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Show U; '' i 'v..'-':-- ' ' ,i . !. : - T1 PROVO. COUNTY UTAH 0 -- .ft ..':' . FEBRUARY Letters To The Chopping Block mm xxdh SUNDAY, UTAH, X i I Br FRANK 1950 12, Once News Nov History fhe Editor C. ROBERTSON Israel felt for the Jehovah of the Teen-Ag- e Movie Thit week I should like to turn Old Testament. this column into a court of Poo tdevil! In his righteous domestic ' relation!, limited to a nesshe shuts himself completely Manners Criticized kind of domestic trouble which out7 of the inner life and thoughts Herald: seldom: If ever gets into the real of his family. He inspires fear and Editor courts or the pseudo ones con IkUls affection. He keeps his wife X wish to compliment Ruth ducted by such as Mr. Anthony in a kind of subdued frenzy for Louise Partridge on her "Minutia" fear she will forget something, or of last Sunday, Feb. 5th. I did not or Mr. Alexander on the radio see the movie to which she refers. The question before the court make a mistake that will bring or but many of my friends did see is what recourse hasa husband down upon her his wrathsense it It was a beautiful picture. or wife, who sincerely loes his criticism, He has killed her of companionship the only thing They agree with Ruth that the Dartner. who would snnnic in that was marriage worth conduct of many teen-age- rs horror ; from the thought, of di- while makes long ago. Probably he has reprehensible, and that' It 4 too vorce, and who woul rather die undermined her health if she is often is in any show. A good pic than air dirty domestic linen in and highminded loving, or caused ture, or a good play Is a recourse has such public what to become sullen and taci spoiled by the uncouthcompletely laughter person against a mate who is too her turn If she has tried to fight back Of our young people. . I seldor . damned perfect so he dismisses her make the effort to attend even I'm serious Almost any of us and lost, and good pictures because the pleas can face and surmount a crisis as stupid. ure of a good show is marred by be to are His likely daughters once a in or a tragedy, while, but someone's lack of good taste. . off the who the kind take long how many can stand up against to am to sorry wear, them say that young girl! undies he compels the erosion on on their way to school, and so offend much more than younf our dispositions shock-thei- r classmates by an ap ooys, according to my observa of petty day by y. But he tion. pearance of day irritations 1 am convinced that we cannot knows nothing of this. which never sons teach the people through the his of Instead teaching lessen and alone. We may reach an handle to newspaper how automobile, never change? and impressing upon them the the parents, but too often parents Ask any man necessity and desirability of are helpless, or seem to be. I wish what type of which will do more to make the following suggescourtesy, w o m a n he than anything else to prevent tions: s would rather accidents, he will build up (1) That courses on social connot live with. in: them a sense of inferiority duct be given in our high' schools and he will because he will be at pains to let and colleges. If they cannot be answer a nag them Ttnow he jdoesn't trust taught by regular teachers. I sug ging wife. A them. He puts before them the gest that the deans of boys and woman is more constant temptation to take some girls, men and women, make it a else's car and raise Cain. point to give a series of lectures likely to ansbody wer a, harsh ' is little hope for such on proper conduct, not only at the There and unsympa- Robertson a man, for he has become so im theater, but at church, at dances, thetic father of her children, bued with a sense of his own on the streets, etc. The culprit I would like to righteousness he can't (2) That managers of our the bring to the, bar this morning is Change. He will never know the aters have more regard for the the socalled perfect husband joy of sinning or being sorry adult members of the The man who Is honored in his for a sin. He win never be able cultured,, and that audience, make community, who is full of good to laugh at his children trying some effort to have athey reasonable a is who to He will him good works, provider, amount of decent order.. State up right. bring who knows his duty and does it, never have the comfortable feel-m- i? ments could be thrown' uoon the and who is Just as sure that he that thoush all the world screen to this effect. If necessary mem- turn against him his family will ask certain knows the duties people to leave the ber of his family, and is sternly be at his side to share even in audience if they insist on (annoyshall it. do determined that they famy and disgrace if necessary ing others. In so doing they forEveryone knows the type. He because they feel that ne would feit the right to have their money criticizes his wife's failings un dor the same for them. Wrapping returned. More adults will attend mercifully, and wants to decide himself, in rightness like an; In if they are assured that their inwhat outside activities she should dian buck In a blanket he goes telligence will not be insulted have, if any. He sees that his his lonely way without r ever every time they enter a theater. becoming realizing why it Is that his family daughters dress with X3) The Sunday schools of everv modesty, and he is so determined shivers and quakes inhishis pre- church cbuld well teach the prinfamily that his sons shall not be de sence. The best thing of proper conduct, yes, even do is to ignore him, aa much ciples linquents that he denies them all can cnurcn. in do. as and his and tries possible the liberties he can, they usually (4) Parents should assume a far best to inspire in them the dread Most Juvenile ' delinquency has responsibility In this matof him which the Children of been caused by the current craze greater with their own children. There to pamper youth, and give .it ter are many parents who do this everything. This and some of our children are has overdone been beyond thing trained,! but not all. alii reason. Yet it is underneath properly Let us - unite in our! efforts to a reaction against the type of correct these abuses. By RUTH LOUISE PARTRIDGE man I have just described, who MRS. CHRISTEN JENSEN once an in were overwhelming Well, here I am again, faced , and what to do majority. with a dead-lin- e, SOUNDS EASY' Human courtesy is thev best. about it? Every so often I promise myself that I will write up an solution I know. Discourtesy in ST. LOUIS,! Feb. 11 (U.R) At extra MINUTIA or two and have the home should never be toler torney Thomas Pascal appeared them at hand in case I am up all ated, but discipline alone will as a defendant in city court and must be denied a night and then have toto do a never ado it. Courtesy policeman's! testimony tell you come column. I don't need habit, . and it Is one not that he drove through a red that nothing comes of the too difficult to form. Children are promise. I really should do it instinctively imitative, and if the traffic light. though. My stuff is bad enough father and mother are universally "You present I a problem," City wnen l nave a ciear neaa zor n courteous to each other they Judge James H.j Connor told Pas which is silly as I haven't had won't ever have to worry about caL ri have eltyer to believe you a clear head since; I can re- the children's manners. "Do it or the officer, here. What would member. If it isn't ringing in the yourself," are words that never you do Jlf.you were. Judge7 ears from sodium salycilate, it is should be heard in any home. It Td discharge, the defendant,' runlng of the nose from sinus. it just as easy to request as to Pascal replied.) Missed two concerts this Week command, and a great deal more "You win," the judge smile because I didn't feel up to them, satisfactory, but this hasn t kept me from sitIn this court any man who "Defendant discharged." ting up all night with a sick pleads that he has to under all friend, though I must say that circumstances maintain his dig I feel sorry for anyone who has nity and his sense of duty will t to listen to my sniffling all night De automatically xouna guiiiy. Have several reports to make. First: The white curtains I put up at Christmas are now a dirty SUNDAY, FEB. 13 .brown. Will have to do something :.l i!" KSL TV about them. Second: We have 0:00. Test Pattern, Music. had the fan taken out of our Br HAL COCHRAN 6:30 Escape. furnace. This is the last of our We're no expert on statistics, 7:00 Paul Whlteman Show. IMPROVEMENTS on the heating Business, plant; and we can now look for but the average run of motorists f:30 This Is ShowShow. ward to getting some warmth out is much too fast per hour on 8:00 The Ruggles 8:30 Crusade In Europe. of the darned thing. This will be streets. :00 Fred Waring Show. all to the good, believe me. Third: slippery, ; 10:00 Weather. My exasperated yell . about the You can't win! When winOff. 10:05 in manners Sign of spontaneous lapse slush finally goes out, N.J our republic seems to, have ter's of that KDYL TV awakened a response. I have re- come in. spring. poetry will 2:30 Test Pattern. ceived a good deal of comment on 3:00 Science. of Flight I Val it. Fourth: didn't get any rave while who Film Theater. 3:20 People makihg entines made just as I knew I out. income tax reports may be 4:30 Matinee Football Highlights of 1949 wouldn't when I said I would 3:00 Sign Off. And speaking of Valentines, I 8:00 Test Pattern. saw by a Salt Lake paper which 8:30 Travelogue. shall be nameless, that we have 1:00 Television Playhouse. here in Provo a little old lady 8:00 Supper Club. who cuts out old fashioned Val 8:30 All Star Film Theater. to entines. Wouldn't I like pay 9:40 Weather Report. her a visit though! Must be quite 9:42 Monkey Business. a sight to see her snipping away. 10:00 Sign Off. once a was great divided into two classes men Paper cutting art, but like so many other things and women. it has about disappeared from the face of the earth. I am conse Few care to see a show we quently very happy to see that our twice; says a movie authority. have a living exponent in Andsometimes not even midst. I would like to take a les once, we find out too late. son or two Irom Mrs. , Clarissa In all sections the weather is Meiling. No address is given, and 1 don't know how to get in touch much discussed these days. Not with her. It does seem as though to mention just cussed, we will end up, all of us, sitting in a corner cutting paper,, the 2 world being what it is. We ought F 1 THEATRE no be prepared for our future by 000 learning to cut with neatness and dispatch. Heard a radio 'recording of OF THE AIR .: M Winston Churchill sounding off 4 in the British election opening. If no other purpose were served, an occasional election should be held TONIGHT in England as long as Mr. ChurLuise Raincr chill lives, for no other reason than to give him a chance to talk. IN More power to him, if I may be so bold as to say so. DRAMATIC Does the Dr. Fuchs shenanigan SCHOOL set you back on your heels as it does me? I swear I can t see how Russian doctrines can appeal to I 'A Listen to a full hour of ' anyone, most particularly to any exciting entertainment, one with brains, and yet, look with brilliant Broadway what has happened and is hap VTot Tmc Vacuum Clcancr. F Playwrigjht-Directo- r we and pening 1 GDR6. IU CAUTMe LOCAL ' i Songwriter Howard.: have no moral right to throw t i brick-ba- ts at the British for their Dietx M.C-'m- g a top take more than mk-hi- ft methlacK ot vigilance. Wei are doing It cast n a sensational ods and machines to thoroughly clean all right in the little game our clogged sewers or program ptpes. so ',,..' selves. We will get the ;. grand qrain slf II T insist on IR Oalways we are if ourselves not prize the national careful. It is quite possible that service devoted exto sewer and we haven't even scratched the clusively troubles. Just surface of American perfidy. It drain loo for is fantastic that a, man who can general section, talk it our secretary of state telephone book. Phene 3131 talked about the uselessness of L. WISSMILLER DON appealing to Russia could a mat 1S34 East it Nerthi ter of days before, bawl great Free Estimates Service KOVO x'-PromptHomes In As Better advertised teams over a man who crocodile Gardens and American Homr yA 1 960 has been convicted of perjury in a treason trial. It is all very con tusing, so long, toixn. - ings to pursue the infinite detail of his life .;' and ways. who visit the store fThe ordinary folk underline even more strikingly the dedicaAmericans to tion of countless modern-da- y Lihcoln's memoryl There's the case of the stteetcar conductor who gave the shop. $1 a fveek for long months, taking home books and other fragments of the! Lincoln story whenever his payments had accumulated sufficiently to meet the cost. A lot of of similar patient, plodding devotion have been recorded. I None Of these people, either disinguished or ordinary, ever saw Lincoln alive; They know nothing of him but what they have reid in books. What inspires this deep feling for a mani who has now been dead a little bookshop in Chicago that specializes inbooks .anc documents touch- in the life ot Abraham Lincoln. Probably no finer or more complete collection exists anywhere outside our greatest librarieis. !nbt only all the . Gathered in this shop are leading biographies of Lincoln, but rare "copies or originals of his papers, a bool case that purports to contain all the works which were in Lincoln's own library, and other evidences of the life he led. ' The place is V mecca for a strange and Vfi men the Lincoln followers. Fired by intense enthusiasm and devotion, they frequent the .l'jtp, with amazing regularity. . Doctors, lawyers, prof espors, some of the bcfslown historians of streetcar condSiiots workingmeil, all are drawn there by hCwerful Lincoln There-- . " - buMen, ' magic 1 f in-atan- ces .3 ' j i J. I years? the effort to catch the secret of hismagne-tisNo one unversed in the fascinating, richness of his life could dare7 attempt a ' t definite answer to: this puzzle do two elements stand as but likely put kevs to his enduring appeal among the mass of men. In him there was a wonderful balance of statesman and politician. 851 It ought not to His j ;idealism ed j that i neis.. in' the relatively brief period have been offered for sale as a cold remedy there have been one death officially ascribed in the coroner's report to an overdose of these tablets, and at least one other death in which a possible overdose was suspected. The one known case was aij accident, one of those tragically common accidents in which a small child obtained the' bottle, opened began to eat the pis. That accident has been repeated overfand over again with ari; endless variety of medicines ; even common aspirin has beekniown . to be fatal in such incidents. overdose an medicine Deaths in which of is suspected but not known , often involve the ancient, consistently disproved Idea '.that "if a little is good, more is better" It cannot be said toof requently or too strongly that medicines, whether1 of the home remedy kind or the ones, prescribed bjr a doctor, should" not be used in excess of the directed quantities. The patient .and his caretakersghouid never take it on them-selvto increase the specified dosage. No medicine, however harmless it may be thought to be, should ever be left within the reach of children who are too smaljl to know the dan crers. It is so easy to present a tragedy, so impossible to undo it. antihistamine-tablet- s , '."livji;.?'"-'-""- . ry alone account for; his continuing hold on thej hearts of menu The other key is per .hapsr the big one.! Lincoln was a man of compassion. He had an intense love of his fellow man. And he conveyed that feeling through his personal humbleness , that marked even his greatest hours. Somehow, even;! in death, he communicates that love for others, Lincoln was I itnd -- everybody's president... Ordinary men do not forget the example of such a life, nor the humility that moved side by side, with his greatness. Nothing is more . natural than that they should respond to that exampleeven . though the man who set it lives only in memory. x " . j ; f j - jDon't tread on me." That motto, accompanying a coiled rattlesnake, appeared on a popular flag in the French and Indian War. This might make a good letterhead fori our diplomatic correspondence in cer- i Voshinqton Mgrry-qo-Rou- . 1 Tlnn'f hiirrien fits KonWif k is a tip offered on behavior with robbers. 0. K, with us. I i ! Republicans Take New Lease On Life at Big Lincoln Day 'Box Supper" Celebration - s Br DREW PEARSON . WASHINGTON The deep-s- et eyes of Abra ham Lincoln stared somberly down from a huge portrait. Below him. milled 12,000, people, some trying to speak, some trying to gnaw chicken bones, some hoping to dance, j some - trying to i look plebeian all celebrating the Republican party's determination to take new lease on life at one dollar a throw, for a box supper. . j The man ' who once guided the Republican party and the nation through its most perilous crisis, looked down on the strange sight. What he thought, nobody knows. But. here is what he . " frantic woman, bejeweled and In a fur coat, trying desperately to eat a chicken .leg. She was elbowed on both sides. Her hat Was askew: Her fixed smile had a pained look. Per- ' iodically, a hoarse voice in the stand above shouted, "siddown. you. Down in front." She shuddered, but gnawed . . . Sen. Owen Brewster, as harassed and perspiring as a busy grocery , clerk, trying to squeeze through to the press table. His bald head gleamed but his voice retained its sense of humor. "We simple little Resupport :. . .," he said. A loud boom ' publicans from the high school band drowned out.the rest. But nobody cared, anyway. Twenty photographers trying to shoot a trio of A slightly 4 - ' Republican leaders balancing boxes on their. knees and picking at chicken bones . . this Was a shot for the front pages . . . homespun Joe Martin looked like he really enjoyed It, but Sen. Homer Ferguson's smile was fixed and glassy . . ; "My Boss," complained a, stenographer in a rloud, nasal wail, "gave me his ticket to this sup- -, ; per.. He: told he there would be plenty ofa eats half and a good band. They ran out of food hour ago, and the only musician I've seen was a guy blowing a bagpipe."; I CHERUBIC CAPEHART On the platform sat Indiana's Sen. Homer Capehart, looking for all the world like a decherub. The left side of! his jected, middle-age- d sadly . . at his side a, quartet sang lip drooped"We ought to applaud them for effort," valiantly. . . . Capehart, who had arrived chirped someone too early by an hour, sat a prisoner. He xauld riot escape, but neither did he applaud .i squeezing through the crush came Guy Gabriel-- ; son, the friendly GOP national chairman. jAb ball. player, ran .Hermann, the old major-leaginterference for him, while Mrs. Gabrielson "clutched a dainty orchid to prevent it from being bruised In the crowd. Sen. Margaret Chase Sniith of Maine reached down to greet Mrs. Gabrielson. - t She wore gardenias. GeOrge Bender, Senator. Taft's lustiest- - cheer leader, was in seventh heaven. "I didn't know there were this many of, us left in the world," he yelled, 'looking down at the crowd. George's fancy, bosom heaved with vjrith pride. Gone were his memories of the "win to friends as a gag Dewey" shirts; that he. . sent . Master of Ceremonies After .Dewey's 'defeat George Murphy wheezed playfully into the mike, '"shake hands with the girl on your left. Now, now. don't hold it too long. . . The lady in (the fur coat, still clutching a half -- nibbled chicken , leg, put her hand in her pocket. I VAGUE COLLEGE PROFESSOR Sen. Ken Wherry full of beans and bounce, pushed through the crush ; . a cry from (the crowd: "Is that Wherry?"; "What's left of him," was Wherry's answer . . . Sen. Alexander Smith, the slim gray, former Princeton professor, loped j i ue y . , - . pasi looking like a faculty adviser at a fra initiation.! He was haDDv. but ntti temity dazed. From around his neck hung a big card- ooara sign, it reaa "iNew and added to his Appearance of being a Jersey," lost soul in a strange r. ',: 'world.'1.:. :,. One section in the grandstand resembled 5th Avenue's Townsend Old Age clul elderly but milled imelegant. Below, a mass of teen-age- rs waiting far Fred Waring's band to patiently, start . . a great cry swung through the arena. The champ had arrived, the great hope of the party. In strode Bob Taft, wreathed in smiles . . . No 'progressive rebels there to greet him, no Wayne Morses, no Oubot Lodges, no Irving Ives . . J No chicken bones for them , . . "Maybe," cracjked ' someone, "they stayed home and ate caviar." '. As New Hampshire's twinkling Sen. Charles Tobey, a GOP Independent made his way slowly down the aisle, la newsman asked: "What are you doing on the program?" , . . Tobey looked at the lineup of party conservatives or the speakers programIndiana's Charles Halleck, who ducked out on Abe Lincoln's great principle civil rights: iNebraska's Ken Wherry. who traded civil rights 'for a Montana power' line; uapenan, wno opposed preparedness; Washingte ton's Harry Cain, the spokesman for the lobby .. .! . "I, realize," said Tobey wryly, "I'm! with strange company." I WHAT ABE LICOLN THOUGHT? The song leader roared out: "Hail, hail the gang's all here, what the hell do we care." Senator Tobey laughed and moved on . . .Above him I the deep-se- t, somber eyes of Abe Lincoln still stared down at the political party he had helped to spawn. Eighty-seve- n years before he at Gettysburg had stood at another rally! where he told fellow Republicans: "We are testing . . .whether that nation or any nation so conceived and so dedicated, can long endure." . . . The hazards which) he outlined are still there. The principles he emblazoned on nen's minds are still remembered.! But will they be carried out by those who now profess his '.faith? That was the big question asked from the sidelines at the famed box supper . . . only time will give the ' answer. CAPITAL NEWS CAPSULES MIXING POLITICS AND TAXES While congress, is scratching for more tax money, the U. S. tax court, key agency for collecting taxes, is in danger of going political. Out of the 16 judges, there will soon be nine vacancies, and if the administration chooses to make them political appointments, a lot of badly needed tax revenue can go out the window. Four vacancies are com-- .: ing up for. appointment in June, while four judges over 70 are holding office only by presi- -, dential dispensation. Tragedy- - is that congress provides no pensions for tax court judges. When they retire, after years of poorly paid work they .'s are out of luck.! ?' READING THE NEWSPAPERS The New York; Times played the Ingrid Bergman story on the inside, and so modestly you could hardly find it. (All the news ithars fit to priit). As far as the Boston Post Was concerned, Truman's historic! statement that he: would make the hydrogen bomb might never: have been made at all. The (Post buried It way inside 4. . . The Saturday Evening Post, which boasts that1 it's ahead of the hews, bally hooed an article on Bill Rogers, the: Senat investigation committee sleuth, after Rogers had already resigned to join the law firm f Secretary Kenneth RoyalL BARBS . " . - , ! i I real-esta- - - t Robtin' around1 4S j !i 1 Ml ay, 1 W ; ROTO-ROOT-E- i ex-Ar- my TELEVISION m PROGRAMS i. : a a. -- ; i " - i j nd 1 as S ,V . t R, , w ; t . " v " Feb. 11, 1141 The Installation of an army R.O.T.S. corps at the, Provo high school will have to be sidetracked until over the current war scare blows over, Sherman Chriitenson, Jaycee president explained after attempts (had been made to facili tate the project . . . the official Soviet! News agency Tass criticiz ed a speech by President Roosevelt before the American Youth Congress, charging that he had attacked the Soviet Union for its Invasion of Finland ". . . The Congress failed to condemn Russia . . . Dorothy Jean for the Invasion Cannon,- - honored queen, was in charge of the Job's Daughters meeting at the Masonic temple . . . honored at a birthday party was Alice Ann, four-yeold and Mrs. H. J. daughter of Mr. Corlelssen . , . . Hoyt Brawfter, Denver's top hoopster, led the Big Seven scorers with 69 points in eight games. Only Cougar in the first 10 was Frank Fullmer with If points. . ?'. Febl 11 1930 , I A move was led In tha i state legislature by George Ryan, Juab county lor assessing mines oh their net proceeds instead of on a property valuation r4 . Madeline Hoppaugh, 23, became one of the first women In Utah to 'get a pilot's license . . . the palatial German liner. Muenched was a total loss after being swept by a costly fire ! the New York har bor . . 1. more than 225 descend ants of the late. Samuel and Leah Pyne attended "the annual Pyne reunion at the Tim panogos ward amusement hall with Fred Smartr Spanish Fork as master ot ceremonies . . . Primo Camera, the big Italian "bull" won his fourth knockout In the United States. He S. N- weighed 280 pound Daniels, former Provo i man. bought the Logan Knitting fac Jim Tully, the hobo tory author, socked Jack Gilbert, screen lover in a brief bout in a ; Hollywood night spot, : . ar - .... ? i HARD LUCK MELTS COURT MINNEAPOLIS? (U.R) Marcel lus J. McMullen, charged with reckless driving, had a hard luck story that was really a hard luck story. The judge believed him. This is what happened to Mc Mullen the night he was arrested. He had broken up with his girl; he 'had lost his job; he missed! a turn ofra slick road and damaged his car by hltting the curb and a tree; ' as his carwas being towed into a garage, fKwas struck by another and wreck Judge Leslie Anderson let him off lightly. ii TCLCVISIOn Blodels From $239.50 ' DUNKLEY'S n The red wood used in pencils, fence posts, and cedar chests is not cedar, but juniper. The cedar Is an Old World tree. MUSIC MART j Provo IS West Center 1 Radio Programs, Sunday, Feb. 12 (The radio prograsna listed below are submitted toy the radio 'stations who are responsible for theUr accuracy. In ease f seeming Inaccuracies or for farther information call the re-spectlve radio sUtlons.) iA .' ECSU KDYL KOVO mil 989 Musical dock- t;!t KSL News - T:tiXidsr.i VUchaux t:ll. l:30Nw T:45C Cavauero SSIBibl :1S - . StSSlPropbaej; , it t:4S y t:MiGood News i:is l:SIltlMra 1S.4S Erni Slnglar ot Church Chapel I Golden i AH Malodlea - ;i 11:301 li:!Nw 12:15 Fabuleua Four Hardy FamUy j Sunday Serenade Sammy Kay Ne Galen Drake Jack Smith Ted Steele I Man 's Tamlly Sammy Kayo Philharmonic Renelsaeard Story 4:)lNlek Barrast ot Stare Dinah Phora New. Weather Henry Morgan 4:45J Staairalooa S:is' S:30ITh Saint Phil Harris (:e Chicafo Theater Sam Spade :15 4:1 Theatar Guild S:45l 7:00! Caravan 1:15 T:J8 Proudly We Hail Album t:eiLt George 8:15' :30 :45 Nawi I9:00Symphoniei 1:1 1:3 I:4S ll:00Thir la Europ 11:1)5! 11:3 ll:45 OrcheiU-- a Hour of Stare , Our Mlaa Brook Corlaas Archer Horaee Beldt Contented Hour KCSl) Reportina Concert BaO National Guard Theater Hour Stardust Operettas Great Waltzes Sympboniaa Catbolle Boot Musi Weather Marr A Merea Benny Strong News News x Music You Want 12: 11:15 Sunday Saloa Paul Weston tt Take or Leave It Salute Writers Guild Bout ot j X Earn Vacation Strike It Rick SportUte School Bob Crosby 1:4(1 t:0l t:15 do Bing Crosby Guy Lombards Guest Stir Alfred Newman T:4S g:3ft;Dramatic Record Parade Concert Hour ' Jack Benny i Lewis J Williams Amos n Andy Devotional Hour BergenvMcCarthy Red Skeltaai Jack: Una London C. S:451 ' Piano Pathway R. Diamond r Rogaj's 4:taiRoy 4:15 Drift Peoples Platform To Learning NBC Tbaatcr News Kdwin C. HIH Kay Kyser Facta 'Urtliroitad Modem Concert Adventura High ' S:3tDtatlv :4 Tabernacle Chest -- -- Shadow-l:15- Bigg. Organist Trinity Choir Church ot Ait Your Own Music Newa ReHtious Bervtea) Light More Out of Life lt:4II 1:!B. Cunnincham l:lS Mdicin Drama Quia Kids 1:30; Juvenile Jury 1:45! IrSSiHopalonS I t:15 X:lo!Martln ICaae t:4S World New in Sky Three) Suns Collins llslHarmofllta i:tTba Child's Theats Funnies Safety Story Cugat Norman Cloutitr Xarler Howard Eddier u Gypsy Strings Round Table! Musie 1Z:3 Assembly of God Sermona la Song Newsi St Francis Hour Musis House rorum ofi Air tteut eternal U(h ii. 11:1S Wild wood Church Hare to Vela News weathiar Ctmco ot Mucte Radio Pulpit rreadotn Story Novatlmal S:lif fl:30 Hrmna ot Oa f :4SlChrltian Sdenea l:;Obrlin Chorus list Chariot Wheels Caroilna Calling :4S . i 10 Years Ago j 20 Years Ago h :.! tain quarters. s self-express- ion Minutia T es j of-eve- put, rare as! it jis, that blend could not j i . that blended U with haH-heade- d political realism in remarkable combination. The mixture cast him in the mold of a great leader at a moment when the nation desperately needed that great-- 1 high-mind- ' semi-nudit- T , . i escape general notice ; . m. Many of these men are ardent colectors of Lincolniana. A good number meet in the hop informally from time to time, making It a sort of; market place for an exchange of stories and, ideas about the great pivil War president. These same admirers; as- semble more formally in other surroiund- - Care With Medicine 1 Millions of words have been set down in ;': ' r ; Lin-col- n, :.::.': . -- ; From the Filet of The Proro Herald America Organ Moods Rainbow Brides News Good Night - LDS Church King Oeorg Tabernacle r " New Ca-- f Symphonette Temple Square Opera . - Symphony RaB News. Ooodntfht lt:3 !:4SI MONDAY. FEB.! 13 N With Musie Old Corral :IS l:3ISun-U:45 p lambore rn Roundup rrolle Eddie DucMn Wake Vp Tim News. Top otl Morning High time 1:e0IRobert Hurlaigh Craftsmen New. Weatnet T:3eNews 7:1 Tc45Jaroborse Hemineway S:l 5 Sunshine Kids S:3flReauests S:45;By Jensen : Marvin Miller :15Gordon Owen t:3;Monday Music :! . :45l i:ee Kate Smith 1:15 Lanny Rosa 1:30 Woman's Pag Time 1:45 Swing Partner Sunshine Songs Gaalight Gaieties Mamarr tor fw' Linger Awhile Love and Learn Varieties Dave Garroway Jm-tercn Rhythms David Harum Jerry Burn Lady of - i : j Emerson Smith ll:0Heatter MaUbag King's Truth Harding ll:15!Harvey 11:30 Serenade News. Weather Times Lets Tsks 1 of ll:45jSonira 1I: Carnival Double or. lZ:15 Cedric Foster 1 Z:3iQueen for Day TodaysChildren :4Sl Liantxof worm l:0News l:15 LadlM Fair 1:1 Paula Stone !l:45iBob Ebcrly 70 Voice f Arrny BeUeve :3 2:45 S:tt!Gorddn Owen 1:1$ Frank Sinatva 3:3eiTp Tunes J f5 i)L. Barry more .ISt tieminsws Can Be Road of Ufa fPepper Young Happiness Barkstsire Wife Stella .Dallas Lorenso Jones Widder Brown tri Marries Portia Faces ju Just Plain ittU Front rarreU Trevelers . 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