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Show PRQVQ. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH; SUNDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1949 Conviction of Communist Party Leaders What does the conviction and sentencing of the 11 Communist leaders mean to the utflre of their party Obviously it deprives the party of the Julk of its present national leadership. ;Elizabeth G. Flynn is the only member of !thi top group ndw available for full service. serv-ice. One other, William Z. Foster, is disabled dis-abled by a heart ailment and is himself wilder wi-lder indictment, v I The convictions "will of course be ap-pealed ap-pealed and probably will be reviewed by the .Supreme Court. Until a final decision is Jiad, it is unlikely any profound change Will occur in the American Communist Party lexcept the necessary development of new leadership. f But what then ? Foster and Miss Flynn 'insist that if the convictions are upheld the '.party will not go underground, as some of its spokesmen threatened in the closing 'days of the nine months' trial. , Yet it is hard to see how it can do other-rise other-rise if the jury in that trial has correctly gauged the aims and purposes of the party. The 11 leaders were convicted of conspiracy con-spiracy to teach and advocate the Overthrow Over-throw of the U. S. government by force land violence. To make a case against these defendants, government lawyers had to atisfy the jury that the entire party is bent upon such a conspiracy. They had to convince the jurors that the organization is not a legitimate American political party but- merely masquerades as one to achieve Its revolutionary aims. , I If that is a proper measure of American communism, then the chances are great that the party's true purposes will remain unaltered. But henceforth assuming the convictions are upheld- any other Com-Snunist Com-Snunist leaders are on notice that they face the same fate suffered by the present ii. . Consequently, these future lexers must go underground if they are to escape indictment indict-ment for conspiracy. They must take with them all evidences that the party is still what the American courts will have said it was a plot to overthrow the government forcibly. It is conceivable the heart of the party's work may be driven underground while the facade of a regular party is still maintained main-tained above ground.' For this case does not appear to outlaw the Communist Party nor to make its members automatically subject sub-ject to penalties for conspiracy. In every instance, the government will have to prove the guilt of conspiring Communists.. Com-munists.. It will have to get below the surface and expose their revolutionary intent in-tent This ' looks like a continuing advantage for the Communists, this privilege of keeping keep-ing the false facade in place. But actually it will not make much difference. The truth is the Communist Party has always operated oper-ated underground to a considerable degree. Even to prove a conspiracy in the present case, the FBI had to ferret out these secret activities. The government has made clear it is ready to delve deeper in the future if necessary to bring conspirators to justice. Having part of the organization above ground may really be a help despite the fact it is a phony front, for it may well supply the FBI with leads to the underground. Thus it seems to us the important thing is not to outlaw the Communist Party even though we know it isn't a genuine political group. The vital task is to keep track of the real revolutionaries wherever they are, to drag them into the light and put them where they cannot carry out their dangerous danger-ous purposes. Justice lf 100K NINE MOtfTMAT A COST OF SEVEN HUNDRED "THOUSAND DOLLAJTbFWD Nbu 6UIDY OP APVOCAT)N3 "The violeMT oveTu3dvy OF MY OOVERNMEKT. ILL have ib senp yxT& JAIL FOR A VWILE I - i .. m i i i ao. r: pfijp fail &wm L Once NetwsNow History Will He Try It? s V Comdr. Eugene Tatom of the Navy told a House committee a man wearing ordinary 'clothes -would not suffer serious injury from an atom bomb explosion if he stood at tone end of a long Washington airport run-Way run-Way and the bomb went off at the other lend. That's a distance of a mile and a fifth. f ' ' H The U. S. Atomic Energy Commission, Summarizing data on the atom explosions over Hiroshima and Nagasaki, would disagree dis-agree with Tatom. It says that flash burns Jwould be serious even at two miles. Moreover, More-over, it concludes that anyone; that close "surely woulr suffer "radiation sickness" probably resulting in death. , , Perhaps Tatom hasn't quite caught up his reading. Let's Go Girls Harvard University has broken a 132-year-pld custom and decided to allow women wo-men to enroll in its law school. This was probably a tougher decision than most of us realize'. The guiding fathers fath-ers must have wrestled with the matter a long time before letting down the bars. To those of you who maybe can't quite appreciate the size of this thing, let us say that it might be compared roughly to an announcement from the Big Ten that it has decided to admit Slippery Rock Normal as a full-fledged member in good standing. Sayers of witty sayings have been asked what they'll do when the wisecracks are all used up., As in the past, they'll turn the barrel over and go through it again. r The Washington Merry-go-Round Prom the File of The Provo Herald 10 Years Ago OCT. 23, 1M9 Participants in the Search-Tor-Talent contest at Provo high school were Betty Davis, Joyce Jones, Margaret ' Wilson, Ruth Cunningham, Georgia Lauren-son, Lauren-son, Thales Smith, Junior Run-nelli, Run-nelli, Carol Benctf, Jerry Wad-dell, Wad-dell, Arlene Benthen, Earl Callahan, Cal-lahan, Blanche Kirk, Grant Bandley, and Ray Heal Merchants Mer-chants in St. Anthony, Ida. were offering prizes for the best soap picture drawn on local windows during Halloween season . Women employes of Utah Power and Light were guests a-t dinner with Martha Evans and Veda Hicks in charge of arrangements. Attending were Sarah Rowe, Norma Crane, Barbara Paxman, Joan Cox, Inger Johnson, Stephen Ste-phen Lundquist, Evelyn Hansen, Emma Lee Bown and guests, Mrs. Vee Pulley, Mrs. Myrle Buckley and Mrs. W. H. Prusse. 20 Years Ago OCT. 23, 1929 Barbara Bingham of Brigham City was chosen as beauty Queen of the state Billions of dollars dol-lars were clipped from stock values during the week as the New York stock market broke. Traders surged about the brok erage offices watching their hold ings wiped out and scenes on the floor of the exchange were of the una never before witnessed. It was one of the worst breaks in history" L. B. Harmon was appointed . to succeed President Thomas N. Taylor as district chairman of Provo Scout district Provo was awaiting the appearance ap-pearance on, a local stage of the popular comedy team. Mack and Moran 'The Two Black Crows." BACALL. SUBTENDED FOE FAILURE TO SHOW UP HOLLYWOOD, Oct 22 (U.R) Lauren Bacall, husky-voiced actress v wife of actor Humphrey Bogart, has been suspended by Warner Brother studio because she refused to appear for . rehearsal re-hearsal when the 'studio whistled. Miss Bacall twice refused . to attend rehearsals for the movie "Storm Center," Warners said. Executive producer Jack . L, Warner indicated similar- treatment treat-ment will be accorded other film Minutia Drew Pearson Says: y Chief Trouble With Recent 81st Congress Absenteeism . WASHINGTON -As the debris of the 81st congress is swept away and as relieved bureaucrats bureau-crats get back to work with no senators breathing breath-ing down their necks, it can be truthfully said k J. . 1 - . piai congress nas .accompusnea. iar more tnan veteran capital observers ever dreamed possible. . ;.. iu uci, ine rtcem session proDBDiy passed more of Mr. Truman's Fair Deal program than FDR's congress passed of the New Deal program, with the exception of bis first four years in bffice. . Chief blot on the 81st congress was that it failed to pass an old-age pension-social -security bill at a time when such passage could have it failed to pass-aid-to-education at a, time when the schools were, desperately 'in need of help. I The fact that congress failed to. do this and bogged down toward the end was due largely to absenteeism. t Not all the pleading, cajoling and scolding of patient Senate Leader Scott Lucas could muster the vojtes for the simple - reason thai dozens of senators and scores of congressmen were out of ' -wn. ? Absenteeism has become worse in recent years because of free . junkets abroad on army airplanes. In the old days, congressmen went home to mend their political fences. Now many travel abroad on "surveys." Usually it's a good " I J.. A. A t A 1 Ml. rati iar congressmen 10 get acquainted wiin conditions abroad but not when their votes are , needed in Washington. During the closing weeks of congress for instance, the following senators were "surveying" conditions in Europe: Survey of Housing Included Bricker of phio, Flanders of Vermont, Freac of Delaware and Sparkman of Alabama. Survey of Europe Generally By the senate appropriations committee, including Chavez pi New Mexico, McClelland of Arkansas, Robertson of Virginia and ' Stennis of Mississippi though Stennis is not even a member of this committee. Survey of Franco Spain Undertakent by Mc-Carran Mc-Carran of Nevada, chairman of thejudiciary committee, who has nothing to do with foreign -relations. Survey of Military Establishments By Ty- dings of Maryland, even though Secretary of . Defense Johnson" begged him to stay in Washington. Washing-ton. (Friends said he had Ao go because he'd promised Mrs. Tydings.) . In addition, the following senators got tired and toward the closingdays of congress, packed up and went heme: Butler tf Nebraska, Reed of Kansas, Thye of Minnesota, Tobey of New Iowa and Withers of Kentucky. j TRUMAN IRKED AT LESINSK1 ' President Truman confided his "keen disap-pointment' disap-pointment' to Congressman Morgan Moulder of Missouri the other day over the shackling of federal-aid-to-education by Chairman John , Lesinski and the house labor committee. Moulder, a strong champion of aid-to-education, predicted the house like the senate would have passed a satisfactory compromise, probably providing free lunches and health care for paro- (Copyrlght 1949 by the Bell Syndicate. Ine ) chial schools, if Lesinski had not bottled the bill up in committee. "Of course,' the issue could have been easily solved along hose lines, commented the president, presi-dent, somewhat irritably. "I did all I could. 1 even had some of the committee members over here for a conference and strongly encouraged action to ielieve the school shortage. 'The fact that the committee refused to do its duty was no fault of mine. I can't dictate to the congress." f Truman also revealed that he was consider- vu-ovit piaii lur auiuriiing vne mount- i ing national debt, but didn't go into details nowever, ne promised io study a suggestion by Moulder that revenues from specific taxes such as excise and excess profits levies be diverted to retiring the federal debt. STRANGE ROUMANIAN I ut the way dicial experts Roumanian in agent of one I There is something peculiar certain American diplomats and have been hobnobbing with New York who is the registered of Stalin s chief henchmen. The Roumanian is DrVespasien Palla who arrived in the U.S.A. With his own car and chauffeur, gives swank, champagne parties on his Long Island estate, and L the official representa-tive representa-tive of Premier AnnsT Pauka, the lady Communist who runs Roumania for Stalin. Palla is a Xneatile gentleman, who once represented the Fascist Antonescu government, which declared war on the United States, and which slaughtered 300,000 Jews, sent-many of their bodies to the I. G. Farben soap factories. Palla served Fascist Antonescu as minister to Switzerland. Now he is minister without port- i-:iQior tne communist Pauka government. But the amazing thing is that despite this irect hook-up with the Russian-Roumanian 'Communists, Palla has ready access to American legal bigwigs and some diplomats. On April 29, at a dinner for the American Society of International' Inter-national' Law, attended by Deputy Secretary of State Dean Rusk, diplomats and lawyers stood up and applauded when Palla was introduced. Another amazing thing is that this mysterious mysteri-ous gentleman is called upon for advice regarding regard-ing Ahe United Nations, though Rouania is not a member of the U.N. What information he sends b. :k to Roumania is not known, nor would the FBI know, since he has access to the uncensored Roumanian dir' latic pouch. MERRY-GO-ROUND General MacArthur has informed the state department that the Chinese Communist, plan to set up a formal government for all China by November 15 . . . Governor Dewey has sent his personal press chief, Jim Haggerty, to mastermind master-mind John Foster Dulles' re-election to the senate . . . Oklahoma utility interests are spreading spread-ing rumors that liberal, young congressman Tom Steed "hasn't paid attention to his job." Real fact is that Steed is one of the hardest workers in the house, seldom left his office before 9 or 10 p.m. . , . Secretary Acheson has ordered his aides to begin drafting. a peace treaty for Japan. The British, anxious to get General MacArthur cut of Japan, exacted a promise from Acheson he'd have a peace treaty for Nippon within 90 days. By RUTH' LOUISE PARTRIDGE OPEN LETTER TO ANYBODY: I see by the paper that the City Fathers acting for once like real fathers and , not step-fathers have changed their minds about letting a considerable frontage and footage on North University avenue go to drive-in arrangements. arrange-ments. This was a shock to me for I have been too busy to read a paper lately, and consequently didn't know any such depredation was intended, or thought of, or countenanced for one single minute. min-ute. All over this silly town there are sidewalks paid for by trust ing and gullible citizens, who are forced to walk around cars, climb over cars, climb under cars, or crawl through cars in order to get from where they are to where they are going. This is a public disgrace, but that any such calam ity should happen to the lew blocks we have left in this town that could by any stretch of the imagination be called a boule- varde, is, shall we say, unsettling? I would like to remind all and sundry that University aVenue displays the one and only living testimony that this town can get together on anything and it may be the last, and I am referring to the Norway maple trees that shade its walks. Those trees were NOT there when the pioneers came. Those trees did NOT spring .up voluntarily, nor yet were they paid for and planted by pixies. It may interest you to know that once upon a time we had a mayor and a crew of you should pardon the expression expres-sion city servants who got together- and decided to beautify Provo. In the light of what has happened tothe thencalled Garden Gar-den City since, this is hard to believe, but tHe Norway maples back me up in this. The mayor's namewas Dr. O. D. Hansen. He wasa dentist, and to that fact as much as anything we owe rovo s one lone - attempt to act like .an adult city. Mayor Hansen's Han-sen's long experience with pulling teeth made him just the man for this job as we were no more enthusiastic en-thusiastic then than we have been since in doing anything sane toward beautification. I don t have room here to go into the fine print written about these trees at the time, nor would I dare set down the verbal brick bats that flew. I will only say that I remember it well. The idea of cutting out old trees that were already giving shade, and putting in little new trees that would take twenty years before they would keep the sun off did seem to be a little feeble minded, but the tooth-pulling mayor stayed with It and today we have a row of, lovely trees that will increase in beauty for our children, chil-dren, and their children, and thn some. True, they need pruning. True there are some vacant spots, but just the same there stand those trees. They were paid for BY THE CITIZENS OF THIS CITY, dearie, and they are not presumably the property of any one person. I would like to know therefore, how it is that those trees can be removed at the whim of any one who wants to move them? Who gives OUR permission permis-sion for this desecration of a monument to the scarcest thing this city has, civic mindedness? How is it that OUR trees, paid for by OUR taxes can be removed, re-moved, their lovely shade removed, re-moved, the row of trees ruined, the whole intent and purpose of them abrogated? I would like to know by whose permission the green grasr of our hard earned University avenue parking is dug ou, and un-green and un-grow- mg cement substituted. What goes on here? I took a walk up our University avenue. It could be a street to be proud of. Most of the people who live bn it are anxious and willing to have it a street to be proud of, but there are several gaps in the beauty of that street that are as ugly .as those left by the teeth Dr. Hansen Han-sen used to pull. Let's do something some-thing about this slow decay, for heaven's sake. F- long, folks. The Chopping; Block By FRANK C. ROBERTSON This next week will probably decide whethef I say something nice about a doctor from Provo, or something that will sear and blister. My fate, in a way of speaking, is in his hands. In other words my wife's bifocal glasses had better work. If they don't she threatens, and she is a woman wo-man of her word, that all low level work in this household such as the scrubbing of floors will fall to my lot. Since the doctor doc-tor supplied her with bifocals she is unable to see the floor ex cept at lone range. When she gets on her knees she can't see it at all. A pair of sore ears has, of course, added nothing Xa-"the sweetness of her disposition. I live in constant fear or having a scrubbing brush or a mop thrust into my reluctant hands. I look much more dignified at a typewriter. Butthe dignity of a husband in the home means little to any jNile of more than one year's standing. 1 1 war o n my recommen- dationthat my wife sought doctor, for had steered e through the pitfalls of bifocals bi-focals quite s u c c e s sfully several years ago, and if he fails me now a long vacation for him will be in order. ' Fortunately For-tunately for both of us my wife is endowed endow-ed with almost endless p a t i- ence bow else My mother was near-sighted, and I cannot remember her with out glasses. I used to .gauge my conduct by them. Whenever they were in place I usually did about as I pleased. When she raised them up on. hef forehead and said. "Frank" I knew it was time to obey. When she lay down for her last nap and my brother suggested sug-gested that he take her glasses she smilingly declined and pushed push-ed them back on her ' forehead.. They and the smile were still in plate when they found her dead y couple of hours later. Like had become practically a part of her physical personality. The complexities of our civilization, civil-ization, and a few fiendish inventions in-ventions like the motion pictures have undoubtedly played hob with our native eyesight so that it has become necessary to de velop constantly new and better aids .for our vision. so iar as glasses are concerned I thin'.: that as a race we were happier when we didn't have 'em, but we have got ourselves into such a state that now we would be helpless and miserable without them. , Robertson could she, have lived with me all these years? and I anticipate that in the end she will rise up and call the doctor. , This matter of eyesight is a funny thing. Science, they tell us, has made wonderful strides. They now put glasses on mere infants and correct in advance any visual defects. There are few people, it seems, without some sort of eye trouble, yet most of them do not know it. My wife, for instance, was grown up and married before she discovered that she had only a small per cent of normal eyesight in one eye. The1 doctor tells her that at some time or another she suffered suf-fered an injury, but she cannot recall it having ever been hurt, except that once as a youngster she was kicked in the eye by a horse. That surely couldn't have done the damage, she maintains, and knowing how tough she is I'm inclined to agree. But I'll bet that the horse limped for days afterward. . I'm always skeptical about the claims of science. In spite of eye exercises, improved technique in the making of glasses, and perhaps per-haps above all the improvement of lighting systems in home and office I wouldn't exchange the eyesight of old Jim Bridger, if I had it, for that of the best visually guarded . college student in the land. Glasses were unknown to the Indians, yet their eyesight was phenomenal. My elder brother, who died last summer at the age of sixty-nine never wore glasses in his life. Only a year ago he took the visual test for driver's license, as easily as any high school boy much to the amazement amaze-ment of the examiner. He did a great deal of reading. I used to watch him when he came to my house, and purposely refrain from turning on, the lights. He would read away unconcernedly after it was almost too dark for me to see the page even, and if tH liffhtv wprp nn h rnn A usually be found in the darkestr7 corner of the room. Of course he was trained for it. In our home, as kids, we never had anything except a coal-oil lamp to read by. and sometimes one almost needed to strike a match to see if it were burning. BARBS By HAL COCHRAN Mother, father and baby are a problem two and one to carry. Pianos are not strictly furniture fur-niture but could be used as-such as-such to greater advantage in some homes. . It's not too early to suggest that miners take a tip from the lowly little squirrels dig in for the winter. Alcohol in the trees colors the leaves, says a bulletin. Now we believe that red nose theory. It's strange how many husbands become deaf when the leaves begin be-gin to fall. MGM THEATRE OF THE AIR presents -i 14 um mmm immiwrti 1 1 . v , j sm A dLafcaa J Burgess Meredith IN Married Bachelor' TONIGHT 8:30 p. m. Vmutual intirmountaiij NETWORK 'r It's Time For A Change 1 VOTE FOR Clyde L Weeks i Your Candidatefor MAYOR OF PROVO (4-year term) Progressive Efficient Dignified Experienced CLYDE K. WEEKS Overseas Veteran of World Wars I and II Pd. Pol. Adv. Sponsored By "We're Voting for Clyde" Comm. Radio Programs, Sunday, Oct. 23 (The radio programs listed below are submitted by the Tadlo stations who art responsible tor their acenracy In east of seeming Inaccuracies or for further Information call the respective re-spective radio stations.) ' , KOVO 960 ':! Musical Clock :1S :30 :4l 7:00 .Elder Michaux Wild wood Church T:15 Hart's to Vtta :30lNw News Waathtr 7;45C. CavaUero Camaoa of Muirtc S:00Bibl Claas Radio Pulpit"" t:18 t:MPropbacy freedom Story S:45 Noratlma :0Back to God Ernlt Ltt :13 Singlnf 9:30Hnnna of tay ChurcB of Alt :4iChrUtin Science Gold en Melodl IS:jBapttJt Mr. fix-It it:is Portraits 10:JO1 utnaraa Hou Eternal Light l.4S: X 1 1:001 American Pork Memorable Muaic ll:liOberlin Scries -ll:30Sunday Music Round table ljSl 12:00INw Theater l?:lSMuic 12:30 Bill Cunnlnfham 12:43Pabulous Pour l:00Pamily Theater 1 Man's Family I:lSi 1:30 Electric Hour Quia Kids l:4Sj 2:00'Myitery House "could Be" 2:13 2:30 Martin Kane S:4S , - 3:00Tbe Shadow Radio Playhouse J.15, 3:30 Detective Story Harvest of Start l:4S X 4:00Ro7 Rosen Dinah Shore 4:131 News, Weather 4:3e)Nlefe Carte Hollywood Call t:00IFalcon ' S:1S : :10The Saint Phil Harris S:43IJohnny Desmond :IWtyne King Sam" Spade :13 News :30jPlayhouse Theater Guild 7:0 " . 1:13 - 7:30 Monte Crlsto Album 7:45 . :0tLetGeorge do'lt Take or Leave It is OlMarried Bachelor K.y Armea :0l Science Editor- Peacha Kafan t:30Ncws Houi ot :41 Byron Jemen JJ-JOjCarvan Symphonies 10:3t,Opera Concert Catholic Hoot l:43 ll:00iOrcheitra News Weather tltlSI Mary A Mere ll:30iPreddie Martin Tex Williams ll;4SNcws News 12:00 Music You Wast 12.13 12:30 12:43 KDYL Mil KCSU lm Assembly of God Sermons to Sons News x' Without End Music House Child's Theater Tunnies Chapel la Bar Three Suits Your Owa Music Ben Light Xavier Cugat Eddie Howard Gypey Strings Collins Driggs Sunday Serenade News Jack Smith Sammy Kayt Rene Vavard Piano Pathways Kay Kyser Modern Concert Bing Crosby Guy Lombtrdt Sunday Salon Paul Weston Concert Hour News Devotional Hour Jack rina Sportlite, A) Newman Erna Sack Mantovanl -KCSU Reporting Hall ot Memories Theater Hour Stardust Operettas Great Waltses Music America Organ Moods Rainbow Bridge News Good Night KSL lift News Chariot Wheels Carolina Calling World News Biggs. Organist Chariot Wheels of Church Air Newt i Tabcraacto ChoCt News . Religious Service Invitation Peoples Platform Nfcws . People Stand - Ch or alien Syncopation . CBS Symphony ? . Symphony Musie of America Music "for Yeej Symphonette Hour of Start Our Mist Brooks Jack Benny . Amos "n Andy . Bergen-McCarthy Red Skelton Corless Archer Horace Heidt Contented Hour Concert Hall ' LDS Church Religious Service MONDAY. OCTOBER 24 :t0Say With Music : :30Sun-Up Frolic :4S 7:00 Robert Hurlelgh t:lSCraftamen I:30jNew 7:4 5 1 Jamboree S:Q0I Hemingway 8:15Gordon Owen S:30Requests S:43By Jensen' .:00Marvin Miller " t:15iWake Up :3tDesign lor You t:4S tt:to:Kate Smith lt:15 Woman's Page lt:30 Songs of Time lt:45 Time ll:00Heatter Mailbag ll:13Harvey Harding 11:30 Serenade ll:43News Old Corral News, Weatbes Swing Partner Sunshine Songs GaaUaht Gaieties Marriage tot fwo linger Awniie Love and Learn Novatime Jaca ttercb Lora Lawtoa Double Todays Children Light of world Life Can Be Road of Life Pepper. Yourie jappmeei 12:00jQueen for Day 12:151 12:3!Cedric Foster 12:45By -Jensen i l:00:News 1:15 Ladies Fair 1:30 Paula Stone 1:45 Bob Eberly 2:00;Voice of Army 2:15 Make Way 2:30 Broadway 2:45i 3:00'Gordon Owen SUSIFrank- Sinatra 3:30Top Tunes S:43 4:00;L. Barry more 4:15lf Hemingway 4:30 Remember r 4:43 S:ttiMemGo Round I Woman's 5:15iJusi for Kids INews Weather 5:30 Tom Mix 'Easy Rhythm S:4S tiewt News, Weather Varieties Emerson 8ml m , UN Cornerstone Close Harmony Let's Take IS Backstaee Wife Stella Dallas Lorenso Jones Widder Brown Girl Marrie Portia races uli Just Plain Hill Front rairell Travelers Aunt Mar . Dr. Paul Eddie Duchin Top of Morning News High Time Varieties Rhythms Lady of House Meditations Market Basket Peggy Lee Your Own Music Perrv Como Care of Baby Noontime Farm Freddie Martin News Sunset and Vine Matinee Melodies Meet the Band Tin Pan Alley News Classics Platter Party Roger Gale Dinah Shore Buddy Clark News Variety Time Tabernacle Ch-df Newt Symphonette Temple Sauert . Pases From Opera srmpoonT new Symphony Hall News, Goodiugat News Jamboree artn to undue) News Harry Clark Potiucs Part Newa Friendly Time News . Margaret Masters Arthur Godfrey - Grand Blast Rosemary Wendy Warret) . Aunt tenny Helen Trent Our Gel Sunday Big sisters Ma Pc-klns Dr Malone Guiding Light News Farming Friendly Arthur Godfrey Hollywood Letter Tun. Tim Garry Moore Hilltop House Perry Mason 2nd Mrs. Burton David Harura News Brighter Day Nor ah Drake Curt Masscr Make Believe News fli.H IS Edward Murrcw |