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Show - - - ' - -- - - " ' PBOVO. UTAH COUNTY. UTAH. SUNDAY. AUGUST 26, f 1945 Editorial . . . Finally, my brethren, be strong in' the Lord, and in the power of his mirht. Epbesians f:ll aa aa- , Acquaint thyself with God, if thou would'st taste His works. Cowper. , Our War Debt If all the Words that have been written about our obligations to the returning servicemen ser-vicemen were laid end to' end, the resulting "text would be very monotonous, indeed. Yet, in view of recent experiences, and in view of the imminent return of millions more of our war veterans to civilian life, it seems necessary to go over the subject attain. It would be absurd to think that the av-erage av-erage person does not realize' his' obligation obliga-tion to the men who braved death, and in atoo- many cases met death, that we at home might go 'on enjoying freedom from the horrors of bombs and shells and the terrors of an invasion and warujn our own soil. We and our neighbors do feel indebted toward these men.' But in every-day practice that feeling seems to be repressed, and we have this picture: The fighter turns in his gun, puts on civvies, and tries to find a job and a home for his family. Time after time he's told by indifferent landlords that if he has children he's out of luck. If he finds a place, the rent is too high for his uninflated pocketbook. In many cases he finds his job filled and he's shunted into an insignificant spot which barely complies with the draft law's requirements. If he wants to build or buy a house, he finds himself .snarled in the red tape of the G. L. loan mess. If he s lucky enough to get a business loan, he's immediately prey for all kinds of sharpshooters. Is this the reception we planned for our sons and husbands and brothers? Can we blame these men if, after repeated instances of such mistreatment, they become bitter and wonder if all those things they were told about fighting for a better world weren't just a lot of malarkey ? There is, of course, an obligation on the part of the veteran. ' The young fellow who left a job as a junior clerk to enlist in the air force, became be-came abomber pilot, commissioned as major with the corresponding high pay, cannot expect ex-pect to step into stich a high-salaried job as soon as he steps out of uniform. Nor can he expect that everyone he meets will know how many times he's been decorated and treat him with added deference. He must learn to slow down the tempo of his living, and go along with the restrictions 'that have been, necessary in wartime and which will continue, in many instances, for many postwar months. The majority ,pf fighters are so relieved to be through with killing that they are glad to live quietly and ask no favors, but there are a few who must learn. Just as some of us on the home, front must learn that our debt to these men is not just a popular say-jing, say-jing, but must be put into daily practice. IT . - Round 'Sorry' But Treacherous The Japanese, those so-polite people, remained re-mained "so sorry" long after they agreed to surrender, and went right ahead with their treacheries. j They were 1so sorry" they didn't understand under-stand MacArthur's orders. They were "so sorry" they were unable to stop their troops from fighting. They were "so sorry" their planes attacked at-tacked our ships after the surrender. They were "so sorry" their antiarcraft gunners fired on our reconnaissance planes at a cost of more American lives. We sincerely trust that General Mac- Arthur, who is certainly, equipped with suf ficient motive and temper, will make the Japanese "so woefully sorry" that they will be most happy in the future to mind their own business and never again attempt back stabbing. Count Your Blessings Now that the' picture begins to assume proper focus, we must admit that this restricted re-stricted wartime life we've just been through had its advantages. As we sit in our weary jallopy, stymied by an impossible Sunday evening traffic jam, hungering for our supper, we'll recall with considerable longing those lovely aft;er-din- ner naps we enjoyed during our A-ration immobility. And how long will it be, now that the ban is off, -before the telephone awakens us at 3:30 on a bleary morning and shrills into our reluctant ear : "Happy birthday, dear'Winthrop, "Happy birthday, to you-u-u-u." And so most of the world turned out to celebrate and went Jap happy ! When General MacArthur said, "I will return," he neglected to mention that the Philippines would be just a stop-off on the way to Tokyo. Some men become proud fathers and pass out cigars others just pass out. A Tokyo broadcast to the Nip troops said, "We have lost, but this is temporary." The word must have a new meaning. By the expression, "So sorry' shall we always know the Japs just a sorry race! The Washington Merry-Go- I Br Drew Pearson A iJUJ jriCtUTB uj. ir turn a g, ;. jcoL Robert Going On in National Affair; iiV 5 a ty (Note Drew Pearson is on vacation. Darryl Zanuck, famed head of 0th Century-Fox, Century-Fox, contributes as west wrier today's column col-umn on post-war Germany.) g By DAERYL ZANUCK Producer of "Wood row Wilson" 2 HOLLYWOOD To my mlrid. the most dis turbing and sinister fact about Germany today is that it is a nation without a conscience. Not long ago, I visited Germany and other sections of EuroDe at the invitation of the psycho! ogical warfare section of the wr department. I went uicic aa vim m group wimn mciuu,m, We were sent to study at first hand what war, as it la. fought today, does to men "and women and nations physically and spirituaiiy.1 In the course of that tour, wg talked to many neoDle. Anions them were military leaders and diplomats, high-ranking representatives of various governments, men ox religion ana men ox iow estate, and men and women who had lived through the terror, some scarred and some ennobled. But shocking as it may seem, we failed to find in Germany even one person; with the slight est sense of shame or war guM They h&ve no realization of the scope or enormity of tii r crime against mankind. They have no compunction. They have become, it seems to me, a people without a som. REV. NIEMOLLER Two' men whom I met in Gerfnany and talked to at length two men of totally different ante cedents and outlook summed .'up for me the German frame of mind today. pOne was Pastor Martin Niemoller, the famous iteboat commander of World war I who defied the1! Nazis from his pulpit and spent eight dreadful years in a concen tration camp. The other was Ma Schmeling, for a brief time the world's heavyweight 'champion who is now a tavern keeper inljHamburg. I ran across Niemoller in Frankfurt He speaks excellent English. He had intended going with his wife to a tea that afternoon but ave that up when he learned that we were in ;the city. As one of Germany's formost anti-Nazis; $e were natural ly eager to taiK to nun. for nis part ne was obvi ously just, as eager to talk to us.il We wasted little time in preliminaries. He had spent two years in, solitary confinement after his arrest out wnen oermany plunged J into war, he offered of-fered his services and his life to the Nazis as a U-boat skipper. We explained : that it was dif ficult for us to understand this rabout-face. His answer was measured and solemn: "1 don't expect you to understand. I expect few people to understand. It s difficult for any one to understand my state of mind unless they, too, nave spent time in solitary confinement. 4 1 had two consciences. On one side I asked myself: "How can I support a: state that is con trolled by these horrible beasts?!? On the other How can I turn down my country: my Germany?" ALWAYS A GERMAN And yet, knowing this horror and having ex perienced it in his own person, this man would not have hesitated to kill for the Nazis. For in answer to another question as to what would have been his conduct had he been restored to active military service, he said bluntly. s; to the best of my ability I would have served Germany and fought as courageously as I could. "Germany is guilty of permitting a monster like Hitler to come to power," he; said, "But our -war guilt ends there. Once Hitler " was in control, we were powerless. ;i Pastor Niemoller. remains an anti-Nazi. He is nevertheless a staunch German; patriot and proud of his nation as a nation. I do not intend to set myself up as a judge but I wonder if his is not the kind of thinking that makes it possible for a Bismarck, a Kaiser or a Hitler to become a national na-tional idol. . MAX SCHMELING CURSES . : I met Max Schmeling in Hamburg. He was immaculately tailored and in excellent health. And he bore a white card issued by the military which apparently exempted him from the curfew and similar military regulations 1 He cursed Hitler and the , Nazis ferociously and he told us. with seeming honest, that he'd been induced to enlist in the paratroopers by deceit . "They told me they wanted jne to get in as a paratrooper- by way of making propaganda and stimulating enlistments in this: branch," he said. "They also said I was too old for ihis kind of action ac-tion and they didn't intend to use me in battle. But shortly after I got in, I found myself jumping jump-ing over Crete. I broke my lei and hurt my back and that ended my service' He, too, like the others I spoke to in Germany, seemed unconscious of the horrOri perpetrated by his country on the rest . of Europe. "It was all Hitler's fault Hitler and his Nazis." They seemed to feel they were altogether blameless, living in a world apart. GOLD FILLINGS OF DEAD In the light of what we saw: on every hand, the visible and concrete evidence of a bestiality such as the world had never known, the attitude of the average German seemed , monstrous. We saw the notorious concentration camp at Dachau and we saw many of the others It was like descending into a pit of inconceivable horror. There were the torture chambersj and suffocation rooms. There were the great yawning furnaces, each bearing a neat sign in Gqrman giving its capacity of human bodies and working hours. There were the dog kennels and the execution blocks. j Perhaps the grisliest sight oil all was a long row of huge boxes each piled to the top with gold fillings taken from the mouths, oil uncounted victims vic-tims who met death at the hand pf the Nazis. On each box was official stamp of r the Reichsbank. GERMANS WELL-FED JJ f Germany, it seemed, has : emerged from- the war in much better condition : than any of us imagine. Her people are far better fed and clothed than any in Europe today, not: even excluding England. They are much healthier. There's little or no evidence of malnutrition. Their factories and plants are being restored with surprising rapidity because they are essential to the economy of the other nations. Already, the Ruhr valley is oper-4 atlng at 30 per cent of capacity i Above all else, it seems to zhey it will be necessary neces-sary to give the Germans back their soul and their conscience. To do that we will have to resort re-sort to every device at our command. At times, we wUl have to be brutally harsh! but that is the only way we can bring them back into the civilized civil-ized family. i jilt ji-lt is my belief that motion pictures can play a very real and a very pronounced part in this task. We can show them directly! and dramatically dramatical-ly the proof of their crime and if extent Our military leaders in Genhan are trying to do this already ' by the distribution of booklets among Germans which show graphically what went on in the concentration camps and elsewhere during the war. f it With all due respect to these leaders, I believe be-lieve the movies can do this moreii effectively. Once made full aware of their guiltl the Germans, I believe, will begin to regain their moral values. Thereafter, fllmavcan be employed to point the way for them to srmore decent approach to life. The fundamentals of 'justice,! fair-play, honor and mercy can be slowly re-established in Germany. Ger-many. Unless this is done, I aijn afraid for the future. We have won a military victory. It remains re-mains to be seen whether we can gain a moral ascendency I; (Copyright, 1943, by the Bell 'Syndicate, Inc.)! t ; Another Challenger .WW THAT WEVE WON THE TlTlE ten tesp fr 4Sr The Chopping Block By Frank C. Robertson One may always trust the younger, generation to be brutally frank. I received a letter from one of them the other day, which began, "Dear Old Block," hd Says he. "I've noticed the -Chop' ping Block isn't its former merry self ... As long as it 4teeps growling, however, it's all right But when it admits sweetness and light it is doomed ... I really should charge you because my only reason for renewing my subscription is to clip your column for you at fifteen cents per clip. But I hate my postman and enjoy loading him down every day, for for this joy I'll foot the bill." Yes. it takes a man's own son to thoroughly deflate de-flate his ego. 5o, just for that, I'm going to let him write part of this column himself. He writes: "This is the night of the end of the war, and it doesn't seem like the end of the war day at all. "I have been reading Japa- Mr. Bobertson nese proverbs. One gives a lesson we snouid take to heart: 'If vou have to kill 'a snake kill it once and for all.' "Thus the Japanese warrior creed must be stamped out, once ana lor an. "I feel very old aifd tired, and quite disturbed. really wasn't prepared for the war to end There seems to be a great void somewhere, an emptiness, a nothingness. I guess I'll go on reading uapanese proverbs. '"When you're thirsty it's too late to dig a well.' 'When there's a beginning there's an end. 'When a rat crosses the street everyone cries, 'Hit him. 'A road of a thousand miles began with one step. 'In plenty think of want: in want do not presume on plenty. 'Talk will never cook rice.' 'When man takes fire into his bosom he provokes his own calamity.' 'The pebble in the brook secretly secret-ly thinks itself a precious- stone.' 'To the eyes of the crow its young one has milk-white feathers. feath-ers. 'A man learns little from victory rmuch from defeat.' . "Learning, without wisdom is a load of books on an ass's back.' 'The bravest of men may be harassed by the lack of one sen.' 'A lean dog shames his master.' , "There's no door for the buying that will shut out the world of men.' 'A woman's tongue is only three Inches long, but it can kill a man six feet high.' 'Where there isn't. any water one can't sail, ships.' 'A man s good name, is as pre' Q's and A's Q What is a bateau? A A flat-bottomed boat, tapered ta-pered at both ends, commonly used by river crews in logging operations. Q What important pain ingredient ingre-dient is imported from Spain? "A Pigment red oxide. Q What percentage of our annual an-nual corn crop of two billion bushels is used to feed hogs and cattle? ANinety per cent. Q For what countries was August 15 Independence Day? A Costa Rica, Guatamala, Honduras, Nicaragua and Salvador, Salva-dor, which overthrew Spanish rule on August 15, 1821. Q What was the date of American Amer-ican invasion of Guam? A July 20, 1944. clous to him as Its skin Is to tiger.' "I have a kindly affection for the oldtime Japanese who putter ed around politely and philoso phized. I .hope their kind isn't abused nor unfairly discriminated against. If you had the nature of the true Japanese you wouldn't let the trials and tribulations of a fruit harvest bother you at all although you might commit hari- kiri if you failed." Some wise man said long ago, "To know a nation get acquainted with its proverbs." I think this, is particularly true of the Oriental races. In these days when hate and the lust for revenge flames high I am glad that my son has taken time to get acquainted with an earlier and kindlier breed of Japanese. There was once a peace' ful Japan which Lafcadio Hearn knew and loved. Undoubtedly some of it yet remains as the basis for a hopeful future once the snakes of militarism and religious re-ligious superstition have been slain. When it comes to that there is kindliness and love for humanity to be found in the traditions of every race. It is greedy, selfish and vain-glorious leaders who have led them off the track into bloody wars of conquest or of trade. Any country that fails to control its leaders instead of being controlled by them is surely marching down the road to doom. About all we can say about the atomic bomb at this time is that it is here to stay. One can't be sure about the human race. Enough power can be unleashed to destroy any nation on earth. It is quite possible that nations may soon prepare concoctions of mass destruction so that if they are surprised sur-prised and destroyed their own implements will carry on the grim job of death after their human directors are gone. There may be great possibilities in the released energy of this new force to create heat and power, and the supply may be as limit less as the sun itself, but the great responsibility facing the states men of the world is first to see that human relations become such that no one will want to use this tremendous force in destructive effort. For all we know the universe may be filled with the ashes of other civilizations which have learned the secret of the atom and used it to destroy themselves. The gods must laugh. Refrigerator For Automobiles Sold By Blind Inventor DALLAS, Tex. OJ.R) Development Develop-ment for use in his car of a home made ice -refrigerator to fit in the car's turtleback compartment has brought to blind William L. Cherens of Dallas a f 100,000 con tract for the right to make the device. The chest is a small refriger ator with space for 25 pounds of ice, enough food for a meal for four people, or four meals for one. and for Z4 bottles. . Cherens describes the icebox as being about the shape of a "little treasure chest. It is 38 inches long, IS inches wide and 13 inches high, and both Cherens and a Dallas firm with which he negotiated the contract believe it will find a ready mark et among sportsmen, farmers, traveling salesmen and tourists. DOCTORS TO MEET AT BUSHNELL HOSPITAL SALT LAKE CITY, Aug. 25 (OR) Bushnell General hospital t Brigham City has invited members of the Utah State Medical Medi-cal association to attend a special spe-cial program of lectures' and clinics clin-ics at the.hospital August 30 and a i. Principal speakers at the meet-ins meet-ins will be Dr. John Emmett from the Mayo clinic at Rochester. Minn., and Dr. Alton Ochsner of. Tulane university at New 0r- leans. Once News Now History Twenty Years Ago From the Files Of THE PROVO HERALD Of Aug. 25. 1925 The chamber of commerce was Investigating the possibilities of interesting manufacture r s o i earthenware products into lo cating a plant near Prove. Sam pies of Kaolin and other raw clay materials submitted to the parties in Los Angeles were found to be of better quality than ex pected. Four boys of juvenile age had broken into four stores in Provo and a Springville residence had also been looted of jewelry, y Four young men were arrested for gambling and $14 in currency was confiscated by- the officers who made the arrest, at a secluded seclud-ed spot north of the Hoover mill. "Owing to this being the first offense, the names of the young men will be withheld," the article stated. Fines of $10 were assessed by Judge George S. Ballif of the city court on each individual. A two cent reduction was announced an-nounced in gasoline which was now selling for 19 cents a gallon. Bob Cunningham of Provo is the official announcer of the Al G. Barnes circus and his son, Sammy Cunningham is one of the performers in one of the featured feat-ured circus acts, it was announced prior to the appearance of the circus in Provo. Marriage licenses were issued to Richard Sterling Glazier and Zella Myrle Penrod of Provo: Jasper Lamar Bird of Provo and Josephine Maurine Hacking of Vernal. Your G I Rights By DOUGLAS LARSEN NEA Staff Correspondent WASHINGTON. Aug. 25 Here are some questions from veterans vet-erans and 'relatives of GIs on the Soldiers and Sailors Civil Relief Act: Q. My husband will be out of the Army in a few days. When the collector of local taxes heard this, he called me up and said we would have to pay all back taxes on a farm we own just outside out-side of town or he would sell it immediately. Can he do this? How much time does my husband hus-band . get to earn money to pay ud those taxes? A. The collector, of your taxing district could not sell the prop erty for such delinquent taxes while your. husband was in the service, and cannot for six months after his discharge, unless., ne se cured permission from the court. The court has wide discretion in this matter. O. Mv husband was involved in a law suit over an automobile accident just before he joined the Navy. He will be out soon and I am wondering how long he will have before his case is taken up? A. The law authorized a court to postpone proceedings for the period of military service and for three months thereafter. O. What does the law say about cars which were bought by a veteran vet-eran before he went into the service and his inability to keep up payments? A. in cases of automoDues ine court may postpone repossessions for the duration o military service, serv-ice, slus three months, or the Mint mav nermit repossession on the repayment by the seuer oi monies paid on account oi ine purchase price. O. Mv husband is with the oc cupation troops in Germany and probably won t get oui ox uk Armv for a year or more. In the meantime I've been having trouble trou-ble with a neighbor regarding a boundry dispute on some property, prop-erty, we have. I think' the pro-dinffs pro-dinffs so far have been unfair but J cant afford a special at-j. torney. What Should I do? A. Contact the local bar associ ation. You will get help there, Desk Chat, Editorial Column DEFINITELY DERISIVE DEFINITIONS CAPITALIST anyone who has acquired more wealth than you have the ' ability. Initiative Initi-ative and energy to acquire. DIPLOMACY the art of letting someone else have your own way. MARRIAGE the consumma- tion of woman's cunning and a man's conceit. SPINSTER what a girl be comes because she lacked the propinquity of a strong man at the time of her weak moments. water eo .the- story v goes and tnen emptied ine iishlntn ine tutr so that they might have big swim, while - she was cleaning CURTAIN Life is a show-Shop, Everybody 'troupes, A few of us are real stars, The most of us art 'supes. But it makes no ' difference whether We're starry queen or down Well aU be together When the curtain comes down. Overheard on the Geneva bus: She is too disgustingly healthy to fall in love." Calvin Coolidge once said: Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more com mon than unsuccessful men with talent.- Genius will not unre warded genius is almost a pro verb. Education will not the world Is full of education derelicts. "Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent "The slogan press on' has solved and always will solve the problems of the human race. Some people get a pat on the back when they really deserve a kick in the pants. WISE (?) GOLDFISH I like the little story about the goldfish. How wise they looked while swimming around in their glass home and how a member of the fair sex deciding to clean the bowl in which her goldfish lived discovered: that they weren't so wise after all. She had filled a large tub with their bowL ? But did the fish so to the edga of the tub and thus enjoy av They did nof, They swam" 'round and round and ''round in Kuui .cireta us me oj uo a DOWII ' s, .. . People are like that. too. They become so used to their own ideas and their own limited vision that the moment some fellow with imagination tries something new, they yell: "It can't be done!"i One must imagine If one would - sxow. Life' would be terribly hum drum if vision isn't exercised if we refuse to reach out for big ger things. Arthur Brisbane once said that, it wouldn't be so very long before ' flying machines would take the . place of our express trains on long journeys just as trains took the place of the stagecoach. But, ne aaaea, very few people win believe that because very few people have imagination. Yet, today, the airplane is not only an accepted convenience but an actual necessity. Are you as wise., as the gold fish? Or are you trying to swim out beyond the 'narrow circle of your day-to-day habits? SLIPS OF THE PRESS . ; . ' A good deal . is- ofen revealed, when the typographer slips a letter let-ter into the wrong place, or otherwise alters the copy before him. There wai this note In a Maine newspaper, which hardly pleased - oneyoung lady: "Miss Maize Coggins, the pop ular stenographer at the bank,, has gone on a business strip to New York." Even more astounding was the omission of the Mg" in "bridges' in the following item in a Ho-: ooun paper; "Two brides .were opened for, traffic in upper New Jersey yesterday, yes-terday, guaranteed to stand the largest crowds. A bad factor, is one who It egged on by ambition and off by the audience. Whats On The Air Today SUNDAY, AUGUST 26 KOVO 1240 KDYL 1820 KSL 1160 S:1S S:Jol :4S Soot Service Sons Servic Boon County KUTA 870 iWoodhddrs INw organ Fantasias 'CoOm CeneerU (Tha Jubilairea IBennett sisters Rendezvous IStory to Order Treasury Salute pa a bub :SSlChureb of Air 1:151 T:3e!News and Muale INewa T:4S!Sunday Varieties IMelody S:eIBSMa Oaas IBibla HJgblig hta IMelodias s:is ! . A Nawa IE. Power Butts New Voices S:3Nws S:4SMusle Church of Air or da. afuslo ISeuUtarnaixas ICamp MetUn I t:t!Bv. X, Zoller News . :1SI . Church or Aft Y:3Votceof Prophecy master 8iners t;4SI Lea Paul Trio Prophecy IHoma Worship INewa (Naval Choir - -(Religious Service Ne lS:MPUgriiB Hour IS:1SI l:3ttlstheraa Hour !:$! Carveth Wells Sunday Sengs waits Serenade - ICarvi (Sund r Let's --- fserei JTalmf naela Ch4s wa& Calla I Correspond enta nrransatianaa (Sweet Swing .- - . .-i INewa IHai 11:0 (Revival Hour 11:151 ll:St 11:JI INewa (Moat tram, Ufa Otound Table I Uohn Kennedey ICncyclopedla (Sammy ICaye ICbun News uick of Air Stow Melody Pictures lS:;Chaplaia Jim 12:151 1 3:3 IB Cunningham 12:45 iDale Carnegie IThe Show (News and Muale Stradivari (Thomas. Nesbitt iWiks Op I (News " lOlin. Dewas l:S!20tb Air rare 1:15) l:30Song Sty lings l:45ITed Maynard F 2:toiTeur America 2:1S 2:30Time tor Crime 2:45Harvey Harding orld Parade IPreview l ask wasnington Man's Family IStory Darts far Pougb Symphony Army Hour ITommy ttarsey Summer. Show I ectrlo Roar ummer Program 3:0Mike McNally 3: 15 3:30Nick Carter 3:45 (Symphony Small Revue C Greenwood Family Hour 4:00Abbett Mysteries INewa I Summer Hour 4:seiMerry Go Round 4:45Uudy Lang America United I Sunday Party Sunday Music I S:oOpinioo Requested IWayne King TJrew Pearson 5:151 ( I Don Gardiner 5:30!Ken Carson Show ! Bandwagon I Quia Kid 5:451 I I :oiMediation Board S.-15I :3l (:4 5 1 Gabriel Reatter I rrine Lanrf ord INewa (Battlefront ITommy Dorsey Fighting AAP i ' fWm. Shlrer IQxxie-Harriet T JReport to Nattoa Men of Vision jBiondie War Town Crisis' (Vesper Service (War Heroes - t:Steel Horizons -Merry Go Round ISummer JEdition (Radio Digest :isl s i iMystery Time I ?:30;Double or Nothing lAmerican Album I . Star Theater . 7:45 jjlmmle Fldler I I Quia Take or Leave it S:SeBrownatene Show (Hour of Charm 8:151 I S:34iName the Song IMeet Me s:i Harry James I (Show I t:tIMelody Highway I Sentimental Trip Ches Pmm t:15Central Utah Headlines Story JVera Maasey 9:3Famlliar Musle iStrange New Comments S:43Guy Lombardo lUtan Man iweignpornoog Jos. r. Truth (New (Classics MerriU Scaker IS:SSINewa IS:iSCoaccrt Hour l:30 l:45t INewa (Greet Operas ICathoUc Hour evival Hour I String .Znsembla 'empta Square ll:00ISwinghift 4Music (News Dance Music Symphony (Mary A. Mercer Musle tou want ii:30iMuaie Pecine story U:4S Freddie Martin IMusio in Night (Orchestra INewa I News Goodnight MONDAY, AUGUST 27 :ew Wise and Shine KMartin AgTonaki Wews S:15 Farm Tips (Time Tt Tunes Four Clubmen tasiMornlng serenade INewa I J,?,. -S:5Treasury Salute IMorning Kevue INewa IFairfield Four ?:0!Frazier Hunt T:l5(Weather Report IsSSlNews T:45Shady VaUey I Fun and Folly I Song Parade , INewa wounaup IBreakfast Club I I INewa IHarry Clarke Sun Up Tunes (News S:S0IRhythm Roundup IRobert St John INewa , A S:15 tLora Lawton (Conre a Poppta I- 8:30IFun with Muale IRoad of Life lAbbe Observes IN S:45l I Arthur Godfrey Uoyee Jordan One Opinion 9:SSArtbur Gaeth f MSiSerenade .SOIWoman'a Pare t:43CUff Edwards Fred Waring IToen Brenneroaa Fashion House I - valiant wo artetv Store IGU Martyn (Light of World David Harum (Ted Mafame Aunt Jenny l:MWiUiam Lang ie:lSiMorton Downe :3Coast Guard Band Kenney Baker lt:45l l:tSR. A. Gunnison For the Ladies ll:15LuncB wiUs bopes I - ll:3S IRomemakers ll:45John J. Anttwmy (Art Baker Milady Melodies Glamour Manor I Kate Smith i t cmifli rRi Sister (Correspond enta meien xren - NeWS lUeVfJ Um VUf vmm Raukhage Talks ILife Can Be C. Bennett IMa Perkins My True Story jNewspsper (Dr. Ms lone 12:0eNews. Music 12:isRbytnm 12:3tLester Smith lS:4St&wap end Sen Guiding Ught (Think About iToday's Children Fun Feat (Women in White iNews . IHymne I Shopper News pirn Petsxsea Rosemary Farm Program Tena and Tim l.-!BuHtin Board l:lf iHarvey Harding i:3fn n amoouues l:45VarieUes 2!Songa For You StlSUobhaos) PamO (Stella DaUas S:3'Summer Melodies (Lorenxo J ones 2:5i IWidder Brown iiim wuii iMwtM Downt UrensK Beaeley IMa Parkins U B Kennedy IHits of the Day (Pepper Young IThe Vagabonds A Woman's Life Wapptoeaa Ladies be Seated (Bachelor Child iBackstaae Wtie uek Keren mouse cany isteiia oa: (Nichols itenorta 'New ISona of Pinueeia Songs (Church Hymns 3:SS!Memory Lane 3:lSJHit Tune S:3S 3:45ISwingUmo . Girt Marries Make Believe Portia Face Ufa I Just plain BUI I Front Farrett fEvelyn Winter j (Marilyn Day ? I Popular Concert (Meet the Miseu.'. 4: ' Judy and Jane 4:l5INewa, Muale INewa 4:3iMarry Go Rouad Aunt Mary 4:451 Dr. Paul Nam tlsa Tuno iQuiacy Howe urroii- INewa Bing Crosby (Easy Acts (Wort Sings .16 Vorld Today S:SIMyatery S:lSSupermaa tniTom aus SSIMuaie nzr-a . rml rrmm . IKnrm ICnhMsra - meperter iDick Tracy a Oa a Clue " (Music Fashions (Jack Armstrong INewa . i raaaa Ranger iHop Harrigaa 1 Man's Destiny a |