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Show PROVO, UTAH COUNTY, UTAH, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1947 Right Down His Alley r.. j Editorial... Which Is the Real Stalin? It is always interesting to learn what Prime Minister Stalfn has to say to the American public. But his answers to questions ques-tions put to him by American writers have a way of being more confusing than enlight ening. His interview by Elliott Roosevelt, j published in Look magazine, is no exception. Some of the answers were familiar, since they weiV substantially repetitions of others given to questions submitted in writing by Americans. There Were other answers that didn't jibe witlviNme of Mr. Stalin's statements state-ments about SqvKt-American relations and world affairs mfprhome consumption. And there weiSiifdtnerlsLwhich contradict Soviet policy as it has come to be known through the United Nations and foreign ministers' meetings. Most Americans, journalists and non-journalists alike, who have had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Stalin seem to have found him an affable, courteous person with a twinkr ling eye, a sense of humor, and no tendency toward excitement or bombastic speech. The tone of his infrequent statements for Americans Amer-icans bears out this impression. Yet he stands before the world as the head of a dictatorship which, at its lower levels of , government, displays too little of Mr. Stalin's confident and optimistic geniality. Hi$ ministers' are notable for frequent bitter speeches and a consistently mulish disinclination disincli-nation to co-operate in international conferences. con-ferences. The official publications of his government gov-ernment go in for bitter, extravagant tirades against American capitalism, policies, manners man-ners and general way of life. What, then, are Americans to believe ? There seem to be only three choices. Either Mr. Stalin's voice is the true voice of Russian Rus-sian policy which elsewhere cloaks a feeling of insecurity behind a brusque exterior; or Mr.- Stalin speaks softly and insincerely while arming his lieutenants in the field with big sticks; or Mr. Stalin's mild views no longer prevail in; Soviet councils. Some men wJuj.inow ;Russia well insist that this last supppsjn" is correct. They insist that it is tr&iather mysterious Politr buro which runs the Soviet Union, and that Josef Stalin is more or less of a figurehead ? whose chief functions to serve as a symbol for popular loyalty; aiid: adoration; still the questiorvffifwhich side of Mr, Stalin Stal-in dual political nature ' predominancy When he addresAieripan readers is ft Stalin the ruler of a great, populous, ambitious am-bitious nation or Stalin the Communist world revolutionist who is speaking? t Until those questions are answered if yideed they can be the diffuse light which Jlr. Stalin sheds in his interviews will continue con-tinue to provide no illumination for a groping grop-ing world. The "Ifs" Are Fading j A month ago when the experts were issuing issu-ing their annual forecasts for the new year, fnost of them hedged their predictions with a formidable array of "ifs." Many of them said that 1947 would b" a year of varying degrees of prosperity if too many strikes did not occur, if inflation could be controlled, if the president and congress could work in harmony, if international relations did noV grow worse or if something else did not occur. ; Although the new year is barely four weeks old, enough has happened to suggest that some of these "ifs" can be discounted, t For instance, prospects on the labor front , are encouraging. Union leaders and repre- sentatfves of management are sitting down to the conference tables in a spirit of give and take that is in sharp contrast to the bellicose attitudes displayed -a year ago. Some prices are declining, otflfcas reduced the price'of cars and marginal trading has been resumed on a restricted basiJ all straws in the wind to indicate that the inflationary trend is being checked. Washington is in a more co-operative mood than it was a year ago. International - relations are no worse than they were in fact, ime competent observers ob-servers "believe there Fras- iieen an improvement. improve-ment. These faint signs do ndt mean that everything every-thing will be serene in 1947. Some' strikes may occur, some prices will ' increase, the president and congress will- clash on some issues and there will be sporadic flare-ups in our dealings with other nations. However, the signs do point unmistakably to a trend toward sanity. It looks as if the hvsteria which has prevailed since VJ-Day at last is j giving way to reason. Much depends upon how rapidly this transition from artificiality to reality in thinking proceeds in 1947. If wm can ease ourselves off the plateau of make-believe and inflated values and down to the bedrock of sound economics fairly promptly, we may be able to avoid the necessity of going through a short term primary postwar depression as we did in 1921. To avoid that ordeal,, is one, of the Challenges of the new year. It should be remembered re-membered that 1946 was a pretty good year for most people despite the fact that almost tfvery national trend was running jn the tfrong direction. Now, with those trends in tfie process of being reversed, we have a fighting chance to get down to safe, solid ground without a serious smash-ufx r The Washington Merry -Qo- Round By Drew Pearson . A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs WASHINGTON The splurge- of recent air crashes is causing considerable worry to the secret se-cret service agents responsible for the life of the president. The secret service is afraid the day may come when the president's plane, "The Sacred Cow," may also encounter bad weather or mechanical trouble. They also know something about the president's propensity for taking off, rain or shine, and it keeps them awake at. nights thinking about it. When he wants to go someplace, he simply goes. Result is that a quiet campaign is under way inside the secret service to persuade the president to abandon air travel generally. They want him to take the train as President Roosevelt did on almost all occasions. FDR enjoyed train travel. It rested him and gave him a chance to set caught up with his correspondence. Truman, however, loves the speed of an airplane. He can get to Kan sas city in four hours whereas it would take him two nights and a day by train. The secret service has never recovered from the scare it received on Christmas, 1945, when Mr. Truman flew home to Independence in weather' that had grounded all commercial airlines. How-i ever, the president is a hard man to persuade, and his secret service bodyguards are not any too soptimistic about the chances of keeping him grounded. The best thing they can really hope for is a new and larger plane from the war department de-partment in the near future. MARSHALL IN BRITISH CABINET If a Britisher were permitted to sit in on an American cabinet meeting, a howl of protest would go up from the isolationist press. However, here is a conversation which Gen. POl Fleming, chief of the office of temporary controls, had with friends after Gen. George Marshall's first appearance appear-ance at a cabinet meeting as secretary of state. "Though George has been a toptlight official in Washington for a long time, this was the first real cabinet meeting he ever attended." said Fleming. Flem-ing. "At least, it was the first, one in this country." "What do you mean?" Fleming was asked. "Well, you see. General Marshall began attending at-tending cabinet meetings on foreign soil. He was present at three meetings of the British cabinet during the war." Note Though Marshall sat at British cabinet meetings, Winston Churchill got sour jpn his determination de-termination to stage a cross-channel invasion and vetoed him as supreme allied commander. I "No MUD-SLINGING,,-TRUMAN ! President Truman's private directions to his staff on harmonizing with the GOP-controlled congress may be summed up in three words: "Keep it impersonal." Truman doesn't want any part of those' free -swinging, name-calling bouts with the . congress that kept the press galleries scribbling scrib-bling when Franklin Roosevelt was in the White House. UttMtai.4jAUubeiM& told . Jhe.jbiQet,.tht he Won't duck a scrap when "honest differences of opinion" arise. ; "We will have our differences with congress," th president told his staff recently. "We are bound to have them. However. I am convinced that I can get along with qpngress as long as we keep our quarrels on an impersonal basis. Let's lay off the personality stuff." fi& Ml - km Minutia THE NEBRASKA UNDERTAKER New Hampsnires sharp-tongued Senator Charles Tobey, is getting the same reputation as anoiner nign-pnncipled Republican individualist the late Senator George Norris of Nebraska. Strangely enough, Tobey's victim is usually the irrepressible ir-repressible Nebraska undertaker, Kenneth Wherry, Wher-ry, who succeeded Norris in the senate. During the debate on the senate small business committee Wherry was first interrupted by Senator Sen-ator Allen Ellender o? Louisiana, who asked why he had proposed a new special small business committee, com-mittee, ratter than extending the old one. Wher ry s answer was tortuous and labored. Finally Ellender El-lender blurted out: "My suspicion is that the senator wants a new resolution adopted so that he can be chairman of the committee, and not permit the senator from Iowa (George Wilson), who is the ranking member, mem-ber, to be chairman." Heatedly. Wherry replied that he had known all along this was what Ellender was getting: at. It was of no importance to him, he insisted, who was named chairman of the new committee. commit-tee. "But I think I have seen quite a few articles in the press in which such a suggestion is made," replied Ellender. "Yes, in Drew Pearson's column," Wherry shot back. "And we can make a pretty good guess about it," said Ellender. smiling. "Yes: Drew Pearson. Drew Pearson!" shouted the gentleman from Nebraska. TOBEY GOES TO TOWN Later Tobey took the floor and repeated El-lender's El-lender's charges. The only motive for setting up this committee and for continuing the war investigating investi-gating committee, argued the New Hampshire senator, sen-ator, was to provide committee chairmanships for Wherry and Senator Brewster of Maine. 'That, Mr. president, is reducing it to the low est terms. But it is not good enough. The price Tobey then recounted that he had been told a day earlier by Senator Bob Taft of Ohio that Wherry and Brewster had appeared before the Republican steering committee last November "pleading the cause of special committees." Wherry asked Tobey to 'yield, but Tobey, with much to say in a short space of time, refused. re-fused. Again Wherry interrupted. "When the senator had the iloor I courteously courteous-ly asked him to yield and he declined," Tobey shouted. Then, as Wherry began to speak a'ny-way, a'ny-way, Tobey thundered on: "I shall heap coals of fire on his head." Again Wherry started to speak, but Tobey drowned him out: "I yield to him provided he uses his own time." Without another word, Wherry took his seat. Red-faced, he did not again try to interrupt Tobey. "The senator," was Tobey's parting shot, "Is not a good trader." CAPITAL CHAFF Alert Senator Brewster of Maine, giving colleagues col-leagues an off-the-record report of his recent Latin American trip, disclosed that British agents are selling British planes all over Latin America and outselling the USA. They are taking orders for delivery on jet planes which will be far ahead of our transports. In two years, Brewster predicts, the British will force Latin Americans in nso Rrit. ish-type instruments for landing thus difficult for American planes to operate on the 'greatly impressed by the way same fields There are now eleven foreign'your department helped me." airlines entering the United States. .... R. M (Copyright, 1947, by the Bell uavls, the West Virginia coal operator who has Syndicate, Inc) I By RUTH LOUISE PARTRIDGE Went to Soroptimist banquet as DeLily Alexander's guest, to hear Dr. Carl Christensen lecture. His wife, the former Alberta HuisK was there, looking just as she used to look, except for the becoming be-coming streaks of silver in her dark hair. Doesn't seem possible that it is more than 30 years since they used to come over to my house after a basketball game for bread and milk. But leave us get away from my memoirs, and down to the reason for this, if any. Carl talked about well, many I the money the things which I cant spell, norjwish without pronounce either, but even 1 1 question. could understand the last part ofj Perhaps this his speech, in which, he said in i is all right in general, that Utah must give up! war time. the idea that she can ever be an agricultural state, and face the fact that she is very rich in minerals, and that our prosperity lies that way. Of course, we have heard it before. Dr. George Hansen has been patiently telling us the same thing for years. Suppose we double the amount of land which can be watered (at a fabulous price) and made to produce, what then? Even doubled, it amounts to very little indeed. Bluntly, it isn't worth it. Utah is a desert state, and we may as well face it. Now, Carl says we must stop shipping our raw mineral ma terial to be processed somewhere else. We get rooked on every car load. The thing to do is build processing plants here. Manu facturing plants. He says that even the Geneva steel is far from a finished product when it leaves. Raw material it seems is about the least common denominator, financially speaking. Why haven't we taken advantage advan-tage of our great wealth in minerals, min-erals, instead of supporting an absentee landlord, or its equivalent? equiva-lent? Well, it all goes back to the early Mormon folklore or something, some-thing, and that is odd, because Joseph Smith said in 1844 when he was running for president, that the air, the land, and the water should be free to all free men, and he advocated putting a dam across "the Mississippi river at Keokuk, Iowa, and one hundred years later, there was a dam across the Mississippi river at Keokuk, for power,' just as he suggested. What I mean is, he certainly didn't seem adverse to taking advantage of whatever was at hand, yet in early Utah, men were excommunicated from the church because they insisted on exploiting the .mines. Our own Uncle Jesse Knight, who would never have done any thing contrary to council, asked permission, humbly, to mine, and promised further that if he were permitted, he would give of his riches to the church and he did. He saved the Brigham Young university from bankruptcy more than once, but the point is, it The Chopping Block By FRANK C. ROBERTSON I with another crisis due to over Whenever a congressman stop production. In another column of having statesmanlike opinions and thinks like a human being he frequently makes sense. During Dur-ing the past week or so a couple of them have come up with ideas about the army which the American Ameri-can people, accustomed to military mili-tary wastefulness, will approve. First is the resolution of Rep. Taber of New York to scrutinize the eleven billion dollar appropriation appro-priation for military purposes. Of course this evokes a squawk from the military who are used to spending a 1 1 but no sound reason rea-son can b c advanced for letting them waste public money in the time honored custom in times of peace. If national security secur-ity can be just as well maintained main-tained at a cost of ten billion 5 ! .liM'-f i fm ! I Robertson as of eleven bil the same paper 4 read where government officials, largely AAA men, had gotten together with the chamber of commerce and issued a stern warning that the world would face a disastrous crisis unless the American farmer increased his output. The state department wants food production stepped up to gain international good will, while at the same time the secretary sec-retary of agriculture is proposing that plans be adopted to curtail ) pruuuiuuH aiung me mil ui me pig killing and banana dumping days when Henry Wallace was secretary of agriculture. It's all very bewildering to a nnnr farmer T Hnnht hnuroopi' if there is a farmer who isn't sure in his own mind that farm I prices are going to hit the tobog gan soon, while costs and wages are still going up. The cartoonists and commentators are having a Roman holiday over the slide in the price of butter. It's all very funny, but blame it on my cracked crack-ed lip if I don't smile. I'm not in the dairy business. I've sold the few cows I had, and right now am buying canned milk for my coffee. But if the sl;de in the price of butter isn't checked soon lion why not save the taxpayer's other products sold by the farmer that much money ? It must be a I will commence to slide along revolutionary idea, for no one with it. It will be like an aval- seems to have thought of it be-lanche gathering momentum with fore. The second astonishing proposal pro-posal is that the War Assets Administration Ad-ministration be abolished and the army itself, and I presume the navy, dispose of the surplus di rectly to the public. There are plenty of chaps in the army who are killing time because there is nothing else for them to do. They couldn't pos sibly do a worse job than the W A A is doing. The government is not getting much back from the proceeds, but the public has to pay high when it gets the stuff. Even little Abner could see that a few jobbers and dealers are getting the gravy from the billions of dollars that went into surplus war materials. The government gov-ernment has the buildings and it has the personel to handle the job. Just why should it be necessary neces-sary to have an enormous divil payroll, and a few big private enterprises handle this stuff with which the army is certainly more familiar than anyone else? The congressman who thought of this simple solution deserves a medal, but my money says his ideas will not be adopted. Congress will hold that the rights of the public, which furnished the money in the first place, are secondary to the profits of the private enterprises which want to handle this surplus. sur-plus. Sometimes I think the motto of the American press should be: "Read the papers, and be confused." con-fused." The other day I read on one weight and distance, and fhe first thing you know discouraged farmers will again be trying to produce. at less than the cost of production, and it's a nice trick which nobody can perforin more than once. Union labor can squall its head off, but when the American farmers face ruin their wages will have to come down, and when consumption is cut by that we will have the inevitable' debacle. de-bacle. Everyone knows that prices are too high all along the line, but unless farmers enjoy parity with industry and tabor prices can suddenly get too low all along the line. And then. I wonder, what becomes be-comes of the schemes to balance the budget and start paying off the national debt? I Once News Now History 30 Years Ago From the Files of THE FROVO HERALD Of Feb. 1, 11T Germany put out 800 submarines subma-rines in keeping with her policy just declared of unrestricted warfare. war-fare. There seemed to be strong feeling developing all over the country in favor of our govern ment withdrawing the German ambassador's passports w h i ch would be an invitation for him to ' leave this country. Germany was planning a starvation blockade block-ade of Great Britain. 0 The BYU secured a substantial increase in appropriation from the church board of education over last year's $75,000 budget based on greater enrollment of students. The latest census report credit ed Prpvo with a population of 10,645, Salt Lake City with 117,-399 117,-399 and Ogden 31,404. The southbound Orem train struck and crippled a coyote on the tracks near Orem. Conductor Frank "Shelladay stopped the train and finished the animal with a rock. He brought the pelt back to Provo as evidence. 20 Years Ago From the Files r Of Feb. 1, 1927 Efforts on the part of organized labor to obtain repeal of Utah's anti-picketing law failed when the lower house of the legislature struck the enacting clause Irom the proposed bill. Chinese protests against the massing of foreign warships and troops off Shanghai fell on deaf ears today as the administration expressed us determination to protect American lives and property prop-erty in the Orient. Tlr Stanlv TW flarlr nf Prnvn was appointed county physician! succeeding Dr. J. Karl Beck. The establishment of a bird re fuge on the Provo river va urged by the local SDortsmon't - l39Ui;UIUUIb ; . 10 Years Ago From the Files Of Fb. 1, 1937 Provo experienced a wet season sea-son with the precipitation 21 per cent on the gross income of pub-utilities. pub-utilities. The supreme court held Washington's Wash-ington's utility tax unconstitutional unconsti-tutional by a five to four decision. The state imrfosed a tnv nf mw. tenth of one percent on the gross income oi public utilities. Charles A. Lfnrtheroh nnr rt m m. iwvn Vlt from England to fly to Egypt. Pioneer Article Series Features Ex-'Y' Instructor A series of Centennial features telling the part Brigham Young university personalities and activities acti-vities played in the pioneer history his-tory of Utah has begun and will be featured each week in the Y News. BYU cammis niwnnr according to Moana Ballif, Provo). eauor. A. L. Booth, 83, pioneer of Provo and former mathematics instructor at BYU, was featured this week in an article written by Hope Harding, Mendow. Camera Fans Tune In KOVO 12:45 TODAY For Camera Club OF THE AIR Visit STANDARD SUPPLY For Photographic Supplies What's On The Air Today SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 2 COUNTY WINS OVER TAXPAYER LEAGUE POCATFXLO, Feb. 1 OJ.R) Bannock county today won another an-other judicial round in its fight with the East Bannock taxpayers taxpay-ers league over proposed issu ance of $1,000,000 in bonds for aj new county high school. The league sought to stop issu- preparations for a recent bond' election were faulty. However, District Judge L. E. Glennon to-! day upheld a county motion for a demurrer to tne league president. would never have been bankrupt,! page of my morning paper a if the mines had been exploited by the pioneers instead of people who were ..bitterly anti-Mormon. anti-Mormon. It isn't too late, but folklore and mores are very very hard to buck. So long, folks. stern warning from the depart ment of commerce that American Ameri-can agriculture was face to face crusaded so hard for peace, is now staging a contest for the bestj; high school essay on "creating a . department of peace. . . . Astute young GOP congressman Gordon Canfield of New Jersey proposes a bill automatically making an ex-president a senator-at-large. He feels that the talents of ex-presidents ex-presidents should not be wasted. . . . . war assets administrator Gen. R. M. Littlejohn is so used to getting brickbats that the following fol-lowing praise almost knocked him for a loop. Joseph G. Gruner of Patcrson, N. J., wrote: ''I am writing writ-ing to tell you how cordially I Work Wanted We can give immediate repair service on all makes of cars. Guaranteed Workmanship at New Low Prices Kitchen Motor Co. 118 North 1st W., Provo 1 fc. Charlie McCarthy with EDGAR BERGEN 6:00 p.nv Master of nimble wit Fred Allen 6:30 p.m. KOVO KDYL KUTA KSL 1240 1320 570 1160 6:00 On the Range Top o Morning Newt :1S . . . The Mariner 6:301 American Music Carolina Callinr 6:45: ; . P g 7:00; Young People Wildwood Church American Farm Newi ' 7:15' ' E. Power Bins 7:30News News Labor. USA 7:43 Roadside Chapel Quartet Voice of Business Johnson Family T-OOiBible Hour Radio Pulpit Pilgrim Hour Church of Air 8:15 8:30iProphecy Voice Down Bible Institute 8:451 i " - 9:0jBible Institute Child" Craft The Funnies News 9:15 Church ot Air Over Jordan 9:30,Our Duty News. Novatime Rome Worship Tabernacle Choir 9:45,Christian Science Masterpieces Service lO.OOiPilgriro Hour Bob Eberiy Prophecy News . io-.nl , t2L? Sonf - - Religious Servlc 10:30Lutheran Hour News - News Learning 10:451 Dave Rose Show Dick' Jurgens 11:00 Married for Life Master Singers John Thompson Platform 11:151 Melody Leo Durocher 11:30 Sunday Music Round Table Sammy Kaye News 11:451 Wigglesworth 2:00,3,' Time Robert Merrill Southernaires Music - 12:15 Piano Portraits 12:30 Bill Cunningham Harvest of Stars News Here's to You 12:45Camera Club . Heart Throbs 1:00 News The Parade Danger Symphony 1:15 Music Dr. Danfield 1:30 Ray Block 1 Man's Family News 1:45 Sam Pettingill 2:00 Mystery House Symphonett Our Children 2:15! 2:30 Mysteries Quiz Kids Green Hornet Hour of Charm 2:451 3:00 The Shadow Symphony Darts for Dough Family Hour 3:15! 3:30 Quick as Flash Counterspy West Builders 3:45! ; Wm. Shirer 4:00 Those Websters News Missing Heirs Ozzie and Harriet 4:I5 Across Footlights 4:30 Nick Carter Open House Bible Story Kate Smith 4:451 ; 5:00 Merry Go Round Jack Benny . Drew Pearson Gene Autry 5:15 Frank Sinatra News 5:30 Melodies Bandwagon The Clock Blondie j 5:15 6 Too Mediation Board Charlie McCarthy Symphony Sam Spade ; 6:15i , 6:30 Investigator m Fred Allen ... Vesper Service I eSjDetective' . i- News 7 -OOlEiploring Merry-Go-Round Walter Winchell Hildegarde 7:13 Louella Parsons 7:30 Double or American Album Jimmie Fidler Eddie Bracken 7:45: . . Police Woman 8ToOGabrieT Heatter Don Ameche Theater Guild fake or Leave It 8:15! 8:30 Symphony Hall Meet at Parkys Musical Show 8:45i ' . 9:00jWm Hillman Bob Burns News Church Speaker 9:15 Orchestra Memory Lane 9:30 Three Suns Star Dust News ' 9:4S!Orcncstra Melody ,' : News Catholic Hour IO:00'News Telcsnik Musie Revival Hour Tabernacle Choir 10:15 Music of Masters 10:30' Catholic Hour String Ensemble 10:431 ... " . 1 1:00 Organ Reveries News News Temple Square 11:15! Mary A Mercer Music You Want 11:30 Dance- Parade Henry Russell Concert Hour 11:451 vV 12:001 .r 'Music You Want Chick Floyd 12:15 To Dreamland 12:301 - 12:45 iNews MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3 6:00 Sun Up' Frolics I The Old Corral Juke Box News 6:15 ! The Songsmiths B:30 News News News Farm Roundup 6:45 Wake Up Time 1 The Old Corraj' Juke Box 7:00!Farm Journal News 7:15 Shady Valley ,.'" Harry Clarke 7:30, News -fej. News News Potluck Party 7:45!Shady Valley " Reveille James Abbe News - 8:0olNews Top of Morning Breakfast Club Melody Parade 8:15iMusical Clock Nelson Olmsted t 8:30 Say With Music Road of Life New , , 8:45i Joyce Jordan David Hamm 9:00'CeciT Brown Fred Waring Tom Brenneman My Serenade 9:15Tell Neighbor Euric Madriguera 9:30Serenade Jack Berch Galen Drake Grand Slam 9:45iMosic ' Lora Lawton :. Ted Malone Rosemary 10:00 Good Morning Sing and Smile Glamour Manor Kate Smith 10:15 Jerry Sears 'Kenny Baker Kenny Baker Aunt Jenny 10:30'Woman Page For the Ladies. Club Time Helen Trent 10:45 Bing Sings Betty Lane Our Gal Sunday 11:00 George Putnam Take It Easy Vera Keene Big Sister . 11:15 Little Show Charm School Ma Perkins ll:30 Jacxle Hill Wishing Well My True Story Dr. Malone 11:45 Jamboree News - ' ' Church Hymns Road ot Life. 12:00:Ce3ric Foster Today's Children, News , . 12:15 Smile Time Woman in White Baukhage Perry - Mason 12:30Queen for a Day Masquerade Songs of Day Farming 12:451 Light of World My Dreams 1:00 News Life Can Be Prarie Platters Bob and Victoria 1:15 Studio Party Ma Perkins - Walter Kiernaa Bouquet for Yow 1:30 Pepper Young Master Minds Lone Journey ' 1:45 Musical ' Comedy Happines i Studio Tour Easy Aces 2:iErsklne Johnson Backstag e Wife. Bing Crosby House Party 2: 15! Johnson Family Stella Dallas - News 2:30:Music Lorenzo Young -, Newt Evelyn Winters :45 Hollywood . Wldder Brown Ken .Linn Milady's journal 3:00iNews Girl Marries What's Doing Window Shopper 3: 15 Afternoon Revue Portia Faces Life 3:30iSwtng Club Just Plain Bill Bride and Groom 2nd Mrs -Burton 3:451 Front Farrell ' Meet the Missus 4:001 Time on ' Hands Ladies Be Seated Off the Record 4:15! News , " : Randevu , 4:30;Merry Go Round Aunt Mary A Edwin C. Hyi Tune Time 4:45 Buck Rogers Dr. Paul Dick Tracy Robert Trout - 5:00Hop HarrigaH Woman's Secret Terry and Pirates School of Air " 5:15 Superman News Sky King . 5:30 Ridin the Range Music Fashions Jack Armstrong News 5 :4 51 Tom Mix -U. V KaHenborn Tennessee Jed Date--with -alc |