OCR Text |
Show They Both Could Get Along Foster Desk Chat, Editorial Column PROVO, UTAH COUNTY. UTAH. FRIDAY, APRIL 4, 1947 Eel i to rial... Up Above the World So High A few days ago the human eye was permitted per-mitted to loolt upon a scene which, paradoxically, para-doxically, the eye has never, seen and perhaps per-haps neve will. It was a view of the earth taken at ah altitude of 100 miles by a radio- operated camera in a V-2 rocket. A hundred-horizontal miles are as nothing noth-ing today. Man can fly them in a wry few minutes. A hundred vertical miles can easily be encompassed by man's imagination. But the idea of human presence at that distance above the earth's surface is incomprehensible incomprehens-ible to most of us. The rocket's camera simulated that human hu-man presence, and the result was both inspiring in-spiring and humbling. There was the curve of the earth. There lay a section of a recognizable recog-nizable globe. Man had known for centuries that this would be so, though he had never really seen it. Now a product of human ingenuity in-genuity had brought back to earth visual proof of human wisdom. "But if the earth's shape were recognizable, recogniz-able, its features were not. Mountains were merely patterns of light and shadow. A great body of water was a black patch. Clouds were tiny dots and clusters. There was no evidence of what some have called a minor superficial phenomenon of this planet life. Yet man, looking at this new picture, could know that down there where those tiny dots and clusters appeared there was a thin blanket of atmosphere. Beneath it were towns and roads and moving creatures. And he could know that there were also trouble and pain, greed and anger, sorrow and death. . From the point where the rocket -camera's shutter opened a point infini'tely close when measured by the astronomer's yardstick yard-stick the race of man could destroy itself without the camera's noting it. The explosion explo-sion of a hundred atomic bombs would only add a few more puffs of cloud to the picture. A hundred miles are as nothing. Yet from that short distance in- space the strife of men and of nations,- and most of the things that they strive' for. are not only unimportant. unimpor-tant. They are invisible. Man's searching wisdom, however, is not unimportant. The fact that he sees without being seen is remarkable. Even bis V-2 rocket is remarkable. Man should work hard on his rocKet. not to arm it with abigger warhead but to send it flying higher with bigger and better cameras. He should make more and more pictures pic-tures out in space, and ponder them. Perhaps then, after a while, he would realize that he is a terribly lonely creature in a coldnd limitless universe. He might even come to the conclusion that it would be better for human beings to band together for comfort and happiness than to busy themselves with plans for invisible destruction. destruc-tion. , 1 . 'wm3SkS w The Washington AA er ry-Go- Round By Drew Pearson A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs WASHINGTON The entire nation was deeply saddened, by th tragic death of 111 coal miners at Centralia, and it is devoutly to be hoped that the disaster will prove a lesson to mine operators who have resisted federal mine inspec tion. However, if is sometimes healthy to see whether there is any blood on the hands of those who charge other people with murder. And a check-up on John L. Lewis's record makes one wonder whether his memory is short or whether he had tongue-in-cheek when he hurled the murder mur-der charge at Secretary Krug. It so happens that Centralia. 111., is in the center of a coal field where John L. Lewis . staced one of the bloodiest civil wars In labor history against the Progressive miners. When it ended. 21 of Lewis's rivals Were dead. And, unlike the Centralia mine disaster, they did not die accidentally. Page after page of testimony taken by the Illinois Mining commission show how Lewis's henchmen carried on this bloody battle. As conclusive proof that this war had Lewis's blessing, he actually paid $300,000 out of the United Wipe Workers treasury to Carl Elshoff, owner of a mine at Springfield, 111., to close down, thus throwing rival Progressive miners out of work. In other words Lewis paid out the dues of his own men to a mine owner, who otherwise would have given gainful employment, as a reward re-ward for closing down. Not far from Centralia also ' occurred the famous Herrin massacre, where the Steamshovel-men's Steamshovel-men's Union first started strip mining. Lewis sent his miners an inflammatory telegram describing them as "outlaws," following which 400 Lewis men surrounded a handful of steamshovel workers, work-ers, marched them into a field, lined them up after the manner of the Nazis, and mowed them down in cold blood. 1 TViia te IKa man u'hr. nnw nninte a finapr at Secretary of the Interior Krug and cries: "Murder."j Treatment Of Brain Hemorrhages inese are aisu some ui mc uuuga gcuun Pert and Pertinent . vLi Yum, an ancient (if not venerable) Chinese, claims' to have attained the advanced age of 214 years." Life Facts. was this figure arrived at by dead reckoning? "Gasoline consumption is increasing in-creasing steadily." News Item. perhaps that is because it is increasingly difficult to find a parking place. "Otters frequently eat only 4hel heads of the fish they catch. Wild Life. anyone who says the otter oughta try the rest of the fish oughta ask the otter. "Give a man plenty of rope. . proverb and, he'll get himself all tangled up with some woman. probing the Centralia tragedy might query John L. Lewis about when he pontificates before them. However, no legislator yet has had the nerve to tangle with mighty John. Note The Washington Merry-Gp-Round, as its contribution to mine safety, will publish the names of future mine operators who flout federal fed-eral inspection recommendations. BACKSTAGE IN MOSCOW If I had the ambition I'd like to write Of jewels and pearls For dainty lovely Charming- girls-Trolley girls-Trolley cars Love on Mars -Melodramas and swing... Or, most anything. Right and wrong, The weak and strong. Courtship, short and long. Busted romances, Movies . . . dances . . . Peanuts, flags, Riches, rags. Contented faces, Foreign places, Folly and divorce, Without recourse Moonlit trails, Bridal veils, Planes with wings And other things Without om mission . . . Td like to write But I lack the ambition! The Doctor Says By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN. M.D. Written for NEA Service Hemorrhage over the surface of the brain can be located by mak- Uing holes in the skull with a Durr, ana me oiooa cioi iormea can be removed through the same openings. Usual cause of the bleeding over the brain surface is injury to the head. Dr. Harold C. Voris reports in the Journal of the American Medical Association on his ex perience with 100 patients who rhage are headache, dizziness, weakness, paralysis of one side of the body, and mental disturbances krangmg from mud personality changes to loss of consciousness. General Behavior-Victims Behavior-Victims become confused and do not know where they are or what they are doing, with the result re-sult that some of them are labeled mental cases. When hemorrhage is suspected, an opening can be made into the skull through a small scalp in Though U. S. diplomats at Moscow are engaged en-gaged in the deadly serious business of writing the peace, thev sometimes slip in a little humor. Moscow advisers were informally discussing i nad develoDed brain hemorrhages cision after iniection of a local one of the main problems worrying the delegates'.,,, the result of injury. The ma-i anesthetic. A small burr hole is how German industry can be built up sufficient-, jQi-ity recovered following the re-i made, and if a clot is present, it injoval of the blood clot. appears as plum-colored material The brain is protected by skull, under the thick membrane coat- bones, and in addition it is cover-ling the inside of the skull. The eo by a tough membrane which blood is ;sed through the lines the inner surface of theisame hole. skull. Over the brain surface the I " : . Question: I had a facial par- head is struck a blow, the brain lalysis about 10 years ago, and the effects have completely disappeared disap-peared except for a slight trace around one eye. Is there anything that I can do? ly so she can pay reparations but at the same time SO sne will noi oc miuiik chough w wsjc nai. me conversation revoivea arouna wnai are war industries? While "It was agreed that steel plapts contribute to war, it was also agreed that steel is indispensable to peace. Remarked one delegate: i veins form a loose network. If thei "Even an aspirin factory is a war factory.1K-,j c.,i, ki, h kr,in' since a modern army cannot fight without aspirin.' may be displaced in it's long axis 'And a plant manufacturing baby carriages is also a war plant." quipped General Lucius Clay, commander of U. S.-occupied Germany, "Because it helps the infantry." UNDER THE DOME Two Down Johnny Evers' death leaves only Joe Tinker Tink-er alive of baseball's immortal double-play combination and he with one eg removed by amputation in January. Frank Chance, the ""Peerless Leader" at first base when the trio was making baseball history from 1902 through 1912 for the Chicago Cubs, died in 1924. But baseball fans won't be forgetting them, nor the lines a young columnist for the New York -World wrote in 1907. when the Cubs were kicking the Giants around: These are the saddest of possible words Tinkers to Evers to Chance. Trio of beaxcubs and fleeter than birds, Tinkers to Evers to Chance. Thoughtlessly pricking our gonfalon bubble, Making a Giant hit into a double. Words that are weighty-with nothing but trouble Tinker to Evers to Chance The Cubs bought John J. Evers from the Troy, N. Y., town team for $200. and it didn't look like much of an investment. Evers weighed only 95 pounds then, and never more than 130 including his uniform, lie and Joe Tinker, shortstop and equally scrai-py, scrai-py, fought at the drop of a sock, in clubhouse or smoking car but on the field there was never the slightest rift in their matchless teamwork. Evers and Tinker said not a word to each other in the last two years they played together. Johnny Evers, called "The Crab" and "The Trojan," was the brains of the trio, the second-base pivot man in the double-play combination. com-bination. It was Evers whom the police had to rescue from enraged fans on the Polo grounds when he made a goat out of Fred Merkle in 1908. Merkle neglected to touch second base when Don Bird we 11 drove in what should have been the winning run and a pennant for the Giants. Evers shoved through the fans and touched second. Umpire Um-pire Hank O'Day. ruled Merkle out. The game was replayed and the Cubs won. with Joe Tinker starting the 4-to-2 scoring with a triple off the great Christy Mathewson. Little Johnny Evers was one of the smartest smart-est players in baseball. He had to be to fit into that famous wrecking crew. which causes some of these veins to tear and a clot to form. If the clot cannot be absorbed, it increases in size and causes the symptoms to be progressive. Symptoms for brain hemor- Barbs By HAL COCHRAN Time saved by crashing traffic lights is often lost wailing for an ambulance. 0 Why does the tax collector " with his hand in our pocket always have to roll up his sleeve? Soon folks will be tramping haphazard over hill and dale. No Once News I Now History 20 Years Ago From the Files Of April 4. 1927 Clashes between Chinese and foreigners were reported toaay in two Yangtze valley cities Chunking and Hankow as turmoil tur-moil continued in China. United States troops fired with machine guns on coolies aboard a steamer at Chungking. The Fascist ace. Commander Francesco de Pinedo, took off from Medina Lake, near San Antonio, An-tonio, Texas in his hydro-mono-1 plane for some point in New Mexico on the third leg of his trans-American flight. Morton High of Cicero, 111. won the national high school basketball bas-ketball championship, defeating Batesville, Ark. 18 to 16. 10 Years Ago From the Files Of April 4, 1937 The Ogden high school won the debating honors at the speech tourney. A new edict was issued by the Nazi party agency as follows: "We request that every hen lay between 130 and 140 eggs a year." Present production was only 90 eggs per hen. 1 o Chesley Peterson of Santaquin. representing the Payson highjtation: "When Englishmen argue to white heat, a fist battle follows; fol-lows; in Italy, it is a stab in the back with a stiletto; but in America, when we get .to the fighting point, we laugh in each wonder the spring flowers are wild! , Folks in a southern town want to stop milk deliveries in the wee morning hours. Who's going to help father find the keyhole? New styles will give young men a chance to really tog out Last night our neighbor in the next block returned home, stalled stall-ed around a while to see just what mood his wife was in be fore announcing wearily: "Dear, I've been-'to every notion counter in town but none of them can match that piece of ribbon you gave me this morning." Instead of the expected withering wither-ing tirade, his wife exclaimed joyfully: "That's wonderful. Now I can be certain that there'll be no other hat at church Easter morning just like the one 1 am making!" SMILE Every time I get all tangled up and circumstances seem in a merry plot to bring about my undoing, un-doing, I stand off and look at things and begin to smile. And you can't imagine how the ability to see the funny side of things. ..even of one's own troubles. . acts as a weapon with which to frighten of the ogres of despair. Of course, there are folks who never smile, who take themselves and the world so blamed seriously serious-ly that their dispositions are ingrowing. in-growing. But I have fodnd that the-average man who is doing worthwhile things, who is trying to put into life as much as he gets out of it or more, has an appreciation appre-ciation of and an ability for,"She practical application of a saving sense of humor. Somewhere we read this quo- school, won first place in the Future Farmers oratorical contest con-test at the BYU, His -subject: "Land Planning--Today's Need." Le Roy Bunnell was the instruc tor. Second was Grant C. Cluff,! other's face." Lincoln and third, Keith Boyer, Springville. Bill Rita led the Provo American Amer-ican Legion's rifle team to victory with a 97 point score. it you re wearing -a sour expression, ex-pression, brother, go out and drink a couple of pecks of ozone . . .and smile! Half of your troubles never happen. Answer: Unless it is disabling jthls Sprjng. And the women will or disfiguring. I would not try to do anything about it That's Where the Money Goes run them a clothes second. Q's and A's The private session of Ohio legislators at Senator Sen-ator Taft's home last week was featured by a short and swpet speech bv Senator Bricker statine that since he had stepped aside for Taft in 1940 and Taft had stepped aside for him in 1944. it was. now his turn to vield to Taft for the presidential I By PETER EDSON ! printing press money. Before thei Q What were the speed and nomination. jAll hands then rallied to push Ohio'sNEA Washington Correspondent war the Greek, drachma was! flight specifications for Army's lavonte son toward me wnite nouse tnougnj washiivutun, April 4 (NEA ) worth a little less than a cent 'r piane, purcnasea in iwuo: some with tongue-in-cheek. .... Someone re- Two days of testimony by Un-!,o7 lhA riniiar n.irini th. A One hour's flight, 40 mph marked that when the smoke of senate battle dersecretary of State Will Clay-i. ,. '. j . . ... with pilot and one oassenaer. The ton before senate and house fore- inuauon "as so Daa ,n ,n im ptane, piloted by Orville Wright, ign affairs committees reveal that! the government put out a new 1 4 mph, a trifle better than an the Greek government which the issue of currency in which one automobile could do in those days. United States now proposes tonew drachma was exchanged fori back is all but bankrupt. How 50 billion of the old ones. That' Qwhere did metal for the badly it's broke can be revealed wiped out the value of all Greek famed "Damascus blades" of the only by digging into supple'men- bonds and bank accounts? Middle Ages come from?'- tary government economic re- Today currency is exchanged; A-M.,.h nf it m f mm Wi clears away, tho public will, see Taft in clearer perspective ar.d his presidential chances will be better But many had the distinct feeling that if the Taft bandwagon didn't roll fast enough, Bricker would be, quite willing to unsheath his tword and bow back into the running. . . . There's usually a backstage brain truster in the lives of great men. FDR's early life, for instance, was aided by Louis Howe. And when ex-Gov. Charles 1 ports. on the open market at 8000 drach-1 nna nt h. riit nrH..r.r. r Greece has about the same area mas to the dollar. That makes onesteei as Louisiana, but Greece has three drachma worth one-eighth of one '' times the . population. Picture one-thousandth of a cent. In short, q qj wnat country is Pnom- ixuisiana wun nan ner roaas ui uvuig in ureece is nov penh the capitaP gone, half her bridges out, 180.000; 100 times as high as it was in 1934 . r-mKn r m . . i ,.,, ' ... , A Cambodia, part of Indo homes destroyed, a million peo-. Wages have gone up 75 times.. china pie homeless, their livestock and But even so, the average Greek aim hums icuuicu uy uon , ouiiamuys real waees are now oniv r uiu r-ki i 1 when Whitman became covemor If vnu lrmlrimnn M- t k.'i .w- fL. to tne United States, behind elder statesman Bernie Baruch and his ad- shipping sunk, and the port of ard of living was one of the low- ftnt public relations today, you will lind the New Orleans destroyed. That was est in Europe. same Herbert Swopo who started Whitman to- Greece at the end of the war, Fnr thi VMP th ward the governorship. with the ports of Piraeus and Sa-'l. Jf.Z? .JL V: lonika substituted for New Or- milUoni wi(h expenses of $196 million a $21 million deficit. The Whitman died in New York the other day most people had forgotten that it was Herbert Bayard Swope. then a young reporter for the New York World, who woke up District Attorney Whitman at 2 a. m. after the famous Rosenthal murder and made him visit.the scene of the crime. Swope was Whitman's brain truster during the sensational months when police lieutenant Charles Becker was sent to the chair, but he would not go to Albany What's On The Air Today FRIDAY. APRIL 4 KOVO 1240 :0Burl Ivies : IS Holly House :3 Leave to Girls C:S 7:M!Gabriel Heatter 7:15iMuic of Star 7:3,B. Drununond ?:4S S:0 Musical Hawaii :15Henry J Taylor S:3SfFulton Lewis Jr. 1:45 Jimmy Dorsey 9:iLet George Do It :1S. 9:3 Newt :45SporUcast I::Ncwc lv:lsUoe Sudv l:39Eddy Howard l:45j ll:a;Organ Reveries 11:151 ll:39Dance Parade ll:45l KDYL 1320 Music News Alan Young People are Funny WaJU Time Mystery Theater Bill Stern Music Supper Club Barry Wood The Band Box Jelesnik Music News Casa Cugat faie Moonught Senator Taylor News Terrible Meek KUTA 570 Lone Ranger Your FBI Break the Bank The Sheriff Sports Show Sports Cavalcade Fat Man Rhythm Rhyme Polka Party News. Sports Billy Reese Van Welch Rhythm Patterns Mert Draper Freddie Martin Music UI One SSL 1160 Baby Snooka Thin Man Ginny Simms Moore-Durante Theater Lowell Thomas Jack SmiUi Interlude News Tribute to Smith News Long Life Sol Carson SATURDAY. APRIL 5 A-pr. V. K. Wellington Koo. RADIO CENSORSHIP ...... ''leans ! To get the full picture of William B. Shirer's UNRRA poured $354 million Creek foreign debt is $67 millibn, i exit from Columbia Broadcasting you have to go; into Greece over $250 million of over half of it held by Greek- pai-K io me oays oeiore Miner, wnen Shirer was " suppnea oy tne unneo siaies. Americans in the United States. Naziland. Shirer did a great job for the American public both with his book and on the air. and CBS was proud of him. More recently, however. how-ever. Bill has not been enthusiastic over loans to Greece and Turkey, has raised some red flags regarding a drift toward war. Now, after long years of service. Bill is off the air. A president can create an emergency and thus create reasons for his continuance in office. Sen. Alexander Wiley (R) of Wisconsin. If .the United States is to furnish world leadership it must have a world outlook. Henry Wallace. We all live on the same main street. We are all closely interdependent. Anthony Eden, former British Foreign Secretary. - 1 f Tt C" . . . .. u. ii . . j mi . i " woo runesfjoiraem m oermany ana one or tne an ui n weru ior 100a. ine omer n t f 1h ia n,iili ' ' ' ' " J . ' VI naill IIIC W UI 111 rtTKiirUlNE v . . l auuui v.-uuatA, lUl ITMDD 1 . 1 TT.Il 1 1 Kl C?.. I -Jready advanced $181 milion and .reconstruction, and miscellaneous Gr,etat BrHa,n $44 m!Uion' laiH Thi. mnv hsv. Iront mlllinn. It IS HOW PrODOSed tO Eive $350 from starving, but it didn't begin ;HHon more. Fifty million dol- to do the Job. 1,,,s W1U Ior uireci renei ui Because of the food shortages, follow up on the UNRRA ship-! prices soared. The Germans and -ments ending March 31. Twenty r Italians took about $1 billion out million will be for aid to Grek l iu. ..... L.K a tfrifMll t lll-A Fiftv mill inn in-, O ... , , . . i KJX J I CCic UUi 1 1 1 k ' If JVT Weir IlCtll " - - - 7 v se ...ShTrR occupation costs, half as ma- aid for industrial re-i issued by CBS officials that it is difficult to knowlteriajs ot Daid ri,r' , habitation. ed Shher HoweJeT XJlT T'' The Grceks tr" to et on 'or Greek labor to do the re-j ed bhner. However, when the Pearson-Allen team construction and for huilriin ma. was imS.eftosahve XrJT1' regarding lend-lease -SS!tS'to Greece? iTh-Zl iTh-Zl onfnfo. Li hmhS f E ""1,0." pollt-' Russia, and animendment wastimated another $80 million will prediction that FDR would defeat Wendell Willkie i wo000 worth oY o f refined iif " " tP. Vhi8 J,nothe5 i in 1940 a foregone 'certainty sent cold shivers l'?2 mnt w. L?,t ? iTi3.tS0mill.,on 18 io be dvnced up and down the sponsor's back. equipment was about to leave thetthe Greeks to modernize, equip1 UA. and train thpir armv 1 T . 1. 1 o. . t . of State Marshall sent a confi- 'i6?.? "rSSh!' "l" dential cable to Undersecretary o.2" "Jf nvp1?! S' Rtl A,hr.n urhlrh mPnriHi1 Of UNRRA, the POStWar Meanwhile, the Columbia network has been increasingly timid about freedom or the air. and in 1943 parted company with one of their star commentators, Cecil Brown. .He bad been trllina- some unpleasant truths about the conduct con-duct of the war. SEWER OR bRAIN CLOGGED? r m WHY DO THIS? Ass1 slew, catdy WMicMry OR THIS? htefficicat msefcisa roddstf MMttiy aiMfcei we deft inf 4cW. Mtkt miif mI TEMPO RAtr OPEN. HNGT State Acheson which surprised thT neW ' proposais-rnd S5 Zted tZ "crfgre s OK total comM to7TlMmmfon fsUtSntoO Te.0;'niion they're -talking. Meanwhile, the two most fearless champions fining equipmesfc to Russia. M to nwrttnJ:" of air freedom are the American Broadcasting Marshall's request is based on " . cover ine ne" 13 I"on"ft' company and Mutual. ABC's courage is well the fact that the JRussians already u ne Amor J'ou study this, pic- known and lcne established But thouoh Mutual had obtained r4itle to the ril!Lu":'. me worse it iooks. fien is partly dominated bv the Chiraco Trih.m'. leauinment under earlier lend- BOurke Hickenlooper asked Sec Colonel McCormick. it was his network w.Tich ilease and since, tie contends, they took on Cecil Brown and which has now offered I already own the nroDertv. he an outlet to Bill Shirer. Thouch he mav murder 'wants them to have permission the news in the Tribune, Col. McCormick seems (to ship it. Some congressmen are! "Wc do jnot contemplate fail- to oeueve mat all sides should be given a chance a litle dubious, though inclined ; urC ald Clayton "fifteen to be heard over a radio network, and lets to think that if anv small eonees. months in this world is. a ffoori sions will make Marshall's path'10ng ume, and a year from now easier in Moscow, it should be conditions will be better." granted. t The question everyone in (Copyright, 1947. by the Bell Washington is now askina- himself Syndicate, Inc.) .lis. "What else is there to do?" Mutual's capable chief, Ed Kobak, operate accord- L OIL REFINERY TO RUSSIA Some weeks ago there was a big outcry" inctn- retary Clayton, "If, after having;; spem an una money imngs get no better then what?" CALL YOUR MAN WITHOUT MUSS OR FUSS. Ms Irsm- iatt Mi Eke trie ROTO.ROOTEft w uteUy ismave (tpsfe. ' N't th messm y . . . QUICK. SANlTARX 4 GUARANTEED. main uon thi ORIGINAL ROTO-ROOHR Don L. Wissmiller Manager 231 South 1st East PHONE 2146W :tJSunUp rrolie Th Old Corral Agriculture News : . Songs for You :3 News News News S.OlWake-Up rime The Old Corral Yawn Patrol Jack Searle Sings T:tl News 7:lS,Chisholm Trail Garden Gate T:3!News News News Jambnree 1:45Bobby Norris Coffee Time Crossroads News S:t Musical Clock Sunny Side Up News Barnyard Folliei .S: IS News . Music S:l Jackie Hill Reporter Melody Parade :4S :tNews Week-End Frolic Bstty Moore Warren Sweenej tMSUttle Show Weekend Frolic Corns a-Poppin' Let's Pretend :3.Say with Music Ed McConntU Piano Playhouse Adventurers l:tPro Arte Four ChUds Friend Tr. Junction LXS Conference l':t A-Z in Novelty '-VJS- Red Cr 'O' Ladles Polka Party !:, Amateur Time L " Farm. Home "lour ' 1 1:1 S Benny Goodman ll:3News Rhythm 1 1:45- Police News Symphony Choose the Hits Dude Martin News U.IS' USAC Speaker 12:3 Ray Robbins The Baxters Lunch Party Give and Take :4SJ Masters Golf , l:M!News ' Frank Mcrriweli Phil Brestoff Fred Robbins 1:15 Charlie Splvak 1:34 L. A. Band Archie Andrews Sunset Roundup Bandstand l:45 ' Organ Melodies 2 : Sports "Parade Doctors Horse Race UXf Conference 2:3'George Towne Boy s Choir Orchestra 2:i S.SSjror Approval Masters Goif Dial a Smile 3i3 Dick Jurgens Ed Tomllnson 3:45 Time King Cole Trio , 4:fl9jSymptaony Great NoveU Labor Speaker 4:151 Upon a Tuna J:Jf Inquiring Editor 4:4l News 5:SjHawaIi Calls Pin-Up Tunes News Cornerstone 5:15! News Van Welch S:3 Music Time Curtain Tuna Music S:43Sports Review . Library Jsj20 u'Uon Rhythm News Ellery Queen :3:Scramby-Amby . News . I Deal ta Crime Music Makers It's a Strike . Ned Calmer 7-ljM1hty Cy Time nd PUcc Cangbusters Your Hit Parade) !:?!iH1-h Adventure Top This Murder .7:! . Mr. Malone Serenade : Chicago TheUer Judy Canova Jury Trials ' Jan Garber Pres. Truman Pres. Truman Songs !:!f K"n KracJUn Truth or, News Vaughan Monro "Mil Guest Star' :3J,Emil Coleman Ufa of Riley Rhythm Mayor of Town !l , Dectoiow Now News News News Hollywood ISMSjOrchMtra1 Casa Cugat Billy Reese Three Suns' Dance Music News Rhythm Jc,n Sablon lI:Organ Reveries News Ray Herbeck Sol Carson ll:lrral of Town Sons o' Guns Barn Dance Chalk Talk Il:4SjDance Parade Newa Treasury Salufas |