OCR Text |
Show Just the Spur He Needed 21. PROVp, UTAH COUNTY UTAH, MONDAY, APRIL 1947 Editorial... Slight Setback for Mr. Lewis The country saw a strange sight last week. John "L Lewis backed away from an established estab-lished position of his' own accord, without court order, threat of government action, or any other dramatic outside pressure. And strangest of all was the slightly balky behavior be-havior of his United Mine Workers. Usually Mr. Lewis's slightest request gets unquestioning obedience from the miners. But last week thousands of them ignored his order to stay out of all but two of the country's coun-try's soft coal mines, allegedly for reasons of safety. This was one apparent reason for Mr. Lewis' withdrawal of the order. The other was Federal Judge T. Alan Goldsborough's refusal to refund S2.800.000 of the $3,500,000 fine which he imposed on the UMW for contempt. con-tempt. The judge questioned the mine union president's good faith in issuing the stay-away stay-away order, and expressed doubt that safety was his first concern. The dollar sign loomed large in the miners' decision to go back to work. Some returned to mines which apparently had failed to pass inspection on technicalities which involved no great hazard. Others went back to pits where real danger undoubtedly exists. It is a sail thing that miners must often risk their lives needlessly in order to provide pro-vide a living for their families. It is no less sad because they have been doing it for years. The hazards of their work are a challenge chal-lenge to the operators, state mine inspectors, the federal Bureau of Mines, and to the law which permit dangerous conditions to go uncorrected. un-corrected. Mr. Lewis could help greatly in lessening these hazards. But he has consistently overplayed over-played his hand, as he did last week. For all his shrewdness as a tactician, his self-seeking methods and dictatorial manner have become increasingly -apparent. He has brought things to a pass where most of the country now looks with suspicion on his activities ac-tivities in the worthiest of causes. So today there is a fear that Mr. Lewis may use his power to force through a law which would give him the deciding voice on questions of mine safety. With a different leader some such law might be acceptable. But if Mr. Lewis were given that power it is highly probably that he might use it to punish a stubborn operator or further his own ambitions. Mr. Lewis scarcely visits the mine fields once in a decade, and he may have forgotten some of the hard facts of a miner's life. But this hint of rebellion by some of the rank and file may remind him that every work stoppage called for reasons of personal strategy strat-egy still takes wages from the miners. The only real threat to an authoritarian leadership like Mr. Lewis' comes from the rank and file. Fines and injunctions may stop such a leader temporarily, but they also tend to make him a martyr. It is only when the dues-payers start thinking and questioning question-ing and raising their voices that the leader has cause for serious concern. We hope, for the good of the miners and the country, that Mr. Lewis is feeling a little of that concern. We hoje. too. that it may entire him to trim the biilowing sails of his egoistic ambit ion. The Washington Merry-Go By Drew Pearson -R oun A Daily Picture of What's Going On in National Affairs of a For the WASHINGTON' -- Tli- Truman policy loans to Greece and Turkey comes up .or final vote in the senate at 4 p. m. tomorrow, the sake of a unified American foreign policy loans will be approved. Simultaneously, however." congirss and the American people should know the background of the extremely difficult course on which we embark. Once President Truman and the stuto department de-partment a.o granted the $400,000,000 it will be ui) to them to use it in such a way that the perennial problem of Greece dor plaguing the peace of the world. not keep on A study of the state papers of John Quincy Adams. Marquis I)e Lafayette, and James Madison shows that Greek history is now repeating re-peating itself all over again. Just 110 years aso. Greece also sought a ioan from the Initetl States, also was harassed over the question of retaining a monarchy, also was a pawn between Russia and Britain, also was the battleground for t Russian-inspired revolutionaries. The situation then was almo that of today, even including tin-Britain tin-Britain claimed she was hard up l identical with I tact that Great; i inaucial I v. and ! American fleet was sent to the st interesting ot the state pa-present pa-present ei'isi:" over Greece is letter to Thomas .let ici son of the fact that the Mediterranean. LAFAYETTE'S APPEAL FOR GREEK LOAN One of the most interesting of the pers paralleling the General Lafayette's June 1. 1822. i "Tile flan of America is cruising in the Medi-j tei ranean." Lafayette w rote. "Where, by the bye.! I .suppose they should be rather liiendly thani hostile, nay on occasion, as far as prudence per-, mit.s. really str.viceable to the friends of liberty j in Italy. It seems to me that the archipelago j (Greece! should also be an object for a ( rinse ! "Inclosed you will find the last piodamation issued a Epiciauie Gi;ecoci on the 1st January. The Grecian citizen who hi ought it to me en-! quired whether 1 thought a loan of a million dol lars would be procured in the United States My! answer, after having consulted with Mr. Gallatin' (secretary of the treasury) was that I don't think j it possible to succeed with government, but as t()j the second part of the question, who' her a loan! might be obtained from private capitalists, on j condition advantageous to them. L thought ai trial should be mad.'" CZARIST R EVOLUTION Chief difference between IH21 and li)47 the fact that Rcissiii then was c.arist. today Communist. But the basic makes Greece important i-ly i-ly the outlet to the Bhck nelles. Greece." sitting astv a pawn in Hnssian-Bi it ish the eastern Mediterranean. . Today , Communist Rti- ia i. act used of stirring stir-ring up world roolu!ni! Th n it was Car Alexander Alex-ander of Kusski. Dcscrilniiu this, -.o.d warr.mjj of danger to the United Slates. I.alav- He wrote to Jefferson on Dec. 20. !K2: "Kmperor Alexander of Ru-sia i- nnv chief of the European counter revolution: what he and his allies will do. either in coned', "i hi competition compe-tition with England, to spoil the name ol Greece, ana to annoy the new ll'-publ'i ( America. 1 do not know; but although the policy of the United States has been hithei to very prudent, it seems to me they e.ini.ot r mam w h'.llv indifferent indif-ferent to the destruction on A i : , i ic.n . continent, of every right proclaimed in 'he immortal declaration declar-ation of independence. ... r - -vWr"" The Doctor Says Evolution of Modern Anesthetics By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M.D. also learned that if they took too Written for NEA Service much they went to sleep. Inability to gauge the amount Ether was first used as an an-of an-of drug needed to relieve pain . esthetic in America 101 years ago or ciuse unconsciousness held up in Boston when a man was put the development of anesthesia, as, to sleep by a dentist for a neck even the ancients knew that ex- operation, tracts of poppv and mandrake Reeent Developments put people to sleep. i Morphine, which is one of the .active principles of opium, was idiscovered in 180G. but its use in ! relieving pain did not become widely known because it had to be given by mouth. When the hypodermic syringe was invented 'in 1851. physicians for the first time were able to give proper amounts of morphine to relieve i pain. I When oxygen was discovered, i the possibility of giving medicine through the air entering the lungs was conceived. A 22-year-old chemist. Humphrey Davy, by Isnilfing nitrous oxide or laughing !gas, learned that it made him ifeel numb and sleepy. Later jwhen he had an infected wisdom .tooth which was very painful, he ! inhaled some of the gas. and the pain promptly disappeared, j Discovery of ether as an anes-'thetic anes-'thetic was partly accidental as it was used in Europe and America during the first half of the 19th century at "frolics" or parties in which the guests inhaled ether for its exhilarating effect. They Nitrous oxide and ether, the first two anesthetics discovered, are still in common use. The former is used for short operations, opera-tions, because it is eliminated quickly from the body and recovery re-covery is rapid. The latter is used in most surgical cases as it eliminates elim-inates pain and produces good muscular relaxation. Modern developments in anesthesia anes-thesia include discovery of new anesthetic gases (cyclopropane), use of tubes to put in the throat for operations on the head and neck, drugs to be given before :the anesthetic, or taken in place of it. and finally the fact that curare, although not an anesthetic, anesthe-tic, produces great muscular re-Taxation re-Taxation when given with an anesthetic. an-esthetic. Question: My son is only 22 years old. but his hair is turning gray. Would lanolin help? Answer: I do not know of anything which Will restore hair to its original color. The only thing to be done about gray hair is to admire it. Desk Chat, Editorial Column 1 Labor Law Showdown ivrA i. strikes'' is iin!.; aphie fact which lust ' he s-iine name- a thiouuh Hi - !)a:da-' etc this ga w a . was i i all v tor mi 1rul ol By PETER EOSON NEA Washington Correspondent WASHINGTON. 'April 21 A " "'deliberate wave of might well follow il the new house "labor - management iclatioiis act" becomes law, New . Jersey Republican Congressmen' Fred A. Hartley. Jr.. frankly admits. ad-mits. It has already passed the house. " ,1 Hartley is chairman j house labor committee lS drafted this measure. What the senate wil toning down the lough bill provisions will take week or so to determine. .approved bv the house tin .1 the which Abolishing the present national1 labor relations board and substi- tuting for it a new labor-management board which would be a judicial body only. Outlawing of the closed shop and industry-wide bargaining. i Denial of bargaining rights to. unions with Communist officers Banning mass picketing, boycotts, boy-cotts, sympathy and jurisdictional strikes. Once News Now History 20 Years Ago , PERT AND PERTINENT ."Each person has his own conception con-ception of righteousness . magazine article, i --and there seems to be a gen-I gen-I eral agreement that 'tomorrow' 'tomor-row' is the time to begin. :"Most Americans hae an ambition ambi-tion to leave the farm and go to the city to make a iortune . . radio commentator. so they cm retire ami live on a farm. "Pity is the shortest path to a "woman's love." proverb. we always thought that the 1 best means of obtaining the ! desired result was a plentiful use of flattery. "Girl habits triple the first year . . ." Forum. their weight - Rwdio Baby From the Files of April 21. 1927 China and Russia are the focal points of imperialistic aggression. Alexander Rykoff. chairman of the peoples' commissars, told the do in Hartlc ano'her But as Hart- lev bill is the most severe labor j reform program ever to come out jof congress. It is far more dras-jtic dras-jtic than proposals of the National 'Association of Manufacturers and jother employer Three years later, I.af.ivctle wa still worried wor-ried over Russia's conspiracy to stir up rco-lution rco-lution and (jre.it Britain's inability to help Greece financially. On I eh. "!.. IK?l he wrote Jefferson as follows: ! I i; ,i.-. I ;i i i -att. .11! Blind to Duty The National I-V-deration of Telephone Workers has ordered its striking" members hack to the job in blast-de astated Texas City, but that will not make- amends for the union's heartless action in the earlier Texas-Oklahoma Texas-Oklahoma tornado disaster. Thirty Woodward. Okla.. telephone operators opera-tors have resigned from the union in protest pro-test against refusal of their leaders to permit per-mit them to work during" the emergency. '"Girls refuse to stop. . . . Would be ashamed asham-ed of union that youkl put up pickets in disaster like this." the operators wired officials of-ficials of their union. The union's refusal was a piece of stupid callousness in its disregard for the public-safety. public-safety. To look at it purely from the union point of view, it was poor public relations. It strongly fortifies the belief that means must be found, short of striking, for settling labor disputes in public utilities.-Ut,lu-r : I 1 lilt 1i i i; .il. tin- C )tt o - ReliK i"na i ies the al.um.-. lament no! ;i bettc on tin w a.-keep a.-keep nans The ot theii to have evil to Russian an ion infor in "The ai bti.i i at n al . widely e!er;d-'d. It anpi their soldierv trom an in favor of then Greek British n ei iiment .linnet pecuniapv crisis, now mav favored Grecian independence, them than Grecian dependent- cinpn e." "The ..est we can op-" l.,il ;i tllr s another letter to .letleison. "1 tin- erect some Gleci.iii rcpublits whole lii..ii aim mati.ai ma;, obtain a deurei "I .- -cu i it y . " ."MONROE'S MES AGE TO CONGRESS Lafayette, howev er woi nod o er Greece ! part ol his Hill annual n 1 o ' ei 11 it his Mcssin And .lames Maoisoji. urnn.u 1 1"). U!2!. took the 'same kind encouragement m i n.'iiartl man Americans take at Kn king toda : " It is qually .-tiang.- and -ha net ul . " he wr.tc. "That England, with hci boa.-! 'o trecdom. instead of taking 'he lead in the ulonou-- cuse. should Irown on it as she has done, and should aim as she now does to bailie the more generous polio of France in behalf ol the Greeks. Ti e contrast will increase the lustnt lellccted on he. rival." w : i ide; l t G i ri . L. .1 i lay ..it ar id mi one devoted pendenci. June it England's Greece that I 'he Greek spokesmen Hartley honestly believes that national labor leaders would be deliberately "bad" in pulling strikes to piotest against passage pas-sage of anything like his committee's commit-tee's bill. This is a serious crisis. sa s Hartley. He calls it a show down. But he declares that the country cannot delay this showdown show-down any longer and that it can lake the consequences. In this showdown he expects labor leaders lead-ers to overstep themselves as they have in the past, causing pubbr ,-entiment to turn against them still more. It so ballpens that this is the season when manv labor contracts Vxpirc More than 11 1 oil strike no-it no-it ices have 'been filed with the Department of Labor since Jan 1 I More than 800 were filed in March and 400 in the- first two weeks of April Ninety per rent of these eases will not result in strikes, labor department officials declare. "But this bill would enable the government to cope with the situation." sit-uation." says Hartley. He does not believe it would take too long to show how his bill would work in dealing with th" situation He sa s. "There w ill be far less dam- than tt. ! till Moi.r ,, ii. IH'U ace to the whole economy probably would occur it we cuo not check the failure of laboi leaders to realize their responsibility respon-sibility to the country." Labor Leaders. Asked For It? Chairman Hartley blames labor leaders themselves for the fact that his committee wrote a bill of such sweeping provisions. La- Bringing labor unions under ant i -trust laws. Regulating strikes which imperil im-peril public health, safety or in-teres'. in-teres'. Creation of a new. independent oi l li e of conciliation. In spite of these and other sweeping changes. Hartley says this: bill is not "anti-labor." The-bill The-bill does not ban the right to' strike, he a;. s. and for the firs' time employes are going to be prot"cted by law lrom the abuses ol union bosses. A live-man Democratic minority minor-ity report on the Hartley bill takes a dim view of the whole proceeding, calling it a 'hedge-podue" 'hedge-podue" with "Everybody "in on the act' except Jimmy Durante." Navy Veteran Crash Victim CEDAB CITY. Utah. April 21 U.P' Mae Lewis Hunter. 20-year-old navy eteran and son of Iron county- commissioner Charles R. Hunter, was killed late Saturday in a tralfic accident north of Cedar City. A light coupe Hunter was driving driv-ing went out of control when the youth attempted to pass another car. The coupe went off the highway, high-way, struck a boulder and overturned. over-turned. Two passengers Douglas Doug-las Moiling and Ken Huntington escaped serious injury. Four Montanans Killed In Mid-Air Plane Collision HAMILTON. Mont . April 21 U.Ri The bodies of lour Montanans Mon-tanans killed in a mid-air plane crash over the Hamilton airport late yesterday were at the Dowl- ing funeral home ,here today of opening session congress of Soviets the all-Union in Moscow Columbia Steel Co. announced the construction of an additional battery of 3,' coke ovens at the Ironton plant in order to fill a contract for 400 tons of coke a day for the Murray and Tooele smelters. The schovl children lent their aid to the clean-up program with a huge parade featuring banners carrying timely slogans. The children marched six abreast a distance of more than two blocks. Paul Kelly, ri.sing young film star, was held in the death of Ray Raymond, musical comedy stiir after a terrific fist light, another an-other case of the "eternal triangle." tri-angle." Mrs. Raymond admitted a growing friendship with Kelly. Q s and A's Q What are the high and low birthrate vcars for the U. S. since World War 1' A High was 1940. with 23.t? pei 1000 population. Low was I'Xi'.i. with 17.1. Q--What is th Hollywood "bit p who enacts only ance roles on call"' A S'i.) a day . oi pay ,i;. c r." minoi Ml of a actor appear- i a week. 10 Years Ago Unhappy Choice Then, as now. American statesmen were worried over the heavy u.u debt Greece had to carry, so much so that .lolni uinci Adams discussed this with the Russian ambassador. Baron Krudener. Adam's memoirs carry this notation. Jan. If). 1830: I. the second At a Moscow press conference an Anieri-: can reporter asked Soviet Deputy Foreign .Minister Vishinsky what would be likely to hapen in Germany if the Pig Four conference confer-ence should reach no agreement. Said Mr. Vishinsky. "I don't know why it should be thought there will be no results. There will be some fuller or lesser, positive or negative."' The subtle difference between no agreement agree-ment and a negative result is one lesson in ! logic which we hope the world will be spared by the foreign ministers. 1 "I called upon Baron Kriaieni , fRus.-ian ambassador am-bassador in Washington i and had a conversation ol more- than two nouis with l:i:n upon the af- lairs of Russia and Greco and Turkey I asked how it would -be possible to impose a perpetual per-petual itttnual tribute upon a people- mined a- ii .! .1. ...;t,i i-w.t u) n-i rt'i r nnn nti ir-ii iiiiiii- . . rfs.uoi iwniu ....... .. , .pending nuriai arrangements. ver bill, says Hartley, if labor T, f identified leaders had come before the com- af. Gt.,.co Gordon Wetstecm. 20. mittce on or off the record s , Mont., pilot of one plane: frankly admitted that there wore t-h(.sU,,. Dt-Ib. ;.. of the. Johnson some labor practices mat neyoeu K1..; Service Missoula nilot of correcting, ano men -u-opci .m u with the committee to right the I wrongs. Every section of the bill was adopted in the 2o-n"icmber house labor committee with only one to 'five votes in opposition. Half of the 10 Democrats went along with the la Republicans on every vote, j Actual chatting of the bill was done bv Gerald D. Morgan, a na vi ne iat Hilt Deportation Judging from their reaction to Henry Wallace's speeches in Kngland. many congressmen con-gressmen seem to think' that if Henry doesn't like this government he ought to go back where he tame from Iowa, that is. There hasn't been any Republican Party since although there are more than twenty-million Republican voters. That is because the Republicans have had no fixed : body of principles. Dr. Nicholas Murray ; . IJuller, president-emeritus Columbia IV are the Greek.-. "I said. too. that I -hou isfit'd. ii instead of -t inula, in tt should have a monarchical goviini been sulfered to choose lor t hoi ..selves. "He (the Russian amb.sadoi said that this excessive anxiety ol the Biitish government to keep Greece under their own control arose ironi the fear of losing the- Ionian islands, where, as well as Malta, they were much detested " In oilier words, history indicates that Greece is a problem which did no! wait tor Harry Truman Tru-man to discover, hut an evcr-lc.-tei ing wound in the heel ot Europe which probnbly can never be solved until the Dardanelles is put under inter national control and until takes over both the political pei.dence of Greece. GOOD-Gl'ESSE K VAl GIIAN Colorado's GOP Senator Eugene ..Miilikin gave Attorney General- Tom ( lark and General Harry Vaughan some gentle ribbing when he pie.scnted them with second prize tor guessing the score of last v ear's opening baseball game Clark won the year before. So Miilikin. soeikii.g at the an nual ba.-.cball stag dun "You're slipping, spending too much ti 1 Washington attorney who was . : . 1 1 4 1... ii more sat-i uiren as special cuuhm-i u the Grceksicommittce. Morgan was lor eight thev had i years on the stall or tne nouse ' legislative counsel. He has been particularly interested in labor matters. Not Anti-Labor. He Says As approved by the Hartley committee the new bill would make more than 20 important changes in existing labor laws Among them: plane, and his two passengers. Dr. E. L. Williams. Missoula chiropractor, and Garland Gar-land Reeves. Kalispell. According to Inspector J. F. Matthews of the CAA. Derby entered en-tered the traffic circle in a North American Navion private plane. We'steon. son of Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Wetsteon. Sula. was making an approach in a Cub trainer owned by a Hamilton flying school. The planes collided at an altitude alti-tude of 700 feet, one eyewitness said. Sheriff F O. Burrell reported Wetsteon was'a student pilot making mak-ing his second solo flight. He was discharged from the navy recently, according to Burreil. From the Files Of April 21. 1937 Instruction began in a technical techni-cal training school at the high school with Ralph Craven instructor in-structor in carpentrv . Charles Session. Utah Power and Light Co. sales executive was named local retail merchants committee chairman. Arlington "Kid" Spillsbury of Cedar City, intermountain middleweight mid-dleweight champion, knocked out Arcade Pearcc of Springville in the seventh round of a bout staged at Park Ro-Shc. v Clark Gable was in couit to testify against Violet Wells Norton, Nor-ton, accused of misusing the mails . in claiming the screen star was the father of her child. The automobile workers union prepared to file charges against Henry Ford with the national labor la-bor relations board charging him with violation of the Wagner ac. Ross Jones. 10. Spanish Fork boy was fatally burned when his gasoline soaked clothing caught fire. a Franklin D. Roosevelt heaved out the tirst ball in the Washington Wash-ington park to officially open the major league baseball season. Mrs .1. Borden Harriman was named U S. minister to Norway bv President Roosevelt. Q Is liquor chinking legal n. India'.' A Some provinces have introduced intro-duced prohibition or partial prohibition pro-hibition of alcoholic beverages. Gambling is being eyed with governmental gov-ernmental disfavor, too. Q--What radio program is called call-ed "The Voice of America " ' A The state department bioad-cast bioad-cast beamed to Rus.-ia. Q Doc s Iran have any I epilations epila-tions claims on Germany ' A Iran seeks S95.'. 000.000 foi depreciation and damage to lail-rods. lail-rods. bank losses in issuing currency cur-rency to the Allies, army equipment equip-ment loss and damage, and money debt. - and along about 40. they wish thev could halve it. oOo VIEWPOINT Pious folk are always admonishing admonish-ing me Urging me to repent. Yet. if I should reform Who would pay my rent? If Heaven is all they say it is. And twanging a harp, their goal; Even so. I like to boast Of mv unconquerable soul. . oOo Which is the tougnest job con- fronting a new bride: getting him adjusted to her eating habits; or. changing her eating habits 10 conform to his? oOo SELFISHNESS is one of the strongest, motivating forces in human endeavor and accomplishment. accom-plishment. I oOo Careful nursing will not cure .a grievance. oOo -TODAYS LIMERICK Pledge now to do your duty. And don't expect a booty Clean up in '47. Don't wait to get to Heaven, Our Pioneers loved Utah's beauty: Leona Jackson Springville. oOo It's all right to look Out lor oeimics: in fact, the habit of thrift Mas been the foundation all great fortunes. But. learn think in terms of dollars. . . thousands of them. The man who holds a penny- close to his eye that he cannot see the sun will never discover the vast wealth that lies all about him and is his for the asking. Your success in life depend! to a large extent on your capacity capa-city to think in money terms. . . . "the penny thinker remains a penny thinker."' 1 iie man who can and does think in terms of large sums is the one who acquires personal wealth. oOo You aren't really a pessimist until you refuse to milk a cow because you figure the milk's already al-ready sour. of to so What's On The Air Today MONDAY. APRIL 21 KOVO 1240 KUTA 570 KDYL 1320 KSL 1160 6:00 Scotl.oirt HAT, C.:.'.U Sporls W tt:4 :. Hei r s to Y.utl Lone Ranger i-klv V t- Lum So-i- et 7:00 Gabriel 7:l. Music I 7:30 Ou Lombiirilo 7:4.' X:iiO Americans X:J5 Henry .J Taylor Fulton l ew is Jr 8:45 Jimmy Dorn-v 9:110 Fish. Hunt !: i: !l::i0 Nr-. s S:-Ij Sportscast 10:00 News 10:l"i Orchestra 10:30 .Navy I0:t." Orchestra Heattrr Treasury St. Ahner JXiy Akciv Lead a Uand ' Overture ; News Musical Show Telephone Hour : Victor Borce Doctors Airlane Sherlock Talk Trio Holmes Green Hornet Hh Ihm Rh me Or Kan News Sports Billy Reese Bands Haliads Rhythm Pattern ; Contented Hour : Dr. 1. Q Supper Cluh ' Harry Wood Cavalcade Inner Sanctum Joan Davis Bill Henry Radio Theater " Guild Player ' Bob Hawk Lowell Thomas Jack Smith Crime Doctor Cugat MoonJtfcht Tnv.e 11:00 Organ 11:15 1 1.30 Danec 11:45, Reverieb Parade Hal Red Ru- r arris Nichol.- Cusa Pale Star New s S.immv K.ne l.el.s Dance i New s KSL Orchestra ; New ? : Radio and Public Concert Music Shannon Sextet TUESDAY. APRIL 22 Weather Patrol Some swarms. butterflies migrate in I'ORKST SFRVICK WORKER FOUND DEAD KALISPELL. Mont.. April 21 (U.R Funeral arrangements were pending here today for Elmer Seott Buck. 67. Kalispell forestry service employee, who was found dead with both wrists slashed yesterday. No inquest had been scheduled. Two youngsters playing near the Kalispell flour mill found his body in a narrow passageway between be-tween two buildings, police reported. S:00,Sun-L'p Frolic I Agriculture 6:1." . I ::;o News i News S-.43 Wake-Up Time I Yawn 7:00 , 7:15 Shady Valley 7:30 Farm News 7: n Shady Valley 8:00 New s ft: 1 5 Musical C lin k ! 11:10 Say w ith Music 8:45' 9:00 Cecil Brow n S: 15 Tell Neighbor 9:30 Bill Harrington ir.alen Drake :45JMary L Taylor Ted M.ilone I The Old Corral ! News The Old Corral New 5 James Abbe Break fast CliihT News ! Coffee Top , t'pon 'Road Jovie Time of Morning ! Melody I News 'The Songsmitns Farm Roundup Around Farm j New s Harrv ClarKe Potluck Party ' News a I .me of Lite Jordan Parad Breneman Show Fred Waring i Jack Lora Berch I -aw ton 10:00 Listen to Bing 10:15 Variety Show 10:30 Woman s Pace 10:45 Good Morning 1 1 :00 Cedric Foster 11:15 Smile Time 11:30 Merve Griffin 1 1:45 Jamboree Glamour Manor i Sing and Smile Kenny Baker For the Ladies I Art Van Damme ! Qui? I Wishing Well , News h, .ii 1'i.ited Nations i.naurial inde- T queens. You'll holt hall and not spic.K' mm CI.. i k admitted that as. v.ccK. Toin. Si cms to no crow niir- chei said. me oii'V'1 rv blossom ( oiu-i Mi: Mil W . hi t.- I.iOIV "hi. "' slit l'l'IK. ii ' aso that when he crowned Secretary Secre-tary of Agriculture Clinton Anderson's And-erson's daughter as cherry queen, he got her crown on backward Turning to General Vaughan. who was a shrewd enough gues-ser gues-ser to attach himself to Hiutv Truman some years ago. Senator Miilikin opired: "I have nothing but praise for this m.jn. who did not even place last year. He has come up from obscurity to take his place as one of our best guessers. Let me congratulate you for your progress prog-ress in the- Hunt direction." (Copvriuht. 1!)47. bv the Bell 12:00 Queen 12:15 12:30 Harlem 12:45 for Da Club conles.N. il Syndicate, Inc.! PERMANENT WAVE ONE THAT WILL LAST $4.95 DOVE'S BEAUTY SHOP 113! East 5th South. 1 block from City Bus. Drop in or Thone 1869-W This Offer is Good for Short Time Only 1 :00 News l:15Swap and 1:30 Footlights 1:45 This is Elaine Sell . Listening Post Singin Sam i Curt Mafoy Nancv Craig My True Story Church Hymns Today's Children Baukhagc Talks 'Woman in White Ned Lvnch .Masquerade Island Songs .Light of World Life Can Be i Ma Perkins Pepper Young News David llarurn I At Your Door I Mary L. Taylor : Grand Slam I Rosemary Kate Smith I Aunt Jenny i Helen '''rent Our do I Sunday , Big Sister Ma Perkina Dr Ma lone Road of Life News Perry Mason Farming My Dreams Party Line Walter K'ernan .Edwin C Ail! Song ;nri D.inee Happiness 2:0Erskine Johnson! 2:13 Johnson Famil.v ' ".:30 Hearts Desire 2:45 3:00 News 3:15 Afternoon Revue' 3:30 Cactus Jim IMS! 4:80 Swing Club 4:15 4:30 Merry (Jo Round 4:45 Adventure . Baekstase Wife 'Stella Dallas .Lorenzo Jones , Widdcr Brown Bob - Victoria Bouquet for You Lone Journey Easy Aces House News Evelv n Journal Party Winter What's Doinc Girl Marries Portia Faces Lile Shoppers' Guild Bride and Groom 'Just Ptmn Uill 5:0 Hop Harrigan 5:15 Superman 5:30 Cl.arl.i- Spivak 5:45 Tom Mix Ladies Be Seated Dick Tracv Terry and Pirates Sky King Jack Armstrong Tennessee .led Front Farrell Rh ; hm Ncu s Aunt Mry Dr Pant Woman's Secret News Mu.c Fashions Her Hom.r 2nd Mrs Meet the Burton Missus Erie Wax Sevareid Works i Roljert Trout , School-of Air Music Siory Princess |