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Show I The Star Gazers 1 What's That About Buying Ribroasts for a Quarter? I " AS1 t . frROVO. UTAH COUNTY UTAH, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1947 Editorial... Taft-Hartley at the Polls For several weeks the special congressional congres-sional election in Lehigh and Bucks counties count-ies Pennsylvania, had been touted as a pre-fiew pre-fiew of the 1948 race. The principal reason reas-on was that the Taft-Hartley law was the ientral issue of the campaign. Another res-in res-in was that industrial Lehigh county and 5-ural Bucks were a small but representative xross-section of the American scene. ; Interesting sidelights on the campaign 5 - tv, ,,nitpH AFL. CIO and independent "ir v - - - onHiflatp i boards, fourteen montns ago. mis same sun was Pinion support Of the Democratic tanuuuii?,, recomraended t0 Attorney General Tom Clark; by and the fact that the Republican candidate, jBerge. but Clark. vetoed it. Tangling with the real - nr ht tnte assemblv, had steered (estate boys at that time wasn't popular. Fennsvhania's version of a Taft-Hartley bill through the legislature. . Well as vou know, Franklin Lichtenwal-ter Lichtenwal-ter the Republican won. And as you might suspect, the Democratic forces m the two counties minimized their . defeat while the Republicans perhaps gave importance. Though Mr. Lichtenwalter's winning pei-centage pei-centage was slightly larger than. the percentage per-centage of registered Republicans, the elec-ctin elec-ctin ppms to show that a normally Re publican (or" Democratic) section will vote in a nrettv normal way unless there is cort- The Washington Merry Co Round By Drew Pearson Wendell Berge Paved Way for Current Anti-Trust Activity . WASHINGTON Don't be fooled by all the hurrah, hullabaloo and headlines now coming out of the justice department's anti-trust division. Actually, the rash of anti-trust suits now splashed across the front pages don't mean much. Most of them were prepared two years ago by abler, more energetic Wendell Berge, predecessor of the new ; anti-trust chief. John Sonnett. ! Take, for instance, indictment of real estate boards. Fourteen months ago. this same suit was Now that President Truman has thrown the harpoon into the real estate lobby, however, how-ever, the Justice department has dusted off Berge's 14-month-old case . and brought an indictment. Even so. the indictment doesn't mean too it exaggerated much. For present anti-trust division chair-warm- real estate men. only the real estate boards, and you can't send a board or corporation to jail. That's why real estate moguls aren't really worried. Other recent cases pulled out of the Berge hat are Eastman Technicolor, prepared 18 months ago, and the tire price-fixing conspiracy, prepared two years ago. Another important case still not i i i ...a, nn mee t fimi h i i im i,nt of rvm haT te AOainci wan ct Tmf I in vtxi 1 1 1 f 1 1 L in a nretiv normal v uintf - v ,uui w- - . . -- -Vorohlv mnrP to stir'uD the voters' minds j bankers. This case w.y. all set to go when Wendell rfie"ISi THailiv law apparently had ! Berge resigned, but six months have dragged by I Willi IlOWUUg JiapJ-:iUll 1 CHIEF DUSTER SONNETT The man who has been dusting off old Berge cases and dolling them up with flashy headlines lis1 amiable, uninspired John Sonnett the only rman who ever licked John L. Lewis but got no Lcredit for it. Sonnett. who dresses like a poem died the supreme d eventually ex- Dects to bo ud to Wall street. There he has been promised a legal job representing Jim Forrestal's! than the Taft-Hartley law appare to offer. . , The results might also indicate that the labor vote cannot be delivered in a bloc, even when two usually unfriendly union groups get together in an attempt to do so. This snecial election doesn't necessarily prove that the big unions have lost out as a but doesn-t act like' one handl noiitical force. Rather it may be that tne jcourt injunction against Lewis an big unions have overdone themselves in de- nouncing tne iaiwiarue,v m ,s iod banki firm- DiHoni Read labor law. Or perhaps they nave oearen i During the war, poem-dressing Sonnett was their breasts and rent their garments too earlv in the game. If this "slave labor law" had taken money out of the envelopes of Allentown's organized organ-ized workers, if it had cost them their jobs or destroyed their unions, then Philip Storch, the Democratic candidate, surely would -have been elected. The new law has done none of thes,e things. Wages are still up and employment X meres X If Something a in me j ir Cf s 1 . CTs and A s Desk Chat, Editorial Column Descriptive Definitions I dreary. the wind is BY FREDERICK C. OTIIMAN stands. I told the fattest butcher United Press Staff Correspondent in the place that I wanted an WASHINGTON, Sept. 19 (U.R economical rib 'roast. He said did Clinton P. Anderson, our secre-i' L . , ' ruBM;0J u , tary of agriculture, can chop this T . . . , , .. A . .. dispatch into confetti and eat it kind Clint he insuited nie. i on his 25-cent-a-pound rib roast. showed him your speech about That'll teach him not to embar-j intelligent people eating 2o-cent rass a taxpayer. irib roasts. And then. Mr. Secre- Clint is the gent who announced tary, he insulted you. He got red in Albuquerque, N. M., that we in the face and said, . . . are fools for paying $1 a pound: But I shall not repeat what h for steaks, when we can buy rib said. Clint, because ho got less roasts for a quarter. In almost respectful as he went along. The so many words he said it. I cheapest meat he had was brain This made it my next move.jat 39 cents a pound. I clutched a copy of his speech My next butcher was a skinny in my hot little hand. Grabbed a 14th street trolley tor the Ar cade market. Debarked at this, one of the biggest collections of butchers and grocers in the east. Hurried past the fruit stand where single lemons were five cents each, and pears a dime. Paid little heed to the delica tessens where rat cheese was 93', cents a pound and eggs 92 cents a dozen. Ignored 65-cent roasting chickens and the 97-cent butter. And made a bee-line to the meat Q What was the longest Indian trail in the United States? A The War Trail of the Six FALL that time of aide to Secretary of the Navy Forrestal. which ; Nations from Chautauqua, N. Y. you do not need cover-It lawn mover or a snow shovel. makes it just a bit embarrassing to bring the long- to Georgia is the longest known 'delayed anti-trust suit against Forrestal s and irau. 'other Wall street firms. In addition John Cahill.; (under whom Sonnett once worked, is now defend- . Q Why do we call an inquisi- ; ing Dillon, Read. Uive person a peeping torn? So life is no bed of forget-me-nots for Johnny! a It was originally peeping ;Sonnett. Nevertheless, he swears he'll prosecute ; Tom of Coventry, a man who dis-i UTOPIA where thev his old wall street mencis ana pernaps ne win. obeyed the order not to look in the streets when the nude Ladv Descriptive Definitions FUTILITY a bald head ing a 'wolf complex. vear when M thoughts still to Dush a mouldering Past, dreary; rains, and weary; My thoughts Once News Now History 20 Years Ago Sept.19. 1927 , The livestock display at the county fair was declared to sur pass all former exhibits of its kind Urban E. Overlade s team won the heavyweight honors hon-ors in the horse-pulling contest Possibility of extending a railroad line from Craig, Colo., to Provo, Utah, were openly dis cussed by Salt Lake and Denver railroad officials. Such a line would tap the rich Uinta basin Marriage license applicants were Frederick Harold Smith and Bern ice Pearl Gore, Springville Fire destroyed three bams belonging to George Billings near never Fifth East and Fifth South streets ciinE to the, lQ years Ago Be still, sad heart! and cease GOP PUBLICITY SEARCH The Republican national committee isn't shout- !!Godiva rode by. Q- HTI. iL - TIl--4. T .11 -wnen was ine juiDriy ecu . f , it - m i a y T-ii, ! k an.nMioro nw mihliritv man It finallv 8D- jCidtnru . fascism has remaiaed taiK. wayoeine 'pHitnr ni .Tim1 A-The break a Hartley law will do all the horrid things pre- H,.m, w ' n ' H him 9?;nnn ion July 8, 1835, while dieted for it by the unions' high brass, but it seems unlikely. ctually occurred tolling dur- Flattered. but amused, Leyshom replied: !B luneiai oi um aivit rains, and the wind is never "I suppose you realize that 1 work for uov-;tici juu ui " uiu weary If or until the organized rank-and-file feel ;" Cox- aid'leJSJ oWhat is the oldest mem- the effect of this law in their jobs or wages rff ective critic senator Pepper. In addition, youjment building now standing in would discover, it l iook xne jod, mat uumn mc war. I was executive officer to Col. Jack Redding,! A It is the Palace of the Goy- jvi. cum But the hopes of youth fall Ithick HERO a swift moving guy who! in tne bIast- can cross the goal line if he And the days are dark and dreary. has ten husky teammates to , clear the way for him. i repining; have a Behind the clouds is the sun still all thel .v,.:. OlllUUlg, Thy fate is the common fate of all, Into each life some rain must fall, Some days must be dark and dreary. tariff law people. that suits From our SCRAPBOOK for Yours . . . THE RAINY DAY The day is cold, and dark, and dreary; , , .i j- jn..kiipifv hif nf th Democrat c national com- ernors at Santa Fe, N. II ana wnen iney ao icei !before 1617. it is now occupied The Republicans decided to look for somebody; by the Museum of New Meixco. else. or personal freedom, it is doubtful that they will all jump through the hoop at their lead ers' command those effects, they will express their feelings feel-ings at the polls without millions of dollars' worth of urging. As a footnote to the Pennsylvania election, elec-tion, we might suggest that maybe the Taft-Hartley Taft-Hartley law won't be the big issue of the 1948 campaign, after all. And we'll bet that if Mr reasonable-sounding solution to the high-price high-price problem, he'd have won by a bigger landslide than Mr. Lichtenwalter did. The vine still clings to the mouldering moul-dering wall. But at every gust the dead leaves fall, And the day is dark and dreary; My life is cold, and dark, and MERRY-GO-ROUND BARBS New war production board Industrious Av-erell Av-erell Harriman. the secretary of commerce who is reversing his father's role of Wall street highbinder, high-binder, is auietlv working on new kinks for the Storch had been able to present a Marshall plan. It's the most ambitious and could he the most effective step to pep up Europe. . . . arent helping ; plantation is at Scott Utah Suits Us Fine What causes such titanic storms as those which periodically visit the Pacific and the Atlantic, twirling" tremendously up from ihe tropics? There is one of them maneuvering off the Florida coast even now, and in southern south-ern Japan the prefectures are counting their dead. If vou have an answer to the ques- Harriman argues that Europeans arent lfPinE plantation is at Scott .Mississippi themselves; Kunr coai is Dogging uown, r I'-" at comprises 35.000 acres, industry is flat on its face. So he would recruit; qHov long did Gandhi go about 5.000 U. S. experts to work with Europeans 'without food in 1939, when he showing them American techniques, giving them j announced he was going fast to efficiency hypodermics, allocating raw materials! the death" where needed. ... At present, much U. S. mate-! A He fasted for 98 hours. At rial sent to Europe gets into wrong channels, isjthis time, Gandhi was 70 years wantonly wasted. First thing the Greek govern-jof age. nient did with U. S. $$$ from the Truman, plan. was to buy a big consignment of fancy neckties.' Q What country has dedicated . . Officials admit the Harriman "European pro- a memorial to the Unknown Child duction board'' will be tough to put across, but victim of World War II? no toueher than the present mess. A Czechoslovakia recently Negro to Annapolis Q What is the smallest ruminant rumi-nant known? A The dikdik. an east African antelope that stands only 14 BY HAL COCHRAN inches high at the shoulder. j Ideas are those little things that always work better when you do. Q Where is the largest cotton! plantation in the world? A The worlds largest cotton A man stole 100 pounds of meat from an Ohio deep freeze concern and now Is" in the cooler for some time to rome. Longfellow po A GAG you'll soon hear on your favorite radio program: "What do you think of these long dresses the women are wearing now? Do you like them?" "It doesn't botherf. me a whole lot. You see I've got a good memory and besides, I spent my vacation at a nudist colony this summer." The millennium will be here i when each of us has the intelligence intelli-gence to be tolerant, the mag-jnaminity mag-jnaminity to overlook slights and insults, and the generosity to share our happiness with others. Sept. 19. 1937 The attorney general Held that a proposed $15,000 contribution from Provo city to the Utah Valley Val-ley hospital would be illegal Rep. Samuel B. Pettengill, D.. Ind.. threatened to start im peachment proceedings against Hugo L. Black, associate justice of the supreme court The Utah State Fedtratlon of Labor j was slated to hold Its convention; in Brigham City Dave Crow- i ton won the city golf champion-' ship with a 309 total for the four individual with a weary expression expres-sion and I took no chance on him. I kept quiet about your speech, Clint, and asked him what was his best buy? He said, sirloin steak at 96 cents a pound. I wouldn't fool you, Clint. He said it was good, solid eating, with a minimum of bone. Rib roast? Pha, he said. Like that. Pha! He Wauled out a rib roast, Mr. Secretary and proved to my satisfaction that it was about 40 per cent, bone, gristle and suet. This makes an 80-cent rib roast cost a good deal more per bite than a dollar steak, Clint. Any way you figure it. So I asked him did he have any meat at all for 25 cents a' pound? He smiled pityingly. Cheapest meat he had was tongues, fanned out like octopus oc-topus legs, at 39 cents. Special price. 'The American people still are willing to pay - prices that have no relation to value, you said, Mr. Secretary. Not me. I can vassed every meat stand in the market, looking for anything at all to eat at 25 cents a pound. Clint, I found plate beef at 59 cents a pound and cold hot dogs at ditto. Top round steak ground into hamburger was 90 cents. And you know what a cube steak is, Mr. Secretary? The tough chunk of meat the butcher attacks with a waffle iron arrangement, and your wife buys on the nights there is no company? Ninety cents a pound also, Clint. Over by the fish stands was the lowest priced meat in the place. It was mostly tallow, with a narrow streak of red In the middle. As nondescript a plect of meat as ever made a butcher hang his head. Twenty-nine cents a pound. No bargain, the man said. So you see what you did to me, Clint. Just let tne know when you eat these words. I want to send over a photographer. TABLETS 1 fltlofff t MQtd ing interest was growing with the mi mvni opening of the grounds near Utah tmmm lake. I i ijnjLU I MhrrrrA (Adv.) What's On The Air Today FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 19 The kids soon will see that some First senator ever to ap- dedicated, at Prague, a plaque to f rui t rowers', troubles come in point a Negro to Annapolis is 80-year-old Demo- an Unknown Child victim of the pears. tion of how a hurricane or typhoon begins, iciatic Theodore Francis Green. Rhode Island mil-!war clockwise in the southern hemisphere, coun- ilionaire and blue-stocking. He has picked 18-year-; terclockwise in the northern, please convey S." NeW York u hi unce iu me it-anirw nit-it-wnim anean nf anv other candidate this year. First to never have quite been able to read this rid- congratulate him was John Nicholas Brown, assist-dle assist-dle of storm. ant secretary of the navy, and. like Green, rie- f.',-o tV,Q tUnriuc , .Jtr,10 l.ov.,nrl tct. scendant ot one ot iew tngiano. s oiue.u mmm. Phone Book Heavier ' It's hard to imagine anybody any-body having: aved enough for all the rainy days we've had this summer. i Being on the level helps you to NEW YORK. H.Pi - Telenhnne risp in vonr own pstimation ing. And how might you test tnem 1 nere. to Annapolis but none has graduated. of ,.2oo.o00 new Manhattan tele-! Although it is big. it does not ex- was a proposal the other-day that the army 1948 predictions Both political parties phone directories, each weighingiceed the Chicago directory, which riv out ana dump a piane loan or so 01 tirv scanning me nuntun iw a new. t,anUiUa .u v ,f0Ur pounds. has 1 736 paces ice on the current Atlantic disturbance, but maor. " ,v JV" 1 ti,. bie drv-eoods merchant, head the Democratic list. the efficacy of this would be highly uncertain. uncert-ain. Well, say you, why not bomb this furious furi-ous genie that rages above the turbulent sea? Give it a dose of atomic energy, eh? The conclusion of scientists, after studying the meteorological effect of the atomic bomb, where bombs were dropped, is that this, if any. is slight. It is wholly feasiblt . however, how-ever, to attack a hurricane from the heavens if you should happen to have an effective weapon. The hurricane, typhoon or cyclone all are one is a comparatively shallow storm, and planes already have flowi. abeve such storm to return without harm. In temperate zones our great storms, such as the tornado, miscalled "cyclone," are created cre-ated by marked and clashing contrasts in temperatures. In the tropics, where the bur. ricane is hatched, there are no fronts of the sort. Our scientists haven't gone to school long enough to explain the motivation of that awesome energy, revolving revolv-ing about a center of Sabbath-like calm, which shatters the ship and strips the shore, and subsides when it gets good and ready. Florida is reported to be a nice place, and offshore and inshore the fishing is good, but on reading the papers in hurricane season seas-on we reflect that Utah suits us fine. SIMPLIFICATION Each day you are given The physical and mental strength To absorb your trials And tribulations. Contentment and progress Will be yours only When you learn not To pile up past troubles And all those to come On top of today's problems Expressing the insatiable demand That they all be solved now. 0O0 And on the other hand, the poor and the ignorant will continue to be dishonest and delinquent as long as the rich and educated show them how. Hang onto your faith in mankind man-kind . . . there are at least one hundred and forty-three million persons in the United States who haven't handed you a raw deal. And then there-was the little -a 1 a it, n i . . L. Robert moscs. in. i. cny p.anne., tops xuu-yy listings an increase of 3000.leach liran. . . . iviosps 1 uciiik rniiicu uuv n iv m. - If you don't want to be photographed with the wrong person, go with the right one. Gov. Dwight H. Green of Illinois (as he vetoed a bill to abolish snapshot-taking in night clubs.) IS I Potomac bullrushes to chart a new government I reorganization which will make him Just as un-i un-i popular in Washington as he is getting in New iVork. . . . Ambidextrous Governor Warren, the man who runs on both tickets in California, still scorns White Huse ambitions. Friends say Warren's War-ren's real yen. is to be a good attorney general ' in a good Republican cabinet. . . . Bill Malone. San Francisco Democrat, now thinks he can swing the Democratic national convention to the Golden iGate. His best ally is Harry Truman, who thinks the Democrats should move west. . . . Pompous Senator Revercomb has so Irked GOP bosses in iWest Virginia that they talk about bouncing him in favor of Tom Townsend. counsel for the United Mine Workers. That's one way to insure the miners' min-ers' vote. Ironical fact If it hadn't been for the disagreeable dis-agreeable persistency of Australia's Herbert Evatt mmnsrrl ;in bucking the United States when we wrote the ;vj; c narier hi oan r i ciiiciscu, uiuu imnv ; would not be helping the United States re Greece ! today. It was Evatt who howled, yelled and banged 'his fists until he modified the veto- almost over ;the dead bodies of Sfcetinius, Vandenberg, Con-naliy. Con-naliy. et al. . . . Thank's to Evatt, the UN general assembly is now able to consider Greece unboth-crcd unboth-crcd by Mr. "Gro-veto." , Good bureaucrat Chalk up credit to Loy i Henderson of the state department for knocking Greek heads together and forcing them into a coalition cabinet. . . . Henderson, son of a Kansas j preacher, comes from the same background as . Eisenhower, sometimes seems a fish out of water. However, his streak of Kansas common sense usually usu-ally comes out on top. (Copyright, 1947, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) Industry, labor and agriculture must march along together or wobble separately. H. P. Rusk, dean of the College of Agriculture, University of Illinois. SO THEY SAY Russia is pursuing the same kind of tactics as Hitler did in the 30s. We must convince the present pres-ent regime over thereJhat it cannot obliterate .freedom all over the world. If we can do that, wc have a chance of getting along with Russia in a 'peaceful world. 'Sen. Joseph H. Ball, R., Minn. Ihe new directory, delayed for Over-all errors, according to five months, has 1,413 pages. 59 Lee J. Jordan, have been shaved, eirl who was so surprised when more than the last, and has 565.- down to 0.15 per cent not one in'she was born that she didn't 10.000 listings. speak a word for 15 months. Yugoslavs Attempt to Occupy Trieste Ahead of Schedule J , ,i .i S3 XV " . , . (SEA Radio-Telephotn) American soldiers, (IffO, and Yugoslav troops Oj-ight) faced one another across hastily erected barbed wire barrier, creating a tense situation. The Yugoslavs moved in to occupy the Isonzo River Vallev 10 hours earlier tnan the agreement regarding the occupation of Trieste under terms of the Italian peace treaty. Photo by NEA-Acme Staff Photographer Leo Stoecker. radioed from Rome. KOVO KDYL KUTA KSL 1240 1320 670 1160 :0'Gabriel Heatter People are Funny Lon Ranger Mark Warnow : 15 Real Storm :J0 B. Drummond Walts Tim Your TBI FBI f6:4f 7:00 Meet tha Press Mystery Theater Break the Bank To B Ignorant 7:15! 7:30 Burl Ives Bill Stern Die Sheriff Hollywood Show 7:45 Date Night On the Town SporU Show 8:00 Fulton Lewis Jr. Supper Club Sports Cavalcade News 8: 15 Henry J. Taylor Barry Wood Jack Smith 8: JO Newt Men and Music Sport Pago Centennial g:45Jlmmy Doraey Newa Ntwi :00:Georg Do It Blues in Night Fat Man Baby Snooks 9:15 Eddie Howard 9:30 Magle Carpet Band of Night Polka Party Club IS 9:4 5 'Listen Moon Dreamt Robert Trout 10:00 Newt, Sporta Newa News. Sporta Thin Man 10:15 Al Jarvii Havana NighU Ed Stoker 10:3o;Organ Reveries Vet Reporter Rvthm Newa 10:45' Bob Eberly Music You Want Here's to 7ets 11:00 Dance Parade News Orchestra Matterworks 11:15! Charlie Spivck 11:30 Let t Oance 11:45 News Music til One Time to Dance SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20 6:00'Sun-Up Frolle The Old Corral Agriculture Newa 6:15! Songi for You 6:30 Robert Hurlelgh Newa Newa 6:45 Helen Hall The Old Corral Yawn Patrol Musical Show 7:00 Bill Harrington Sanpete Salute News 7:15Musical Clock. Roads. Reason ' W tot Jamboree 7:30'News 7 News Crossroad 7:45 Shady Valley Coffee Time Music, Newa Newa 8:00 T Hemingway. Meet the Meeks Al Pearce Let's Pretend 8:15;Llttle Show 8:30 Say with Music Sunny Side Up Adventure dub 8:45' . , 9:00 Pan-Americana Weekend Frolic Wakeup. Smile Theater of Today 9:15 Albert Warner 9:30 Bins Sings for the Ladiee Come and Get It 9:45 Jerry Sears Melody Parade 10:00'At Sardi Child's Friend Small Business Grand Central 10:15 Milt Herth Trio 10:30 Eddy Howard Ed McConnell 2900 Time County Fair 10:45ITalent Show I ll:00i Farm -ind Home Piano Playhouse Give and Take 11:15 Benny Goodman 11:30 News , The Baxter Voice of Aim 11:45 Police Newa News Piano Party 12:00 Barry Gray Archie Andrew Town-Speaks News 12:15' tISAC Speaker 120 Chisholm frail Frank Merrtwell Lunchin in Town Greiner Show 12:4SjMelodies ' 1:00 Bill McCune From Bandstand Afternoon Stars .Tory Kearns 1:15' Beldame Belvame 1:30 TBA From Bandstand Midvale Salute Western rarm 1:45 Chris Cross 2:00 Handicap Tooele Salute Cross Section 2:15 Leo Peiper From Bandstand1 2:30 Sammy WatKins Torme Tim. Disc Derby At the Chase 2:4S'Music Memoir Kins Cole Trio 3:00 For Approval Old Utah Trail junior Junction Easv Rhythm 3:15 From Countiy 3:30 Cecil Brown Old Utah Trail Intermission ' Sports Review 3:45 Les Brown Larry LeSeuer 4:00 Hawaii Call Foreign Policy Pat Novak Hawk Larabee 4:15 4:30 News Sporu Curtain Time Dick Tracey Sound Off 4:45 Bartlcy Crum 5:00 20 Question Pin-up Tune Robert Q. Lewis 4.-I5 Football i 4:30 Charlie Sp.vaa Choose the Hits Yukon' Challenge' 5:45;Sports Review j .News 6:00 Stop Me Your Hit Parade" News Bill-Goodwin 6:15' 6:30 Adventure Top This 1 Deal in Crime Sweeney-March 6:45 . I 7:80BYU vs. Judy Canova Gangbusters Serenade 7:15 Western State 7:30; Grand Ole Opry Murder Aoe Biirrowt 7:45 Mr Malone Dance Orchestra 8:00! I Life of Riley Jury Trialii i Jan Garber 8:15! 8:30' (Truth or Sunset Roundup ' 8:45 j x,.v,, 9:00 Music Hall News MiTm " fTnkprs-9:15 fTnkprs-9:15 j 1 Guest Star 9:30 iChittison Trio Here's to V'els Vaughn Mor.ioe 9:4S Rhythrn Poika Part; j 10:00 News New? Sport 'Bob Chester 10.15 Glen Gray Ed Stoker j 10:30 iWill Osborne Orchestra I.News IO:4jO'itan Re. -fries Navy Band 1 1:00 Dance Parade !New . Orchestra 11:15' iSons o Guns Time T U-tnc H-301 (Turntable Tavern 11:43 I iMuaic Ul One Treasury Salute |