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Show DAILY HERALD TUESDAY, IARCH J, 1887 Utah County, Utah HISTORY OF OLD SALT LAKE THEATRE Funds from Purchases of Camp Floyd Possible Made Building Army Surplus (Editor's Note: With approval by the Utah Legislature of an appropriation to match private funds for construction of a replica of the Salt Lake Theatre, interest In the historyof the famed theatre has revived. Here is a special feature on the Sak Lake Theatre, written by Moana B. Bennett of the United Press staff in Salt Lake City.) thought the great central chandelier came from and what it cost. Ludlow says: "It was a piece of work which" would have been creditable to any New York firm, and apparently a richly carven circle, twined with gilt vines, leaves and tendrils, blossoming all over with flaming wax-light- s, and suspended by a of gold lustre. So I chain massive he probably paid a replied that thousand dollars for it in New By MOANA B. BENNETT The York." SALT LAKE CITY, (UP) " 'Capital! the built who Mormon pioneers exclaimed Qrigham. the in valley "I made it myself! That circle Is 6alt Lake Theatre 96 a cartwheel, the wheel of one of some of th Great Salt Lake years ago were ingenious finan- our common Utah oxcarts. I had ciers who parlayed about $4,000 in it waxed, and gilded it with my gold into a $100,000 building with own hands. It hangs by a pair of unusual which I also gilded; and of the candleornaments the gilt breaks. Johncut after my patsticks were all In 1857 word arrived that ston's army was marching on the terns out of sheet tin. ' " The theatre was first opened Saints. It boded no good to a peoarms chased been had by that ple from homes before and they were apprehensive. But within five years the soldiers' visit had made hard work and some center the yieatre a a pracfor culture and recreation tical possibility. much-neede- d the Civil War broke out Johnston's troops were ordered to abandon Camp Floyd and return east to Jom the battle. They were told to sell at auction all the supplies they did nc' urgently need. Supplies at Auction So when the auction came up Brigham Young gave Hiram B. Clawson $4,000 in gold and told him to buy everything he could. Tents, stoves, groceries and other hems were purchased at less than a tenth of the regular cost and netted more than when $40,000 in cash. This became the basic appropriation for financing the new theatre. In addition Clawson secured a large quantity of nails, glass and other building material which was Practiused in the construction. buildof for the the all labor cally with laborers was donated geting of tickets free ting only a promise to performances. The pioneers cut When re-so- ld their own wood, made their own adobe bricks, and quarried their own stones. Actual July 1, construction began on 1861, and all that summer ox-chai- ns Sukarno Seeks To Stave Off Open Revolt JAKARTA, Indonesia (UP) President Sukarno has moved to allia ance to stave off open revolt against his new conception of democracy, it was reported today. Press reports said Sukarno wrote former Vice President Mohammad Hatta a letter Monday in an attempt to restore their cooperation that led Indonesia for more than a decade. Hatta is an once-popul- ar active But anti-Commun- as Sukarno attempted to much as possible of his salvage to dump Western democracy plan for a "guided" state, including Communists, the rebellious Wira-buan- a division tightened its grip over ail eastern Indonesia. Lt. Col. N. H. Ventje Sumual, commander of the 7th Military District and leader of the rebel council, flatly rejected Sukarno's new political conception. Sources in Jakarta said Sumual would "completely disassociate" eastern Indonesia from Jakarta rule if Sukarno's guided democracy plan were carried out. 5 51-m- an and fall and into the spring of 1862 the interest of the city alternated between the news of the terrible Civil War being posted on the walls outside the Deseret News, the valley's main newspaper, and Not So Good Samaritan the progress on the "new theatre." Capacity of 1500 The building was designed by the man who William H. Folsom and supervised the condesigned dome-shape- d Salt of the struction of fall In the Lake Tabernacle. d a 1861, E.I. Harrison, Scot-Fre- e architect from London, arrived in the valley and became associated with the project. He is credited WASHINGTON (UP) A Bible with influencing the interior design scot-frethief got off but a good and patterning it somewhat on the Samaritan in mudidn't Monday elaborate interior of the Drury court. nicipal Lane Theatre in England. Willis L. Richardson, a 114 80 was feet The building by old good samaritan if there ever on the ground floor and 40 feet was one, was fined $25 for operathigh to the square of the building liwith an exterior designed in clas- ing an automobile without a sic Grecian Doric style. The audi- cense. The Washington man told a lady torium had a parquette and four circles. The stage was originally judge that all he was doing was 62 feet deep and the seating ca- pushing a friend's car to a gaHe said the car's battery pacity was nearly 1500 persons. rage. was dead. Police said he steered When there were larger crowds extra chairs could be set up and part of the time through the front window. 200 standees could be accommoThe Judge said the price of dated. besides the $25 was an friendship It has generally been conceded extra $5 not showing the car's for the most outstanding theatrical and $10 more for opbuilding west of the Mississippi at registration a not car bearing a front that time and for most of the 66 erating license plate. it stood. years But a old Bible thief, Ranks With Finest A Massachusetts editor, Samuel Robert W. Feeser of Hanover, Pa. Bowles, who visited the territory made out a lot better when he declared: "The building is itself a pleaded guilty to removing the rare triumph of art and enter- Good Book from a department prise. No eastern city of 100,000 store without benefit of payment. The judge a man asked with inhabitants remember Salt Lake City has less than 20,000 possess- appropriate old testament sternes so fine a theatrical structure. ness: "Don't you know it's wrong It ranks, alike in capacity, and to steal even a Bible?" "Yes, I know," Feeser said, pielegance of structure and finish, along with the opera houses and ously. "That's the Eighth Comacademies of music of Boston, mandment. I don't know why I New York. Philadelphia, Chicago did it." and Cincinnati." The judge let him off on the An eastern visitor named F.H. promise that he would henceforth Ludlow went to an early perform walk in -- ighteousness. ance with Brigham Young and la ter recorded the following comments: "But my greatest surprise was excited by the remarkable artistic beauty of the gilt and 65c 'Til 5 p.m. painted decorations on the great 90c EVENINGS arch over the stage, the cornices 20c CHILDREN and the moulding about the prosHAPPINESS cenium boxes. President Young AMD with proper pride, assured me DRAMA! Bible Thief Gets Off well-traine- e, 26-ye- ar 30-ye-ar NOW s that every particle of the ornamental work was done by indigenous Saintly hands." with religious dedicatory services on March 6, 1862. The first paid performance opened to the general public was on March 8, 1862. The first bill was "The Pride of the "State Secrets" and a comic song by W.C. Dunbar. Goods for Tickets The practice in the first years of the theatre's existence was to give a standard play, an ,olio, and a farce. The curtain was at 7 p.m. and the doors opened at 6 p.m. Prices were 75 cents for parquette and first circles and 50 cents for the upper galleries, but it was common practice for many years to accept goods for the price of a ticket. Artemus Ward records that one evening's receipts were 20 bushels Market", of wheat, five of corn, four of potatoes, two of oats, four of salt, two hams, one live pig, one wolfskin, five pounds of honey in the comb, sixteen strings of sausages, one catskin, one churn (two families got in on this it was the most ingenious of churns and fetched butter in five minutes by rapid grinding), one set of children's undergarments embroidered, one keg of apple sauce, a dog, and a German silver coffin plate. George D. Pyper, for many years the theatre's manager, said one man took a large turkey for his admission and received two spring chickens for change. Annie A. Kiskadden, one of the early actresses, said a large melon would buy a ticket and a small melon for change while a bit of flour came as change with a ticket from a peck of potatoes. A local company of amateur actors was organized and they played entirely without pay until 1866 when, they asked for "pay or no play". It was a matter of passing on the ultimatum they had received from their own employers who told them it was their jobs or the theatre because the plays were taking so much of their time. Invited Many Stars From the beginning stars were invited to take the leading roles with the local players. By the time the theatre was sold to be demolished there was ample evidence that nearly all of the great actors and actresses from 1863 to 1928 had journeyed west and stopped to play at least one performance in the Salt Lake Theatre. Salt Lake City has not been so fortunate since the theatre was closed with a farewell performance on Oct. 20, 1928. The repertoire of plays included the popular plays of the day and many of the classics. In the first period of the theatre before the actors were paid, 12 of Shake- speare's immortal scripts had been performed. Scripts were hard to come by in the first years of the playhouse and the visiting stars were most generous in ing to the meager library. add- 12 Bail Out Of Plane; Dump All Luggage COLUMBIA, S.C. (UP) Twelve survivors of maiden parachute jumps refused to worry today about throwing .away all their luggage in a futile attempt to save a $561,000 Clifl Flying Boxcar. "I guess our gear is scattered over quite a few miles," said Capt. Franklin Greenspan, of Rantoul, HI., pilot and commander of the flight from Chanute Air Force Base, 111., to Charleston AFB, S.C. Greenspan said crew members and gesting a possible link between cigarettes and lung cancer, has died at the age of 73 of king cancer. Graham died late Monday at Barnes Hospital where he served 32 years as chief surgeon. Graham first suggested a pos sible connection between cigar ettes and lung cancer in a speech before the Inter - American Congress of Surgeons at Chicago. Four years later, Graham and two associates reported in a medical publication that two years of laboratory research on the subject showed "positive evidence" that cancer could be produced by cigarette tar. Graham was a moderate smoker himself for many years, but gave up tobacco six years ago. Graham wa the first surgeon to successfully remove a human lung and was credited with the development of an test for gall bladder disease. Graham's first successful lobec- 00 HEAPS A PIZZA SALT LAKE CITY (UP) The Utah Senate is really buckling down to work. The upper chamber met at 9 a.m. today instead of the 10 a.m. time obverved heretofore. Sen. Elias L. Day Lake) said a night session would be proposed 2ND EAST 8TH NORTH Open 4 p.m. to midnight Weekends 'til 2 a.m. op) 1 Citrus fruits, such as oranges, BREAKFAST Pineapple Juice; grapefruit, lemons; also tomatoes. hot cereal, milk; toasted English 3) Whole or enriched cereals in some form. He says hot breads muffins; butter; jelly; beverage. French omelet with in variety belong in this category, LUNCH Creole sauce; buttered swigs chard; despite the bad reputation they have wrongfully gained. popovers, butter; half grapefruit 4) A good variety of the usual with mint ice; milk. vegetables and fruits, with em- DINNER Pot roast of beef; carphasis on the intensely yellow and rots; onions; potato; green ones. green pepper cheese salad; butter-flak- e "These are the foods you find rolls, butter; pecan cupcake; in your market," he says. "Noth- beverage. ing faddy about them, no tricks. 2 Nevertheless, they provide the BREAKFAST Orange juice; hot basis for the best imaginable re- cereal, milk; French toast, syrup, ducing diet provided you use some butter; beverage. form of each of the four groups LUNCH Vegetable-bee- f soup, every day and in amounts re- crackers; tossed greens with lemquired by your body according to on and vinegar; ginger pumpkin your energy expenditure. milk. "That means the work you do pie; DINNER Vegetable juice cocktail, 'housewife, truck driver, student, crackers; turkey in casserole; glazfactory worker, business man, ed carrots; baking powder biscuits, whatever it may be. Certainly the fruit salad, fruit housewife requires fewer calories plum preserve; a day than a logger in the woods whip dressing; beverage. she needs about 2,000, he needs around 6,000," he explained. "But whatever your work, if you eat more food calories a day than you oven-brown- V SUSAN HAYWARO VAN UEfU.T 2ND TERRIFIC 11 ATTRACTION nn CZIDl? T S '! ed Westward Ho h Academy Wagons, also Disneyland U.S.A. The Rainmaker, Paramount with Burt Lancaster. Uinta Tap Roots, also Kansas ' Raiders. , ; LEHI The Shnrkfighters, aJnd Royal Dance With Me Henry. AMERICAN Cameo FORK The Opposite Sex, with June Allyson. PLEASANT GROVE Grove Everything But the with Maureen O'liara. Truth, OREM Scera Anastasia, with Ingrid Bergman. I SPRINGV1LLE Rivoli Between Heaven and with Robert Hell, Wagner. ;'. PAYSON Huish Teahouse of the Ausust Moon, with Marlon Brando. vvj iTi v ii jutr ml HOLLYWOOD UP -- Vamplra" he glamour ghoul who will ' b driven from San Francisco airport in a hearse Thursday to attend th opening of two horror movies, doesn't dig Ejvis Presley My kind of man is someone lik Boris Karloff " she said. STARTS TOMORROW THE FOURTH IN A SERIES OF OUTSTANDING MOTION PICTURES WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY AT 8:30 P.M. WITH SOCIAl HOUR TWO SHOWINGS AT 7 AND WEDNESDAY AT 8 P.M.-FRID- AY P.M.-DOOPEN WED. 6:30 and THURS., 7:30-F- RI., 9:30 ORS TO GEE 'tllFIFI'"-.- . Crowthfrr, N. Y. "RIFIFI Tfrof FOCH V'; DEAN NINA No On JAER Seated One Feature Has Started. lunmm c UTAB-- OPEN HE 8 Today's Radio Programs MOST MSTIMCTIVK THKA STARTS TOMORROW 6:30 Series Tickets still available: Students $3.00 Adult $4.50 General Admission: Students 75c Adults 90c s7hp r (The radio programs listed below are submitted by the station who seeming Inaccuraclep or for responsible for their accuracy -- In case of ; further Information eajl the respective radio stations) r 7 Of Dragnet 8:30 HI Fi Tuesday. March I 9:00 Gabriel Heatter 7 3o Operation KIXX-h- oo 9:05 Hi Fi Continues Entertainment 9:30 Bern Solvn . FIRST TIME AT . Evening 6:00 Sportlite 6:15 Mel Allen 6:30 Evening Serenade 7:00 Tods tn Poos 7:1" Quincy Howe 7:30 Band Box 8:30 Mr. Chase iSi) MacRAE , GRAM GLORIA SONYA UVItN SHIRLEY - MS GENE JAMES WHUMORE EDDIE ALBERT NELSON R00 SIEIGER WIUAM LU0WI6 AGMES DC IHif Evening Gabriel Heatter Music Show Krickcast Harry Wismer News Newsreel Fulton Lewis Jr. Legislative Report 7:30 Treasury Agent 8:00 Big City 6:30 u with INGRID BERGMAN yul brynner - helen hayes Sunrise Serenade 7:00 News 7:15 Sunrise Serenade 7:30 Martin Agronsky 43 Wake Up Time "Donoficial" 2M3 IT B.BCI0G say to MVGQlw $25 TO $2000 1-v- Open Saturdays 9 :3t to I2:3atm rrtid.nti f 1. H 24 . mod by iMeftde! MntrM Uee ten offilietee- ttint S - CereeteHee) it OtKiWKi f: (id) isit Telefrlend Breakfast Club My True Story Orval Anderson Whispering Streets Jack Pair 11:00 11:15 Make Up Your Mind 11:30 Class A Basket12:00 12:15 1:45 2:00 3:00 4:30 5:00 5:15 5:45 10:00 Ski Report. News 10:10 Bern Solvn 11:55 News KEYY-U- 50 Evening ' News on the 4 Hour 6:00 Dave Weiser 6:15 Classified 6:30 News 6:45 Melodic Moods 7:00 Music Vou Want 8:00 Air Force Show 8:15 One Night Stand 8:4 Memory Lsne 9:00 Joe Meier 12:00 Serenade 1:00 News KDYL-13- 20 6:00 6:40 6:4j 7:00 Evening News Richard Harkness World News News 8 oo 8 0.- OO 9:0.i 9:30 1 1 00 1105 1145 10:55 Wewscest Heatter 11:00 Gabriel 11:05 Don Spainhower 12:00 12:15 12:30 12:35 1:00 4:15 4:30 5:00 5:30 5:35 Afternoon Hit Parade Cedric Foster Central Utah News Hit Parade Jimmy Lawrence Hemingway Van's Varieties Jimmy Lawrence Sports Time Jimmv Lawrence KEYY-U- 50 News 3:0O 7:00 9:00 Morning on the Va Hour Rog Bown Show 6 00 K 30 7 00 7 15 7 :30 fi 8 9 9 10 00 o.r no 13 0 10:15 11 A5 Disc-Kapad- es : Evening Lenny's Muflc Leonard Friendly Utah Legislature Sports with 'Dean Lowell Thomas Amos "N Andy News Robert Q Lewi News Rolfe Peterson News Album ol MuslO Music til 6 a.m. Local News 12:15 Alltime ..Hits 1 1 I :00 News :05' E. Donaldson G- 1:3 1 :4o 2 00 2:05 2:30 2 45 3 00 3:05 3:20 3:45 5:00 - ; : Owe&' Hilltop Hoase Pepper YoUng News 5 Star Matinee oum Woman In One Manl's Family News Dr Gentry Confessions RoaQ Show News KSL--H- M '' Morning 5:00 Music 6:00 News 6:15 Breakfast. BarlOrv 7:00 World News 7:15 Rolf - Peterson 7:45 World News 8:00 Friendly Time 8:30 News 8 45 Margaret Master Hal Parkes ball Highlights Classified Afternoon 9:15 Know Utah New 9:30 In Woman's Day Provo vs. North 9:45 Trading Post Cache 10:00 Here s to Milady Or em vs. Jordan Gosar 110 Donna Reminiscing Afternoon Martin Block 12.00 High Noon 9:00 Platter Party 12:30 Piano Impressions 9:30 News 1:00 Safety Serenade ' :35 Platter Party 1:15 BYU Devotional Class A Basket9:45 2:00 Serenade 10:00 ball Highlights 4:00 KOVO-- 60 KDYL-13- 20 Morning Morning 6:00 Don Spainhower 6:00 News 6:30 Farm Flashes 6:05 Sob Hard wick 6:35 Don Spainhower 7:00 World News 7:00 News 7 15 Bob Hard wick 7:15 Coach Watts 7:30 News Roundup Spainhower 5:20 Don 7:45 Bob Hard wick News 8:00 News 7:40 Don Spainhower 8:05 Gordon Owen 00 Hemingway 8 15 Bob Hard wick Spainhower ,8:15 Don 8:30 News Review 8:30 News 8:35 Bob Hard wick 8:35 Don Spainhower 9:00 News 9:00 5 Star News 9:0" Valentines 00 Don Spainhower 10:00 News 9:30 Queen for Day 10:05 Bandstand 10:00 rive Star News Afternoon 10415 Weather Show 11:00 News Mitchell 10:1 Dou 10:15 Melodies of Grace 11:05 Bandstand 12:00 News 10:30 Don Spainhower News Bill Goedwin News j Show Tunes;; Dance Time News Paui Smith Show Jazz 12 to 1 KSLii6o WEDNESDAY, MARCH12 n6 Morning 6:00 Good Mornlnj 6:15 News 10. 10:30 10:45 TIMES TONIGHT ACIA wtM0M 70 7:13 9.00 i. Beneficial makes getting a loan a iti.ndly matter. For prompt Cash, phona for service... or coma in. Loam $2$ to on Auto, Furrjitur or Salary 13 E. CENTER ST., 2nd FI., Knight Clock, PROVO FRanklln Ask for tho YES MAftagor Uoas 60 6:15 6:30 6:35 6:40 6:45 00 W'ViftW When you ask for a TECHNICOLOR 9:00 Hit Parade 10:00 Dancing Party 10:30 Hit Parade 11:43 News KOVO-9- 60 -- 3-5- 160 CO-HI- What's Playing At the Movies wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmmm AMA t (Last of a series) ion 0 ilhViiljlI; ULL (5ED 0OT CT1 A 31 A AIM A3 AVN I (Prepared by the Nutrition Foundation to show use of basic, everyday foods.) 2) LOVEJOY Q 2J The longer you've been fat, the harder to get thin. FRANK LAST i, iJr-- DOORS OPEN 1:15 P.M. Feature - Times:-- 4:35 7:15 :5f Illustrations Of Balanced Menus r 1 until you get your weight down to where it should be. That is not enough for optimum health. You must teach yourself the new h$ttt of eating from balanced menus; in amounts enough to maln&ain tjiat proper weight, not for ust a lattla while, but for the rest of your life," . he concluded. ...means Trouble im DOORS OPEN 5:45 P.M. 70c thereafter 50c til 8:30 Children 20c anytime . PROVO ERNEST CHARLOrTE GREENWOOD for tonight. So will your mirror. "But, of course, you must stick to the balanced diet not Just "And buy a reliable scale. Use it at regular periods, at the same time of day. In a little while your scale will tell you that those unwanted and unbecoming pounds Tuesday, March "GO GORDON lt TOY WENDELL COREY LLOYD BRIDGES a fai amount mctum quirements. A1 ay Buckling Down Mil THE RAINMAKER pile up as fat. "To get rid of those excess pounds, adjust your food intake tp Juat below the calories required to maintain your ideal body weight," he advised. "Use a reliable chart to help you determine what your particular body weight should be according to your height. Life insurance companies, many food companies, health departments, etc., distribute these charts free. Get one. Study it carefully. Then determine your calorie needs and eat from the four groups enough, but not more, food to fulfill those calorie re- ijijiWH ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP) Dr. Evarts A. Graham, who touched off a medical controversy by sug- in Life ust up, the excess calories simply are fading away. prevent them from getting fat. So warns one of our most distinguished researchers in the field of nutrition, Dr. Charles Glen King, executive director of the Nutrition Founda- Researcher Succumbs to Lung Cancer Senate Really For fast service on "TAKE OUT" Orders PHONE FR By GAYNOR MADDOX NEA Food and Markets Editor NEW YORK (NEA) The longer you have been overweight, the harder it will be to get back to what you should weigh. That is why it k so important to avoid putting on weight in early life, why lit is vital to the health and good looks of young people to learn menu patterns that will re-educ- ate X-r- PIZZA you like them! Start Wat ching Diet Early . Young Made Chandelier The Mormon leader is reported to have asked Ludlow where he Just the way FINAL ARTICLE passengers dumped 1,000 tion. pounds of personal luggage in their "Obese people who have occaattempt to keep the plane from sionally lost some weight find it losing altitude after one of the two easier to reduce than those who engines conked out during a rain have never lost any unwanted last night. pounds," he added, again stressing "But we kept losing altitude at the importance of a better diet 1,000 feet a minute, and I gave pattern for Americans, who are the order to begin bailing out at rapidly becoming a nation of over6,000 feet," he said. "This was the fed. first time I had ever bailed out in He pointed out, too, that as a 14 years of flying. rule, fat children have fat par"In fact, none of us had ever ents. That usually means that mama and papa like to overeat jumped before." Greenspan said the three other and that the child has picked up crew members and eight airman the habit and shows the result. is far more passengers jumped in perfect or Just plain overeating we than serious realize. There is der and none was hurt. They were to that a evidence prove confined to the Ft. Jackson, S.C, every calunneeded with diet packed base hospital for observation, how with also is hazards ories packed ever. to personal attractiveness, not only "I attribute preparation and good but to health and longevity. discipline to the fact that there King, who is also professor of were no casualties," he said. "I at Columbia University nutrition personally briefed all the people nutritional consultant to on the craft before we took off and the solution convinced UNICEF. is We even replaced one man's par to now a national overweight, achute because it did not fit prop problem, is the readjustment of erly." The plane crashed in a wooded our Way of eating to modern life area south of the Columbia Mu and what we have learned about food values. nicipal Airport. A board of Air "Faddism is no solution to overForce officers roped off the area to keep crowds away until inves weight," he stated with emphatigators could learn the cause of sis. "Most of the 'wonder' diets so popular are not the answer. the engine failure. "I can't honestly answer that I In the first place they are exwas the last one out," Greenspan pensive. They are impractical in said. "I took the forward escape normal family living and fail to the obese into eating hatch and most of the others went a balanced diet and and enjoying out the aft hatch." to it sticking permanently." He defined a balanced diet as including everyday foods from four groups: 1) Good protein, such as meat, fish, eggs, dairy products. Demolished in 1929 Throughout its 66 year history the theatre remained basically the same with only minor remodeling now and then. There were no serious accidents or fires. The theatre was sold to the Mountain States Telephone and Telegraph Company. In 1928 the Daughters of the Utah Pioneers made some attempts to have the building moved in order to preserve it but the tomy was performed; April 5, 1933, $125,000 estimated cost was not on Dr. Robert Gilmore. obtainable. The building was finally demolished in 1929. Today there is only a plaque on the wall of the telephone company office building at First South and State street marking the spot where the theatre stood. (R-Sa- WHY YOU GET FAT Arthur Godfrey, News Call Hollyw ood Howard Mfller Wendy Warren 10:15 Backstage Wif 10:30 Helen Trent 10:45 Our GalSinday 1 1 :00 Nora Drake 11:15 Aunt Jenny 11:30 Young Dr Makma 11.43 Road of Life Afternoon'.. 12:00 World News 12:15 Business of Fern? 12:30 Arthur God frey 1:30 House Party ; 2:00 News 2:05 Right to Happlnea!j 4 2:15 Second Mr 2:30 Strike It Rich ! v 2:45 PaVButrtnT 3:00 News i' f 3:05 Rolfe Again 4:00 Allen Jackson V 4:10 Stock Market 4:15 Tennessee t JErniO ; I i |