anaheim-bulletin 1953-10-22
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HOLD TIGHT!—That's just what this trick rider is doing as he performs a daring stunt in Rothera maintains breakneck speed. Britons were being given a sample of the wild west
Results Are the Proof of Newspaper Circulation.
SHAVERS
Schiek - Sunbeam - Remington
Shearling Hands - Heppals
Scissors Ground
Lemons Grown by Planting Stems
RIVERSIDE — Not all lem-
University of California scientists here reported growing lemmons in the soil while seeking new ways of controlling insect pests citrus orchards.
Entomologist Paul DeBach and physiologist Lools C. Erickson found that lemons picked with
HOLD TIGHT!—That's just what this trick rider is doing as he performs a daring stunt in Rothera maintains breakneck speed. Britons were being given a sample of the wild west.
Results Are the Proof of Newspaper Circulation.
SHAVERS
Behlek - Sunbeam - Remington
Shearing Heads - Repairs
Seissors Ground
Car Shaves - Shavex
Free Demonstrations
Liberal trade-in allowance on cold shaver
ANAHEIM BARBER SHOP
111 So, Los Angeles St.
Lemons Grown by Planting Stems
RIVERSIDE — Not all lemons grow on trees, was the report today of scientists who said they have grown lemons by merely planting the stem of the fruit in soil.
Entomologist Paul DeBach and physiologist Lools C. Erickson found that lemons picked with stem one or two inches long would readily develop roots if planted moist sand.
It is not necessary to have leaves on the stem, the scientist said.
They said such rooted fruit have remained healthy for months under greenhouse conditions.
If It's News You'll See It
The Bulletin.
Cruise with Death
F. DRACOR
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE EVERYTHING happened at once, then, and the sequence is a blur. Gay screamed again, desperately, horribly. The leader took another step. Over the sound of the screaming came a hammering of metal on the metal door, and Robert's voice shouting.
"What's going on in there?"
"I fired at the door just over the guard's head."
My shot, which I had placed pretty close, but high enough to miss anyone who might be outside, made the guard drop to the floor. The leader might be waiting for a silver bullet, but he plainly believed in the authority of lead. The door burst open and Robert rushed in, followed by Brown and the doctor. They had armed themselves with a curious collection out of the Captain's tool box. Randolph clutched a spanner, Brown a wrench, Robert a heavy lever.
When Robert saw the oilers, and us at the end of the room, we came to a surprising stop, and spread his arms to check the rush of his companions. He spoke in French, mixed with words in some language which I did not know he knew.
To my astonishment, the leader made Robert a strange gesture of respect, half salute, and half bow. Robert produced a scolding tone—with some effect.
Larry behaved in the Cooper-Gable-Ladd tradition. Without waiting for anything more, he made an excellent flying tackle at the Haitian nearest him, and the two men crashed to the floor together. The cook reached for a knife in his belt, and Carlotta sprang on him, while Brown caught his arm from behind. Robert and the leader both shouted protests, and I was their only audience. Randolph brought his spaner down on a black head, and it bounced off the thick skull as if it had been made of rubber. One of the oilers fled. The room dissolved into a whirling mass of bodies, and I ran around the edges trying to keep near Robert, and afraid to fire for fear of striking the wrong person. As a fight, it was a beauty. Then suddenly, the Captain stood there, gun in hand, with Hezekiah and Todd behind him. In the excitement we had not heard them arrive.
"What's the meaning of this?" he roared.
None of the white men had enough breath to answer him. They were still panting from their struggle on the floor. Gay had collapsed on the sofa, her hands over her eyes this time, and Carlotta was dabbing at a bleeding scratch on her right forearm. I was not thinking about anything except helping Robert as he tried Jonas pointed his gun directly at my Robert.
"Robert Tintagel," he said, "arrest you for the murder of Drusin Opdyke, and for the inciting of this mutiny. Put the cuffs on him, Todd, and we'll take him below."
I know I gasped. I was too afterwards that I said, "You can do this," which was a misstatement because he could and did.
Brown, bless him, did make sort of protest. "By what right? By the right of what I found out and been told." The Captain was not going to give us any information.
So far as I can remember, this time Robert said nothing at all.
"Look here," Brown said again. "this man did not incite the man. He came to warn us against it. He led us down here to prevent it. Isn't that so, Randolph."
But Randolph, so appealed only gave his mouth a cry quirk. "His action could be interpreted that way if you like," said equivocally.
At the door, Robert shook Todd's pudgy hand, and turned speech to us.
"Look out for yourselves," told us. "The devil is walking ship."
Then he was gone, leaving stunned.
Captain's tool box, Randolph clutched a spanner, Brown a wrench, Robert a heavy lever.
When Robert saw the oilers, and us at the end of the room, he came to a surprising stop, and spread his arms to check the rush of his companions. He spoke in French, mixed with words in some language which I did not know he knew.
To my astonishment, the leader made Robert a strange gesture of respect, half salute, and half bow. Robert produced a scolding tone—with some effect.
"You tools! You are planning a great wrong. The storm is angry with you. Listen, and you can hear it growing worse."
In the silence we could indeed hear that the oldtimer crying of the wind had started up again. The ship too was wallowing more heavily.
"Elle veut la pouie blanche," the leader said, but there was some uncertainty in his tone.
Robert made the most of it. "You are mistaken. I call to the storm and I know."
The leader glowered at him, but two of the Haitians looked relieved, as if the affair were going faster than they had bargained for and they welcomed a check. The nuking guard loomed behind the three white men, his head down in his shoulders, his arms nanching, apparently uncertain whether to charge them or to shamble off.
Robert nad caught their attention, and I breathed more freely, but the cook was not to be put off. Now he snarled. "Don't listen to him. Can't you see he only wants to get around us and finish us off?"
"No such thing," said Robert. "We need every man to run the ship. You should all go back to your places."
The leader rolled his eyes around the room, noted the hesitation of his followers, and felt that he had lost the odds. He made Robert a gesture of submission, and then a peremptory circle with his bent arm, calling his crew around him. And that might have been the end of it, it well enough could have been let alone.
Unfortunately, just at that moment Gay caught sight of a new face in the doorway.
"Larry!" she screamed. "Larry! Help! They are trying to kill me."
What's the meaning of this?" he roared.
None of the white men had enough breath to answer him. They were still panting from their struggle on the floor. Gay had collapsed on the sofa, her hands over her eyes this time, and Carlotta was dabbing at a bleeding scratch on her right forearm. I was not thinking about anything except helping Robert as he tried to get up. It was Lisa, of course, who was self-possessed enough to explain.
When she had finished the Captain said, "I thought as much Pierre LeLoup, you are a bad man. I told Mr. Opdyke not to hire you, but he was dead set on it. Mr. Mate, take him to the brig. I see Mrs. Tintagei has a gun. Take that first. The officers will hold all weapons from now on."
The wiper whose skull had been impervious to the spanner, made a strong bid to get on the winning team.
"I foney the engineer be in the brig, sah. The key she overboard." Jonas digested this new outrage sourly, pulled a duplicate key out of his pocket, and handed it to Hez. He had a last word for the bilere.
I had ought to hang every one of you with my own hands, but I won't. The ship's in danger, and I need you to work it. Get back to your stations, now, and see to it that there is no more trouble."
But the cook, the renegade from civilization, was not so easy to defeat. He was bleeding heavily from a cut on the cheek which Carlotta had given him. Whether he was too full of rum to care, or whether the hate in the man made him indifferent to consequences, as he passed Jonas in the doorway he pulled the knife, which he had managed to hide again, and leapt like a striking snake for the Captain's heart.
He was not quick enough. A bullet caught him point-blank in the forehead, and he fell forward. His dying fingers clutched the Captain's foot. Jonas kicked them away.
"Now, who else wants it?" he asked, glaring around at us.
The thing which happened next was unbelievable.
Randolph came across buckling floor to put her around me. "My dear, I know didn't...," she began.
Brown turned on Larry. "I fool what did you have to stay fight for? You nearly got u killed."
Larry didn't answer, but looked so distressed that I threw he was going to cry. Little who could turn her emotion and off like a fountain, flew in the room and flung herself aside him.
"Don't you dare to talk to like that, you mean old thing did it to save me, when no rest of you were doing it. He's just the bravest that ever lived. Larry, darl love you. I love you better anybody in the world."
Larry's arms went around automatically, but his face red, and his anxious eyes woke.
"Take it easy, Gay."
But Gay could not be cheered. "What does it matter, darl She knows all about us. Good as told me so an hour She was bound to find it out or later. I'm glad to tell body I love you. It doesn't hurt them."
Larry looked helplessly at him. Again his eyes went lotta.
"You'll find out if it both of you," she said.
The absolute venom in her seemed to goad Larry's wife face settled into the most objection I ever saw. "It," he said. Then he put around Gay's shoulders and out of the room. She danced beside him like a blue chin.
(To Be Continued)
Magician Baffles Jury, Wins Suit
CHICAGO (UP) — A magician mystified a jury so much it decided to award him $2,275.
The magician, Bob Sharpe, brought his bag of tricks into Municipal Court yesterday to fight his breach of contract suit against the Ralston Purina Company of St. Louis.
Sharpe contended the Ralston Purina Company hired him to perform before dealer and sales meetings and then reneged on the contract.
The company claimed Sharpe's tricks hadn't mystified anyone at a dress rehearsal. Therefore, Sharpe had been fired from a company-sponsored show.
But the jury took only 30 minutes to decide Sharpe's slight of hand had convinced them.
Sharpe began his court performance by producing four eggs from an empty bag.
His attorney Alfred Busch, said, "Let the record show that Mr. Sharpe produced four eggs from an empty bag."
"From a purportedly empty bag," a defense attorney said.
Then he caused some cigarets to rise from a fresh package.
"Let the record show that Mr. Sharpe caused cigarettes to rise from a package of Herbert Tareytons," Busch said.
"A purported pack," said Judge J. M. Braude.
Trace Lung Cancer To Cigarette Smoke.
LOS ANGELES (UP)—Dr. Michael B. Shimkin told a meeting of the American College of Osteopathic Surgeons yesterday cigarette smoke has a definite correlation to lung
Sharpe's hand was quicker than their eyes.
Grimm Voted UP National League Boss of the Year
NEW YORK (UP)—Jolly Chol Grimm, the lefthanded banjo player who did some righthand thinking with his Milwaukee Braves this season, was named today by United Press National League magazine of the year for 1953.
Grimm, a deluxe story teller and a Barnum & Bailey type clown as third base coach, play strictly a straight man role running his sp'rited young club, and was rewarded with jump from seventh to second place in the standings.
He gained the award with votes while deposed Manah Charley Dressen, who won straight pennants for the Dodge received nine and Eddie Stanky the Cardinals picked up one. Annual selections are made by committee of 24 veteran baseball writers—three from each league.
Grimm himself knew he had improved club when he started spring training fully expecting play the 1953 season in Boston. But he was in for a lot of prises, the biggest of which came when the Braves' franchise transferred to his home town.
Say New Taxes Will Again Hit "Little Man"
WASHINGTON — The safest bet on new taxes to be levied next year is that the little fellows will pay most of the bill and the Treasury will remain in the red. The little man's share of the new burden will vary somewhat according to the type of taxes imposed. It is argued that a retail sales tax would take the most skin off him.
The little fellow is the taxpayer with $1,000 to $5,000 a year gross income. He pays the most because there are so many of him—35,860,888, according to Treasury records. Taxpayers in the $5,000 and up brackets number 8,326,711.
Little Fellow Hurt
Whether it be a retail sales tax or a manufacturers' excise tax, higher brackets cannot consume and pay excise or sales taxes on as many articles as the multitude below.
The administration does not want to hear what politicians believe the little fellows would say if subjected to a federal retail sales tax. Therefore President Eisenhower ruled against a retail sales tax. There had been a flurry of talk about it and the Democrats were beginning to hit the administration where it hurt.
It is often argued that a general federal retail sales tax would wreck the political party imposing it. This belief never has been tested.
Ike Barred Sales Tax
When Mr. Eisenhower barred a sales tax, he left the door open for a general manufacturers' excise tax to raise new revenue. Such are largely hidden taxes which the consumer often pays without knowing it. The tax is paid by the original maker of the goods. The rate might be six or seven per cent right across the board, excluding food, medicines and clothing.
Just why the taxpayer is expected to accept without rebellion a manufacturers' excise tax on something he wants and buys, but is expected to explode in anger against a five or six per cent general retail sales tax slug is not easily explained. But that is the straight pennants for the Dodge received nine and Eddie Stanky the Cardinals picked up one.
Annual selections are made by committee of 24 veteran base writers—three from each city.
Grimm himself knew he had improved club when he started training fully expecting play the 1953 season in Boston. But he was in for a lot of prizes, the biggest of which came when the Braves' franchise transferred to his home town Milwaukee.
Everybody managed to get spired after that. The fans at matically made the Braves to heroes-win or lose—and win did, most of the time.
Grimm, with the patience years in big league manager spots, developed a top-flight pitch staff, a solid infield and power-hitting outfield.
There's No Substitute for Circulation.
BACKS CAMPBELL KAULBA Mortgage 81 N. Louis Phone N
THIS WEEK GET A DOUBLE PAY-OFF! on a new MERCURY Get details today from
Test of Super-Fighter Scheduled This Week
SAN DIEGO — San Diego aviation sources reported today Consolidated Vulture's super-sonic Air Force fighter—the F-102—is being prepared for its first test flight at Edwards Air Force Base and the flight will be made within the next two or three days.
The F-102 is a delta-winged plane, 42 feet long with a wingspan of only 31 feet.
The sources said the plane will undergo ground tests tomorrow.
Pilot will be Dick Johnson, former Air Force flier now employed by Convair.
Read the Anaheim Bulletin want ads for profit and pleasure.
RADIO KVOE(1480)
THURSDAY
5:00 P.M. News — Traffic Jam-oree
5:30 P.M. Sports Report
5:40 P.M. Traffic Jamboree
6:00 P.M. Local News
6:15 P.M. Penthouse Serenade
7:00 P.M. News — Penthouse Serenade
8:00 P.M. News — Kvoeasy Listening
8:00 P.M. News — Kvoeasy Listening
8:30 P.M. On Stage
10:00 P.M. News — On Stage
FRIDAY
6:00 Spanish Hour
7:00 News — Breakfast Nook
8:00 News — Breakfast Nook
9:00 News — Backfence Matinee
10:00 News — Backfence Matinee
11:00 News — Backfence Matinee
12:00 News — Open House
1:00 News — Open House
2:00 News — Merry Go-Round
4:00 News — Merry Go-Round
STRANGE AS IT SEEMS
MRS. A. GOODWIN-Sydney, Australia
IS THE MOTHER OF TWIN BOYS BORN 56 DAYS APART
THE FIRST BABY ARRIVED DEC. 16, 1955 AND THE SECOND WAS BORN FEB. 10, 1956
TEX RITTER—celebrated Western Star LEARNED TO WALK, RIDE, GHOOT AND ROPE ALL AT THE SAME AGE!
RUGGSELL PAINTER, TRYING TO GET A CLOSE-UP OF A MOOSE WITH HIS MOVIE CAMERA, ON THE ROAD FROM SEWARD TO ANCHOR ALASKA, AMED HIS CAMERA, THE ANIMAL ONLY TO HAVE IT DROP DEAD IN ITS TRACKS
TOM'DANSON'S... TV-RADIOLOGIC
THURSDAY, OCT. 22—There's a wide variety of TV viewing tonight with lots of good programs for your entertainment. Starting at 6:30 p.m., the "Television Theater" will present a story concerning Jimmy Valentine, perhaps the most appealing thief in the annals of crime. This will come over KECA (7) ... More tense drama in "Douglas Fairbanks Presents" with the story, "Emerald Green," over KNBH (4) at 7 ... Now, take your choice. At 7:30, KNXT (2) presents Jack Smith with the popular "Place the Face" show, with movie star Charlton Heston as guest. At the same time, KTTV (11) will turn back the clock 30 years for coverage of the old-time car race during "The Open Road." Also at 7:30 over KLAC (13) Clete Roberts will query people on their opinion of Sen. McCarthy during his "Street Corner, U.S.A." ... A resident of the city files a report of robbery and assault, naming a rookie cop as his attacker, and Joe (Jack Webb) Friday sets out on the trail during "Dragnet" from KNBH (4) at 9 ... Handsome French star, Jean Pierre Aumont, will star on "Video Theater" in an original play called "The Cruel Time," over KNXT (2) at 9 ... And at 9:30 over KNBH (4), we find pert Wanda Hendrix playing the role of a young girl who suddenly acquires sophistication in a romantic comedy, "The Bachelor," with William Lundigan as the bachelor.
The following programs are compiled from reports provided by broadcasters. We assume no responsibility for last minute changes on their part—T.E.D.
TELEVISION TONIGHT
Thursday, Oct. 22
5:00 P.M.
2-Space Funnies
4-Mount Vault
7-Al Jarris
8-Story Lady
13-Webster Webfoos
5:15
4-Gabby Hayes
6-Corra
8:30
4-Bowdy Doody
5-Space Funnies
5-Western Feature
7-Jack Rourke
11-Sheriff John
13-Telvexturus
6:00 P.M.
2-Laurel and Hardy
4-Nutty, Clown
9-Action Theater
13-Thunderbolt
13-Dick Haynes
6:15
4-Cmdr. Conners
8-Ray Bolger
11-Ramar Jungle
6:20
News
5-Fly Boy
7-TV Theater
8-Perez
5-Newreel
8-Range Bldar
9-Joe Hill Show
11-Pet Exchange
13-Hank McCune
7:18
5-Supreme Twist
9-U.N. Newsreel
7:30
2-Place the Face
4-Dinah Shore
5-Hilywd. Opportunity
7-Lone Ranger
8-News
9-Early Movie
12-Open Road
13-Reserve
7:45
4-News.Cawanan
8:00 P.M.
3-Aspen McHustley
4-Groucho Marx
7-Quick as a Flash
9-News
11-Dollar a Second
13-V.I.P.
8:15
9-Sports by Brundige
13-Musical Show Case
8:30
2-Four Star Playhouse
4-T-Men in Action
13-Playhouse
9:20
2-Big Town
9:40-Ford Theater
5-Broadway Theater
7-Stars of Tomorrow
11-Stairway to Stardom
10:00 P.M.
2-Playhouse
4-Marin Kane
5-City at Night
7-Famous Husbands
8-Life Begins at 11-In Your Way
10:15
7-Charlie Clifton
10:30
4-News
4-Fortain Intrigue
7-News and Sports
8-Best the Clock
9-Don Lee-News
11-Close-up
13-Movie
10:45
5-Dick Lane
7-Movie
9-TV Jukebox
11:00 P.M.
2-Popular Science
TOMORROW
Friday, Oct. 23
8:30
6-Cinema Carnival
7-Thrill Theater
8:20
3-Farm Reporter
8:30
2-News, Movie
7-Movie
10:00 A.M.
4-Ding Donne School
5-TV Classroom
10:20
4-Glamour Girl
8-Strike It Rich
10:45
2-Calif Living
11-Serenade News
11:00 A.M.
4-Haykins Falls
5-What's Cookin'
11-Star Shoppers
13-Mike Roy
11:15
4-The Bennette
12:00
2-Art Linkletter
3-Steps to Heaven
8-Double or Nothing
11-Norma Gilchrist
Copyright 1953 by Universal Radio & TV Features Syndicate - Tom E. Dances
NETWORK
KFI-NBC 640
KECA-ABC 798
KHJ-MBS 936
KNX-CBH 1070
INDEPENDENT STATIONS
KLAC 578 KFYD 1926
KMPC 718 KFYC 1336
KBIG 740 KBOL 1566
RADIO TONIGHT
NOTE: Independent Stations Feature Music News Sports Daily
THURSDAY P.M.
5:00 P.M.
KFI-Pat Bishop
KECA-Hiro Hirsch
KHI-Bgt. Preston
KNX-Ed R. Murrow
KFI-News
KECA-Virgil Pinkly
KNX-Tom Harmon
KFI-Local Spots. Rpt.
KECA-Chet Huntley
KHI-Sky King
KNX-World Today
KFI-KECA-KNX-News
6:00 P.M.
KFI-Putnam and News
KECA-Len Beardsley
KHI-Gabriel Heater
7:00 P.M.
KFI-McGee & Molly
KECA-Stars of Space
KHJ-Horse Reidt
KHJ-Official Detective
KFI-Truth or Conse.
KREA-Chrysler Lines
KRJ-Rod & Gun Club
KNX-The Choristers
8:00 P.M.
KFI-One Man's Family
KECA-George Jessel
KHJ-Nightmare
KXM-Meet Millie
8:30
KFI-Boy Rogers
KECA-Hwd. Starway
KHJ-Enchanted Hour
KNX-Love Thomas
8:45
KECA-Mike Malloy
8:50-Hillywong Opportunity
Lone Ranger
News
8:60-Early Movie Road
8:65-Reserve
8:75-News. Coravan
8:80 P.M.
2-B Meet McNutley
4-Groucho Marx
7-Chuck as a Flash
8:95-News
11-Dollar a Second
13-V.I.P.
8:15-Sports by Brundige
13-Musical Show Case
8:20-Four Star Playhouse
14-T-Men in Action
5-Biff Baker, USA
7-Wherey Raymond
8-Ray Bogger
9-Scoop the Writers
11-Before Your Eyes
13-Quiz Bowl
9:00 P.M.
3-B Video Theater
4-Dragons
8-Sat Theater
7-Counterpoint
9-Pim Feature
11-Colonial Flack
8-Smokey Rogers
9-Mama Weisman
11-Leyden's Theater
13-M. Roy's Kitchen
2-Guiding Light
2:20-Ladies Always Win
2-News and Music
2:00 P.M.
3-Double or Nothing
4-Kate Burns
5-Mrs Talent, U.S.A.
7-Jordan Movies
9-Quesen for a Day
13-Betty White
3:20-Garry Moore
5-Tricks and Treats
11-Photouqs
4:00 P.M.
5-P.M. Show
5-Welcome Traveler
5-Playcrafters Club
7-Al Jarvis
13-Nancy Brown
2-P.M. Show
11-"Bones of Adventure"
4:30-On Tour Accounts
5-Movie Theaters
6-Olive Norman
13-Dr. Wilson
TOMORROW
FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
KFI-KECA-Music
KHI-News
KNX-Bob Perris
KFI-Fleetwood Lawton
KHJ-Breakfast Gang
KNX-Balph Story
KFI-Cabbagen & Kings
KECA-KNX-News
KFI-KENY-News
KECA-Paul Masterson
KHI-News Greene
8:00 A.M.
KECA-Breakfast Club
KHJ-Cecil Brown
KNX-Ralph Story
KFI-Johnny Murray
KHJ-KNX-News
8:30
KHJ-Bible Institute
KNX-Make Up Mind
8:45
KFI-Andy and Virginia
KNX-Rosemary
9:00 A.M.
KECA-Garden Guide
KNX-Wendy Warren
KHJ-Record Rhapsody
9:15
KFI-Ladies Day
KNX-News
KNX-Aunt Jenny
9:30
KEOA-Dble or Nothing
KHJ-Norma Young
KNX-Helen Trent
9:45
KFI-News
KNX-Gai Sunday
10:00 A.M.
KFI-Ten Date
KECA-A Friend. Berch
TOMORROW
FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
KFI-KECA-Music
KHI-News
KNX-Bob Perris
KFI-Fleetwood Lawton
KHJ-Breakfast Gang
KNX-Balph Story
KFI-Cabbagen & Kings
KECA-KNX-News
KFI-KENY-News
KECA-Paul Masterson
KHI-News Greene
8:00 A.M.
KECA-Breakfast Club
KHJ-Cecil Brown
KNX-Ralph Story
KFI-Johnny Murray
KHJ-KNX-News
8:30
KHJ-Bible Institute
KNX-Make Up Mind
8:45
KFI-Andy and Virginia
KNX-Rosemary
9:00 A.M.
KECA-Garden Guide
KNX-Wendy Warren
KHJ-Record Rhapsody
9:15
KFI-Ladies Day
KNX-News
KNX-Aunt Jenny
9:30
KEOA-Dble or Nothing
KHJ-Norma Young
KNX-Helen Trent
9:45
KFI-News
KNX-Gai Sunday
10:00 A.M.
KFI-Ten Date
KECA-A Friend. Berch
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
KFI-KECA-Music
KHI-News
KNX-Bob Perris
KFI-Fleetwood Lawton
KHJ-Breakfast Gang
KNX-Balph Story
KFI-Cabbagen & Kings
KECA-KNX-News
KFI-KENY-News
KECA-Paul Masterson
KHI-News Greene
8:00 A.M.
KECA-Breakfast Club
KHJ-Cecil Brown
KNX-Ralph Story
KFI-Johnny Murray
KHJ-KNX-News
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
KFI-KECA-Music
KHI-News
KNX-Bob Perris
KFI-Fleetwood Lawton
KHJ-Breakfast Gang
KNX-Balph Story
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
KFI-KECA-Music
KHI-News
KNX-Bob Perris
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
KFI-KECA-Music
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
KFI-KECA-Music
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
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TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7:00 A.M.
TOMORROW FRIDAY A. M.
7: