anaheim-bulletin 1954-05-10
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10 — ANAHEIM (Cal.) BULLETIN Monday, May 10, 1954
FRENCH WOUNDED HOME—Clutching his white "Kepi," this wounded Foreign Legionnaire is transferred from plane to waiting ambulance at Orly Field in Paris. The special plane repatriated seriously-wounded soldiers from the fortress at Dien Bien Phu before it fell to the Communists.
French Mayor Ousted For Red Sympathies
AVIGNON, France (UP)—The Communist mayor of nearby Soruges has been suspended after publicly stating his pleasure at the fall of Dien Bien Phu before the town's War Memorial.
Enraged villagers reported Rene Mesterham's actions to the departmental prefect yesterday.
Claim Jap Fisherman Asked to Ban H-Bomb
TOKYO — Radio Peiping claimed today that one of the 23 Japanese fishermen burned in the "fallout" of the March 1 U.S. hydrogen bomb at Bikini had written the Communist Chinese delegation at Geneva to help in banning atomic weapons.
Peiping identified the fisherman as Michio Nakano. A check of Tokyo hospitals failed to turn up anyone by that name receiving Thousands Walk to Ties Up Pittsburgh
PITTSBURGH — Thousands owe to work today because of a strike pany trolley and bus operators.
The AFL operators walked out service to more than 1,500,000 Great City and Allegheny County authorities prepared for one of the worst traffic tieups in the city's history in anticipation of miles-long bumper-to-bumper automobile traffic.
Mayor David L. Lawrence said the mass transportation tieup could "go on for months" after 11th hour negotiations failed to resolve contract differences between Division 85, AFL Street, Electric Railway and Motor Coach Employees union, and the railways company.
Lawrence requested both sides to hold new bargaining sessions today after he and government mediators stayed up most of Saturday night and Sunday morning in an effort to heid off the walkout.
The strike originally was scheduled for midnight April 30 when the unions contract expired. It was postponed for a week at the request of Lawrence and civic officials.
The operators, who earn $1.98 an hour, asked for a 30-cent hourly increase plus 48 other contract changes. The company turned them down on grounds they would necessitate a fare boost. Fares were raised only last December to 20 cents on trolleys and 25 cents on buses.
The full impact of the strike was not felt Sunday.
Church attendance dropped slightly. Downtown theaters and restaurants and other amusement places reported big drops in attendance.
In anticipation of today's rush, City Engineer Michael J. Gittens asked commuters to pool their automobiles and carry as many passengers as possible. Employers
AVIGNON, France (UP)—The Communist mayor of nearby Soruges has been suspended after publicly stating his pleasure at the fall of Dien Bien Phu before the town's War Memorial.
Enraged villagers reported Rene Mesterham's actions to the departmental prefect yesterday.
Bulletin Want Ads Bring Results
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Mortuary 251 N. Lennon
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TOKYO UP—Radio Peiping claimed today that one of the 23 Japanese fishermen burned in the "fallout" of the March 1 U.S. mydrogen bomb at Bikini had written the Communist Chinese delegation at Geneva to help in banning atomic weapons.
Peiping identified the fisherman as Michio Nakano. A check of Tokyo hospitals failed to turn up anyone by that name receiving treatment for radiation burns.
Regain your Health—the Natural way thru Chiropractic
Dr. John L. Waite, D.C.
Phone KE 5-4426
121 E. Broadway, Anaheim
There’s No Substitute for Paid Circulation.
The Doctor Disagrees
By Elizabeth Selfert
CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO REVEREND PREWITT moved to a chair beside her, and for nearly an hour they talked of the items listed in Craig's call book. "I think," he said, "that this is a matter for the law."
"Why?"
She was startled, and his smile reassured her. "Any depriving Craig of his license to practice would be done by the court," he said quietly. "I'm not the soldier your Stephen is, but I've heard rumors that offense is any fighter's best defense."
So he and Shelly went to see the magistrate, who immediately produced a suggestion for a court action.
Shelly thought Craig should be warned, and with snowflakes gifting on her hair, back she went to see him.
“If,” she said, walking briskly into the room where he sat up in a chair by the window, “a person dies of coronary thrombosis, would it snow in an autopsy?”
“Yes,” he answered quickly. Then he squinted his dark eyes at her. "What have you got in your bonnet now?" She hung her fur coat on a hanger in the small closet, and drew a straight-backed chair close to the one where he sat. "You're looking better," she said critically. "The turban bandage wasn't too becoming."
He snorted. "I don't think they're designed with my peculiar style in mind. Now! What about that roughly, 'you'd know the answer. You're pretty, you're soft and delicate; every feature in your face, every gesture you make, and yes, every soft, pretty word you say. You're a beautifully fashioned doll, Shelly, and an expensive one, but you're a doll of the sort I can't afford. I found that out when I was doing pre-med, and was beguiled by a girl in one of the Long Island finishing schools. She bewitched me, she entranced me—it was wonderful to be with her. And because of her I darn near flunked out that year, which would have lost me my scholarship and finished my education right then and there. I'm not the fool to need be taught the same hard lesson twice."
He risked a glance at her. Shelly was not angry, not hurt. She just sat and waited for him to finish.
But after a silence . . . "Craig," she said gently, "you fancy yourself as a judge of character, I imagine."
"You're not going to tell me I'm wrong?" Now he watched her face closely.
"I'm going to try. Because I'm sure you've decided that I too went to Miss Bennett's, and all that—that I had training in how to be charming, a debut in frosty tulle . . .
"You didn't?"
"I didn't. I had a year at Mary institute in St. Louis—a year paid for by great sacrifice on the part of my mother and me. But the rest of my education was got in to 20 cents on trolleys and 25 cents on buses.
The full impact of the strike was not felt Sunday.
Church attendance dropped slightly. Downtown theaters and restaurants and other amusement places reported big drops in attendance.
In anticipation of today's rush, City Engineer Michael J. Gittens asked commuters to pool their automobiles and carry as many passengers as possible. Employers also were requested to ask their employees to form car pools to lessen the anticipated heavy automobile traffic.
In many instances parking zone time limits were extended to ease the pressure.
Copyright, 1953, by Elizabeth Selfert Distributed by King Features Syndicate.
"Yes," he answered quickly. Then he squinted his dark eyes at her. "What have you got in your bonnet now?"
She hung her fur coat on a hanger in the small closet, and drew a straight-backed chair close to the one where he sat. "You're looking better," she said critically. "The turban bandage wasn't too becoming."
He snorted. "I don't think they're designed with my peculiar style in mind. Now! What about that bee?"
Shelly opened the small brief case which she had brought with her. "Let me do the talking," she demanded, "this time."
And this time Craig let her.
When she was entirely finished, and had zipped up the leather case again, he sat regarding her. "Why do you do all this, Shelly?" he asked.
She laughed a little, and her cheeks were prettily pink. "Because I like you," she said so impulsively that he had to believe her.
But anger rolled blackly into his face, and clenched the strong fingers upon the chair arm.
"Don't you want me to like you, Craig?" she asked softly.
His eyes flashed jet sparks. "I don't want to like you!" he said bluntly, and turned away from the sight of her.
"Oh, Craig," she teased, "what a thing to say! Why don't you want to like me?"
"Because you're an expensive doll. Too expensive for my tastes."
"And you don't like dolls."
He glanced at her briefly, not at her face, but at the skirt of her tweed suit, at her nand and arm, and shoulder. "I can't afford to like dolls," he said gruffly. "Either to spend the money, or the time—"
Shelly was sorely tempted to mention Eleanor. She did not. May be he didn't think Eleanor was a "doll." But why, then, did he think She could ask that question. "What makes you think I'm a doll, expensive or otherwise?"
"If you were not a doll," he said
"I'm going to try. Because I'm sure you've decided that I too went to Miss Bennett's, and all that—that I had training in how to charm, a debut in frosty tulle."
"You didn't?"
"I didn't. I had a year at Mary institute in St. Louis—a year paid for by great sacrifice on the part of my mother and me. But the rest of my education was got in the public grade schools and high school. I had a debut of a sort. An old friend of my mother's gave a lovely luncheon in my honor—at the Woman's club. It put me on the debutante list, and that year I was invited to all the big parties. I was asked to be a V.P. maid, too, because the family happened to be an old one in the city, and money doesn't always overweight birth — which seemed a good thing, because we were poor. Very poor, Craig. We had social-standing, and an old, old name, some connections with people who had money—but nothing else.
"My mother fed the two of us by arranging parties for other people; she dressed me by making over the castoffs of the girls you knew at the Long Island schools. My father, you see, died six weeks after I was born of an infection he'd fighting in the First World war. There was the tiniest pension—and there was pride. But not much else. We'd have been better off without the pride. Then mother could have gone out and really worked for a living, and I could have been trained to earn mine.
Instead, there must be the pretense of social standing, of a debut, and the heartful hope that, as pretty as I was, I'd make a good marriage. I could have made such a marriage. Twice I had proposals from men whose fathers had a million dollars, more or less. But there was something in me that kept me from marrying a rich boy who, at eighteen, already was on the road to alcoholism, or a man of twenty-nine who already had been divorced by two other girls."
Well, I put opinion to the test. I went to a man at one of the swank night clubs, and asked him for an engagement. I don't know why—maybe he had an unexpected cancellation — but he agreed to my singing there for a week. He had some glamorous pictures made, and there was a good deal of newspaper publicity about the society singer he engaged.
"It paid off. My friends rallied round—and it seemed as if I might be a success at earning my living. For a week, anyway."
"Didn't you get other engagements?"
Shelly laughed. "No. As it happened, I didn't need to. Because on one of the first nights of that week, Stephen Carr happened to come to the club, and he—well—he came again. The second night he asked to meet me. We saw each other every day, then—all day. And the next week we were married."
"And that's how you earned your living," said Craig gruffly. "Very nice earning, too. I'll say."
Shelly stood up. "I married Stephen," she said gently, "because I loved him."
He had her coat in his hands before she could reach it. "I apologize, Shelly," he said from behind her shoulders. "That was an unforgivable thing to say."
She laughed a little. "We both married under false pretenses," she told him gaily. "Stephen thought I really was a society girl. I thought he was a country doctor. But it worked out all right, because when we each found out the truth, we still loved each other."
"I double my apology," said Craig soberly. "And about that other thing, too. I'm glad you do like me, Shelly. Very glad."
"Do you withdraw the 'doll'?"
"Oh, no!" he said, following her to the door. "You're a doll, all right. But afford it or not, I find myself bound to like you."
(To Be Continued)
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
Sands Walk to Work as Strike Up Pittsburgh Transportation
BURGH — Thousands of persons hitch-hiked or walked day because of a strike of 2,700 Pittsburg Railways Company and bus operators.
PL operators walked out at 5 a.m. Sunday, paralyzing more than 1,500,000 Greater Pittsburgh District residents.
Allegheny County auprepared for one of the epic tieups in the city’s anticipation of miles-to-bumper automobile requests both sides bargaining sessions to and government mediating most of Saturday Sunday morning in an off the walkout.
Originally was schedled night April 30 when contract expired. It need for a week at the Lawrence and civic officers, who earn $1.98 per hour for a 30-cent hourly pay of 48 other contract company turned on grounds they would fare boost. Fares only last December in trolleys and 25 cents impact of the strike was day.
Dependance dropped downtown theaters and other amusement added big drops in attention of today’s rush, Mr Michael J. Gittens enters to pool their hand carry as many possible Employees.
Crime-Buster Named to Head Anti-Treason Unit
By DAYTON MOORE
United Press Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON (UP) — William F. Tompkins, crack crime-buster from New Jersey, was selected today to head the Justice Department's new Internal Security Division.
The anti-treason unit is charged with broadening and intensifying the administration's legal crackdown on Communists, spies and traitors. The new setup was described as the most important step in the government's campaign against subversion since the FBI was placed in charge of counter-espionage shortly before World War II.
Tompkins, 41, is now federal district attorney for New Jersey. President Eisenhower was scheduled to send his nomination as assistant attorney general to the Senate today.
Internal security, now a section of the Criminal Division, will be co-equal with other top branches of the department and will take over all cases dealing with subversion. A spokesman said the change is part of the administration's over all plan to broaden and step up provide money for the purpose of operation and maintenance of the schools of said District and for the payment of salaries of employees thereof that for holding said election the said Jankheim Union High School District of Orange County, California, shall be divided into seven (7) voting precincts:
Precinct No. 1 shall include all of the area lying within the boundaries of the Anaheim School District as established by Order of the Board of Supervisors on March 30th, 1954, excepting therefrom the territory included within the Katella School District.
POLLING PLACE therein shall be the Anaheim Union High School Officers of Election:
Mrs. Persis Ward, Inspector
Mrs. D. F. Lehmer, Judge
Mrs. Audrey Starr, Judge
Precinct No. 2 shall include all of the area lying within the boundaries of the Katella School District.
POLLING PLACE therein shall be the Katella School House Officers of Election:
Mrs. Edda Sparks, Inspector
Mrs. Midge Halvorsen, Judge
Mrs. Lucille Anderson, Judge
Precinct No. 3 shall include all the territory embraced within the Magnolia School District.
POLLING PLACE therein shall be the Magnolia School No. 1.
Officers of Election:
Mr. Steve Cannon, Inspector
Mr. George McGuire, Judge
Mrs. Doris Kirk, Judge
Precinct No. 4 shall include all the territory embraced within the Centralla School District.
POLLING PLACE therein shall be the Centralla School house Officers of Election:
Mrs. Olive M. Williams,
Inspector
Mrs. May Brock, Judge
Mrs. Kathleen Correia, Judge
Precinct No. 5 shall include all the territory embraced within the Cypress School District.
POLLING PLACE therein shall be the Cypress School house Officers of Election:
Mrs. Ruby M. Cawthon,
Inspector
Mrs. Edna I. Mahaffie, Judge
Mrs. Marie J. Bolinger, Judge
Precinct No. 6 shall include all the territory embraced within the Savanna School District.
POLLING PLACE therein shall be the Savanna School house Officers of Election:
Mrs. Inis S. Clark, Inspector
Mrs. Olga J. Jennings, Judge
Mrs. Moe Eelle Snavely, Judge
Precinct No. 7 shall include all the territory embraced within the Los Alamitos School District.
POLLING PLACE therein shall be the Laurel School Officers of Election:
Mrs. Lura Labourette,
Inspector
Mrs. Mable Wright, Judge
Mrs. Dorothy Hooper, Judge
The returns of said election will
Tompkins, 41, is now federal district attorney for New Jersey. President Eisenhower was scheduled to send his nomination as assistant attorney general to the Senate today.
Internal security, now a section of the Criminal Division, will be co-equal with other top branches of the department and will take over all cases dealing with subversion. A spokesman said the change is part of the administration's over all plan to broaden and step up anti-subversion work.
The division will be responsible for prosecution of cases under the Smith Act, which makes it a crime to conspire to overthrow the government by violence.
The department spokesman said the Criminal Division has accumulated a backlog of such cases and others involving denaturalization and deportation of aliens suspected as loyalty risks.
Tompkins, of Maplewood, N.J., was a war crimes prosecutor at Singapore after World War II. He will become the eighth assistant attorney general and will represent the Justice Department on the interdepartmental Committee on Internal Security.
Tompkins has built up a reputation as a racket-buster since becoming district attorney last June. He got a denaturalization order and income tax indictment against Albert Anastasia, one-time trigger man of Murder, Inc., and prosecuted Harold J. Adonis.
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE OF SCHOOL ELECTION
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to the qualified electors of Anaheim Union High School District of the County of Orange State of California, that in accordance with law, an election will be held on the 25th day of June, 1954, in said District, between the hours of 7:00 o'clock A.M. and 7:00 o'clock P.M. at which election there will be submitted the question of shall the maximum rate of tax for shall the maximum rate of tax for District be increased from $1.00 per each $100.00 assessed valuation to $1.50 per each $100.00 assessed valuation for the school year commencing July 1st, 1954, and that the said maximum tax rate be increased from $7.50 per each $100.00 assessed valuation for the school year commencing July 1st, 1955 and thereafter for an unspecified period of time, to pro-
Loma Vista Memorial Park
Fullerton, California
Cemetery — Mausolum — Columbarium — Endowment Care Provided
Phone: Fullerton LA 5-1575
Res. Anaheim KE 5-3811
Loma Vista Memorial Park
Fullerton, California
Cemetery — Mausoleum
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Phone: Fullerton LA 5-1575
Res. Anabeim KE 5-3811
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TOM DANSON'S ... TV-RADIOLOGIC
MONDAY, MAY 10—Jerome Cowan and Peggy Allenby will play the leading roles in "Fear Is No Stranger," a gripping drama about a father's emotional struggle between his duty as a public servant and his more personal role of parent, during "Studio One" oven Channel 2 at 7 o'clock. The scene is set in a California town where two young women have been found brutally killed... Stay on the same channel for George Burns' session in bed as he prepares for an insurance physical examination. This episode is TVviewed at 8 p.m.... The program for the "Voice of Firestone" simulcast tonight will include several southern numbers, inasmuch as this is Confederate Memorial Day in North and South Carolina. Rise Stevens is starred over Channel 4 at 8:30... Dennis Day follows on the same channel with an amusing story bit which concerns his invitation to appear on a TV panel show, and his plans to make use of this appearance as a springboard to fame. This is at 9 p.m.... Tennessee Ernie (Ernie Ford) is still with Lucy and Ricky during "I Love Lucy" on Channel 2 at 9, and at 9:30, Robert Montgomery Presents his weekly drama on Channel 4.
The following programs are compiled from reports provided by broadcasters. We assume no responsibility for last minute changes on their air-T-E-D.
TELEVISION TONIGHT
Monday, May 10
5:00 P.M.
2-Space Funnies
4-Pinky Lee
7-Al Jarvis
8-Monte Hall Show
9-G. Norman
11-13-Movie
15-Dusty Walker Show
5:29
2-Little Rascals
4-Howdy Doody
5-Western Feature
7-M. Whiting
11-Sheriff Join
13-Webster Webfoot
5:55
7-Rourke in Ho.
6:00 P.M.
2-Charley Chase
4-McElroy
4-Chet Huntley
7-Annie Oakley
9-Action Thunderer
13-Thunderbolt
13-Commander Comet
6:15
7-Jack Owens
11-Ramar
6:20
2-D. Edwards, News
5-Easy Life
8-Newsreel
9-Captain Video
11-Time for Beany
13-Sports Page
4-News, Sports
5-Handy Hints
9-Marge & Jeff
11-News
13-News, Weather
6:55
5-Weather-Bollay
7-Weather News
7:00 P.M.
2-Studio One
4-Diamond Jubilee
5-Newreel
7-Cisco Kid
Superman
9-Into the Nite
11-Abbott & Costello
13-Movie
7:15
5-Surprise Twist
7:29
4-Tony Martin
5-Make Believe Stars
7-Kit Carson
8-People in News
6-Craig Kennedy
11-Life w/Elizabeth
7:43
8-News
8:00 P.M.
2-B-Burns & Allen
4-Name Tune
5-At Ease
7-Asked For It
9-Sports Film
11-Gloria Swanson
8:15
5-Roller Derby
7-Superman
11-Wrestling
13-Movie
9:00 P.M.
2-8-I Love Lucy
4-Dennis Day
7-Thrill Theatre
30
2-8-Red Buttons
4-Rbt, Montgomery
7-Name of Song
10:00 P.M.
2-City Detective
7-Jack Rourke
8-Doug, Fairbanks
9-Public Service
13-10 o'clock Theatre
19:15
7-Alice Scott
10:39
2-9-News - Sports
4>Theatre
7-Orient Express
8-Studio One
13-Criswell Predicts
9-TV Jukebox
13-News Program
11:00 P.M.
2-Chronoscope
4-11-News
5-News, Hawthorne
7-Hank Weaver
11:55
2-7-11-Movie
TOMORROW
Tuesday, May 11
7:00 A.M.
2-8 Panorama Pacific
9:00 A.M.
2-Morning Show
8-Brkst with Ace
9:15
4-Today in L.A.
11-Morning Serenade
10:00 A.M.
2-Cfee Hrs. Eisenhwer
4-Ding Dong School
8-Schools Today
11-Certified Salute
10:15
2-Brighter Day
10:39
2-Intro to Art
4-Dunliffe Family
8-Strike It Rich
2-Calf Living
4-3 Steps Heaven
11:00 A.M.
4-Home
8-What's Cooking
11-Little School House
11:30
2-Art Linkletter
8-Garry Moore
11-Sheriff John
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RADIO TONIGHT
NOTE: Independent Stations Feature Music — News — Sports Daily
MONDAY P.M.
5:00 P.M.
KFI-Pat Bishop
KABC-News
KHJ-Bobby Benson
KNX-Ed. R. Murrow
5:15
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KNX-L.A. Today
5:30
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KHJ-Bill Hickok
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5:45
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6:00 P.M.
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6:15
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6:30
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7:15
KIF-Out of West
7:20
KIF-World We Live In
KABC-H.J.Taylor
KNX-Taient Scouts
HKJ-Could This Be U
7:45
KIF-Nat.Business
KABC-Rom.in Music
8:00 P.M.
KFI-News of World
KHB-Back to Bible
HKJ-Under Arrest
KSUS-Suspense
8:15
KFI-One Mans Family
8:30
KFI-Railroad Hour
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KHJ-Let George Do It
KNX-Lowell Thomas
8:45
KABC-F.Martin Or.
KNX-Tenn.Ernie
9:00 P.M.
KFI-Telephone Hour
KNX-Bill Ballance
KHJ-To Think About
9:30
KABC-Drway Future
KFI-Amer. Handstand
KHJ-Rpts. Roundup
KNX-Brieg Music Box
10:00 P.M.
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KHJ-Fult.Lewis Jr.
10:15
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KHB-Dr.F. Hailez
KHJ-Frank Edwards
KNX-Alcott.Hanlon
10:30
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KHJ-Major League
KNX Phil.Norman
11:00 P.M.
KFI-KNX-News
KABC-Melodies
11:15
KFI-Rollie Thomas
KNX-Merry Go Round
11:40
KNX-Balance Record
MIDNIGHT
BULLETIN WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
TOMORROW
TUESDAY A.M.
7:00 A.M.
KFI—Wills Western
KHJ—KNX—News
KABC—P Masterson
7:15
KFI—News
KHJ—Breakfast Gang
KNX—Ralph Story
8:20
KNX—Frank Gos
KFI—Hit the Road
KABC—Bob Garreq
7:45
KNX—Harry Babbitt
KFI—knox Manning
KHI—News
8:00 A.M.
KFI—Johnny Murray
KABC—Breakfast Club
KHJ—Cecil Brown
KNX—Ralph Story
8:15
KHI—News, Sports
KNX—News
8:30
KFI—Pat Bishop
KNX—Make Up Mind
KHJ—Haven of Rest
8:45
KFJ. Andy & Virginia
KNX—Rosemary
9:00 A.M.
KABC—Garden Guide
KNX—Wendy Warren
KNX—Melody Manner
8:15
KFI—Ladies Day
KBC—Chet Huntley
KHJ—Capitol News
KNX—Aunt Jenny
9:30
KHI—New York Young
KBC—True Story
KNX—Helen Trent
9:45
KFI—News
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9:55
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10:00 A.M.
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KHJ-Bill Hickok
KNX-Tom Harmon
8:45
KABC-Bob Garred
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6:00 P.M.
KFI-George Putnam
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KHJ-Gabriel Heatter
KNX-Radio Theater
6:15
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6:30
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6:45
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KHJ-Hayes-Henry
7:00 P.M.
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KNX-Round of Life
10:15
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KNX-Ma Perkins
Khj-Tello-Test
KFI-Strike It Rich
Khj-Jack Wagner
KBAC-Modern Rom.
KNX-Dr. Malone
KNF-Guiding Light
KBAC-Ever Since Eve
11:00 A.M.
KFI-Hope Records
Khj-Story Time
KNX-Mrs Burton
Khj-News
KNX-Perry Mason
KFI-Phrase That Pays
KBAC-A & D.Todd
Khj-Nora Drake
Khj-Queens for a Day
Khj-Lady's Book
KBX-Brighter Day
12 NOON
Khj-Farm Report
KBAC-KHJ-News
KBPC-Major League
KNX-Bill Kenneally
12:15
Khj-Road of Life
KBAC-Paul Harvey
KNX-Hilltop House
Khj-Cedric Foster
12:30
Khj-Pepper Young
KBAC-Sam Hayes
KNX-Art Linkletter
Khj-Tapestries of Life
12:45
Khj-Happiness Rt.
KBAC-Your Town
Khj-News, J. Wagner
1:00 P.M.
KFI-Backstage Wife
KABC-Bill Davidson
KNX-Arthur Godfrey
KI=Stella Dallas
KI=Widder Brown
KI=Jack Wagner
1:45
KI-Woman in House
2:00 P.M.
KBAC-Murder in P.M.
KI=Plain Bill
2:15
KI-Frt. Page Farrell
2:30
KI-Lorenzo Jones
KI=Go to Town
KNX-Curt Massey
2:45
KI-Paya to Be Mar.
HKJ-Lynn's Hwd.
KNX-Wizard of Odds
3:00 P.M.
KI-Welcm. Travelers
KBAC-Reserve
HKJ-Crowell's Nest
KNX-Ashhton, Norman
3:15
KI-Off Ballance
3:30
KI-Dr. Paul
KBAC-Martin Block
HKJ-Behind Story
3:45
KI=News
Khj-Tello-Test
4:00 P.M.
KI=Life Beautiful
KBAC-M. M. McBride
Khj-Fult. Lewis Jr.
KNX-P.Norman
4:15
KI=Bert Wheeler
HKJ-Hemingway
4:30
KNX-Geo. Fisher
Khj-Music
KBAC-Naney Holme
4:45
KBAC-Hirsch, Sports
Khj-News