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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK. TRIBUNE MONDAY, DECEMBER .21, 1925 | rn s k T 1 | progr of development that is: alluring to the 5 . The Bismarc PDU NE oT ee Gireet crataee weneae Trant name #5 And Every Where That Mary Went— SHUT OFF MAN’S AIR Am Independent Newspaper ‘Taxpayer fp Sa a LU NC METIS Were tase een neni : <= AND HE DIES THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER He is outspoken on lines of economy, reduction = xem | sa co ses tablished 1873) or taxes, and a construct gricultu Hy nea nig? iti BY DR. HUGH S. CUMMING. even in winter weather. If you do all oe ‘OT % He gently couxes the pean maidens to fall” these things, you will get the great- Seed ye em Ne eine eetlne al lilicts deunelal dance: care eon Genera . Public Health| est amount of value out of nature's Cee ee ee ene eri imatlere facuehe (he! Gadles or palilisan gemtne Service medicine—fresh. air. Fresh air bene- y Biemarck, as second clase mall matte) . Hoaasts the Jodigg of oupawe political ssew!sG ow that man can exist for} fits the whole hody. It helps you to George Do Mann........+. President and eae ere ieee eae ene ates as little further, in-{ 6 dat mane ‘thats svi iene : a F % aid! go mare dalla co, which tickle sone without food for Plants kept in a room ‘where there Subscription Rates Payable In Advan ae oa ee ee ' Iso ean li short] is hut little fresh ait and sunshine Datly by carrier, per year. ......eeee oe Misa Coad mothe mide and she sweetly lime water, Man cannot] soon wither and die, What is true Daily by mail, per y (ao Blamarck).. iite jlive without gir, If the supply of air] of ered is also true of men, women ail, per year i is shut off life becomes extinet in a}and children, ; (in state outside Blamarck) i few minutes, Do not be afraid of fresh air. Most Datly by , outside of North [ aks About the Press | H Very few ¥alize how important air people need to learn that they should atin re ; ‘ ifter. te } is in the mat C th, People | b + = gi ] , lai eo Amer ess. Not unl i ver ir| never be more than 70 degrees. Sixty- q sociated Press Him the of Amer press, M louv air will nevertheless keep their J i pret oe ane See iealy entitled to the we have papers conducted not for profit, he windows closed and their doors shut.| eight degrees is even better | for The Associated atches credited |... ‘i F They burn up the air in their rooms| health, Excessive heat is unhealthy. use for republication of all news dispatches alsy Wi We wet the frath in our newspapers, with fires and lights. Air which is too dry is unhealthy. to it or not otherwise credited In this paper, and Ase nis right, but it looks otherwise, A ‘They fail to give their bodies the| Stagnant air is unhealthy. Give your the local news of spontaneous origin published here-( iueted fit, would have benefit of proper ventilatic They|skin plenty of fresh air. Do" not tn. AML rights of republication of all other matler paper that wae not conducted for prafit would haw shut the tr oR from their hades wear Light clothing. Give your lonps nerein are also reserved. _ fo he privately endowed: and such a paper, inevit- | with close fitting, heayy shoes, with| plenty of fresh air. _ nbd tend were of a bine, on one side ory tight. ars and with closely woven Helping to Avoid Colds Forelyn Representatives the other, Han any journal of today that tries to! Jeloth of all kinds. Frosh alr helps to destroy | the G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY a | For a long time, many people} germs that cause coughs and colds. an DETROIT y own way | thought that there were two kinds of | The best way to avoid colds is to get CHICAGO <resge BW eer ery 7 av ‘ air, day air which was good, and| plenty. of fresh air. Keep the air 314 Kresge iz. Gur press is) far om perfect fat, day in and y ‘4 y . 4 a 1 Tower Bite AYNE, BURNS AND SMITH iat ict (any! PRL tmnportaie night air, which was ‘bad. In some] ubout you moving. Ventilation is PAYNE, NS AND OSS lag. out, (here js tittle news of any rea! ance parts of Europe people s have this| more important than heat. Vhen Ww YORK = Fifth Ave, Bide ia not yiven a fair presentation wrong idea, There are still in Amer-| you goto sleep see to it that there » PAESL EWA IGRG AES Meu RRA DER ! ica many ‘people who believe that|is a stream of fresh air flowing into (Official City, State and County Newsptper) = i night air is bad, and’ keep the win-| your room, If you keep your win- ne ——— ‘Ten Years Ago | dows if tele sleeping rooms tightly d ows open gon canst jell, hie fresh America Is Young Phe M15 copy of “Who's Who" is an Interesting ele eeyone’ snelld (how that night oaeltlene, j 4 c 1 woul BE Shook interesting for what it does not contain rather | air n not bad air, Hee night sir * fh arenehe seep. Lesage breathing : ton ale 4 aa not dangerous. but that night oir isj helps your lungs, your brain, your Poe baiidin , tian fore lige it does contains ood. By keeping the windows of [nervous system, in fact your whole daly the e ie y hi built b ae) UNE | For neither the name of Warren G. Harding nor your sleeping room open-at night it! body, den nd tne umtinished | Coivin Coolidge can be found in it | will help you to avoid tuberculosis,| In street cars the air becomes bad ned, with!” ‘ “ait sometimes called consumption. in g short t It is your duty to Astro “HS Who will be president 10 years from now? Will Another mistake which many peo-| ace that ventileiora in cara afe Kept t it be some man already well known throughout the ple Tae ane to the feet hae they | open, Coughing and ee al re, with its AY hon : r wil i s le who i ‘act believe that the body takes in air/ these erowded places spray harmfu b tu t Bs ah court) ar wil it be some one who is practically only through the lungs. The fie bacteria inte the air. vise this oir \ t 32 unheard of now? | lic Health Service wants you to know| is breathed over and over + again i ' v btins pruly, our American life elevates the obscure in| that fresh ‘air is important to your| more colds result. p emg s . + | skin as well as to your lungs. With plenty of fresh air goming ! ‘rapid fashion, sometimes, i Still air—air that is not in motion | into a street car or a eroeae room, e Kens ut i —should be avoided. To keep your] many harmful bacteria will be de- : x nly smile, and ¢ Theres OCAxSS. “TRI is 6 : hody in perfect health you need air] stroyed by the oxygen in the air. If the : ‘ There is talk of cutting taxes. This is contrary ! that is moving. Keep the wir about| you have a cold, if you must cough . to the detinition of taxes which is, “Things that | you in motion. Open youx windows.| or sneeze, remember it is your duty ie | Pp % \ ' the next time SoU gy an | Open your doors. Use the electric] toward the public health to cover Signin ae ' fun. An electric healthful,| your mouth with your handkerchief. pal ha pe cima ieee eine | intimate friend: “This is a lot off WCCO (4164) con- ' your nails and on your friends, : dann, foolishness.” And, of course,) cert, f ; 7 it is! Mountain Time we i : And all the time, in the back-| KOA (322.5) 6:30—Orehestra. - - ——— 7 SeeETE = ground grinding und saving and fe Pacific Time t ym this Stayt struggling are the millions trying to GO (361.2) 6—Dinner concert. stheti Editorial Comment | IN make good thelr dream of “making| KGW (4818) G—Dinner. concert, : v E gen money” SET ISI) t—orchest ‘ s BS mage . . ot a 2 KFI (467) 7—Orchestra. Pa great in an No Twilight Zone for Death Taxes 2 The sad point is that, sooner or} ere Phe k Duluth Herald) | ie later, most of these millions los u f ue Cede da Wadkinee ® KARL WHITNEY | wheel choir, He said to me the oth- theit sense of values, ‘In the “fool ) » 1 : T Me resentitives of several states are in Washing PRESCOTT— er da : ; ishness” that is all about, icia wail 1 (eying: 16: Ret, Gangress tal do away’ with the NUED y“Karl, what: do you think those 21.—In three sen-/values are implanted. i fying t ie sald entirely | ain bohunks at the mill’ would think if! , adler ex-| Maine camp. “Mellie” € at inheritance tax, leaving this fleld entirely) vou. othe r Leslie, and also| they. saw me wheeled around at the} d, gave thelhe a contented and carefree person ) r state your husband sure that you will] plant? I’m sure most of them have | best summin; p of New York I have|with his $3 a night, earned now rT 4 7 | pose of these fateful} had lots worse burns than I and been | heard in « day’s travel. then, and the little extra tha | we 1 W Apparently they are not getting much encourage Miss Perier, . who| at work the next day or two.” is arrival, the American| from “making snowshoes. ‘The $3 ( 7 utters stand now they shouldn't get taken a great fancy) However, the doctors have given Bull was asked why] wouldn't pay the cover charge ina} j to little Jack, says, “if by | selling] Jack permission to go to his officelthe had come to New York and an-|New York night club at which hej pane LL them, you could endow both your] and“only.uge a ‘cane, two weeks fromtswered with disarming honesty: “Me| was guest. | does; Minneapolis hat » is confusion and irritation.{ sons with « fortune outside of that] today. In the meantime, Miss: ler and came to make some a? — ie — St. Louis has not the F he Federal| Which they will inherit from . the is. leqving for New York. this, evé- | money. “Wealth seeking, curiosity and;Controversy Raging Over , so long as both th “| steel m t might not oniy annihi-| ning, tobe gone ten days. ‘She says ,Soon a great crowd had gathered) gamn foolishness” -these ave the ‘ rf Bue nd s vernments impose inheritance taxes, late the : which they have brought} that while she is there she will ar-/ +5 peep at him and he made the de-| most easily found of New Yori's! Whether Mme. Schwim- when ( a to you, also, make them bring| rahge. to fegatiate some of her .in-| duction: “Folks here is sure darn} many sights j ; ‘ eee Bat the Federal government ought not to drop] io oa'g to those who become} vestments so that she can make that | curjous.” ‘Also they are the ns that keep mer Queered the Trip a ae eon ; its inher © taxes until it gets a satisfactory | their 1 ors in the toca. ; enormous payment if you will let her se enagatier, they had Hbaped upon most, of the popul ‘ enamored; on before Indianapoli a wea if Pe" ‘a I n quite a good deal of| have the jewels. 4 im the usual honors, had s ed) that breed a great restlessne weliligenosscan rence chat every state in the Union Will IMDS" | gic" Perier sinee she came back. I| “1 epnfess, my dear Leslie, that 1,| around. to. night clubs’ and. theaters] fhevthy comestte act as a WES Oe ieee batts in xes, and will make them some] think she is a charming woman, one | too, will be glad to get rid of those | the snowshoe er of Maine com-} ening individui nective, ic agbingts pepe ea ener Me Vienna $ ; of the few that I would like 40 see) pearls. I do not believe I could beat) mented: “This is all a lot of damn) portant things importance | i” wap, Wovd), Heaoa. erty eebsier: Wi 1 tiny tra wl passed AL nite i ring of pearls that it] to sée. you wear them, for I. should | foolishness.” and important things seem. to-be- swap ith hor We bee [2 Mea ae Heya vith, t would if the ral government : to collect for you, my] all the while be thinking that they so co relatively Portant, : pained nn ny We carat alouecee ed its zenith repealed its inieritance taxes now is that Alabama came nearer disrupting your home| There you have, with one browd.|" phe wige old ne fiddler will) on. LeGEVelE Rotvwe bene Gele: Nev rliek a a nm i as finkitafee taxes, would ago it seems that T hed and although titints sto acknowledge sweeping gesture, the canvass Off take hi ai yearning wand 0 back ane Ye . 3p t meric 0 nd Wlorida, whieh o inheritance taxes, : and how terribly’ it, I am: afraid, perhaps, they .con- to his hills, there to leah hack in| @ates. ‘ , Sa Ainérivat in |siiisdintely omer Wendel eu’ fig. BayluMa for Till cn diasipated, We rwomec|tbihpeenctel diaitersible daprearioniet ¢ money” woul bel iixurcous, quiet and, contentment | ¢ Between Elmer and Mme, Rosika pouerroug, too earnest to nead it : i : times wonder just why fate is so per-| spirit which caused dear Alice to.lose entence in 80 per cents Most of the wise do that, The rest| Schwimmer, who inspire ex We are an amazingly young country. And it was) men who wish to free their estates from the burden) (0 i her mind snd make way with her- The butcher hoy from) hovome New Yorkers. pedition, a ‘red-hot controversy has Re ag \ nat | of income taxes We are all waiting with great im-| self,’ the small Massachusetts town be- GILBERT SWAN, | been raging lately in the press. more important, the history of the world, that) € ai WAnEINg. . i a figure in Wall Seikien: cael The row started over a book by . Ifthere-w o Federal inheritance tax, any rich | patienc 's leg to get well] Ofcourse the burglary which en-|comes the giant figur Loita Lechter, soe weecnrcmle shoud devote its youth to such things as) Tf there were n see pees vetaplisn { CROUeH for him to go down to hig} tatled the death of poor Zoe Elling-|Strect and thus lures 10,000 others. wis Lechner. Lochner was p factories and railroad wheat fields and banks! Man with this in view would oniy have to establis0| Gmice. It does not hurt him any{ ton can also be laid up against them. | 7) Sauk Center conquer: Rey Gaeneeuant yor en here ie ¥ t it should produce paintings and masie|% Tesidence in one of these two states, and then! more but his physicians have refused} (Copyright, 1995, NEA Service, Ine.) 10.000 more try to do jParty, management and his book. is a he i a a [his estate, when he passed away, would go to his ve Lee 1 te ponte meande he TOMORROW: The letter, con- i d, Germany, Italy timates that Mme. Schwimmer had and poems. i * t fo y long y : 5 + Gi R ‘ + Fi Poi thine vill H Never doubt it. ulte free Trom taxes fool! wy ‘will "hot allow , himself a] cleded. the peasant ae etsthe) land oteald ae to do with queering the whole When America finds its volee there will go up from — HT the states want Ue national government to ine: forthe magic fotintain. \ Elmer, in a review of the solume Anis Wand’ a sone to aniaze ihe warld song that leave the inheritance tax fieid to them, they should ‘And then my father said, ‘Well,! Jn the salons, art centers, literary Hoesen wean namsparer:, allowed a ak ae : seauty See to it that every state has an effective inheri itis no cxondert He tant any bigger |etreles and musie centern of | the} “* wimmer came right back at him with will send a message of hope and joy and beauty : see than in inch o’ pie!’ And that’s been | world they talk of fubulo ms to ‘S J nmel aFiguesneek at iRimiwie clear to the highest peaks of the unattainable tance tax law and that no state offers a tax-free my name ever since.” be made, and New York awakens to sremallongehte sprage:ttiiso mountains asylum to the rich, y/ eC. The Twins laughed merrily. When an influx of lecturers, writers, paint-| 1 i a wonder Ceblidge docan't PORE UOTE gilts pelabacis But first we had to lay the foundation for the| And, while the bargaining is hefiig done, it. might Ly ove ROBERTS BARTS bey bemtnite Teakiabout them again, [ery mutiClENT. om they tind Set mad at congress und say some-/g hint by Eimer that somebody. probe : be wise to have the states agree to abandon the % leaming win-|two classes of people about them: | thing? ubly made a rake-off out of the trip, reat country of comrad Bs : piers Shi al Dee and Nick hastily dressed stg’ eistenees with, eleaming ne is the “durn curious” group that i he. which cost upwards of half-a million, BK Vie nn - ot -workiien: icliing income taxe to the Federal government, Nancy .and) Bick. chastily, ‘dow: ene.18 a celebrity; the| Keeping on the hop may he good! sq that there was room for a little We are like an army of workmen toiling to com and slipped on the magic shoes that!" “aware almost there,” said Inch|Wants to stare at a celebrity; the | vie aah gonsider the flea; rthe| so,tane tuare. was ee vast ballding—v than any ever duit) M c li ati is ar fe the litte at ead en tal fi Be, “That's where Santa Class |oi0e" ii, Fee reed Lwants to fen | flew 'sodn gees to the dogs. Mme. Schwimmer, in answer, fore as passersby see the uncompleted first More Complications hen, the. 1h f ve n ati 4 Se » {scores the point ‘thet the expedi- before. And us passersl the: ncomplated firs) P |down on the two big fat blue gee: To Be Continued) the lions, as they nubiie. Wanter in’ Alabama looked down al tion's diubucsing eificat-mea, Geren ee iaeaes ee! and monstious, th a Canelogn 281) he (had ridden in through the Win-] (Cooystght, 1998, NEA Service, Inc.) | ¢i th musician or artist on nctrest| rifle barrel.’ He recover, but) Planteff, Henry own unproportioned — unbeautita builders) dt is apparent from reports of the proposed or- ae G 4 Ni . ee i this "function or. that and, if: he| will never look the same again. York sales monexer, wee probity a ranizati - ) poli ‘i Nancy sat on Ganz ani ick s: aes ‘ umpet| ito ee isn’t questioned, even by Elmer him- bind | tne Farmer-Labor" erty. thar the ‘rcecot conot|°% cic fer thene eu nam, ware faa fig, Apeling (is, som oecuva ta Raa ony sguoe of Manz ox OUR St] ais ovat aos a olar fall shat motte Slewtnet subs a2 Jamey Mi But some of us who are working have seen the} the Farmer-Labor party, that the present compli-} names of the geese. as soon as, egen. he Me citar to himself or his most |don't wonder if maybe it isn't the|suggest graft on the part of sny- mmpleted plans. And so we only smile cated ‘political situation in this state is to become | they were settled, Inch 0’ Pie jump- 3 — , and go on} knowing that the completed edifice se gleaming towers that will strike the ting ling stars with their beautiful, golden spires dove of peace looking for a place to ‘body else? light. A Difficult Case And, indeed, I venture to say, such a@ case would be difficult to make out, by any such hard word. Yet it is indisputable that Ges Tiantett had . Set ed in front of them, with a foot on From present Indications,! ¢ch goose’s neck. ‘Then gathering robable that that group of Nonpartisans/up the glittering reins, and cracking ved by William Lemke will hold a convention andj 3, "Uny follschranch whips away | endorse a complete state ticket and candidates for Sa LN a open window toward the sky. Wooing the Voters | still it is most p vith our work, will rai more complicated. \ Prohibition has done some good. : A Russian poet refuses to visit Amer- ica because of it, _ ia : ae ie one) - heslene: to pay a rs of eis suey teres both t a sU 2 - “I hear the trees cracking,” sa: G Oo TEQU joctors say married men -|ed dowh if he could nave helped him- both the short and long term as United States sen-| 71 year tne treet cracking,” said) (9 Sou Mean ae er than single men, We say they do celf, Is the “era of good feeling” come again? Not, | #or. This move may encourgae some of the leaders| a ‘hurd ‘frock ‘tonight. THAT & DON'T (<N Many a Ford peace delegate’s home certainly, In the sense that there is only one po-| Of the so-called I. V. A. faction, both democrats and| But it was only inch o° Pie's whip.| (WHAT 24M if they marry good cooks.” | is made happier to this day by jewels and rich brocades purchased on that trip and billed to the lit financial management to’ settle for. Why did Gas stand for ‘em? What else could he do! He “And I hear a peculiar hissing around which means that the wind changing to the north,” said Mr. alton. But it was only Oie and Ganz hiss- ing as they flew. 1 party, and that nobody runs against its can- There are those, in Congress, and out, who, | ause they are Democrats, will “do polities” | inst the Republican administration Bet’ a bear driyen.into a Maine city by heavy snow was{just about as hingry as ajbear. « Two hégds.may be better than one republicans, to believe that the time is now ripe to reconstruct their individual fences and break away from the republican-democratic combination which has been attempting, with more or less suc- ton issues, the diffe Which of the major r Coolidge’s message dhe Democratic already agreed nees have disappeared | rommendations of President regarded with hostility minori On tax policy, they have on the bill which he recommends. n pobic they are with him, as there is on agricultural snot drawn on party lines. scarcely touched on a partisan controversial issue. | A Democratic president could have written it as Well as a Republican. On most things, most Demo- erats will vote with Coolidge, There will opposition; but it will come from members ostensi ly Republicans. We are more nearly a united nation than we have been for more tion, is by poli is | In fact, the message | than a genera Will it Spread? A Cleveland (0.) man had « model 19 mado quite a bit of noiss, os ii in the morning. So 41 door, found and, with a blow torcl into small: piec He is to be sympathized with, the neighbor's action is understand ‘bo ‘Stppriging if it might be rat Aft {fit does, let's hope it includ Of those 5 a. m. lawnmower. Good: Will an Omen in Political Skies Without rreference to ‘this polities, it must be said that Calvin Coolidge (does not employ the caveman (Stutt of ‘boisterous pdtiticians who used strong-arm | methods often prevalent in (past ‘generations, ; -* | In his message to Cotigress ‘he phe éutlines.& eciaMy when he start other day, opening his neighbor had entered | , had cut his ancient machine 5 he some surely, And yet lable. It wouldn't her widey capied, es action on a few Such little i © be bitter | | Were counted, it cess, to defeat the more radical element, which i: centered in the Nonpartisan League. One prominent republican remarked upon hear- + ing of t “Weill They didn't have any idea that those ‘two noises were their own. chil- dren riding as hard as they could go toward the North Pole to help Santa split in the Nonpartisan League ranks, | aay aie ey meets eae we should be careful, because we spilt much| where the Twins slept, and fixed they tact te ee ‘attention {things for the night. : cae This is true, and attention | On went the twi so be called ta the fact that it will be en-|and upward, flapping within the range of possibilities, even if the | Witt new Farmer-Labor party endorses a ticket, for old Nonpartisan League organization to endorse same ticket. The Independents have depended too much in the ast upon the possibility of a split in the Nonpar and : League ranks. Newspayers have featured |) such stories time after time, 1 ie a ey ut when the is vi i ie, “for the North Pole ix right un- was found—with very few excep-| der’ the North Star, Indeed “it has that the League had voted a9 a unit, and that been said that the North Star is « only the Indeper |cinder that flew out of Santa Claus’ Regardless of the or; Umbey 2nd ORL Raeeiee. ares party, tween the | fine, riding y along over the | world with a jolly little elf to talk to you and tell you things. And Inch Pie never stopped talking for a geese, onward their wings great slow flaps that seemed to carry them forward with great speed. You can swim very fast by moving arms very slowly, and so it was the geese. No aeroplane could gone faster y passed the Big Dip were making straig per finally it for se) e get ag far as the North} ¢ will be there,” said Inch 0’ vote: tions it was nients who were divided. ‘ganization of a FarmerLabor the need for honest cooperation be Conservative elements of the republican and demo pied Parties in this state is just as great as ut | any time since the advent of ye Naa nute, results of the rece ry tof A.C, Townley. 4 “I know what you. are thinking Bee ie a Cnt couference of republican lead- | about,” he said one tim “You are 's demonstrates that thes ers recog. | thinking wbout my name and how nize this fact, and that o: neve leaders recog: | ta ooened “to be called 1h BT Tk ; I » and that earnest efforts will he madw | Well, I shall tell you. Moker bane all of the conservatives behind one | “When I was born Twas just Ucket, both state and senatoria! “ |}about as big ia ott een a I i suppose you think I’m not muel ie- The voters of North Daktoa must not lone sight leer now, but’ really” Ear @ cegaiee of truth recently expressed hy President (2 int to what I was then. in his address hetore the Geta “t was so little that no one could merce in which he said, “It is , notorious thgt where | ¥# government is ‘had, business is bad.” i ness” in this case means st laborer 48 well as the welfare of the business Old ge New York Chamber of Com to spell, and so one night when my. ame from his work in Santa Claus’ toy shop, he said: ‘Have you named him yet?” “And my mother said, ‘No.’ but two mouths can argye more than one. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Sérvice, Inc.) “0 8 4 ry Tonight’s Radio . | pe i Eastern Time WEAF (492) 6—Dinner music. 8 {—Hawaiian Trio. 7:15—Paul Jel- jenek, pianist, 7:30—Lullaby Lady. 9—“Music by the A. and'P. Gypsies. To WEEI (476), W (469), WWJ (852.7) WJAR (305.9),, WOO (508.2). WSAI (325.9).. 10—Grand opera, “Tales of Hoffman.” Té WOO (508.2), WCAE (461.3) WJAR (306.9), WCAI (469), WTAG (268), 11-i2— Ben Bernie and his orchestra, 11-—Or- chestra. : : : WTAM (3894). 6-7+Dinner music 8-11—Concert.’ 11-1—Dance music. wws 7 inner concert. 8-—Orchestra and solajsts. WCAE (461.3) 62 inner con- $—Orchestra, S—Studio con- Jessie Santmyer, soprano. 10 =-Grand. opera. -11—-Program from theater. ae. KDKA (309) 6:90-Dinner concert. &—Light opera, 9—Spear’s | Happy Home Hour, 25 << 4 Q Central Time’ KYW (536) 6—-Dinner. music, WMAQ ; 'y (447.5) °@-—Organ recital. 6:30—Orchentra.° j.2 WGN (370.2). 6:30—fiinner concert. AWEAA 16) Gi pDance or chestra. of ‘ KSD | (645.1)' 7—Mme, Graziella Pampari, harpist. 7:30— Pullman Porters’ Quartette. 9—Concert or- chestra, bf WLW (422.3) 7—Dinner concert. 1:40—Orchestra, 10—Popular con- cert, i WHO 7:30—Vocal nivsic, a:t0e Males ahora. H—-Orehestta, WDAF (365.6) 8—Topeka program.| SNighshawk Frolic, couldn’t have the party go on, from European city to European city, leav- ing a chorus of local tradesmen be- hind, yowling that the Ford Peace Expedition hud jumped its bills. LEATHER DRESSES \ London.—An entire leather outfit, except for silk stockings, was ex- hibited here by a mannequin. The frock was of syede with dyed leath- er insertions uhd the cloche hat to match, BY — = a a. |, A Kise in Sime means nines