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PAGE FOUR : An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Bismarck, N. D., and Bismarck, second cla! George D Mann.......- Subscription Rates Payable Daily by carrier, per year. Daily by mail, per year (in Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck). Datly by mail, outside of North Dakota Member Audit Bareau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the Use for republication of all news dispatches credited mail matter. fn Advance ++ 6.0 to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and alsc | tie local news of spontaneous origin published here- The Bismarck Tribune Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, red at the postoffice at! President and Publisher +++ 6.00! Rob 0; tragic pathos of the lost cause. {mean these things. For it reminds all citizens break that is not easily forgotten, And, it reminds that. arm, also, us the glo that is our common heritage as Americans; {that America is the richer for having produced « is, | Good old “Dixie” it song, bre: old fire of American heroism and self-denial! jit ring on as long as America jasts! { May in Ail rights of republication of all other matter | smell in company. herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK : ~ - Fifth Ave, Bldg. | (Official City, State and County Newspaper) EE STRSTR TEE ac SES Why Worry Now! The continent of North Ameri is sinking steadily into the sea. ing at a very rapid rate. How rapidiy? Pretty geological standards—sa inch in five yea That may not seem so speedy. res that inea thousand centuries ¢ middle west will be at the bottom of a new ocean, There will be a few islands where the Appalachian Mountains now are, and the Rockies, of course, will stay dry; but it looks as though the rest of the seountry is going wet To he sure, Uie whole thing is far enough off so that none of us need to loge any sleep over it. And yet it’s rather a good thing to think about, now 5 and tien, if one is inclined to be too cocky. We manage to keep pretty busy in this country. We build big buildings and tunnel through moun tains and harness streams and fling railroad tracks across deserts—and it never occurs to us that this sort of thing isn't going to forever. So We £0 ahead, persuading ourselves t it's tremendously important; and most of us make ourselves work 3 a scientist, it is sink- Furthe measured by quarter of swiftly, as y about a an But the scientist de so our £9 hard that we haven't any time left to play or listen to music or watch the big stars go wheeling across the sky on a warm summer night. And_ then, once in a while, some scientist looks up ‘from his test tubes and charts long enough to smile and say: ou think you are important! will keep on spinning for centurie: gest cities and taliest towers are the s pillars of your bank grow between the stones in your streets. just an incident, that's all.” It may be very true, though it's discomforting tc think about. But, after all, we have the scientist can’t answer. We can sa) “You're probably right. concerned about w ‘3 happening to us here and now, not gbout what's going to happen a hundrec thousand years from now. have life and sunshine and open meadows and gold on rivers and green leaves in springtime and mis moons on August evenings; arfd these things are quite enoug: You can worry about the future i you want to. We will enjoy life now, and laugh. ‘Then, later, if the flood comes, we will not care.” And it’s a good answer. Just so long as we under: stand that happiness and love and laughter, honestly ure among the chief of the things to be! earned, gained here on earth ist’s threato. well, we should worry abou Piffle American lead Americ: and what nct by bringing back the ankle lengti skirt and banishing the cigaret from ‘the mouth of all who are young and female, These things, it is said, have c: have made our young men lose respect for them. All of which ip piffle. mora} standard is rising. Short ekirts and cigarets have morals. litt'e to do “Dixie” Still Holds Us in Its Spell Why, the earth fter your big- buried beneath 4. Why, strange fish will swim through the nd theaters, and seaweed will You're reply that But, meanwhile, we're) Perhaps this country is going to sink under the sea; for the present we s iety women, we read, are to try to ‘back to the way of moral leadership ed American A girls to stray from the straight and narrow path and | Will share command of the seas with Britain on « Don’t forget that in the staid ‘nineties, when skirts touched the ground and good women scorned tobacco and rouge, every city in the country had a thriving red-light district and moral uprightness was a thing that simply wasn't expected of men. Now skirts are short and cigarets are puffed-——but segregated vice has died and a new In ‘the things that really matter we've advanced. with The scene is the sumptuous interior of a gigantic A Quarter of a Century Inventoried (Minneapolis Tribune) new century. The President of the United States MeKinle ance William . The chief international event of import as the Boer war which, at the moment, was going against Britain. Of minor importance but of an importance the time undreamed of was the German hospi to Britain, America’s peace treaty with Sp had but recently been ratified In the Philippines Aguinaldo was waging a cam paign against American authority. The figures fav ored by the headlines of the day, aside from Mc- Kinley, were Kitchener, Senator Aldrich, Bryan, ant Winston Churchill, and Generai Wood. were the vogue in metropolitan street the horse and buggy wag omnipresent in the smaller town. Such was the setting, The editorials celebrating the day contained litle hint of what the next quarter of a century was to bring forth. What are realities to us now would have seemed fantasies then. <A true prophet, we fear, would have been without ‘honor in his own country. Let us suppose that someone gifted with clairvoyance had greeted the day. as follows: “Twenty-five years will bring many + amazing changes, In the course pf the next quarter of a cen- tury man will learn to get along without the horse and buggy. He will learn the use of a horse‘ess carriage which will take him everywhere. Before the quarter of a century is closed there will be prac tically one automobile for every famfly in the United , States. closed, too, man will be flying round Not only that but the invention of a new instru- ment called the radio will make it possible for peo- miles away. A new form of entertainment will and attain colossal dimensions. the silent drama will draw three million dollars a year. Pole wiil be discovered. 4 as much as two or q | fought. ;fand run into countless billions of dollars. French revolution will convulse Russi, oldest dynasties in Europe will fall, .| first class power will be destroyed. States will enter ‘this tremendous and be the chi ‘he three European f n Americaa president. in seeming to dominate, the dffairs of the planet, “Regarding the financial future of the States, this may be said: erything expected of it by the most extrs optimists and then multiplied by about three, t of first place among the nations; 1925 time. it money. to reverse its sea policy and its Irish policy. basis of parity. (of this quarter of a century will he a pair of men, you have never heard of. of New York, Theodore Roosevelt, will be nomi: at the next Republican convention, have a meteoric career. name is Woodrow Wilson. century. has an echo of the wild rebel yell, a touch of the | And the country is better because the song does north and south, native-born or foreign-born, that the Civil War is not merely a dusty memory to the | people of Dixie, but a thing of suffering and heart- Confederate no tess than the Union army, trod a path of | t FE. (Lee and a Stonewall Jackson, just as it) her for having produced an Abraham Lincoln. | thing the z i What, this country needs is onions too polite to | Editorial Comment { ‘Twenty-five years ago the curtain rang up on i} Before this same quarter of a century is the globe. ple sitting in their homes to hear concerts 2,000 grow out of the now contemptible motion pictures The great stars of'as he wound in a The North and South; Where you're concerned, A tremendous world war, the like of which no man ever heard of, will be! he is siva It will take a toll of 40,000,000 casualties Another | Germany as 3 The United war f factor in forcing it to a decisive: conclusion, For a few months at least, the United ! States will be witness to the strange spectacte of} Paris, dominating, or United The United States will do; agant AS the result of the war, it will jump to the position see it solidly established as not only the most powerful nation of the globe but the richest nation of all} Nearly every country on earth will be owing Its prestige will be so great that its mere nod will be enough to cause mighty Britain Tt “The two most spectacular American statesmen one of whom you already know and another whom The first, the governor nated as the Republe‘an candidate for vice president After McKinley is assassinated —and it fs in the cards that he will be-+this man Roosevelt will become president and The second is a professor of jurisprudence and paticies at Princeton, and his He is destined to have the most spectacular career of the entire quarter- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Post Ho day, Stuff { | ! | | { | LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT children. I wish I were going with TO LITTLE MARQUISE, CARE you, for ever since I told them you " were coming, Jack has been beside peat als ic belles himself with joy. Presently your ER—CONTINUED moter will be here. You will want to seg her alone while I talk over businefs with Mrs. Atherton.” (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) TOMORROW: This letter continued. | APY! S yf TWINS Thomas laughed, Little Marquise, very heartily when I started to ask him how little Jack answered his question on the ethics of discharging an: old and faithful servant. Excuse me, Prescot | said, “but that boy is a clever and ‘he is a bonny lad as well, thought a minute and then he said: “Oh, Thomas, I'l only drive my mover, you know. You can drive for all the rest.’ “I'm sure it was this car,”,he said d out the traffic .|toward the house, “that made Master John think he must learn to drive. OLIVE ROBERTs BARTGH Tweekanose, the bad, little goblin, went on having a good time, or at Mum, I'm sure that boy thinks he could do|Jeast he thought he was ha nything that would protect you and|S00d time. But if you think it’s enough to know that you|to spoil other people's good times, will be driving in the traffic alone.”|] don’ T saw, Little M e, by the trou-|” Bat ‘ch in face, that he pe then i did not like the idea of'my driving], Just afte: {alone either and that he | probably | boys and had said something that would put it; School an i presents and their in the mind of my oldest son. Tweekanose’s chi to be’ mean. When I saw my husband, Little ‘Marquise, 1 nearly burst into tears.| He never seemed to be able long nose out of mi He looked so pale and ry Queen be actually grown thin, He ; tirely | more worried, and she me, however, that he was aed i all right and that he was perfectly Inch o’ Pie and Inch o' 1 Twins that they would ju ple to go down to meet me pb y doctors said that by doing so he|¢ateh the mischief maker. might put himself where he might} 80 the three of them tried harder not get to the office until a week or{than ever, But the trouble was, you never two | Yr, Dear Little Marquise, were you|knew what on earth the joblin wars kingly 8ing to do n ever separated from your i lover und during that time he had! He ruined sa playroom of toys o been jl and he had made very day, and he ruined it party t t of it to you, yet when you day, and he even ruined things for home you found him crippled Arann ADs: ell! having a wistful, lonely look in _.Qne night Jack Frost got busy. them? If you ever did, you will know J:¢’s a queer one, too, never to ‘be just what it meant to me, when, in- counted on, and generally asleep on stead ‘of being met by my great big his job just when he is needed to man and encircled in his arms and ™ake sled tracks and freeze ponds. taken right off my feet by a hug But this time he took a jolly notion which lifted my face up to his, Thad to make everything lovely for the oblin re different. girls enjoying to hief. ft bed and looking pale and his eyes WHERE NY OLO Sine Sot 1S to walk over and seat myself beside Children on their Christmas vaca- Jack's bed. : tio Jack drew himself up and held out = * his arms to me and I bent over und I found the tears dropping from my eyes as his head bent to my breast. 5 2” I murmured, “I didn’t have the slightest idex you were so badly Surely, you know, if I had dreamed of this | would have been | with you long before that. “Leslie, darling,” he finally said when he had kissed me again and ugain and told me how’ glad he was that I was home although he has-) tened to add, “I was really very glad you were not here the day I was burned because you must know that while that confounded sore has never been dangerous, yet it has been damn uncomfortable and I know you would have worried over me much more than you should.” Of course we had all: sorts of 9 he shook down some snow and . EVERETT TRUE + sSToRs. moving picture theater in a large northern city. The audience Ilstens in more or less boredom; unti), suddenly, there is a sharp ruffle of drums and the musicians go lilting into “Dixie.” _ The half-bored audience instantly grows awake. Feet tap the floor, tiny thrills run down a thou- sand backs, and a spontaneous burst of handclap- ping drowns out tie music for a moment. Why is this? Surely not one in fifteen members of the audience comes from the south. In fact, the ancestors cf a good quarter of them, probably, were living in Burope at the time of the Civi War. But it makes no difference; one and all burst into ap- ‘plause when “Dixie” rings out. ni it m; + Of thet, you had stood in the trenches g when Grant was hammering,\hammering you stop to consider st; for the written for © minstre) show, of the men wio made the fight against disease. best things that can be said about it. respect it will be about average—tcat is to say very much what you would now expect. have one dreadfu) blot upon its record. be the great war. “Medical science will make remarkable strides during this 25 years, The life of man will be defi- Medical science will conquer malaria, the yellow fever, and the hook-worm. And itely lengthened. will make great progress elsewhere. “It will ‘be a quarter of a century memorable for and in, he two In most other arvelous progress in mechanical inventiot These w¥l be But it will} This will This, the grbatest calamity of human history, will show mankind on what a vol- © Punny tune, that “Dixie.” You may be the grand-|°22 civilization rests. Today, although two wars gon of-a: Union véteran or the descendant of a 10)|2T¢ faging, you people do not take war seriously. ‘per cent abolitionist; but somehow, when that most You are not greatly afraid of it. Twenty-five years “stirring of all war tunes strikes up you find your- from now the thinkers wi!l not be underestimating, pelt wishing, just for a fraction of a second, that|#* You are, its real peril to civilization. Instead ‘“ too, tad been one of Pickett’s gallant men in of feeling more secure than you, the people 25 years 1 smarvelous “charge through the wheat at Gettys- hence will be feeling less secure.” ‘ We ‘scarcely need say that a man who 25 years ago, had put himself on record with such opinions would be laughed out of court as a simple simon. How impossible, then, would it be for any of us to dare venture opinions as‘to what the next quarter 3 performances before the war |°! * biganrd ae bring nb & glance at the fore- * rough | soing makes it apparent chat. the fantasies of to- Sopa et peste sg siphon ad day are more likely to be the realties of 26 years henee then what would now seem to he the proba- things to talk about, Little Marquise, It really does a husband and wife a great dedi of good to be away from each other for a while. I hud to tell! Jack all about Ruth and Walter and although I wasn’t through with the news I had to tell him Jack must have seen after a while that I want- ed to see the children. He rang the bell and asked if Mrs. Atherton had come, “She had just this minute entered, Mr. Prescott,” answered the her to come up " I exclaimed impulsive. ly, “have you been sick enough to have a nurse?” I had not seen her as I came in, . “No, my dear, all this young wo- man does is to see that the dressings jon my. leg are properly adjusted. Someone could have come in daily to have done this but my doctor, know- ing that I was' perfectly well able to! pay for such luxuries, insists that I shoutd keep one.on my payroll.” “She is very pretty,” I said laugh- ingly. “That may help some.” eae 2” asked Jacl “I had not noticed. She is most uninteresting to me and Iam sure she must hate me, for she spent her time dress- ing a burn and listening to me swear while she has been doing it. No, my dear, I have been mighty glad you were not hére most of the time, for I assure you I have not been at my best either mentally or physically with a bum. leg and the knowledge that I was holding up the works both atthe miM and with the motion ~— THEN To CSET. UNCIKELY WHSRS ———_ = an- + = WEARING “TOUPES. PICKS CLERK To RIGHT.— OW GONVIC TIONS, THINKS SQUARG DSAL 1S PRACTICED. then blew his breath over everything as hard as he could, and I wish you could have seen the grand sled track there was on one special hill. It was a wonder! No automobiles came that way, or no street cars, and not gmny people ~—and the hill was a mile long. All the Christmas sleds were brought at once, and everything was as jolly as sleigh-bells. f But there was one little boy, quite little, with a long nose and a peaked cap, and if anyone had looked close- ly, they would have noticed that his shoes were pointed too. He had no sled. He just looked on, and sort ‘of chuckled to himself. “Come on and™have a ride on my sled,” called a jolly little boy. “Plenty of room on behind.” “No, thanks,” said the queer little boy, keeping his hands in his pock- ets, which seemed to stick out most peculiarly. “I don’t like, to sled ride.” What!” almost shrieked the jolly little boy with the sled. And he went off and told the others about it. “There's the noan whistle!” said the children hy and by. “We'll go home for lunch and come back this afternoon.” So they took their sleds and went nway, leaving the sled track shining like polished glass in the sun. Yes, the sun had come out--which made it all the merrier. ‘ But the queer little boy just stood still, He didn’t go home to luncn. ‘Then when he was quite alone, he took some white stuff slyly out of his pockets, and going up and down the sled track, he sprinkled it. There seemed to he no end to -the amount they heli--those tiny pockets. And the ice began to split’ and ck and melt. ‘The beautiful sled track soon begun to lose its polish und look very rough and dull, Then the queer little boy, whose name you may have guessed, went away, When the children came back after uneh, the poor sled track was ruined. i “Oh, it’s the sun!” they cried. The ‘sun has melted our lovely track! What a shame!” But I know that if they could have tasted the tiny streams of meited water, thev would have policed salt! ‘o Continu (Copyright, 1925, NEA. Service, Inc.) BY CONDO YENTERS (MEN'S FURNISHING -®. SCANS CCUSRKS, FIRST To Rt = : = SHUT — Pia Sees CLERK ——— ——*, (N@ To DECEPTION -|—-Niehthawk Frolic, Organ novelti | Rw" Case) KEEP AIR MOIST TO KEEP WELL | BY DR. HUGH 8. CUMMING | Surgeon General, U. 8. Public Health Service In order to keep living every one must have sufficient’ air to breathe, and sin order to keep on being healthy this air should be sufficiently pure us weil as sufficiently moist. If we could spend our lives in the open air, away from noxious gases, ventilation would take care of itself. i ir of our rooms, in order to \thful, must be renewed con- stantly either hy natural or artificial meins. When we breathe in we take oxygen from the air, and when we breathe out we add ‘carbon dioxide and other — substane Oxygen is taken from the air we inhale, by the blood which circulates through ol lungs and is carried away to help the food build up the body, keep it warm and energize it. Oxygen constitutes about one-fifth of the air und about one-half of that one-fifth is breathed out unchanged, and may be breathed over. Carbon dioxide is part of the waste that is left over in the body when oxygen and food combine to build up the body. It is picked up from the blood by the lungs and breathed out. It is injurious when it is breathed in again too large amounts. Have Thought for Others In using window ventilation care should be taken that some persons do not suffer from bad air, while others shiver and sneeze. To renew air, some factories now use big elec- tric fans so placed as to drive off the gated in @ work room, tions massed in church y. ences in theaters and other buildings, raises the temperature and increases the moisture, In winter, on the other hand, the heated air in buildings is usually too dry. Often the humidity falls to as low as 20 per cent and humid- ity as low as this is lower than that found in desert regions. Air,as dry as this draws moisture fro’ the skin and irritates the mucous. mem- branes of the nose, throat and mouth. Keep Humidity 5@ Per Cent To be comfortable the humidity of a workroom should be about 60 per cent, It would be well for plant managers to see that the humidity is kept at least that high, for at 50 per cent humidity less heat is re- quired and much coal is saved. This saving applies to factories us well as homes. A temperature of 62 dc- grees Fahrenheit’ is quite high enough if the men in this tempera- ture are doing work which requires average physical activity. If you are afraid of drafts upon the body at night take a piece of board about 12 inches wide and equally as long as the window is wide, raise the window sash, slip the board in beneath, and draw the sash down upon it. Fresh air will spill in over the top of the sash, Even this unsatisfactory measure will help to dissipate that dull, sick feel- ing that you have upon waking up in the morning after having slept in a room iene ited | At ebe . a foul air or to drive in the fresh air,| Plant manager, ventilate your fac- or both, ‘ tories. Workmen, ventilate your Temperature and humi , that {s,] homes. The net results of such the presence of moisture in'the air, must also be considered, The body heat given off by @orkers congre- New York, Jan. 4.—New names, like meteors, flash from time to time across the financial sky, cutting 80j yerhaps undeserved compliment. He proper and adequate ventilation will be increased health, greater effi- ciency and more economy. Mussoli j pays the United States a bright a path that the whole buisness fays that, alone among nations, we world watches and gasps. regard work ae a As enn ie y il -|cessity, in order to live, but as the Most of them disappear like com sory. HOrRONeT AAR GAY Mf life, We ets over the horizon and a few join, Woivome life, because it is a chance the established constellation of Mor-j to work, und rejoice in a rich con- gans and Lamonts and such. There tinent, because it gives us some- are many number of whom the “man, thing to work on. 5 in the “street” seldom hears andj This may be too high praise, as to scarcely knows. Yet their money our actual achievement, but surely power is great or greater than the it is none too high an ideal to aspire Rockefellers. Vanderbilts, —Astors, toward. When God laid on Adam and all the other names associated the curse of work, he also sowed for by the average person with wealth. him the seed of progress. Work, Of such are the George W. Bakers even the humblest, is its own reward. —senior and junior—whose names! The street sweeper must needs get would probably be listed second or wages, to live; but his most direct third among the world’s richest. reward is the clean street, made so by They are never scen by reporters, his effort. The jon sees a wall and the elder’ Baker is famous for come into existence which will, out- making the briefest speeches on last him and house unborn genera- record. . itiona. He has ‘projected himself into {something eternal. So far as Ameri- Just now the sky writers are spell- ca has lived by this spirit, it has led ing gut the name of Clarence Dillon. the world. ‘A giant merger of banks, involving + $600,000,000, finds his name linked t—at least in general gossip. This Dillon made Wall Street und the business world in general gasp not so long ago when he outbid the | Morgans—yes, the mighty J. Pier- | Pont Morgans—in the battle for the; !Dodge Motor Corporation. Up to that minute. only financial circles knew his name, but this group had | watched his rise as certain movie di. jrectors watch the talent of a budding ‘star, or the mentors of music hear a tone that gives promise of greatness. Dillon breezed out of San Antonio, ‘Tex., in the general direction of Har- vard University just about 25 years ‘ago, “His father, 1 am told, had run a deprrtment store in the southwest leity. Today Dillon is but 43, a mere youngster ns financial giants go. He took his A. B. and within a few years was married to a Milwaukee girl, The story from that point on Is {rather familisr—an interest in a gas jand coke concern in Wisconsin; from that to western mining connections, and finally an appeatance in New ,York as co-partner in the banking ‘firm of Dillon, Reed & Co. | In contrast with such comparative- ‘ly conservative risers are the hun- idred and one restless meteors that ae forever cross the Wall street can-|fova's ‘care of twe chines tet ate yons, a ake ticularly; one is that the family of ed.” ‘The street rings with such tales as! ie, former Prince be extinigu! ’ ‘ ‘urther: ‘ito pre Mare: bebtad AB pes Pao there heeds no: mere ee 101 al , il lost a hundred million, and who re-| Pate che family ,of the prince which turn is Aes the greatest motor!” Old Nicolo was a cynic, but he un- coup in the street’s history. doubtedly was good authority on the practical politics of his time. Persia seems to be in about the same period. The usurping sovereign might be safer if he followed Machiavelli's ad- vice. But the world will be glad «that more modern principles have Penetrated at least enough to pre- vent this. It is enough for one cen- tury that the Russian revolutionists did it, in the name of the “dictator- ship of the proletariat.” ———_——_____9 | A THOUGHT } e- 1 will lift up mine eyes unto the hills, from whence —Psalms 121:1, se Sess Hope will make thee Hope and Youth are chil mother.—Shelley. The London Daily News wanted to know how many hours a day. men over 50 should work, so it asked a long list of eminent men all over that age. Senator Smoot, who is 64, found that he was all right so long as he did not exceed sixteen hours a day. Saymond Poincare; at 75, says “ten or twelve hours a day, or even more.” Sir Oliver Lodge, who 74, now finds eight hours enough. M. Loucheur, at 53, works ten hours; Lord Inchape, 73, ten and a_ half, | and Sir Flinders Petrie, 72, ten. The interesting thing in this list is not merely the hours, but the fact ‘that these men take ‘hard work for ‘granted, Most of the men on thi list are wealthy, and all of them are distinguished. They have achieved the highest ambitions to which men aspire. And they celebrate this achievement by hard work aud long hours. If you think work an evil, to be escaped, do not aspire to the heights. The new king of Persia gracious- ly announces that he will not slaugh- iter the’relatives of the deposed Shah. Which indicates that the precepts of Nicolo Machiavelli are not known, or are not followed, in Persia, A prince who conquers a new Young men from Texas, California. Tennessee, Georgia — they flash across the street of stréets in the world of money, they come to play with millions as once they played with marbles in the old home town ‘corner lot. They come to love the Hecang and the thrill and the lust of attle, And the point that lures more nnd more to swing into the-fight is this: there's always room for another! —GILBERT SWAN. Tonight’s Radio | ———________+4 Eastern Time WCAE (461.3) 6:30—Dinner con- oung; for ren of one cert. 7:30—Sunshine Girl: 8—Or- A Cp aaER chestra. 9—Studio. 11—Theatre|, The sewing machine was patented program. in 1790 and neighbors have dropped WGY (379.5) 6:30—Orchestra.” 8| in to use it ever since, Chorus, Central Time aoe (399.8) 4—Musical selec- 8. WOAW (526) 6—Classical. 6:15— Popular songs. 6:50—Orchestra, 9— Luxe program. wee pee aac pater: fea- . joncert. n . oben concert. 4475) 6:30—Orchestra. WCCO (416.4) 6:30—Concert. 9— Classical. 10:30—Band concert. — WFAA (476) 6:30—Orchestra. WGN. (302.8) 6:30—Concert. KSD (545.1) 7—Margaret Nolan, soprano. 9—James Rohan, tenor. HO (526) 7:30—Vecal and strumental, 11—Orchest: WDAF (365.6) 8—Classical. in- 11345, RTHS (374.8) 9—Classical. 9:30— 10—Orchestra, inner music, Mountain Time vg KOA (322.4) 6:30—Dinner concert.| : 8—Radié ‘instruction “in conversa- tional Spanish, 9—Radio instruction in. auction bridge. . 9;30— Special tontraltor "acrompanfed star? Rink: accom, je Chase ata the pian. : Ee Peeific Time Bop ap Sata ae Variety. 8—Voeal| ‘The easiest way ia to let h and instrumental, - ba oes ciel eee mental, 9—Radio favor. shent, himasit, bat wan MONDAY, JANUARY 4, 1926