The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 30, 1926, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune Independent Newspa: THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class mail matter. George D. Mann..........President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year ..... “s $7.20 Daily by ae per year, (in Bismarck). 7.20 Dail mail, per year, nin’ state ‘outside Blamarck)..........+-+ 6.00 mail, outside of North Dakota +» 6.00 ily b: Lond Member Audit Burean of Circulation Member of The Assuciated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled te the use for republication of all news «ispatches | credited to it or not otherwise credited in this pa- published herein. All rights of republication of ali other matter herein are also reserved. G. LOGAN, PAYNE COMPANY DETROIT Tower Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH RK - - + Fifth — {Official City, State and County Newspaper) EE The Increase of Wealth for a man to be a millionaire. To have amassed over a million dollars was the unusual thing and who would have been brash enough to predict that some day there weuld not only be plenty of million- 75 men who would be paying taxes on incomes ar. How many. more there are with an actual income of over a million, but who have been clever enough to pay tax cn a conjecture, The figures of the treasury department show 1» the ycvernment in taxes in 1924 the sum of $47,- 207,203 on their incomes alone. Thus we see that tionately greater burden in the upkeep of the gov- ernment than does the poor, or middle class man. per, and also the local news of spontaneous origin Foreign Representatives Kresge Bldg NEW YO Ave. Bidg. Not so many years ago it was an unusual thing certainly, in those days, there were few persons aires in the United States, but that there would be of over a million dollars y smaller amount of money, ic of course a matter of that the possessors of these enormous incomes pi possessors of wealth are forced to bear a propor- The fact that a man possesses wealth should not be the cause of hatred on the part of poorer per- | ; Great President, But Poor Candidate sons. Being wealthy is not a care-free occupation. Large taxes are exacted from wealthy person: few years ago with nothing and their financial suc- cess should be an inspirat::n tc every poor man. If they could start with nothing and amass wealth, then the conditions in this country must be con- ducive to such 2 course and consequently all we have to do is to reach out and grasp the opportunities that appear day by day. Truly, if we haven't the vision to see these op- portunities, if we haven’t the initiative and the courage to gras) them, to risk all we have in the hope cf getting more, if we are not willing to work day and night and take the plunge, how can we expect to reap the reward of wealth? Many wealthy persons never carned their money, but someone did earn it before they got it and what can be earned by one can be earned by another. Don't envy the ‘wealthy man, but follow his example and become wealthy yourself. America furnishes the opportuni- ty, but you must furnish the vision, the courage and the work. Pay Roll Bandits The era of banditry in which we find ourselves today is distressing in the extreme. We seem to have suddenly reverted to the old frontier days when bandit gangs shot up the stage coaches at will and pilfered with impunity. Banditry has in- deed become a lucrative profession in this country. All one needs to do is to buy a pistol, practice up a hit, take one’s nerve in hand and sally forth to steal a pay roll or two, Stealing pay rclls has become a favorite diver- sion of our up-and-coming underworld. It is usu- ally so ridiculously easy. Firms send clerks, un- armed or inadequately protected, to bring huge sums from the bank to the factory cr the ,shop. What can they expect but that bandits will take advantage of this circumstance? ’ Just in the year ending October Ist, the estimate of money stolgn in pay roll robberies reached $4,- *--900,000 and in defending this amount of money against the savage marauders, 20 men met their death and 40 others were seriously wounded. Of course, there is one cure—pay by check. Rut labor does not like to be paid by check. Labor in- sists that the crisp currency be given out at the end of the week, not a check that needs to be car- ried to a bank and cashed. And why should the authorities blame the firms for not paying by check when it is merely a method of shifting the blame for lawless conditions from their shoulders? For that is what it means. If adequate measures were being taken against the pay roll and cther bandits, then factories and shops could pay off in cash without fear, But the true situation is that the authorities have failed dismally in preserving the peace and safety of our modern civilization. They have failed from neglect and they have failed through corruption. Let us place the blame for these pay roll robberies squarely where it belongs, on the shculders of the police, whose duty it is to so preserve order that these r:bberies should be a great exception and not a rule. An Oil Survey As it becomes more and more apparent that our oil resources are extremely limited and that our use-of petrcleum is increasing by leaps and bounds, it becomes increasingly evident that scmething should be done about it. _» And, as is usual when this situation obtains, many “pera have come forward with various solutions & to She problem, some good, perhaps, scme bad, all of them plausible. Our problem is to find out : one of the solutions will provide a permanent for our oil ills, is one very gocd maxim to observe when y weiving a problem and that is to have all your facts “*qt hand before beginning it. And that is what we @hould do in this case. We should know, just as accurately as it is possible to determine, how much reserve petroleum the world has under its crust and ‘we must know the exact present consumption and have these facts at hand we will know present supply will last and that will factor in deciding on the/ merits of the ’ future B ler realized this 00 as an endowment CEE ar aE Sarreluneee-seemaeenil Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Furthermore, most of these wealthy men started a |five years, to finance a series of studies in ‘the| | origin, distribution and properties of petroleum. He | | realized that the first and prime necessity is the | | facts of the case and these he is determined to have. | The results of this endowment will undoubtedly | be of the utmost importance as bearing on the pres- lent status and future development of the industries | | based om petroleum, which is still one of the most | nysterions and puzzling of the natural resources. Mothers’ Aid Laws The mother in the howe cannot be excelled as an ceonomist, the children’s bureau of the government has asserted in air ton public aid to mothers with dependent children. Home care is cheaper and better, according +t» the figures, than institutional care. Forty-two states now have mothers’ pension laws providing for aid to children in their own homes and 130,000 childgen receive such aid in these states. The total number“of children who need such help, however, is probably close to 350,000 or 400,000, according to the bureau estima The extent with which available appropriations meet the reed varies greatly from state to state, as is indicated by difference in ratios of children aided to general population. New York, Nevada, Cali- fornia, Massachusetts, Wisconsin, Montana, Minne- | sota, New Jersey, Delaware, Maine and North Da-! kota are at the top of the list, in the order named, reporting aid given to more than 200 children per 100,000 population. South Dakota, Oregon, Idaho, Wyoming, Iowa, Colorado, Connecticut, Michigan, Utah, New Hamp- shire, Pennsylvania, Ilinois, Arizona and Ohio re- ported ratios cf from 100 t> 200 per 100,000 popu- ‘ation. But in several states that have such laws, no use has been made of them and there are six states that have no such statutes and this, it would seem, indi- cates a lack of appreciation of the splendid work this mothers’ aid performs. In some of the states even an expectant mother is entitled to aid. One favorable tendency is noted, and that is that the am: unt of aid allowed each child has tended to increase to keep pace with modern economic condi- tions. The mothers’ aid statutes are well worth enacting and making use of after they are enacted. (Kessinger's Mid-west Review) Calvin Coolidge has made our country a good, president, His record for economy, thrift, debt retirement and tax reduction is one of the best in the history of the Republic. But his failure to grasp the fundamentals of the American farm problem, and the widespread dis- satisfaction among ‘middle western, morthweatern and western farmers would be a serious handicap to his campaign for a so-called third term. Grant and Recsevelt could not make the “third term,” and it might be hard for Coolidge. Editorial Comment all of a four-year term upon McKinley's assassina- tion, and that Coolidge only served about a year upon Harding's death. third term, and this argument, while nct much of an argument, would be used against him. Undovbtedly the president could force his renom- ination at the next Republican convention. Coolidge is not as unpopular as Taft was, in 1912, and Lowden, the principal candidate, at this time, is not as strong as Theodore Roosevelt, although Lowden’s popularity among farmers will surprise the city resident who hears little direct from the; people, who still make up a third of the population | of our United States. Unless the president docs something to regain his fcrmer strength in the middle west, the farmer’s revolt would seriously endanger the Republican; party in 1928. The big cities of the country are usually more or less Democratic; the rural sections of New York, Minois, Ohio and Indiana have been strongly Re- publican, Then, in a presidential election, this must be re- membered, that it is the electoral vote rather than the popular majority that determines the presiden- tial winner, and that the farmers hold the balance of power in enough states like Illinois, Iowa, Ohio, In- diana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wis- consin, etc., to name the president. If the Democratic feud continues between Al Smith, the most magnetic leader of Democracy, and William G. McAdoo, the successor to Wilson’s lead- ership, then Coolidge might win, regardless of his present weakness in the west and middle west. But a Democrat like “Jim” Reed of Missouri, E. T. Meredith of ‘Iowa, or Governor Ritchie of Mary- land would have a mighty gcod chance to win against Ccolidge, unless the president does some- | thing to win the farmers back to his fold. | Today, Frank O. Lowden of Illinois is the strong- est candidate, with Vice President Dawes a close second, and Speaker Nicholas Longworth, the clever husband of the brilliant Alice Re»sevelt, a near | third. It is rumored that if Coolidge forces cannot win, they will back Herbert Hoover, but Hoover is more unpopular among the farmers than the president. Many things can happen before 1928, and one of them may be a change in economic conditions that will make the farmers fee] differently. Another Conquest “of Winter ‘ (St. Paul Dispatch) We have resorted to so many ingenious devices to make life in the temperate zones comfortable in winter that an addition of one more has become about as surprising as a ecld wave. Nevertheless the attempt of the gtate highway devartment to It is only fair to say that Roosevelt served almost | * Yet, in a way, it would be a |” THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE The exam no of Bob Hathaway by the coroner was mercifu brief and to the point. Dr. Murchison al- lowed him to tell, in his own words, of his arrival at the Cluny house at approximately a quarter to nine, of his finding his uncle’s body a few feet from the partly opened w He identified the broken ¢ vase, indicated by Dr. Enos as the instrument used in committing the murder, as ¢he property of his uncle, “Mr. where th ase was accustomed tp ‘oroner asked. it, place on the ight of the win- room pointed out to you faint dust on the book shelf, marki place where the vase stands?” “The housekeeper maid can verify these details tater,” the coroner nodded. “Now, Mr. Hathaway, pression did you re opened the di room—that is, door?” what im- when you r into your uncle's if you did open the e door was closed. I knocked an . 1 thought my uncle 1 the bathroom and opened the door and entered. He was lying sprawled on the carpet, his ripht check bone against the cirpet. I saw at once that he had been struck on the head, and noticed that a broken vase lay ‘on the floor, be- tween the—the body and the window, indicating that the person who had struck him down had stood behind him, and that his back had been | turned.” The coroner rapped rather sharply. “We must not draw conclusions, pleats Mr. Hathaway, That will be all.” When he had taken his seat, Faith whispered in great agitation, “But, Bob, he didn’t let you tell about the footprints! They're not giving her a chance, Bob!” “Morehouse will undoubtted], all that out when he is calle: As the morning wore aw with pointless questioning of servants who knew nothing, Faith felt that her bring I. TELL You, MR- True, | AND CONTENTIONS ARE + ALWAYS THINK You'Re 1 You'Re WRONG. AS A pls a mh Hiyf keep the roads open for motor traffic is an under- {taking which a few short years ago would have been considered colossal and impossible. Success last winter meant little because the snowfall was so scanty. But with three feet on the level in some northern counties and’ ‘Monday's. storm piling over the rest of the state, this winter the test be real enough. Winter driving, a few years ago undertaken only by the more daring motorists, now has become com- monplace, The serviceability of the moter in M4 , do you remember} nerves were being rasped raw. jlast, her own turn came. | There’s Many a Slip— | | BARBS By Tom Sims chambermaid bit into found the $2,000,000 | It takes a woman |to find out all about apples. A Paris | She nothing new to tell-— jcould only reiterate the story she had) Eleven Argentine cowboys had to Bolen Mid ai sealer. the | check their guns before disembark- had discovered that Cherry had fled| (NE, 2¢ the port of New York. The the house, of her trewell note, which she iden with quivering lips, when ded to her by the corone h quaint the bridal party and the tor with the news of the bride’s appearance, ‘oner inquired fiance,’ “Did she ever tell you that she r @fetted she had promised to him? to hu feelings. respected him too much to make for the wedding.” “That will d Call Cherry Lane Wi you. coroner threw his bombshell, triumphant audience, look: at reporters TOMORROW: the coroner and his jury. | made Them lay, not one. but two. Twenty-two pounds of sugar of Agriculture, YOUR ARGUMENTS ALL WRONG - You RIGHT, BUT I KNow MATTER OF FACT, YOu'RE TALKING THROUGH YouR HaT/ YOUR TURN / TALKING THROUGH RSI finding Cher frantic trip to the church to ac- “Now, Miss Faith, what was your’ sister's attitude toward Mr. Cluny, as expressed to you, her sister?” the jaer But she couldn't bear We all wanted @—————__——-—_ her to break it off, but she said she a laughing stock before his friends. She insisted on going on with plans Pibroch of Donuil Dhu, Miss Faith, thank Wake thy wild v fT Justajingle ‘| The farmer fixed the hens’ nests so be made from a bushel of corn by a new process used by the Department bs there, you know, charge s for ginger ale, not to countless other ’ splendid Forty-two professors —_aadvocate a meeting on the subject of revis- ing foreign debt We'll be look- ling up a professor about January 1, rec- dis- : ble to see and talk ocean within ten years, a seientist, Vaeations are get- ‘She—she was very fond of hi ing harder and harder to take. Faith tried in vain to still the . 2 :jof her lips. “She admired him, ap-' They're inves Speaker preciated his generosity as—as a and Cobb for a, game played in 1919. Why not go a little farther nd look ‘into the affairs of those y fellows Napoleon, Custer and Lee? \ (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) him Pibroch of Donuil anew, ” the Summon Clan Conuil, with a Come away, come away, and Hark to the summons! Come in your. war-array, Cherry gladly faces 'Gentles and commons, Come from the deep glen, and | From mountain 50. rocky; , The war-pipe and pennon i Are at Inverlocky. ‘Come every hill-plaid, and , True heart that wears one, Come every ‘steel biede; and Strong hand that bears, ene. Tl : Zar | Te Gree, Need fall riaht Loave untgndad she hep, ‘That's how he fooled his hens and The flock without shelter; | Leave ‘the corpse uninterr’d, The bride at the altar; Leave the deer, leave the steer, Leave nets and barges; Come with your fighting gear, Broadswords and targes. can Come as the winds come, when | Forests are rended, ; Come as the waves come, when : Navies are stranded: | Faster come, faster come, Faster and faster, Chief, vcssal, page and groom, Tenant and master, Fast they come, fast they come; See how they gather! Wide waves the seale plume Blended with heather. [Cast your plaids, draw. your blades, Forward each man Yet! Pibroch of Donuil Dhu, Knell for the onset! Sir W. Scott: ‘Gathering Song of Donald the Black. | plat cia eran | IN NEW YORK | ———————_______—_-_o New York, Dec. 30,—Until a few days ago her picture was still in the lobby of a Broadway theater. There were two photos, in fact <one profile and one full fare. The passing crowds, perhaps, did not so much as notice them, end those who nudged elbows in the lobby space as they stood in line at the ticket window gave them, }na doubt, only the most casual glance, And therein the tragedy story. by A ition, 9 It had: become the symbol of all that life was worth living for. They get that way on Broadway, sometimes ——those fytil trugeling § youns- sters, whose: and prides hide their particular shortcomings. After all, she had not wanted a great deal, as things go on Broad- way. She did not demand stardom. She asked recognition chiefly. A small part with fair opportunities would have pleased her. Just enough to get your picture in the lobby. Th crowds may pass by but, after all, it’ something to, see" dife's" nteture ‘there. Maybe you can’t pet the point of view. Anyway, that’s it. Well this girl wtruggled along over a period of years, never quite seem- ing to hit the mark. aay she got bits, but not parts, lies the irony of this and particular To achieve that moment when her hotographs would appear in the lob- y had been more than a mere am- | And, somehow, ‘she didn’t hold any- thing very long. : Well—it was a couple of wee! ago that her piguures ‘finally peared ‘in & lobby: | Pretty-nice, you sn: after all that struggle! Yea, air,.she got.a rt at last |and went to a high-class photog- | rapher who charges from $10 up per print. And then the play went but she was dismissed the after the opening. ‘The picture was still there a couple of days ago when 1 passea, And that's what's so darn creepy on-- day you remember read- the newspapers tell- suicide of one Dorothy ler in a New York hotel. | There’s another picture that's more | iamiliar, and has a more comic story. | It shows a girl, formerly of the Ziegteld squad, dressed —in—-well,! you know what a lot of the Zicg- feld girl pictures are dressed in. About a year ago she married aj young man from a very proper family and now her husband is; haunted -by . seeing almost naked pictures of his wife wherever he turns. In sailors’ cabins ahd inj; funny penny arcadés; in those trashy alleged | “art” magazines and in sealpers’ windows on| Broadway. | I'm told he has spent a considerable | fraction of the family fortune buy- | ing them up whenever he sees them | and hoping in time to put them out! i of existence, GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1996, NEA Service, Inc.) | | | President Calles declines to extend time on Mexican oil and land laws, ef- fective January 1,, Chicago holdup man known as “The Cat,” ordered shot on sight after at- | tacks on unescorted women. Fargo, N. D.—C. P. Wick, Fargo, was elected president of Master Bar- | hers’ association of North Dakota. S. 0. S. message from British steamer Clearton, in distress off Vir- ; &inia coast, interrupts broadcasting | of Coolidge speech in Trenton, N. J. | ' | | i | | | | | | | i James M. Doren, prohibition chem-| ist in Washington, declares exces- sive drinking and not poisoned alcohol cuused recent numerous liquor deaths. District Attorney Keyes in Los Angeles says dismissal of charges against Aimee McPherson for obstruc- tion of justicé is.. imminent; her jformer attorney says preliminary i hearing “reeked with perjury.” Owatonna, Minn.—Restoration of capital ilies ‘and the whipping post and establishment of state con- stabulary is asked of 1927 legis! ture in resolutions adopted at mee ing of southern Minnesota crime pre vention assoviation, organized here. } ——_— i ros 1 FLASHES OF LIFE ; Ee) (By The Associated Press) |. New York-—-A century note will hardly be enough for a young lady's boy friend. in this town tomorrow night if he would celebrate a la mode. Agencies are asking as high ax $16.50 for a ticket to leading shows, Cover charges in Roger Kahn's night club are, $30 each, and of course the upkeep of a party far exceeds the initial outlay. For in- stance, ginger.ale will he $3 a bottle, Paris—One up-to-date cupid’s dart is a champagne bottle. Captain Al- lain Lemerdy of the French army was struck with a bottle in a cafe by Lawrence Vail, American drama- tist. During the subsequent prosecu- tion the captain met Clothilde Vail, sister of the dramatist. And now |’ Pro; THURSDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1926 Most watehes tell exactly wha time it fon't. grams From Radio . Station | KFYR, Bismarck | ‘ Tharaday, December 30 30 to 7:00 p, m.—Dinner concert. 200 to 7:10 p. m.—Weather, — mar- kets, news, ¢ to 8:10 p. m.—Varied y, December Pp. m.—Dinner concert. 00 to 7:10 p, m.—Weuther, — mar- kets, news, | 7:10 to 7:30 p. mg-Studio program, d_ program. 31 6 | ———________*s (Mercury readings at 7 a. m.) Bismarck—Clear, roads: good. St, Cloud—Clear, 35; roads fair. Minot—Clear, 31; roads fair, Fargo—Clear, 36; roads good. Jamestown—Clear, 32; roads fair. Mandan—Clear, 33; roads fair. 3 Devils Lake——Clear, 22; roads fair. Duluth—Partly cloudy, 16; roads good. Grand Forks—Partly cloudy, 33; roads fair. Hibbing—Partly cloudy, 14; roads good. Winona—Cloudy, 22 roads fair. Mankato—Clear, 21; roads good. Crookston—Cloudy, 35; roads fair. Rochester—Clear, 28; roads rough. | At The Movies | —____. CAPITOL THEATRE A running gun battle. Bullets whizzing by and ripping through the sagebrush of the Colorado desert. A beautiful girl in the saddle with him. This is the situation confronted by Tom Mix in the opening sequences of “The Great K & A Train Rob- bery,” Fox Films super thriller which comes to the Capitol Theatre Friday and Saturday. _ Tom Mix is right in his element in this drama, which is based on the great story by Paul Leicester Ford. Tom gets in his masterly work with the lasso, his guns and Tony, the wonder horse, during the course of his portrayal of Tom Gordon, detec- tive, who has been assigned to nip the progress of railroad bandits. Experts who have previewed the film declare it to be the finest thing that Mix has ever done. “It has as,much action as a cy- Gere ons. reviewer remarked. larry Gripp, once a pal of James Eades Howe, ‘celebrated. throughout the United States as the “Millionaire they are to be married. Cambridge, Minn.—Talk about the records of modren athletes! Why, in ancient Greece they used to pole vault over bounding leopards and turn handsprings over charging lions. Paintings of such feats, found at Corinth, have been described to the Archaeological Institute of America by Professor T. Leslie Shear of Princeton. San Francisco-All aboard for Chico, girls! Dr. Walter J. Swingle of the department of agriculture has brought - a, giant strawberry from China which beautifies the complex- ion and reduces the weight. It is three times as big as the native brand and grows on a tree. The doc- planning to develop the plant ico, New York—The deaf may now “see” sound. An invention called the Osiso records sound vibrations photographically. To use the device the deaf must first learn to recog- nize the picture of each sound. Los Angeles—Mrs. Efeanora E. Mc- Bride is seel 100,000 from James Duncan McBride, whom she married once, on the ground that he refused to keep a promise to marry her again. Radio’s Rialto (By The Associated Pres) Varied musical numbers will be heard et 7:15 p. m. and at 9:05 p. m. from WREO, (285), A pro- gram of no solos is to be on at 10 P- m. from WKRC, (423) Cincin- nati. WOC, (484), Davenport, is sched- uled to give a chimes concert at 5:45 (3 m. and at 7:30 p, m, the Moline lowboys will entertain. The Latonia - Brio musie to be.enthis event ing’s z will be the Twi- let Rong Thoter WBE (333), Springfield at 7:30 m. and the nittoy trie from WAG (4a) Chie at 8:25 p. m, bs ea tnt +, —_—_______-. The tres'th Kiowa’ by ‘Ite trait. — Matt, 12.33, 0-7 ; “He wishes well” is worthless un- lesy the deed’ ge with it.—Plautus, Hobo,” has the role of “de Luxe Harry,” the tramp. ELTINGE THEATRE John Gilbert and Ele: Board- man will be seen at th@ Eltinge to- night, tomorrow and turday in “Bardelys the Magnificent.” he story is of France of the sev- enteenth century, done by Sabatini, and a better “Bardelys” than John Gilbert could not have been selected, or even imagined. This Bardelys person is a swash- bucking hero of the king’s court, who is not above boasting that he can win any woman he sets his mind to, and <— ri ie the villainous Chatellerault, done by ‘Roy. D'Arcy, the sinister Crown Prince of “The Merry Widow,” is skeptical of the wooing Prowess and wagers him aright goodly sum, which was the nickname lor money in those heroic days, that he won't have much luck with the fair Roxalanne de Lavedan, the fair and beauteous heroine, played by Eleanor Boardman. — Having himself been spurned by ‘a lerault felt that he w: on_ inside information. Bardelys sets off for the lands and the home of Roxalanne, and imme- diately after he meets her his troubles begin. To avoid delay he h&d taken the identity of a certain fellow Lesperon, unknowing that this peron was being sought as a traitor to the king. On trial as Lesperon, Bardelys is brought before a stern judge, none. else Chatellerault, who repudi- ates and sentences him to \ The story then pe 8 into an amazing series of dare-devil stunts, which end with Bardelys winning the favor of the girl and his king. You Doc: ve paki suitor, but 5S re le Was From WLW (438), Cincinnatl. thought he had found the irresistible thevnif at 7t0 Pete from 'WHE| _ “Would you like a puppy” he ask- oe ciareland. sich colored artists) "son, Eddie, how delightfully hum- ‘Vocal numbers are’ to be broadcast] ble of you! Yes, dérling, I accept.”— from WHO (526) Des Moines, at 7:80| Pele Mele, Paris: ' ° .m, WCAU, (278) Philadelphia at) ———-_-__ <7 Sin ee iis at 6 p.m. from “Vy 01 lections the eveni: rangi ies ea tete +e eee utfalo wt 10:30 p. 1 EING A SUCCESS. AT. (880) Schenectady at 0: 30 Bi m, ‘ ne Bom, Waki wes oly 's ir. (238) Apringticld.at 7 pm. sand MEANS. FAILURE WJZ (485) ‘New: York with WGY (380) Schnectady on a hookup at 9 p. m. will be other stations giving ‘ recitals.

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