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PAGE EIGHT “WOOO PLANS CONCERT BY ~ SYMPHONY Minncapclis Orchestra to Broadcast Full Program Mon- day Evening, January 24 Phe Minneapolis ehestra with Henry Verbrugghen, eanductor, will broadcast its first concert exclusively for radio from the Gold Medal Station, WCCO, Mon day evening, January 24. The pro- gram will be of approximately an hour and a half’s duration, begin- ning at 8 o'clock. The full orchestra of participate. It will pl at the Lyceum Theater. microphones will pi and carry it over special lines to the | WCCO transmitter. No spectators | will be permitted in the theater 'dur- | ing the program, it was said. Symphony Or- 5 pieces cal | pn the s A battery al up the music While portions of the regular con- | Chureh cf the N certs of the Minneapolis Symphony | have been broadcast in past years, | this will be the first time, it an- nounced, that the orchestra has play- | ed a program exclusively for radio | broadcasting. While broadcasts of symphony orchestras have proved radio attractions in the past, radio experts have not declared them ex- | ceptionally successful. This is due to the fact that the programs broad- cast have usually been regular con- certs of the symphony before an au- dience. The result has been that the place of broadcast has not been suitable for accurate trans: sion; | the program itself was not arranged specifically for radio purposes and there were long waits between num bers. Precedes Mid-Winter Tour The program which will be heard | January 24 has been selected by Mr. Verbrugghen and radio station offi-! ith the particular view of appealing to the radio audience and | at the same time offering them sel tions which could come only from symphony orchestra, This broadeas announced by Henry ger of WCCO, author of the Symphony program notes. On the} day following the broadcast, the Min- neapolis Symphony will leave on its mid-winter tour. To assure exact reproduction over the air of the multitudinous instru- ments in the symphony, engineers of | WCCO have bee of tests during the hearsals for the past week, continue to do up to the d ral microphon it was said, to up” the music of the orchestra. prevent echoes and reverberations from the empty auditorium, the cur. tain setting off the ge from the nder of the house will be drop it is said. /CCO officials predict that ‘this Lroadeast will attract one of the lar radio audience in the North-| st, as requests are constantly be- ing recei that the music of the Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra be rent over the air BUSINESS MEN WILL DISCUSS AGRICULTURE Representatives of Commer-| 7 cial Organizations in Twelve States to Attend id for: ‘Washington, Jan. 17.—-A new ap- proach tothe agricultural problem through the business interests of the Middle West will be made at the meeting of the North Central Divi- sion of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, to be held at Chi- caen, Jan. 20 and 21. The Bismarck, N. D., Association of Commerce, an organization mem- ber of the National Chamber, has Den asked to send delegates to the Chicago meeting. In addition officers of the following firms which are in- dividual and associate members of the national organization have been invited: First National Bank; A. W. Lucas company; Provident Life In- surance compan: Quanrud, Brink & Reibold, Inc. Four Speakers The pace will be set for the rep- resentatives of business organiza- tions of the 12 states comprising the | great inland granary of the country by four speakers, each covering a different phase of the agricultural situation. Roy Young, governor of the Fed- erat Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, | will open the discussion with an ad- dress on the “Present Financial and | Agricultural Condition of the North- west.” Arthur Huntington, of the | Towa Railway and Light C riage. | will discuss “Basie Costs in Agricul- tural Production.” R. McKelvie, publisher of the Ne- | braska Farmer, former governor of | that state, will attempt to answer | the question: “What is.a Farm | Worth?” at the afternoon session. | Dr. B. H. Nibbard, rofessor of aj cultural economics at the University 6f Wisconsin, will address qhe meet- | ing on “Causes and Durations, oy Aavcultarel Depressi These and/other phases of the agri- 4 1 be taken up ‘viewpoint and ‘an effort made to | Sete opinion as represent- ‘gathering to 2 common the. question of agricul- with a view to definition of a national for ! be ‘of the meeting will over: the diseussion mani, we. re- coke eee ROW ON ROW «ined in the Minnea poli | Pi emergency i” ay discuss Pacific Miss chambers To | states | Kansas South Dakota represented as attacking T WITHIN THE CHURCH—As Nativity, Montreal, Hundreds of rel: Arr Lauricr ed outside > ‘Lheatri the who the ig former director-general of fleet corpo freight rates f the Middle We lly, pre : rail of the ez, tion, om c North mere sippi . Louis-San Franc smmercial of of Il Michigan, Minn Nebraska, North Da and W at Chica: or commer pois, In Interest Shown in Policy (P) inesday ling Government’s program de , wide inte be manifest t this government policy as evidenced by comm from abroad and int nited States Protest demonstra: Iso continut but so far no di Latest wore the American reco, regime under Pre: posed in civil war by Ju liberal, i forisiof; £00 libernls! onder Gan apata being forced into Costa Rica nd pictures the conservative forces “a, a lib strong- hold which, if taken, may break the backbone of the Sacasa movement. This was the Diaz government's vie A statement that “Brazil faces the peril of being Americanized” was ap- plauded at a meeting of senior stu- dents of the university law schooi at Rio De Janeiro, while a resolution demanding that Secre' Kellogg be discharged from office eing in- tellectually, mentally and morally un- fit to hold a post of honor ar respon- sibility” was adopted at a mass meet- ing in Baltimore attended by seyerat hundred perso THINK OF THAT! A man had been visiting a certain widow every evening. hy don’t you marry her? a friend. “I have often was the rep! pend my tockholm. asked thought about ‘it, ut where would I eve then ?"—Kaspar, Sunk Astern, But Not Foundered — “The Hare pearl; t services for 39 of the 7 jatives and friends of the victim “|flour offered for sale to give name, tells of | i which it was grown. -|stad. Provides that fortunes 7 little v funeral notes boomed for the Curch of the Na e disa the to aster, the victims were borne io Hee untimely gra THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Grief-bowed Montreal Inters Its Panic Dead ‘tims of the fire panic in the Laurier Palace Theatre were held jointly h from the great bell of Notre Dame, run crowded around the caskets within, as shown in this ex in the only when national calamity befalls. clusive NEA Service picture. After joint services for 39 cf the ‘77 children ute. LEGISLATIVE CALENDAR NATE Bills passed Provide are started agains supervisor upon whom | was made shall call} eting of the dl isors within six days after the} iee to provide for the defense. Murphy. councils to le at the levy has been a of the people. Committee on appropria- vides that the state wadi to the general fund of the on-each July 1, $25,000 out of oneys collected und: the yea ine tax Jaw. Amendment to ( present 3. Cammittee on appropria tion Amends law on disposition of fees collected by the ate securities fees collected commission shall be paid into the general fund of the state treas- ury monthly. Bills Introduced )—Whitman, Amends cling and branding tion tor er tate, of nd factory location of the urer, percentage of wheat , the variety and the -state in Recommended by Governor A. G. Sorlie, Referred to committee on state affairs. Resolutions Introduced Concurrent resolution C—Hjelm- above $500,000 be conscripted in time of. war. Referred to committee on feder- al relations. Resolutions Passed Concurrent resolution D—Bond. Provides that all work of the legis- lative session be speeded up in an effort to adjourn after 45 days. HOUSE Bilts Introduced H. B. 48—Siéight. -Provides sale of state mill and elevator Drake by the state’ industrial on, State Affairs. H. B. 44-—Swendscid. Provides ‘for essment and taxation of. property of power companies. Taxes and taX a for as | Rie tallswing bole mere naanacay) by committee on appropriations and referred to that committee: H. B. 46--Appropriates $5,000! | to ,jof the U \sions and. pre expenses of delegates to na- nal political conventions, Approp H. B. burial penitentiary school. H. B. 49: burial expen charged sailo: and state sof erection of headstones therefor. anor ea Lines $620.60 Elle sp » in the vestig mission. 1 Veitch. Amends to the compiled Inws of 1913. cation. Hague. issuance of licenses therefor. perance. H. B. 53—Cox, issaanee of dupli state or Provides ribes how be done. Judiciar, H. B. 54—Ferris. sold in the state Requires to be State Affairs, H. B, 65—Burkhart. sehool boards system of expenditures mended by Governor A. Education. Rail Board Hearing Postponed to Feb. G. The state railroad board today ’ | ended, announced that the hearing which certain Williston person charged the Montana-Dakota Pow- er company and other power con- cerns with fraud in the sale of se-, curities had been February 2.. Mations have been}, "| filed with the board by the power: the roteed- companies to dismiss the p1 ings on the ground that the- rail- road board has no jurisdietion, Pe bak also seek an amendment 0 the board’s order, issued when the proceedings first were filed, restrajning them from disposing o! additional securities until the pres- ent case is decided. s in Cote des Neiges cemetery. es $500 to pay) id per diem of presiden- | . 48--Appropriates $500 to pay expenses of inmates of + the training Appropriates $300 to pay. honorably — dis- , soldiers and marines . war of the Rebellion and , balanec ttorney for in- ion of the state highway com- and plement Edu- Provides for reg- Tem- for the bonds by the any of its political subdivi- it shall flour! labeled to! show the kind of wheat from which itis made and its protein content. | Requires to-adopt the budget as recom- Sorlie. postponed to rf Mourners lined JAPANESE ARE. PREPARING FOR BIG ELECTION Premier Wakatsuki Expected 1o Dissolve Coming. Diet For That Purpose Tokyo, Jan. 17,—()—Politieal par- ties in Japan are building their tences in preparation for the greatest election ever held in the empire—an election wherein more than 9,000,000 new voters will have the privilege of casting their ballots for the first time under the manhood suffrage law passed by the Diet in 1924. If the election takes place—and it apparently is a forgone conclusion that Premier Wakatsuki will dissolve the coming Diet for that purpose— it is expected to be preceded by an old-fashioned spell-bound campaign similar to those which have charac- terized many American presidential contests. Japanese party leaders ‘are emulating in numerous ways: the | American political tactics. No. Other Course Seen Premier Wakatsuki, who succeeded ‘the late Premier Kato last spring as head of the governmeftt, is the lead- jer of the Kenseikai, the minority party in the Diet. The Kenseikai government was able to survive the last session because of a semi-coali- tion with the Seiyuhonto party. The \Seiyukai, presided over by General] sions Baron Tanaka, was the actual ma- jority party in the lower house, but was effegtually defeated through the 2 Kenseikai-Seiyuhonto combination, The ¥oalition. is declared to have the Seiyuhonto demanding] 40 in WHat was considered too great a po- litieal price for its adherence’ to ‘the poare! eet standards. Consequently, here apparently is nothing for Wa- i kateukt to do but-decree a dissolu- and go before the country, At me tithe, a general eleetion is e li thing desired by any party. \The cost is expettéd to’ be tremen- doug and ‘the attithde of the millions of new voters towards parties and to ‘binations have attempted ta cause the fall of, the Wakatsuki cabinet, hoping that a new cabinet would be ‘appointed which would weather the next Diet and, consequently, avoid a national election. The premier ha: been, accused in the newspapers o} all sorts of things ranging from lese ‘majestic to perjury, with the expec- tation that he would resign; But the premier has stoéd his ground and tention: to “his necusers. Some politicians the: Seiyukai to introduce. impeachment. to the Diet whereupon it: will be the p1 ounce dissolutio: iis as The.Kenseikai-would: go country.on a platform of. rigid goy- .e¢nmental economy, * reduetion taxes, further lacermeine a ‘enterprise nd: the” improvement mts ber irs 'DONAHEY T0 AGAIN FACE G.0.P, SOLONS Elected For Three Suc- cessive Terms \ Columbus, Ohio, Jan. 17.—()— Vie Donahey, only Ohio governor to be elected for three successive terms, begins his fifth year as chief exec- utive in the same situation as during his two preceding terms. He will be the single representa. tive of the Democratic party holding a major state elective office. He alse will have a state legislature which is preponderahtly republican. Donahey’s political success so far as his own personal campaigns are concerned has been niarked. He has overcome republican majorities re- peatedly. But he hag never carried his party ticket along with him. Disagreed Over Legislation Open disagreement between the| chief executive and legislative lead- ers and refusal of the state senate to confirm the Donahey appointments, during the past two sessions of the general ‘assembly resulted in the establishment of what is thought to be an “all-time” veto record. During the legislative session of four years ago Donahey disapproved 76 bills, Last seasion he vetoed 71. Donghey’s friends think there much «that is makeup. He is professedly against the “vested ‘ini finds “the rights of ‘the vate” and honesty in government” among his mont ready phrases when discusting affairs: of state, and has an unusual ability to sense the trend of public thought. Then, g00, he is the father of ten children. Started As Printer Born in July, 1874, he became a printer soon after leaving the public schools. His first public office was auditor of Tuscarawas, his home county. His first taste of state pol- ities came when he was sent as a delegate to the state constitutional convention in 1912, He was elected state auditor the same year, serving two ternis, and in 1920 made his first bid for the governorship. He failed to surmount the Harding landslide of that year, but was successful in 1922, '24 and '26, His vote getting ability had brought him mention for the democratic presidential nomination in 1928, But he is emphatic in his disavowal of any such aspirations and insists that he cannot be drawn into the race. OUTSTANDING BOOKS OF 1925 ARE SELECTED American Library Association Announces Choice—Could Have Picked 40 Chicago, Jan, 17,-+UP)—-The. Amer- ican Library Apsoctation today. an- nounced its election ‘of ‘the 37 out- atanding books in'' 1925; exclasiye of fiction oy children’s books. The list was furnished to, avid at the request Of the American ‘National Committee on International Lingala tty Cooper- ibn of the if Ni This country was 40 volume brary auscelation sai to make public an incom: stead of-a-“padded one, ‘about which there ber bean: ation.” . Divi- of the it -apbitrarily fined by the Infernational Institute on Intellectual jon, which will publish » ‘rivie bot of 600 titles. Countries publ! 10,000 or more paces pooreage'y répresented by Tas Unites sand the ites comes ander that beading. Your of ae he book, “Beventy fe bs ‘The full 1c Hamilton (Houghton), \ Only Ohio Governor to Be, is Rooseveltian in iad MONDAY, JANUARY: 17, 1927 11. George Santayana—Dialogues in bimbo (Scribner). Belles Letters and Art ‘ 12, John A, Brashear—Autobiogra- phy of » Man Who Loved the Stars (Houghton). 18. Harvey W. Cushing—The Life of Sir William Osler. 2. vol. (Oxford). 14, Robinson Jeffers—Roan Stallion, Tamar and other Poems. (Boni and Liveright), 18, Wm, (Viking). 16. James W. Joffnson, Ed.—Book of E. Leonard—Twe Lives ; American Negro Spirituals, (Viking). jit. Amy Lowell—John Keats, 2 v. (Houghton). 18, Joseph Petthell—The Adventures of an Mlustrator (Little). 19. Herbert Quick—One Man's Life (Bobbs). 20, E. A, Robinson—Dionysus Doubt (Macmillan). Geography and Travel 21. William —Reebe—Jungle (Putnam). 22, Joseph R. Smith—North America (Hareourt).. Philology and Literary History 23. G.-P. Krapp-—The English Language in America. 2 vol. (Centu- ty). ee 24. R. L. ‘Rusk—Literatute ‘of the Middle-Western Frontier.2. vol. (Co- lumbia). ‘ Natural Science 25. G. A. Bliss—Calculus' of Varia- tions (Open Court). 26. G. A. Dorsey—Why We Behave Like Human-Bejngs (Haryer). 27. Carleton ENis and A. in Days 28. D, W. Johnson-yNew England— Acadian Shore Line (Wiley). 20. J, Lotka—Elements of Physi- A. sy Biology (Williams & Wilkins). C, P. Oliver—Meteors (Williams & Wilkins). 31. C. B, Payne—Stellar Atmos- pheres (Havard). 32. M. ¥. Walcott—North American Wild Flowers. Vol. 1 (Smithsonian). 83. A, N. Whitehead—Science and the Modern World (Macmillan). 34, S. W. Williston—Osteology of the Reptiles (Harvard). Applied Science 86. T. F. Carter—The Invention of Printing in China (Columbia). 36. Alice Hamilton—Industrial Poi- sons in the United States (Macmil- lan), 87, Raymond Pearl—The Biology of Population Growth (Knopf). - IT’S A SIGN Alyce—What makes you think Tom is to quit college? Mertyle—He’s traded his ukulele for a pair of garters.—Life. $i Wells— Chemical Action of Ultra-Violet Ray (Chemical Catalog.) G. aoeare dettiseen and 2. Edward Chenting—History of the United States Vol. VI. The War for Southern Jadiesndence (Macmil- Tan). 3. of Life and Labor (Dutton). 4, Hughes Mearns—Creative Youth (Doubleday). : 5., Charles Warre (Little! +6. Lewis Renae sane that Fiction (Mecmillan Kiri fey bots ‘Tomorrow. rm and Korea’ wheresomp por- |! Hy Japanes: SOPp Late “aagon ‘of. a Social Science Samuel Gompers—Seventy Years Dr. Grassick Renamed President of State Tuberculosis Ass’il. Dr. J. Grassick of of Grand Forks was reelected president of the North Dakota ‘Tuberculosis -asso- ation at its annual meeting, held here Saturday. Dr. Fannie’ Dunn Quain of Bis- marck was reelected vice dent; B. K. Kilbourne of was elected secretary and Dr. S. Towne of Bismarck, treasurer. Chosen on the executive com- mittee, besides the officers, were Minnie J. Nielson. former super- intendent of public instruction; Henrietta Lund of Bismarck and Dr. J. G. La Mont of San Haven. * Members ‘of the board of direc- tors elected for a three-year term are Dr. ei A. Whittemore of Bis, marck, retschmar of Venturia, Eolas Motliring of Williston, a Ww. Braatlein of by Mrs. _C. E. Jones of Lisbon, lorence Porter of Minot and. Per- cy M. Hanson of Jamestown, Reports were gin bs by commit: tees and Liga) the cost of work of aoeeniation for the coming year were made, Freight Rates on | Florida Fruits and Melons ‘Reasonable’ Washington, Jan. 17—4(#)—Railroad rates on fresh fruits vegetables and melons from Florida to all points in the United States and Canada are generaly reasonable, an Interstate Commerce Commission examiner re- ported today to the commission. The examiner, F. C. Bilyer, sug- gested, however, that the commission should hereafter fix 360 boxes as*the minimum load for a car of citrus fruit, the present loading minimum being 300 boxes. By this means the railroads could be enabled to make a reduction per hundted pounds on citrus shipments, the examiner said; and yet obtian-about the same revenue per carload as at present. GOOD MEASURE “Have your poems all come back, darling?” “Back? This is what I call rubbing it in! I sent them four, and hanged if they haven't returned me nine!”— Passing Show, London. A member of the lily family, the Joshua tree, is a true desert growth. money! ; All Our Overcoats n—Congress, th Constitution ond, the ‘Bupreme Court at 40% discount In Minneapolis Your Choice of _ Hotel Radisson: Fer, Business Reasons | IS JUSTIFIED ‘BY EVERY