The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 1, 1928, Page 15

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— SS ___ MALE HELP WANTED WANTED AT ONCE—25 men to learn barber trade. Sige ah training for best positions. ta log . Moler Barber College, Butte, Mont.; Fargo, N. D. FEMALE HELP WANTED ADDRESSORS for Mail Order House. Home, spare time; enclose stamped, addressed envelope. Lue cile’s Labs., 1906 San Pablo, Oak- | | ; Ads over’ land, Ca “| sre 3e addi- ‘ GIRL WANTED for general house- oat td work, to work ot May, One go-|] CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ing to Business College preferred. ’ RATES Fhone 967. 90 Cents Per Inch WANTED—A competent maid for general house work. Phone 189. ————— advance. should be ‘ WORK WANTED. ceived by*D efclock to insure ; CET ACK'S Radiator Shop clean|| \ssertion came day. Se Sah eat ait |; arisen une pitee” venesuenie BISMARCK TRIBUNE, . . YOUNG giri desires @ position as- PHONE 82 sisting with housework in city or country. Write Tribune Ad. No. 2. ‘oung compe- tent girl wants + eg house- work. Phone 430-J. << HOUSES AND FLATS VOR RENT—All modern house, six rooms and bath. Good location. Phone 882-J or call at 370 Man- dan street. : A Used Car Is No Dealer Made It. YOU, too, can have # ca car in which ship. Our rebuilt cars O. K’d USED CARS ATTRACTIVE BUYS 1926 Ford coupe, refinished. every one. « will amaze you. 1926 Rete coupe, fully 1927 Chevrolet Landau sedan, good Motor es as new. 1925 Overland sedan, reconditioned. 1925 Chevrolet coupe. 1925 Ford coupe, new tires. Z " 1926 Ford ton truck chassis with transmission, completely over- hauled. 1927 Chevrolet ton truck, good as new. Veo Trade and Give Terms CAPITAL CHEVROLET CO. Bismarek, N. D. MOM’N POP FOR SALE FOR SALE or to apply well located Bismarck located in fast growing dress H. H. Hafstrom, D. Phone 307-M. Address Mrs. A. S. Nie marck, North Dakota. Mom’s Wise IT'S ABOLT TIME XOO WERE GETTING HOME ~AMy'S BEEN WAITING TO KISS YOU GOODNIGHT Now Wait A MINOTE, COP — LET'S KILL ‘Tw ~ AN classified-ads are cash in te Guaranteed Rebuilt Automobiles rou can feel all the pride and satisfaction of owner- cars—we stand squarely back of And the low prices “Rebuilt Cars With s Rerutation” chase of five or six room m five Fargo residence lots—well water and sewer in street. FOR SALE—Nielsen’s Millinery. NO FAIRY STORIES TONIGHT =(T'S PHONE 82—— f 145 ‘ ies. Better Than the I HAVE nearly twenty sales r—a real od are on . pur- lern residence addition, Ad- 602 Ave. Isen, Bis- TWO STORY five-room house mod- TWO HOUSES, close in, on same ROOMING HOUSE, including. fur- FIVE ROOM modern bungalow, 3 FIVE ROOM « -ttage, close in, mod- ern, al 1 FIVE ROOM front, ).00, . BUILDING LOTS, a splendid selec- FARM LANDS; have started four in ten ton INSWRANCE. Fire, tornado, auto- FOR SALE—A white enamel bed FOR SALE—Victrola and records, FOR SALE—Three burner electric SARGAINS 11 used furniture, Ken- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE town, plenty water, fair buildings, sell cheap, part down, balance to suit ie Address M. Nieder- meyer, lah, N. D. suitable for one lady. ern, nicely located, close in, $4000.00. lot, modern, rent for $90.00 per month, one partly furnished, a good investment af $7500.00. niture, hot water heat, close in income $345.00 per month, prob- ably the best of its kind in the city, $15,000. close to Bismarck. Would take car in’ trade. Kenneth King, at oe Land Office, Bismarck, N. ~ APARTMENTS FOR RENT—Exceptionally well, furnished modern apartment ground floor, with piano, frigid aire, electric washing machine, vacuum cleaner, always hot wa ter. Porches rink garden space! 1-2 blocks from postoffice, $5,200, ll big rooms, $3150.00. story and half house, can make two additional rooms, modern, nicest part of city, east jon in all parts of the city. sales totaling nine quarter sec- tions the past week. Its coming. BUY NOW. 1928 will be the best real estate year we have had mobile, in good, reliable compan- fae ing now witl. many more talking. Do ‘your business with the busiest deale - in the city. F. E, YOU} FURNITURE FOR SALE _ with mattress and spring. Cheap if taken at once. Call at 523 South Ninth street or phone 894-M. also library table. Call at 802 Fourth street. Phone 1193. range. Cheap. Call at 309 Tenth street or phone 749. _ nelly Furniture Company. Phone 188-M, Mandan. PERSONAL PAEMIST and Phrenologist Mad. am Lattimerelle. Helps find lost articles. See her today. 115 First stret. Phone 1230. fl YOO MIGHT, AT LEAST, EXPLAIN: WHY YOU WERE OuT SO LATE AMN'S BEDROOM- SHE JUST ASKED TO HEAR A FAIRY STORY! Freckles and His Friends ~~ He's tite Only One in the Class By Blosser _ Phone 543-W. 9: 807 Fourth street. FOR .RENT—Modern furnished apartment. or sleepin; room. Would be ‘@ good home for nurse: Also one dining room set for sal oy at 614 Eighth street. Phone FOR RENT—All modern four room apartment. also single room for light housekeeping, city heated. College Building. Phone 183. FOR RENT—Nicely furnished two room apartment: available ‘March ist. Hazelhurst, 411 Fifth street. Phone 273. Also. garage. FOR RENT—Thrée rooms modern furnished / apartment, ground floor. Call at 721 Third st--et. Phone.678-R. FOR RENT. toom and irtment for Woodmansee Apts. A four a) A bath unfurnished adults only. ‘—Four room apartment over French & Welch Hardware. See Griffith, care French Welch. PDE FOR RENT—Two room furnished light housekeeping apt. modern Fourth. hed _housekeep- 422 Fifth street. ing apartment. __HOME_LAUNDRY. GENTLEMEN! The only way to keep your shirts for years is to send them to Marguerit Bulten’s Home Laundry. sired. We call and deliver. Ave. A West. jirs if de- ir 203 Phone 1017. $.5.¥i CHARACTERS VANCE F.-X. MARKHAM, District ruey of New York ‘ a MARGARET ODELL (THE “CANARY") CHARLES CLEAVER, a man- about-town KENNETH SPOTSWOODE, a mane- facturer LOUIS MANNIX, am fan) er DR. AMBROISE LU oo shionable neurologie '¥ SKEEL, a professional bur- te fs wit [AM — SESSUP, tele- rator “EPIVELY. telephone op- ATH, Sergeant ef the Homicide Bureau eee THE STORY THUS FAR Skeel’s Guger ite were foun@ (a the apartment murdered ret Odell 3 trath comes t Manatz bad been eall- eee CHAPTER XL FEW minutes later Heath turned abruptly and went out into the hall. We could hear him calling to Snitkin down the eleva tor shaft, but when he came back into the office his expression told us that as yet there was no news of Skeel. “T'll call’ up the bureau,” be de- clded, d see what Guilfoyle had to-report. At least we'll know then when the Dude left his house.” But when the sergeant had been connected with police headquarters he was informed that Gullfoyle had as yet made no report. “That's damn funny,” be Com-|tereq y; mented. hanging up the receiver It was now twenty minutes past ten. Markham was growing ‘res- tive. The tenacity with which the Canary case had resisted all his ef- forts toward a solution had filled him with @iscouragement. He pushed back his chair ner vously and, going to the window. gazed out into the dark haze. “I'l give our friend until half Past ten,” he said grimly. “If he isn’t here then, Sergeant, you'd bét- ter call up the local station-house and send @ patrol-wagon for him.” There was another few minutes of silence, Vance lolled in his chair with half-closed eyes, but I noticed that, though he still held his ciga- ret, he was not smoking. His fore head was puckered by a frown, and be was very quiet, I knew that some unusual problem was occupy- ing him, As I watched him he suddenly sat up straight, his eyes open and movement that attested to some in- ner “Oh, my word!” he exclaimed, “It really can’t be, y’ know! And yet” —his face darkened—“and yet, by Jove, that’s it! . . . What an ass unuttergble nee Hea the district attorney's of- || ce é beatae Ver: hos mi for two. lose in, all al For Nina saw Hurenuile Mandan street orgphone 262-M.__ | FOR SALE—Nine row Burroughs SLEEPING room with closet, con- necting bath in all modern home,|- $10.00, Breakfasg if desired. Ladies only. 119 W. Thayer. Prone 783-R. FOR RENT—Nice warm _ light housekeeping rooms, private en- jose in, all modern home. ._Phone’544-W. ‘320 Second street. FOR RENT—Steam heated nicely furnished sleeping room in aa trance, cl Ph 44-W. ly modern -home. Call at Sixth street. Phone 1161-R, Always| __Bismarck, N. hot water, only five blocks from ai town. Call at 206 Fourth street pale arta very desirable sleep- ing room on ground floor, large | FOR RENT—Two large housekeen- a FARM LANDS +__|____ROOMS FOR RENT styles and -izes, We have one to FOR SALE—One section land 200|FOR RENT—Nicely furnished| ‘it your business. W. E. Stitzel, acres cultivated, 2 1-2 miles from] rleeping room in modern home,| vepresentative. Patterson Hotel, , Duroc Jerse Gites brea the last of March. ee pounds, each Price 1 and “trutz, Box 21, tically _new, in small town in Northwest Ni Dakota. also aative singers. treats, ete. ing rooms, well furnished. Close in, Phone 637-J or call at 113 Mandan_street. Menus For the registered to farrow Weight about $30.00. Bis- udding mact.ine with stand. Prac- perfect cOndition. First $85.00 takes it. I Van Hook. Trustee, Bismarck, N. _D. WANTED TO RENT—Furnished hotel, restaurant or confectionery, Address 310 Seventh Ave. northwest, Mingt, N. D. FOR SALE—Choice Imported Ger- man Rollers and Hartz Mountain, 8, seeds, e_ 115-3, Jacob Bull, Dickinson, N. D., Box 728. FOR RENT—Two unfurnished rooms with closets, in modern | Family | home, outside entrance, outside door on porch, water, light and BY SISTER MARY heat. 417 Tenth street. Cal!! Breakfast—Baked apples, cereal, 1068, tream, country sausage, rehea' FOR RENT—Furnished _ sleepi rooms, hot water heat, alway: water. Rent reasonable, 522 Sec: ond street. in Hoskins block. Floren, Business cc RNG! One (ese Ob FOR RENT—One large furnished} light _ housekeeping room on ground floor, with garage. Phone FOR REN 223 Second street. MISCELLANEOUS at serviceable age. son Bros., Wilton, N. D. NATIONAL CASH REGISTERS— New and second hand. Over 500]rooms in butter for ten ™ MU, DINE Avttor affected in this way before, and the fact that he was habitually so cyn ica) and aloof, s0 adamant to emo: tion and impervious to outside tn. fluences, gave his words and ac. tions an impelling and impressive quality. After a moment he shook him- self slightly, as if to throw off the upon him, and, stepping to Mark. ham’s desk, he leaned over, resting on both hands. “Don't you sec?” he asked. “Skeel's not coming. No use to wait—no use of our having come here in the first place. We have to go to him. He's waiting for us. + + Come! Get your hat.” Markham had risen, and Vance took him firmly by the arm. “You needn't argue,” he persist: ed. “You'll have to go to him sooner or later. You might as well go now, don't y’ know.—My word!” He had ied Markham, astonished and but mildly protesting, into the middle of the room, and he now beckoned to Heath with his free band. “You, too, Sergeant. Sorry you had all this trouble. My fault. I should have foreseen this thing. A devilish shame. . . . You know where Skeel lives?” Heath noaded mechanically, He had fallen under the spell of ‘Vance’s strange and dynamic im- Dortunities, “Then don’t wait.—And, Ser. geant! You'd better bring Burke or Snitkin along. They won't be meeded here—nobody'll be needed here any more today.” Heath looked {nqguiringly to Markham for counsel; his bewilder- ment had thrown bim into a state of mute indecision, Markham nodded his approval of Vance’s sug- Bestions, and, without a word, slipped into his raincoat. A few minutes later the four of us, accompaniec by Snitkin, had en- fance’s car and were lurch- ing uptown. Swacker had been sent home; the office had been locked up; and Burke and Emery bad departed for the homicide bu- reau to await further instructions Skeel lived in 35th Street, near the East River, in a dingy, but once pretentious house, which for- merly had been the residence of some old family of the better class It now bad an air of dilapidation and decay; there was rubbish in the areaway; and a large sign an- nouncing rooms for rent was posted in one of the ground-floor windows. As we drew up before it Heath sprang to the street and looked sharply about him. Presently he espied an unkempt man slouching in the doorway of a grocery-store diagonally opposite, and beckoned to him. The man shambled over turtively. “It's all right, Guilfoyle,” the sergeant told him. the Dude a social visit. What's the trouble? Why didn’t you re- port?” Guilfoyle looked surprised, “I was told to phone in when he left the house, sir. But he ain't left yet. Mallery tailed him home fast night round ten o'clock, and I relieved Mallory at yipe this morn: ing. Tie Dude's still inside.” “Of course he's stil) inside.’ Ser- geant.” said Vance, a bit imps tently. ; és 3 “Where's bis room situated, Guil- foyle?” asked Heath. @ “Second floor. at the hack.” _ ‘F We're going in.--Stand “Look out for him,” admonished Guilfoyle. “He's got a gat.” Heath took the lead up the worn steps which ted from the pavethent to little vestibule. Without —Large furnished room newly decorated with kitchenette. FOR SALE—Our four year RY Shorthorn herd and show sire. A)- so two outstanding young bulls Come and see these bulls “efore buying. Erick- o0e90 Pall of horror that bad descended | “We're paying| potatoes, breakfast radishes, crisp jot |toast, milk, coffee. Luncheon—Tomato rarebit, hearts ond street. fof lettuce with French dressing, FOR RENT—Desirable office room|fritters with fresh maple syrup, . A} milk, tea, seve €o.|. Dinner—Chicken pie, grilled sweet re and kum- potatoes, French endiy. coffee, a favorite with our forefathers letter month of February. Chicken Pie jhard cooked eggs, spoons butter, English pastry. Clean and cut up chicken serving. Cook in boiling water cover until tender. tender remove from broth and cool and remove fat. — CASE \ THE BENSON MURDER CASE and with hale hanging in strings over her shoulders, emerged eud- denly from a rear door and came toward us unsteadily, her bleary eyes focused on us with menacing resentment. “Say!” she burst out, in a rasp ing voice. “What do youse mean | by bustin’ in like this on @ respect- able lady?” And she launched forth upon a@ stream of profane epithets. | Heath, who was nearest her, | placed bis large band over her face, and gave her a gentle but firm shove backward. “You keep outa this, Cleopatra!” he advised her, and began to ascend the stairs. The second-floor hallway was dimly lighted by a small flickering | Sas-Jet, @nd at the rear we could | distinguish the outlines of a single door set in the middle of the wall. “That'll be Mr. Skeel’s abode,” observed Heath. He walked up to it and, dropping one hand in bis right coat-pocket, turned the knob. But the door was locked. fle then knocked violently upon it, and placing bis ear to the jamb, listened. Snitkin stood dl- rectly behind bim, bis band also in bis pocket. The rest of us Te mained a little in the rear. Heath had knocked a second time when Vance's voice spoke up from the semi-darkness, “I say, Sergeant, you're wasting time with all that formality.” “I guess you're right,” came the answer after @ moment of what seemed unbearable silence. Heath bent down and looked at the lock. Then he took some in- strument from bis pocket and in- serted it into the keyhole. “You're right,” he repeated. “The key’s gone.” He stepped back and, balancing on his toes like a sprinter, sent his shoulders crashing against the panel directly over the knob. But the lock held. “Come on, Snitkin,” be ordered. ‘The two detectives hurled them- meres against the door. At the ird onslaught there was a splin- tering of wood and a tearing of the lock’s bolt through the moujding. The door swung drunkenly inward, The room was in almost com the threshold, while Snitkin crossed warily to one of the windows and sent the shade clattering up. The yellow-gray light filtered in, and the objects of the room at once took definable form. A large, old- fashioned bod projected from the wall on the right. “Look!” cried Snitkin, pointing: and something in his voice sent a shiver over me. : We pressed forward. On the foot of the bed, at the side toward the door, sprawled the crumpled body of Skeel. Like the Canary, be had been strangled. His head hung back over the foot-board, his face a hid- eous distortion. His arms were outstretched and one leg trailed over the edge of the mattress, rest, ing on the fioor. * “Thuggee,” murmurmed Vance. “Lindquist mentioned it. Curious!” Heath stood staring fixedly at the body, his shoulders bunched. His normal pig of ores was gone, and he seemed like 8 map hypnotised. “Mother o' Godi” he breathed, awestricken. And, with an invol uatary motion. he crossed himself. Markham was shaken also. He set his jaw rigidly. “You're right, Vance.” His voice waa strained and unnatural. “Some thing sinister and terrible has been going on here Ipete in this town—a werewolf.” “I wouldn't say that. old man.” ‘ Vance regarded the murdered fokeel critically. ‘No, 1 wontdn't ‘say that. Not a Jat a @esperate human being. A man of extremes, quat salad, fresh rhubarb pie, milk, Since chicken pie was supposedly seems quite apropos during this red One four or five pound fowl, 1-2 pound mush- rooms, 3 tablespoons flour, 2 table- for When about half done add 1 teaspoon salt. When duce stock to three cups. Strain, Saute mush- minutes. plete darkness. We all hesitated on © . There's a fiend - it 3 to Tee slices of hard layer of pi cover with pieces of chi neck, backbone and wings used in some other way. Continue layer for layer of and chicken until al flour to a smooth cold milk and stir into reheated chicken broth. Bring to the boiling peist and pour over contents of king dish, cover with pastry and bake about fifty minutes. To make etd 3 teaspoons bakin; spoon salt. Rub in 1 cup shortening. elt 1-2 cup shortening in 3-4 cup hot water. Add 1 tablespoon lemon juice and yolk of 1 egg. pec h add to flour mixture, cutting in with a knife. Knead two or three minutes on a slightly floured molding board. | Roll into a sheet to fit the top of | the about 1-2 inch thick. inch gashes at right angles to each other in the center o: and fit over chicken mixture ia bak- i ing dish, alah, with a mushrooms a sift 3 cups flour,| ig powder, 1 tea-! baking dish, making the dough Cut two 2- the crust ind | mote emigration from Great that, nation’s e Brit: an announcement: high commissioner ain.” No Trucks For Tibet Calcutta—Because a motor lorry frightened a pony ridden by a rela- tive and killed him, the Dalai Lana has forbidden establishment of mo- tor transport service across Tibet. — ‘ Historic Town Lots Weybridge, England—Julius Cae- sar’s old camp at St. George's Hill will probably be turned into a sub- urban development and destroyed. Busy Blue Danube Vienna—Merchandise traffic’ is now open the entire length of the Danube and passenger traffic will begin in April: OUT OF SEASON Motorist (wildly): Officer—Offi- cer! Come quick! I’ve run over @ ord | KIMONO STYLES HIT MILL | Williamstown, “not one woman in 100 will wear a corduory kimono today” a manu- ted] facturing company here has en- Mass. — Because | countered financial difficulties its attorney says. Desire for soft silks is blamed for the change. Nairobi, British East Africe—Na-| lame aching back a good tives have found that baboons con| W' : be o one is captured within sight of the others, clipped, painted blue ond released to rejoin his mates. London—Australia n surplus men, and it has domestic work for thousands of women, says The Baboon Blues kept away from scttlements if i | | Leap Year Paradice has 141,000 movie actor. Hollywood Cop: Sorry, old chap it’s Sunday and you can’t collect your bounty until tomorrow.—Life. HELP YOUR LAME ACHING BACK 12 Days’ Free Trial Have someone give your poor int-E if you want swift and freedom from druggists—60 cents a gr mise tube. It’s great for all aches, pains and rheumatfe pains and — swelliny FREE—Send name and addres trial tube to Pope Labora- k K Hallowell, Maine.— —all for 12 da tories D Adv. [ RADIO PROGRAMS FEATURES ON THE AIR Friday, Mar. 2 2:30—U. S. Marine Band—WEAF WR :00—Godfrey Ludiow; Violin Music—' 0—Whito Rock Concert; Ore! KDKA WLW WJR KYW K pm Review; WRHM WREN WHAS WSM 8:00—Anglo Persians; Oriental Must w WEBH WTMJ KSD WC ae mollve Hour; TAM WWJ WSA! WDAF KV0O WFAA WH 9:30—Cap'n_ Kidd; Novelty _P WERC MBC ADC. = FRIDAY, MAR. 2 (By The Associated Press) Programs in Central Standard time. All time is P. M. unless otherwisa in- Gicated. Wave lengths on left of call letters, kilocycles on right. 826—K YW Chicago—570 8:00—Uncle Bob 6:30—Centaur Program 30—White Rock Concert 00—Wrigley Review. :05—Studio Prograin 10:00—Movie Club 20:30—Serenaders 365.6—WEBH-WJJD Chicago—£20 6:00—Palmer Syinphony 7:00—Cities Servico Hour O-Edgewater Orchestra 9:30—Around the Piano 11:00—Popular Program 416.4—WGN-WLIB Chicago—72) @:10—Uncle Quinn 6:35—Dinner Music 300—Old Fashioned Almana: 30—Songs :30—Novelty Program :00—Palmolive Hour Music $44,6—-WLS Chicago—870 $:00—Supperbell Program 00—Scrap Book: Jack & Jean 30—Male Quartet ert Hour Singers 10:00—WLS Showboat , 447.5-—-WMAQ-WQS Chicago—670 5:00—Topsy Turvy; Organ 7:00—Orchestras 10— WV 10:00—C 11;00—Dance Music (2 hr: 428.3—WLW Cincinnati—700 §:20—-Studio $61.2—WSAI Cincinnati—820 $:00—Orchostra, 7,00-—-Cavaliers ‘Music 8.30—Theis Orchestra 9.0—Palmolive Hour 19:00—Orchestra 6:00—Willard Cavaliers . :00—Hearthaide Prograin :0b—Cities Service Hour .00—Anglo Perzians 2. 8:30—La France Orchestra 9:00—Falmohve Hour $74.8—WOC Davenport—200 si5—-Chanticleers 0—Cities Service Hour :00--Anglo Persians $:30—La France Orchestra 9:00—Palmolive Hour 6: + & EASTERN 491,5—WEAF New York—610 7 ta Service Hour fusic 10:00—Siumber 422.3—WOR Newark—710 7:00—Choir Invisible 300—Trne Story Hour Fm dehe Minute Men cap’n Kidd “injeeGolden's Orchestra SOUTHERN 475.9—WSB Atlantacs: $:60—Myers Orchestra 7:00—Army Night 8:00—Wrigley Review 9:00—Palmolive Hour 243.8—-WDOD Chattanooga—1230 | ABA—WEAA Dallas—550 7;00—Cavali $i00—Palmolive Hour ‘490.7—WBAP Fort Worth—600 6:00—-Concert 8:00—Anglo Persians $:30—Jack Rose $04.4—KTHS Hot Springs—780 W—Dinner pncert jeal Gems; Dance 298.9—KPRC Houston—1020 6:10—Ford and Glenn ‘ ' 982.9—-KOA Denver—20 Bandy Sh ean 408.8-—KF! Los Angeles—64C Sieview’® tion E WMAQ Kk 10:00—Ben Bernie—WEAF WWJ WTMJ I WESTERN Cc WGR WWJ WCCO WHO WIZ KDKA KYW and Justrumental Solos—WJZ M 4—WHO Des Moines—560 hand Program ke University; Studio ard Program e Hour ce Music -WCX-WJR Detroit—68¢ Lady eran Concert. 228.9—WOWO Ft. Wayne 721 —Don and Tommy ‘mble Re Prograins ome Makers 422,2—WOS Jefferson City—716 —WDAF Kansas City—810 01 of the Air ties Service Hour nglo Persians ‘rance Orchestra umolive Hour ighthawks 9—WTMJ Milwaukee—1020 —WOW Omaha—890 ntry Band rsians ‘France Orchestra Imolive Hour en Bernio 299,0-—-KMOX St. Louis—1000 /—Musical Program eal me as WOR vance Music KFYR, Bismarck, e, Weather weather, mmy- Thompson Graham, s@ irs. Arthur Bauer, pl and accompanist. ther, markets, news, rm school, 302.6—WGR Buffalo—990 315.6—KDKA Pittsburgh—950 dfrey Ludlow ‘rigley Review 9:00—Trio 379.5—WGY Schenectady—700 nglo Persians thedral Echoes motive Hour 468.5—WRC Washington—640 7:00—Cavaliers 8:00—Anglo Persians ¥:00—Palmolive Hour § 8 » Studi BU Program 340.A-WJAX Jacksonville—89 0—Happy Girls $:00—Wrigley Review W—Dance Music 322.4—-WHAS Louisville—$30 — Wrigley 9300—Pahnolive Hour .9—WMC Memphis—680 ley Review 8:21 336.9—WSM Nashville—890 $:00—Wrigley Review 9:00—-Palmolive Hour 249.8-—WCOA Pensacdla—120% 7:00—Jubllee Singers, $:00—Atmore, Als. Program 499.7—WOA! San Antenio—6or 9:00—Musical Hour 10:00—Dance Music

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