The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 26, 1930, Page 4

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4 Mhe Bismarck Tribune pt An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDESI NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- imarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ‘a8 second class mail matter. (George D. Mann. Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ‘Daily by carrier, per year .. Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year (in state, outside Bismarck) utside of North Dakot President and Publishet $7.20 , in state, per year.... Weekly by mail, in state, three years fol Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the loca] news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Leadership Has Its Penalties Ambition and hard work are not sufficient to make real business leaders. Ninety-nine out of a hundred average business men never become leaders because they are unwilling to pay the penalties that leadership de- mands, according to Owen D. Young, one of the foremost industrial and financial figures of the day, in an inter- view in the American Magazine. “Lack of ambition—or lack of a sort of wishful think- ing that often passes as ambition, is rather rare. Most men honestly want places of power, but they refuse to believe that the price is so high,” Young continues. “There is nothing magical about leadership. But there are certain penalties attached to it. The average man has a sneaking notion that he can get ahead just as fast and be comfortable at the same time. He thinks, no doubt, that in his case it won't be necessary to pay the penalties—that he can beat the game. There are three gencral classes of men, Young says, putting in the first group those who have daring or “nerve,” but are without ballast of conscience or judg- ment. They are willing enough to take responsibility ‘but no one with any sense is going to hand it out to them. The second group, according to Young, includes the general run of men who work for a living. They, have conscience and judgment to an adequate degree. So far as attaining leadership is concerned, their trouble is either lack of courage or unwillingness to pay the price. The third group is defined as made up of men with conscience and judgment, plus the courage to act and willingness to take the penalties of responsibility. They are the stuff of which leaders are made. Mr. Young ex- Plains them thus: “By the penalties of responsibility I mean the hard driving, continuous work—the little daily sacrifices—the courage to face facts, to make decisions, to stand the gaff—the scourging honesty of never fooling yourself about, yourself. Even when human beings do apprehend, at least dimly, the real cost of leadership, too often they fail to measure up to the test. If they had a big crisis to meet, on which they knew their whole future would depend, they would meet it with clenched fists and a high heart. But in the little daily demands—the things they can do or duck—it is here they fail. If you see any- one shy away from a task, however small, you may be ‘sure that you can’t rely on him at the finish.” Young was asked if the current report was true that $50, to $100,000 jobs are going begging for the right men to fill them, “If you ask whether existing jobs at such salaries are left vacant because no one is in sight to fill them, I must answer, ‘No’” Young replied. “An existing opening has to be filled with the best men available. But as for po- tential jobs that might exist if we could get the men to swing them, I say, ‘Yes’, emphatically. “With big business it’s no longer # question of capital or the ability to see ahead. It’s the question of men big enough and brave enough to execute the vision.” A Dream of Death by Music Most persons if they had their way would prefer to die to the synchronism of beautiful music. This is a sonti- ment so pervasive, so often heard expressed, that the as- sumption is within reason that it is a unanimous emo- tional characteristic of the race. Some envision such a death under the sedative of Song, others yearn for the majesty of the rumbling pipe organ, still others would Pass out to the heroic strains of military band or to the weird, wild wails of the bagpipe. ‘This resignation to death under such esthetic assauge- ments may even pass from receptive attitude to death in the performance of some great artistic creation in the form of tone modulated into melody or harmony. Ma- dame Schumann-Heink, the singing marvel of this day and time, whose voice has spilled Nquid magic through the years, has suggested such a death for a great artist by expressing her own wish to die singing a note of con- tent with her last moment. She knows that the day of her last song is inevitable, that the last moment must come, though it may delay. Then she will sing her final word, face her last audience, mix laughter and tears Qnd heartache. But she does not intend to see that final audience leave the theater, slowly and reverently. She does not want to hear its last congratulations, Instead, her soul will be Been the last triumphant note of song, if she has her For Schumann-Heink has said that she will sing unto the last. She wants her last breath to be a note of music. And then she would like to slip back of the stage, into the ‘wings, an@ die quietly. It might embarrass the People in the audience if she died on the stage before them, she Says. And she wants her going away to be as simple and lovely as her music has always been. _ The stage lights will shine with golden glamour, the velvet curtains will swing to with that intimate rustle, ‘and the audience will applaud. The great contralto won't ome back for an encore, though, That will be the only difference betvcen that last concert that she has ar- | Fanged for some day, and the thousands of others that sh? has given, if her wish is fulfilled. The plans of the gray-haired prima donna for that | inevitable departure are very beautiful. There is some- thing queenly, something almost royal, in going to death | atraight from the stage of action. It makes the going ‘Sway a gallant gesture °° ; . Playing the game to the end is always a challenge. No | matter how lowly the task may be, there is a fine cour- ‘Schumann-Heink, if she has-her wish, will-count -her fast breath in songbeats, not in heartbeats. She will not oil the concert. She will make her departure easier Or everyone, as @ good trouper should always do. That is the code of the game. ‘The famous artist has drawn her crowds trom cities here music halls sent spangled lights across the sky; fiom villages where men and women went to do their hopping and stayed to listen to the shining, golden voice that wove wonder across the street; from small towns and crossroads; from those whose heads carried crowns, and those who wore faded hats because the cost of a new one had gone for the cherished ticket. ‘The world which admires the courage of those who play te the end hopes that Schumann-Heink may have her wish, that she may sing until the curtain falls. But it wonders if there will be a moment just before, when it will sense the closing drama, that it may ring out its hail, well done, and long farewell, as her soul gocs quietly away on the breath of a song. Wise to Press Treaty at Once It is reassuring to learn that senate advocates of the London naval pact mean to press consideration of the treaty on the upper chamber at once, without waiting for the special senate session that is to be called by the presi- dent immediately after the adjournment of congress. There is no reason for delaying action on the pact. Fully 75 per cent of the senate is in favor of ratification, it is reported after sounding sentiment of the senators. The senate foreign relations committee has put its ap- proval on the instrument, 16 to 4, revealing the small group leading the opposition to consist of Senators Hiram Johnson, Henrik Shipstead, Arthur Robinson, of Indiana, and George Moses. The treaty involves many international considerations and it should not be exposed to the manhandling of domestic politics in the coming congressional campaign. To do that is to enmesh it inextricably in intrigue and give Europe false impressions of the American attitude. The best proof of our sincerity in calling the London conference and proposing naval limitation—of which the Pending parity pact is the best agreement attainable— is to ratify the London plan without subjecting it to Political misuse. That course would be sure to be mis- understood in Europe and bring down on us disastrous interpretations of our action. It is important in so deli- cate a matter that Europe be assured of our honesty of Purpose. This country must work toward a more cordial Cooperation overseas if the cause of permanent peace and the renunciation of war, as phrased in the Kellogg- Briand pact, is to make further progress toward realiza- tion. Already Europe is too mistrustful and cynical to- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE Every D.., Has His Day : | ward us. To use the naval parity problem as a domestic Political pawn is to invite dangerous utterances not only in the senate but, likewise, outbursts from abroad.dam- aging to our international relations. The issue is not really whether the pact should be ratified. There is a wide majority crystallized in favor of that already, according to reports from Washington. That which is to be done in respect to the treaty should, therefore, be done with the least friction possible. The question has become one of when to act. There is no virtue in‘ delaying action for the only reason that is ap- Parent so far—the sinister purpose of political confusion. | Gasoline Taxes Not counting refunds made, the total amount of the gasoline tax collected by 47 of the states and the Dis- trict of Columbia in the first six months of 1929 amount- ed to $175,140.140, says the bureau of public roads, U. 8. Department of Agriculture, on the basis of figures re- Ported to the bureau. In New York the tax became ef- fective May 1,’and the Illinois law did not become ef- fective until August 1. A total of 5,593,872,662 gallons was taxed in the 47 States and the District of Columbia. The average tax paid per gallon was 3.07 cents. In 1028, gasoline tax paid in the first six months of the year in 45 states, the District of Columbia, and in Illinois for one month of the period was $140,635,398. The tax in Illinois was collected for January and discontinued in February. Massachusetts and New York had no gaso- line tax in 1928, The total number of gallons taxed in the first six months of 1928 was 4,652,393,536, and the average tax paid was 3.02 cents per gallon. All the states now collect a gasoline tax. Has His Doubts (Bay City Daily Times.) Henry Ford claims that the automobile has raised the average intelligence of the people. The only one you can’t tell that to is the traffic cop. Nice How-Do-You-Do _, (St. Paul Dispatch.) The strain of handshaking upon notables has beén lessened in New York by the simple process of throwing waste paper out of the window into the street. Thus Gotham unleashed its glee over Admiral Byrd’s return to the cxtent of seventy tons of paper which was floated through the air to simulate a snowstorm. A hero who left. the white waste of the polar regions came into the waste white of Manhattan. This manner of greeting appears a bit hysterical. Yet it is fully as logical as the practice of subjecting the right hand to torture as the price of fame. It avoids wear and tear on heroes if dictionaries are torn up before they are thrown and if in mad excitement typewriters are not pressed into service to express the ultimate of welcome. If the truth were known there were many in Man- hattan who were as happy to throw paper as they were to see Byrd. There are few men today whose school day yearning to throw paper wads was satisfied completely. From them there is a happy release of a long suppressed desire. Admiral Byrd by his polar exploits advanced education, but by his return to New York he offers opportunities that education has denied. Work Makes Prosperity (Fort Worth Star-Telegram.) Ambassador Morrow, campaigning in New Jersey for the senate, makes the most sensible remark about the! business depression that has been heard from any polit- ical quarter. In the course of a speech he said: ,_ “While we can not predict with accuracy wheme! in business may come, we can have faith that a great people, with a great industrial plant, will go on with their work, raising still higher their power of consuming goods for the durable satisfactions of life, furnishing more employment to each other by a further multiplica- tion of the int of and services.” Mr. Morrow’s reminder that prosperity is the result of the energies of 125,000,000 people rather than of adventitious political or other forces may not have been needed, but it is sound American doctrine. There has, in fact, never been a major business depression that has been taken with less of panic than the present set- back to business, nor one that is so comnfonly accepted as likely to be of short duration. The forces Mr. Morrow mentions are at work, silently and powerfully, to ‘fe on raising still higher the er of consuming goods for the durable satisfactions of life.” Radio Churches (Murray, Minn., Herald.) A small country church which couldn’t afford a installed a radio and listens every Sunday to a lemon Chicago minister, supported by a church which can well Pay to have high priced talent in the pulpit. is this a forecast of the future for the country church, or is it merely an isolated case? Is this a makeshift to meet emergency or is it the beginning of a new kind of preaching in the country churches? It may be the solution of a problem that confronts some rural congregations, which have not the means to Support a pastor regulariy, but no church will ever be able 56 Un the inspiration from a radio sermon in his own pulp’ Radios will never supplant pastors. Given the choice, any ruratchurch would select a resident, or even a circuit pester. in preference to having ite pastoral work done y absent treatment. The rural church pastor does more than preach, He funetions where the radio can be of no service. He con- gratulates the parents when new. born atrives and he performs the ceremony when members of his “flock” are married. In times of sickness and trouble he is a constant source of comfort, and when death stalks in the home, it is he who is the support of flickering and his words hold out hope for the future. His advice on moral issues and civic questions is always sought. +The tadid will never dislodge the rural pastor. His mission is too big and his services too much in demand, Siac anti Prevent excessive until doctor arrives. Objects in the eye: Do rot allow the child to rub the affected eye. If Hi [il i 8% i i i a5 g & E § b g # fi 88 CHILDREN’S HURTS -| Every little boy and girl receives many cuts, burns and minor accidents before it grows up. The mother nearly always has to attend to the little injuries, and she should know how to treat them so healing will take place most naturally. Not many of the injuries are serious; probably not more than one in @ hundred re- RAZZED BY THE quires the services of a doctor. Even NAMES: BY: BUSINESS --- CARTOONISTS ---- though the mother knows nothiig w) d é about first aid in the beginning, she Y 1o~ > usually learns from experience to be- pooRAy: nd} id come an excellent practical nurse. ‘ POP" 4! ne The handling of children’s injuries is Q Red, ic Quite simple, and I will give you some map fi instructions for caring for the more z common ones. 3 bot ee Black eye: When the child receives blow in the eye, immediately use a cold compress, as this will tend to Prevent the accumulation of blood which is responsible for the black and blue marks. Cold compresses should be used as long as there is soreness in the eye. After this, begin to use hot compresses about three times a day, as this will assist in the absorp- tion of congested blood. Bloody noses are often caused by a blow or by the congestion of blood in the head during hot weather. Have the child hold its head back and place m & compress of cold water on the back BUT, INTHE LIGHT OF RECENT EVENTS, MAYBE HES NOT Suc -\ BAC ; of the neck sig over the noe2. © SORT OF BOG'TO HAVE AROUND, AFTER. ALL! siictareviug out or eit Gene, toe oo should be renewed until the soreness Burns and scalds: Small | solute system of measurement based | takes any interest in work except to 3 ones Today Is the {|on the centimeter, the gram and the|get from it the maximum of money | Should sod treated by washing thor- 5 second. The unit of electric energy|with the minimum of time and ef-| Cughly with water, then appiying a Anniversary of known as the kilowatt hour was first |fort.”—Whiting Williams, author. | Compress with s thick Speen of oe defined by him. Kelvin was knight- ing soda and water. If the scald Hy ed chiefly in acknowledgment of his | severe and covers much of an area it LORD KELVIN’S BIRTH service as engineer to the cable com- BARBS {| 1s better to send for the doctor. On June 26, 1824, Lord Kelvin -At- | Clothes on fire: Wrap the child in 4 hs ‘ ny which inaugurated trans-At. [nA EIN SER COT (William Thomson), British physicist | Putte telegraphy. a rug or blanket to smother the and mathematician, called one of the — “Ludendorff blames Charlemagne| flames, ‘Then apply vaseline, carrou greatest scientific intellects of the) q+ _s/ tor the defeat of the kaiser in the| oll, or soda and water to the burn. latter half of the 19th century, was Quotati World war.” You don't mean cham-| Do not try to tear away clothes which born at Belfast, Ireland. ‘ | eee pagne, do you Ludy? may be adhered to burned tissue. It vas apiiied at Pe npeatbea tie) at 5 Winekats if xe * | is better to soa: them off with water. 01 Jasgow ani ami ige and also ere can never be muc! au! « under the famous Regnault at Paris.|in the world; and if woman doesn’t|, Brooklyn, sometimes called “the iw Because of his valuable contributions | furnish it I don’t know who will.”— | bedroom of New York,” should be just Cuts: Children seldom cut them- to science during this time, he was|W. E. Woodward, author. the place to try out those new shorts selves deeply enough to require s doo- sppointed professor of philosophy at + 2 ® PU oaths ag ere tor. Every cut should be washed with Glasgow University. when only 22.) “Plenty of men and women in mid- * * sterile water. A little bleeding does He held this post for 53 years. things, but they seem to think He| The millionaire New York broker not hurt, but the loss of too much One of Kelvin’s earliest papers|dle life are out of a job and dis-| Who used to give away $100 tips and can be prevented by tying firm- dealt with the age of the earth, By|couraged, because they have not the|1s now broke, probably is cursing the y eee gaure. After the bieeding his studies in the conduction of heat|courage to try a new vocation for| hard times and wishing for a return the bandage should be loosened. Kelvin showed that the earth’s age| which they are untrained.”—Edward ; Of prosperity. Wine ‘wound does not heal quickly, was not unlimited but that it was|L. Thorndyke, Psychologist. * “ $ ros of swollen, within 20 millions of years old, The * k & The boy who was told he'd never rs begat Seed apes het cuter and resulting controversy among scien-| “While Americans are no doubt} get anywhere unless he kept his hair | shouk porta et the of the tists has lasted until the present) better fed and clothed than any other |immaculate, can now point to Am-; epsom am edges ea day. people in the world, still the great} bassador Morrow. wound psec eageesed ag Kelvin’s most popular achievement | majority of men and women are xk * ally, it bee re receit rarsseact paen rhaps was his invention of a mar-jreally poor.”—Clarence Darrow. Florida is where most pineapples! tention, or ee pegs |i compass that was free iror:| * * * are grown. Chicago is where most | to stop readily. = the magnetic action of the iron of. “Many a president believes that|are thrown. ‘ or vein is cut a doctor should bap the ship. He later adopted the ab- nobody, except of course, himself,| (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) | at once and pressure exercised on Husband Hunter © 1950 LY NEA BEGIN HERE TODAY NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XLIV N4™up got up early ‘one bright and shining morning and stood meditating at her win- dow. Across the street a woman was cleaning the whitelsteps, She cleaned them every morning, ex- cepting Sunday. Natalie wondered it it made her unhappy to let rig so uncleaned for a single > The hold of habit and custom! Steps—or husbands. Was there so much difference in the weight of responsibility they placed upon the one supposed to care for them? Didn't her steps worry this womap, as much as her neglect of Alan worried Natalie? Natalle wondered about it, and wondered too if she were losing her sense of values. She hadn't been able, since reading of Bernadine’s Lamont's death, to shake off a feeling that she ought to do as her Aunt Emma advised, and go to Alan. Had Alan been merely fascinated with Bernadine, or had he really loved her? This was the question Natalie weighed almost every mo ment of her waking hours. Aunt Emma eaid seriously one day: “You know, honey, 1 eus- Dect a man can love any number of times, but I'll bet my biscuit recipe against Dora Lane's that he loves one woman best of the lot just the same, whether ‘he loves her first, or last.” She had said no more; had understood. And across street: had Alas loved. most?’ SERVICE INC. ND there was still another question. Someone must have come to visit at the house across the street. A chubby little baby face was to be seen at the windows oc- casionally. Natalie grew to watch for it and to wait for the march down the immaculate steps, for the morning and afternoon walks. The sight of the little ‘round fig- ure-bolding to the hand of the pretty young woman beside it— the mother. Natalie was certain —had first brought this question to Natalie’s mind, and there it remained. Bernadine Lamont had had a little son. .What would become of him? She seemed to remember that Alan had said Bernadine had no relatives. ‘Would Alan himself take the boy? She came to believe that he would. And then she told her auut that she was going back to Alan, “I want him,” sbe said simply, “on any terms. If he thinks a vile thing, well, 1 am to blame. He was patient with my silly jeal- ousy for a long time, Aunt Em.” The older woman tooked searchingly into her hope-filled eyes. “U’mph,” she sald, “and how do you expect to convince him that you had nothing to do with that letter? Can you let that drop, my dear, and be happy?” “I'll have to.” Natalle an- swered. “But I'll confess that it’s been a hard fight to forgive him for doubting me even with my abominable behavior to influence him,” Her aunt nodded. “I see you've made up your mind,” she said un- derstandingly. “Well. 1 wouldao’t undertake to advise you anyway, when but you want to be suri you tackl new job, thi know the size of it, Nattle, di “I've thought of it night day,” Natalle told her. “If Alan won't believe me—he won't, but be might forgive me if be thought I deserved it, and I've thought of a way to atone for the crime I didn’t commit. I’m going to tell him that I want to bring up Ber- nadine Lamont's son as my own.” Aunt Emma was perturbed. “But, my dear... just to make up a quarrel... .!” “I want to do it!” Natalie ex- claimed. “I may be blaming my: self for too much wrong, but. I've a feeling that if I hadn’t been so unreasonably jealous of Alan, all thts would never have happened.” “Perhaps not all of it,” Aunt Emma agreed, “but you couldn't have stopped ‘he bo: mother from dying, you kno’ iy “No, but it-wouldn’t have left Alan responsible fér tlm. I'm sure he fee “Maybe you're right,” ‘Aunt Emma said, with a relaxing sigh. And then: all turns out all right. “It wil Natalfe ‘assured’ ber brightly. She had found it e great encouragement to have made up RUTH DEWEY GROVES her mind. “But if Alan should + + « stubborn,” she added gravely, “I'll do what I can fer the little boy just the same.” eee ‘HAT afternoon Natalie arrived in New York, and sent word to Alan from a botel that she wished urgently to see him. He was inclined to refuse, but as the hour ehe bad set drew near, he found himself going to her. A great deal of Nata! high courage fied with the first sight of Alan's forbidding countenance. And he imntediately made it plain that he had no disposition to talk to her. She found herself rather halt- ingly telling him what she bad come to say. And how different it sounded from the way she had meant to put it. He would be- lieve she was admitting guilt it sl ontinued in this way, a cooler portion of her brain warned her. Still she kept on, and the quieter Alan sat, the more penetratingly he looked at her, the more she foundered. What a sorry mess she was making of it. She could have cried with humiliation. For Alan’s mouth was beginning to twist into a sneer. He was telling himself that she had come to make a cheaply dra- matic gesture over a dead woman's child. She ought to know better, for she was too clever to try denying what she did and renewing her ridiculous charge against Bernadine. She knew wouldnt stand for that. She ought to know that be would see through this tricky ges- ture. He glanced at her hands. What the devil were they reaching for? gly. He knew she n't moved them—tbey re tightly clasped‘in ber lap, but the illusion that they were lifted io appeal to him was disturbingly Natalie stumbled to silence. She knew she had appealed in vain. “I shouldn't have come,” Alan said, with a touch of pity. “We might have spared ourselves this, for the whole matter of Bobby Lamont's future, and my own as well, is settled.” “Oh,” Natalie thought, fren- siedly, “why does be have to be so stiff?” But she did’not speak, except with her eyes that Alan was unable to evade. “I’m going to adopt him,” he explained in answer to their that,” ‘Natalie said rusbingly, “but can you bring bim up, Alan, without a woman to help you?” Watching his hardened face, as he studied her before replying. Natalie felt that she had sunk to the lowest depths of bumility in thus throwing bers it him. The undiminishing barshness of his expression made her cringe . in dread of his words. She ex- ected a tirade of reproaches, but Alan was not -hinking wholly of the past. He was more occupied with the present. This was an bour he had dreamed of in his bitterest moods. Natalie—at his feet! Her beseeching gaze, her pain- parted lips, the air of suppliance that vibrated about her—all these were as he bad imagined them. Only himself was there something amiss. He was not enjoying her contrition. And he had expected it to give him a fierce satisfaction. For it had angered him that she had gone to the end in arrogance— ber letter, it had infuriated bim. She had seemed to Bave not s touch of meekness, not a tinge of regret for what she had done. Haughty. disdainful. He had wished the time would come when he could humble her. eee ND now it was here. And he was going to bu! ber. He was going to show her what s miserable mistake she'd made about Bernadine. What a fool she'd been. Ob yes, he wag going to do it—but be knew he was going to be cheated out of bis anticipated gratification. Her beauty would do that to him. His eyes were feasting on it. He knew it. “But it isn’t love,” he denied hotly. i His face revealed his confiict- ing emotions. Natalie thought the rusb of red to bis face—that @ moment before bad been white —was caused by anger. She caught her underlip, and held it sharply between her teeth. For one wild moment she was tempted to declare her innocence and beg him to believe her. ber think he was weak enough to take ber back, she told herself, to changing she felt she must conviace him that she was sincere ia her desire to have little Bobby Lamont as her own. She made a heroic effort to speak calmly. “You know, Alan,” she said, and ber voice you may would make an intelligent moth- er.” \ He surprised her by nodding in agreement. In his present mood, she had thought he might take issue with her even on that point. Her instant of elation vanished, as a sarcastic curl of his lips fo!- lowed the nod. “Yes. 1 know that.” he said witheringly. “But you should have had cbildren of your own. For you cannot have Bobby Lamont. I am going to adopt him, and when you are granted your divorce decree, "il marry the girl who is to be ni6 mother.” (To Be Continned) a i : i iH zk By i} Fady Eg, carbeehts FRIDAY, JUNE 37 Milecy cles eae ‘Meters ‘Dawn: Reveille. 5—Early Risers club. Time signals. —Time signal. o—Farm centie in Washingten. 5—Meditation period. rs’ 3 rain markets. :57—Arlington t! 00—Grain marke: 1m: Clara Morris. ‘ribune news and 051 in oregrem. 5—Volce of the Wheat Pool. 's—G: markets: high, low and close. 1:18—Farm notes. 1:45—Bismarck Tribune news, ‘weather, and St. Paul livesteck ':00—Good cheer. 2St—Stesta hour: Good News radio sports items. ews. 1. scores. 32 Your ngiish our 5 00—Studio program. 3:00—Music. PREPARES FOR THIED ‘DEATH ute

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