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4 ; REG 3 : | The Bismarck Tribune Ad ‘Au independent Newspaper | THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) } — Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck ie Second ciass maii matter. 3eorge D. Mann... Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .. Dally by mail, per year (in Bismarck: Daily by mail, per year Gn state, outside Bismarck) ... Daily by mail, outside of North Dako’ »+»President and Publisher $7.20 2120 Weekly by mail, in state, per year Weekly by mail, in state, three years for. 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 rot otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the ocal news of spontaneous origin published herein. All ‘ights 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 Shea canara OTE The Flag Flies Disarmament is a goal worth working for, and the vorld probably will be better off when the time comes ‘or it to throw away its war-making tools; but for the sresent let's be thankful that the United States army still naintains an air force. Not because the airplane is such a potent military veapon., General Mitchell may be right about that and ie may not. The thing that makes the army air force 0 appealing is the fact that it can put on such a whale of a good show. A few days ago the army staged a big exhibition along he lake front in Chicago. The air corps was on hand vith some 40 or more planes to lend a hand, and the hrills these planes furnished was worth going a long vay to sec. m: Promptly at noon two big groups of planes, 18 in each rroup, would go roaring over the Loop. Flying in perfect ‘ormation, they would play a grand, spectacular game of follow the leader. In and out among the spires of the office buildings they would soar, motors wide open, dart- ng along with aerial skill displayed at its very best; hen they would come down in one magnificent, broath- aking dive over Michigan boulevard, dipping low in a yorgeous half circle and then springing upward again as f they had hit the carth and bounced off. Now the thing that made all of this so good to look at was the fact that these flyers seemed to be stunting simply for their own amusement. They weren't, really, sf course; they were performing methodical evolutions, ind long hours of hard training had preceded this dis- dlay. But it looked as if they were flying around just for the fun of it, masters of the air as a seal is master of the waves. And that is a side of flying that can’t be empha- sized too often. The commercial planes don’t often give us much of it. They are too business-like. They flit across the sky like roming pigeons, and in alminute they are gone; but these army chaps turn somersaults and do dizzying dives and yanks as if they existed solely to enjoy the sport of flip- ding about in the upper air. \ Most sport spectacles are none too good for the specta- ‘or. He sits idle where he ought to be getting some exer- rise himself. But watching a group of ermy war-birds 3oing through their stunts is something else again. It is aot only exciting and pulse-quickening; it is inspiring. Big International Loans The World war showed the people of the United States shat foreign entanglements do not depend on diplomacy alone but may more so be the result of unfortunate in- sernational financial relations with which the govern- nent has no connection whatever. When the United States entered the World war this sountry was entangled with Europe's vast blood feud by | about $9,000,000,000 of loans to the allies. What cousse this | country would have taken had that not been the case is \ matter for speculation, President Wilson was reclected on the issue of having kept us out of the war. However, ve had a big financial stake in it and we got in after / wilson had made the grade of reelection. Those who ypposed entry of the United States have always contend- sd that our unfortunate loans—which the allies all are arying hard to dodge now in spite of promises to pay— | were an entangling factor in drawing us into the great | world conflict. | Anyhow, the experience of the country in the World war showed the extreme peril to the peace of the na- don in being tangled up in foreign loans to European bel- } \igerents. It is almost impossible for the country to be neutral under such circumstances. As this affects the peaceful relations of the nation to others it is patent peat the dealings of our international financiers should, 'm some way, be under the control of the government and that some sort of approval or veto should be exer- ised at Washington on what Wall Street presumes to do nm the matter of international loans. For instance, to Mexico. | Senator Carter Glass, of Virginia, does not think so. He wants to know by what authority the state department | andertakes to pass on international loans, giving them its this neutral nation into it in spite of protestations against such participation—“it shall not occur again.” And the state department is the bureau of govern- ment to convey that hint to the House of Morgan and the other international financiers of Wall Street. Which does not mean that this country should not take some of the German reparations loan as planned by Owen D. Young, but not to the extent that this nation invested in the allies’ cause and thus became entangled in their war on Germany. That experience should have been a lesson to all, and that includes Senator Glass, who shows carping tendencies when the suggestion of informal gov- ernment scrutiny of international loans is made. Steam Locomotive More Than Thrill Mechanical experts of American railways convened in Atlantic City the other day and agreed that the steam locomotive is beginning to make a little better showing in comparison with the clectric; and while the spread of electrification still goes on, there seems to be a germ of hope for such Americans as were brought up to look on the steam locomotive as one of the finest of all mian- made machines. ; It may be all very true that ‘the electric locomotive is more efficient and less expensive to operate. Doubtless it does make for cleaner train rides, what with the elim- ination of smoke and soot. But we have a deep, perverse hope that the steam engine will continue to hold its own; a hope that these mechanical experts will find more and more reasons for delaying the shift from steam to elec- tricity. After all, efficiency isn’t ali there is to railroading. The man who holds huge blocks of railway stocks may feel that way, of course, but he is in a minority and doesn’t count. Railroading is essentially a business of glamour and romance. It is a thing apart from ordinary pursuits, both for the worker, the customer and the mere spectator. And this is chiefly due to the steam locomo- tive. Why do Bismarck folk go down to railroad stations to see No. 4 pass through? To see who gets on and off? Well, partly, perhaps; but it is more probable that they go chiefly to get a look at ‘the engine. The engine is more nearly alive than any‘other machine yet devised. It puffs and pants like any other living creature. When it labors up a long grade its labored breathing is the sort of noise that is made by a living organism. Its very whistle has a wild, eerie note that no other mechanical sound can ape. Indeed, the mere spectator has a big stake in the rail- road. The world, fortunately, is full of a number of thrills; but what thrill is greater than the thrill you get when you stand at a railway crossing and see a great express train thundering by, its cars gleaming with brass and bright paint, a long plume of smoke lying low over its windswept back, a grim-faced engineer peering alertly from the window of the cab, its red lights blinking as it disappears in the distance? What thrill equals the weird, heart-moving stab of a locomotive whistle, heard far off, late at night, in the silent country? What panorama is so stirring as the sight of one of those old-fashioned train sheds—now, alas, being replaced by more modern, less exciting sta- tions—where trains stand in rows and dozens of engines send jets of white steam up to the cavernous vacancy overhead? The electric engine cuts a poor figure by comparison. It may have efficiency on its side. It may be the cleancr Proposition, it may give more power and more specd; but it does not pant and puff, it does not emit trailers of white smoke, it has no authentic personality, it cannot whistle with a voice that challenges infinite space. Event- ually, probably, it will drive the steam locomotive out of existence; but we are permitted to hope that that day isa long way off. ‘ We're Misinformed, Too An article in the current issue of Good Housekeeping magazine reports a very interesting fact. Travelers re- 4 | A Man Is Often Judged by the Enemies He Keeps | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1930_ ot Today Is the | Anniversary of YOSEMITE VALLEY GRANT On June 30, 1864, the Yosemite Vs ley was passed to California py an act of Congress under the condition that it be kept open as a national park, In 1890 the Yosemite National Park, including the Valley, was estab- lished by an act of Congress, and 15 years later the original reservation was ceded back to the government by the state. The park, embracing an area of 1125 square miles, contains some of the most magnificent scenery in America. The celebrated big Sequoia trees, the largest of which is 204 fect in height and 29% feet in diameter, are in this region. Besides the trees, the park contains, as John Muir, explorer, beautifully writes: “the headwaters of the Tuol- umne and Merced rivers, two of the most songful streams in the world; innumerable lakes and waterfalls and smooth, silky lawns; the noblest for- ests, the loftiest granite domes, the deepest ice-sculptured canyons, the! brightest crystalline pavements, and | © 1950 £Y NEA turning from Russia assert that the great mass of Rus- sian people has been convinced that the United States and England are planning to make war on them and are only awaiting a favorite chance to strike. The ideas that a nation sometimes gets about another | nation are sometimes funny, and nothing could be much wider of the mark than this one. What England’s inten- tions may be. we do not know; but if there is in this re- public any thirst, official or otherwise, for war on Soviet Russia we have not yet heard of it. However, it won't do to laugh too heartily at Russian ignorance. A great many people in our own country arc firmly convinced that our social structure is being ser- fously undermined by Russian plotters. Indeed, our con- gress now is officially investigating the great “red peril.” Our suspicions seem to match Russia's ignorance rather neatly. | Editorial Comment | Running Wild (New York Times) The phrase was used years ago about the New York legislature. Escaping from the control of the governor and of party leaders, it was said to be “running wild” at Albany. At Ws | approval or disapproval. The answer should be plain. | any i | | | 1 | (Glass, who was very close to the foreign loan steps of this | sountry during the World war, as a result of his senate 1 bommittec assignments, knows how unwise they all were , | the final analysis, and to what extent this country was | dragged into the conflict by them, what the sorry mess | fas been since peace, with the debtor nations doing their | yrorst. to dodge payment ever since, while holding Ger- i ‘many to full indemnity accounting and spending their i (wij resources on increased armaments, instead of pay- | ing their war debts to Uncle Sam. ‘ | | Senator Glasé's inquiry comes at‘a’ time when proposals | are under way to assume the issue of bonds to pay the German indemnity. It is impossible to consider the issue ‘nto consideration. While not as well timed as it might ve, the senator's inquiry is pat in other ways. It should rot be made with intent to limit the state department in she exercise of an unofficial and informal discrimination n the matter of lending money abroad in such a way as © open the way to political entanglement afterward. | This form of entanglement has no place in American policy, whether in peace in the world or in war among international relations. It would be salutary, it to have. the state department exercise a veto on fo other countries which insist on being militaristic thus always @ menace to the peace of this country the possibility of becoming linked up with the feuds of Europe. The World war showed how that could brought about unwittingly. “It shall not occur again,” said President Harding as he ed down on the dock filled with coffins at Hoboken en the government began bringing home its dead of World war from France. With equal appropriate- , it might be said of potentially entangling loans to countries which started the recent war and then drew taised by the senator without taking the German bonds | the depression. President Hoover's attack upon the bill yesterday was the most forcible and militant statement that he has idiers who have not yet been specially provided for by congress. The cases of these worthy men could, as President Hoover points out, be taken care of in a reasonable and discriminating bill which would not threaten to bankrupt the treasury. But these appear to weig! with the great majority of Both parties in congress, now dispoced to throw off all restraint and defy. BEGIN HERE TODAY CONVERSE, jenloes helleven her te Hillshire to an sant te lam decides to xo GEOFFREY NORM. bin offe: NOW GO ON WITH 185-sToRY CHAPTER XLVIL S¢(,.EOFFREY NORMANI® Phil- lipa fairly squealed his name in her surprise and unexpected pleasure. “When did you get back?" “Not long ago,” Geofftey told her, “But how did you know where to find me? Have you seen Alan?” Geoffrey permitted her first ques- tlon to answer itself when he said: “Yes, I've seen Alan. Just had a minute with him in his office.” “Did he tell yout” Phillipa went on. Then she laughed. “I sup- Dose you've called me up to wish me happiness?” “Why, Alan dido’t tell me any- thing.” Geoffrey answered truth- fully. “Have you tnberited @ for- tune or something like that?” “Ob.” Phillipa was rather taken back, but she instantly became gay again with the thought that Geof- frey had called her, then, simply because be wanted to, Not know- ing she wae engaged to Alan, be naturally thought it all right. “I'm coming down town,” she erled excitedly, “I'd like to see you.” “Well, I'm awfully sorry,” Geof: frey sald regretfully, “because 1 want to see you, too. But I've got @ lot of tmportant engagements for the rest of the day. 1 called up to see if you wouldn't come to a little Darty at my place tonight?” Phillipa hesitated, but she was snowy mountains... arrayed in open ranks, and spiry pinnacled groups partially separated by tremendous canyons and amphitheaters; gardens on their sunny brows, avalanches thundering down their long white slopes, cataracts roaring gray and foaming in the crooked rugged gorges. and glaciers in their shadowy recesses working in silence, slowly completing their sculptures; newborn lakes at their feet, blue and green, free or en- cumbered with drifting icebergs like miniature Arctic oceans, sparkling, calm as stars.” SECS Sea | Quotations | ————— “Most failures are due to misfits.” —Jessie Lynch Williams, author. * * * “It is always pleasant to be assured that you are a genius.”—W. Somerset Maugham, author. “2 “It is cynicism and fear that freeze life; it is faith that thaws it out, re- leases it, sets it frec.”"—Rev. Harry Emerson Fosdick. ses ¢ “Nowadays if in redding a book I come across the word ‘children’ or| The Husbandg ! SERVICE INC. ‘ thinking hard and fast. Geoffrey's invitation presented an opportunity to show Alan 6! isn't tied hand and foot to the life he was laying out for her. # “I'd be delighted,” she said at last. “Would you mind coming early? This isn't a fashionable party at all.” “I'll have dinner in town and come up about eight-thirty. 0. K.2" “Right. It’s awfully kind of you." Phillipa smiled frequently to herself on the way to the station. to take a train to New York. Geof: frey had been a bit stiff, but that was his way, she thought. “And oS tip mot to dress—thoughtful ad.” Thoughtful—and oh so rich! As goad looking as Alan, too, in bis way. If she had the chance to choose between them. . . . “Well, he hasn’t forgotten me!” She smiled like a puss in cream. Alan, and his orphan kid! Going to adopt him. And she could like it or lump it. But who could say? roe she wouldn't have to lump It. She shopped with a high heart, buying herself a new and dressier blouse of eggshell crepe to wear with her smart blue suit. She remembered it well—that apartment, She went there once on an errand. She needn't have gone —she could have sent a boy just as well, but she wanted to see the Dlace. And she never forgot it. Astonishingly vast, and furnished with the magnificence of a Roman Palace. Its impressiveness bad re- mained in Phillipa’s mind as a background against which she com- pared all other home interiors. No other that she had seen had meas- ured up to it. Tt bad been quiet, and filled with subdued light when she frst saw it. But tonight, she thought, there would be soft radiance flooding it, many flowers, and the haunting ‘Sweetness of waltzes. Phillipa had never seen the room to which she was shown by the man servant whom she knew to be Geof- frey't own personal factotum— valet, courier, cook, “anything you want,” as Geoffrey said, She had a glimpse of the main hall, and found it surprisingly dark- ened. Then she was led up a short filght of hand-carved stairs to Geof- frey's “wing.” There he received her in a small living room that was just like him- self—restrained, attractive. “This looks like a very exclusive party,” seid, smiling at bim to show that it might be just they two and she'd be complacent. “We'll be joined shortly by a third member of the party,” Geot- frey said, “I think I hear him now.” He looked toward the.door. “Ab there, Alan, I was afraid you might disappoint.” Alan and Phillipa stared at each other in amazement. “Just little surprise I arranged,” Geoffrey explained lightly. “I hope you will forgive me, but I've some the word ‘fairies,’ I toss it aside.”—Sir James Barrie; { BARBS | ‘With the report that Shakespeare’s sonnets may be filmed, chances seem bright we shall yet hear some good English in the talkies. > *e 2 Most unpopular of all Swiss move- ments is the substitution of hot cof- fee for brandy in the reviving of lost Alpine climbers. Perhaps this is an- other tariff reprisal. ee Michael, ex-boy king of Rumania, will soon join the army as @ corporal. To be sure, he has lost some author- ity, but prospects are good he'll be made a top sergeant some day. x * * It is only fair to warn orators who plan to regale Admiral~ Byrd with warm toasts of welcome in the future that he has just been presented a sword by.the state of Virginia. * * * Bringing a familiar exhortation up to date: Glide, Kelly, glide! (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) thing to say to you two. A little coffee first?” Both refused, Alan indifferently, and Phillipa with a touch of asper- ity. “Then let’s all be seated,” Geot- frey invited, and offered Phillipa a chair. She sat down, feeling awk- ward and disturbed. Alan dropped into a wing chair and reached for a cigaret. “Alan,” Geoffrey said, gazing ‘steadfastly at his friend, “I've asked you to come here so that I might tell you I think you bave made a great mistake.” Alan was staring back at: him, his expression a decided question mark. Neither looked at Phillipa. “About Natalie, 1 mean,” Geof- frey went on. “Good God, man, how could you have believed she touched that letter?” Alan started to rise. “Sit down,” Geoffrey snapped. “You've got. to listen, Yor judged Natalie without a fair trial. She’s.told me about it. I ran across her at the Penn Station yestet , half out of her mind, fit for the hospital. I took care of her, and made her talk. She was in no condition to think—she just talked.” “1 auppose she accused Mrs. La- mont?” Alan said bitterly. “She didn't accuse anyone. She seemed stunned. But | gathered that at one time she was very NON-STARCHY SOUPS IN SUMMER Most people think that soups are more valuable in winter than in sum- mer, but as a matter of fact soups contain so much water more of the water, and this is much preferable to adding thickenings. Tasty soups are relished by every- body. An ingenious cook can make a Dr. McCoy will gladly answer. Enclose a stamped addressed ‘envelope for reply. good soup out of almost any good substance, even leftovers, although fresh vegetables are best. Those in eshing | “ood health relish soup, for it starts through some parsley, celery and car- rots. This makes a soup about the consistency of catsup, with a very good flavor. If you like, you may give | you @ creamy consistency to the soup by adding a small amount of the juice and then the balance slowly added. This soup should be chilled on ice ee had Cold sere tomatoes may be used if you prefer. = - In cooking soup you will achieve the finest flavor if you chop the ingredi- ents into pieces and start it with cold water over a low flame. The old say- ing that soup should smile and not laugh illustrates a proper way to boil soup, allowing it to simmer slowly but not boil vigorously. In this way the full flavors are extracted and blended together in the water. - It does not matter whether you call soup © broth, comsomme, bouillon, bisque, chowder, puree or pottage. It consists essentially of food particles suspended in water. In preparing soup one should remember that the food combinations should be observed in soups as in meals. Meat soups are quite wholesome when only one kind is combined with some of the non- starchy vegetables. When makifg a meat soup you may use that soup standby, tomatoes, but do not use crackers or any other starch in the meal at which tomato soup is served. ‘Phe meat extractives when boiled out give the soup an agreeable flavor and are not harmful. On cold days you cam serve some ot the starchy soups made of potatoes, tice, peas, barley, macaroni, etc, The starchy soup should be served as & thick soup so that it is possible to almost chew it. At least each spoon- ful should be county ate ete a enough to proper! starc’ with the saliva. In making the starchy soups you may combine them with non-starchy vegetnbles such as spinach, cclery and parsley, but do not use tomatoes with a starchy soup. Soups are more wholesome if the usual thickenings of flour or arrow- root are not used. You may make your soup thicker by boiling away unter RUTH DEWEY GROVES Jealous of the woman you mention.” “Very?” It was Phillipa, ending on a taunting laugh. ‘ . . » She told me, howev Geoffrey went on, “that you were going to marry Miss West.” “Se you did know when you tele phoned?” . Phillipa thrust at him. She was beginning to feel at sea— hel; plese. “Yes? Alan sald on Geoffrey's pause. “Did {t never occur to you to doubt everyone who had a chance at that letter? Geoffrey asked. abruptly. “Well, really,” Phillipa jumped to her feet, byt Geoffrey motioned her to be quiet. “I want Alan to answer that ques- tion,” he said with a solemnity that Stopped Phillipa’s protest. “Of course, 1 did,” Alan declared teatily. “Are you certain of that?” Geot- frey insisted. ' “Now sce here,” Alan began !m- patiently, “this is all very well, coming from a friend of Natalie's, but why did you drag Miss West Into 1t2” Phillipa whirled to him. “Let's get out,” she cried. “This is con- temptible.” Geoffrey ignored the baleful glance she cast at him, and Alan bis bead. “No,” he said firmly, “not until 1 know what Norman's got on his mind.” “All right,” Geoffrey sald tense- ly, “I'll tell you." He turned to face Phillips where she stood stiffly before her chair, gripping her hand- bag to keep her bands trom shak- i ag. “Misa Weet.” be said buntly, “do you know anything about that let- ter that you haven't told Alan?” Phillipa stared-back at him for a moment, her eyes blazing defiance, then they wavered, and she turned to Alan. “I won't stand for this,” she cried. “He's only doing it to humi! oe If you're a man you won't stand for it, either.” She rushed over to Alan and grabbed him by the arm. “Let's go,” she walied. “Let's go.” “Wait a minute.” Alan spoke sternly. “How about tt, Geoffrey? Are you ready to apologize?” “Apologize?” Geoffrey echoed blankly. “For askin: question that I believe should been asked her long before this?” Alan thrust Phillipa’s hands away. and strode toward bim. “For what's behind the question,” he said levelly. “I think you know it your implication is clear to both of us.” Geoffrey gravely head. “I mean it to be,” he sadd quietly. “Miss West had every op- portunity to tamper witb that let- ter, yet it seems that you never thought of suspecting her, Alan.” “Why should 1 have suspected ber?” Alan angrily demanded. Geoffrey's answer came with cool deliberation. “I think you sbould ask yourself that question.” “Um asking you,” Alan retorted hotly. “Then you will listen to what 1 have to say without losing your temper,” Geoffrey told him. “And you, too.” He faced Phillipa with a determination that cowed her into silence. i “You two are engaged to be mar ried.” he said glacially, “aad you were engaged when that change in the letter was made. But what sort of engagement was it? Natalie tells me that you were living with her, Alan—oh, merely under the same roof—and that you did not seem anxious for a divorce. She believed you would eventually have made up your quarrel if you hadn't believed that she was guilty of alter- ing that letter.” Phillipa broke in. finding her voice for a sneer. “Ob, did she?” she flamed at Alan. “Well, someone did it,” Alan said helplessly. “Yes, someone did it.” Geoffrey repeated. “But not Natalie, My belief in her forced me to suspect the person who would benefit most by having her placed under susp!- clon.” He paused, then said steadi- ly: “And I concluded that Miss West would benefit considerably.” He waited, but both Alan and They had more to say,.and Phillipa’s rising rage Prevented her from being quick enough to stop him. inclined his band,” he said slowly, “she will let notbing stand in her way, if she is that kind of woman.” (To Be Concluded) “When a woman fs hunting a hus- - the meal off well, awakens the appe- tite, and a bowl of filling soup will often round out the menu in a satis- factory manner. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Cancer of Stomach Question: Mrs. C. L. asks: “Will please state some o: the symp- toms of cancer of the~stomach? Is there any pain or bloating in the ad- vanced stage?” Answer: The symptoms of cancer of the stomach vary entirely with each individual. There may or may not be pain or bloating. If you have any kind of stomach distress you should Gertainly have a careful ex- amination made, going to some doctor who uses the X-ray. Do not try to your own case if you suspect it is as serious as you intimate in your question. Mustard Question: J. H. H. writes: “I am very fond of prepared mustard as a condiment and would like to know if you consider it harmful.” Answer: Mustard is a compara- tively harmless condiment if it is used with meat at a meal which does not contain starchy food. The danger of all condiments is that they excite the appetite and encourage one to eat more than normal hunger would call for. Head Sweats Question: O. L. M. writes: “My baby nine months old has for several months been subject to profuse per- spiration which occurs only when she is sleeping or nursing, and the strange part of it is that the condition mani- fests only at the head. Will you tell me if this is an indication of anything wrong and what measures I can take to overcome it?” Answer: Most mothers dress their babies too warmly, and this is gener- ally the cause of the baby sweating. The baby wilh sweat if too many covers are used whilc she is sleeping. or if she wears the same amount of clothes while nursing as she does at other times, as the heat of the mother’s body and the effort used in nursing will make the baby’s head unusually warm. (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) KFYR TUESDAY, JULY 1 850 Kilocycles—515.1 Meters ° one 00—Dawn: Reveille. Early Risers club. :15—Time signals, itera flashes. eeasee ab Oo 1 1 1 1 8. 11:03—Organ program: Clara Morris. 12:00—Bismarck Tribune news and weather. Luncheon program. —Voice of the Wheat Pool. a markets: high, low and close. lone. Farm notes. :45—Bismarck Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock g:00— ‘Musical matinee. 2:30—Siesta hour: Good News radio magazine, :00—Music. 00—Stocks and bonds. Bismarck Tribune Sports itemhs. ‘Bismarck Tribune news, World Bookman. 6:00—Time signal. i? Dr. Prescott’s sixty-piece neert band. seven years from a land dependent on mule and camel trains to one serviced with well-defined trade routes and quicker transportation. MOTORCYCLES DOUBLE Oslo (AP)—Narrow roads and long distances have brought the mo- toreycle to such favor in Norway that 1929 imports doubled over the Preceding year, Zhe venbalee are used the year around, being equipped with skiis for winter travel sa Direct representation in parliament is sought by 330,000 women of Austria who are members of cooperative so- A medal has been awarded Dr. P. H. Scardino of Houston by the king of Italy for his efforts to improve Italian-American unt 4 Young Corbett is the biggest draw- ing card San Franclaco has had since Jack psey was getting started : Money dessn't go far—but it goea coal od SARs ope Noh yeid 4 va rad 7 » a 4