The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 3, 1930, Page 4

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A PARSON EON ___ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1980 covers, too late, that e button ts missing from the sleeve [ The Declaration of Independence---As 1930 Methods Might Have of his shirt. ‘Then, after breakfast, he starts out for work. He has Covered the Story . to run to catch his street car and when he gets to his corner, after a tough sprint, the motorman fails to see him and the car doesn’t stop. Finally he gets to his of- fice. It is too hot, he turns on an electric fan and the fan sweeps all the papers on his desk off onto the floor. He goes out for lunch at noon, stands in & hot crowd for ten minutes before he can get a seat and then gets a plate of liver and onions, which he abhors, instead of the egg salad which he ordered. He goes back to work, \and—but why carry his misadventures eny farther? It is obvious, surely, that life can be ful! of a million petty WI X00 SIGN. annoyances, and it is a rare day that docsn't bring at } a ree MAN? least three or four of them in a bunch, Now all of this wouldn’t be so bad if we could get some ger year a. outlet for our irritation, But we can’t. Swearing is con- ay ae KGa Daten et Circulation sidered bad form, and there are usually women around = anyhow. One can’t stamp one’s foot in wrath, as a child FAVO Member of The Associated Press dces, ngr can one throw things or paw the air in energet- ye Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use| ic anger, There is nothing to do but grin and bear it— ited to it or i republication of all news dispatches credite and some days that is pretty hard to do. Ont otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the nly ; news of spontaneous origin published herein All) Dr. Mayo must be right. Keeping our tempers is bad Bets ot republication of all other matter herein are} sus But we have to do it. » reserved. jist Eee (Official City, State and County Newspaper) e- Bismarck Tribux.e An independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) ished by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- :, N. D,, and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck nd class mai] matter. e D. Mann ...President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ; by carrier, per year ... by mail, per year (in B! ; by mail. per year 4 in state, outside Bismarck) ... cr? by mail, outside of North Datota -$7.20 . 720 CANTALOUPES ARE COOLING Provident nature kindly arranged to give us cantaloupes during the warm season when they are most val- uable. Throughout the melon time I would suggest that you will keep cool- er and feel better if you use melons once or twice daily. On extremely hot days it is often a good plan to make an entire luncheon on nothing but cantaloupes, using a8 many as desired. The large amount of puri- fied water and wholesome mineral elements contained in cantaloupes and other melons have ® cooling and cleansing action on the blood stream and should be used abundantly dur- ing the summertime. Cantaloupes are related to the gourd family. Their original home is in Asia and India, and they were first brought to Europe from Armenia. Muskmelons, cantaloupes and nutmeg Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. Exper bly by mail, in state, per year....... vatt'y dy mail, in state. three years for ly by mail. outside of North Dakota, used to chill them, it should not be placed inside the melon, but the melon should be packed inside the ice, and opened and cleaned when ready to serve. method preserves the delicate catural taste and is not diluted with ice wa- ter. To make the cut cantaloupe stand on the plate a slice may be cut from the bottom, making it flat. Can- talope filled with ice cream makes ‘a perfect meal for luncheon when you do ‘not care for heavier food. An- other delicious way to serve musk- The Penalty for Overwork Nar} Foreign Representatives No one can burn the candle at both ends for very long} ~ cident: SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS without suffering for it. The business man ought to con- melons all belong to the netted group hand,» (Incorporated) serve his own energy as carefully as he conserves me- whose rinds are laced over with a|small squares or balls which can be the Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. chanical ene: in his factor thick graying pattern. The pulp of made with a melon spoon obtainable street CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON i tent ed these melons varies from green to alat any hardware store. This can be centl; “A tragic and instructive case in point is the recent, deep gold, and is highly flavored cel eoce see a aint MA fe bee aes E sweet to the tougue. They consist ese pieces ap or pineapple Sy The Farm the Arena of the Fourth suicide of Leroy A. Manchester, chief counsel for the Sree eet water, the rest being | Jello or Jell-well, placing the dun in | Youngstown Sheet & Tube company, who killed himself while the lawsuit over the company's merger with Beth- lehem Steel was being heard in court. Newton D. Baker, also retained in the case, remarked when he heard of it: “It was a pure case of overwork. Manchester was worked to a frazzle.” There is no more costly road open to any man than the road which requires him to maintain a faster pace than his body will stand. Sooner or later something is bound] 5 to break. You can’t overwork without paying the pen- | alty—and sometimes the penalty is terribly high. the refrigerator until the gelatin has hardened. Some people enjoy the cantaloupe baked. Simply cut the cantaloupe in two, scoop out the seeds and put the halves into a hot oven. Serve as soon as they begin to brown. Do noi cook them too long or they will become mushy. If the cantaloupe is a@ little too green to serve for breakfast, you may often use it by baking in this manner. \composed of sugar and organic min- erals,principally potash, lime and iron, and vitamins. Cassabas and honey dew closely resemble muskmelons in food value and are somewhat larger in size and ripen later in the season. ‘These melons contain a small amount of acid and for this reason the best -|way to use them is to make @ com- plete meal of any one kind of melon, using all that is desired. ‘They should never be eaten when they are unripe or overripe, as they may produce symptoms akin to colic. ‘They are best when the flavor is most fully developed. ‘The housewife should use the greatest care to select the ones which have a good ripe odor and are not bruised. Much of the pleasure of eating the muskmelon is due to the delicate musk-like aroma which is whiffed up the nose. For this reason, the melon with the best odor usually has the best flavor. They are best chilled by placing in the refrigerator. If cracked ice is volumy Fourth of July keynote tomorrow might well be that 280, terops. and feonomic considerations are to the fore today in Amer- wider‘as its outstanding problems. Purely political ques- of have been receding into the background, fairly well et hed out. Even the burning issue of prohibition is TnJre economic than personal. And peace is not so much traffiatter of sentiment when the nations sit down together ably formulate it in the mold of permanency as it is of from nomic needs. Limitation and parity of armaments out ts become the first step in a practical effort to make of me Kellogg-Briand renunciation of war more than a 8 détre and beautiful gesture. And that is founded in thre@nomic considerations. ‘independence day, 1930, finds the nation passing Trough a period of economic stress in part temporary, Jowierefore remediable by mere reestablishment of bal- safeyce, ond in part of a permanent character and demand- tions permanent cure. There is the disadjustment of bus- agt ss in the wake-of the fall debacle in the ‘Wall Street the ock market, which in time will right itself by its own alonmedial processes, but the nation still has with it the and.arter-century agricultural problem which it is sceking into the American cruiser , So that his other ships —__—_____——_? The Spaniards’ aim was bad, or their Today Is the | powder poor, for their shots went r would have an opportunity to break | wild or fell short, while the American | Anniversary of through and escape. This strategy | gunnery was excellent.” Teresa, B sere Sse ie for when Cervera made his| Four hours after Cervera began his QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Bread With Meals Question: A. C. N. asks: “Will you tell me why you never recommend bread with meals in your menus, only Melba toast? What harm is there in eating yeast bread and baking pow- der breads?” Answer: I do recommend bread oc- casionally in my menus, but I believe most people use too much bread to the exclusion of other more vital foods. When any kind of bread is used it should be taken with non-starchy vegetables and not in addition to other starches or with protein foods. A New Slant on the Treaty ‘There are half a dozen different angles from which one can view the pending London naval treaty. One that is bound to stimulate a bit of thought is that presented by George Young, former attache in the British diplo- matic service, in a recent speech at the University of Chicago. On July 3, 1898, the Spanish fleet | him found itself confronted with an torpedo boat destroyers were destroy- American dreadnaught. ed, 323 of his crew were killed, 151 “Thus,” writes an historian, “the | were wounded, and 1782 were prison- action resolved itself into a sefies of | ers, he being among them. magnificent duels between powerful ironclads, metal ringing on metal,{ The Baltimore girl reporter recently engaged to marry John Nicholas while the cannon roared, the great ish-American war. engines throbbed, and the air was|Brown, millionairc, certainly can Asserting that airplanes and submarines have brought | Finding himself in a blockade, Cer- | filled by the clouds of smoke, which | credit herself with the year’s biggest in a new set of circumstances, Mr. Young declares: vera proposed to ram his flagship, the} rushed from the overcharged boilers. | scoop. | “The new warfare has killed the old private war block- | ‘¢ | under Admiral Cervera, attempting to escape from Santiago harbor, was in- tercepted and destroyed by the Ameri can fleet under the command of Ad- miral Schley. This was one of the most spectacular battles of the Span- BATTLE OF SANTIAGO dash each Spanish cruiser =e the last of his four cruisers and "2nd for good with farm relief. sect It has been the habit of Fourth of July oratory and 4ng¥scussion to dwell on outstanding issues and problems tray! the various periods of the nation’s development. In eithhe past these flights of sentiment and of wisdom or folly Notargely kept close to Independence Hell and the Liberty “Sell and were purely of domestic, and often florid, con- cur®n. on The Spanish-American war and still later the World Witvar put an end to provincial outlooks on the nation’s hegitthday and weltanschaung became the American as ‘yell as the European keynote. As far as world affairs go oF this year, the naval parity treaty is for the United States tot ye chief international topic. typ But the naval treaty is a minor matter compared to “sccnomic problems at home, with agriculture depressed, men out of employment to an extent that seldom is the’ edc2se in this prosperous country and a tariff situation de- veweloping that threatens international trade complica- ONt:ons from foreign reprisals over the recent upward re- antisions. of Go, as said, the crops might well be the best subject T{o; Fourth of July oratory tomorrow. Very largely the immediate future of the country is bound up in what to these are going to be. They should bring the great move- wiment that will dislodge grounded business. They should si point the way for shaping farm relief policies under the €®farm marking act. The country needs the stimulus m Which regulated production and marketing is expected | Editorial Comment | te to provide. And the country is in the first year of the Pl effort to establish those conditions. America again will tebe independent to the extent that the remedies of the 4 farm marketing act work out satisfactorily. It will con- @ tinue its economic floundering to the extent that the new policy fails to function. fi. ‘This, then, is a Fourth on which to summon the Amer- > fean people to express their patriotism in an economic fe Sense, to invoke their loyalty to the development of eco- ~ nomic organization, not an occasion to appeal to martial nationalism and fighting valor, for the only conflict on of 1929, the horizon is that in behalf of the new policy of co- operation. Our Fourth of July has moved camp fire and bivouac of the battlefield to the firesides | industrial activity, thus not only building solidity for nted the | their own future but helping to take up the labor slack. of millions of homes. The flail has. supplat “payonet. There is nothing to fight out, but much to thresh out. May the wisdom of the American people still find that patience in which to solve its present-day problems a8 ably as its physical courage in the past mastered its politico-martial crises. Nature is propitious. A favorable season has prospered the growing crops and as the har- yest develops, the regulation set in operation in reduced ‘acreages last fall and this spring may work out the new _] salvation of the nation—how to make agriculture rea- _ sonably profitable and thus assure that basic prosperity founded on the welfare of the farmer on which the per- petuity of the nation is mostly after all, dependent. Life’s Petty but Fatal Pace One of the unfair things about this modern world is that while it is constantly devising new ways to make ‘a man lose his temper, it 1s also putting him under an ever-increasing compulsion of keeping control of him- self. Dr. W. J. Mayo of Rochester,‘Minn., in a recent speech i before the American Medical association at Detroit, sug- gests that one reason for the prevalence of heart disease today may be the stern control over the emotions made necessary by conditions of modern life. As a case in point, Dr. Mayo remarks that many sur- Bcons die of heart disease. The surgeon, he points out, practices a profession in which ironclad control of the emotions is absolutely necessary. This, in turn, puts an extra strain on the heart—and the strain finally exacts @ penalty. ‘The surgeon, however, isn’t the only unlucky one. Prob- ably every one of us has to exercise more self-restraint, im the ordinary round of daily living, than our grand- fethers had to exercise. There are more things to bother us, and we have more reasons for repression. Consider the things that can arise in the course of a “ay to jar a man’s temper—the little things only, not gounting major catastrophies. ‘ A man gets out of bed and steps into the shower. Just as 8 nicely-moditlated spray is coursing down his back someoné downstairs turns on the cold water, and the “He quits his shower and goes to shave. There he dis- ‘Covers thet hif razor blade is dull and that he has no ner, Sp he must painfully scrape his face with a dull fob fintshed,-he goes to dress. A shoe-string breaks, « collar-button rolls under the dreséer, or he dis- Speci in from the | yant ade, with all its concomitants of contraband and the right of search. It has killed the battleship and crippled the cruiser, and all this squabbling over cruisers is a bat- tle of Tweedle-dum and Tweedle-dee. “tf you, like me, had known your children were spend- ing their nights in the cellar every dark of the moon in a probably vain effort to escape airplane and Zeppelin bombs, or if you knewv, as I do, that now one such air- plane bomb can destroy all life in central London, and that it can’t be stopped from doing so, why, you wouldn't be worrying about whether cruisers had six-inch or eight- inch guns.” Former Foes as Friends (Toledo Blade ) French and German veterans of the World war plan a reunion in August at Chemin des Dames, in the area of the final drive in 1918. It is hoped that more than 20,000 of the former soldiers who faced one another on that sector will return to give a sturdy expression of good will, One of the French leaders now offers an addi- tional suggestion. He urges that the children be brought along. His intention is that the rising generation be taught the lessons of the futility of war and the worth of peace. With the children he places the hope of inter- national sanity. ‘ ‘A battlefield could serve well as a school for peace if| its lessons were correctly presented. But lessons against war are seldom given at such places. The childish visit- ors are usually told only of the glory of bravery. They are not told of the stark madness of settling abstract questions by ruthless physical combat. May true lessons be revealed at:Chemin des Dames! Work Is the Way Out (Duluth Herald) President Hoover Monday told the governors’ confer- ence at Salt Lake City that in the first half of the year c works construction amounted to 1700 million dol- lars, which is $20,000,000 more than in the boom year Also, he told them that the public utility companies and other intelligent business concerns are taking ad- tage of the situation to prepare for the return of ‘What gives these figures large importance is that they spell employment for labor. , Idle labor consumes little and is bad for business. Labor at work consumes normally, and is good for If every worker in America could be put at work today, so that he could see steady earnings ahead, prosperity would be restored over night! For it never should be forgotten that though industry and its owners benefit from prosperity, it is the con- sumers who make it by their purchases, and that as the surest way to halt prosperity is to stop the carnings of the consumers, so the surest way to get prosperity going again is to put all consumers back on the pay rolls. Two Farm Problems, 25 Years Apart . Tt will be recalled that, at just about the same time, President Theodore Roosevelt was naming his country life commission to devise ways and means for diverting city dwellers to the land, so that acreage could be more intensively cultivated. The fear of the times was that American population was rapidly outatripping America’s ability to feed its population. Today, only a quarter of a century later, we have & national problem that is just the reverse of the one that i E : ag iH a8 a ef be - i te Natural law cured underproduction, and did it most pleasantly, from the agriculturalist’s viewpoint. Demand boosted prices and higher prices sent plows into new furrows. Natural law could—and, in time, would—cure overproduction. But natural law this time would) work most cruelly, from the agriculturalist’s viewpoin‘. So the thing we are all trying to do now—federal and local governments, farm organizations, newspapers and other agencies—is to find ways and means to soften the processes of natural law. Adequate tariff jon for farm commodities still on an import basis, elimination of waste in distribution, discovery of new uses for land producing surplus foodstuffs, and a lowering of produc- tion costs aré all ingredients in the general remedy. ‘ ‘Ths remedy will benefit the patient only s0 as it is used to ease the harsh workings of nstural law. feed in ati to nullify or deny the existence of aatural Polisi sy do harm instthd of good. | HAPTER 1 FE WAS a stormy night in mid- January. The pavements were swept by drenching sheets of rain, and a piercing wind was blowing. In that cosmopolitan corner of New York called Greenwich Village the atreets were almost deserted by 10 o'clock. From behind the closed blings of the little cafes and drin! iug shops came bursts of music and laughter, - Haltway down the narrow street, Bastien Dumont, tumbling down the steps leading to the Cafe Ture and pushing open the door, was met with a twang of a mandolin and a light, gay tenor voico sing: ing “Funicull, Funicyla.” Bastien was Anglo-French, one of a score of struggling artists who frequented the little cafe. The place was something like a club for the indigent who would sip the wine of life, but who must have it cheap. ‘There were two rooms at the Cafe Ture—the first just belaw the level of the street, small and low celled, with the bar, the coffee urns, and a reredos of bottles on the left; the second a few steps lower atill, much larger, equally low in pitch, with sanded floor and some dozen tables, big and little, ranged round the walls. These walls displayed a cal- lection of sketches, legacies from various artists, One night a great man had sat there and laughed over his wine, and had turned and drawn a girl's head on the wall bebind him. His had been a name to conjure with. At the door the young man paused, blinking, and expelling a grateful breath. “Peste,” what a night!” he ex- claimed. Groping his way through the blue-gray fog to the shining counter, he shook the proprictor by the hand. “What a night!” he cried in a warm, youthful voice. “Is Judy here?” The proprietor returned -Du- mont’s greeting and answered his question in the French language, which the young map’ had used, “I have not seen Judy yet, M. Dumont: but sbe will doubtless be here. Chummy is in there.” He jerked his thumb toward the inner room. Dumont ordered coffee and cog: nac, and, entering the inner room, was noisily greeted by a crowd of men at one of the larger tables. eee At a table on the opposite side of the room to the one at which Bastien Dumont had joined his friends, two men were sitting. Of the other tables, most were occu- pled by groups of twos and threes. From time to time glances of curiosity were directed at the two men. For one thing, they were not habitues of the place, and it was seldom that strangers came to the Cafe Ture. One of them, however, was known to several people there. He was Vincent Stornaway, a suc: cessful portrait painter, who nad long ago abandoned any pretense of a bohemian life, He exuded pros- perity with his faintly picturesque clothes, his flowing tie, his golden- brown beard, pale cheeks, and clear, healthy skin. His compagian was known to no- body, and various unflattering comments were passed on his ap- pearance. He was unprepossessing to a degree, his pallid face being fleshy and heavy-jawed. his eyes pale and small and sunk in pufty bags, his forehead low and square and livid against a band of coarse, black hair. “A libertine with q bad temper, tmurmured clever Topy Leigh, the lest heart in the world. and HEATH HOSKEN bY__CHELSEA HOUSE. Judith Grant cruelist caricaturist with the kind- “Good shot, Tony!” said another man. “I wonder who the chap can be!” As a matter of fact, Stornaway’s companion was Bruce Gideon, & financier, whose portrait the artist was painting as a present from an giazed sketch insurance company with which |cama in. and lampblack that sullied and dis- Gideon was associated. During the| “Good Lord!” ho said. “You|suised the wonder of its youth; but sittings Gideon had shown much in-/don't mean that's the same|{t was charming, for all that, and terest in the life of artists, and the two men had become friendly to a certain extent. Gideon had asked Stornaway to dinner at his apartment on Park Avenue, and had expressed a desire to see a real bit of the poorer Greenwich Village. To the left of Vincent Stornaway and his companion was a young woman sitting at a table all alone. As other men and women came in, nearly all of them greeted her, and some lingered a moment by her side. A man now and then asked her to have some refreshment; but nobody sat down at her table. She answered all greetings in the same way, without enthusiasm, a8 a matter of course. She accepted refreshment every now and then. From time to time she smiled a beautiful smile, like that of a child. eee proce GIDEON turned with an interrogation to Stornaway, who, as it happened, could en- lighten him, “That girl has a remarkable story,” the artist said in a low voice, turning toward his compan- ion so that his words should not; practically older, Englishman. long before.” eyes made young woman’ “One day word—just carry. “Do you think her beau: tiful?” “Not exactly,” Gideon answered. 0 colorless."? “She was considered the most|Gideon asked. beautiful girl in New York some} years ago,” the, artist continued. He pointed behind him to the crape-decorated .wreath. “Chanlery did this head of her. She was like @ young Diana then.” Gideon had paid his homage to the dead master’s work as he woman? What’ happened to her?” “Love,” replied Stornaway. “She fell in love with a boy who used to live Steyne, an artist. At least, he was trying to be an artist, and starving meanwhile. It was one of those terrific passions. They were ‘in- separable—couldn’t breathe a) She was working at Willoughby's art school. She was about 18 at the time, and he was a few years She's the daughter of an fame—he died climbing—I can’t remember which mountain, Her mother was dead Gideon turned, “I thought she didn’t quite fit in here,” he said. way. This is most interesting.” Alan Steyne disap- peared—just like that, without a deserted her. wasn’t the kind that could stand it. It wasn’t an ordinary love affair— not on her part, at any rate. didn't exist apart from him, and everyone thought he was equally fond of her. I used to come here quite often in those days, and I saw @ good deal of them.’ “What became of the fellow?” and talked to the two girls. UDITH une “Nobody knows—never heard of since. He was clever, but impatient —didn’t care about going through the mill. He’s never done anything in the art world, or one would have heard of him. The girl went to pieces—nearly died, you know; and when she struggled back again she was like she is now.” “Do you mean she’s mad?” asked the rich man with interest. “Not exactly. Silly, I should say —not quite all there—childish.” “And how does she live?” “Everybody looks after her, as far as I can make out. She never painted since Alan Steyne left her. I don’t quite know how it’s man- aged, but nobody would let her want. “Lately she’s been living with an- other girl—a girl they call Judy. Someone told me that she was I ing after Chummy. I think she model herself—s queer, savage-look- ing sort of a girl.” “How long ago did this hap pen?” Gideon asked. “Let me see—about seven years ago, I suppose. Yes; it's five years since I used to come here regularly, and then Chummy was quite an.in- stitution.” A SLIP of a girl pushed open the door and came into the Cafe Turc. She shook herself like a dog, and the raindrops fell from her in showers. Everybody in the front room knew her and greeted ber. “Hullo, Judy! Cheerio, Weicome to the ark, Judy!” The girl answered them all with laughing words in a voice that was husky, partly by nature, and partly owing to a bad cold. She advanced with a series of shakes, and finally divested herself of the shabby mackintosh she was wearing. Underneath, she had a very short skirt of a dark tartan, and a bright- green jersey with threads of gold showing here and there. On her head was a battered, white-felt hat, very much pulled over her eyes. Judith Grant's face was gaudy with its cheap paint and powder Judy! surmounted by the flowerlike. Once a man looked at it, he often had to look again and again, She had a mop of short, red-gold hair and big eyes the color of dark- purple pansies, and a mouth that was always laughing. She was very small, Artists used her as a model rt.|for the line of her neck and shoul ders, and for her bands and feet, which were pretty nearly perfect. Sometimes, when her profession failed her, she got into chorus, She was a born dancer, but she never stayed long, and had never achieved promotion on the stage. For one thing, she had no voice, and she was so small that she was lost in the crowd. i Her entrance into the inner roou was greeted with another chorus. Everybody knew her. “Hullo, boys!” she cried, e jumped the three steps Jp a bound. She looked round and saw the fair girl alone at fer table. - “Ab,- there's my family!” she exclaimed, walking over to Chummy, ‘and flinging down her mackintosh on a chair and her hat on the top of it. She sat down beside her friend, and Dan brought her a steaming tumbler of punch, Two or three of the men at the big table came over here—Alan I've forgotten his in Switzerland, and his small wick survey of the fair face. “Go on, Storna- She She - » . (To Be Continued) Spinal Curvature Question: Mrs. S. writes: “My little . girl 12 years old has developed a curved spine within the last two years. She has a mixed diet, attends gymnasium, and seems generally well. but complains of backache and tires easily. What causes this? Can it be corrected? Does it affect the health?” Answer: Be sure your little girl is ‘having corrective exercises with her gymnasium work and that she is in- structed by a competent teacher. It is also well to have an X-ray picture made of her spine, and to get the opinion of a bone specialist regarding the condition of the spinal vertebrae. She may be suffering from tubercu- losis of the spine, in which case it would be unwise for her to exercise during that time when the acute changes are taking place in the bones. (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) KFYR FRIDAY, JULY 4 550 Kilocycles—545.1 Meters :45—Meditation period. i00—Shoppers’ guide program. 1 10:10—Aunt Sammy. Bt '—Arlington time signal. 11:00—Organ program: Clara Merris. 12:00—Bismarck Tribune news and M. weather; luncheon program. 1 —Voice of the Wheat Pool. 12:30—Time signal. SATURDAY, JULY 5 \—Dawn revellle. Early Risers club. 0—Farm flashes. b—Time signal ‘arm reporter in Washingto! 745— Meditation period. er 3 ioppers’ guide program. 9:00—Opening grain markets. oo Sunshine hour, : Veather report; grain markets 10:57—Arlington time signal. 11:00—Grain markets. H rgan program: Clara Morris. 12:00—Bismarck ‘Tribune news and weather; luncheon program. Voice of the Wheat Pool. 12:30—Grain markets: high, low, and close. 1:18—Farm notes, 1:45—Bismarck Tribune news and weather; St. Paul livestock. 2:00—Musical matinee. 2:30—Slesta hour: Good News radio magazine, 3:00—Music. §:00—Stocks and bonds. 3 ismarck Tribune sports items. 5:8s—Blemarek Tribunenews. 5:45—World Bookman, 6:00—Time signal. 6:45—Baseball scores. 6:50—Newscasting. 6:55—Your English. 7:00—Studio program. is 9:00—Dance program (remote). “The word ‘sanction’ starting out in life as the sebedionsst of rome. altar, has degenerated int - mon ‘euphemism for war. Tt is now & term used to designate penalties to be a ed. to violators of the Pact of Paris.”—Salmon ©. Levinson, Chicago attorney. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: hs

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