The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 9, 1930, Page 4

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\ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JULY 9, 1930 4 The Bismarck Tribune ¥ An independent Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) OES ec OSE Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @8 Becond class mai) matter. George D. Mann....... Preeeeiety President and Publisher ig hb oon antler a 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) .... Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota. ag 38 ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year ‘Weekly by mail, in state, three years fo: _Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, per year Weekly by mail in 83 $8188 BS ee Canada, per year.. 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 local 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) i Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Unfinished Business: Health Bismarck is asked to sponsor a new welfare activity, @ health movement which is preventive of disease in its aims. It will cost nothing. Service as now given by the Association of Commerce and the luncheon clubs will way to support of their own achievements. ThatJs why Senator Swanson is so valiantly leading the fight for ratt- fication of the parity pact. Why will not the recalci- trants learn how the game should be played? Instead of their soap box sideshowism? Hoover has won now so often that the lesson should have sunk in by this time. He forced the hand of the senate on the debenture provision twice. He put over the farm marketing act as he wanted it. He finally got a tariff bill in which his demand for agricultural protection was embodied. He got his crime commission appropria- tion in spite of plans to hamstring it. The worst provocation of all, the senate attempt to make politics of pension legislation, likewise was defeated by the proposal the president laid down accompanied by a veto which, in view of the nature of the legislation, al- ways calls for heroic courage to venture on. This state of affairs in the senate could not have been possible but for the collapse of party discipline on the Republican side. It resulted in a number of shifting coalitions in which the Democratic minority, taking ad- vantage of Republican insurgency to improve its own fortunes always furnished the nucleus of the blocs. With the Democrats it was a case of demoralizing the opposi- tion and discrediting the president in the hope of gain- ing political advantage thereby in the coming congres- sional elections and, expectantly, in the larger contest of 1932, when the white house will be the stake played for. It was because of the littleness of the opposition, which ran to cover in the house but remained militant in the upper chamber, that the country is glad the lawmakers have adjourned. There would be a still greater relief if the senate finished the job of ratifying the naval pact Pronto and also went home. Russia Raving Again P Russian reds still have hopes of creating a communis- tic revolution in America and like to talk of it in stilted suffice. It is the movement sponsored by the U. 8. Chamber of Commerce, which made such a success of its fire prevention campaign of the last seven years that it was inspired to add this new movement. * ‘The national commercial organization treats both ac- tivities from their economic standpoint. Greater cau- tion against the menace of fire has resulted in a saving of property that is reflected in ratios and percentages and also in another form of saving expressed in lower fire insurance premiums. Laying down the thesis that life has its economic eval- uation also, the national chamber .wants the nation to proceed to save some more dollars in the form of de- creased losses from illness and death, Then, too, as & matter of welfare, the chamber wants disease and death kept down, so that fewer will die of ills and more of old age, which should be the normal cause of death, instead of epidemics and infection and accidents. Bismarck has made a pretty creditable record in the first year that it was entered in the chamber’s health and sanitation movement, being seventeenth in 28 cities of its class. But it had one big black mark. It allowed death to carry off three lives by diphtheria. This scourge is rapidly being suppressed and there are such scientific means now to combat it that diphtheria deaths are con- sidefed a disgrace to a community. It has been pointed out to the city that these three deaths are evidence of @ field here for further effort to better health and sanitary conditions. ‘The new movement should be made to fit in with the diphtheria prevention commission which will begin func- tioning here in the fall. This is a state commission serv- ing without pay and appointed by Governor Shafer at the instigation of the State Health department. National health conditions are far from being what they should be for so rich and progressive a land as the United States. Ray Lyman Wilbur, secretary of the in- terior, discussing the matter at the spring meeting of the committee on costs of medical care, presented a list of diseases which by their persistence challenge a move- ment for their eradication. He said, among other things: “One million persons are sick with malaria each year. ‘We know that we do not have to have malaria if we want to pay the price to get rid of it, and that price is practi- cally one of dollars. It does not take very much skill in most cases. “Seven hundred thousand persons are sick with tuber- culosis at any one time, most of it preventable. “Four million persons in the South a few years ago ‘were affected. by hookworm disease. There are probably not so many now; they have more shoes, and more of other things now. But the number affected is still great. ‘There is much paralysis, locomotor ataxia and mental disease, and there are many handicapped children be- ‘cause of social diseases. All of this is correctible, and should be corrected. It is a scientific error, if not a crime, for a child to be born with congenital syphilis. “We still have 30,000 to 100,000 cases of smallpox each year, in spite of the work of Jenner. Of course that is just plain, outright carelessness and ignorance. “We-have had approximately 26,000 cases and 5,700 ,@eaths due to typhoid fever. These were the figures for 1928. They would not be greatly different now. Typhoid _ fever, of course, is another preventable disease. “There were about 89,000 cases and 8,300 deaths due to diphtheria in 1928. In the case of this disease, also, but little improvement has been made during the past few years. Diphtheria still claims its regular number of little children. Were the skill of organization shown by some of the health departments applied generally throughout the country, there would be immediately a marked and rapid reduction in cases and deaths. “People suffer much unnecessary pain because of their | failure to visit a dentist regularly; and many obscure dis- orders are due to bad teeth. Probably not more than 20 Per cent of the people go periodically to dentists for ex- amination and repair; most of them go only for the relief Hoover Stands Forth Victor Gradually it is dawning on the nation that President Hoover's supposed weakness in dealing with congress is a fiction and an illusion with which cantankerous law- makers delude their strutting selves. ‘ ‘What really is fact is that a bloc\of senators of which the nucleus is, of course, Democratic has been spending & great deal of wasted energy and bitterness in senseless opposition to the white house. All they have to show for, their intrigues and wasted opposition is the rejection of John J. Parker as nominee for the supreme court bench by a mere majority of two votes, and this was largely discounted by the way they were whipped into line to ratify the succeeding proposal of Owen J. Rob- erts for the place. ‘The senate is in special session today as a result of its cheap politics. Part of the program of discrediting the President was to put off the London naval parity pact till _ @fler election, so that’ members coming up for election 4m this campaign could dodge showing their attitude, fool the pcople into returning them and then try to defeat he agrcement as a blow at the prestige of Herbert Hoo- j¥er. Meantime it might have been possible to raise some cloudy show of opposition to the treaty and thus gain the ‘similitude of justified attack on the foreign policy of the administration. ‘The president, however, called the special session and | -only two prominent leaders have had the temerity to stand by their opposition to the pact— Senators Hiram President Hoover played a different brand of politics | % negotiating this treaty. He put some leading Dem- ats on the delegation which went to London to repre- ent the United States in'the conference. These men are placed in the position where partisanship must give radical verbiage. Probably much of the agitation is for home consumption. It makes the leaders seem like big men when they can palm off on their nation of mental gulls stuff thet should be “told to the marines.” Pravda, the soviet official organ, is at it again, urging the communist leaders in America fo prepare to foment revolution out of agricultural disadjustment, unemploy- ment, and the katzenjammer which lingers from last fall’s stock market debacle. It urges boring from within through labor unions to get the thing going. On the communist party in America, history, it says, imposes problems of decisive importance. If there be any doubt left for scoffing at the assertion that Russia is striving to promote trouble within this nation, to the end that it might bring it to the same conditions that now terrorize and afflict the'old empire of the czar, the proclamation of Pravda should disillusionize all. It says, of the communist organization in this country: | “The party must also emphasize in its agitation the urgent necessities of the workers and unite them in their revolutionary struggle. This mobilization of the masses should be based upon the full social insurance of all workers. “The party must strengthen its organization cells, or nuclei, in the factories. The American party now has 150,000 members, only 10 per cent of whom are organized within 140 factory cells, Under such conditions the party cannot successfully lead the activities of workers in the various enterprises. “The central problem of the party is to convert revolu- tionary trade unions into massed organizations with strong centers located in the factories. In deciding these Problems the party is confronted with the task of estab- lishing a collective ‘agitator, a propagandist and an or- ganizer, wnich is the central party press. “It is one of the fundamental problems of the Ameri- | can party to convert the newspaper Daily Worker into an actual militant massed newspaper which will be ‘a’ builder of the party and an organizer of the masses.” | Editoria] Comment | | Well, Whaddya Know About That! ; | ——__—________————¢ | but got another in a machine shop Today Is the {ts Boston, *, in 1845 he produced his sewing ma- Anniversary of | chine but, despite its obvious ad- vantages, met with bitter opposition. For the next nine years he was des- Perately poor. He made a trip to England in the hope of being able to interest capitalists. He was unsuc- cessful, being obliged to sell the Eng- was a miller, Howe went to Lowell to|lish rights to the machine for 250 work in a cotton machinery manu-/|pounds. factory. Two years later he lost his} When he returned to this country Job on account of the financial panic, jhe found that his patent had been HOWE’S BIRTH On July 9, 1819, Elias Howe, inven- tor of the sewing machine, was born in Spencer, Mass. After working for his father, who infringed and that many sewing ma- chines were already in use. He there- fore began action to establish nis patent. After five years of litigation he won his case and thereafter was one of the leading manufacturers in the United States. He shortly became @ millionaire. In 1867 he received the gold medal and the cross of the Le- gion of Honor at Paris. “The cultural calibre of our citizens is higher than it has ever been be- fore.”—Leon V. Solon. DANGERS OF THE PARLOR AND ploding gasoline BATH clothes; trying to Almost fifty per cent of all acci- dents occur in and around the home. As high as sixty per cent of the ac- cidents to women occur at home. One out of every eight deaths from falls is caused by falling on a floor; ‘one out of every twenty is from fall- ing off, or over a chair; one out of ten, out of a window. Most dangerous falls are on the sidewalk about the home or on rough over furniture; falls from ladders; falls from tables and chairs by people who were in too much of a hurry to get a ladder; falls out of beds; and falls from bathtubs, Mark Twain, the famous author, said that he would avoid “those deadly beds,” when told that most people die in them. But many people hasten their ends by rolling out of them onto the floor. The bed is now more dan- gerous than the bathtub. Bathrooms Possess peculiar perils of their own, People elip on the soap and fall in the'tub. They skid on the tiles. They scald themselves with hot water. They touch the electric lights while standing in the tub and are electrocuted.. Some with heart dis- ease faint in the tub and are drowned. Common accidents to children at home are: cutting the hands or feet with glass; playing with matches or setting the clothes on fire from a stove without a guard; swallowing while cleaning lift heavy objects; 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. and some people even hurt themselves while taking off their shoes. Most home accidents are strictly preventable. If you watch your step at home, keep a sharp eye out for falls, mind the stairs and the chairs, you will form the habit of being as careful at home as you are elsewhere, and may live to see the neighbors go- ing to the hospital for needed stitches, while you keep safe and sound. Staying up late at night, rushing off without any breakfast, drinking alcohol, poor hearing, poor eyesight, and mental fatigue will make you Prone to accidents. People are not alert at home and this is the big rea- son that so many dangerous accidents oceur while there. See if you cannot make it as safe to live at home as to travel on a train. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Oily 8! kin jon: Mrs. D. asks: “What would cause oily skin and hair when Plenty of vegetables and milk are tak- en, and sweets and pastry but sel- dom? How can this be overcome?” Answer: The butterfat from milk or open safety pins; swallowing poisons, such as medicines or rat poisons; scalding themselves by upsetting boiling water on their bodies. Many chikiren play with guns when “they didn’t know they were loaded,” and kill other children. Some die from infections from running nails into the feet. Many children’s fingers are smashed from sticking them into that crack behind the door or from catch- ing them in the doors of cars as they are slammed shut. Grown-up accidents include walk- ling off the porch in the dark; ex- BEGIN HERE TODAY JUDITH GRANT. beautifal young Greenwich Village 6 model and dancer, lives apartment with C’ LEY, known’ as 'Chi tiful girl whose impaired ever sin Bea ibtepus be who has inh ed Juggernaut (Duluth Herald) ! We grieve at the tragic superstition of the infuriated | people of another tongue and color who hurled them- | selves to death under the wheels of the car of Jugger- naut in the name of religion. But what about America with its complacent toleration of @ death rate from automobiles that, if it were a Plague, would throw it into a panic? The American Motorists’ association has just made Public some ghastly figures. Last year, for every hun- dred thousand registered automobiles in this country, 124.7 persons were killed in automobile accidents. This is the highest ratio-in the last ten years. ‘Tho death rate from this utterly needless source last year was 26.6 per hundred thousand; and if typhoid fever, for instance, were causing any such appalling death rate the whole nation would be enlisted in the fight against it. And in thevlast thirteen years 218,373 people have been killed by automobiles—a figure great enough to dignify a mejor war. . Writers’ Rewards (Miami Herald) “Good-by, Dolly Gray” and “Schooldays” are two pop- ular songs of a bygone day which everybody sang or at least remembers. They are still heard occasionally when a singer wants to carry his audience back to “the good ol’ days.” William Denight Cobb, who wrote them, died recently and left an estate of only $250. The will of the late Edward Stratemeyer, probated at New York about the same time, tells a different story. The author of the “Rover Boys” tales and count- less other juvenile books was able to make bequests total- ing half a million dollars. Song writing rewards, however popular the composi- tion, were relatively nothing in Cobb's heyday compared to what they are now. Even now the composer must look sharp if he is to keep others from getting the revenues which are rightfully his. A song once returned only what could be through shect music. Now automatic piano, phonograph, radio and the talkies are potential sources of royalty. Some of the writers of tha old-time Western “thrillers” which every schoolboy smuggled into the attic fared no better than Cobb. Stratemeyer was of the modern school which has, along with the secret of popular ap- peal, the business acumen to be paid handsomely for it. We see this in many fields. The “artist,” whether his medium bé the potboiler or the prize ring, has outgrown his traditional prodigality. The Hazards of Play (Minneapolis Tribune) A tabulation ef the deaths in the triple Fousth of July holiday ended Sunday shows it cost 410 lives in the Of these 178 were due to automobile accidents and 121 to drowning. Fireworks and toy pistols killed hades @ small percentage of the total. Airplane accidents, a heart attashs, lightning and other causts accounted for Back of this record are the important factors of high- way congestion and. a heat wave. On the whole the Hlauty 1s ee eae wage Ai eee condone re gn) Significantly enough it demonstrates that in the care- ful operation of motor cats there is still the most fruitful field of endeavor to the end the accident toll may be cut. The toll from drownings always mounts during periods of excessive heat. It is naturally greatest at unsupervised bathing places with strong swimmers frequent victims from failure to exercise ordinary safety precautions, As the holiday occasion stimulates the urge for play it imereases the accident hazard. The fatality record shows that holiday and week-end periods are times when motor car drivers and bathers should exercise special care for the safety of themselves and others. The tabulated returns of holiday and week-end fatal- ities are impressive. Yet, when the extent to which the public gives itself to the activities of midsummer play is considered, with the extra hazards involved. there is some assurance that everywhere the individual is ac- cepting that responsibility which is the most effective safeguard. mont she ning to marry Chammy. NOW GO ON WITA TRE STORY CHAPTER IV ‘UDY saw Steyne the next day. She met him at the entrance to their building, just as she was go- ing out. He said he had come to ask whether she and Miss Morley would go to the theater with him that night. Judy accepted eagerly. “Chummy’ll love that! She's mych better. She simply adores the theater; she'd like to go every night. You'll find that out when you're married!” She stopped suddenly. There ‘was something electric in the at- mosphere, She looked up at, Steyne and saw that the merry, boyish look had gone from his face. It looked stern, almost hard. ~ ~ “Miss Grant,” he asked, with a Kind of bald coldness in his voice, “why do you assume that Miss Mor- ley and I are going to be married?” Judy was too much taken aback to speak. To begin with, Steyne seemed to be angry with her—for what reason she could not possibly imagine. Then the mere idea of his marrying Chummy took her breath away. As she looked at him, she thought his face grew harder still. “But,” she burst out, “aren’t you and Chummy going to be married?” “There is no immediate prospect of it, as you can see,” he answered, speaking in an almost hostile tone, which hurt her, although she did not know why. “And when you assume it in front of other people —Dumont, for instance—it makes it, very awkward for me, Moreover, it is hardly fair to Miss Morley.” “Not fair to Chummy!” Judy cried, She was almost inarticulate. To ah outsider she might have ap- peared comic in her surprise. “But Chummy loves you with her whole. heart and soyl. She has loved you all these years. It is because of you that she is what she is—be- cause you went away and left her. Oh, what can you mean?” eee IN the young man’s face was a determination to get something over which he knew would be very unpleasant. No man likes to look a cad, particularly in the eyes of such a passionate little loyalist as Judy Grant. “Miss Grant,” he sald, “it 1s very painful for me to have to say this, but I must, or else I should be sail- ing under false colors. I am dread- fully sorry about Miss Morley, but you must see that at present the idea of marriage in her case is up- thinkable. And if she recove: how do you know that she wou! have—even feelings of friendship | toward met” “Miss Grant,” he asked, “wh ley and I are going to be “Feelings of friendship!” repeat- ed Judy. “Oh, how can you? If she knew you again, it would be with all her old love—of course it would! How can you think any- thing else?” “In, those circumstances it would be different,” Steyne remarked quietly. “If, as you say, I have the misfortune to be in a way respon sible for Miss Morley’s present con- dition—” “I say so!” interrupted Judy in- dignantly. “Everybody says 80. Ask anybody—Bastien Dumont, Michael Stone, Tony Leigh—any of them! When you left, she broke her poor heart. She had nothing left to live for. She just waited for you to come back, and you didn’t come. Then she fell ill and nearly died, and when got ter was—what she fs now. Everybody knew that it was for love of you!” Judy broke off with & sob in her throat. Steyne’s eyes were fixed on Judy's face beneath her shabby hat —that little flower face so lovely two he did not speak. trying to make up to hei darling Chummy!” while starches creain, and the oil from olives, avocados and such oily fruit may tend to promote the oily skin if these foods are used in excess. Stop all vegetable, animal and fruit fats for @ short time and then learn to-use the right amount which your system needs. Non-mucous-forming Foods Question: H. G. asks: “Will you kindly publish a list of non-mucous- forming foods? I have catarrh in the head and it has made me a bit hard of hearing in the left ear.” Answer: Fresh fruits and non- starchy vegetables can be truly con- sidered non-mucous-forming foods, and proteins may, by action in the body, nroduce more catarrhal mucous. | Goeee chemical |Those who have a tendency to:ca- |tarrh should use only small amounts }of starches and proteins, and also |<imited amounts of milk and cream. and HEATH HOSKEN | E bet-|I've spent it. And you never despite the cheap. vulgarity of its|about our relations, We never make-up. The single-hearted loyalty | were engaged to be married. Any blazing in the big purple eyes, the|such idea would ha laughing lips trembling over poor | lous. Chummy’s sorrows—they seemed to|She had quarreled with her rela-|at her, and she quickly turned affect him strangely. He was pale |tives, and was living on a pittance. [a under his tan, and for a moment or | We were very good friends, dreamed, that she would take it so | much to heart!” i eyes were startled. saying all this,” the young map added in a low voice, in which | shame mingled with eagern to not doubt Alan. that he spoke the truth; but it was all so utterly different from the tragedy with which she had been | living. tragedy. not like a sweetheart?” in 4 hope she never gets well!” to do you assume that Clarissa Mor- gi qT! young man’s face hardened again. “Miss Grant,” he said, “if Miss Morley were to recover, and if she really had feelings such as you de- scribe toward me, I suppose I should be in honor bound to ask her to be my wife; but that, un- fortunately, does not seem to be at all probable. The specialist and|q Doctor O'’Shane both give little hope. They talk of what they call ‘permanently enfeebled vitality,’ and say that in all practical things she is like a child.” “But they do say she might get better,” protested Judy. s“And, oh, I am bitterly disappointed! 1 con- sidered you were engaged to her. Do you think I would have taken that money from you? And now to m vi meant anything at all!” Steyne flushed. “As to the money, don’t think about that, Miss Grant,” he said. “As an old friend, I am entitled to help Miss Morley. It is a privilege; but you have been misinformed been ridicu- I was practically starving. 1 was awfully fond of her. She was one I ad course; but I never knew, I never it’s the truth, and—I wanted you care a great deal for her, and I want to help her all I can.” All that part of my life seems like can do no harm.” sullenly. along, because you mightn’t know how to manage her.” and we'll dine at Ticino’s, shall we?” thought you were anofher kind of blow!” ( Belabata made no actual prog- no longer complained of feeling at more animated, though she looked very frail. Steyne’s companionship had mych to do with it. He constantly took the two girls out, and people ob- serving them remarked on what a happy trio they were. that Alan had spoken the truth. They were ostensibly very good friends, be alone he felt a certain smolder- ing hostility, She could see that Chummy had not the faintest idea of his identity, not the remotest thought of marriage with bim, but she still felt that he ought to have claimed her immediately and made her his wife. That, Judy felt, wa: her, woman if the knowledge had not “why,” Judy went on, her volcelof the brightest girls I ever. met,|come to her and She was terrified, still quivering, “I thought, when Bj and very clever, but there was heard you had come back, that it|never any talk of marriage. We would be all right, that you would| were awfully sympathetic. take Chummiy away and marry her|mired her and at once, and spend all your life in|loved her in a Way—as we all did. 1 poor|I knew she was fond of me, of Steyne’s' face was always before her, with that something bebind loved her—yes,|the laughter in his eyes—some- thing that thrilled her and made her afraid, Judy made no reply. Her big \ “I do hope you'll forgive me for know.” Still Judy was silent. She did Indeed, she knew | It made it an even worse “Then you don’t love Chummy— “No,” he answered; “but I do “You don’t love her?” Judy said if to herself. “Miss Grant, I was only @ boy. dream now.” “Oh, poor Chummy!” cried Judy, a burst of passion. “I almost There was,a pause. Then Steyne asked in his ordinary voice: “You will come to the play to ight?” “No—no! How can we?” “But you say Miss Morley enjoys Honestly, doesn’t she “But it's “Are you sure? She likes me as friend. She loves the theater. It “All right,” agreed Judy half “I don’t want Chummy miss a treat; and I must come “I'll call for you at seven sharp, “Chummy would love that.” “All right, the nd—please for- lve me, Miss Grant!” Her eyes dropped before his. “I don’t suppose there’s anything forgive,” she muttered. “I just an, and that it was all coming ight for Chummy. It’s a bit of a ress toward recovery, but she One thing was noticeable, ny rate—she was decidedly Without doubt, Alan By now Judy had tacitly granted but when the, happened to Once Judy caught Alan looking Something dawned upon She would not have been a way, That night she slept badly. (To Be Continned) | Paralytic Stroke | Question: P. J. H. writes: “Four years ago I had a paralytic stroke which left my left eye about blind. Is there any known remedy that will Gissolve the clot?” Answer: The surest remedy for dissolving a blood clot is to take a fairly long fast. During the fast the blood re-absorbs the deposited mass of coagulated blood, and the pressure of this clot is thus removed from the brain or spinal cord. This is the way paralysis can be cured. I have known ‘of some cases getting well without fasting, where the blood was able to absorb. the clot while the patient was on a restricted diet. There are no remedies which are effective—only fasting and diet. Pyelitis Question: M. R. asks: “What are |the symptoms of Pyelitis?. Is it pos- jSible to have it at intervals for a pe- riod of years? Is it curable? If so, what is the cure?” Answer: Those with pyelitis usually develop a fever, but the most charac- teristic diagnostic point is the pres- ence of pus in the urine. It is often associated with other disorders. The treatment would depend upon the findings from @ thorough diagnosis. (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell Syndleate, Inc.) —_——______—_—"—_—_"® | KFYR { @ 'URSDAY, JULY 10 llocycles—545.1 Meters: €:06—-Dawn reveille. Early Risers ¢ lub. hes. —Organ program: Clara Morris. 0—Bismarck Tribune news and . weather; luncheon program. 5—Voice of the Wheat Pool. 5—Grain markets: high, low, and close. p ES Farm notes. 1:45—Bismarck Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock. 2:06—Musical matinee. 2:30—Siesta hour: Good News radio magazine. : )0—Stoc: ind bonds. 5—Bismarck Tribune sports items. 5—Bismarck Tribune news. 5—World Bookman. 0—Time signal. 5—Baseball scores. Pata 3: success of the country, and re

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