The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 19, 1931, Page 4

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BISMARCK TRIBUNE An Independent Newspaper |. -THB STATE'S OLDES1 NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by Ihe Bismarck Tribune Company. Bis- arck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | = second clas mail matter. eorge D. Mann .............. President and Publisher Px Subscription Rates Pay: by carrier, per year ... . vaily by mail per year (in Bismarck) .. vaily by mail per year .* . Gn state, outside Bismarck) tally by mail outside of North Di Yeekly by mail in state, per year . * eekly by mai) ir state, three years ... eekly by mail outside of North Dakota, Der year ... Veekl7 by mail tn Canada per year Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press _ The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or ot. otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the deal news of spontaneous origin published herein All Iso reserved. eit ‘foreign Represent i SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) | Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. | CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON | ‘Lost With All Hands’ | +4 There is a grim fascination to the mental picture | ‘hich arises whenever an airplane vanishes on an ocean | Aight. One pictures a dark and empty ocean, with mile- | tional Safety council, 32,500 Americans were killed in| ong waves throwing up white crests to gleam in the lackness; a frail airplane, soaring above, faltering sud- | enly, dipping down, plowing into the water—and then, | fter a moment, not a ripple or a bit of wreckage to! how what'has happened. The picture is unpleasant, but | + Sticks in one’s mind. Probably it is the loneliness of it that fascinates us. We | Ml nourish the hope that when our time comes to go/ ve can go decently, surrounded by people we love; as if, erhaps, the infinite loneliness of a man who is stepping ut of this world could be mitigated a little by the pres- nee of those who must stay behind. And to think of | oing alone. in mid-ocean, with only the storm-clouds for} ritnesses—it is a dark picture. | But human beings, who are afraid of death, are also | dventurous; and as the years pass there will be many | irplanes lost at sea, with eternal mystery to cover the | ate of their occupants. And this will be true, no mat- | er how nearly perfect the airplane finally becomes; for | he sea is cruel, and from the days of the Phoenicians | sas given many, many men lonely burials. _ Indeed, if it is morbidly fascinating to think of the dis- | ppearance of one airplane in mid-ocean, how much | nore so is it to think of the long, long list of ships that lave gone to sea and have never made a landfall. There s a whole picture gallery there, of endless length, done n the manner of Dore. That phrase, “Lost with all hands,” is the caption for nost of these pictures. Perhaps the gallery begins with | Jiysses, who got into his galley to sail beyond the sun- | et, and who was never seen again; and the early Roman | nerchants, who crept out beyond Gibraltar to sail up to | 3ritain for tin, lacking charts and compass, must have sontributed many pictures. Then, in a later age, there vere the Venetians, who sent clumsy caravals to Con- | itantinople and Egypt to tap the Oriental trade routes ud the Vikings, who colonized Greenland and sailed lown the American coastline to Chesapeake Ba: ind, a ittle later, the Portuguese, coasting down Africa and joubling the Cape of Good Hope, and the Spaniards, | earning how treacherous and destructive were the sud- | jen hurricanes of the Carribean; and then the Dutch, | who took round-bowed ships past Jeva Head, and the | | 3nglish, who hunted the Northwest Passage, and sent xeA-rovers out to harry the Spaniard. The gallery is a long one. And when a white mono- | sane sails off over the ocean and is never seen again,! we are simply getting another dark picture, fit for un- | somfortable dreams, late at night, to add to a series that | 2egan long ages ago. Autos and the Parade i The inauguration of a governor is ordinarily a thing that we can take in our stride, so to speak; but when} Gifford Pinchot takes office as governor of Pennsylvania) an January 20 he will introduce a feature that appeals| to us mightily. He will ride to the capitol in an old- style victoria, drawn by horses; the first time in 26 years! that Pennsylvania's inaugural has not seen the gov- ernor going to work in an automobile. Just what this may portend is an open question; but! at least it serves to restore to the inaugural something| of the old-time holiday pomp and circumstance that is So often missing from such affairs in these drab days. There is no doubt about it—a horse-drawn rig carries more style than an automobile. Of course, there are automobiles and automobiles, and some of those $15,000! creations do look pretty imposing; but an automobile! can't prance or strut, and it has no iron-shod hooves} to make inspiring clack-clack noises on the pavement. It is altogether too business-like and efficient. In fact, it is this very efficiency of the au‘omobile that unfits it for a place in any parade. The au‘omobile is primarily a device for taking people from one place to! another at a maximum of comfort and a minimum of time. And neither comfort nor the time element can be considered in planning a proper parade. All hands are| expected to be uncomfortable, from the parade marshal) (seated on a horse for the first time, probably, in a decade) to the high private in the rear rank whose bun- ions are bothering him. And everyone knows that the crowning glory of a parade is the length of time it takes it to pass a given point. Fut everybody in automobiles, and‘ the given point loses all significance. So, indeed, does the parade. From any standpoint of modern efficiency, the parade is an obsolete vestige of 4 more leisurely era, anyway. If we lived up to our creed of efficiency we would not have any parades, A new gov-| ernor would simply get into a taxi at his hotel door,| Tide to the state house, take the oath and go to work,| with no useless fuss. | Tf, then, the parade is simply a device by which we| an indulge our fondness for out-o-date ceremonies, why | mix an auto up with it? Mr. Pinchot has the right idea. | Let. us get back to the standards of our ancestors. Call! out the militia and doll ‘cm up in uniforms of the style} of 1812; get a lusty band, firm of leg and sound of lung; | _ put the marshal on a high-spirited horse, and stick the | ‘governor in an open carriage, with plumed horses and a| juniformed driver and footman. If we are to havc} ‘warades, let's have real ones. © The Disclosures in New York > One of the main reasons why crime pays, when con- 4 d on s large scale, has been shown by the recent ‘investigation of New York judges. «According to the New Yorker, which sums up the evi- en ite issue of December .20, charges of graft or of a ens and four city magistrates. In other words, seven /out of the hundred judges in the largest city in the world Hits tetieved to. have had illegal connection’. This | jrecord is illustrative of'a situation that probably exists fC other communities in this country. | ¢ ‘we have well-meaning reformers optimistic cnough that anti-gun laws to prevent the law-abiding | usual because of the preponderance of this season's mnild- | and other structures, and he gets about better because | it is of benefits, and he has come to the conclusion that crime situation. Sure punishment for the guilty instead of restrictive legislation for the innocent would seem to be the better course of procedure. The Corn Sugar Ruling Secretary of Agriculture Hyde's ruling that it is no longer neccessary for manufacturers of food products to indicate on the, label the fact that they have been sweet- | ened with corn sugar hes aroused plenty of proicst. Scec- | purer and swecter than it act was first passed, and th to agriculture, has only partially answered the com- | plaints. An editorial in the current issue of the Journal of the American Medical association discusses the question from ‘the standpoint of 1 science. It points out that | because corn sugar has improved so greatly in the last | decade; but it adds: out reasonable dec! tion, so that the purchaser may be laure. warned, the gain will be more than offset by the loss.” This is a timely warning. The whole purpose of the’ Food and Drugs act was to enable the purchaser to) make sure exactly what he was buying. It is to be hoped that this fact will not be forgotten at Washington. The Death Toll Rises Still America’s automobile fatality toll goes up. In 1920, according to figures just issued by the Na- traffic accidents, And even this figure is not quite com-/ plete, for it represents statistics gathered in only 32/ states, covering about 75 per cent of the country’s popu-| lation. The total death toll, consequently, was some-| what higher. | The one gleam of hope lies in the fact that the rate! of increase was lower than usual—the smallest, numer-| ically, for any year since 1920, with the exception of 1924./ But this is cold comfort. The figures are damning evi-| dence of our incapacity to handle the automobile as it) should be handled. Editorial Comment Fdltorlals printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published without regard || to whether they agree or disagree with The Trib- |} une's policies. | Dogged Mr. Legge (St. Louis Post-Dispatch) If the farm board does not prove its case it will not be due to feeble leadership. No more dogged man than; Chairman Legge has appeared in our national life since| Grover Cleveland. Mr. Legge went before the joint ap- propriations committee in Washington. The result is that the board is back in the market with another $150,000,000 from the half-billion-dollar revolving fund. It; wheat holdings have mounted to approximately 115,000,000 bushels. It has 1,300,000 bales| of cotton and $37,000,000 of the new appropriation will | go for more cotton. The American Cotton Shippers’ as- | sociation protests that the policies of the board are un-| sound, and the middleman everywhere is loosing that| same bloody yell which did the house ef Macbeth terrify. But in the lexicon of Legge there is no such word as} leggo. We confess to admiration for him. j Sev daria eames Unusual Weather (Minneapolis Journal) i If the temperature happens to fall below zero on any} of Minnesota's October days that slavish usage of the calendar still makes us call January dates, it is just an- other token of the reform that California sponsored, | Jong ago. | For a below zero morning is unusual, in this state. | The Indian summer that prevailed so long as io confound} a January thaw, has become habitual to the Minnesotan. | He may see temperatures that are thoroughly wintry,! according to the old definition, but they will remain un- ness. Not only are extremely cold days, or snowy days, un- usual in terms of weather bureau records, which follow the old methcd of instrumental measurement, but they| are unusual in the human sense. For man has improved; his resistance to what used to be forbidding weather. He dresses more sensibly, he builds himself better houses he has better agencies of transport. So, when extremes in temperature and precipitation momentarily impede} him, he gets baek to normal in almost no time. Hiberna-} tion is entirely of the p: in this Northwest, where ence the word “blizzard” used to be an affright and a shudder. The thermometer, then, really cuts a figure no longer in Minnesot scheme of things, The weather bureau may play with its data to its own technical content, but people outdoors-will prefer to look upon occasional tem: perature changes with equanimi! Thanks to Nature’s moderation and man’s better ways of living, the cold and snow that used to figure in the mental picture. of Minnesota are unusual in the same connotation that California delights to employ. . The Baumes Law . . (Minneapolis Tribune) Chief Justice Wilson, speaking before the pardon board! Monday, urged the repeal of the Baumes law. His Studies of the law and his observations have convinced | him that the law is prqduetiye pf more injustices than} society would be better off without this law on the| Statute books. The Baumes law came into existence’ in New York state with great cheering and jubilation on the part of those seeking to combat the rapidly increasing forces of crime. The law provided life sentences for those who had been convicted of a certain number of felonies. It was hoped that the effect of this law would be to deter the professional criminal by making the hazards of his erim- inal career cumulatively dangerous. It was felt that the professional criminal with three convictions of felony behind him would hesitate a long time before he com- mitted the fourth inasmuch as the fourth would auto- matically carry a life sentence in the penitentiary. While in theory the law seemed to be almost perfect, | in practice it developed weaknesses. When it went into effect in New York state, the nation for a time was re- galed with stories of the exodus of crooks from that state who had decided to transfer their activities to. other states where such a law was not enforced. But as time went on, it did not appear that there was any appreciable decrease of felonies in New York state, The criminal courts and the police of that state seem to be just as busy now as ever they were. Perhaps the most conspicuous failure of the law in practice were the “life for a pint” cases. The confining of a person in a penitentiary for the remainder of his} life for some violation of the prohibition law is repugnant to the common sense of justice and there have been many other cases where the cumulative sentence in- volved in the Baumes law was entirely out of proportion in severity to the actual seriousness of the final offense. If the enforcement of criminal statutes has proven anything it has ven that excessive severity of punish- ment reacts in favor of the offender. Juries, confronted with the fact that a conviction for a comparatively minor offense involves a life sentence, will simply refuse to convict no matter how overwhelming the evidence of the Prosecution may be. * ‘ If the severity of punishment could put an end to criminal activities, crime would long since have ceased to be a problem. It would be a very simple matter to make statutory provisions for the severest kind of pun- ishment. More difficult answer to find than that of mere punish- ment. Punishment is no doubt a deterrent to some who mental fact. The Baumes law has had no observable effect in the reduction of crime.on the part of the professional crim- inals. It has, on the other hand, its cases of conspicuous injustice. In of these facts its retention on the retary Hyde's assertion that corn sugar is now much’ s when the Food and Drugs t this ruling will be a boon | | many of the old objections to corn sugar no longer apply, | | “However, if such a decision should in any way under- | mine the purpose of the Food and Drugs act, if it should ghts of republication of’ ell-other matter herein are| Courage sophistication and adulteration of food with-| Society's conflict with crime has a much|- tion Bureau are at your service. You are invited to call upon it as often as you please. It is being maintained solely to serve you. What question can we answer for you? There is no charge at all except two cents in coin or stamps for return postage. Ad- dress your letter to the Bismarck Tribune Information Bureau, Fred- [eric J. Haskin, Director, Washington, D.C. Q. What study average is required of football players at Notre Dame? A. MeP. A. At the University of Notre Dame football students are required to achieve the same study average as any other student of the university. The student athlete who is on proba- tion, for having failed in more than a third of his school work, is not per- mitted to p&rticipate. in intercolleg- iate athletics during the time of his Probation. @. Are there more eighteen-hole cr more nine-hole golf courses in the United States? J. V. M. A, The American Golfer says that as nearly as it can check there are something like 4700 to 4800 golf courses in the United States. Ap- proximately 60 per cent of these are nine-hole courses. Q. What are the names of the Finger Lakes in New York State? J. A. M. A. There are, strictly eleven of these lakes. They are: Conesus, Hemlock, Canadice, Hon- eoye, Canandaigua, Keuka, Seneca, Cayuga, Owasco, Skaneateles, and Otfisco. They vary in area from 66.7 square miles to .97 square mile. speaking. Q. Why is Delaware called the Blue Hen State? C. E. M. A, Delaware is known as the Blue Hen State. from the notoriety that one of her native sons, Capt. Cald- well, acquired in the Revolutionary war for his love of cock fighting, and also his well Grilled men known in idea was that a blue hen produces the best cocks. Q. Did the government spend more money than usual on roads last year? ; i A.D. that expenditures in connection with Federal-aid highway construction in the calendar year 1930 exceeded those for any other calendar year. During the year the Federal Government paid to the states as its share on com pleted Federal-aid work $96,355,890, Loo OUT, MAs OCoNT BUMP NoTHini't IM OvuT tT OuMP ‘EM | WW TH HITCHEN ~ I WAS EATN A FEW CRACKERS IN fa statute books only inereases the opportimities for in- justice without any compensating increase in the effec: tiveness of society's war against the out and out criminal. the army as the game cocks. His! The resources of our free Informa-!an increase of approximately $19,- | pees or 25 per cent more than in| A. The Bureau of Public Roads say | C. ME,ER High Voltage! Q. How much did the journey cost | when Columbus discovered America? R. DN. id A. The total cost of Columbus’ first expedition, including the three ships, the wages of the crew, stores and pro- visions, was 1,167,542 maravedis, or about $4,580. e ~ Q, What is onomatopoetic? H. W. A. Words which are formed to represent the sounds which they de- | scribe are \onomatopcetic. Rumble, | ¥ hiss, buzz, splash, and murmur are examples. Q. What proportion of the women who are entitled to vote, exercise Hae franchise in this country? E. . A A. It is estimated that the num- ber of women voters availing them- selves of the suffrage in the last two elections has been between 25 and ee cent of the potential woman vote. g @. Please name the fruits whose acids pass through the system un- changed. M. L. G. A. The foods which contain ben- zoic acid'are namely, plums, prunes, and cranberries. They are acid forming because benzoic acid is not oxidized or broken down in the pro- cess of digestion. Other fruits, even! though they taste acid, are not acid} forming in the blood because their acid content is oxidized. Q. At what age does the head of | the normal person cease to grow? J. L. A. The human head reaches ma- turity when’ the person is between the ages of 18 and 22. \ ‘ Q. What is a snow snake? A. T. A. It is a long slender shaft, curved slightly at one end, to be launched so as to glide endwise over a surface of ice or snow—a game which was popular with the American Indians and is still played to some extent lay. Q. In what earthquake was the greatest number of lives lost? G. A. A. The earthquake of Tokyo, Ja- pan, September 1, 1923, was regarded as the greatest and most disastrous in history. The area involved ex- tended 140 miles east and west and 110 miles north and south. The loss of life was estimated at 139,000; the |Her name was Nike. This statue if BARBS | WELL RIGHT HERE 1S WHERE You'RE GOING “To TAVIN' THESE CAOMBS |] GET rT OFF Your CHEST — MAKE A THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JANUARY 19, 193) citigen from owning firearms would help remedy the| © 1926 Mecov CARROTS AND CARROTIN ‘The carrot has long enjoyed a repu- tation for being a wholesome and healthful vegetable, but ‘nowadays clever cooks are learning many new ‘and attractive ways of préparing it. A long time ago the carrot leaves or green fronds were used to ornament the heads of Court ladies. We do not now use the carrot leaves in this way, but we often use shredded carrots and leaves to dress up and ornament other foods. For example, a few shredded carrots in 9 vegetable salad miake it much more attractive to the eye and more tasteful. While carrots play an important role in salads, they are still at home in stews, soups, meat loaves, puddings and a variety of other dishes. Fortunately, the is one vegetable which is obteinable prac- tically the entire world over, even during seasons when other vegetables are scarce, number injured at 125,000, and 235,- 000 were believed missing. The prop- erty loss was placed at $932,500,000. Q. What does the statue, The Winged Victory, represent? J. A. G. A. The so-called Victory of Samo- thrace is the Goddess of Victory ex- cavated by French archaeologists who were at work between 1863-67. The Goddess of Victory was repre- sented by the Greeks as having wings. which was the great prize of the French archaeologists is a beautiful example of 4th century Attic sculp- ture? It was first set up by Deme- trius Poliorcetes about 305 B. C. iii cl Tt Today Is the | Anniversary of R. E. LEE’S BIRTH On Jan. 19, 1807, Robert E. Lee, commander-in-thief of the Confed- erate armies of the Civil War, was born in Westmoreland county, Va., the son of @ Revolutionary War vet- eran, At 18, he entered West Point, grad- uated second in his class and received Carrots may be classed with the non-starchy vegetables when they are small, a time when they also have the sweetest flavor and are the most ten- der. They contain the alkaline ele- ments of iron, lime, sodium, mag- nesium and potash, and also from 5% to 10% of sigar. The yellow coloring matter which they contain is called catrotin, which is sometimes extracted from them and used to color butter or margarine, This yellow coloring mat- ter is also contained in sweet potatoes and yellow squash and is so closely al- lied to vitamin A that it is almost in- separable, If a large quantity of carrots or other foods containing this yellow pig- ment are used, there is a tendency to tinting the skin to a slight yellowish color, especially the palms of the hands. This is so slight as not to de- tract from one’s appearance but seems to be useful, especially with people who do not tan readily. In buying carrots, choose the small- est you can find, for they have the least starch and the best flavor. It is better not to scrape the carrots, but to wash and scrub them well, as this method saves the valuable mineral elements which lie just insidethe skin. Unless you are preparing them for a soup, cook in the minimum amount of water, Butter serves very well for a seasoning. Carrots combine well with any other food. Carrots are now canned, and if you prefer, you may buy them: in this form. They are equally wholesome either cooked or raw. They are so mfid and sweet that they are one of the first vegetables which may be mashed and fed to babies. There are many good reasons why carrots should be served often. They bi a@ commission in the engineer corps. After the Mexican War, in which he was repeatedly promoted for distin- guished services, he became superin- tendent of West Point. His next service was as cavalry commander on the Texas border. He was recalled to Washington in March, 1861, when seven states had formed the Southern Confederacy. A month later Lee sent in his resignation, and, within two days, was made comman- der-in-chief of the military forces at Richmond. After successfully leading his forces | in the early days of the war, Lee fi- nally yielded to the superior armies of Grant, surrendering his army at Ap- pomattox courthouse, Virginia. Lee then accepted the presidency of Washington college, now Washington and Lee, at Lexington, Va., in which post he remained until his death in 1870, A British scientist says the universe will some day explode. Already you can hear poppings ae Chicane, * ‘The market may give some inves- tors a pain, but even holders of seats|® on the Stock, Exchange have had to stand for it. a ee After. all, muses the office sage, there is only a letter's difference be- tween a resolution and a revolution. ek * You may talk about your Dawes plan, Young plan and Five-Year plan, | OUT OUR WAY By Williams | CLEAN GREAST. OF I(T. BY THE TIME YOu GET, THERE, “YoU OONT NEED! CLEANING , BUT THE HOUSE Does. TRwiilams Co] ©1901 By NEA semvice, tne, tinue to be the Installment plan. . * * * An opera is to be opened at Palm Beach this winter, says a news item. There should ve no lack of divas there, certainly, ip ce Se | Quotations 1 If there is one thing the American likes, it is a good thumping, particu- larly of his neighbor.—J, Brooks At- kinson. eek ‘There are politicians who persist in the illusion that they are alive—Be- nito Mussolini. * * OK ‘Whoever admits that he is too busy to improve his methods has ack- nowledged himself to be at'the end of his rope. And that is always the sad- dest predicament which anyone can get into—J. Ogden Armour. * OK The world at present is divided into two camps, the camp of democracy and the camp of militarism. — Lord Astor. * * * These spinach diéts and the “apple day” admonishments make me laugh.—Beatrice Lee, “Miss United States for 1930.” * OR We may talk all. we want about feminism and woman’s important Place in the business world, but we still want homes and ahildren—Anna Steese Richardson. , ss & “The idea that we shouldn't say anything unkind about the dead is a thoroughly false one.”—George Bern- ard Shaw. x * * . “The spirit of adventure is a state of mind rather than a matter of SEDER) —Uornae Peace aal “After all, who can object to a fair, honest, carnest and lawful enforce- ment of a‘law of the land.”—1 = bition Die Wetec “Abraham Lincoln had a library. If he had no possessed a few. goéd his great mind would never have expanded as it did and we should never have discovered Amer- ica’s American.”—Dr. Wil- liam E. Barton, biographer of Lin- coln. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) FOLEY-GRAM Coughs and colds grow worse at nightfall. One coughing disturbs the entire family. It pays to keep a bot- tle of genuine Foley's and on hand. ‘First doses a clogged air passages. Ease difficult breathing. Stop coughs at onte. Sedative and comfo) without opiates. Mildly laxative. Ask for genuine Foley's, Family Size. real thrift buy. Sold everywhere.—Adv. | [" Sticker Solution ; LOSE STAMPED ABORESSEOD ENVELOPE FOR REPLY ce HeACTH ‘SEAVICE - LOS. ANGELES: add color. to the meal, they do not cost much, they provide alkaline ash in the body which counteracts acidity, personal questions on diet addressed to him, care of Enclose a ‘stamped addressed envelope for reply. Provide iron needed for our blood, mineral for teeth and bone. They af- ford bulk, counterbalance the heavier foods, and last, but not least, they have a bland, sweet taste which al- most everyone enjoys. ‘Tomorrow I will give you some car- rot recipes. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Removing Thyroid Gland Question— R. G. asks: “When all of the thyroid gland is removed does the patient become prematurely se- nile? I am deeply concerned about my daughter who was operated on for goitre. Her health has been failing ever since. She has suffered a com- plete nervous breakdown, followed by fits of insanity and despondency. She has become gray, shuns amusements, is often fretful, and has developed the slow movements of a very old person. I do so want your advice.” Answer.—If all of the thyroid gland is removed the patient generally dies within a short time, but if only a por- tion of it is removed it is possible that enough remains to supply the need. However, @ lack of thyroid secretion _ does produce premature ageing and may cause some mental disturbances. Your daughter may have some other condition as well as the thyroid trouble, but, of course, it is impos- sible for me to diagnose her case without first having the opportunity of examining her. Nursing Mother Question. —Mother asks: “Are there any rules for a nursing mother to follow in regard to her diet?” Answer.—There are many rules which are important for a nursing mother to follow. She has a double duty: first, the obligation to her child, and then the duty to herself to keep well at this time and avoid injury to her system caused through feeding her baby from her own blood without supplying 4t with the necessary ele- ments to replace and repair tissues. I have written many special articles on this subject and will be glad to send them to you if you will write again, giving your full name and ad- dress on a large stamped envelope. ut the most popular of all will —____——" KFYR -—_: ey TUESDAY, JANUARY 20 ‘paid Hilecycles—045.1 Meters 3 ‘Farm flashes. 10—Weather report. 7:15—Farm reporter in Washiy(gtou. 30—Old-time music. is 7:45—Meditation period. 8:00—Around the Town: Radjo floor- , walker, 9:00—Sunshine hour. 10:00—Opening grain markets; weath- er report. 10:10—Aunt Sammy: daily household chats. 10:57—Arlington time signals, 11:00—Grain markets, 11:15—German program, 11:30—Organ program: Clara Morris. 12:00—Grain markets; Bismarck ‘Tribe d weather; lunch- P.M, eon progra 2:00—Grain markets; high, low, and élose; Bismarck Tribune hews, weather, and St. Paul livestock, 2:15—John Law, singing evangalist, 2:30—Siesta hour: Good News radio magazine, 30—Auction bridge game No. 9, 00—Music. Yorld Bookman, ncle Paul's kiddie time, tocks and bonds. lara Morris. 6:30—Studio program, ewscasting. 0—American farm program, ‘Legislative tidbits, 7:4§—Robert Bruce, cornet soloist; Belle Mehus, 8:00—2illeMehus, accompanist, WAE VETERAN DIES St. Paul, Jan. 19—(#)—Dr. B. T. Green, 60, for 30 years a practicing Physician at Brookings, 8. D., and commander of the Brookings Ameri- can Legion post, died at a hospital here where he underwent an opera- tion last. week. During the World war he served as a major in a med- ical corps. He was active in obtaining aid for disabled World war veterans, TRAVELER ONLY THREE Liverpool, England, Jan. 19—(7)— Olga Karnowiz, three years old, is making a trip of 4,500 miles all alone, from an uncle in Poland to her moth- er in Montreal. On her coat as she boarded the Laurentic was a tag in Polish, German and English telling about her. Cuba’s central highway is termed the largest single project of high- type road construction. It is over 700 miles long. \ FLAPPER, FANNY SAYS. Many good-tocking girls get that way from many gool looks in a mirror, > Mrs worth chapt been matrc of th name Senn

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