The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 30, 1931, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUN + An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDSSI NEWSPAPER (Bstablished 1873) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. b., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second clas mai! matter. George D. Mann ... Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year .,....... Daily by matl per year (in Bismarck) . Daily by mat! per year (in state, outside Bismarck) Dally by mai) outside of North Dakota Weekly by mail in state, per year Weekly by mail in state, three years Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, per year .. hidebeey Weekl7 by mail in Canada. per year . Member Audit Burean of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the $7.20 local news of spontaneous origin published herein All) tights of republication of al] 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 IN Frontier ‘Justice’ Lynching places a blot upon any community or state where it occurs. It is an indefensible and shameful ab- rogation of authority in @ society which rules that law, rather than passion, should take its course. Brutality of a crime which arouses just indignation and heats de- sire for revenge and reprisal, often ends in lynching, espe- cially in such @ law-abiding and peaceful district as that on the Little Missouri in McKenzie county, where capital | crimes are few. That is the land of the cowboy, whcre not so miany years ago “hoss”stealing or cattle “rustlin’” meant the rope. There is always the “makings” of a “necktie” par- ty in the great open spaces, where crimes such as young Charles Bannon committed are almost unknown. It is easy to understand how the McKenzie county communt- ty felt when the peaceful Haven farm was turned into a bloody shambles and the guilty youth finally confessed with what emounted almost to bravado, Here scemed the perfect setting for frontier “Justice.” ; The murderer had been returned to the scene of his crime only a short time before his “feet were dancing in the air.’ His removal from the strong Williams county jail to the shack of a “hoosegow” at Shafer would seem to have invited this lynching, but those night riders who perpetrated a fresh crime to punish an old one belicved their ghastly mission justified. Some law-abiding citizens in many sections probably will say, with a shrug of their shoulders: “He got what he had coming to him.” But the use of lynch law is revolting. It is shocking nd, condoned, it encourages a brutality which in time would engulf society itself and reverse the wheels of progress. Administration of punishment without authority of law is as old as the hills, but such action never advanced civilization; never corrected laws delays and only en- courages lawless concert of action. Sometimes lynch- Jaw is demanded by public opinion, but how fallible that ruide is we all know. More often the application of this remedy is the rash act of a small minority. It is to’ be hoped such was the case in this McKenzie county lynch- ing. Lyrching {s peculiarly an American institution. Lynch Jaw is a term loosely applied to such forms of rough jus- tice. Its application flourished in pioneer days when probably more justice was meted out by that weapon than through strictly legal channels, but it is rare in North Dakota. There have been other lynchings, how- ever, ang in pioneer days probably many desperadoes and ttle thieves were “taken for a ride.” But any necessity that may have existed in carlier times for this type of rough and ready justice has long since passed in this state and nation. Generally speak- ing, publio sentiment demands legal rather than illegal punishment. even for the most brutal crime. Courage of a Mother Samuel Cohen came rushing home the other day, and tossed $1,759 in his mother's lap. i “We have plenty of money now, mother,” he said. just robbed a bank, my first.” There was a wide smile on his face. A happy, tri- umphant grin. In exactly the same way he had probably told his mother that his team had won the baseball game, or he had made a dollar shoveling snow. But his mother didnt smile. She gazed a little won- deringly at the 18-year-old boy who was her son, and who so proudly had given her the spoils of his holdup. Then she sent him away. She found a paper sack, put the money in it, and turned down the top so the coins wouldn't roll out: After that she put on her hat and coat, and went to the police station. She told on her boy because she had decided that it was the only way that she could save him. There are some who say that it was the wrong thing, to do; that justice becomes a paltry issue when love is at stake. But every step of the walk the face of this ‘woman's son probably went with her. She remembered how he had skipped along at her side, holding tightly to her hand when he was three and four and five; how proud he had been when he was old enough to cross the Street alone; how he watched the traffic lights for her just a few years later. It is safe to say that she didn’t walk alone and her heart wasn’t cool and calculating. It was aching and dull. And it struggled with a conscience that wouldn't let her turn back. Her son had broken trust with her. He had started off on the wrong path. No mother wants to admit before the world that her son has fatled; that he has broken trust and taken moncy that is not his. Mothers like to hold their heads up proudly as they say that Johnnie has received a raise or Harry has been promoted. The very fact that young Cohen's mother did her duty so fearlessly is proof enough that she believed it was a necessary step to help her boy. She was thinking of him and his future, not of herself and her pride. So she put the money in a paper bag and gave it back It must have stung her hands as she stuck the Lills in, listened to the jingle of the silver. It must take courage to be a mother. No ‘Ks’ in Sakakawea Out here in North Dakota we spell it Sakakawea and the children are taught that spelling in our schools. Nevertheless it is wrong, for the national geographic board, which has the last word in such matters, spells it Sacajawea. Not a “K” appears in the official name of the woman who helped Lewis and Clark win the North- west for the United States. ‘The board’ ruled on the name in selecting it as the title for a peak in the Washakie National Forest of Wyo- ming. The mountain is 13,607 feet high and the board asserts the name was given it in recognition of “a Sho- shone Indian woman, whose resourcefulness and courage contributed greatly to the success of the Lewis and Clark ition, 1804-1908. ‘The mountain is in the locality where she was buried and where there still exist some “T've sosseeees President and Pubibes | 5| Only provide $10 for each of them; and no matter how ‘00! Why Money Is Needed Chairman John Barton Payne's statement that close to a million Americans will be receiving aid from the Red Cross in another fortnight emphasizes the importance |of speedy public contribution to the organization's re- lief fund. The $10,000,000 which the Red Cross is asking looks like @ good deal of money. But when you analyze the situation in the light of Mr. Payne's statement it is ob- vious that it must be the bare minimum with which the | Red Cross can function, | If a million people are to be helped, that fund will | carefully you handle it, you can't buy a whole winter's | supply of fuel, groceries and warm clothing for $10. Mr. Payne's statement should be all that is needed to make the nation over-subscribe its quota in record time. A Princess Marries | ‘That recent wedding of the Osage Indian princess, | Who was “bought” by the bridegroom for 48 ponies, a silk | flag and a new automobile, scems to us to have been an extremely fitting and proper pageant. It was a ceremony carried out in the old Indian tradition, with the auto- | mobile as the only modern note, and it made interesting reading. Of course, it was all pretty expensive for the bride- groom. In addition to offering all of those gifts he had to cntertain 150 of the bride's relatives for a solid week, providing a great feast for them every day, and the | whole thing must have run into money. But after all, | Indian princesses don’t get married every day. By all | of our traditions they are romantic figures, and it is only | fitting that they get married in a romantic manner. ‘Foeman and Friend’ | ‘There is something very appealing in that story about} {the Confederate veterans at the George Confedcrate |Home, in Atlanta, who unveiled a bronze plaque the; jother day to Alexander H. Wray of Patchogue, N. Y.,| ‘a veteran of the Union army in the Civil war. | | Eyer since 1907 Wray has given his entire federal) |pension to the Confederate home—a total of more than /$5,000; and the plaque expressed gratitude to “a brave foe who was in heart a friend.” One feels that it would be nice to know this man Wray. How much trouble, misunderstanding, and suffering could not have been avoided if all of his comrades in arms had felt toward their former foemen as he felt! | Roger Babson says there is nothing wrong with business but tlt the people-are physically tired from the strain jof the modern pace. Now if Professor Babson would only Hinvent a commercial pill to cure the aching void we would be willing to believe the next theory he reports, | Editorial Comment Editorials printed, below show the trend of thought by other editos hey are published without regard to whether they a isagree with The Trib- or dis une’s policies. , Repeal the Gag Law | (St. Paul Dispatch) The Legislature will do well to adopt Senator Lom- men’s bill repealing the newspaper “gag” law promptly. | The ¢ of the Saturday Press, which was suppres: | under this high-handed law, is now before the United | States Supreme Court. It would be infinitely better for | Minnesota by its own action to clear its reputation of {this unfortunate experiment in the forceful regulation ‘of public opinion th to be stigmatized nationally in a} | Supreme Court decision for the attempted infringement | {on the freedom of the The chief original sponsors of this law back in 1925 | are now advocating repeal. Senator Lommen himself | | was one of the authors of the legislation. Senator Morin, | | who was a strong supporter of it originally, has since | become convinced tinat the ordinary rules of civil and | criminal libel can be made adequate weapons for dealing | with so-called scandal sheets and other abuses of un- | ethical journali: s a new law to fix re- | sponsibility tor “fly-by-night” sheets by requiring filed { statements of their owners, printers and publishers. aititude of Governor Olson, who as Hennepin county three years ago, prosecuted | the only iwo ne’ to which the law has been | | applied. In his message to the Legislature last weck he | \asked for repeal of the “cag” law, explaining that pos- | sibility of abuse made it unwise and dangerous. |. The Legislature should not only repeal the law, but do | it promptly. H Fate’s Trick on Minnesota (Minneapolis Journal) | |__Except for Fate, according to the New Yorker, some | Minnesota town might have had at first hand the mes- | sage of sweetness and light that Sinclair Lewis gave the j World at large in Main Street. But for some undisclosed | chain of circumstances, a si | been brought up to Mr. andards of human rela- | | Uons; mig: ven have become a laboratory for his teach- ings, a working model for other towns to emulate. For Mr. Lewis tried, hack in 1918, to get into the coun- | try newspaper business in Minnesota. The New Yorker | Says he wrote a newspaper ker as follows: “I want a weekly newspaper, complete plant and good will, in a town of from 1,500 to 7,000, in Minne- ; Sota, North or South Dakota, the wheat (not min- i ing or grazing) portion of Montana, Iowa or Northern ! | | | | | ingle community might have Wisconsin, and the order of states named is also the order of my preference.” That was in December, 1918. Two years later, Main Street was published. Would it have been, if Fate had | placed Mr. Lewis in a Minnesota newspaper office? No | one may say. And so. no one can do more than specu- late upon the alternatives. Perhaps the world narrowly missed being deprived of Main Strect. Perhaps a kinder Main Street might have come from his typewriter, had Mr. Lewis found a tripod in a small town newspaper of- fice. Perhaps he would have become so engrossed in changing the currents of life in his community, that he would never have written another novel, which would have been a pity, as thousands will testify who either ad~ mire or are provoked by his writings, | But what about the writing men who have become Minnesota editors? Are there no mellower Lewises among them, men seasoned by their intimate contacts and keen appraisals of the communities of Minnesota, which are {not the Gopher Prairies of Lewis’ memory? Did litera-| ture lose by their choice of the small town tripod? Or did some sector of life gain enough to compensate? | A New Dog Bill i (Fargo Forum) ! Representatives of tne North Dakota Livestock Breed- | ers asociation are planning to submit a new “dog” bill ‘at the present session of the Legislature, a draft of the bill having keen presented before the association and at the sheep and wool growers’ mectings in Fargo during the past week. { The: measure would differ in many material aspects | from the one which was passed by the last Legislature ; and vetoed by Governor Shafer, its sponsors declare, and they have hope to have an act which will mect with the | sanction of the chief executive this time. Few Americans realize how much their government does for them. Readers of the Bismarck Tribune can draw on all government activiftes through our free information service. The world’s greatest libraries, labor- atories, and experimental stations are at their command. Ask any question of fact and it will be answered, free, by mail direct to you. Enclose two- cent stamp for reply postage and ad- dress the Bismarck Tribune Infor- mation Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin, Director, Washington, D. C. Q. - What intercollegiate sports are Played at Notre Dame besides foot- tall, baseball, and basketball? D. N. A. Other Notre Dame sports are golf, tennis, cross country, and track. These are intercollegiate. There is ‘d | also intramural and unofficial hockey, and lacrosse. Q. How much was last year’s rain- fall short of the average? D. C. A. The Weather Bureau says that the summer rainfall east of the Rocky Mountains in 1930 was approximately 500,000,000,000 tons short of normal. Six trillion five hundred billion tons is the approximate normal rainfall for the continental United States for one year. Q. Is tho Chinese alphabet similar to European alphabets? N. P. F. similar to European alphabets. There characters corresponding to an al- phabet which. consists of three types of characters; pictograms, idiograms, ‘nd phonograms, all of which are used, the first named referring to ob- jects, the second to symbols, and the third to sounds. Q. How long has olive oil been used as a food? T. A. A. It is one of the oldest foods. It is mentioned in the Bible and was extensively used in the early Greek civilization. Q. Who operated the hotel, What Cheer House, built on a hull of an old ship in San Francisco Bay? E. J. A. The San Francisco Chamber of Commerce says that this famous old hotel provided rough comfort for miners and rani It was operat- later conducted the well known plea- sure park, Woodward's Gardens. The What Cheer House was located at Sacramento and Leidesdorff Streets in San Francisco. It is reported that this hotel was the first in,San Fran- swimming, handball, boxing, squash, | A. The Chinese alphabet is not, is undoubtedly a system of Chinese | ed by Robert B. Woodward, who also | M. G. Sad Story of a Guy Who Went Crazy Over Puzzles cisco to be run on the European plan | und at one time it contained the only | library in town, which was frequented by ANrk Twain and Bret Harte. Q. How thick would ice have to | be to support a railway train? W. V./ G. ‘A. It has been shown that 18 inches | of ice is necessary to support an or- dinary railway train. i Q. How long has Canada had | | Mounted Police? I. A. C. A. On May 38, 1873, a bill was in- troduced in the Canadian Federal {ment of a police force in the North- | west Territories. This bill was adopt- €d by the House of Commons on May | 20, 1873, and the following September the actual enrollment of the new force began to take place. Q. What does the word, Comintern, | ;Mean? R. D. H. | A. It is an abbreviation of two words “Communist International’ and is applied to the highest govern- ing power in Russia. @. What country produces the most iodine? W. N. | .A. Chile is the largest producer. That country produces about 90 per cent of the available supply of iodine. | Q. LR. A. It is a marker for the longitude ; of a place. Most county seats now; ‘have them, and ‘they are commonly located just outside the city limits {away from disturbing noises which might affect the delicate magnetic |needles of compasses placed upon them for determining direction. They ‘are set up by the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. What is a meridian stone? A. |. @. What life insurance companies | ij have the largest assets? K. McC. | A. The companies, which are} | strictly life insurance companies, | having the largest assets are the Me- | tropolitan, Prudential, New York, and | Equitable. | Q. Did the chemists from Antioch | college who went on a scientific ex- ;Ploration into the western deserts find any plants of commercial value? A. Proximate analysis of specimens to date, according to announcement just made from the -Antioch labora- tories, shows promise of several plants easily propagated or already growing in abundance, each of which may Parliament dealing with the adminis- | y. | tration of justice and the establish- ALETER COME HESE FOR A MR. 0.0. BULLER ITS FROM AN’ ATTORNEY, BUT THERE'S NOBODY IN THIS OUTFIT BY THAT NAME ~ 1T | DOESNT BELONG: | As proposed, the new bill would provide for the assess- ment of all dogs by the assessor, with a tax of one dollar a head, regardless of sex or age, charged against the own- er ot the dog on the regular asscssment rolls as a per- | Sonal property tax. The county auditor would secure {and mail to each owner a metal tag, the law providing that the dog must at all times wear the tag on a coller | to be provided by the owner. The money collected from this source would be set aside in a fund to reimburse owners of livestock or poul- try killed or injured by dogs, with a provision for ap- praisal of damages to be made by a disinterested free- holder to be designated by the county auditor, and who is i) receive a fee not in excess of five dollars for each service. i After a claim for damages has been authenticated, such damages will be paid by the county commissioners only out of the dog tax fund, warrants to be issued “in the order tn which claims for are allowed.” Owners of dogs known to have caused loss or damages are to be conte by the Rages commissioners, the no- or killing livestock ity for damage. NO-T Guess NOoT— LT Vnow (T OOESNT“THey GOT TH’ WRONG ADDRESS IT AWT FER ME ~—I MEAN, IT Aiur FER NOBOOY NOW, L KNOW HE DENNED TH" BIRD THAT sQuAWKS TH LOLOEST 1S wd HIS NAME, BEFORE HE \T IS FER Him, \T TOO OFFEN. Sust Tay’ To LEAD You Away FROM ITs NEST, NOW WE KNOW ! prove to be a veritable “drugstore” in itself, “Although the commercial possibilities of these desert products are not yet certain, it seems probable that they can be so utilized. Q. Do animals have cancer? A. C. A. Birds, animals, and fishes have cancers, Growths of much the same nature are common also in the vege- table kingdom. Q._When did Great Britain acquire the Fiji Islands? N. R. A. The sovereignty of the Fiji ‘Islands was offered to Great Britain in 1858. This was at first declined, but was later reneweg and accepted in 1874, > pits caesar Today Is the | Anniversary of | SCHUBERT'S BIRTH On Jan. 31, 1797, Franz Schubert, a famous Austrian composer, was born at Vienna the son of a poor school- master. At 11 Franz became a singer in the court choir and, later leading violinist in the school band. At 14 he began writing songs and at 18 his supreme gift of lyric melody was revealed in “The Erlking,” one of the world’s most dramatic songs, written by him in a single day. His brief life, spent chiefly in the drudgery of teaching, was harassed by financial embarrassment and em- bittered by the slow recognition ac- corded his works. Schubert’s fame rests upon his songs, some 600 in number. “Of the modern song,” writes a critic, “Schubert is not only the orig- inator, but, to this very day, the un- surpassed master... . Had Schubert written nothing but these songs he would still be among the immortals.” f BARBS j A new book has been written deal- ing with Adam and Eve. Will they call this “the book of the year—1"? -* * Maybe those boys who threw eggs at Rudy Vallee in a Boston theater regarded him as a ham. * oe These are the days when it be- hooves a man with an iron consti- tution to prove his mettle. * oe * A student at an eastern college re- produced the official colors of his school by scientific experiment. He is reported to have dyed for his Alma Mater. “ek Ruth St. Denis says that dancing will soon dominate the sports world. She is a little late in her prediction. | OUT OUR WAY "By Williams THAT'LL WORRY HIM LHE NOT ANSWERIN' TH TELEPHONE ~ IF YOu 00 ANSWER IT, 17S PROBLY TH Pouce ~ AN', IF YOu OONT,'T, MAN BE SOME BODY'S CIE AN LEFT You A FORTUNE. HE WONT SLEEP FER A WEEK,NOW, WONDERIN’ WHICH ‘ © 1926 MecoY ested for Dr. McCoy’s menus , Febru- the week beginning Sunt ary 1, 1931: Sunday Breakfast: Waffles (browned thor; oughly) with Maple syrup; crisp ba- con. Lunch: Potato on the half shell; string beans; salad of endive and lettuce. Dinner: Roast veal; green peas; asparagus; stuffed celery; Jello or Jell-Well with whipped cream. toast; Lunch: , Eight-ounce glass of Orange juice. Dinner—Vegetable soup; Salisbury steak; mushrooms en le; steamed carrots; salad of crisp raw spinach leaves; dish of berries (canned without sugar). Tuesday Breakfast: Wholewheat muffins with peanut butter; stewed figs. Lunch: Stewed corn; cooked cel- ery; salad of cold sliced beets on lettuce. Dinner: Roast mutton; baked to- matoes; spinach; salad of raw cab- wage and parsley; prune whip. Wedn Breakfast: French omelet; toasted Shredded Wheat Biscuit; stewed Raw apples as desired; handful of pecans or almonds. Dinner: Tomato soup; baked white fish; mashed turnips; string beans; celery and carrot salad; no dessert, ‘Thursday erate: Cottage cheese; baked apple. Lunch: Baked sweet potatoes; cauliflower; salad of head lettuce. Dinner: Roast beef; baked pars- nips; asparagras; sliced cucumbers (mo vinegar) ; ita apricots. iday Breakfast: Coddled eggs; Melba toast; stewed raisins, Lunch: Pint of buttermilk; 10 or 12 dates. Dinner: Broiled fillet of sole; spinach; ‘stuffed tomato salad; Jello or Jell-Well, pee % jurday Breakfast: Broiled ham; crisp waffle; stewed apples. Lunch: Lima beans; baked ground beets; celery. Dinner: Broiled lamb chops; bu'- tered carrots and peas; pineapple and cabbage salad; ice cream. *Stuffed Tomato Salad: Four large tomatoes, one cup of finely chopped celery, one-half cup grated raw car- rots, and oil dressing. The tomatoes should be scalded quickly and peeled. Dr. McCoy will gladly answer questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed envelope for reply. Scoop out the centers, leaving a to- mato shell, and fill with the mixed celery, carrots, oil, and a small amount of the tomato pulp. Serve cold on lettuce. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS . Falling Hair Question: M. E. B. asks: “Is it true that falling hair is caused by Certain foods which we eat?” Answer: ‘“iere is no certain food which causes the hair to fall out, but certain bad food combinations may produce an acidosis or lowered alka- linity of whe system where the food elements from which the hair grows are destroyed. The one with falling hair should use proper food combi- nations, and include in the diet plenty of those foods containing the hair-building minerals, such as as- paragus, lettuce, bran, dandelion, parsnips, fruit skins and beets. Browned Flour - Question: Mrs. L. G. asks: “Will you kindly tell me what you mean by ‘browned’ flour?” Answer: Put the amount of flour desired in a dry pan, place over the fire ord stir vigorously with a fork until it is browned thoroughly, from the browning effect of the hot pan. Deafness Question: J. G. J. asks: “Could & person affected with deafness due to a collapse of the eustachian tubes expect any relief by taking a fruit fast or the orange juice diet? Do you feel that the poisons developed in the alimentary tract have any direct bearing on the ears or hearing?” Answer: The fruit fast may be of help in removing catarrhal deposits from the inner ear. I would also ad- vise you to have treatments through vibration, suction and finger surgery. The latter treatment may be applied directly to the eustachian tube. Cer- tain specialists have just discovered that poisons from the alimentary canal have the effect of causing deafness. I have been claiming this, writing about it, and proving it for nearly a quarter of a century. Baseball pitchers have fore some time put a “hop” on the ball, and wrestlers have always bee ai ay to fling. x * If a modern American city had feelings, the first thing it might complain about is its spent * * ‘Then there's the witty red-haired dresser who called herself a beau- titian, (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) | | Quotations j USIP kc History is a panorama punctured by cataclysms.—Sir Charles Oman. ee OK No God will help us unless we help; ourselves. — Dr.* Hjalmar Schacht,) German financial expert. * * Germany is se¢thing politically— there can be no question of that.— Oswald Garrison Villard, editor of the. Nation. | ese * It is said that mothers like best the children who give them the most trouble. I suppose Cain was Eve's favorite—Sir James Barrie. * * * The facts established at the Mos- cow trial concerning a conspiracy for foreign intervention in Russia are not worth a shrug of the shoulders— Raymond Poincaire. eee You can not go to the moving pic- ture theaters today with any assur- ance that you or your children will not see something suggestive or sa- lacious or obscene before the show is over, either in the feature picture or in the accompanying comedies—Dr. Clitford Gray Twombly, rector of St. James’ church, Lancaster, Pa, Former Kidder County Woman Dies in City Mrs. Barbara Heust, 68-year-old Bismarck woman, died here Wednes- day after an illness of two months duration. She leaves several children, among whom is Mrs. Frank Richter, Bis- marck. Mrs. Heust had made her home in| h Bismarck for some time, coming here from Springs at the death of her husband a number of years ago. Tentative funeral arrangements have been made and it is thought that, the funeral will be held in Bismarck charge of gtand larceny. brought to Fargo from Steele county He was after pleading guilty. = Snyder stole grain, poultry and po- tatoes from several farmers in ‘Steele and Traill counties. Snyder's 17- year-old son, an alleged accomplice, was placed on probation. SATURDAY, JANUARY 31 550 Kilocycles—545.1 Meters M. — leditation period. round the Town: Radio floor- walker. 9:00—Sunshine hour. 00—Opening grain markets. erman program. 30—Organ program: Clara Morris 2:00—Grain markets; Bismarck Trib- une news and weather; lunch- P.M. eon program. 2:00—Grain markets: high, low, and close.) Musical matinee melodies. (0—Siesta hour: Good News radio magazine. Music. ‘Music. \—World Bookman. ds. 0—Bismarck Tribune sports item» 5—Bismarck Tribune news, —Music. 0—Dinner hour Clara Morris. 6:30—Mrs, G. H. Wingreene, soprano, Grace Duryee Morris, accom: panist. Newscasting. 0—Helen Ferguson: Popular bits; Hazel Johnson, accompanist. Legislative tidbits, organ recital: ie | jational Home program. T rnold Christianson, ballad singer. 8:30—Concert program. 9:00—Popular dance program (rémote). ake har Le SEP oie Le 7 | Today in Congress | Pts at kk nA FRIDAY SENATE Continues consideration of war de. partment appropriation bill. Agriculture committee " considers bill to regulate futures trading on the grain and cotton markets, Campaign expenditures committee hears testimony on Delaware election. jommerce ‘committee _ continues ringa on legislation to aid ofl in- dustry. HOUSE Debates $25,000,000 Red Cross reliet measure, Ways and means committee resumes hearings on veterans’ compensation. Banking and currency committee hears witnesses on farm loan relief is. Hope Man Will Serve Five Years in Prison) Fargo, N. D., Jan. 30.—(4%—Chris Snyder, Hope, was sentenced to five years in the state penitentiary by Judge A. T. Cole Wednesday on a ——— | Stickler Solution FLAPPER FANNY SAYS. -

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