The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 2, 1931, Page 4

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’ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1978) Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck Preaident and Pubiisher 8 second clas mat! matter. George D. Mann Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier, per year . on ie bel be! Lon dp Bismarck: %.20/ ‘The human touch, to which moralists and tenchers | din /state, cutie ae 6.00 and preachers refer continually, becomes a moncy saver Daily by mail 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, Weeklz Sy mail in Canada. per year . Member Audit Bureas of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and alro the tora) 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 Incorporated) s Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORE BOSTON A Costly Victory Administration forces won a victory in the state senate Saturday when they killed the bill to create east and west congressional districts in North Dakota. It may prove to be a costly one, however, because the matter hardly will be permitted to rest there. In the last analysis, political authority continues to rest with the people and those senators who voted against a fair and henest reapportionment will have some explaining to do. They may find that the vote which sounded the death knell to the reapportionment bill also set ihe bells’ tolling in recognition of their own political demise. It’ may or may not have been good politics on the part of the majority faction in the senate but there is little Goubt that the action will be unpopular with the people. That it will become an issue in the next political cam- paign seems ceriain. Opponents of the administration, both I. V. A. and Nonpartisan, will hardly miss this op- portunity to demonstrate the indifference of the major- ity party to the will of the voters. Governor Shafer, if he makes the race for the United States senate, will not be able to escape his record and the reapportionment question will be a part of that record. He will be forced to elther beg the issue or de-| if clare his position on it. If he does the latter he will have to give his reasons and these must have some semblance of sound thinking if they are to be ac- cepted. Unless the governor thinks up better reasons than those advanced Saturday in the senate he 1! headed for political difficulty, for the maneuvering against the reapportionment bill was so crude as to be noticeable to anyone, whether or not he is skilled in ob- serving legislative affairs. If the matter is not revived in the senate, and there seems to be no prospect of that, Congressmen Burtness, Hall and Sinclair will be chief opponents at the next congressional election unless the political slate changes materially in the next few months, Other candidates| will enter, doubtless, and the leaders of the administra- tion machine, which forced defeat of the public demand, may find the results far different from what they now expect. Costly Stupidity : A glimpse at current history sometimes makes one won-| der if ordinary, human stupidity and incompetence do not | cause more trouble and more suffering than all of the malice and wickedness in the world put together. An example of this is found in Winston Churchill's “World Crisis,” that fascinating description of the World war as a member of the British cabinet saw it Churchill, as first lord of the admiralty, was the mov-) ing spirit behind the ill-starred Gallipoli adventure, and the misfortunes of that costly expedition were hardly his fault. The expedition was crippled by dumbress and failure from the start; and nowhere was this more clear than in the tragic Suvla Bay landing. French and English troops had already obtained a foot-| hold at the lower tip of the peninsula. Farther up the peninsula the Australians had come ashore and estab- lished themselves, In neither place was it possible to make much headway against the strong Turkish trench system. So a flank attack was planned. Under cover of dark- ness, a division of troops was thrown ashore at Suvila Bay, several miles up the coast. This division was to press forward promptly, cross the peninsula, and take the defending Turks in the rear. If it succeeded the peninsula would be taken, Constantinople would fall and the war would soon be over. The division got ashore at dawn. In the foothills to) oppose it was a scant battalion of Turkish troops. The division had only to move quickly to gain its goal. The ‘Turks could not possibly stop it. But stupidity and incompetence now entered the scene. ‘The general commanding the division was a stolid and sedentary gentleman accustomed to caution and meth- odical, bit-by-bit movements. Instead of ordering his men forward as soon as they got ashore he had them dig trenches on the beach to prepare to repel an at- tack. In the afternoon hundreds of them were dismissed and allowed to go in bathing. All in all, this man wasted 24 priceless hours before he set his troops in motion. By that time it was too late. The Turks had had time to bring up reinforcements. A large percentage of the British division was sacrificed, and the objective, was not reached. Gallipoli held out. Constantinople wes not captured, and the war lasted three years longer. All of this—a price simply staggering to contemplate —came because one man in a position of authority was cither stupid, incompetent, or both. Could there be a more dreadful testimonial to the mis- chief that those two qualities can create? The Rising Cost of Government | Our government today, national, state and local, is $7.20 1.50; THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. MONDAY, MARCH 2, 1931 impersonal attitude about it. more careful. sometimes, A Light Under a Bushel fond of advertising themselves and fail to devote enough attention to their writing. A writer gets a reputation and then rests on his oars, letting the impetus of his former books carry his new ones along, and spending a good share of his time in seeing to it that his name gets into the newspapers and magazines. office in New York and publish American books—will have no more of it. It will withhold the names of its authors, and its books will carry no “by-lines” at all. It will be interesting to see how the authors react to this scheme. In pure theory it should make no dif- ference at all. {an imperative inner compulsion. He is supposed to be thinking of fame very little and of money hardly at all; he writes because there is something in him that de- mous printing? category, but they are a tiny minority. for it. Furthermore, authors have to eat; and many a first-rate book came into existence in part, at least, because its writer needed to bolster up a fading bank ac- count. Even more interesting, however, will be the reaction of the readers. Most of us, probably, buy books for the authors. If a new book by Zane Grey, or James Cabell, or 5. S. Van Dine is announced (depending on our individual tastes) we hurry to buy it. If a book by an unknown appears we wait and find out what other people are saying about it before we take a chance on it. What would we do {the author's name were withheld? Probably we should read the book reviews more carefully, and take the ad- Evidently it wasn't in his code to rob people whose lives | came in contact with his. So long as he didn't know! the party from whom he was taking property he had an| ‘This spirit is found in larger forms of banditry. Swin- dlers have beén known to risk the money entrusted to, them by thousands of unknown victims. The money was, something impersonal. If they had known the sacrifices and struggles back of each fraud they might have been A French publishing house recently announced that 280! hereafter it will publish all of its books anonymously. Authors, the announcement said, get altogether too So this publishing firm—which is about to open an! A writer is supposed to write because of | f mands expression. So why should he object to an anony- | | Theory, unfortunately, docs not always jibe with the; facts. There may be a few writers who fall in this! ‘The average! writer, quite properly, wants fame and adulation. If he! turns out a gocd book he would like to get the credit ~ vice of the critics more regularly than we do now, But the critics, too, would suffer. The critic can be a creature of habit, like anyone else. If a book comes to his desk under the name of a writer whom the ae admires, he is apt to see more virtues in it than he might if he did not know who had written it. In the long run we might get better criticism; -but it would mean a great deal more work and worry for the critic. There is little chance that other publishers will adopt this system. But it would be fun to sec what would happen if they did. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought ard by other editors. They are published without regard to whether they agree or disagree with The ‘unie’s policies. The Wheels of Business (Duluth Herald) 4 ‘The big and successful merchants in America know that the only way to make bad business good and good business better is to put greater energy into all their activities, This includes newspaper advertising. John L. Meyer of Madison, a merchandising expert, in talking to the Wisconsin Retail Furniture Dealers’ as- sociation in Milwaukee the other day, expressed the opin- ion that, “If newspaper advertising were st Haat over this country, there would presently be a collapse of retail business. “Newspaper advertising is to retail business progress what the wheel, which takes the power in an automo- bile, is to transportation,” he said. “There are four wheels in the business vehicle. The front wheels are the goods to be sold, and the value. The back wheels are merchandising and advertising.” Going further into detail he added: “Persistent news- paper advertising has become necessary, first, because one in every six families move yearly; secondly, because 7,000 persons become new customers daily in the United States. As they come along to be consumers on their own, the merchants cannot meet them at the station. It is futile to watch birth records. Only the newspaper can meet these new store guests every day.” Letting the Navy Down (Washington Evening Star) On March 4 congress closes down, shuts up shop prob- ably for nine months. Final efforts will be made dur- ing the eight remaining working days to get through im- portant legislation which has been fire while the congress fought out the relief problem and soldiers’ bonus legislation and telked politics. Some of these important measures seem bound to fail. One of them, unfortunately, is the naval construction program bill. This measure, the first step looking toward bringing the American navy up to the strength specified for it under the London nayal treaty, has been sacrificed, it appears, in order to make it possible to get through all the ap- propriation bills and avoid an extra session of congress after March 4. Senator Hale of Maine, chairman of the senate naval affairs committee, intensely sympathetic to the upbuilding of the navy, on afternoon gave over his determination to press for the passage. of the bill upon the appeals of the senate leaders. Sen- ator Blaine of Wisconsin, one of the “little navy” group, had the floor, and it was ‘reported that he had threatened to talk the rest of the day unless there were some a8- surance that the naval program bill be postponed. The ‘naval appropriation bill was pending, the annus! sup- ply bill, a bill appropriating $20,000,000 for additional hos- pital facilities for the war veterans and yr measures. ‘As s00n as assurance was given that the naval program bill would not be pressed further in the senate at this session the jam was broken and the other measures) went through in jig time. What is happening to the naval construction pro- gram legislation is illustrative of the manner in which a minority in the senate, no matter how small, is able to hamstring important legislation in the short sessions of congress. It is merely another demonstration of the’ unwisdom of such short sessions, which give # minority spending thirteen and a half billion dollars @ year, and thus nearly one-seventh of the income is devoted to public expenditures. ‘Twenty years ago the government spent one-fourteenth of the national income, and it will thus be seen that government expense has doubled during that time. ‘Dr. Guitteau, who is the authority for these figures, is @ federal revenue collector at Toledo, Ohio. He says that if the increase continues at the present ratio, the nation will soon be taxed one-fifth, ot twenty per cent ‘of its income. No nation, he says, can bear such « tax oad and live. _ Manners Among Thieves ‘There are. manners even among thieves, it sppears. Mrs. Anna Nicholas, of Wéshington, D. C., was handed back the money and jewels which s man had taken from Der, when the man recognized her as someone he knew. st the power to prevent action on important legislation. Friends of the American navy, although they are in a great majority in both houses of congress, are helpless, it seems, because of the opposition of a few senators in & short session of , under the rule of unlimited debate which prevails in the upper house, Naval vessels gre not built overnight. It takes time to perfect @ fighting ship.. The failure now of the naval bill sets back this country another year, in all 285 FRE dl a i =e : : : i i [the two makes 2 laiger total. | | | | -—— ———— Is It Coming to This? This newspaper puts at your dis- posal a corps of trained researchets in Washington who will answer ques- tions for you. They have access to the government departments, the li- braries, museums, galleries, and pub- lic buildings, and to the numerdus as- sociations which maintain headquar- | ters in the nation’s capital. If they | can be of assistance to you, write youd | question plainiy, and send with two' cents in coin or stamps to the Bijs- marck Tribune Information Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin, Director, Wash- ington, D. C. Q. Does the motion picture ma-| chine lamp give off violet tays? J. D. A. This lamp is made of lead tion and the Life. He that believeth in Me, though he were dead, yet shall | he live.’ The marble sarcophagus of | Washington and that of his wife oc- | cupies the front chamber. is another vault which contains other members of the family. Q. What has become of the loco- motive engine, Sabine? G. W. C. A. Locomotive Sabine pulled the} first train over Southern Lines west of Morgan City, Louisiana, in 1878. In later years it was rebuilt and was in 1929 on display at La- fayette, La. Q. What pewter articles were used in this country in colonial days? C. glass and does not give off violet | E. D. rays. Q. How many prescriptions for li- quar were Yssued last year? In what state were there the most? R. A. J. A. The numter of prescriptions is- sued for alcohol and other liquors in } 1930 was 12,986,218. More prescrip’ tions were issued in New York than in any other state, the number be- ing 2,340,192. Q. How many independent cities | are there now in Virginia? E. C. There are now 24 independent Q. .How many sleeping cars are there jn Europe and how do the rates compere? N. W. A. Europe has about 2000 sleeping cars while the United States has about 8000 ‘The rates are higher in Europe. The railroad fare is slightly lower abroad, but the combination of What kindof a hat does a bull ter wear? F. O. H. A. There are two kinds of hats) worn hy bull fighters. The first is worn when in the arena fighting and is called a “montera.” It is usually made of velvet and worn over a wig. The dimensions do not vary. The second kind is called the “sombrero ancho” and is made of felt. This is worn by a bull fighter when walking on the street. Q... Please deseribe the tomb of Washington. B. A. L. { A. The tomb of Washington is a! severely plain structure of brick, with an arched gateway in front, above which a . marble slab is inscribed, “Within this inclosure rest the mains of General George Washing. ton.” Above the door of the tomb are the words: “I am the Ressurec- A. During the 18th century the following pewter articles were used: Porringers, plates, salts, platters, su- gar bowls, draw cups, tea pots, pep- per casters, butter plates, and quart and pint pots. Spoons appeared in the latter part of the century. In the early 1800's old and new silver tea- spoéns are flagons were on the earliest list, but pitchers appeared early in the 1800's. Q. ‘How many locks does @ vessel rave to pass through at Sault Ste. In the Welland Canal? F. Marie? G. A. A. In the St. Mary’s Falls Canal, Sault Ste. Marie, a vessel through one Jock. In traversing the Welland Canal there arc eight locks te negotiate. a. A. Q. Wes Judah P. Benjamin, the secretary of war in the Southern Confederacy, afterwards Prime Min- ister of England? L. B. M. He was never Prime Minister | 4, of England. When he fled from the United States, he went to England where he was admitted to the bar and became a famous lawyer. A. Q. How far away is the horizon? A. The actual distance of the hor- izon depends upon the height above sea level of the eyes of the observer. The horizon is always as far away as one can see. The higher one goes up from a given point, the greater the distance of the horizon. The observer looking out over the land or sea from @ high place can see more of the earth’s round surface before the|to be deported. Did Pocahontas become a Christian before her marriage to John Rolfe? D. M. She was baptized in 1613, one year before she married John Rolfe. curve of the surface takes things be- yond the range of vision. If one stands on a cliff 100 feet high at the seashore and looks toward a point where a ship is coming toward the snore, the ship can be seen much |sooner than if standing at sea level. In exact words, one sees actually more of the earth’s surface the high- er up one is because with the increase of elevation, one’s position in relation to the curvature of the earth's sur- Beyond, ‘4 face changes. Q. Does Canada give trees to peo- ple who wili plant them on the prai- res? B. E. A. Since 1900, the Canadian gov- ernment has distributed over 116,- 000,000 young trees to applicants liv- ing in the Prairie Provinces—Manito- ba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta. _ Today Is the ‘Anniversary of BIRTH OF SCHURZ On March 2, 1829, Carl Schurz, a j famous American political leader and soldier, was born near Cologne, Ger- many. Educated at the University of Bonn, he later took part in the re- volutionary movement of 1848, but Pacific e | © © backache or an records. alone depends Massage has be removed by tion of blood. 1a the cure of pation. prolapsus or di convalescense promoting the creams. Massage may is often helpful eases, tuberculosis or flammation or fevers. ment’ was finally forced to flee to Switzer- land, He emigrated to the United States in 1852 and settled at Watertown, Wis. Less than 10 years later he was appointed minister to Spain by Presi- dent Lincoln, but resigned at the out- break of the Civil war to join the Union army. Appointed brigadier general and later promoted to major general, Schurz commanded a divi- sion at Chancellorsville and a corps at Gettysburg. After the war he engaged in jour- ralistic work. From 1869 to 1875 he was United States senator from Mis- souri. He presided over the Cincin- nati convention which nominated Greeley for president. From 1877 to 1881 he served as secretary of the in- terior. In 1913, seven years after his death, a monument was erected to him on Morningside Heights. BARBS —_—_—_—_—_ FF The United States exported more than 27,000,000 artificial teeth last year. No wonder we are so falsely vepresented abroad. : see Hot-headed members of the Aus- trian Parliament threw inkpots at cach other. The country may well regard this as a blot on its legisla- fave history. listed. Tankards and passes * * * Al Capone is insulted because Gen- eral Smediey Butler said he ought Now maybe Al ex- WHY 0H -GOLP— way, IT OIDN' MEAN T was GOIN’ RIGHT Now —TI sez, IF THINGS DON'T CHANGE. AROUND HERE , SOME ©’. THESE DAYS, ID BE Missin! WELL—T MEANT~IF Thinas SAINT DIFFRUNT BY TH' TIME IM TWENNY ONE, ER-ER THIRTY ER SO. GOSH,A Guy DASSEN ENEN MAKE A LITTLE REMARW IN-1N) FON. scripts rejected c: experience destroy hope. regard to birth sponsibility. sults. ton of New Jersey. ENCLOSE STAMPEO AOORESSEO ENVELOPE FOR HOW MASSAGE HELPS HEALTH Have you ever had which you relieved so, you were using massage, & form of treatment which has every nation as far back as history Massage today has become ‘a well developed art, but it is well to {remember that the value of treatment of the one administering it. take exercise while resting. The suc- cess of massage rests upon the fol- lated, pain relieved, internal conges- tion lessened and often certain swell- ings or deposits in the tissues may Massage removes the fatigue pol- sons from the muscles; it is singularly luseful in toning up the muscles of sluggish intestines, and is invaluable Massage improves the circulation of both blood and lymph. used with great benefit in cases of confined in bed. many hair restorers owe their success to the massage which accompanies their application. said of many face creams and tissue Massage may be used with dieting for reducing the weight, since deep rubbing will assist in forcing more blood through fatty deposits and ab- Often, one suffering from gas pains may be relieved by abdominal mass- age which assists in expelling the gas Prolapsus of the abdominal organs and in kinks and adhesions. Massage ble, strains of the back, and an ad- jJunct to the treatment of many dis- Massage is not advised locally in burns or hemorrhages, nor during ‘When used properly, massage is a great help in maintaining the health. Many wealthy persons maintain their own private massuers who travel with pects an apology from the govern-|% * KO “Let's hope there'll be no hard feelings,” as the wary patient said to the chiropractor. xe * All writers who have had manu- of Erich Remarque, author of Quiet on the Western Front.” 21 publishers after his next book, he must reject 20 of them. (Copyright, 1931, NEA Service, Inc.) a | Quotations | oo An actor can gain a great variety tures and he can also earn enough money to retire before he is too old to enjoy retirement. ee OK Bolshevism is an atrocious sys! Its tyranny is 10 times worse tnat of the tsar. —General Max Weygand of France. ** * The worst thing in the world is to —wWilliam Lathrop Love. xe * Accurate and competent advice in REPLY ae AtCIY HEALTN SERVICE -LOS ANGELES~ CAL them. In Hollywood, where it is so necessary to retain a youthful appear- LSet ance, massage has become very popu- in your muscles ache by rubbing? if 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. Jar for soothing away unwanted lumps of flesh, and building in hollow places, until the desired perfect form been known to largely upon the skill been called a way to lowing accomplishments: qr Increases in achieved. ihe general nutrition and circulation ae of blood. ‘The digestion may be im- QUESTIONS ay ANSWERS proved, the nerves soothed or stimu- Question: J) R. asks: “Could j epilepsy be caused by small bones be- ing out of place in the spine? If so, could these bones be re-set or ad- justed?” Answer: I have known many cases of epilepsy to be cured through what the chiropractor calls an adjustment of certain vertebrae of the spine, but | the common cause of epilepsy is from intestinal poisoning, and the cure will usually be found in doing those things which will bring about a thoroughly clean condition of the col- on. the increased circula- long-standing consti- It may be luring long periods of when the patient is It is of value in growth of hair, and Evaporated Milk Question: O. L. M. asks: “Is it all right to use evaporated milk for pud- Gings, and for creaming vegetables? What I mean, is the food value of canned ond fresh milk nearly alike.” Answer: It is just as well to use evaporated milk for creaming vege- tables; as there is less water in it, it is even richer in food value, and a smallér quantity is required. High Blood Pressure Question: Mrs. R. S. D. asks: “What foods do you advise for keep- ing the blood pressure down?” Answer: There are no specific foods for sending the blood pressure either up or down. The only foods which I have discovered which will affect the blood pressure in suscepti- ble people are the starches and sugars which often produce a rise in high blood pressure patients. However, in low blood pressure patients they sometimes have an opposite effect. I have prepared articles, with diets, on high blood pressure which I will gladly send to you if you will forward a large self-addressed stamped en- velope. The instructions are too long to be given in this question and an- swer column. The same may be sorbing them more readily. be very valuable in in gall bladder trou- during an acute in- skin eruptions, after i ee | Additional Sports . 1 Marion Cage Quint Wins County Title La Moure, N. D., Match 2.—Marion high school won the prep school bas- ketball championship of La Moure county here by defeating Verona, 17 to 12, in the final game of the two- day tournament which ended here tonight. Verona held a 8 to 6 lead at the half. In the consolation game His downed Jud by a score of 20 In the tournament for girls Marion high school also took first place in this event, the girls winning from Kulm in the final game 22 to 11; half ended with the score tied at 8-all. will envy the position “All ‘With 2 through work in pic- —John Barrymore. To Have Checker Tilt Fargo, N. D., March 2—John Mey- er of Pingree, for seven consecutive years checker champion of North Da- kota until dethroned by L. H. Nichols of Dickinson in’ the state tournament last March, will give a simultaneous exhibition against 10 opponents in Fargo Monday at 7:30 p.m. The match will furnish both Meyer and his opponents intensive and valuable Practice in preparation for the 1931 control would save the | state tournament which will be eld stem. than lives of thousands of women, and a/‘n Fargo, March 19 . doctor who has this information and ‘ and 2. j Goes not give it incurs a terrible re- Lott, Van Ryn Win Miami Beach, Fla., March 2.—(7)}— —Dr.-‘John Whitridge Williams of| George Lott and George V: Johns Hopkins. “doubles eee The more sacrifice marriage entails,|championships here Sati the greater amount of happiness re-| crushing J, Gilbert Hall, ort a smashed their way to the doubles title in the Pan-American tennis range, N. J., and Marcel Rainville, ‘Montreal, in -—Representative Mary Teresa Nor-/ the finals 6-2, 4-6, 6-2, 6-1. Before teaming with Lott in the doubles, Van Ryn defeated Hall in singles semi- $< final play, 7-5, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, to ad- | KFYR o—— TUESDAY, MARCH 3 350 Kilocycles—545.1 Meters Music. Weather ‘Farm re] 0—Old-time walker. 10:00—Opening itatic jeriod. ates the "Town: Radio floor- (0—Sunshine hour. 0—World Bookman. {| vance to the finals. Decide Champs Sioux Falls, 8. D., March 2—(7)— Basketball champions were decided in four South Dakota districts Sat- urday. Sioux Falls became the Dis- trict 18 champion by defeating Clo- ton, 30 to 9. Pierre defeated Gettys- burg, 20 to 8, to win the District 16 championship; Doland won the Dis- trict 3 championship by defeating grain markets; weath-/ Garden City, 28 to 17; and Parkston report; farm flashes. porter. in Washington. music. 10:10—Rune Saramy: daily housenola | Scored @ one-point victory over Mit- chats. 10:20—Musical 10:57—Arlington. 0—Grsin markets. 11:15—German 11:30—Organ pi Morris. 12:00—Grain markets; Bis: une news and weather; lunch- P.M. eon prot 2:00—Grain mi close; Bi weather, and St. Paul 1 2:15—John Law, singing evang 2:30—Siesta b mi $:00—Muste. 6:00—Musie ie. 1 6:15—Uncle Paul's kiddie time. Ff jtocks and_ bonds. ‘Bismarck Tribune sports items. 5—Bismarc! 0—Music. :00—Dinner, 0—Art Zeb: 0—Thurley 1:15—Legislat! 7:30—Harmo! i: 7:45—Robert B. Bruce, cornet; Hazel Johnson, accompanist 8:00—St. Paul’ Turtle ‘Tom Sharkey, old heavyweight, now is a guard at track near San Francisco and st Agua Caliente, Stickler Solution MaoMen MiMic ao Mock. markets: high, low, azine, Grace Duryee 's Lutheran choir of Lake chell, 19 to 18, for the District 23 progra title. time signals, Only two sports make a profit at the Splverail of Illinois, football and program. rogram: Grace Duryee ram. ismarck Tribune jour: Good News k Tribune news. hour organ recital: forris, arth, Violinist. Sneil. ive tidbits, slater.

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