Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
45 Soe Radio Explorers Club Se SBOE St el RRA RNA eA RRR neetenmRT ‘ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, AUGUST 18, 1934 FAMED CELEBRITIES INTERVIEWED EVERY: WEEK IN FARM HOUR Mrs. Fisher Usually Successful in Cornering Stars for’ Her Program Chicago. Aug. 18.—Continually on the trail of personalities whose names are known to everyone, Mrs. Helen Stevens Fisher usually succeeds in presenting at least one famous person to National Farm and Home Hour listeners each week. Although she has questioned scores of screen, stage and radio stars in interesting interviews, Mrs. Fisher first came to radio as a home advisor on commercial programs. While in this work she became known as the “Little Lady of the House,” a title that continues to identify her to Farm and Home hour listeners. Several years ago she came to the National Farm and Home hour, which is broadcast each week day at 11:30 a.m. (CS.T.) over an NBC-WJZ net- work and KFYR, to prepare and broadcast party plans for home enter- tainment. While she branched out re- cently into the interesting task of watching for arrivals of prominent people who may be asked to appear before the microphone for an inter- view, the party plan broadcasts are being continued. In fact, Mrs. Fisher gets an average of more than a thou- sand requests each month for copies of her party plans. They range from suggestions for a Fourth of July celebration to pointers on how to en- tertain Junior on his second birthday. Most of the interviews carry an element of surprise to radio listeners. Very often they are scheduled no earlier than the morning of the broadcast, and Mrs. Fisher has prob- ably set a time record for writing in- terview scripts. She often jerks them out of the typewriter two or three minutes before she goes on the air. No hideaway is too formidable for Mrs. Fisher's requests to come to the NBC studios for an interview, and she seldom fails in getting the person she wants to “tell all” in a conversational style that appeals to both town and country listeners. TF 'KFYR-NBC Program: . (Subject to Revision) {| Monday, Aug. 20 :00—Breakfast Club 00—Harvest of Song 1 mnese Sextette n Flashes Radio News he Hour of Memories Mark: Weather and Aunt Sammy :15—Broadeast of American Legion Rand of Milwaukee from Ger- y 1i—Honorable Archie 0. atl Farm & :30—General Mills “W! Prof Sauerkraut & Band tudio Markets 00—Radio Gulld tudio Page and Other Artists Symphony Orch. xy wn Ma Perkins | 45—Procter & Gamble Camay N—Al Pearce and His Gang 9 9 1:00—Markets 1 H with Speed Wall 0—Rainbow Gardens Orch. 0—Press Radio News and So. St. Paul Livestock Markets —Ensemble Symphonique —Bdest. from Seth Parker 0—Sinclair Minstrels 30—Colgate House Party §—NBC Concert Orch. tic Republican Series Piano Moods :15—N, D. Farmers Union :30—Firestone Program :00—Guy Lombardo and Orch, 0—Charlie Gray & Orch, 10:45—Hessherger's Original fan Orch. 11:00—Jack Berger and Orch. 11:30—Eddie Duchin & Orch. Bayar- ° Singing Texan | Sesto lex Deaniicateeaee | Patricia Norman, Exotic Texas Blues Singer Heard Over NBC Ev- ery Friday Night from Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, Aug. 18.—Patricia Nor- man, 19-year-old blues singer from El Paso Texas, is the youngest member of a youthful ensemble gathered from all over the country. The group—Paul Pendarvis and his orchestra—broadcasts over an NBC- WJZ network and KFYR every Fri- day night at 10:30 p.m. (C.S.T.), from the William Penn hotel in Pittsburgh. Miss Norman danced in the road show, “Follow Through,” which starred Joe Penner and also appeared on the vaudeville stage in Texas. Also heard with the orchestra is Eddie Scope, winner of the 1933 Paul Whiteman college vocal auditions in Chicago. Paul Pendarvis, the director, is the son of a Santa Monica, Calif., banker and was born in Enid, Oklahoma, in 1907. He was agdruated from the University of California and was scheduled to go into his father’s bank. Music proved the stronger attraction, however. In college, Pendarvis led a campus dance band that played for ‘STAGE AND SCREEN STAR BEGINS NEW | BROADCAST, AUG. 22 {Dennis King Will Return to! Microphone Accompanied by Louis Katzman’s Band New York, Aug. 18—Dennis King, of stage and screen romance, and Louis Katzman’s orchestra will bring a new type of musical and dramatic program to radio listeners from coast- to-coast over an NBO-WJZ network beginning Wednesday, August 22, at 8p.m.C. 8. T. The star of many stage and screen operettas, King will perform both as a singer of romantic songs and as ; an actor in a brief dramatic scene at exch of the tifteen-minute weekly broadcasts from the NBC Radio City studios. The celebrated baritone and actor will inaugurate the series by singing “Nitchavoe” and “I Hear You Sing- ing.” and with the Balcony Scene from “Cyrano de Bergerac,” in which he will be assisted by a cast of radio performers. For the first broadcast Katzman and his orchestra will play; the Kashimiri Love Sonz and a med-| ley including “A Kiss in the Dark”, and “Sweetheart of Sigma Chi.” At each of the succeeding weekly| broadcasts, King will offer two or more baritone solos and will be heard as the hero in either a roman- tic scene from some famous play or in an original drmatic sketch written | especially for his use. Probably best known tor his stage; and screen portrayals of Francois! Villon and d’Artagnan in “The Vaga-; bond King” and “Three Musketeers,” dances in the homes of Hollywood movie stars. 30—Women's Radio Review Rhythmic Serenade —Chicago Symphony Orch. 0—Oxydol’s Own Ma Perkins Procter & Gamble Camay ucation in the News (0—Baseball Scores isters of the Skillet 0—Tender Leaf Tea Pem.—Baron Munchausen :30—Press Radio News and So. St. Paul Livestock Markets Organ Melodies :00—Studio na Jettick Shoe Program Eddie Duchin and Orch. ack Berger and Orch. ws Leonard Keller and Orch. 11:30—Tom Coakley & Orch, 12:00—Silent ‘Thursday, Aug. 23 Breakfast Club ‘0 be announced —Viennese Sextette \—Farm Flashes Fress Radio News gan Recital udio rkets, Weather and Aunt Macs Vic and Sade Words and Musie Markets and World Bookman —The Honorable Archie Uonal Farm and Home Hour ow! 0 Symphony Orch, lol's Own Ma Perkine 0—Tom Coakley and ' —O'Learys Irish Minstrels J Fleischmann Hour 0—Press Radio News and So. St. Paul Livestock Markets udio M. Barkes, iuy Lombardo and Orch Dancing in Milwaukee \—Nay Heatherton—Baritone Men of Note 12:00—Silent Melody Mixers Veather and Aunt mm: 10:15—Merry Macs 10:30—Vic and Sade 10:45—Words and Music 11:00—Mkts, and World Bookman 21:15—The Honorable Archie 1 11:30—National Farm and Home Hour 12:30—General Mills “Wheaties” with Prof. Sauerkraut & Band 12:45—Studio 22:50—Markets ‘00—Manhattan Beach Orch. 1:15—Organ y 30—Women’s Radio Review : y' 3:45—Sam & His City Fellers lb—Harry Meyer & Orch. :15—Tintype Tenor 6:30—Baseball Scores 5:45—Sisters of the Skillet 6:00—Will Aubrey, Wandering Minis- trel 6:30—Press Radio News and So. St. Paul Livestock Markets 6:35—Organ Melodies 7:00—Russian Symphonique 7:30—Ford Program $:00—Palmolive Beauty Theatre of the Air 9:00—Plano Moods 9:15—C, M, Barkes 9:30—Studio 0:00—Address by P. M. G. James A. Farle Wednesday, Aug. 22 300—-Breakfast Club 00—Harvest of Song 15—Viennese Sextette Om ets 00—The Honeymooners 15—Merry Macs j—Moore Paint Program tudio 20:00—Markets, Weather and Aunt Sam Archi 11:15—Honoral e 1 41:30—Netional Farm and Home Hour 13:30—General Mills “Wheaties” with Sauerkraut & Band :30—Herman Crome and Orch. 2:00—Silent Friday, Aug. 24 —Breakrast Club —To be announced —Viennese Sextette —Farm Flashes Biscuit With Bill and Patty 10:00—Markets, weather and Aunt Sammy ;—Charles Sears, Tenor —Vie and Sade —Words and Music —Markets and World Bookman 5—Tho Honorable Archie Program eneral Mills “Wheaties” Prof. Sauerkraut & Band 1:00—Maria’s Certo Matinee—Gen- eral Foods 00—Rhythmic Serenade 30—Chicago Symphony Orch. \—Oxydol's Own Ma Perkins Alice in Orchestralia 1 Pearce and His Gang loratio Zito and Orch. jleepy Hall & Orch. \—Baseball Scores State Mill & Elevator Prgm. with Speed Wallace 0—Organ Melodies Paul Livestock Markets Pantry H 10:00—Eddie Duchin and Orch. 10:30—Paul Pendarvis & His Orch. 11:00—Clyde Lucas and Orch. 11:30—Tom Coakley Orch. 12:00—Silent day, Aug. 25 7:00—Breakfast Club 8:00—Gospel 8:15—Morning Parade 8:30—Press Radio News 8:36—Morning Parade (Cont.) jies and has made countless phono- :30—Press Radio News and So. St. Dennis King has played in all types of drama from Shakespeare to musi- cal comedy. He was starred on Broadway last season in “Richard of Bordeaux,” and has becn featured on the radio. s Louis Katzman has conducted his orchestra for many microphone ser- graph recordings. A native of Bes- Sarabia, he got his early musical training in the Near East, and has a thorough knowledge of the best music of both the eastern and west- ern worlds. After coming to Ameri- ca he was associated with many lead- ing symphony orchestras, before forming his own organization. ? ee | Stevens Met With | More Trouble Later If you think Captain Albert W. Stevens of the stratosphere ex- Ploit broadcast over NBC net- works Saturday, July 29, was hav- ing trouble in the aerial wastes 10 miles above Nebraska when the balloon started to fall, you should hear about the trouble he had Wednesday, Aug. 1, in the wilds of Boone county, two miles south of Lebanon, Ind. ‘When his balloon bag split op- en last week all he had to do was | Listeners-in Will Be Taken to} lerican Bosch Radio Explorers Club, BROUGHT 10 RADIO IN BOSCH PROGRAM Far Corners of Earth by Talks of Travelers MARTIN JOHNSON TO TALK Others Include F. Trubee Davi- son, Roy Chapman Andrews and Margaret Mead New York, Aug. 18—Radio listeners will be taken to the far corners of the earth to share the most exciting adventures of leading explorers of the American Museum of Natural History when the American Bosch Radio Explorers Club sets sail over a coast-to-coast NBC-WJZ network and KFYR on Sunday, August 19, at 3:30 p. m. (CST). F. Trubee Davison, president of the American Museum of Natural His- tory, will be the first speaker and Roy Chapman Andrews, conqueror of the Gobi Desert; Martin Johnson, jungle traveller; Margaret Mead, fa- mous woman explorer, and many oth- er noted scientists will be among oth- er guest explorers whu will tell of their exploits at the weekly fifteen- minute broadcasts from the NBC Radio City studios, under the spon- sorship of the United American Bosch Corporation. Captain James P. Barker, veteran skipper and commander of the Am- WILL BROADCAST ON SUMMIT OF RAINIER} Human Pack Trains to Carry) Microphones to Top of Gla- | cial Mountain Sunday will set the stage for each broadcast with a colorful seaman’s tale, and one noted explorer will be interviewed each week by Hans Christian Adam- son, author and former foreign cor- respondent now connected with the American Museum of Natural His- ‘The museum, which will furnish all of the guest explorers, is an institu- tion of recognized authority in the Human pack trains will carry NBC | microphones to one of the highest | points in the United States, the sum- mit of Mount Rainier in the State of Washington, for an unusual half, hour broadcast on Sunday, August 19, | at 6:30 p. m. CDST., over an NBC- ‘WJZ network. Two announcers, Hal Wolf and Wil- | ton Hoff of the staff of KOMO and/ KJR, NBC associated stations in Seat- tle, will scale the heights of the “Mountain That Was God,” as In- dians once called the mighty glacier- covered Reinier, to bring listeners a graphic word picture of the natural wonders which have made the moun- tain famous. 4 According to present plans, the na- tionwide radio audience will be taken tu the peak of Mt. Rainier, 14,408 feet above sca level. Not only will the summit be attempted, but announcers also will describe Paradise Valley, a fairyland of flowers at tne edge of the PRESERVE THIS PAGE Radio fans would do well to save this page all through next week. It will serve ac an excellent guide when you may tune in on pro- grams to your liking with a mere turn of the dial. educational and scientific life of the nation, and its association with the series assures listeners to the Ameri- can Bosch Radio Explorers Club of scientific accuracy as well as inter- esting entertainment. Expeditions from the museum are in the field constantly, gathering in- formation in many odd corners of the world. Neither desert heat nor the icy barriers of the poles, nor moun- tain wilderness, nor the ocean depth have halted the explorations of these adventuring scientists. In this series they will come to the microphone to piaciers, and subterranean water- wait until it fell close enough to the earth for him to jump out. with his parachute and drift soft- ly to land without any trouble to speak of. But when he misread a road sign, got lost on a country lane and then ran out of gasoline four days later while motoring east with instruments salvaged from the wreckage of the stratos- Phere gondola, he found himself in genuine trouble. He couldn't wait until things got better or step pleasantly out of the car and drift softly to a gasoline station this time. He had to get out and walk one dusty, stony, brambly mile to a Hoosier farm house to beg gasoline. Which he did. The instruments will be taken to laboratories for inspection and reading. Radio apparatus used by the crew of the Explorer will be displayed at the NBC studios at Radio City, New York. radio listeners, Cheri McKay of NBC’s Merry Macs quartet has received a bushel of apples, a pair of slippers and a cap knitted by a blind woman, ;end numerous cakes from a colony of j blind fans. (0—Chicago Symphony Orch, 30—Chick Webb and Orch. 00-—Al Pearce and His Gang 30—Palace Hotel Orch, 00—Pickens Sisters 5:15—Flying With Capt. Al Wil- jams aseball Scores 1 1 Capitol Theatre Party :30—Radio City Concert 0—Highlights of the Bible 0—Weatl eo escsnororsmmntremS 0—Singing Strings :30—Dancing Shadows To be announced 5—Harriet Ware Anniversary 0—Sunday Vespers :30—American Bosch Radio lorers Club :45—Shura Cherkassky, Concert Pianist 4:00—Catholic Hour 4:30—Henry cing an¢ Ore! 5:00—Margarite Kennedy, Scores ‘cital :15—Baseball 0—M u: 1 Art Quartet 8:45—Studio 3:55—Markets 9:00—Studi 9:30—Heinnie and His Grenadiers 10:00—Markets, Weather and Aun! Sammy 10:15—Genia Fonariova 103) id Sad. 12: ets 1:00—400th Anniversary Discovery | of.Canada - * and Sanborn Hour 300—Th ng of Love 1:30—Leon Settle & Kampus Kings ard it S—Eehty Geodon the Ate =o o—Leonard Keller and Orch. say Gordon and Orch. jen ¥ | Timein Air Dramas Among other gifts received from her} Ex- h, Piano Re- 8:00—Hessbergers Original Bavarian Orch. tell listeners about their quest for falls in arched tunnels of- ice caves knowledge of benefit to mankind. —|120" tha"bace of the glaciers, ‘They Adamson, the inquiring reporter of wil) cross ard describe such noted the series, left the newspaper field glaciers as the Nisqually and the Cow- in 1926 to become identified with the|jitz two of six great glaciers which development of the Ariny Air Corps, = as civilian assistant to F. Trubee Da- tities pmcoe le lecte abt AEat ee vison, the Assistant Secretary of) 4’ total of twenty-eight glaciers are War in charge of army aviation./ round on Ranier, which covers one This summer Adamson was in Wyom-| hundred square miles of territory in ing and Montana with Dr. Barnum) painier National Park and is. located Brown, who will be one of the guest eighty-six miles from Seattle. Mt. speakers in the forthcoming series,| Rainier was given its English name by on an expedition to gather fossils of| tne celebrated explorer, Capt. George giant dinosaurs that roamed the) vancouver, who named it in 1797 in earth 200,000,000 years ago when the! nonor of one of his brother Lords of Northwest was a tropical jungle. English Admiralty, Among other guest explorers not| Rainier, formerly called Regnier. already mentioned will be Mrs. F.!""qne ‘broadcast will be under the Trubee Davison, Vilhjaimur Stefans~| rsonal supervision of Program Di- scn, Theodore Roosevelt, Jr., Clyde ; : Robe! rector Will WaNen; Chief Engineer Risherena rt Cushman Murphy.| Francis Brott and assistant engineer Tom Rewak of KOMO and KJR. Villain Has Easier Benny Tells All New York, Aug. 18—Slap—the sound comes over the air. “Ouch,” says the: Vice Admiral |* BIG NETWORKS BOOK Programs Will Be Heard Dur- ing Three-Day Engage- ment.at Regina, Sask. Arrangements are being completed with the Canadian Radio Commission to bring to the Canadian and Ameri- can radio audiences the sweet music of Harry Turner's Orchestra when it plays a three day dance engagement in Regina, Sask. August 23, 24 and 25. Thru the efforts of the western pro- gram manager, Horanc: Stoven and Myron ‘J. Bennett, program manager of the orchestra's programs. will be broadcast not only by the Can- adian network but by the Nationa! Broadcasting company and Columbia Broadcasting 5: as well. Defin- ite hours of the broadcasts will be an- nounced at a later date Harry Turner’s Orchestra is to be congratulated in securing this oppor- tunity and with Myron J Bennett an- nouncing the program from CHWC in Regina there will be no doubt but that it will be well presented. YOUTH IS KEYNOTE New York, Aug. 18.—Youth is the real keynote of the “Dreams Come True” program series presented over an NBC-WEAF network and KFYR Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays at 1:00 p. m. (C.S.T.) under the spon- sorship of the makers of Camay soap. For the baritone star, Barry McKinley, is only 21 and the maestro of the orchestra, Ray Sinatra, is only 24, making the total ages of the two most important figures in the program series only 45 years. .2 nein as | Returns to Air On Private Life radio actor. In his mind the listener has a vision of the villain getting) New York, Aug. 18—“I find that I what he deserves. But the listener is | like radio best among all branches of wrong. On the stage even the villain | the show business,” says Jack Benny, often does not get slapped, but makes! whose comedy is heard on the Gen- the noise by clapping his hands as he eral Tire broadcasts over a nationwide is lightly cuffed by the maiden. On, NBC-WEAF network each Friday at the radio even the gesture is elimin-| 8:30 p. m. (C.S.T.), “because your ated and the slap is made entirely by| radio audience can only hear you and the villain. | that saves shaving expense and tailor Perhaps he hits himself in the face,/ bills. I have done some of my best it he is very realistic. More often he| broadcasts in bathrobe. merely brings his palms together., “The stage is different from both Sometimes lazy villains stand idly by| the radio and the screen. You must while a sound effects man makes the! dress well and I have seen actors get noise. On the Palmolive Beauty Box| plenty of mileage out of a full dress Theatre programs, heard over NBC suit by using the right spotlights. For networks and KFYR, for instance, | instance, if the trousers can’t stand there is a full crew of men who duel, | inspection, you have the spotlight put slap, ¢lose doors or do anything else| on the coat. I have been asked ‘What which requires a special sound. Al do radio stars do with all their Paradise, where all the actor has to| money?’ Well, I spend mine on golf say 1s, “Goodbye,” and even the door balls but my game is improving and I is slammed for him. expect to be saving shortly.” Flowers For All Occasions REASONABLE PRICES Artistic bouquets and corsages for those ex- tra “special” events. : Hoskins-Meyer . Florists 200 Fourth St. Phone 19 PRSAR ECB AR Dott till the THERMOMETER : Diy, S inveatigate NATURAL GAS HEATING COSTS Nour! Montana-Dakota Power Co. Bismarck - Mandan - Hebron Dickinson TURNER'S ORCHESTRA} sz LEO COOK, 6, ASKS DAD JOE FOR JOB ON RADIO PROGRAM Precocious Youngster Is Ambiti- ous Understudy of Clown- ing Father New York, Aug. 18—Radio’s most ambitious understudy is Leo, the six- year-old son of Joe Cook, the clown who is starred at the Colgate House Party broadcasts over coast-to-coast NBC-WEAF networks each Monday night at 7:30 p.m. (CS.T.) A precocious and indefatigable trouper, Leo has speeded up his ABC's 80 that he can read House Party scripts with slight assistance on five dollar words from Joe's butler, Sween- ey. Meekly he accedes to a despised noon time nap, return for a guarantee that he can attend every one of the House Party shows at the NBC Radio City studios. r Leo's double in the House Party hilarity is subjected to penerating scrutiny and minute criticism. It is the youthful Leo’s fond hope that said double will be stricken with incurable laryngitis two minutes before the House Party show goes on the air. Then he, Leo, in the best traditions of the theatre, will get the microphone spot which he firmly believes to be his due. Last Monday night he had the lead- ing role letter perfect as the result of an entire week’s practice on a soap box at his father’s Sleepless Hollow home. “The kid is my toughest audience,” confides Joe. “He is the arch tyrant of Sleepless Hollow— in fact he’s the only serious competition for Mussolini I know of. I've got to tell him a non- sense yarn he likes before he'll go to Davison Describes African Adventure New York, Aug. 18.—F Trubee Davison, president of the American Museum of Natural History, who will be the first guest explorer in the! American Bosch Radio Explorers Club series, to be inaugurated over an NBC-WJZ nationwide network and KFYR on Sunday, August 19, at 3:30 Pp. m. (C8.T.), will come to the micro- Phone prepared to tell listeners how he lived with a pack of lions in Africa. Davison will be interviewed by Hans Christian Adamson on his recent Af- rican expedition in the course of which h@experienced a thrill which come to! few men—hobnobbing with the fam- ilies of lions that live in the dried-out river beds on the Serrengetti Plains. For more than a month Davison spent several hours a day within a few feet of from 12 to 17 lions, studying their habits, bringing them food and learn- ing to know them intimately. One of the most active of the young- er men who have won wide public no- tice, Davison started his public career at the age of twenty, when he organ- ized the first Yale Air Unit. A crash which kept him bed-ridden for sev- eral years prevented him from going overseas. As Assistant Secretary of War for Aviation from 1926 to 1933, Mr. Davison played a prominent role in the advancement of civil as well as military aviation. ntly he has devoted himself to scientific pursuits. | Add Pet Superstitions—Herman Larson, Commodores Quartet bari- tone, never dresses his left foot first— and he never passes on the opposite side of a post while walking with a companion. Double-Duty Just the thing for school teachers, bookkeepers, cashiers, accountants, sten- ographers, lawyers, doc- tors, dentists—in fact, any- one in any type of office. IT WILL CLAMP YOUR PAPERS TEMPORARILY OR PERMANENTLY, WITHOUT DAMAGE, AC- -CORDING TO YOUR DE- SIRE. Bismarck, N. D.. FAMOUS EXPLORERS ’ |Behind the Microphone— ——6 | Dramatic Star ee = Dorothy Scott, Slim, Blond Dra- matic Star, Who Will Soon Make Her Appearance in the One Man's Family Sketches Heard Over NBC. San Francisco, Aug. 18.— Dorothy Scott, youthful Californian, has been selected from a large group of can- didates for a part in One Man’s Fam- ily, popular dramatic sketch of life in the average family broadcast week- ly over NBC networks. She will make her appearance shortly in a new and interesting role. Miss Scott, who is in her early twen- ties, is a native of San Francisco and had experience in musical com- edy and legitimate drama as well as before the microphone. She appeared with DeWolf Hopper in “The Mikado” and treaesures a fan letter from the famous actor written after he heard her voice in a radio drama. One Man’s Family is broadcast each Saturday at 7:00 (CS.T.). over an NBC-WEAF network and KFYR. Windjammer Sailor Brings Yarns to Air New York, Aug. 18—Captain James P. Barker, who will serve as com- mander on the American Bosch Radio Explorers Club broadcasts over an NBC-WJZ nationwide network and KFYR, beginning Sunday, August 19, at 3:30 p.m. (CS.T.), has sailed the seven seas for 44 years. For 32 years Captain Barker, who will share time on the air with weekly guest speakers from the American Museum of Natural History, has been in command of large ocean going square-rigged ships and steam vessels. He has rounded Cape Horn 41imes in windjammers. In recent years he com- manded the Tusitala, one of the last of the proud American square-rigged sailing vessels. Captain Barker's colorful, pictur- esque background of adventure and experience in every part of the world will-add color to the meetings of the American-Bosch Radio Explorers Club. Each week the captain's story will deal with the part of the world to be dis. cussed by the guest explorer. Gunther Decker, first tenor of the Songfellows Quartet heard over NBC networks, says his greatest handicap as @ member of the quartet has been forgetting that he is a soloist. Every Kind of | HARDWARE For All Around the Home Also Complete Line of Paints, Varnishes and Painting i Supplies. French & Welch Phone 141 306 Main No Office Can Afford To Be Without This MARKWELL FASTENER ALLOWANCE WILL BE MADE ON YOUR OLD STAPLING MACHINE, REGARDLESS OF ITS AGE . OR CONDITION Order These Handy Devices From The’ Bismarck Tribune Company Exclusive Markwell Fastener Dealers for South North Dakota one Inexpensive Here is a stapling device, made from the sturdiest of materials, which will clamp to- gether your papers and documents “tem- porarily” or “perma- nently”, according to your desire, without damage. AND MARKWELL STAP- LING MACHINES ARE GUARANTEED AGAINST DEFECTIVE MATERIAL OR WORKMANSHIP FOR 10 YEARS!!! Markwell Mfg. Co., Inc., through its dealers, will at all times repair or replace FREE OF CHARGE a: MARKWELL STAPLIN MACHINE which does not give 100 Per Cent SATIS- FACTION AND SERVICE. Telephone No, 82