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| 1 | if ‘y } i i —————________-_—_—* |KFYR-NBC Program| p (Subject to Bavisien) i) ‘Teesday, Oct. 20 1:00—Good Morning Melodies 1:30—Do You Remember 8:00—Griggs Cooper Good Morning ur 30—-Breakfast Club 54 Ome S—B: st Club 9:45—Ch: 10:00—Markets, Sammy 10:15—Hollywood High Hatters 10:30—-Hymns of all Churches 5—-Betty and Bob Markets and Police Bulletins ley Axton—Tenor 130—-National Farm and Home Hour 2:30—Grandma Travels—Sears-Roe- buck S—News —Dr. Maddy'’s Band Lessons 1:30—General Federation of Wom- en's Clubs 1:45—Armchalr Quartet —Markets and Weather 0—-Pepper Young's Family— 0—F & F Ne 315—Guiding Li 3:30—Agricuiture ip the News 3:45—Kitty Keene—Drett 00—Son: ‘Don Winslow of the Navy O—Jack Armstrong—General Mills :45—Betty and Escorts 300—-KFYR News Bureau ‘05—Master Singers 5—Studio 0—Sammy Watkins and Orch. 5—Benno Robinotf, Violinist 7:00—Russ Morgan's Philip Morris rel 2:30—-La¢y Esther Program i:00—Hon, Herbert Hoover—Talk 8:30—Canadian Club of New York Dinner Program 9:00—Studio 9:15—Joan Edwards, Biogen 9:30—Jimmy Fidler in Hollywood G oss oe 9:45—Serenade in the Night 10:00— Weather 10:01—News 10:15—King’s Jesters Orch. 16:30—Jimmy Dorsey and Orch. 11:00—Joe Reichman and Orch. 11:38—Jack Winston and Orch. 12:06—Silent Wedneaday, Oct. 37 7:00—Good Morning Melodies 5—Neighbor Jim Sammy 6—Hollywood High Hatters 0—Hymns of all Churches s—Betty and Bob 00—Markets and Police Bulletins Edward Gamage, Tenor \0—National Farm and Home Hour 0—Grandma Travels—Sears-Roe- buck b—Studio 5— News e—Your Health e—Walts Favorites Ameri Schoo! nd Weather Young’s Family— feb ceretteseenete ne nee tens 2:18-—Oxydi 2:30—Vie an 9 eon” 8: i—The Guiding Light-P & G lapthe iculture in the News Drett . 5:16—Don wiipslow. of the Navy ‘S—Harry Koy and Orch, 5:30-—Jack Arms! eon oun ral Mi Baking Co.—Fri in Town ds ther Program MoBrieiot Meyer-Towe Hall to- nigl 9:00—-American Tobaceo Co.—Hit Parade \S—Talk—Alistair Cooke eather 10:30—Rudolph Prim! Jr and Orch, ers an ch, ALsd hts Out 12:00—Silent ‘Thursday, Oct. 38 00—Good Morning Melodies 1:80—Do You Remember —Griggs Cooper Good Morning '5—Vaughn de Leath 0—Top O° the Dial hurch in the Wildwood kets, Weather and Aunt mmy jollywood High Hatters o—Hyas of all Churches—G Bob—General Mills ry and Police Bulletin Grittin= Zener rs FO Ranch Boys and Weather ‘oung’s Family— 1s and the Escorts ‘R News Bureau par Reveries itudio 30—Bavitt Serenade ea Meet! 00——-Royal Gelatin Revue 1 eat 3 Be Announced ‘Kratt Music Hall 00—- Weather \ Friday, Oct. 20 og Morning Melodies fou Remember jusical Clock resktast Club 60-—News = Breakfast Club hearts of the Air aah Ge kath tana Flour Mills Jim {= bor ets, Weather and Aunt Leibtm Betty CrockeseGencral Mills ty and Bob—U: Mills {LidbcMerkets and Police Bulletins 11:15—Edward Gamage, Tenor 11:30—National Far 4 Home Hour 13 oc renee Travels—Sears Roe- ue! 13:45—Studlo we lusic Appreciation Hour | Pepper Young's Famfly — Camay —Kitty Keene—Dreft —Arthur Lang, Baritone —Edward Davies, Singer inchv! 5:45—Bismarck Baking Co.—Freshest Thing In Town YR News Bureau udio 5—Uncle Ezra’s Radio Station — Dr Mil 6:30—Oriental irdens Orch, 45—Chevrolet Musical Moments Cities Service Concert Pontiac Varsity Show Safety on the Highways $:45—Studio 9:00—Address by Robert M. Speer 9:15—World’s Featherweight Cham- plonship Fight at ‘oe Rines Orch. 3 { 4 € 3 3 9) 2 < a 3 3 2 2 3 3 $ 0—Silent Satarday, Oct. 30 ws reakfast Club weethearts of the Air THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1937 BILL STERN BOASTS UNIQUE SYSTEM FOR BRROR-PROOF WORK ‘Spotters’ Play an Important Role and Announcer Inter- prets Their Signs HAS ALL DOPE ON PLAYERS Fool-Proof Chart Indispensable; Knows Players by Features, Eccentricities New York, Oct. 23—“Having knowl- edge at your fingertips” is not just a proverbial bromide when Bill Stern, NBC’s ace football reporter, broad- casts play-by-play and player-agains! Player descriptions of the nation’s cutstanding football games. Sura knowledge happens to be a literal, actual, physical reality in which fingertips play as important a factor in the radio audience's enjoyment of the game as do the quarterback’s signals in a team’s success. Football broadcasting differs from cther sports reporting in that an an- wingtime Trio ill Krenz and Orch, 0—Markets, Weather and Aunt Swanson, Singer and Police Bulletins Club Program rouncer must know in split second time not only the names and posi- tions of 22 players but also the names, and pésitions of innumerable substi- tutes, Any one of these may turn out to be a hero by morest break vf ational Farm and Home Hour | chance. So that he can relay this and usic Graphs 3—News 0—Club Matinee 0—Football Game O— Mark: 0- Be Announced 8 jorman Cloutier and Orch. 0—Kaltenmeyer’s Kindergarten 0—El Chico Spanish Revue other information to radio fans im- mediately, Bill Stern spends weeks at the training camps of al! out- standing college elevens. ‘Spotters’ Are Used But what, you may ask, do finger- tips have to do with all this? That's where “spotters” and their finger- 0—Local 0—Girls of tl 5—The Art of Living poe R News Bureau tips come in. “Spotters” are college men who are intimately acquainted with the players on their own teams. ‘They know a player by his features, Crack NBC Sports Announcer Has Football Game Cons Announcer Uses Unique System CONTINUED from page one: Death Comes for Pioneer Nurse in ‘The comfort of hospital patients and staff was also a lifelong obses- sion with Sister Boniface. She got ‘az little satisfaction out of the sheet- iron stoves she found in each hospital Toom when she arrived as the pa- tients got heat from the stoves. Determined to install a steam heat- ing plant in the hospital, she learned ‘one could be installed for $1,000. She borrowed the money from business- men on notes payable in six months with interest. She hunted as far as St. Cloud, Minn., before she could Hospice She Built tantly. at His Fingertips ‘The Freshest Thing in Town’ announcer, secured a blueprint of When little Johnny Lawrence first began broadcasting, he had some difficulty in finding his way around through the maze of studios, control rooms and reception halls. So Francis Pettay, Johnny's explaining to Johnny just how to reach the proper studio for his “Freshest Thing in Town” broadcasts. Johnny Lawrence, “The Fresh- est Thing in Town” is brought to you Monday's, Wednesdays and Fridays at 5:45 p. m. (CST) over station KFYR. the station and here we see him Tangible efforts of her work were recognized in September, 1935, when the hospital commemorated 50 years of service, with Sister Boniface as the ltving symbol of what had been ac- complished. Most Rev. John Gregory Murr: archbishop of St. Paul; Gov. Welford, Chief Justice John Burke, Rt. Rev. Vincent Wehrle, bishop of Bismarck; Mayor A. P. Lenhart; Rev. Mother Mary Louise, superior of the With the exception of a period of @ little over two years, the bulk of ‘Sister Boniface's services to human- ity were rendered in Bismarck. I. 1906 she left the hospital here tc become superior of St. Mary’s schoo!, Altoons, Wis. She was recalled ir 1908. Of Irish Parentage Because she chose the name of the patron saint of Germany, Boniface, scores of her friends regarded her ay 1 0—Markets, Weather and Aunt @ Hour Roe- tle Lamp Company Pro- of German descent, She was, how- ever, of Irish parentage. She wa: e christened Mary Ann, the daughter of sented church, state and citizenry in| Mr. and Mrs. John Timmins, and wa: public homage to the remarkable|born at Benton, Wis. Sept. 7, 1854 woman and the institution she di-|Her father died when she was a young rected. She was presented with an|child. As a young girl she moved automobile by the business and pro-jwith her mother to St. Paul. fessional men of Bismarck. There she attended the cathedral Built Great Institution school. At the age of 17 she entered From a few rooms with a few sis-/| the novitiate of the Benedictine sistera ters, Sister Boniface moulded herjat St. Gertrude’s convent, Shakopee, hospice into an institution that ranks|Minn. That was Feb, 13, 1872. There as one of the Northwest’s outstand-|sne had her training, took her name, his eccentricities, his build and his “| habits as well as by his number. One “spotter” from each team assists An- nouncer Stern in his NBC broad- casts. > Stern sits in the broadcasting booth, his eyes on the play. So, too, do the spotters. In front of Stern is a chart of his own design, on which metal clasps hold in place the names of each player. Should Doaks, fullbact, make nine yards through the left side of the line, Stern sees it and beging absolutely correct, Stern glances at wi um! Up to"on vm 3 ig medical centers. Its t is val-|robes and vows of stability, la bor his chart. field in motion, too many time-outs; unnecessary roughness; inter~ a at $500,000. It has a staff equal|until death and obedience to super- Substitute for Words B to that of the larger businesses of |{ors. There the fingers of the spotters Bismarck and its reputation extends} Later she moved with the sisters 0—Weather Point to the name of the player car- far beyond the borders of North Da-|to St. Benedict's convent, St. Joseph, S—emoke DreameFendrich, Inc.| June the ball, the name of the man kota. Minn, the mother house of her or- 0—Magic Key of RCA ve [making the tackle. ‘The spotters in- In 1884 the institution could have|der, from whence she came to Bis- Was a Woman sert the name of each substitu'e been housed in small residence. The|marck in 1892. to Heart Hour atranged “! staff consisted’ of five sister nurses.|, Sister Boniface was not unlike many Today the institution occupies a whole }of her sex when she time and again city block with beds to accommodate |Trefused to reveal to friends and re- 175 patients and the latest and most | porters her age. “Just say I am past modern scientific apparatus operated 16,” she would say. by @ staff of 50 sisters and 55 nurses. Had Wide Acquaintance Good From the Beginning Sister Boniface had as wide ac- Attesting to the early excellence|Quaintance in the northwest as any of the hospital is that fact that in|other woman of her time. It is said 1914 it was the first hospital in North | that she never rode a train, street car, parr paras, Dakota to be given a Class A rating|elevator or other public conveyance deal) ie bend ie ilewer tana as by the American College of Surgeons | Where she did not meet someone with eye.” But in football broadcasts, Bill and the Catholic Hospital associa-| whom she had previously come in Radio News Stern says when you synchronise their tion of the United States and Can-| contact, Binine and Orch, actions “everything's perfect. ada. ‘To many men she was the north- ‘all SLOPE NEWS ” Sister Boniface saw to it that up-to-|West’s outstanding woman, not only :00—San Francisco Opera 300—Silent rs —Gni ity of Chicago Round Table Discussions ips. where words not without upsetting the broadcaster and the audience—ex- actly how many the penalty ts and whether it is for offside, unneces- , crawling, in- Orch. en rogram ad ‘Sanborn Progra ni janborn Program ton Merry-Go-Round — | sary roughness, holding, terference or what. Album of Familiar} Someone—the name sca) te At every football game he broadcasts Bill Stern uses two charts like this, one for each team. Metal clips hold in place a card with the name, position, weight, height and: home of each player. R date equipment for diagnosis and|because of her executive ability but tment was added to the hospital | also because of the excellent. business :00—Silent m time to time as required by the} Judgment she possessed. i te Mo! Oo oo—Good Morting Melodies doors and other movable objects.| mixture. Roll like jelly roll. Bake in| explained to see @ doctor.| American Colle Oné of her a 5 ge of Surgeons to en- ne of delights was to hold an- toMusicnl Close McClusky — Mrs. Guy Oliver, 68, Those who couldn’t move the lumber|s hot oven (600 F.) about 20 minutes, | After an tion it was found) able it to furnish the best of service | nual Chrigtmas eve parties at the hos- Kfast Club homesteader here, died recently in} forked over about $1 each to keep that only the braves needed to its patients. pital where sisters, doctors, nurses California, their names off court records, btentialine a Never did Sister Boniface at any|8nd patients celebrated the yuletide nce season. 2 F She also enjoyed picnics. On one as. @ young woman and which became} Occasion, pondering means of convey- heavier as the years passed. She con-|ing hampers of food td the picnio tinually looked forward to active|srounds, it was suggested she use the leadership of the institution. As she| hospital ambulance. once said, “There are no eight hour Took Friend’s Advice Gays on my schedule nor any age of} “Oh, no,” she said. “What would t.”” people say if they saw the ambulance Traveled Extensively going down the street loaded with Ever alert to improving her knowl- | food.” edge so that it might be reflected in| But she quickly decided the sug- more efficient operation of her hos-| gestion was feasible when a friend told her that hospitals in other sec- tions of the country found other uses for their ambulances. One brother, James Timmins, long & resident of Morris, Minn. survive: her. He now is living with relative: in St. Paul. Other living members of the family * are John Slater and Mrs. James Mc- Nearney, both of Savage, Minn., and Mrs. Nicholas McCann of Shakopee. Mrs. Pendergast of St, Paul isa ae She had two favorite cousins, the Misses Mamie and Clara McCauley of association |St Paul, who frequently visited her. They are expected here Sunday. . Linton— Officers of the Emmons RE 8 E ughn di h 0—Top O' the Dial ntana Flour Mills Program ighbor Jim rkets, Weather and Auat 1m, i vEee H+ : 8 — Gh ‘al Mills Markets and Police Bulletins rr st tii ness, treasurer; Father Krank, chap- 1a0—Betty Bennett und Joe Wolver-lisin’ 2 on 1:45—Armchal ow Lebo Weather and Markets Dawson—Rev. E. W. Eberts was in-/ soncerm who died within 48 hours of 3:00—Pepper Young's Famils—|stalled here as pestor of the Con- : ; 2:18—Oxydcl's Own Ma Perkins gregational churches of Dawson and 30—Vio and Sade—Crisco Tappen. Thi s—Ivory —— 2 Guid Light — St. Pius — Funeral services were 6 Light — P & Sl neid here for Henry Binstock, 12. bert Gisleberg, Wells county home- - i a 4 t Glen Ullin—Business men here will ‘Good Will” day Wednesday, gE EE efi Hats EEEE s Gackle—Puneral services were held here for Mrs. Albert Wolf, 30, cancer E ; i a E Stewar' Us ins of Finchvilie Guiney Vo Mi pont ey, 15—Don Wins! A of th ¥ i gE i} Steele — Presidents of high school classes here are Allen Bowerman, state game and fish department. Wilton—Knocked unconscious for 30 minutes when he came in contact with a power line, A. J. (Jack) Ab- ro suffered no apparent ill ef- E L 8 ef Be i : af ge ize ef n, Si 45—Chevrolet Musical J ion New Salem—Settler here in 1883, John C. Kleith, 86, was laid to rest. Hettinger — Dr. M. F. Williams, roll call chairman for Adams county, has set the annual Red Cross _member- ship drive for the week of Nov. 11. Lake Williams—Officers of the new 5 i 4 £ Z 8 g & i 5 se il Ha it f ty i t fi i e Finest of Foods - e Tastefully Prepared © At Economical Prices : : § leader. Gardar, N. D., Oct. 33—()}—Rob- ap % bers who Thursday night broke intu| Belfield—New officers of the Re- the postoffice housed in a generai|hekah lod for this district aw store here escaped with $1,500, te» |Helen Ingman, Belfield, president; books of stamps and three pairs uf|Ida Chernausak, Dickinson, vice president; Fi Belfield After entering the building through | secretary; the front door they broke into the/ treasurer. safe which contained funds of the RANG ‘store. Linton — Chicken coops, garages, : Human, sidewalks and root|iceswater slowly, just i pot i 2 = : ° # Stone doorstops, ‘ald he ellved the oo mas done by| two ralesy companies, after pect | was two rail amateurs. No trace of the robbers| agents hed inves Bismarck Tribune Co.