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l The N. Y. Herald Tribune Says. 'THE COMfMERCIAL ATBESHIP But. few of us p In the throngs which stared at the great bulk. of the Hindenburg slipping ' a, | along over New York om Monday evening there. must hay \béer remembered Kipling's fantasy, “with the Night Mail,\ \ . who: read that story-and it was published not so many \Years .ago-sup=] . '> A many Who j The na- j [Xfire, belng' sharpened for Roosevelt: I will be used on Lehman also. Cer-] 1] gain prominent members of She Wi wam'have been. heard: to. express «the; faithful... 'This indicates, that the: i On f, A spirit of hostility to the governor T's 'being 'skilfully brewed among,. the: “Senate- New Yorkers learn that aven 'such a whole-hearted New Dealer &s \Tom Connolly of, Texas-who is &. member of the Benate finance com- mitteg-Intimates that the tax bill -will be drastically revised. A long wrangle is assured before, any tas bill is enacted. For the 'first..time high business circles be- sed that we would so soon be watching.an actual air liner<bound out? . 9 ' it out along publicity lines. 'treasonable opinion: that they would |Heve there is real hope that the. f . saith thea‘nlght mail for Rurope, at her siVenty or eighty. milés-an hour, I faythat [tional 'distribitora-Pabst,- Schlitz,| rather see George Fearon (G. O. P. | surplus levy will be side-tracked - e 3 0 her running lights and the bright windows of her passeriger qfiarters gleam- protest«:| Afiheuser-Bugch .-- haye engaged Benate leader) in the governor's chair t &. 1 1 ess _ ALL ‘DEP ARTMENTS » | ing through the darkness, her engineers on watch in their throbbing engine: against large, appropriations ave: sag~ - George Eades of St. Louis; a than the present incumbent ' inancial insiders. understand tha E ' e GL ENS FALLS 2-31.31\ rooms and the officers on the shrouded bridge setting their long course for ged $122 pg; cent within the last six |:tlon-baiter during 'the 'dry.days, 'to A would like to have j ‘ fas: Sovine ! the English Channel,. That much has already come trie, and there seems $1011 ito trgperednlessuhu M0310 boost their . wares, The: “Sterner“, Recess- >_ |Gongress quit and go home before. i 38 THE TIMES Assumes Bo nnancla; responsibility 10f- $3908“me “7°\ nothing theoretically impossible about a regular and paying trans-Atlantic | the motto of the pac ”P boll {headed'by Jake. Rupert owner of the: 'The barrage \of business protests June 9, But they glso learn that } a th: Advertisements, but will reprint that part of an advertisement in which | airship service. '¥ankees, have entrusted their Head~| painst thecorporate surplus tax \bill there is talk on Capitol Hill of taking | sC typographical error occurs, Advertisers. will please notify the manage- | xpress steamer passages today have been brought down to around 110 | Power- Aine fate to Edward-L. Bernays, who having @) marked effectmn ~thela recess during the conventions. _ - 5 Sis t. Immedistely of any errors which may occur. hours between the Channel ports and Ambrose Lightship. ''The Graf Zep-| Cordell Hull, mild and unobtnuive, sponsored the Edison electric light! ____- waning *--: zm : < > T t Sunday) at 90-82 Glen atzeet by the. pelin, on one of her several voyages across the North Atlantic, arrived over | still doininates, the Wa i hori celebration at Detroit under Hefiry ® m m = T : Eos - published every mm, “fig,“ Welmngm 'and Eesex counties apd. Paris forty-seven hours out from Lakehurst, reaching Friedrichshafen in zon. His successive victories r. a[ Ford ausploes, ( 'y 4 : xs Glens Falls Post Comfifl or I? of Saratoga county and the adjoining fifty-five hours twenty-two minutes, and Dr. Eckener, With the faster| Cabinet comers is the' talk ' - tha |.. This hiring of publicists amounts to |. I|. ( (P f 3 Vmfimufitgedmzt “the Sgt 98m“ of Glens Palls as Second Class Mal Hindenburg, hopes materially to better that time, The westward passages| town. Despite wars and rumors of| tacit admission of the fact that the}[| t FDR's Achilles heel, He also foresées [# is bound to become more insistent of whether the United States ought nof| ures proposed by Miss Perkins, and |a Midas-like fund for the G. 0. P., no a - each locality. We did not need envoys from Washington to take to utilize not merely our helium but the expensive existing equipment, the as a result they probably won't pass: matter who is named, and-he doesn't IF 5 o charge of filling the ranks and the treasury. In that great established airship building industry, the accumulation of technical know!-| He has squelched certain agricultural minimize the value of political pen- [Fl E r It im IS |P b E cy Glens Falls men were quite ca able of representmg edge and experience, and the one still perfectly good big rigid which we have| releases which seemed to disparage nies in urban centers, -In his opinion, [|. VE Y C a a a mergencty q P available for the development of our own commercial airship services.| his reciprocal trade agreements, Next] the pending tax bill will alienate |[| R FF . Glens Falls on draft boards and Liberty bond committee and If we do not do so soon the whole will be irretrievably wasted. | to FDR, Mr. Hull is the most power». small tradesmen hitherto neutral 'or savlng i ' oal raises ful figure at Washington. WoC \& . - h CEEAMERY | ® L C s his fiddle an'*\start playin'. You their neighbors' hev got. Try these tonight: Talks-WAme. | necticut, Massichuselts and as far, ! through a labyrinth of sub deputies and assistant satraps AN0| Toly; keep a row goim very good \Music in th' homes a grand |CBS 7:30-Herhert Hoover, \A me. Away as Ohfo.\ Most of them were FR®DAY ; represented at the point of enforcement only by a petty subal-| with a fiddle playin' in th' same thing. Every house needs music |publican Program;\ WJZ-NBC-7:30 majors or captains in the Democratic NIGHT \office. Hatter ' ADVERTISING RATES M919“ Inform.“ mound at Busine- A FEDERAL MONOPOLY . _ A Republican effort in the House of Representatives to put the administration of relief into the hands of local authorities has been defeated by the Democratic majority. The heads of the national administration, under the leadership of President Roosevelt and Postmaster General Farley, has no intention of Allowing anyone but themselves and their appointees to have the handling of the remaining billions that are to be spent for relief. ' _ During the World war the raising of billions of dollars and the conscripting of millions of men were matters delegated to Red Cross units. It was unnecessary for the federal govern- ment to direct these matters through a vast bureaucracy, act- ing by means of agents sent into each city from foreign terri-|| tory. How did the administration of these extraordinary activities in war time compare with the administration of relief for hon- esty, efficiency and non-partisanship? 'The conduct of local committees during the World war was renowned for its effici- ency. - Such local boards and committee were entirely separated fromall political connections and considerations. Not one- tenth of the scandal that has arisen from the employment of relief workers by grace of political bosses was breathed against the local war boards. Politicians could not save their hench- men from the draft. But politicians, under the Roosevelt ad- ministration, can obtain jobs for their favorites. Not only 'by airship have usually been much slower, owing to the necessity 'of taking long detours to avoid headwinds, but the Ld Angeles reached I‘ekehurst in. 1924 only eighty-one hours out of Friedrichshafen The Graf took 111 1-2 | hours on. her most difficult westward» crossing, \But has materially \bettered. _| that on other occasions. Counting in packing baggage; boat trains, fareWell parties, customs ex- aminations and the other incidental delights 'of travel, one Has to allof all of five working days to a trip between New York and Paris or London by the fastest.of present steamers. An airship service could \take up to Sixty hours' flying time eastbound and still only consume 'two working days; westbound an eighty-two-hour voyage (three and a half full days) would consume only three working days, Thus the airship could count on saving three days one way and two days the other, which is an important gain. \The steamship has no present hope of equaling such passages, while even to save one working day over their present five, steamers would have to add several additional knots to the speeds. even of the Normandie and Queen Mary, and thet would be an expensive buisiness. The two doubts are, of course, the regularity of the airships service and its safety. The fire risk is still a grave one in hydrogen«filled dirigible, though this could be largely overcome if the United States would release the helium over which it has a monopoly but of which it 1§ making no use,, Meanwhile, the Hindenburg will continue through the summer to: test the practicability of a trans-Atlantic girship service. As she does so, the question LISTENING IN- with D, F. O'CONNELL fiddle. There ain't nothin' like th' music of a fiddle, especially when it's played by & fiddler instead of a violinist, Nobody in our neigh- borhood'd know whut you wus talk-. in' about ef you mentioned violinist, but say anything about a fiddler an' they'd start tellin' about good fiddlers like a couple of horsemen'd talk about fast horses, Most of th' fiddlers e'd_play by ear, too, which's somethin' most violinists can't do; leastwise don't do. I knowed lots of fellers who c'd play any tune on | a fiddle after hegrin' it only once, © an play it better'n they c'd ef they'd J wus readin' about th' meetin' th' wimmen folks had in th' Library called th' Family Life Conference, or something like thet, an', I see thet one spoke about music in th' home.\ The Old Timer telling 'em at a meeting of the Cold Stove Club. \I dunno all she said but ef she told th' folks thet a good fiddler's th' best thing a family kin hev she told 'em something I agree with. Any house thet has a good fiddler's a place of peace, Ef somebody starts a row, th' feller kin pick up wars, he finds time and energy to 'smack down his tivals. - He has suppressed and dominated at least six- Cabinet officers--Swanson,. Roper, Wallace; Morgenthou. Farley, Perkins. It hash't got into the news,} but he has put them 'in their. place. navy talk on expansion of the fleet when he thought. it might» demue‘ in- ternational interests; He still super- vises handling of foreign trade in spite of Mr. 'Roper's protests: He scuttled Mr. Morgenthau's pmposal that foreign governments' employes 'in this country be exempte from American taxation. - He has declined again and again to -deliver stump-speeches: desired by the National Committee, taking the po- sition that the Secretary of State can- not' indulge in partisan politics He is cool to several immigration meas- Wet- The big, bad brewers have refused to make up, be good and choose a czar to rule erring brew-makers. Se- cret Conferences designed to elimin- ate evils in the industry ended in bad rather than better feeling. So now they have decided to light RADIO--- Day by Day By C. E. BUTTERFIELD_| (Time is Eastern Standard) several times. HeHas bottled up all | their saloon-on-every-corner tactics: which explains why the drys are win- 'tests throughout the country Forecast- \ 'be & runaway for President Roosevelt. hoés-race when California's vote de- hours of waiting. « hood of Alf Landon's nomination. He 'other Coolidge-and that he will con- duct a campaign designed to develop gyrobably favorable to the admi nis«' body\-& lead which he thinks can: easily be wiped out should a definite ~personglity (if and when) charge of the opposition. . This seer suggests that the cam- will develop into a concentrated as New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio and Indiana. And he feels sure 'that &a Landon campaign, shrewdly conducted, could win this big batgh the President. 'The same sort of feel- Ing accounts for the disappearance of the G. O. P. spirit of defeatism ting their “second win brewers are misbehaving again. Tts{Il ning «a majority of local, option con- |, I A shrewd, cynical Democratic pro- | phet-his. name. is. &. housefiold word. If it could be revealed-discounts re |. ports 'that the November élection will | 'He prediéts it will turn into & 1916 |- termined. the outcome alter . tense. He bakes his forecast on the likeli- believes that the Kansas Governor 'f! 14 a smart, shrewd politician -- an- / ation. Latest polls, he adds, give |. [FDR a per cent margin over a' \no- | [L assume ' fight by both sides for definite states. | He regards the pivotal commonwealths |, of electoral votes-140-away from |- so noticeable in the last two weeks. | The Republicans are apparently get- | Sale <_ See page Re-orgamzatlen The biggest news in th1s paper today 3 ~ 29.31 WARREN STREET FRIDAY NITE SALE 6PMio9PM All the Thrifty Folks for miles and miles around this BIG MAR- hisfiddle an' play \Turkey in th' taken music lessons. NEW YORK, May 14. (P)-Indian- h ay night, Be sure and get your share ofthe that, none except those with the political O. K are allowed to| straw,\ or some other nice piece, \Every family figgered on havin' |@Abolis annual gasoline classic, the: B FEW £01551“ mJAINm fe here Friday might. ae 9 i work on W. P. A. projects. an' purty soon everybody's dancin' one fiddler among th' boys, an' ef Memor/al Day 500 mile automobile} y James Mc. ; 1 ted an' fergettin' all about their argu- none of th' sons had any car fer |Yacte, Will be on the air this year via FRESH KILLED Local self-government is the secret of a peaceable, contented | ment, I knowed a feller who wuz music an' couldn't pick up a tune {two metworks, For the first time. Doubtful- and happy people. Under the eyes of their neighbors, men will work best in any governmental capacity. Favoritism will be quickly detected, easily exposed and promptly punished. Un- der an administration directed from a distant capital, enforced tern of strange origin, government is bound to be marked by inefficiency, irresponsibility, favoritism and extravagance. Such is the W. P. A. and kindred organizations as designed and de- vised by the present powers at Washington, who distrust local governments because they know that they cannot control all local authorities. They refuse to dispense federal monies to local government because they think that their own power will wane once they release the purse strings. Tf it is true that the power to tax is the power to destroy, so also is it true that the power to spend is the power to sway the masses. The strength and influence that gushes from the na- tional treasure chest like the Old Faithful geyser in Yellowstone Park, are too valuable to be imparted to local municipalities. Appropriations for relief running into billions will generate more energy than the President dreamed of drawing from the moon at Passamaquoddy. QUEENSBURY'S WATER Some question seems to have developed as to whose water it is that floods the fields and fills the cellars in the western part of our city after an intense rainfall. When one of our engineers proposed a plan by whigh the floodwaters would be sewered back across the Queensbury border and into Halfway brook, one of the city council is said to have exclaimed that the people of Queensbury should bear a part of the expense because after all 'it's their water. It is true that the water has its origin in the mountain! sech a good fiddler he used to play fer kitchen dances fer miles around an' so fur's I know there never wuz an argument in his house, fer jest as soon's one of th' family began to find fault with something he'd grab after they'd heerd it played once, th' old folks'd save their monéy to buy a parlor organ, or mebbe a pi- ano fer one of th' girls, jest like their children scrape up today to git a mew car better'n th' ones room. \Some folks had & parlor organ, but fer nice sweet music, gimme a. Yeast Baby's Sea is\ Baby's Cries Warn of Many Troubles, but They Also Exercise Its Lungs of some kind like & house in th' lowlands needs & pump in the Spring 2s By DR. MORRIS FISHBEIN Editor Journal of the American Med+ ical Association, and of Hygeia, the Health Magazine Crying is as natural to a baby as complaining is to a good many adults. Even weak, premature babies will cry with a low, feeble whine that sounds like the mewing of a cat. Sométimes crying is the result of a display of anger; sometimes of fear, It is an emotional reaction. Few people realize that crying is one way in which the baby gets ex- ercise, but by crying it also gets at- tention. Babies aré just as eager for attention as are most grownups. « Physiologists recognize that crying helps to ventilate the baby's lungs, forcing out residual air, drawn in by the deep breathing that follows the crying attack. Moreover, crying usually is associated with active movements of arms and legs. # * % The baby, is not comfortable in winter if it becomes wet and cold. It isn't comfortable if its digestion is disturbed and it has cramps, And the youngster can't be comfortable if it has an infection in the ear. A great deal of the control of cry- ing in babies depends on the control 'of the mother. Mothers simply must learn to endure crying by the baby after it has been determined that there is no apparent cause for it. Nobody loves to boss as much as a baby does. If it leatns that it can boss by erying, it will do so as long as the trick works. * L # Remember, then, that when a baby cries it may be from hunger, from extremes of temperature, from colic or other pains, and, quite often, from was found that fear is aroused in babies by loud noises, such as the. banging of & dishpan or slamming of a door, by a loss of support, or by careless handling. CBS is joining in the broadcast which NBC has carried alone since 1927. However, the ploneer describer of the event is WGN, Chicago, which put it on several years before the forma-: tion of a network,. -Sen. Borah at Newark, N. J., rally; WJZ-NBC 8:30 - America's Town ,| Meeting finale, \Which Road to Peace Now?\ 4 WEAF-NBC-7-Rudy Vellee, 8 -, | Showboat; 9-Bing Crosby; 10-Min- ing Congress amateurs (eastern net- work); 11-Henry Bussee orchestra. WABC-CBS-T-Alexander Gray; 8 -Walter O'Keefe; 8:30--new time for Col. and Budd, 10:30-Memphis Cot- ton Carnival; 11:30 -- Springfield, Mass., Tercentehary ball. WJZ-NBC - 6:45 -- Music Is My Hobby 7-Pittsburgh Symphony; 8- Death Valley Days; 10;:05-Russ Mor-. gan Music. What to expect Friday: WEAF-NBC-1 P. M.-Magic of Speech; 3-Women's Radio Review; 4 -Congress Speaks. WABC-CBS - 1:45 - New serial, \The Boy Edison;\ 2:30 - YMCA World Youth program; 3-American Medical convention. WJZ-NBC - 1:30 - Concert \trom Lelpzig, Germany; 1:45 - Women's Clubs, Speaker, Josephine Roche; 5 35 -Have You Heard? dram WGY PROGRAMS A group of key Democratic leaders' were summoned to & private pep meeting in New York last week. They came from all sections of this state and representatives were also present from New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Con-. army rather than generals or portant city chieftains whose primary must hustle as neyer before if they trying to make converts-to concen-» trate instead on establishing personal contact with every voter favorable to Roosevelt in their territories (espec- The most significant angle of the session was a special exhortation to the New Yorkers present. \Jim Far- ley says New York is the most doubt» right. We're going to take a trimming here if we don't step on the gas.\ political pep talk, shrewd political observers - figure that’s a-pretty ac- curate statement ; Knife- New York political sharps say that the subsurface friction which has TONIGHT'S PROGRAM 6:00-News Reports. 6:05-Musical Program. ~ 6§:15-Bart Dunn, tenor. 6:30-Press-Radio News. 6:35--Evening Brevities. fear. In a series of experiments it |P. M. developed at Albany between Gov- {ernor Lehman and Democratic lead- ers in the state legislature traces largely upstate Republicans, Tammany has never been vitally interested in Democratic control of sergeants-the inconspicuous but im- responsibility is to organize their dis- | If Atrict leaders and \get out the vote\.) [P\. ° _ * They were told above all things | [f to beware of overconfidence - that |- they are in for a serious Aight and |- want to keep their Jobs. They were |f also -~instructed mot to -waste time {; LOND ISLAND. WATOH 'EM G0 AT THIS PRICE OUR BEST FRESH PURE CANE © GRANULATED |_ ; FRIDAYJIGB’IE 49 ~ 10 1b 196 m 28¢ ially young voters) and making sure | that they get to the polls in Novem- | ful state in the Union-and \he's} Allowing for .the exaggeration of a | to revival of the old-time 1 understanding between Tammany and ngel Cake25¢ Tuna Fish 10¢ THE-SEA BLUE LABEL 12e VALUE / FRIDAY mm TM GLAD YOU - AND SEE HOW THE TOLD ME ABOUT - DISHES SHINE! THAT'S RINSO FoR DisH- BECAUSE RINSO ABSORES WASHING. M¥;» (Z \WHAT CREAMY: . SUDS IT “nunflfl No greasy filmleft on dishes washed this way has that \greasy feel\ either. On wash» § true! Every thrilling word of it! | , reve 22, There are so many different réa-| Anger, which babies express <by| §:45-Jimmie Mattern. | the state-esfiecially when the. Dem- l reall oaks dirt | streams to the west, all of which rise or pass through QUEENS~|sons why babies may ery that i is stiffening the body and crying aloud, 7:00-Amos 'n' Andy. ocratic organization is in- hostile. duh‘gjgugg;§’g“£gxgng a if; fiffi’fm; wb‘t’mutmd bri hm? 25,12: ‘ | bury territory before invading our urban precincts, But we impossible to try to diagnose each one |is caused 'by anything that hampers |'7:15-Edwin C. Hill. _. |hands, &« at present. Its PBDMATY mps country, It's the Rinso way. Rinso's, out scrub- l } separately,. In many instances the |their movements and sets up resist-| T:30-Italian concern is to rule the roost in New ich suds ebsorb» th e—yzk ~ bi | must admit that the question as to the responsibility and pro- papy cries because 1b is mob comfort- ance to their activities, 8:00-Yariety Hour. York City, and' the Tosi Dgféwzmmm I park if? “liking ' hog able. Certainly it is not comfortabl Al . 9:00-Lanny Ross. = -Fariey leadership .certa . s I J W prietorship of water, whether it be rain water, surface water, I a thert ena v 5 on rte e together, drying is not an ex 10:00-Bim Crosby. | man: “if? 12 an 130m That agile? come shiny-clean without a trace «of washers, Easy / g seng s hes + « + arp y pin is pene- tremely unfavorable or unfortunate & : hasn't helped y 3 . flood water or bilge water, settles into a simple question of in| trating its skin at some concealed performance, provided it Is under- 1 00-News Reports. So it's a natural for Tammany sen- ° greasyfilmonthem-Thedxshwatemevet on: heed; whose hands the water lies at the moment when its presence tender spot. stood. 11:05-Eddie Lane and his orcheltrl 11:30-Dance Music.. 'ators' and assemblymen 'to give the. G. 0. P. 2a. helping hand behind the Orchestra: Russ \TUNE IN on Rinicradio mmnfeamfiuxenmxmyvifin Phil R Morgen and rol . If A's land that adjoins B's h ins to be - \ =| 12:00-Ni Rodrizo' hill-deben- EveuTuudaylth-ILGDT)ovu imbia Network. - dant ren an goog a pay |i} cc ild ss then B must mop it up or sit in a puddle. He cannot compel A| --- - ~- P FRIDAY'S PROGRAM *' FLAPPER FANNY SAYS Here's a Tough Guy Gulbrannsen (Putnam: $2:50), which | A. M, to mop it up for him. Water, as the old adage says of fire, is a good servant but. sa harsh master. When properly conducted through pipes from cleanses our bodies, quenches our thirst -and fights our fires. QueensBury people, even if they would do so, have no right to say, \We shall keep our water for ourselves and you shall have none of it\ But when the waterbrooks of Queensbury burst [[ their banks and pour a flood onto the western plains, deluging || from the Northland \Beyond Sing the Woods\ Has a There's & fresh, earthy tang to \Be- yond Sing the Woods,\ by Trygve TEST YOUR KNOWLEDGE \makes the book & pleasant contrast, to run-of-the-mill problem novels of 'the day. Its story is set In the northern fought and schemed their way to riches and power in their lonely fron- tier manor house. There is, at times, a lUftle too much. starkness- about the thing; a too much of the darkness and deso- cessful clan of woods dwellers who 6:55-Musical Grab Bag. 7: Ill—Hawaiian Music. Reports. 7:30-Good Morning. 9:00-Musical Program. 9:15-Musical Program. 9:30-Musical Program. 9:40-Market Basket. 10:00-Press-Radio News, 10:05-Household Hints. 10:10-Musical Program. H j + af M han s . 1 the reservoirs on the mountain sides, in which it has been col-| Good Tale to 'Tell wilderness of Norway, at some in-| T:5-Good Health . it : are glad - 1 th ter of P It {determinate day in the past; and| $:00-Musical Clock. lected, we are glad to welcome the water of Queensbury. By BRUCE CATTON it fells about a strong, brutal, suc-| 8:30-Cheerio, ©\20 on SAvines lation of the chilly northland, mut] 10:1}-Home Sweet Home, | cellars and making mill ponds of door yards, we can Hardly call}| Can Yow Answer Seven of These the mithor handles it nicely, and he 10:30-Mystery:Chef, _ | t> J: . €.. { 0. ° - ts {. . h \V G. + Bet 'k cooking , j pa dr ufc - F, * ‘ ' C): a Loled Pool to the good people of Queensbury and say, \We shall} spew your | T estions | does have an interesting story to tell. 124052342133 gfiffii ing talk tol NDP mla e fol - VDEPQSITS - . \ That story is concerned chiefly with 11:15--Light Opera Company. meer vont | Mi water back onto you and charge you for doing it.\ ' ~~ ven C Pa \ ' A 1. 1. Name the author of the novel, ._: Who owns the water? Water rises from the earth in the \michard Carvel\ |__ o He goes out “hffllhbeaie with 28 § P, . form of vapor and descends from the heavens in the form of | 2. What position did Joe F. Brown “mm’l’mmgrffivmzid Yolk to {L’fsmftufi g itgg’ghfggfé' rain. It falleth upon the just and the unjust, Water runs and 2,15; 312m; \Eimer the Creat?\ __ , he goes 11:0rite; swim; Anance and | 12:30-Farm Program. | 4 A\. |}: no man has a right to dam the stream without the consent of| 3. What is the sim of 25 x 0? lender, as well af dominant lung. 1 3t¥§§$ngngfigifm°wm§aw Lol COM t TJ the riparian owners below whom his dam deprives of the na-|_4 in the prairi¢ region of the owner, of the countryside, ‘ Series: - mik Ja a 1 ‘ ft] 1 4 'Th h western United States, what name| -In - the course of & long, grasping 1:30-Sammy Kaye “dragon“. AF Eo Aal 15 ral flow. ose by w ose lands the waters pass may uisEis given to both the golden plover [life, he eventually #ets to the point! 2:00.-Nina Allen, soprano. . % | = & 1 it for drink, for fishing, for bathing, for boating, for harvesting | and the upland plover? Thole neighborhood \ is that. | ' hoe ite or turning a mill wheel. But they cannot use it to them-} 2 $126}?! “$513 5mm £s he geta- ready to do so, he awakens 3 | selves alone. They must pass it on undiminished and uncon- a 2:80-Nicholas to the delights of human kindness taminated to bless and benefit all who dwell along the water | cific ifland of New Caledonia belong? Thie‘fliiighest rate any bank & tough head of the clan Tough? 12 00-Musical Program. in this State can pay. *FIRST NATIONAL BANK 2:45--Matinee Players, \T. To which nation does the Pa-] and pity. 3:00-Forever Young. 3:15-Ma Perkins. In the end, His plans for a gen- 3:30--Vic and Bade, ~ 8. Ate seals fish? eral crackdown are forgotten and! 2:45-The ON 1 bcziumel sue: 1&2; leg1 o; the.. lug: ginilthe wag), and that 8, “we; seenuxover 22 becomes \a sort of benevolens. 413°\; “etyo. 115mm | J it”? “m- ‘6 M 3A . Membar o gm Deposit ng so we e the bane wi & blessing, the pain with | 1), Who promulgated. the dogma despot, under whose rule all hands Zépgggg, Forum. i Pat om. . o _ M... ' mp the pleasure, and not seek to cast backthe fléod waters again. | or the Roman Catholic Churth on the afte ha 1 'doubs if this book is quite ss] 4:45-Musical Program. ~ when'we demand as our nthfi the natural M of spring and await??? Concestion of the Vir~| micartant or profound as It seems 5 00-Congress Speaks. & .tobe.: But. it- doeén't-matter much; |- 5:30-Terri- L= Franconi, not.. ~~; os 11ka ppp w aes a> (Tink Abdvérs on Back m 48's a good story, mfertaininziy told. | 5:45-Grace ana Beottg, ~ -__ aa £ | oun wiuey r noo'r SHOP |