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Show HE CHAPTER I Th Viking Story Gustaf Erickson sat in tba dean Whitewashed kitchen of hla house on Xadrld beach and 'watched hla non Herman disproving!. . BCn email ItfaVfag eyes moved reatelessly from beam to locker to panel, fixing them-elvenowhere, returning each time to the tall lean figure of hla son. The boy was stuffing a pickerel, for their dinner. Over hla old dungarees, faded and scraped thin at the knees and elbows, he wofe a womans blue apron. Gnstaf observed It scowling. It was bis wifes apron. She had been dead six days. Norman deftly bent the slim body of the pickerel to fit tbe square baking dish and slid the pan Into the oven, lbs be opened the Iron door heat lapped out Into the room. 8weat rose on his forehead at the edge of Ibis straight blond hair. He walked to a narrow shelf under the window and poured two dippers of water into tin basin.. Bis father, regarded him critically. Norman's hands distressed old Gas tat (They were too slender. The fingers were too thin and too long. Their suppleness irritated the old man. Just MB the comfortable way Norman wore tbe apron irritated him. 8omehow the bands and the apron suggested tbe land, and tbe womanish ways of lands-soon- . s - - A salty anger arose In Qustaf Erickson, anger .at his son, at youth. Bt the passive and secure content of n men who did not thirst for tbe sea. ."How long yet yon goln' to work on that wagon jobr be asked.- Bis voice had a windy flavor, as If It had been toned and broken against the resonant chorus of mighty storms. Norman tookh!s serious blond face tirom the roller towel Be looked at bis father before he answered. 1 figured on going back tomorrow, be said at length. "Bans gave me as long off as I needed. I was staytng at home on account of things here. - I i "That aint what Tm asking. How long yet you going to waste time drifting round on a wagon T "Two months more, anyway . , Gustaf tapped the arm of bis chair Jwlth the short, knotted, once capable lingers of bis broad right hand. eyes, which had a habit 51swidening or screwing shut accord Ing to the beat of bis temper, regarded his son with emphatic disapproval "Tell 'em you're quitting, he said. .He spoke slowly tje pronounced hla words firmly as he always Ld when there was malice In him. "Toave irode around enough on land. Im takln you partners "In the boatr Norman asked. G natal thought that be winced. ,"8urt, In the boat Tomorrow," ' Norman turned without comment to the window. Be knew that argument was futile. Be could no more dispute the verdict of bis father than bo could top the rush of water In Lake Michigan. Be stared out at the lake conscious of his father's eyes boring bard at hla back. Be did not wish to fish. 8ince the firs, day be could remember, another day of storm and disaster on the coast, that vast heaving water had mocked him. It had combated him. It had taunted him and dared him to hate It. And be could not hate It. Uls resentment against ' deep water was cooled often by another sensation, a strange tugging at his heart, particularly on quiet days when it rolled with a alow oily tempo. If the lake were kin to old Gustaf It must be kin to him. nis father loveo It more than he did wife or child, more than life z' Itself. , old Gustaf offered the disdainful waters a. passionate and flaming devotion. Bis brittle heart softened when he thought of those Wet, unresponsive wastes. Their buffets only endeared them to him, their repulse atlmulated hla hot desire, their austere resistance stirred him to new unreasoning attempts to conquer. Norman understood this in bis father. Old Gnstaf played the purt of ' passionate lover to Lake Michigan. Hla little blnck-eyemother had known thatT Certainly she had not loved aucb a rival. She had not belonged bery on the beach In the wind and spray. She had died yenrnlng lor a farm. A doxen times In these six days Norman hnd blamed the cold rompasslonless waters or her bard life, her lonely death. Us time you learned to flab, Gustat growled. "Been enough wearln of aprons and simdtn around on land end drivlo folks' wagons for any boy o' mine I HI make a man o you now." He arose Jerkily from Ids chair and x crossed to the door.- - Ill biKk was ' bout. Just as his arms were end hie legs. lie once had been "utter than bis son was now. Age hnd shrunk him. pinching his flesh and bones. He slammed the door behind him and sat down sullenly upon the step. He was ashamed .Mds son, j "tU learn hint to "cull, lie grunt"' t- bled, "learn bin, now I" Ills shoulacrs were hunched ns be attitude ssit on tho kitchen step. I gave him. Somehow, the appearance of great strength, lie knew whut the people In Mndri.l Buy though!" of him. They believed him wof-r- ntti,. He had sensed'ttiat, the wav they pitied him the day of his wife's fnueraL They Whole-soule- d " - - d . - were mistaken. Ha wasn't worn out a could still conquer hla son. The strength was there, bidden deep down In, his body that was wasting under tbs heartless Inroads of the years. His tired old hands were capable still of Immense feats of lifting, tfiort bursts of terrifying toll. Ills big fists were bard. He held them locked now, over bis big knees. "Him an Erickson be grumbled "A grown boy, and still ashore I ' Gnstaf knew the duties of Bn Erickson. An Erickson went to sea. On salt in tbe old days But be wouldnt Insist on that for Norman. Hed be satis fled with the lakes Ousts! Erickson bad sailed broad old square riggers In the days of his blond Uiqulil:iv youth. Us bad felt the sleet of the Cepe snd tbe Horn on bis face. Be bad sweat himself Into fever in the . Sargasso see and then, because of fabulous tiles of dollar a 'day with the Grjat Lakes lumber fleets be bad left salt water fcehlnd. bln., and .never, re grafted It. A man could domineer labor on the lakes Be roes In live years from second mate to master of a pot bellied, shingle schooner, commanded her foi three boisterous seasons, 'and one night, alone, swam ashore from her wreck on Mustache shoaL Bis terlfled crew bed taken the boot ten hours befors Lashed to his wheel. Qustaf Erickson, stubborn, pitiless, unafraid, an anthlnktng mariner who upheld the dignity of the old sea. watched his craft sink lower snd lower, snd boiling waves swarm over her decks. la the morning, the morning of hie birthda", groping s spar, he was tossed ashore and crawled, beaten, np a fiat sandy beach. Be had lived a long, long life. A farmer found him and took blm'home. Three m nths later Gustaf married the farmers daughter. Why not? 8he was yonng. meek, womanly snd available. Bv Gustafe choice they named their r over-worke- A 'Romance of the Great Lakh by KARL W. DETZER Copyright by TK hotb.V(ntll Cab W.N.U.Stvk , the merciless Justice of the sea. Many nights be repeated the tale In bis grim weary singsong The take wept on Its beaches, and bis son Norman, fleeing white-face- d to bed, lay awake under tbe shingles, hour sifter pitiless hour, with terror sitting atop tbe flannel covers, pressing die breath baud-bew- n out of hla tangs, tormenting sleep 4 from the room. "Ill mak tbut boy a sailor yet!" be beard old Gnstaf storm to Us mother. "Why should an Erickson act ee? Gnstaf uever forgot that nights scene, any more than Norman did. Tbe sympathy that grew up .between bis faithful harassed little wife and bis son seemed unfair to blm. Be wstebed I suspiciously. Be assigned all his failures with Norman, to her, attrib thirty-eight- g Frencb-Cauadla- e y self-conscio- -- . fifth-yea- r boy, "How Long Yet You Goln to Work - - on That Wagon Job?" ' " y uted contemptuously to back hills cast him safely to land, bis soa NorFrench blood the sensitive spot In bla ma bad declined to put to sea. ons pliant adolescent mini To be Bunched over on tbe back step, await- sort be regretted his wifes abrupt reing the fiab that Norman baked, Qus- moval from bis Ilf. It was a shock taf Erickson thought of the five fret- to discover one morning that the had ful years he had tilled miserly solL Ue gone to bed quttely and died. bad wasted many good plowing hours Norman cleaned the house carefully staring acrosa dunes at the beckoning after the funeraL Be saw her, waitlake. Then one morning, .while bis tn an apron, for bla fa ing. always wife cried oot bitterly that he did not boat to come tabors. Be put on love her, that be never had loved her, tbers without distaste when necesthe apron be Silled away to the fishing banks. him to do her pork. It did drove sity Ba ball no crew to bully. Alone, reckoccur to him that It might be a not less. early seasons and lata, ha drove womanish symbol to bla father. tbe boat that bla own hands had built, soft been layln around land long "Ton setting and lifting nets, matching hla Qustaf gambled that noon enough, altemper against wind and wsather, finished the pickerel and pohe when ways making good catchaa offish; Ba moved hla wife without cere- tatoes. "Nearly twenty years old, and whera you aver sailed? Madrid bay I mony from the farm to tha house on fins sailin for a gw n man, Thcta the beach. She was past all remonnow It? 1 waa twice around tbe aint strance then. And each winter thereI wee twenty. My paw when Bora after, while Ice spread over the water, and my gradpaw didn't die ashore. Gustaf Erickson oat by the stove, 1 name you Norman?" Why night after night. In this same whiteBe kicked hla chair back from the washed kitchen, and told monstrous tales of tha five fresh lakes am the Uhls. Norman arose. It was apparent aa they stood aide by side! bow much seven salty sea waa now than hls father. In Only once. In tbe years that Nor- taller he man's mother kept bis house, did Qus- bla pink Erickson face, there showed taf strike her; that night she bad pro- clean untested lines. tested when he Hogged their son. Be got out a piece of rope because the boy had sniveled like a baby over Gustafe favorite story of the captains write end dog. "It was a good dog. old Gustaf An amusing Instance of war propahad said, "a big dog. strong, hairy all In the form of an official com ganda over. Bla namewaa Nets. We liked which gave an astoundtar munlque that dog. Tbe echooner ah. Spanish version of the battle between the Got t laud, she was a fine strong Sir Francis Drake and the 8pan!ah I Nobody ever schooner, a come to light In has Just armada, Jump ship off her, 1 tell you. Till London. Pierre Van Paaaaen records. that captains wife come aboard for a In the Atlanta Constitution. This voyage. Why do yon think that worn Spnulsh proclamation. Issued in an come anyway? Madrid by the government of Philip Old Gustaf scowled. 11 In 1588. tells a story "We hate her. ua on 'schooner. She which Scptemlter, will astonish every schoolboy never give nobody enough to eat. not who remembers the story of the fa even her old man. She was punished uious game of bowls, and the for ttt It blows three days down off trouncing of the Spanish Newfoundland. Blow? Uow can I tell fleet. The Spunlsh communique- re It! The third night by Macklatce that the tluke ul Medina. In com inac. we all waa glad when It gets nmnd o the Spanish fleet sailed np dark that night so we don't have to as fat as Plymouth channel the look no more at the waves I 1 was at been notified of the "where, having the w'heel. The captain, I know not he mustered end presence, enemys where that captain waa He whs all In order all Ids warships; and placed over. He waa a good sailor. But t)la along the clumnel. on Aairast woman, she sit with the dog In the cruising discerned some enemy lulls, I, they cabin. Jupiter, whs she seared! We'd which Hie following day appeared to of been kind ot glad she feel hud. all lie slxtr worships These the duke of us on echooner.. If we was nol up and overtook, but they scared ourselves And then 'that big ruught would not give bnille. although ll was wav come along, two. three times as represented to them" From this point biggest vs ve- lTieSmldhverstooTrH-ee- l big as- all-- . the. jesL-T- h. to r in the world It smashed In the cabin late lmt Dually tome of the English skylight, tore right through the Inf paullns . . push, right Ini' It took nut all the JutkheRil On the port Cattare Per tonality side. The ocean does Vit love' the Bbtorluns say that Julius Caesar was tall and of commanding presence. cnptaln'a wife. A big. big hotel 1 see something float past when 1 Uls feature were angular and prone have wiped the salt fnmTout my eyes Inent He had a fair complexion.' with Two on?thlig out that wky light. I keen, expressive black eyes. In later hollered. Hollered loud The captain years be was bald; at no time of his came. It was st) awash In the cabin,' llfb did he wear a beard. Though enDark. He found no dog. No wife. constitution naturally dowed with "It waa e good dog. Ve feel sorry by no means robust, he became Inured tliut dog was lost. But the woman? to hardship and exhibited astonishing She give nobody enough to ent l" powers of endurance. la matter 4 Gustaf would light hla pipe at this dress, ho was particular to the vctgc point, puffing contemjiluthclj over of effeminacy. -- ' h .... -- Rh-hnu- well-buil- War Communique That Has It Amusing Side ... five-mast- of-flcl- ships did engage In real battle, which resulted ta flrteen of them Mng taken by the Spanish, Including Sir Francis Drakes fiugshlp. with the admits himself on board What happened next the communique does not state, the Imagination of the official writer hav tag exhausted Itself by that time. Similarly, during the World war. seme communiques left troops m certain point snd again. ... -- - -- -- - to them Goes With Piano sub-sequen- t - never referred Jean Ann Blomker. less than four year old, was ta a childrens day presentation st the church. Her father was trying to get her to give her recitation st home before the eventful day "1 dont remember It," Jenn Ann asserted when her duddy tried to coax her to apeak. "Well, think he snld. "I am thinking. I know it bat 1 cant ray It." "Well now, Dow does It go," be . . begged. -- "It goes with the piano." she an weredpmmpt ly. (XlnSTglven Is Eastern t one hour for Central Ud' two hours for Mountain time ) K B. C. RED NETWORK-N- oy 1:30 p. m. Peerless Reproducer 4:00 jv. ui Dr. 8. Parkea Cadman. 1 8 :30 p. m. Acouatlcan Boar. 8:00 p. m. Stetson Parade. TKX) p. m. Lehigh Coal 4 Nuvlgatloa. 7:30 p. m. MaJ. Bowes Family 9KX) p. m. David Lawrence. IfiSp n. Atwater Kent Hoar. Sfandard-subtrac- N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK n - "If Its s girl," he bad said, "call her Aleece, Jr Ami or any of the French names yon want If hes a half-inc- balf-bearte- d . french-Canadla- n . - half-Frenc- h hes a sailor, like me and my father and my gradpaw. Til call him Norman, aftej my gradpaw," By, the Same bewildering odds that had broken np Gostafa schooner and cbll-dre- d d heart-breakin- terms, was remarkable for o Tm coins out," Norman said. He satisfying ons thing. Two camps of of only nodded Indefinitely In tbe direction to hours succeeded during gchool 1 wont be beck for supper. town. amicably under tba same roof. living Old Gustaf growled. ta his youth Norman was conAnd Even Get In early," be ordered. of these two discordant forces, tell Ban Miller what 1 y. Tell him scious he belonged by right of blood because Youre youre through drtvln wagooi them. of to both I" golog to Dave a mans Job One group, big. blend, slow, thorNorman when oclock was two It , homes of bouse. theough, came from tbt nest walked out soberly from other Tbe group, Ill father watched blm go gloomily, the village fishermen. with sharp answer small quick, It bout taking the trouble to mother,-wer- e Normans llkt . Norman black eyes god-bybis ' tbs sons' and daughters of made deliberately serous the heart farmers who came while still within sight of bis futbera ta an turned onslaught from tbs black down wrath. But once beyond It. towurd bills. up aside and proceeded north, Julie RIchaud was on ot these. Ottawa lake. Be bad small Ides where no bid She arrived on an autumn morning be jwhs going. Except that be this Miller Bans when Norman was struggling with Intention of seeking at blm to fourth-gradreading. He waa eleven of er Importing afternoon, once his fathers decision that be must years old. Hs bad grown too rapidly. the His legs were bony, and tbs short go as helper In tbe boat Ue bated Ue knee breeches bis mother. hud nude minute. that Great lakes Intensely hated fishermen. Ue bated boats, tbe for blm four months before already smell of boiling nets, wind, wsves, hud cruwled upward, till they did not three-daconceal .the tops of bis bond-kni- t blows and Here he stockings Bs was Life1 was extraordinary. was bis mother dead not s week, end his voice bad Jusf broken. this thing he had dodged ell bis life Julie Rlchaud waa a amall round, A with bins. flashing-eyegirt, wbo cared less than Immediately caught up book or tha confining for any Job In tbe fishing fleet I nothing Be had worked more than three routine of district school discipline. years for. Ban Miller, who owned With ber arrival Norman felt for the tbe store it Madrid Bay, helping tbe first time ta bis life a dim satisfaction 8be made fat Dutchman put up Ice and do other that he was odd Jobs In winter. In summer deliver eyes at him for three days On the tag the Ice snd. fres green vegetables fnurtb, during noon tunrb period, she to tbe back doors of resort cottages kissed blm on tbe cheek. 1 like you. she told blm. "What along Ottawa Inks From the beginning hit father bad objected to tbe funny yellow balr yon got I" Norman Unshed and wriggled free. wagon. Tbe day Miller took blm on . , , tb boy bad run down tbe He stayed out of Julies reach during wharf to bis fathers fish shanty to the remainder of the fourth grade. Tbe tell blm tbe news next year be was more friendly, even "Your names Erickson." Gustaf ex- going so far is to run away from ploded when Normar paused for school with her ons morning recess. breath. "An Erickson driving a gro- They spent two ecstatic hours propped on their elbows at tbs end of tbe cery wagon I" Norman still remembered It resentdock 'conntlng tbe gulls that flew . fully. Bla mother bad taken no part overhead. In that quarrel Her bewildered black ta afterreturned school to tbe They eyes were troubled at the argument, noon. Together, after th others were but she offered no counsel. Only once, dismissed, they wrote tbe word "tra-- ' snd be remembered now tbe anxiety ant" fir hundred times on Uer face, she bad taken him aside It was an afternoon ' lats ta May but with blm and reminded dutifully, . . . Norman was twelve years old no conviction, bat other boys fished and the tern bad leoithan with their fathers. a week to run . . when he It was the winds Norman dreaded; walked with Jnlle to the top of this the rage of waves dismayed him. Al- bill rond where be was now sluing. ways during the tempeatuoiii weather Julie was singing. It was not tune, blows, he remembered k erely somethin of three-daabout benn soup Guitar story of the schooner Cort- hot and cold. Never for a moment land and the captains dog. Bed oot was ber tongue still She stopped tell his father that "Eddie Baker suddenly and said: "A dam poor Erickson," old Qua cheated ta spelling today, Norman. taf would complain. "No stomach for Twlcs 1 aeen him. What do yon think, teacherd do If she catched Iml". winds, pfangb f Gustaf made that "pfaugh r an ugly Norman did not know. Be could word. Be had a way of thrusting It In- thin! of nothing that would appall to Normans flesh like a Sab knife To Eddie Baker, not ever the end of the be sore be need never hesr .lt aguta world. At the top of tbe hill he said, Be had stayed In hla fathers house "8ee you snd lay down because of hie mother, hadnt be? To by the roadside HtT watched Julie right, tomorrow, be could start out aklp on through the yellow dust unmindful of winds end weathers Be The weeds already were growing could leave the lake and all Its dlo tall enough to conceal him wherl he tasteful memories could settle somelay. A farmer wagon, crawling out where beyond the bills from town, creaked Its nnolled wheels rad farm? He we ked a bit more up the DHL Tho farmer was asleep on rapidly st the thought. Be bated the high seat Between the wheels farms. and through the slowly revolving Be passed np the long gentle rise spokes. Norman made out a pair of of the road behind the village end at hare feet running behind the wagon. the top set down Here, somewhere The horses came abreast of blm, near this spot where he was sitting, their driver still sleeping beavtly. he had fought once when he waa a Norman perceived suddenly that tbe amall boy. Be bad fought and lost. boy running behind tha wagon was It was with a schoolmate named Ed the same Eddie Baker about whom die Baker, one day when he had been Julie bad Just been talking. He was a , walking bom with Julie muscular The standard school In Madrid vll youth, s year older than Norman, lage, where Norman spent eight short. two Inches shorter but a good ten pounds heavier. He bad the name of ready fighter In the Madrid Bay school. Norman knew him to be Int, shlfty-eyed- vincible. The wagon pasaeq while Norman watched. Before be bad time to speak Baker twisted about" Us young glanced up the road sod down ll then crawled rpldlylntothe box . of th wagon. Be slid off directly, with two brown paper pnrcels ta his arms The farmer still slept The thief scampered to the aide of the road scratching hla short dusty bare legs ta brambles. As be dropped Into the grass he ' saw Norman. He did not speak for a moment Then, when he lied, Norman felt for him sn extravagant and pitiless scorn. He give It to me," Baker said sul-lenl- y. Norman looked at him, hla mild, sober blond face taking on for a moment a suggestion of ptak. "Ton swiped Ur Norman said. He waa not accusing. Be was merely stating a fact ta the blunt awkward way common to him. nis falher was like that ta speech. Old Gustaf made hla statements firmly, as If he did not exect contradictions Eddie Baker looked e little startled at, the word. But not attempt any further denial tie unwrapped tbe he-d- ld hncerofthe...jtwo.psrclai---lt.totalned a wooden box of ping tobacco . 2:00 p. m. Roxy Stroll. 8:00 p. m. Young Peoples Con. 8:30 p. m. Dr. Stephen S. wise. Dr. Harry E. Fosdlck. 530 p. fl:30 p, m. Anglo Persians. 8.15 p. m.tCol!iera Radio Hour. tt - V N. B. C. RED NETWORK-N- ov. n. Tower Health Exercises' . m. Radio Household Institute. p. tn. A. C. Gilbert Co. p. in. Mutual Savings Hour. p. m. Physical Culture Prince. p. tn. A. and P. Gypsies. p. m. General Motors Party. 10:30 p m. National Grand Opera. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Copeland Honr. 12:00 noon "Fnrm and Home Hour." 12:15 p. in. IT. 8. Dept. Agriculture. 12:30 p. m.."Fnrm and Home Hour." 7 :00 p. m. Cooks Tours. 8:00 p. m. Roxy asJ nis Gangl' 9:30 p. m. Real Folks. 7:t)0 11:15 6:80 7:00 7:45 8:30 9:30 a. m.' N. B. C. RED NETWORK Nov. 2fi 7:00 ft. tn. Tower nealth Exercises.. 11:15 ft. m. Radio Household Institute .4 :30 p. m. Auction Bridge Games. 9:00 p. tn. Everendy nour. 10:00 p. to. Clicquot Cluj) Eskimos. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. m. Copeland Hour. 11:00 a. m. Forecast School Cookery. 12:00 noon "Farm and Home Hour." 12:15 p. m. U. S. Dept Agriculture. 12 :S0 p. tn. "Farm apd Home Flour." 8 :00 p. m. 8ea!y ATr Weavers. 9:00 p. m. Three ta One Theatre. 9:30 p. m. Dutch Muster Minstrel. 10:00 p. m. Works of Great Composen Nov. 21 N. B. C. RED NETWORK 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercises 10:00 ft. TO. National Home Hour. 11:15 a. m. Radio Household institute 7:30 p. m. "La Touralne Tableaux." 8:00 p. m. American Mag. and Worn. 1 ana Borne Companion Dr. 9:00 p. to. Ipann Troubadours. 9:30 p. m. Palmolive Hour. N. B C. BLUE NETWORK 10:00 a. L, Copolnnd Hour. 11:00 a. m. Forecast School Cookery. 12:00 noon "Farm and Home Flour." 12:15 p. m. D. S. Dept Agriculture. 12:30 p. m. "Fanil and Home Ilonr." 2J0 p. tn. R. C. A. Demonstration. 8:30 p. m. 8ylvan!a Foresters. ' 9:00 p.'m. fimifii Bros. 10:00 p. m. Chicago Civic Opera. Nov. 22 N. B. C. REP NETWORK 7 :00 a. uvTower Health Exercises. 11 :15 a. m. Radio Household Institute 7:30 p. m. Coword Comfort Hour. 8:00 L. The Song Shop. 9:X) p. m. Selherllng Singers. 10:00 p. m. Halsey Stuart B. C. BLUE NETWORK to. Copeland Honr. 10:00 11 :00 a. m. Forecast School of Cookery. 12:00 noon B. 8. Dept Agriculture. 12:30 p. tn. "Fftnn snd Borne Hour 8:30 p. m. Champion Sparkers. 9:30 p. m. Maxwell Bouse Hour. 10:00 p. tn. Mlchelin Hour. . l. 21 N. B. C. RED NETWORK-N- ov. Exercise. 7:00 a. tn. Tower Health 10:00 a. m.. National Borne Hour. 11:15 ft. m. Radio Household Instltnta 12.00 noon Teeth, Health, Happiness 7:00 p. m. Wonder Hour. 7:30 p. m. napplness Candy Store 7:43 p. m. Market Friend 8:00 p. m. Cities Service. 10 :00 p. m.Stromberg Carlson Sexteltt N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK 11:00 a. m. R. Q A. Concert 12:00 noon "Farm and Home Rout. 12:15 p. m. U. 8. Dept Agriculture. 12:30 p. m. "Farm and Borne Hour. 7 :30 p. m. Dixies Clrcn 8:30 p. m. Armstrong" Quaker N. B. C. RED NETWORK Nov. 7:00 a. m. Tower Health Exercise 10:15 a. m. Radio Household Footbau d 1:45 p. m. C Dance 10:00 p. tn. Lucky Strike ehestra. N. B. C. BLUE NETWORK Footbau 1:45 p. m. Princeton-Nav" 9:00 p. m. Pbllco Hour. Tale-Harvar- y The following Is a list of tatlo carrying the above programs: eompanV National BroaAcastln Nat work; WEAF. Now York: Boaton: WTIC. Hartford: V,JARj .dene; WTAQ. Worcester: land. M.: WL.1T and WFT. . hia; WKC. Wanhlnatop: WOT. n Energetic Convertation R. L. Jones has calculated that If a million persons were to. talk ateadllv and the energy of their voice were to be converted Into heat, they would have to talk for an hour and a half to produce enough beat to make a cup- fll of tea (even If they were all poll tlclans) I Nature American Toleration There are Japanese' and Chinese temples of worship ta New York city, Chicago, San Francisco and other large elites, also churches for other heathen denominations. sealed ta red paper. He looked at Nsrman diplomatically. "HI go halves on It I" be offered. ,wU"d it rNormun. Ills vo!ce arose aomewhal' repeated... but mill R aid oot Indicate anger "1 seen oo steal Baker seen yoo steal lots of timescountered, Me?" Norman asked, "And I can lick you. one hard tied beh.nd mj back I" Norman tt.od npilowly. He had no desire to fight. Be knew Eddie Bakers pm nut lhe jormalltlee man be observed rrr.v he challenged. To B - Itr CONTINUED.) WWJ. Detroit: WSAI. Cincinnati. and WttB, Chics ao; KSU,D ft WOC, Davautxirt; WHO. )t! WOW. Omaha: WDAF. muI: Mtnnaanla-o- l r; -- WOCO-WHH- WTMJ. WHA WMC KOA. Slilwauk: -- WSM Lootavtile:- - ilcmnnla: cvoO WSB Kl'Ur. H..un: ia: Ft. tonlo: WHAP Nah.vPT. A'LV WOr. av S'tT-ja- Worth: ' ' JaiconvUI pN National Broadraatma w ,1 yn. Vork: Network: WJZ. New ton; WUZ. Sortnafleld: W "irnKA-more:Rocheater. WHAM. C(B. Fittahurah: W4R letr-.t- t : W cinnntl; KYW and 'v Olf- KWK. Pt. I,Miie; WREN. Minnenoll-B- t WCCO- W UHM, v,r; WTMJ. Milwaukee: WfcM. KVhvl,,,: , - W HAS W2UC. Lou-evllle- : Memnni. KVttO WBB. AtH.n'Jv 1 ulan: U. KFHC. Houston tonlo. WUAP. Ft Richmond. VJ Ot Vrofh Jacket xVTB. - h?vVK , |