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x f not hanz ox to the rear of cars while they coast | vers, newspaper men and women jurors. He finds suci | _ gf Principle of self-expression dominates. | i playing in the international game a hand which wt Bismarck Tribune , Am independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER do the same thing again. P) tEstablished 1873) The declaration of independenc:. in other worts, has shed ty tne Bismarck Tribune Company wis- | not stopped working. It is something for the foes or} N W.. and entered at the postoifice at Bismares | freedom to take into account | class D Man Subscription tates Payable in Advance ty carrier per year. ........ jy mail per year in Bismarck) . vy mail. per year state outside Bismarck) vy mail. outside of North one or two developments in present-day life that do not look exactly favorable for democracy and liberty. The! old phrases that fired the colonists’ hearts in 1776 may . President ana Publishe: WS CHICAGO » | Soldiers of Science Score Again | The soldiers of science score again. To the long roll | - $2.25 brilliant with such luminous names as Jenner, Pastcur +18 | ond Koch is added the name of Dr. Isadore 8. Falk, 30- p.uy | Year-old professor of bacteriology at the University of mm Chicago, who seems to have successfully isolated the germ — | of the dread scourge, influenza. 100, ‘The discovery has been cautiously announced. Scien- lists dread being pre-mature in their conclusions. In- . 19u | fluenza has been as devastating as war. It is a big sub- ject to go wrong on. Dr. Falk studied, 3.800 torms of microbe before he let the world know what a tremendous step bacteriology had taken toward shackling what prob- | at present is its most common disease. te per year “7 te three years for ot North Dako a. by mail 1 by mail tn CANT SETTLE Associated Press ed to the use Caeihes te Pita oben hace tt RE It ts to be noted, however, that isolation of the gerin Sdtted thy this newepaper 3 2 : ' ee et Shontaneous origin puo'ishea herein Au is the substance of the Chicago discovery. No remedy epublication of all other matter heret: are for the disease accompanies the announcement. The | ‘of compounding of a vaccine which will immunize humans | {rem infection by influenza belongs to the future, but it | 4s not likely to be long in forthcoming. The problem, in | the opinion of Dr. Falk may be in producing a preventa- ; live agent from dead microbes of the influenza germ, to tate and County Newspaper) Kepresentatives SMALL. SPENCER & LEVINGS: ‘Incorporated» c ‘operate through the muscuous membrane of the nose Formerly G Logan rayne Co. BOSTON and throat. uicaco a eee The discovery was a year in arriving at a definite) identification of the flu germ. It is a fascinating story which tells of the labors of the’ young scientist and his corps of assistants. {Parents, Reduce Coasting Perils edy of little Robert Kreiser has brought the 3 ee et, che be oe paseo Fourtecn members of the bacteriology department, all Py of protection that will effeciively safeguard the | of whom developed influenza during the epidemic, as- yeh coesting on the street hills. Precautions pre- siseq Dr. Falk in the work, tolling an average of 16 fy taken proved unavailing azsinst accident. Tt) ours a dey and sleeping on thelr desks, in order tha must be stopped | they could get samples of all the suspect germs before uthorities do not want to 1). epidemic ran its course. €5 ban on the youngsters’ winter sport, so they have| “ane infiuenza germ was actually found during the epi- Fd to place stop signs ut Mandan sirect and 8" demic of December, 1928, along with many other bacteria. Sth street, in the hops that motorists will cooperat? | ue was not definitely identified as such until long after- Po feeulation. | ward when hundreds of other microbes were gradually vision, however, failed in the Kretser | ciisinsted as suspects. ch the lad collided skidded ae| ‘The medium which Dr, Falk was finally able to apply | ¢ or the boy's sied to avoid it. BW | in sustaining both the virulent and non-virulent forms. ,. | Of this particular streptococcus was found to be a heated | @ @rs in hooking on to the rear of passing cars. Tha’) 110i, proth with sheep blood. seems a little strange that none | eee nie tragedies. mS ts if two] Dt Falk explained that there are’ two goneral types/ of the statisticians has gone in serl-| ee = Comperation Of pater °| of dangerous germs, those which invade the tissues and ously for tabulations on the number are to be given up to coasters. They must sec) j,, se thes: “anid | of married men who were endurance ve ins! : those whieh produce poisons whic! their children do not invite injury and death by get into the blood stream. ‘The pleomorphic etreptococcus | flyers. on to cars, ‘The ae their aoe —which teraa hhas been. applied to the tafluene germ—| street: car ee aie gitving to break up this habit. City commissioners | 1. its virwent form, is probably of the latter type. ‘That! most anything these days except a tried to induce the youngsiers to desist. It bead is why its effects ere felt 50 throughout the| voman. in the commission meeting Monday evening body in dizziness, pain in the back and sore cyes. some parents have been encouraging this perilous Influenza alone does not kill huma:: beings, Dr. Falk by having their children trail along with the ited out. It serves to destroy tissues in such.a way car. One commissioner who warned a father 10/10: the normal resistance of the body to germs always this "was told by the parent that he guessed Be) within it is so diminished that many fatal diseases, espe-| do as he pleased, they were his children. | was not the proper spirit. Being a parent does | “ally Pneumonia, are given a chance to flourish. ~-confer the right to imperil one’s children. Nor does | ‘enfer the right to make them a nuisance to other | Sbrists, as easily was the case in this instance. There | Possibility at every corner of another car coming | (a and skidding into the trailers on their-sleds. And fe was cvery provocation in the father’s answer to *® haled him into police court for the administration ‘SG bis stitt fine. looks as though there was going to be considerable H of the strects by coasiers and that certainly means | It u * ee ‘Women not only have been given the vote, it seems, but also the priv- ilege of a strap in the trolleys. * * * Scotland is a country where there ! are detours at all the toll gates. se & All women have a sense of rumor. | | a Women Jurors and Justice | (Minneapolis Journal) i Women jurors, says Justice Robert H. Day of the Ohio | ‘Mt of danger to the children. The police are doing ae stot eee. ae pce ele | someon ee At they can, but they must have the cooperation of | juror as the average man, and her presence in the jury | ugnts if the precautions they are taking under regula- | box has made the consensus of twelve jurors more fre- | 7'8 by the city commission are to be made effective. | Tently right than ever before. ‘gg {the mothers and the dads insist that their children | grajeoS” ta) Hadgte praer ey among, state | MMA HOGARTH, anid to heard in ber itself is dangerous enough. when the city puts up the Stop! signs for the motor- © let the parents likewise put up a Stop! sign for the | sameness of testimony that he regards his conclusion as the unanimous verdict of Ohio citizens. : Woman, says this Ohio justice, is likewise benefited | § « | by jury service. It makes her a broader minded, bette: a 2 | citizen. She listens carefully to the testimony, pays * | fine attention to instructions by the court, and earnestly Jur First Charter a Living Principle eee er Cee ee Maen Se | om Mra. Hogarth secused jing to rob her and whe bas dis- peared. RKER. thought aa ssevier, te iomas G. Masaryk set up the republic of Governor Cooper declares women jurors have proved | by the side of the Liberty bell in Independence | groundless the prediction that they would be swayed b: ene oe Morel Wer, eas now the eat Uae. e mas weatiate to tence oardione ct aie in| a y in | naam’ Segeaapesord fo imitate (hat | cases involving life imprisonment and capital punish | ga ae | are ap itary ig ment, and they are not predisposed in favor litigants of ir OWN sex. ution demanding independence in which, word for| The chief justice qualifies his encomium, however. He |, is embodied a great deal of the phraseology of the says: . >t It is to be feared that the natural trustful- ia @eciaration adopted in Philadelphia in July. | nese of wo : cad 0 pio im: | = s Seer pips cea y India does not misconceive the proper interpreta- | mitted lack pig tow wd of ee tee ‘of the | coe. in. eae Mate, Nod te Rcd 3 of being “born free and equal,” well and good. It| world, detract from their value as- jurors, and i GRAVES whe weltes ber ence a | qn has grasped the idea of democracy. Unfortunately,| thelr inexperience in dealing with complicated Pg eye yy ey Ey oe ; Z problems makes it difficult for them to digest a DAN GRIFFIN, san-in-low and equal” has been given too wide an interpreia- mass of conflicting testimony and to pick out heaster, of whese “tarning on” in this coumtry where this political principle has the kernel of truth. It is also to be feared that ys f been looked upon as implying cquality in brains, they do not reason with the same accuracy as “jture and economic and natural gifts, as making the| ™men. On the other hand, these defects may be )-ferate, the unskilled, the uncouth the equal of the | ined, the educated and the skilled, whereas there can| the spurious frem that winek vine, tune no freedom and equality except before the law, and in iaieb cipation in government by the people. Beyond that! ,, These copelusions should contribute further testimony © aiee cetating tawa’s imeel? aii ROW Go ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXVIII MPHE securing of the passkey from Mrs. Rhodes was an act of cour- hen, too, India must consider just how far the Amer- )Asia just because the native nationalists demand it. up Egypt to its own rule, with a slight string at- ‘and it conferred dominion government on Can- Australia, New Zealend and South Africa. Bonnie Dundee had borrowed Strawn's very complete collection of skeleton keys before the detective chief had departed for Belton, Mo., on the trail of Dan Griffin. In asking for the keys Dundee had said to Strawn: “I want to make another search for that money—and for other things, as well.” “I thought you'd made up your mind that the old lady had no hid- ne hoard,” Strawn had reminded im. England needs India not only for itself but to; it from falling under the influence, as in the pre- war era, of rival empires, when Russia notably es g8 & i had as its stake the former empite.of the Moguls. the independence resolution on which the Indica set 80 much store may prove to be hut so much Which does not detract from the interest the episode possesses for Americans, for it proves i i iy ae i s about Dan Griffin's theft from the bank,” Dundee bad replied. “The - i HH over it reluctantly. Fourth of July sentence or two—and after that it’s just ‘We don’t know what's in it and we don‘ age # efter the daughter proves that if either of the women had thastolen money, it was the old lady. Isn't it fairly probable that Grifia had entrusted his stelen money to his mother ay tH iy | L F ag f | i Zs cf! Ege ef rt te they it Li i i tl i i A ts with hatred and revenge io bi heart? Yes, it most decidedly seems to me thut what Dan Griffin was after was that $10,000, If Mrs. Hogarth did have the money it must have been @ sore burden to the Kansas tesy rather than of necessity, for) OUR BOARDING HOUSE 2 ITS NONE OF MY BUSINESS FOLKS, EXCEPT OUT OF CURIOSITY ~BUT WERE You PEOPLE EVER ABouT “THREE YEARS AGO 2 ~~ SEEMS -To | ME YouR FACES ARE FAMILIAR, 5 Bur I CANT PLACE Yous ~~ Y'KNOW How IT 1S, WHEA A FELLA GETS SOMETHING (NS HIS MIND AN” HE (Tw Y'kWow, EM 2 Bee ee Py " tl ie THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1929 US CONFUSED Wit SOMEBODY ELSE > NO DOUBT! w~ MRS. GIMBLER Ff AND I ‘HAVE NEVER BEEN IN CHICAGO ¢ ~~ You MAY HAVE KNOWN SOMEONE WHO By Ahern AND CHICAGO, OF ALL PLACES: MY GRACIOUS No!) —- CANNES ~ NICE ~ PARIS, OP atc gg sae If the boy cries for a horn for ses It’s never too late to crawl over dozen people to reach your seat in ting our doom.”. the theater. Russia. ee When his te! rang The first duty of a man Is to look | and efter himself. according to Ed Howe, ! refractured a vertebra in his neck. Tecently he got up to answer it, tripping over something, fell. He NEA sage. And just to be!@ sure he does the job right, he usually | ited + woman | Christmas, maybe you'd better give , bounds.”"—John Vanbrugh. him one to shut him up. ss her. She could not return ft to the; bank without leying herself and her daughter open to arrest, an@ she could not use a penny of it, with a@ clear consclence—and I firmly believe in Mra, Hogarth's own honesty. But she may bave felt justified in willing it to a favorite fellow-boarder, Her daugh- ter probably felt same way about the money as did old Mrs, Hogarth—regarded it with fear and loathing. That would certainly ac- count for the fact that Mrs, Ho- garth never made a will in her daughter's favor.” oe ND now Bonnie Dundee was going to make @ serious effort to find that much-discussed “hidden board.” He realized, fully as well as the skeptical Strawn, that the chances were about 60 to one j against its being concealed in this house, but in the profession he had chosen not even such a long chance Dundee had told himself a short time before, Henry Dowd had cer tainly invited bis earnest consid- eration. The room was singularly bare of evidences of Dowd's occupancy. With the exception of a cheap black comb and a pair of cheap new mill- tary brushes on the chiffonier, and two magazines devoted to adventure stories which lay on a small bed- side table, there was nothing in sight to indicate that the room was rented, Mindful of Rhodes to leave everything as he found tt, Dundee turned rapidly through the meager piles of gar ments in the chiffonier. Oa shirts, soft collars and underwear, all rather badly worn, he found the laundry mark, “H. D.” and whea ind is protected from injuring } acts as a|even the X-ray is not always reliable ble. rig he does not have the colic, and cases do not, it is sometimes Dr. McCoy will gladly answer health and difficult to diagnose his trouble, as : a g : E & may exist with or without gall stones. The sumnnten diagnosis between quite different and even a Graham dye examination does not always show the difference between the in- treatment for the two condi- is similar, however, so that an exact diagnosis in the begirining of the treatment does not always seem In tomorrow's article I will explain this method. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS A Needed Question: A. M. writes: “I have been troubled for the last few months with the foot trouble known as papilloma. It has broken out in three — ——_—_—______— places on the ball of my foot. Is \ Quotations { jit. this disease-dangerous? Will it de- ° @| _ The formation of the gall stones is; veloped into something serious? What due to « stagnation of bile. It is sig-| causes it, and can it be cured without “A slight knows 0 | nificant that athletes who are in good /operation. Also, is it contagious?” |training never have them. An over-| Answer: of the foot can . | supply of sugars and starches in the/usually be cured in « short tine by “Capitalistic nations are still plot- ; Menu, with a lack of exercise, will injtreatment from a He —Joseph Stalin of [Years bring on @ stagnation of the/uses certain medicinal preparations ‘gall bladder. Men, because they are/on the papilloma, and resorts to board between the two closets, he tould have committed the murder and robbery without having once ee out of his own door or wia- a “But of actual evidence against him I bave none,” Dundee remind- ed himself ruefully, “unless Dan Griffin's description happens to fit. If it does, then we can add motive to opportunity—" He broke off to Usten, then hastily scrambled out of the closet, having replaced the loose board, and ran from the room, clos- ing the self-locking door softly be hind him. eee ERGEANT TURNER again, Dundee,” came a voice over the wire from headquarters. “An answer bas come to your wire to the Riverside chief of police. . . - Ready? ... . ‘Herbert 8, Magnus, son of Benjamin H. Magnus, prom!- nent fruit-grower, lived in River keeper. Age 34. Weight height 5 feet 9 inches. Dark-brown hair, gray eyes, red mustache. Wears glasses. that could be overlooked. And/|side $ bse He i z H is i ig i : i if | i § | é i E 5 z 3 2 $ ; is . E i i a i lf Rp | a I i & 5 i : i i i | E i Hi E ff i F i i E ! 4 gle i Evidtsete E i a. . z a a i tf i i il : i i f : he used one of his skeleton keys to i i. g: fi E 5 g f & unlock the closet he found the same i : | i i I i z 2? Hits & f I | i [ F & & | “and so { had—before 1 knew| fact that the mother was murdered | |, Emil Sevier had contri iMegal entry into Mrs, room, but—he bad available to the nest tenant room! Was it not entirely that Heary Dowd, whether of not be was Dan Griffin, had discovered that ready-made passage and had made use of it of the night of June 297 Senry Dowd bad no alibi for the ime of the murder, beyond his ows E af; i [; & ge ity i i Hit i ney ne { ie E ae 4H il i i f | i I i é E E ae | dah i 5 3 ll i i 32 a nitty i : fs j s z i E il F at : i i Ld ge for it na 2 ial EF ie if ul I ital rE he “