The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 11, 1930, Page 4

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+ Sema NMMRERR 0 0 nese CRC MMI winhaediem siete competent econontists have studied the whole thing more carefully. Meanwhilé, however, it is obvious that some- thing is wrong somewhere. Our prosperity can’t be quite | all it is cracked up to be if it is placing a constantly- | increasing economic burden on the women. The Bismarck Tribune : § Ap Independent Newspaper ‘nae TRE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) TM Not Gone | +e -Spuitined bp the Bismarck Tribune Company.” Bis “| UNKS ARE GOle “To HAVE marck, N. D., and entered at the postoftice at Bismarck Not Ideal, But Modern, Home | deve Scher ae ree cortise Boos AWAY “ANY. OF && second class mai! matt i ili ia | ery A MN STRENGTH, MARTHA! 7 with Not CALL George D, Mann .. .President and Publisher | 4 recent building convention in Copenhagen displayec ; ‘MATCH f uw’ “TAKING AN He's TH" ONE For ANY UAiDU! a conglomeration of ingenious devices that bore the col- | EN GINEER'S NIEWPOIST on becca ie Subscription Kates Payable in Advance lective label, “The Ideal home.” | WATCHING A WATERFA: wHo = WILL BURN 4 ENERGY on Daily by carrier, per year ... ‘There was an automatic rubber door mat, to begin with, | ene FALL, T UP ALL HIS VOLTAGE MY PART? Daily by mail. per year «in Bi that brushed the mud off of the shoes of any man who! fo SBE ALL “THiS IN TRYING - KEEP /(~VoU AND THE stepped on it. sa Rll e ve Then there were rubber air mattresses on the beds The dining room table had a glass top, to make table- % cloths unnecessary. Doors and windows could be opencd and closed, with no effort, simply by pressing buttons. A pneumatic tube was installed to whisk letters away to the postoffice. The whole house fairly bristled with things of tlie kind. The press dispaiches did not say whether or not there was an automatic gadget to put the cat out for the night, but apparently every other household chore was taken care of. We seem to have made up our minds definitely that the machine is to be our salvation, in little things as well as big things. Yet why should that word “ideal” be tacked on ta a proposition of this kind? Is the process of making a home as simple as that, then? Did domestic happiness wait, through all the ages, for the Renta date, outaide Bismarck High oPiAsions- ‘Wally by mail. outside of North > OF YOURSELF ‘Weekly by mail, in state, per year an state, three yeai of North Dako. ENERGY AND -HORSEPOWER hy ME FROM GLUING GOING To.” WASTE.44 T WouLp HIS ROUND SHOULDERS LIKE “TO HARNESS: THE STRENGTH) 76 —TU" FLOOR, Nou’ ARE GOING “To THROW AWAY AND PUT IT “To PRACTICAL RUSE ww LiKE.. R CLEANING UP > THe A dalageenen hl My Member of The Associated Press The Associsted Press 1s exclusively entitled to the use tor republication of a) news dispatches credited to it or not’ otherwise credited in this newspaper and isc the local news of spontaneous origin pudtished herein. All tights of republication of all other matter hereir are also reserved. ————————— (Offictal City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS ‘i Pi eel shel WGeGS, invention of the electric egg-beater? ‘ormerly G. Logan ayn 5 ei es val ad ” CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON It is obvious, of course, that this label, “ideal,” is only | a bit of sales talk, not meant to be taken seriously. But France After Guarantees some people will take it seriously, just the same. The Franee 1s thinking of nava! parity in terms of building paris si heute ornamental rind Up its fleets and obtaining more guarantees, while Brl- | vorow's bride may flounce home to mother if her hu: tain. and America are thinking of the same subject in | band fails to provide an automatic window-o| ‘and torms of limiting or decreasing their sea armaments. | ¢ 960 regulator. seer ; That is why, in the pre-conference period on naval)” 4 whole trouble, whén you stop to think about tt, iq lisnitation, France seems so at odds with the purposes Of} 102i, the way that werd “ideal” is used. It co ‘a j : Gece. Meaitecaid tne ‘called to meet at London, |Mnee i0 out sete hata whaeity we savas .“"Branee, in fact, is described as not thinking in terms iscaunnee ilies peingde ry a site Hat ES , of peace as are the Anglo-Saxon powers. It is thinking hind pelted _ in terms of preparations for war as preparedness means Making 4 home—an “ideal home,” if you please—is ‘at to assure peace. The Gaul has not shaker off all SUB! once the simplest and the most complex task any man picion of-Germany. He has heard the voice of Mussolini | faces. ‘The statistics of any divorce court will prove that ‘prociatming the destiny of Italy to war ih the-not distant |a great-many people make a hopeless hotch of it, and future. Neither reaction has ‘been in the direction of| 11+’ air-scandalous activities of aahy siltbaeceseipang ont tHat fine idealism which has inspired Hoover and Mac- 1 indicate that more people Sayan pedi eccitrerrel uaa they once expected. A Paris correspondent of American papers says that # : PsA ie retain pooitioa’ accurately, 1k shoud be|» Yon te ee is ik ae Fane ae wleiial ees ss recognized that France now is in the grip of naval na-|‘eshloned words, bce as ait tact, kindness and fore-| Tuesday, SNOW AND COLDER tionglism. On her feet economically and financially for eee prea beets ‘ho tackle this job dont|Tauraday, SNOW AND COLDER: the ‘first time since the war, France wants to improve i Priday—but say, why did Com: ] Reaa vin Giailicn! lis intends to yet Gack: wiere she [Mote Deed the Delp iat tis eesniureases ane whe | “Was before the war, when she had a flect of 900,000 tons sie are bapercrat ee - which, incidentally, equaled the American flect. The | tS the factories oF — French government takes the attitude that’ a flect of H 00,000 tons is necessary to give France naval security so | Jong’as she must depend on her own forces exclusively. 5 “"As was suggested in the French memorandum, Paris $s ready to consider any measures toward what she regatds as real security. The term “Mediterranean Locarno” is somewhat inaccurately applied to what the French have in mind. Rather they wish a regional agree- ; ment~on~the League of Nations model, by which thé : participants pledge to help cach other against possible jion. Eavwing that America will not join in a Mediter- ranean agreement, the French argue that that does noi ,préyent Great Britain, France, Italy, and Spain from Not only would such an arrange- —@|mander Byrd ever go to the South|’ it’s the°age of marvels and all that, - || Pole? ea but the hens haven't started laying . them scrambled yet. The sale of toys was greater this ss 2 ~ year than ever before, according to} A business of $20,000,000 a year holiday statistics. Father simply/has. been built up out of materials me * val ib thtoy ‘por poogse ° a + |value send to gees in California, sted os newspapers, after all. @ few other states where sun (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, ] appeared lately, automobile drivers . an La The tallest .-el D height | e The New York Stock Exchange isn’t the only place you can pick up heavily watered stock during this holiday season. ‘lephant was 11 feet 4 inches in height. Reversing an Old Theory Our courts of law, in the-machinery they have set up for the trial of accused persons, operate on the old, es- tablished theory that it is better that two guilty men should escape than that one innocent man should be con- vieted. Extensive safeguards, accordingly, are thrown about every man who is tried for any crime. It_might be a good thing if we could tip off our liquor patrols to this old theory. If-t applies to the trial of sus- pected criminals, it ought to apply to the catching of ‘them, also. And letting fly with a machine gun on the mere suspicion that a man a hundred yards away is a law breaker hardly seems like the best possible way of 5] wyourrs ahead of me,” Strawn stowled. “Do you mean Griffin decided. then and there to take on the dead man’s identity, belongings and famtly?” “Exactly!. He was Dan Griffin, remember, and a fugitive from jus- - -CHAPTER XLVI _ MWTHAT do you meant—the per fect stenographer?” Lieute: ant Strawn demanded, as Detec- tives Payne and Wilkins devoted thelr entire attention to subduing and handcuffing a raging maniac “Look!” He ripped out the stitches he himself had put there the day before, and drew forth a small ‘phonograph record: “When | first talked with Magaus, be told me a lot about bis family; said his little sister had made this for him before he lett home five yéars ago. Yes- terday, when 1 was looking for a Commissioner O’Brien commanded, & broad grin of almost paternal pride on his Irish face, “Begin with telling how you found out bart Magnus wasn’t Bert Magnus.” “That part was easy,” Dundee admitted. “I should have been suspicious of bis identity long be fore 1 was, because there was plenty to make me suspicious all slong. See thesef™ and hi H making such a treaty. putting it into effect. : i tagnt” permft France to feel safe in cutting her Mediter- = who had been known as Bert Mag-| good place of concealment for a|tice. Probably he had made friends i Taneah fleet, it is contended, but Britain, which main- nus, “le there a girl in there?” | round, figt-object I remembered it.] with Magnus, had heard all about Bo, ‘tains 400,000 tons of warships in the Mediterranean, as “Reassure and scatter those poor oe diy neroogiers os For ernts his family and his ambition to ‘ against 150,000 tons before the war under the entente folks cooped up in Styles’ room, a nt rid of the te oo ee month od ipo 5 *cordiale arrangement, could cut her fleet there. ‘ and then I'll show you,” Dundee . aoe ogee en For 0 Kew the : But, so far-as the United States is concerned, greater) | Movies Exert Wholesome Influence promised, “Will you come {n NOW,| +741 y an hour later the police| Ply claimed his name, sultease, and S interest attaches to the French desire to reinforce the (San Antonio Evening News) Ogden?” he ealled to the keen-eyed, H commissionerthe chief of the everything. Had time, undoubtedly, ‘ “Kellogg pact. The French will most certainly endeavor Pasion psc ease & wholesome influence on a sharp-faced young man whose leat)-nomicide squad, aad.the squad’s| hurt though he was, to switch coats & Mgauve tie Gaited States declare that in case of violation; sonetimes charge the mnlsintecnid oe ee ‘an oppusite-ef-4(p--Dody Bad: cast t newest recruit sat about Lieutenant fen teearraesd man, rg the wor 4 of the anti-war pact America will not send supplies or | fect,.a study of 628 feature pictures produced in tHe Uni- the open door of Strawn’ ‘a desk in his office st “Head- ror ‘any rate, the papers bi as cy 8 ep quarters.’ : z scr! the dead man as unknown, & otherwise aid the aggressor, however the aggressor may | ted States last year shows that it is a powerful deterrent. Five minutes later Liéutenant | ower shoot the works, boy,”| With dark-brown hair, small red- 4 We determined. This undoubtedly would mean an effort of crime. Dr. Clinton Wunder of Rochester took this Strawn knocked and was admitted ‘| dish mustache, hud eyegtasses, ‘The favorable report to the National League of Pen Women, convened in Washington. Of the pictures investigated, ~ | that, authority said, one-third presented no villain and no crime. In another third the villain was caught and ye Sy gh ‘s severely punished; in 17 per cent the bad man was killed; ‘:Between the desire of women to dabble in men’s work | in 10 per cent he quit his evil ways and tried to repair an@ the dissipating morale of men, who used to be re-| the wrong he had done; in 5 per cent the hero was garded religiously as the providers, women in increasing perensed Po Se lari favorite device of old-fash- numbers are being called on to support families. -It is an} It ts, theréfore, unlikely that siny impressionable youth tamtly was frantic, out in River- side, of course, and immensely re- Meved when the new ‘Bert Magnus’ wired them that the papers had make a mistake.” i " “Go on,” his uncle directed. “What madé you think of the type- writer being worked mechanically?” “These,” and Dundee showed him his little collecti tt bag tas aos By pele ons gel is little jon of trasl per and the yi sheets +p ga hovering just over the let ope and i ranged them slong the latter @ struck over an over gal ese are pages of a paper was cut. course “Not quite all, chief. The rest /scenario, entitled, ‘More To Be| thought of 8. girl accomplice, at “sunx'| Pitied.’: White paper, typing first, but: {t- wouldn't wash, I which Arthur Wheeler left bere.”|"ect- The last page shows “Then. Wheeler: was mized up in it? Strawn csked keenly. , “Not that be knows of,”’ Dundee grinned. “His only crime was in Deating his beard bill, so that be had to leave this trunk behind, thus |. Putting ideas for @ perfect alibi into the wicked head of Dan Grit- fin, alias Herbert 8. Magnus. Meet Mr, Clarence Ogden, electrical eng meer, Lieutenant Strawn.” . “Glad to meet you,” Strawn mumbled. Then an {idea shook . “Say, Dundee, you. haven't gone of half-cocked, have /yout” “Hardly, chief! Bvery item of this contrivance was found in this room, as Ogden cao ewear. Even tched a disk from r which lay in the to the room which had been occu- pied by the man known as Bert Magnus. The typewriter was still tapping away steadily, but no bu- man hands were touching the keys. “Well, I'll bei" Words failed the chief of the homicide squad. Dundee laughed, jerked an elec: trical cord, add the tapping ceased suddenly. Tl ttle plunger ‘to bring up the issue of freedom of the seas. Women As Family Supports - indefensible change for the worse. It reminds one of tite i will glean from the movies the idea that crime pays. In men loafed and | the silent drama and the Picture the cards always performed the| arc stacked against the evildore. To be sure, in real life tebacea growing} Many @ villain prospers, many a criminal escapes punish- 8 ment, many an honest man suffers: wrong which never is redressed. “But even in most “realistic”. fiction such things would not be tolerated. The literary proprieties dgmand that in the end justice be done. Concord Held Marvel of U.'S. (Helena, Mont., Record-Herald) alg, Indian system, under whi hunted and fought, while the squay hard’ labor of the maizo patches, the ‘ and fhe rearing of the young. f Qf course women who work these days and support | families do not perform the work of slaves.: For the most part they merely take undeniabie talents into the mart or perform clerical and secretarial work. Nevertheless -# lot of them work hard. - Whe big regret of it all, however, is the passing of] ysven & the multiplicity of confilcting Interests in, the chivalry in that modern form in which the man was the) {s so much discord and contreversy but that there is so provider, the woman the keeper of the home and the! much concord. ideals, Capital and labor ate at peace and they have many “A recent bulletin of the United States Women’s bu-| posgs Mrcwciige ies fines the, Pridgen’ Sheie vreau tells some facts about the economic change which | relations are usually so happy. has been reversing the roles of the 3 in the matter} Agriculture and industry, consumer and producer, ship- of.earning the family living. ed re geval “bears” and “bulls,” tariff protectionist ut of 30,000 families investigated, for instance, 27 per | Saye" the sacred and the Profane. “big Navy” men and cept were supported entirely by the wages of their | disarmamentists, bus and railroad and aviation, city and women members. ; country, highbrow and lowbrow, all are playing at a (At 17,090 unmarried women studied, one in five was “supporting a family unaided . never-ending game of tug-of-war. Profound minds see in the contest over Vare and 4]. enormous proportion of city families is depending wholly or in part on the money earned by wives aid significant fact days ago. When 1 did discover it, I asked myself why a poor man, with one hand crippled, toiling away-retyp|. {ng a manuscript of which he bad destroyed s perfect copy. The ewer was, obviously, that he using bis typing as a blind.” “I see.” O'Brien nodded. “And four peoplé swore he was in his toom when Mra, Hogarth was dered, because they heard bim was Grundy in the senate an outbreak of sectionalism. Such a theory would affront their more bitter foes on the/| senate floor, but campaigners often are it_ of the daughters. In certsin industries which employ women, |Feal “cause” for which they ate fighting. “It 1s a question) J” = e ° 8 alti eet thee bet ihe 3 pepe whether the attacks on Vare and Grundy have assured 66 ‘Ue a little phonograp! C3per-cent of the women workers are married. Li Strawn commented.| “Well, as soon as I had record,” “Etactly! But it ten’. It's’a ‘bakiite’. disk. ‘See these 16 litt metal plugs? 1 can't explain very technically, but this disk regulated the tapping of the key, so that it woulde’t be toe steady—tiatervals 6f different length between the tap- ping, you know. Ag soon as I put the: problem up to Ogden, he said | better senators for the future or aggravated the quarrel between the East and West, which has been growing in bitterness for years. There is no better testimonial to the strength of the federal government and to-the genius of congress as niediator than their signal success in- serving these two willful masters at the same time. : ‘Black Gold in the Hills feason ‘1 had ~ Evidently the woman who marries for cconomic secufity stands a feir chance of getting badly stung. Instead of Being frecd from the necessity of supporting herself, she! mey_haye to pitch in and help support, not only her- ‘ecif but her husband as well. fe & It would seem that there are several things’ back of this recent influx of women into tlic realm of jobs. 34 i‘ apparently, the cutgrowth of a sudden’ desire, on the part of womankind, for frecdom. Th? m4rriage-or- caxger. stories written by our popular fiction: producers hor? idiotic they sound, now that the real {acts are com- ing out! . Mos: working women, oue Concludes, are work- inte beceaus? they have to, not becaus>- they want to. The Amddetn ‘World is giving them, not a new freédem, but * Stuart Chase, in his recent book, “Prosperity: Tect ez Myth,” sheds 4 bit of light on the subject. ~ ,, One out of every 13 male wage-earners in ‘the United "Biases, tie estimates, ts always out of a job. The “techs | J! . our engineers talk about- - .of workers by labor-saving machinery— an army of jobless men that averages around Yet We have liad ho bresdlines, no unrest, no nation- exhibit. of suffering, despite the fact that we are] rovts of pa harboring this enormous number of reached, to doubt Bert's perfect alibi, ample reason to check his identity, since £ ¢ouldn’t get that i penny’ business out of my head,” Dundee explained. “It was. ridiculously 7 fete oH i; ii i iF i if &3 tig sie! For telephone operator. = won't know what the remedy for all of this is until thi bi Nunpaid all metiory garth’s di THE TREATMENT FOR VARICOSE | lying on the back on a slanting board VEINS ANL Verdes ease occur more often after middle life“and more aiten to women than to.men. The veins of are most, often affected, the lower leg e full, and Ry their skin: , of a tortu tuous In. the i that it is easy way just beneath the beginning, there is a sense of weight without pain, due to the weight of the blood which the holding with the feet elevated, as in this posi- tion thé abdominal ‘organs are pulled away from the lower pelvis and thisy* relieves the congestion of the lower ULCERS , numb, or ‘pain- lish-blue in color Dr. McCoy will gladly to see them wending J inswer ‘on health and diet t ot TS clear = stamped eddressed envelopé for reply. J valves in the véins are not back properly. People who stand at their work are most often victims of this dis- ease. It is interesting that-man is about the only animal who suffers oe wees great pressure.of blood tpon the veins of the legs. Varicose veins, treated, tend to become worse as the vein becomes widened and its valves stretched, allowing the blood to throw extra weight upon the next valve be- low. Ulcers may also form if the dis- ease exists for a long time. . The usual causes of varicose veins are~ prolapsed - abdominal organs, Pressure of feces, or tight garments such as garters or belts. Many pa- | come tients suffering from this disorder are advised-to have the veins surgically the blood so that the veins will have @ proper nourishment for develop: ment of strong walls. It is also neces- sary to tumor of the abdominal drgans which may be pressing on the -veins. Local treatments should also be given if one wishes to reduce the enlarged ‘exercises ¢ tion. A good exercise is taken while three times last month. Bert test- ing ‘out his invention, of course. He had the parts made.at various electrical shops—a piece: here, a piece there, but he made the con- tact plugs in the bak self, I think. One oi the way, brought out the fact that Griffin had bed one year of electri- cal engineering befére he went in for banking.”~. i “He sure ‘played the Bert’Magnus game without missing a trick,” Strawn commented. Magnus family with his letters—° “Because he had every intention of eventually falling heir to half of the Magnus fortune,” Dundee explained, “But af course lié didn’t ‘dare ‘show up until the father. was dead, and in the meantime he hap- ened to run across his wife, Sally, ger picvenin somehow, ie extremities, Gentle massage while the legs are elevated is also benefi- cial. The strokes should be made from the extremities toward the | ear. After the veins have been treated in this manner, you can ben- efit yourself by the application of ao lump of ice to the enlarged veins. p This should be done several times unless carefully | daily. The ice may be held against the vein with a towel so that your hand will not become too could, but the smooth part of the ice should be placed directly against the swollen vein while the leg is in the air so the blood has an opportunity to drain out of the vein. After three or four months of this treatment, the vein will usually be- strengthened and contracted by this ice treatment. During the cold weather @ substitute for the ice can be had by sitting in the bathtub and elevating the leg and ‘allowing the cold water to run over the part where the enlarged veins are located. The ice treatment, however, produces the ‘When varicose ulcers have de- veloped, there is at first only a dis- charge of serum, but in advanced cases blood and pus are also’exuded. The best treatment for varicose ulcers can be administered by a doctor who uses the actinic light. Often one or two applications of this will cause a healing of the ulcer. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS - (Red in Eyes) Question: Miss M. M. 8. asks: “What causes red stréaks in one’s eyeballs and what can be done, if anything, to make then clear again.” » Answer: A common cause of red streaks in the eyeballs is from eye strain caused from reading too much or staying up too late nights in the bright lights, There aré. other causes from various toxemias due to consti- pation and sluggishness of the clim- inative organs. (Cod-liver Oil) Question: J. 8. asks: “What is your opinion of taking cod-liver oil for a grown person who is about 20 pounds under weight, not sickly, but not strong either, and with littie en- durance? I eat moderately of wholesome foods-and fruits in proper @ | combinations and try to live in ac- E| cordance with all the rules of hy- giene, out cannot sefm to gain in weight and vitality.” Answer: I have never had any re- markable success’ in gi patients cod-liver oil. Jf you are pounds under weight, it“f ‘because you do not assimilate your food well enough. A better selection of food combina- tions will help as well, and also an increased amount of exercise to make your muscles and tissues call for more nourishment. Only weight gain- ed in this manner will be of any val- jue to you. (Dimples) Question: Henry writes: “I am a youth of eighteen. Can you tell me » » because upright, there is a any prolapsus or a oF ase. isk him- y wires, by “Fooled the 1 suppose Bursed his rage against her found she didn't e came on here, as “Not so bad an egg,” Dundes laughed. “I got the dope on him morning. Name of Henry In contempt'.of court for mony, “Williams?” Dundee cried. He knit his brows, ‘then quoted from Mary: ‘Our good friend J. all these years and when he tracked her to her apartment, he killed her in @ yed‘rage-when she wouldn't sive him the money. “And when he have it after all; bent on having old OO _ Today Is the | Anniversaryof | ALEXANDER HAMILTON On Jan. 11, 1757, Alexander Ham- ilton, the famous Am in. states. man, was born at Charles Town, in the island of Nevis, West Indies. + At the age of 12, the future statesman was placed in a counting house. But when he showed consid- erable literary ability he was sent to the English colonies on the con- tinent to continue his education. Hamilton distinguished himself in several engagements during the Rev- piasloeary. war nite as Wash- ington’s confident secretary, at- tending to much of the correspond- ence from headquarters. Hamilton took an active part in the organization of the new gov- felicia ion reg named , ce » ry treasury of the hee States ip lag i is the anniversary .of the meeting of the Continental Con- gress in New York, on Jan. 11, 1780. And on Jan. 11, 1805, Mighiga:: territory separated from Indiana territory. 8 e Door little hén- » from Mrs.: Ho-

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