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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1930 ISMARCK TRIBUNE An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) | Published by The Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marck, N nd entered at the postoffice at Bismarck 8 second class mai] matter. 3 George D. Mann ¥ Subscription Rates Payable in Advance +) Daily by carrier per year ...... covennerennnnes 4 Daily i mail per year (in Bismarck) 0... + Daily by mail per year . (in state, outside Bismarck) ee » Daily by mail outside of North Dakota ee eee Weekly by mail in state per Year ncsme-sssmseree 1 Weekly by mail in state, three years fOr sss Weekly by mail outside of North Dakota, President and Publisher per year see aveeeseees Weekly by mail in Canada per year .... Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS Gaeetpor Te é My ly G, Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO i NEW YORK BOSTON On the Five-Day Week If the business depression has done nothing else, it has at least made us willing to look calmly at an idea that was radical, improper and grossly subversive only & few years ago. ‘This idea is the proposal that the normal working week for the ordinary working man be only five days Jong instead of six. Not so very long ago anyone who supported that plan was automatically written down as something between a woozy theorist and an outright Bolshevik, under suspi- cion of lugging Moscow gold about in his pockets. The thing wasn’t even worth arguing against. To defend it was like defending perpetual motion machines. But now we have changed. Within a week two emi- nently conservative gentlemen have both plunked squarely for the five-day weck. These men are of opposite polit- ical complexions, and neither can by any stretch of the imagination be called either a witless dreamer or @ scheming radical. One of them is Senator James E. ‘Watson of Indiana; the other, John J. Raskob, national chairman of the Democratic party. Senator Watson and Mr. Raskob both urged the five- day week as a preservative of prosperity and an anti- dote to unemployment. Neither man, it is worth noting, suggested it as part of the current “stagger” scheme of making jobs go farther. Each wanted to see it adopted without a diminution in wages. Hear what they had to say: “The five-day week, without reduction in wages, must ecome universal and permanent in America in order to prevent future business depressions and resulting unem- ployment,” said Senator Watson. “Every man under the flag is entitled to a job. Government fails and falls un- Jess all men have an equal opportunity to work.” “Economically, the increased consumption incident to the adoption of a five-day week will result in sufficient savings to enable industry to pay the same wages for sive} days as are now paid for five and one-half,” said Mr. Raskob. There is ‘a good deal of significance to the stand taken by these two men. Their advocacy of the five-day week means that public opinion on the subject has undergone a profound change. We are beginning to realize that things are not well with the nation, no matter how pros- perous it may be, if large numbers of men are unable to get work. We are beginning to realize that industry has @ responsibility in regard to its employes. We are be- ginning to demand that the mechanical age justify its existence by providing all ranks of society with an in- creased leisure and the means to use it. Not Much of a Boast The executive director of the National Association of Community Chests and Councils makes the cheering prediction that “nobody is going to freeze or starve to death this winter.” The welfare agencies, apparently, have their winter programs lined up very efficiently, and that is all to the good; but no one need think that this gentleman's prediction represents anything to cheer over. One may say this without in any way criticizing the welfare agencies, for the depression has given them an exceedingly tough job, and they have done very well with * it; but really, as an American citizen with pride in your country—doesn't the bare fact that no one is going to freeze or starve to death this winter strike you as just about the absolute minimum in accomplishment? No one will freeze or starve. Well, what of it? This is not China. This is the world’s richest and—we like to think—most progressive country. None of us will be killed by the race's oldest enemies this winter. Is that anything to make us congratulate ourselves? Wouldn’t it, m fact, be an everlasting shame if we couldn’t say that? In other words, this gentleman’s remark—and this, un- doubtedly, is the way he meant it—simply means that the groundwork has been done. The very least we can possibly do has been done. There will be a bowl of soup at least once a day for the humblest, most miserable of citizens. Is that enough? As a matter of fact, cold and hunger will cut a wide swath this winter. How many children will be weakened by under-nourishment? How many grown men and wom- en will be worn into ill-health by poorly-heated homes and lack of sufficient food? How many men are going to commit crimes and pay with their lives for it, be- cause they are cold and hungry? When you put down your answers to those questions you can begin to see how heavily those ancient curses, cold and hunger, are going to bear down on some sections of the American people during the next six months. Absolute freezing and starvation may be unknown—but that doesn’t _mean that cold and hunger will not take a toll. ‘This is not said in criticism of the community chest welfare agency folk. On the contrary, it is said in the hope that American citizens will realize the seriousness of the problem which the business depression has creat- ed, and wili see to it that the various relief funds and relief organizations are given more money than they ever had before. We have got to be able to make a better boast than the one quoted at the beginning of this article. A Talking Marathon It is with a feeling of awe that one learns that a young man at the Chicago Radio Show talked for 82 hours without stopping. It is even more surprising to read that not only no effort was made to stop him—he was actual- ly incited and abetted in his performance by the man- agers of the show. | Our country is a very great one, and like all great countries tt has room in it for a vast diversity of neohles, customs and mannerisms. We have had marathon dan- cers, flagpole-sitters, men who could eat 50 griddle cakes at one sitting, and airplane endurance flyers, and we seem to have survived. The soul of the republic, beyond doubt, is still sound. But the imagination reels at the thought of 82 hours of steady talking. This, it would seem, is the reductio ad absurdum of all enduranct stunts. ‘ Why Lawlessness Is Immune If you are one of those citizens who believe that gang killings such as the recent murder of Joe Aiello in Chi- cago are not especially harmful, because they merely re-/ move from the scene a man whom society can well spare, you might give a thought to the recent kidnaping of a rich Illinois banker, whom yeggs overpowered and held for ransom. This kidnaping represents lawlessness at its worst—a brazen, unendurable defiance of law and order, an in- solent flaunting of the success of strong-arm methods. And it grows out of precisely the same conditions that the gang murders grow out of. It is due to exactly the same set of forces Immune from interference in one field, the underworld takes it for granted that it will be immune everywhere. Editorial Comment Editorials printed below show the trend of thought by other editors. They are published with- out regard to whether they agree or disagree with The Tribune's policies. An Outlaw Oil Well (Washington Star) A hazard that residents of the eastern seaboard do not have to contend with menaces Oklahoma City and fear is | felt that uniess extraordinary precautions are observed @ major disaster may occur. On Thursday a gigantic wild oil well “blew in” on the edge of the city and as the “biack gold” spouted skyward at the estimated rate of sixty thousands barrels a day more than one hundred million cubic feet of gas was released. Frantic efforts have been made to curb the flow, but like the famous wild Mary Sudik, the outlaw well that defied control for 11 days last spring, the new giant roars on, spread- ing povential disaster before it. In the affected section all fires are banned, trains and automobiles prohibited, schools ciosed and many residents have vacated their homes. The situation, according to the authorities, is the most serious ever faced by the city and even after the well is capped, clouds of gas will remain for days. Oil and gas fires are dread hazards of the struggle of man to draw the precious fluid from the ground. Generally, however, the wells are located at some dis- tance from centers of population and do not threaten a city. If fire, however, should be the result of this latest prank of nature the catastrophe would be horrible to contemplate. Improvements in drilling are being effected steadily. It is to be hoped that some way will be found to harness powerful wells before a calamity of nation- wide scope takes place. Holding Out on Us ‘ (Bottineau Courant) It has been asserted over arid over again that, in the face of our widespread business depression and unem- ployment, the eastern banks are bursting with unem- Ployed money. That this contention is truthful and sound is the revelation the government now has nearly three and a half billions of dollars in gold on hand. This enormous sum in gold metal is locked up in five mints, five assay offices and the United States treasury. In the New York assay office alone is more than $1,700,000,- 000.00 worth of gold. Issued against this gold bullion is billions of paper money at present in hiding in eastern banks, out of circulation and idle because the rulers of the country prefer and profit by the business depression. Our money bags are picking up snaps every day as in- dividuals and groups of individuals are pushed into in- solvency through lack of the flow of money. It is not a pretty picture of our eminents, so touted by our lick-spittle press and penny-a-line writers as “up- right, honorable men,” piling up more dollars for them- selves at the expense of small businessmen and lesser financial business institutions and involving the millions of unemployed, with its attendant misery and suffering. Men will resort to crime or suicide when faced with heavy financial losses. Man-made conditions which in- stigate suicides or crime make those responsible a=ccs- sories, Let us hope if they cannot be made to pay in this world, they will be in the next. The Mob Menace (McKenzie County Farmer) The menace of the mob is something to which all think- ers in all times have given consideration. In plays, in} essays, and in all historical writings we can learn that the mob is always a dangerous element in any civilized society. Most great, disastrous upheavals in history, from the revolution in Russia back to the rebellions in antiquity, were the work of mobs of hungry men and women, herd- ed into unsanitary and uncomfortable quarters in the cities, These products of a dismal and wretched environ- ment have nothing to lose ‘through a destruction of existing institutions. Efforts to hold them in subjugation are only temporarily effective. Goaded by poverty and misery they band together and form the mob which sweeps over constituted authority with the relentlessness of @ storm at sea. And the interesting fact is that these mobs always arise from city slums. a In this there should be a lesson for leaders of Ameri- can industry. Even in our enlightened age the mob is with us, as primitive and brutally powerful as at any time in history. Let there be enough poverty and misery and we shall have a problem on our hands that is beyond even the control of our government. : Intelligent industrial leaders recognize the existence of this menace, and seek to remove the danger by main- taining a reasonable degree of comfort and happiness among people of all classes, by distributing industries out over the country away from the great centers of Population so that workers may own homes, and cnjoy the comfort and peaceful existence that life in smaller communities afford. If we continue to mass our population in great centers, if we continue to enlarge our slums and then fill them with poverty stricken, unemployed men and women, we create what history shows is the greatest menace to our existing economic and social order. The time must soon come when business lea‘les: will see that industry must be moved out into the smaller communities, so that workers may be granted the added .comforts of life that the smaller communities afford. Football Scandals (Minneapolis Journal) while to piay football fill the air over numerous stadiums | this fall. The most conspicuous case, perhaps, is Kansas | university's recent forced exit from the Big Six, pecause | the other members were convinced that a star halfback’s salary of seventy-five dollars 2 month from an insurance office had more to do with making touchdowns than with making insurance prospects sign on the dotted line. Missouri had offered inducements to the same youth, but Kansas got him. Therefore Kansas, not Missouri, was disciplined. The case illustrates a condition that apparently is growing worse, despite the horrible exampje the West- ern conference made of Iowa a year ago. High schools are combed for football talent, and the promising player usually has his choice of several universities, with cer- tainty of an opportunity to “work his way through! school” at tasks neither too onerous nor too profitless. And even when a university rigorously obeys the spirit as well as the letter ef agzeements against proselyting and subsidizing, there is nothing to keep well to do ; Slumpi—nor, for that matter, “public spirited” citizens | of the university town—from finding the player and get- ‘ting the job for him, without the school authorities knowing anything about it. | Where a reme That's what just now perplexes university authorities. Theoretically, a football team is recruited from those who have matriculated only for | the purpose of learning. Aciuelly, many good players are in school solely because they are athletes and be- cause football enthusiasts find for them jobs they would not get, if it were not for their gridiron prowess. Disciplining the, school that is caught, as Iowa and Kansas have keen disciplined, while doing nothing about the school that is sinning in lixe manner without being caught, is at best a makeshift. Still, conditions today, | alarming ss they may be to ardent advocates of pure amateurism, are as nothing when contrasted with condi- tions of a quarter century ago, when a fellow was eligible | for the football team the minute he arrived at school, | when nobody asked why he was there; and when mini- in the cases of fast halfhacks, good ends and heavy Scandals that concern making it worth a fellow's |° ‘state, according to officials in charge. | | tackles. SYNOPSIS: During a wich Vi Tee Tenn d ante nt, his studle, Denny sure that is found tell what (Copyright, 1980, by New York Evening GRAPHIC) T was Mona Devore who hit upon the theory that some one had hidden behind the curtains in the little closet of the kitchenette and waited for Dorn to enter the door to murder ] him. Theories and solutions w was over. I think every one advanced some theory about right, but at the time we were. stubborn and loud in our beliefs. Mona’s theory was weak and it didn’t take us long to show her that no person could possibly have hidden behind that curtain. The whole closet was only about six inches deep and there were shelves every seven or eight inches. Besides that, the curtains were so thin that you could see right through them. And, as mentioned before. any one hiding behind them. would have been more ma crime was committed by one of the quests. in the cellar, He has the r of h nnot ppened. One by one, tine este aro Fospecicd.” memes: More Strange Suspicions! By E. V. BURKHOLDER Dorn, Green- Detective ‘Murphy fs Henry Carpenter eye numerous before the night in that room, but one person, the murder. None of us was gling out. Brandford borg d first and then Mona Devore and Whipple. They looked at Greta but sisson, you'd better - the librai n and tak tino,” Greta said. down there.” “About?” Mona said. “No, you're ae crazy. Ms not mad ing care of crazy people tonigl Wh nar enough to take care of my-/ self.” “What's the matter with him?” I asked. A DOPE ADDICT! i Mona looked at me. “Don’t you. know what's the matter with him?” she asked. “I wouldn’t have asked you if I did.” “Well, he needs a shot. Get me?” “No, I don’t get you.” “They must have had some job to! « get, Born upon that hook Mona | snoy i xBe'arin® Get me howe ki “I we ler « ie ifthe police have found out yet| «You mean he needs dope? where that rope came from. It was green and it didn’t come out of this apartment.” “No, it @idn’t come out of this apartment,” I said quickly. But that was all I did say about “That's it, smart bov. You're im- proving.’ “Is Marino a dope fiend?” “Is he?” Mona laughed. “He takes dope like we take water. That's the trouble with him now. His nerves have broken under the excitement noticeable than if not hiding. that rope. For the last half hour ” But we had to go into the kitch-|I had forgotten about that cursed | “dhe can't go home to get @ shot.” enette to demonstrate this fact to|portiere noose that had come from | hypo needle!” Mona. Her theories usually were not backed with any great amount of reasoning, but she uphel cstubborness that demanded a hear- ing. Brandford, Loretta Whipple and 1/| this took Mona into the kitchenette to show her the fallacy of her argue ment. Greta Ellis re ied down- stairs. Courtney and Jane Marsh didn’t leave the studio, but they took no part in the Jane sat in the Courtney's hands. haughty air had left her. white god depressed. She bit her lips tantly to hold back her emotions. ‘TEAR-STAINED FACE We didn't pay much attention to her. We didn’t notice her face and tear-stained eyes. We were inking about other things and none of us knew her or cared much | out. about her. Marino hadn’t improved any. He sat on the couch and stared aim- lessly around the room: I had no idea what had happened to him during the time I was down in the Iti them with | rope ions. }empty save for the poll cellar, but I hadn't forgotten about knew that disappearing foot and strange looking footprints. I that some one in the room had vis- ited the cellar and 1 wasn't dismiss- ing Marino as a possibility. But inside the kitchenette Mona Devore held the stage and I wasn't given much of a chance to think of except her theory. hips and viewed the curtained closet as if it had murdered Dorn. “Whoever killed Dorn hid behind that curtain.” she said. “That’s as simple as two and two are four.” ik so?” laughed. “That closet couldn't a cat. No one could si stand behind that curtain.” “But some one did,” Mona in- “Get behind there yourself, Mona,” 1 said, “and see whether it would hide you.” She got behind the curtains, or rather as much behind them as she could. The curtains were a little too small for the closet and when Mona tried to get behind them. she wasn't able to hide much more than her feet. “Maybe you are right,” she admit- ted reluctantly. “But I still think some one hid there.” “How would they have F rcomr out of the room?” Loretta demanded. cena, no one in the room hid mere.” Mona admitted that she had been wrong and we all stood crowded in the kitchenette and looked at the little room of death. It held a secret that mone of us coul possibly fathom. The discovery I had made of the footprints on the chair. and my adventure in the cellar. were not known to any of them 1 was keep- ng that information for Murphy State Poultry Show Set for Feb. 2-5, Fargo The date for the thirty-seventh an- nual North Dakota State Poultry show has been set for February 2 to inclusive, according to an an- nouncement by Prof. O. A. Barton, secretary-treasurer, and head of the poultry department at the Agricul- tural college. The show will be held at the city auditorium, Fargo. Ranking as one of the oldest and best known poultry shows in the country, the North Dakota poultry exhibit for the 1931 season promises to supersede all previous shows in the A premium list will be available to the poultry breeders and the public about January 1, Officers of the State Poultry show are V. Champeaux, Hatton, president; J. J, Phelan, Fargo, vice president, and O. A. Barton, secretary-treasurer, oe | AT THE MOVIES | ° oer CAPITOL THEATRE Sticklers for realism in motion pic- tures will find much to enthuse over in Columbia's latest all-talking pic- ture, “The Squealer,” which, with Jack Holt and Dorothy Revier in the stellar roles, comes to the Capitol Theatre tonight and Friday. A number of important scenes in the story deal with prison life, where- in the leading character is confined | in the penitentiary and later engi- neers a jail break. For this portion of the picture an ed to the Columbia studios. From Loretta wWpipple my apartment. Mona's words brought the fact that niy portiere had been used to hang Dorn and that Murphy was likely in my apartment by this time finding out fact. ‘The mention of this rope caused me to lose interest in Mona’s theories of how Dorn was killed, and I walked out of the kitchenette into the studio. The room was But before I had got to a chair, Greta Ellis walked into the room. She looked at me _ wearily. She didn’t sit down at the piano. but took a chair near me. oT st Denny, id. “Of course not—we don’t, Greta,” I replied quickly. “Well, you should. That doctor was right. I didn’t play the piano and I wasn’t sitting on that piano bench all the time the lights were I didn’t say anything. I was afraid to ask her any questions. I thought it best to let her do the talking. “I knew Denny was going to an- nounce his engagement." she con- tinued. “I told you we had had a big row about it last night. I wasn’t going to let it happen.” “But what dd you do, Greta?” I “T suppose you think I killed Denny,” she said demanded. “Where did you go when you got up from’ that bench?” “I can't tell you that now,” she repled. “No one wuuld believe me now. 1 know they will all think | killed Denny and 1 arrest me when the uess they will “They won't if you tell the Ia fe ive comes “Ob, ves, they will. That's the trouble. 1 can’t tell the truth.” 1 looked at her closely The ple tn the kitchenette began strag- These words were hardly out of my mouth before I lized my stupidity in uttering them. The thought had hit me so hard, how- Rik that I blurted it out without tl ing. Mona laughed. “Sure, he knows how to use a gee she said. “He's many of us can use a hypo This brought a nervous laugh the others and it made me feel foolish. I didn’t answer her. “Palmer would make a good de- tective,” Brandford said in his thick and drunken voice. “Let’s make him the detective. I like him better than Murphy,” “So do 1,” Mona laughed. “Maybe a find the person that mur- ler " I flushed angrily and wanted to make some curt remark, but Greta spoke before I had a chance, “Anyway. vou'd better go down and take care of him, Mona.” she said. “He needs help. The poor fellow is crazy as a loon.”. “Why not talk to the doctor?” Loretta said. “He likely can give him a shot. It's pure cruelty to fteep him away from dope at a ie like this.” “Sure. talk to the doctor.” 1 said. “Get him some dope. We don’t want @ crazy man on our hands.” Mona and Loretta went downstairs to get Dr. Gray and Brandford fol- lowed them out. Greta looked at ‘me and said: “Poor devil. I feel sorry for him.” “I didn’t know he was a dope addict.” I said. “He's been that way for about a |year now. He's got it bad.” “It’s hard luck,” I said. “I no- ticed a great change in him when I saw him in the library a little while ago.” “Something has happen him off.” Greta said. “ mi him act this way.” “I don’t know. When those chaps need dope they ret pretty bad.” “This came on Marino too sud- denly. I know how it acts-onhim. It comes on gradually. He's got something on his mind.” Ee} thought Denny didn’t like 2) “He didn’t.” ‘Then why was he at the party?” “That's the funny thing about it. He wasn’t invited. Denny was sore when Marino came.” “Why didn’t he want him? Any special reason?” { WAS MARINO ALONE? } “Marino has been loafing around the studio for two days. didn’t do that bef fore, but he was here all day and while Denny was trying to ork.’ “He was here in this studio?” “Yes” ‘Was he alone at any time?” “About an hour. Denny and I went uptown. Marino was stil] here when we came og The hook above the door of the kitchenette flashed to my mind. That probably had been put up within the last twenty-four hours. Marino's words and action when J talked to, him in the library after my adveAture in the cellar came back to me with an added meaning “Would Marino have any reason to kill Denny?” I asked. Greta looked at the ceiling. She was apparently studying her answer. But she never got a chance then to_make it. The terrifying scream of a woman came from the second floor. Read the next installment of this thrilling detective mystery tomorrow's paner. of the real prison a cell block, accom- modating three hundred prisoners, was reconstructed in every minute detail, even down to the pathetic at- tempts of some of the real prisoners to “decorate” their cells with pictures cut from magazines, The cell block shown in the picture is three stories in height, with tiers of cells banked one upon the other. Special permission was secured to use the mechanism designed to lock and unlock all the cell doors at one time, a special prison guard being placed over this day and night to prevent any. unlicensed examination cf the details of the locking device. Constructed of steel, reinforced concrete and stone, this represents the most massive set ever erected on a motion picture sound stage. “ PARAMOUNT HTEATRE Quite a few years ago a young architectural student at the Mark Hopkins Institute in San Francisco had a thrill. He was introduced to a stocky and muscular young man, bronzed with the tan of the seven seas, who had leaped to fame with his vivid, powerful stories of life and adventure. The young man was Jack London; the art student Alfred San- tell. From that meeting Santell de- veloped an intense admiraticn for London's work. His feelings were so strong that he decided to give up his promising architectural career and try writing instead and he modeled his initial efforts on his friend’s stories and strove to get the same gripping drama and action into his own tales. One of these tales he sent to the entire cell block and section of the old Kalem studio as a scenario. By prison yard of 9 famous Western jreturn mail he got a check and\an | mum scholastic requirements were pretty generally waived | State prison was literally transplant- offer to join the Kalem staff of iT Subsequently he became a photographs and exact measurements {director and turned out such popular writers. hits as “Classified,” “The Patent Leather Kid,” “The Wheel of Chance” and “The Gorilla.” Fox Movietone grew interested in Santell, signed him, and he made “Romance of Rio Grande” and “The And then, to complete the cycle, Fox |Movietone purchased the talking rights to Jack London's best-known novel, “The Sea Wolf”—and who was time, Alfred Santell. “The Sea Wolf,” with Milton Sills, Jane Keith and Raymond Hackett featured and a supporting cast head- ed by Mitchell Harris, Nat Pendleton, John Rogers, Harry Tenbrook and Sam Allen, will have its first local showing next Friday at the Para- mount Theatre. Ralph Block and 8. N. Behrman wrote the screen play and dialog from the famous London a PREroRieSerns e eEe | Stickler Solution The above diagram shows how, if you repeat on the numbers 7 and 10, and do not use 2 and 15, you can arrange Farmer Jones’ pigs so that the rows, columns and two Jong diagonals add to 34, HEREZ TO YOUR ALTA RANIC NSCOY ALI OF “THE FAST WY TO Te ELECTRO-THERAPY TREATMENTS | ing electricity to the body, as this People have become remarkably in-|current acts upon the muscles in terested in the different types of. treatment with heat, light and elec- tricity, and from all over the world letters pour in asking me to describe these treatments and outline the good which may reasonably be expected from them. The majority of people Dr. McCoy will gladly answer personal questions on health and diet addressed to him, care of The Tribune. Enclose a stamped addressed ‘ 4\) envelope for reply. seem to be interested in the ultra- violet ray light, which is also known ae by various other names, such as ac-|much the same way that normal nerve |selected to direct it? Right the first | tinic light, quartz light, Alpine light, | impulses act. When the internal mus- Krol oe mire light, mercury-quartz light, etc. The ultra-violet rays given off by these lamps are very powerful and much more concentrated that the same rays given off by the sun. These rays do not redden the skin while be- ing exposed, but reddening and burn- ing may develop later if the treat- ment has been too long. The treatment with the ultra-violet has been,used with success in eczema, tuberculosis, rickets, and many other diseases. The light increases the body’s resistance in general and also its ability to absorb calcium and to metabolize fats. When concentrated, cles have been neglected for years and the patient is really losing the use of them they can be put through a series of movements by this machine which causes the muscles to contract or relax. When properly used this ma- chine is of value in raising prolapsed organs and in many cases of paralysis as well as of intestinal weakness. It is very unusual now to find a doctor's office which is not equipped with some of these methods of using electricity. In well equipped offices you wilNfind all of them; the posses- sion of such instruments is an indi- cation that the doctor is aware of all of the latest improved methods used the light may be used to remove moles and warts, and may be given locally in such disorders as tonsillitis, infec- tions in the mouth, ears, etc. } The ultra-violet light is primarily a chemical ray treatment; the deep therapy lamp is more of a heat treat- ment. A deep therapy Jamp is the large lamp of five or six thousand candlepower which may be used over the abdomen or back and causes the organs to be bathed in an increased blood supply, and is of great assistance in aiding nutrition and elimination from the organs. The deep therapy lamp is often helpful in cases of bronchitis or sore throat. The lamp’s rays relax the body's tissues and for this reason are a valuable help in all manipulative treatments, and the light and heat also help the elimina- tion of toxins and promote the rapid-| should have and you will find he will ity of healing. be hungry for anything. Follow closely The infra-red rays are at the op-! the menus which appear in this col- Posite end of the spectrum from the} ymn each Friday. ultra-violet rays. These are the heat- Melba Toast Ld hep cis od to speed) Question—F. H. asks: “What kind Resciilate thin “siealinie t the|of bread is best for making Melba tere e healing power of the) toast, and how is the toast made?” Diathermy is another method of| Answer.—Use white bread, slicing it @ quarter of an inch thick, drying ite apitore “ttions. Be ones a overnight or longer, and toasting very treatment the doctor can cause any amount of heat to be formed deep within the patient’s body where other heat, such as from the hot water bot- tle or deep therapy lamp, does not penetrate. The only sensation which Rise in Temperature the patient feels is a relaxing and; Question—K. L. asks: “Does a rise pleasant sense of warmth. This heat|in temperature from one-fifth to brings a greater supply of blood to| three-fifths of a degree signify any the sick area where it will do the bodily disease? This rise comes some- most good. This machine is very valu-| times in the morning, but generally able in pneumonia where the doctor|in the afternoon.” _ wants heat to be generated deep| Answer.—Such a slight rise in tem- within the chest, and the treatment perature does not indicate any spe- is also beneficial in rheumatism, neu- | cific disease. Most people are below ritis, asthma, sciatica, sprains, and | normal temperature during the morn- lumbago. ing and come up to normal in the The sinusoidal current is another| afternoon. Normal temperature un- and quite different method of apply-] doubtedly varies with different people. in the cure of disease. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Toxemia 2 Question.—Mother writes: “My little boy never wants to eat vegetables, and he always perspires very freely when sleeping. What can I do to make him eat more wholesome foods, and pre- vent this excessive night sweating so. he can become strong?” | _ Answers—You boy is not weak be- cause he perspires, but because he is suffering from some toxemia in his body. His life is really being saved because he perspires and gets rid of some of these poisons during sleep. j The best way to get him to eat green vegetables is to give him a fast for a few days and when he starts eating again give him only the foods he all the way through. If prepared care- fully in this way it may be kept ready for use for several days. Butter at the table as eaten. ‘ peace.—Ellen Wilkinson, member of ooo Today Is the + parliament. 53 * ok Ox Anniversary of Women marry because they don't | \ want to work.—Mary Garden. PADEREWSKI’S BIRTH > On Nov. 6, 1860, Ignaz Jan Pader- { KFYR { ewski, Polish pianist, composer and | g—————.. = IDAY, NOVEMBER Lye dec hart Ie alse a 590 Kilocycles—S43.1. Meters land. - in fa He began to play the piano at three | 7 Hear Weather" ‘report. and, at seven, was placed under a} 7'};—Earm, reporter, in Washington: local teacher. After studying at) _ ment of agriculture. leditaion period. 0—Shoppers’ guide program. 0—Sunshine hour. 0—Opening grain markets; weath- Warsaw and Berlin, he went to Vien- na, resolved to adopt the career of a virtuoso. There he studied under a fellow countryman, Leschetizky. At the end of three years, after making his debut in Vienna, he immediately took rank among the foremost pianists of the world. 5—Organ program: Clara Morris. :00—Grain marke! ismarck Trib- une news und weather; lunch- slowly in the oven until golden brown | During and after the World war Paderewski took an important part lin securing the independence of Po- | Lito land. He told the Poles in America, “The vision of a strong and independ- ent Poland has always been the lode- star of my existence.” After signing the treaty of peace in behalf of the newly formed republic he was in 1919 chosen the first premier of Poland. Finding it impossible, however, to conclude peace with the Soviet gov- ernment, Paderewski resigned after a short tenure of office. He then re- sumed his career as a pianist, up his residence in California. At the present time he is on a concert tour of the country. f BARBS | Shaw places Einstein above Newton Arizona Kid” for that organization. in the scientific world. That is rel-| has broken out. It is the first time in atively speaking. * * x to say nothing of the long pauses, xe ® Add to optimistic stock market re- ports the news that Princess Mary of England has just purchased a prize bull in the United States. ** * Members of a foreign football team are reported to have carried revolvers in a recent game. Perhaps they tried to go one better the American backs who are described as “knifing” their way through the line. xe * With their harvest larger than ever, grape growers should be able to squeeze out a little profit this year. (Copyright, 1930, NEA Service, Inc.) [Guotations J ———— Political prophecies are very dan- gerous things —Former Senator James A. Reed of Missouri. e ee * There is nothing wrong with sex.— aK. Crests. * opinion that our standard of living is too high.—John W. Barton, banker. * * * Manipulation of the ballot is a de- nial of government by the people— President Hoover. ‘i * * * It is the bored type of woman who is most dangerous to the cause of | arabition, A modern symphonic composition, | queen so that when election day came entitled “The Ring,” was inspired by | to fill the school offices of king, queen @ prize fight. Very likely there is ®| and chancellor, war broke out be- slow movement with much fiddling,| tween the two political factions of eon program. 12:25—Voice of the Wheat Pool. melodies, high, low, ana ce Tribune news, weather, and St. Paul livestock. 2:00—Siesta hotr: Good News radio Stocks and bonds, - Bismarck Tribune sports items, —Bismarck Tribune news. % . rid Bookman. z dinner hour, ewscasting. Studio program. 7:30—Plymouth world tour. 8:00—Chevrolet chronicles. University Law Schoo) Has Political Battle Grand Forks, N. D., Nov. 6.—The king and the first feminine queen of the law school at the University. of North Dakota are not recognized by insurgent parties, and a revolution the history of the school that a wom- an has held the traditional office of which each were determined that they should be in power. FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: 9 A rainy day will dampen anyone’? ‘