The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 31, 1933, Page 3

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JULY 81, 1933 | Former Bismarck ** & ee & IN PACIFIC NORTHWEST ee * e# & No Lock Made Which He Can’t Pick | A reputation as the champion pick- er of locks—with not even burglars barred—in the Pacific Northwest has ‘been won by C. E. Corey, former Bis- marck resident, according to a recent story in the Spokane (Wash.) Spokes- man-Review. “There is pe safe or lock he can- not unlock,” the paper said. “At least in his 30 years as a locksmith no problem has baffled him. “He has extricated women from handcuffs clamped on by husbands; opened cells to extricate prisoners that refused turnkey’s efforts; re- leased old people who locked them- selves in bathrooms; let people into their houses and out of their houses. Done everything with a lock that can be done, even to manufacturing them.” Corey is a son of Ever N. Corey, judge of probate court in Burleigh county in pioneer days. The elder Corey was a veteran of the Civil War, who came to Bismarck in 1872. At one Yime he owned a house on the corner of Second St. and Rosser ave- nue, Was Electrician Here C. E. Corey was an electrician when he }nft Bismarck three decades ago, according to William A. Falconer, vet- eran resident of the Capital City. “One Moses began spreading the Ten Commandments,” the Spokane Paper continued, “in particular the| eighth, ‘Thou Shalt Not Steal’ (I look- ed it up and know it is the eighth, 0 don’t question me). Péople put everything under lock and key by way of helping out the old patriarch and the locksmith was born. Somebody had to assume the responsibility of looking after pecple who lose their keys and forget the combinations. “Since 1910, when Mr. Corey opened his shop in the city, he has opened and fixed the locks of 4,000 safes in Spokane and the Inland Empire. To have accomplished this feat Mr. Corey BURLEIGH STEERS BRING TOP PRICE AT ST. PAUL MART i Walter Sellens Markets 23 Heaa of Hereford Steers at $6.50 Per Hundred A carload of Burleigh county steers | marketed in South St. Paul a short time ago brought the top ices offer- ed for the week, act ing to the South St. Paul Daily Reporter. The carload of 23 steers, averaging 1,300 pounds in weight, brought $6.50 @ hundredweight. |had all of the tumblers in place but |Consider Bids for Man Is Champion | eee ee * * & #, ee * merely had to know 100,000,000 dif- ferent combinations, grouped in five numbers each. Otherwise, it is simple —So he says. 4. “But there is nothing hit or miss about Mr. Corey's work. He goes at it in a scientific way. His strong box contains photographs and diagrams of each safe lock he has worked upon, so that during the course of events, if it becomes necessary again to ad- minister to the lock he has all the necessary data to facilitate his work. Jail Locks Go Wrong “Mr. Corey has been called upon to fix the lock that operates the control box, which, in turn, unlocks cell blocks at the county jail, many times. Once prisoners had to be fed through the bars for several days until the lock could be opened. He was called to St. Maries to re- lease a man who had been held in his cell for two days as a result of break- ing an improvised key in the cell lock, which he had cleverly concocted from wood and tobacco tin. He had been obliged to open safes soaked in ‘soup,’ otherwise TNT. There is a way of doing it if you neutralize the ‘soup’ with acetic acid, but this can’t’ always be accomplish- ed. Once in such a job Mr. Corey the fifth in working a combination, } and was obliged to tap the lock tol jar the fifth tumbler into place. That tiny jar blew the dial past his ear into the wall beyond and took all the skin from his chin. “When times were good, Mr. Corey cut as high as 1,500 keys a day. That is how careless people are with their | keys. “Today lock manufacturers use 67, different key ways with their attend- ant variations. Mr. Corey keeps a stock of these different key ways, and with the mere buzz of a steel saw can cut you a key in less than a minute's time.” License Tag Plant Consideration of bids for installing @ plant for manufacture of automo- bile license tags at the state prison was scheduled before the state board of administration Monday afternoon. Two bids have been submitted, but one is above the $18,000 appropriat- ed by the last legislature. The other is from John R. Wald, Huntington, Pa., who bid $17,000. Before letting the contract, approv- al of the project must be obtained from Gov. William Langer to con- form with the law, Assistant Attor- ney General Harold D, Shaft has ruled. Letting of the contract was delay- ed Saturday after Arthur E. Thomp- son, superintendent of public instruc- tion and ex-officio member of the board, raised objections the board had not complied with the law. An attor- Feminism Women of the World Weigh Future of MISS MARGARET BONDFIELD By NEA Service Chicago, July 31.—Feminism was weighed in the balance here recently by outstanding women from all over the world. CARRIE CHAPMAN CATT ed were not so gloomy. There still is a sunny side to woman's story. Selma Ekrem, a cropped-haired rep- —<$—$ $ _$___.. | However, all the reports express- Women from 28 countries, attend- | resentative of young Turkey, told of ed the International Congress held|the strides that feminism has taken under the auspices of the National | in Turkey since 1923, when the répub- Council of Women, at the Cen-|lic was established. Gone are the tury of Progress Fair to debate| Veils, and gone, too, are the archaic the question whether feminism really | customs which the veils symbolized. has won or whether it is faltering. “The present day Turk takes his Marianne Beth of Austria, who sweetheart to the movies. They forced her way through a school of | dance to American jazz tunes, with theology with every man's hand} the same freedom as an American against her and became the first wo- | young couple—but with this differ- man theologue in Austria, then turn-|ence. There is as much liberty, but ed to law and was Vienna's first wom- | less license. We are brought up to an barrister, came to testify to the! respect our parents. We would not struggles of European women. | do anything that they did not want. Baroness Shidzue Ishimoto, who/us to do. But it’s not compulsion; left the School of Peeresses to learn | just respect! typewriting and stenography in an| “Turkish men have a difficult time American school and was Tokio’s first | mastering western manners,” Miss business woman, came a long way to! Ekrem testifies. “Usually they forget demonstrate that the desire for | trifling courtesies, such as allowing feminine equality has penetrated even ; Women to precede them, or helping to Cherry Blossom land. | them on with their coats. But the Alice Kanaddleft of Syria, who| modern Turkish girl brings them holds the ranking educational posi- {sharply to time. She is quite capable ney general's opinion was obtained rere raised and sold by Wal-/ and the matter deferred until Mon-| ter Sellens, farmer living in the Mis- ver bottoms miles day. of Bismarck, & few miles north /“Zids for lignite coal for institutions Sellens is a firm believer in the|have been opened and a tabulation of | North Dakota agricultural field and it|the successful bidder was being made is his opinion that if farmers would} by the board. taise feed, livestock and other farm - products and market them wisely they ‘would be much better off than by continuing un-diversified farming. Sellens’ steers were Herefords. Se eerie” COURT SAYS NOTICE ‘bottoms makes him more fortunate/| than other farmers, Sellens believes, because of the fertile land and less| damage from drouth. The June heat wave, he said, damaged cr zeit ENGLISH NEWSPAPER, crops in the bottoms. z Sellens raises considerable corn—j Holds NDS Bony pakore alow Parponeety of the Falconer variety— Authorizes Publication in for feed. i Another North Dakota cattie man; * * Any self-satisfied feminist fairs better away from Chicago, for her Peace of mind’s sake. For women have no bed of roses in the far ; reaches of the earth. The world-wide depression has brought about a retro- gression of the feminist movement in many corners of the globe. “Everything we have been fighting for for ages is endangered in some countries, lost in others,” one Europ- ean spokeswoman said. “Women's or- ganizations have fallen speedy victims jto recent political changes abroad,” tion in Bagdad, had many fascinating} of holding her own.” illustrations of the difficulties women have in the Near East to win equality. Lily Kelly, who organizes nation-wide Peace demonstrations for the women of the Argentine, brought messages of the eagerness with which dark-eyed senoras of her native land await real equality. eH Other countries, too, gave encour- aging reports about the progress wom- en are making. India’s women have never enjoyed western standards of freedom, but their lot is easier than it was a few decades ago, according to Dr. Mathilakshmi Reddi. Finland, too, sent encouraging reports, via Cecelia Hasseltrom, her spokesman. Frances Perkins, first woman cab- inet member, came to tell what la- bor thinks of the world economic conference. Dame Rachel Crowdy, formerly Secretariat of the League of Nations, had as her subject Interna- tionalism. Mme. Kraemer-Bach, French lawyer and feminist, explained what French women want and expect from their government. “Economic Security Through Goy- ernment” was the topic of one session. struck an optimistic note, the ww who sold stock af South St. Paul| Report- said. “Farmcrs will be O. K. this year, about that,” lor instance.’ Bauer marketcd 36 head of cattele, which he had purchased from farmers 1a the Mandan area. Bauer was par- ticularly enthusiastic about the pros- Peete fe § good corn crop in southern NTINUE Coxuzixve® Unionization Issue Is Eliminated As Steel Chiefs Meet tent of the agreement to speed up the tubmission of codes. There were numerous requests for idetails and texts of the retailers code @s drafted, but no satisfaction on any such points couid be obtained at the industrial administration or from re- tail executives themselves. Johnson explained to newspapermen he was dissatisfied with the wage and hours provisions of the retail code as Cc ONTINUE Of Notable Family submitted Sunday night, and had ord- ered it rewritten. 24-Year-Old Scion Held Three Weeks he was hit over the head and Fnock- said Dan Other Papers ‘Legal notices must be published in English language newspapers, the state supreme court held Monday. The ruling was given in an action involving the validity of a mortgage foreclosure advertisement published in a newspaper printed in the Ger- man language. The only part of the newspaper printed in English was the foreclosure sale notice, some other legal notices and some advertisements. About 90 per cent of the printed mat- ter in the newspaper was in the Ger- man be ‘The supreme court, reversing the judgment of the Stark county district court, held the publication of the fore- closure notice is invalid, and remand- ed the case for further proceedings conformable to law. In its opinion, the court said the; statute relating to publication of a notice of mortgage foreclosure sale “does not authorize such notice to be published in a newspaper printed in a ign language.” fore! i ‘The court ruled there is no author- ization, either express or implied in) North Dakota laws for publication of | @ legal notice in any newspaper other than one published in the English; language. “The English language is the offi- elal and ordinary language of North| Dakota,” the court said. “No other language has been recognized as the official language. In these circum- stances, a statutory requirement that 8 notice be published a given number of times in a newspaper means that the newspaper in which publication is made must be one published in the English se.” The acticn was brought by Eliza- beth Reuter against the Dickinson ABDUCTION PLOT EXPLODED Los Angeles, July 31.—(#)—Officers .|announced Monday that a 30-hour grilling had proved untrue the story of an unnamed man that Charles Arthur (Pretty Boy) Floyd, Okla- hhoma desperado, was plotting an ab- duction in the Hollywood movie col- . | ony. A pair of pigeons at a London poul- try, pigeon and rabbit show were pric- ed at $10,000, added a German delegate. Dr. Maria Castellani, a Fascist, who Cook With Electricity It’s Cooler North Dakota Power and Light Club Breakfasts 25c and 35c Noonday Luncheons 35¢c and 40c Chef’s Special Evening Dinner * 50c POWERS COFFEE SHOP THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Readers can always get their paper at the News Stand in the POWERS HOTEL, FARGO. | FARGOS ONLY FIREPROOF HOTEL | Change of Face—and Pace—in Raildom = Here’s a graphic picture story of the evolution of the locomotive. power plant now being built by the Union Pacific to streak over the rails with a three-car alumi- num: train at 110 miles an hour. At the left is the bullet-nosed At the right is one of the giant Jocomotives now in use on the road, weighing, with its tender, 380 tons—nearly five times the weight of the whole aluminum traipn—but so powerful it car draw mile-long freight trains at 50 miles an hour. heads the statistical bureau of the largest insurance institute in Italy; Rose Laddon Hanna, a Russian, and Hon. Margaret Bondfield, former Min- ister of Labor of Great Britain, had charge of this session. ee * The speakers convened for this In- ternational Congress of Women rang- ed from Yi-Fang-Wu, head of the big- gest women’s college in China; Jane Addams, and Carrie Chapman Catt, to young Christine Galitzi, an inti- mate friend of Princess Teana of Rou- mania, and Viola Ilma, 23-year-old editor of the magazine “Modern Youth.” Though men appeared on the pro- gram, it was primarily a woman's convention. For the congress was bas- ed upon the conviction that women will have a more important part to Play in a world which recognizes “a new deal” than in the pre-depression era. In a way, the congress was a “ral- ly” for women, to show them. how they, as women, can help make this and to urge them on to greater efforts in behalf of civilization. PROMINENT NORWEGIAN DIES Minneapolis, July 31.—()—Andreas Ueland, 80, former judge, lawyer and author, and son of a noted Norwegian statesman, died at his home here Sun- day. He formerly was general coun- sel for the ninth federal reserve bank of Minneapolis, and a director of the Norwegian-American line. M. A. Ueland of Cooperstown, N. D., is a brother. S. D. SOLONS CONVENE Pierre, 8. July 31.—()—The spe- cial session of the South Dakota leg-; islature convened Monday with the gross income tax and beer the main topic of discussion. Although the ses- sion was called by Governor Tom Berry to legalize and tax 3.2 per cent for relief revenue, agitation for re- peal of the income law crowded to the front. About 211 of the 8044 taxicabs licensed by the London metropolitan | Police are more than 20 years old. DINE IN COMFORT Why not dine where the air is always pure and clean. cooled, washed air system maintains that even cool temperature of 75 degrees. This system has been installed for your convenience THE SWEET SHOP Cool — Comfortable — Always and comfort. Good Food world a better place for all countries Our water Excellent Service TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY The California Wave Nook, 102 Third Street, Bismarck, specializes in com- bination permanents at $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00 complete. Our patrons send their friends. Phone 782. YOUR HAIR, comes down dripping wet, from a REAL STEAM SUPER- CURLINE PERMANENT. Every ‘wave an oil wave. Special to Sep« tember st, $3.50 Harrington's, Phone 130. CAPITOL —==THEATRE ==e— Daily 2:30-7-9 Admission 25c "LAST TIMES _ One ‘Chute. Between _ they called ~ these fellows A drama of earthy pas- sion born in the fhyt With BRUCE CABOT ARLINE JUDGE ERIC LINDEN RALPH BELLAMY ———— SCRAPPY CARTOON 2-REEL COMEDY “DON’T MISS IT” Funny looking cave men... even some cave flappers ... strange monsters and birds of a million years ago—you will find them in “Alley Oop”, a most unusual comic which will appear in The Bismarck Tribune beginning Monday, August 7. It is entirely different than any comic now in this paper. It will be a liberal ed- “Alley Oop” charging on “Dinny,” his pet dincsaar, A New Kind of Comic! And What a Comic! ucation in the prehistoric, because the queer animals are pictorially correct, but its main object is to amuse and entertain you. “Alley Oop”, the dizzy “Dinny”, does some things. He’s a wow! looking chap on of the funniest You'll Get Many a Laugh From “Alley Oop” The Bismarck Tribune TUESDAY Bismarck | Aug. 1, 630 P. M, Ball Park | BASEBALL JAMESTOWN | | Guaranteed $1.00 vs. BISMARCK Attraction for 40c.

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