The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 5, 1936, Page 6

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DECEMBER 5, 1936 Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. D. ealth but not éis- ink, Address companied by & ' THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER \ (Established 1873) 3 Dr. Brady will! er seen pertaining, oe be diagnos! te bi Bray in Gate of The Tribune, All queries must be & stamped, self-addressed envelope. What Editors Say About It State, City and County Officia) Newspaper Published daily except Sunday by The Bismrack Tribune Company Bis- garck, N. D. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second class maii| New York, Dec. 5.—()—Editonal comment was varied in American THE CHILD BORN WITH HIP Mrs. Stella 1. Mann newspapers Friday but in general 4 ; : Fabra 5 tl f 3 y ” wered a number of inquiries President and Publisher See ee a ean ae ea ERY In the article “Fate of the Blue Baby Ti niber of similar inquiries about Archie O Johnson Kenneth W Simons Simpson over the objections of his \ 4 \ q 1 Ad from parents, ‘Today we are. ened 2 piabe rea ane Gen iManeser Sec'y-Treas and Editor / ministers and empire. Fae, r ; 4 i | / j cae ts mlnlending eo call ‘congenital hip defect “dislocation” of the hip. The New York Times shid: | : Si : D\ egress ‘That implies that some injury has dislocated the hip joint. The truth is that Subscription Rates Payable in Advance (King Edward) has to conform to We : ‘ HES. j the hip Joint fails to develop compeltely, the cup or socket remains flat © Daily by carrier per year constitutional usage. He is spoken of : We “ : ati "ge. j nearly rimless, so that the head of the femur or thigh bone does not ed Daily by mail per year (in Bismarck) .. as a ruler who does not govern, as & 7 $04 Z FH in the socket as it should. The hip is not dislocated, for it Salle bee a Daily by mail per year (in state outside of Bismarc 8.00 | | Symbol of the power of the state ‘Y = : x/ B: Pad! : ms articulated ins pope joint. ‘The rim of the socket has smiply failed Daily by mat) outside of North Dakota .. 6.00 unity of the empire. Yet he must Bh oN aa Wa : develop. trator dee Weekly by mail in state per year ... 1.00 | |Hothing as a separate person to im- : c f 2 / God only knows why a child is born with this defect of el oe Weekly by mai) outside of North Dakota, per year . 150. | | pal the great convention whieh as 5 5 & y MEG y , velopment. No one can fairly ascribe it to any pare braga eee Weekly by mail in Canada, per year jeondHion of Tals Being on ies eae: CN } > These statements apply as well to all other congenital (that term means William Allen White, in the Em- 1 oa /, J present at the time the child is born) defects, such as hare-lip, clubfoot, Member of Audit Bureau of Cireulation Leaded bade eater! mt # q x y LA, cleft spine, cleft palate, heart defects, etc. Only the superstitious and ignet= wend to solar = ines eee ‘ no, | fis ant attempt to explain congenital defects as due to “marking” or as reflect = | hearts of the world he would stalk out —_ ; b> pike ing somehow on the family, and whoever utters such superstitions or in- Member of the Associated Press on the front porch of Buckingham , sinuations deserves public whipping. palace with a loud speaker in his P In most instances congenital hip defect becomes apparent only when The Associated Press is exclusively entitied to the use for republics id and say to the wide world: the child begins to walk, when a limp or lameness is noticed—painless. tion of dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In thie ‘Well, as I was saying, I never — The earlier any congenital defect is recognized and treated the better mews! also the local news of spontaneous origin published herel | did care so much for this kinging job. Fe (Cos } the final result will be. Alert parents may notice long before the child All r of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. Anyway, I got me plenty of rocks, < i , tries to walk, before the child is six months old, that the creases on the 2 Spondulix, and other quick assets and = ai inside of the thighs are deeper on one side than on the other; or that the Confidence so far as that goes what are you go- ; : HW | ieg on the affected side cannot be drawn so far outward as can the normal ing to do about it? ... Anyway, you 7 leg; or that when the baby lies on his back on firm surface, with knees ‘ ij flexed and feet together.on the table surface, the normal knee will be are all a bunch of white-livered o hypocrites, for if I was to carry this EZ . higher than the knee of the affected side, when viewed from below or the ; 3 foot of the table; or that the bony Eta ants the ay ‘ee ot LOVE FOR KING 4 F cody 3 thigh bone) is greater on the affect side, nm any o! ese signs DEMONSTRATED AT GATE 4 4 j noticed in a baby a few months old, an X-ray picture should be made to see Ff Just what the defect is. If anyone in Western North Dakota has a tendency to get F daint-hearted at the business or agricultural outlook let him consider for a moment the confidence which outsiders are displaying. ” Let him examine, for example, the fine new creamery and cesar ariimussttee A Mf The value of such recognition of hip defect before ae hie peo 2 oki 5 “Ler 7 . .|]| King Edward d di 2 * Z bear weight on the hip is that correction may jut fore the poultry packing plant constructed here by Armour and com. ed eas ceeiree. tee ties wy; | i j of the thigh bone 1s pushed far out of place, Bloodless reduction 1s accom- pany. It represents a heavy investment which the big pack-|| outside Buckingham palace Friday. ! § plished by miaple nae arawing coca als attested ab snd i Hf 7 . y si ake. v1 - ra, 1 taining it in that lon by @ pl cast. This on for aps ing firm was under no compulsion to make A watching youth suddenly call. taining it Then another is applied, holding the limb in less wide abduction. ed for “three cheers for tl J 7 5 A uben compmalogs Waoctad i 4 g And so on, gradually getting the limb back to normal position. The infant heartily, and then sang the na- : Y F may be taken out in go-cart or automobile while wearing the cast. tional anthem. Others in the crowd joined in the singing, and finally the whole panne sang “For he’s a jolly good fellow.” When the Armour plant burned last June the company could have taken whatever insurance it received and retired trom this area. It was under NO COMPULSION to make a heavy investment in our agricultural future, as it has done. The same thing holds true for the Dacotah Seed company, QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Milk in the Country Taking my baby to the country for a month. At home she has had is 4 . only pasteurized milk. May I give her straight milk from the cow? ... another firm which depends upon agricultural success and Mrs. P. P.) Answer—Provided the cow is tuberculin tested, yes. Otherwise it would be well to bring the milk-to a boil for a minute, to make it safe for the baby. activity for its hope of profit. gal on the payroll as a subrosa cutie When fire destroyed its buildings the question of whether | instead of taking her in through the = : Or pasteurize it yourself—heat it in double boiler to 145 degrees F for 25 aoe minutes, then let cool again. That is all there is to pasteurizing. to rebuild came before the men who then owned the enterprise. tron Caen eine esa seen Cea a ee ee a yright, 1936, J . p Before they had made up their minds on this point they en say “Oh, well, boys will be boys,” Scat ini ae 5 aor ;. fg jut anyway she is not that kind of a sold their remaining assets to a group of Minneapolis men and girl and Tam not that kind of a fel-|tonalists’ conversations dimmed by the latter determined to go ahead with the business by con-|low ... and now in closing ladies |Teports King Edward may abdicate. structing a new building and installing new facilities. * * and gentlemen my beloved people and Rome=ttaly regarded King. 34 i The important point is that these businessmen are sure aa tee Mla seats eae The Stranger at the Gate me for a minute while you go to| Ward's dilemma with keen interest Twice the telephone rang and her heart sank, thinking it might be to say that he would dine out, but it was merely the inquiry as to whether Mr. Vance was yet home. they will get a good return for their time and money. If they | ell!’” but complete lack of comment, * a St. Paul Pi Press—“Common- * ek OSGOO! WRIGHT med felt otherwise they would not have made these investments. | er, Siem multiple divorcee, saight be ‘Tokyo—Japan’s ptess “broke” the By MABEL D G cine ib pends with iy ae Copyright by Mabel Osgood Wright WNU Service _[1/OOus push that told that he bad tolerated as quéen, but when to all/King Edward-Mrs. Simpson story They did so in spite of the devastating drouth which was sear- {Plerated 25 queen, but when to all! vith big black headlines, piotures and jyous re ing the country even as they were maturing their plans. ‘The delightful snobbery with which | Stories splashed all over front pages SYNOPSIS the house-mother and father that With them it is not a question of defending the interests | English regard their royalty can stand} | The situation was viewed in frank - * ICasiztiavloe 10/3 1ie niy eigut days | 22 inseparable from themselves eld ail isin quickly Me Waidistich they love but of backing their jud in the | 2° more. , Temptation ts strong to tell bewilderment, Here the empress tr away. ira Vance and his wife are wait-|and was tinctured through and] she put both round her hus- of a land which they love but of backing their judgment in the those Englishmen Mrs. Simpson would | ditionally ts selected from among th ine Yisthauy for a repiy to thelt letter | through with their dual tastes and| one Put DO seme neous vehance imperial families and the five other | tj evidence inviting their son, Emery, his wife, Elea-| personality, On the other hand to greet her with his usual courteous nor, and thelr children, Tommy, elght,|though the apartment owned and t Pht a F Navy fracas, for Christmas. Emery, a self-made ex- 5 a 2 in Great Britain were a pure Cin- ry infirm by business reverses and an acci- $ »! “Poor little woman,” Vance said we haven’t as much confidence in ourselves as strangers have | derella story—... But... unless we Additional Churches | dent, works on inventions dismissed by ence oe onal snnee ot are |in a surprised yet symipathetic tone, in us we are inade of pretty poor stuff. ment is simply polities, and rather eee etter ane k Pessinean cal washes thought hat came to) “W25 the country go dull that two Th Pike +] CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE her face, The maid returns without «| Eleanor, when the maid brought the pir pee? bbe Seattle way that businessmen always are called upon to do, by invest-| make just as good a queen as most y : E ae they have had and better than some.” | families of noble blood, known as the ing their time and their hard cash, Baltimore Evening Sun—“It would | Gosekke. x * ® ——————_ unpleasant politics at thi H. V. Soreni Pastor letter from Emery. Ira tells his wife to oy * 8 & ¢ Dining ropgi of World War Memo- thre ial deli letters, tea tray to the living room, and Prices and Employment ‘The Britis Dominloti feasted in ! rial building: io a, See cas aes tat at Lat ne has in| Placed it upon the carved teakwood | yo, co"me, back Guring the interval differing manner to the constitutional Morning worship 11 o'clock, Yented something successful, one to/ stand without word or comment of! ¢.tnere still living in the olu hum- any fort. drum way, I ruppose, while mother One of the notable disappearances of the last few years has | crisis resulting from King Edward’s|employment, the depressed areas and| Evangelistic service 7:45 p.m. ure been that of the plea for a restriction on the use of labor-saving dispute with the cabinet concerning ea crisis in pain. TOM eT ee 1 jain unopened She drew near to the fire, gazed|savely pretends that she likes it? ‘ Mrs. Wallis Simpson. Py r eting s my, "sg desk, but Kitty Mack, his at it fixedly, holding her cup of machinery and the return to hand labor. Bt : * * * | B. ARBS at. 12h wort Maine are ee ibs brings fi to his attention along with tea upon her knees. Eleanor had ‘The children's walt willibe'a pertecs As business improves and the people of America again| Melbourne, Australla—The Austra-| ¢. Everybody welcome, another personal letter. He opens the | not been much given to formulating | Codsend to them. lan Press, surprised at the swiftness ia AC national RAIS THE SALVATION ARMY Eleanor’s first tremor of dis Bee : os latter, finding {t 1s from a boyhood approach ’ vhic comparisons, but the diff wi PP the standard of living which they feel is rightfully | orine British orisie, made firm come Tee UVARION AMS friend, Ft ecard Iie ion bee betvern the thes appointment at the mistake in the theirs by reason of ability and natural resources, they have| ments concerning the king's duties. agility ft as will go. That Se Nate tone oe oie fire blazing in the well-smoked | ™Otive of her greeting was put aside sensed the fact that restrictions on the use of machinery would] ‘The Argus paid tribute to the ruler’s | > Bibs Bmil Johnson, young peoples leader! ts annoyed, At lunch, he sees a news| chimney of the House in The Glen, |>¥, her eagerness to explain and Place in the affections of the people ‘Trail Parents *|teli of her pleasure, her absolute com oraere AA ocd Christian character is the} But tesction with fis management, | warmth into the room, and this are an 2 she by her story of the House in a item about the meeting of his com: condemn them indefinitely to lower living standards. They | but sai dissoe: oe ee eaten 1. euneee "4 sending floods of the stored sun- | Bue said lf wasiinaboss Die ita, late} rarmers in the dust storm area—help| foundation on which to. build, Bor sales nie 0 abeorbed wen also have come to realize that with any kind of proper balance, |Js individual actions from his respon- Ye ‘People: ion at 6: ‘Then he overhears two of the directors, | sibilities as a king, Seem ieee eae te cara Sane A AoPITs, awion tte | tuuchdag peachy, alscuseing his oneman|Pioges treved Io’ a Mest ore | The Glen and tts people, that they were way through dinner be- machinery throws no one out of work, although it may require] ‘the Ne , wspaper Age said only King jdt leading = bright pep mect-| dictatorial management disparagingly. andi 4 ae Edward could There has been s great outcry for teen age young people. The| Back in the office he reads his mother's |fire-place. Were not these two fires justment of trades or pursuits, : ee pe could rela ate pate ee A oul tn Pencegl- Wices held inthe Salvation dietter, Absorbed in work he looks | the symbols of the old and the new | £0Fe she came to a stop and realized In this connection information presented by the Machinery nia, Perh tl anh Le man standing opposite | hoi king? P 1 Jal .| that not only had she done all the peniehis con 1 able it was necessary for the sake of | Vanis. aps Dora thinks, because) “Other services: The Salvation Army Agere memaking? Personal labor, per] sn iog but that The Institute is of interest. It discloses for example, that important| the monarchy. be cde a? ts uniting with the Evangelical church| to your gate.” Vance ts surprised to And goon) (sprvice.: ai tr '8) 2ENaEd Le tbare wand she hed’ cauuien 6 4 A a a 5 és xk * x 3 . m, irrin, he is ily to ‘The Stranger. en personal satisfaction, s technological improvements have been made in the automobile] Capetown, Union of South Africa—| _Selzure of a liquor still in Cleveland,| fevival services conducted by icy, aia ei ainst a mere press-the-button | 9% for him. glancing touch of things, no labor, ‘Dr. Amunde? He is certainly a gular man,” Emery re- field since 1929, yet the employment per vehicle had risen 25|The Rand Daily Mail declated King | ©. florist shop suggests a new version! Rust and Miss Hannah he i . “|mo responsibility and no real sat- er cent up to 1935 and in that year 109 ad jobs i .| Edward will “act wisely for himself} of the old —“Moonshing and’ report on the man. ‘The Fiatle tector ear 109 men had jobs in auto-] tnd or hs empire” Bones? “ME Bee Cee cenee oi gree) eee eee Mae Geer peter plied; "he has clacovered in Mies mobile factories as compared with 100 in the years from 1923] “But let us say plainly that such a eee tinued Monday and Tuesday and a| phones, urging Vance to come home to| How charmingly Ira Vance had| *ack, my secretary, a new source marriage as 1s the subject of reports| A marital adviser a ee eee ona Wedcesday, night A told the story of his hearth fire, | 9f interest, an original interpreta- i as he fed it with the juicy white-| on of the real Christmas spirit, as to 1925. eae ss ; would be utterly unacceptable to| confine his work to the office. It is : and discus 4 Telephone girls increased by more than 50,000 during the| South Africa.” ne ae alae at ene ears eke the may Oe ihy| pine cones that he held ir the long|he calls it, developed by modern 30 years that the dial system was being installed in most cities|_ “Many of us forget the king is a ed eit ret Gah oi a al oad Ey ne ie) seen tee oy waite takes je at her sister’s home ai ie man like ourselves,” commented the Utite stock in Christmas. | should eat them too Greeting The Stranger, Eleanor finds !1,7 neta its own Ge tale confusion of six untamed br: By Saas: and linemen increased 100 per cent. Natal Mercury published in Durban. : ° Ice dealers more than doubled between 1920 and 1930 be: x * * G E: , t that he brings peace to her mind. Will - i 4 Ja 32 é Darrow, a young artist friend of the fam-|and possessed a different tempera-|t#€ Way, he will go to Westover tause mechanical refrigerators popularized all refrigeration. Oe ee ee papers split Hf reat mancipa or ty, arrives. Eleanor and Emery Jearn| ment, so that he spoke of hee as iy ww for ap iaert as but he says d 3 } en | hildre: 3 It takes far more workers to furnish the textile demands) “Jf the crown is to keep its luster sister is Mil with scarlet fever. Since | f People. ae Maratea Bis omoey, f a thousand is it did j : undimmed, it must be along the high| HORIZONTAL — Answer to Previous Pussle 11 Card game. there ts danger of exposure, the doctor| Eleanor had never before realized | ‘He A8¥ & cfa t! jousan Americans today than it did in the colonial days| path of duty set so nobly by the late 1,7Sixteenth 2 12 Fishing bag. suggests that Tommy and Bess be sent|that the man could take an equal “I think your people would sim- of spinning wheels, due to increased use of textile products as|kmg-emperor.” The Times of India POINT KE ATIE!S h away for séveral weeks. Vance then de-| interest with the woman in the de-|PIY love him. I’m very sorry that JAC IO} InN] : F cides they Will oto tre ecien. that! tails of his home, and by the quiet |e must leave so soon, for, do you steady force of Kis approval fill his|kD0W. dear,~I believe it he could # result of lower prices when machine methods are used. aa 8 [OlOTN} SITRIDIEN Gay and return to the city to go back whi P : % with him Christmas eve. Later there is|wife’s most prosaic tasks with|#t#Y with us a while everything might be different. It seems as if Machines have revolutionized office work in recent y: Bae years, |! WELL NOURISHED MAN R R yet stenographers and typists increased 32 per cent and book-|| CALLED WALLIE’S NEED | iB to go, to party with Darrow ‘when Geena ee fine thet be were someone who had always keepers, cashiers and accountants increased 27 per cent between|] env hcl a meee P B : Killed. __ Eimety retuace tao, AL the toute in| erizabeth did or liked that escaped |a"own me, and who understood the last two census years. Population increased only 16 per|] ogist, Prof. Ruyshi Seki, analyzed 18 Growing out. Fane ot ere ater ter buabarn's hice 2 ses0et 8 ain Gas pan 97 ta Oath FOr Buss rey e 19Tumultuous [clolt} the children are greeted warmly. small to merit, if not spoken words, | "°F for some time past you have pson. recom: been harping on one chord, growing cent. i __ Sound pictures displaced 50 per cent of all theater must- Heres! * Deiat a Bou AaRan “ i Aney ‘hol n thece ares iee unreasonable, discontented, or else cians, but during the same years musicians and teachers of || _ His description of her most com- j P : sales, women like Elizabeth. Erving to) pope npariys, neler. Saat patible husband (which conjured iLielsis r Very slender she looked even in| “1¢ my mother had lived-I.should | ™0od being necessary’. and Vanee music increased by 35,000, actors by 17,000, theater ushers|| up to some readers more of a plc~ verb form. ESE ber heavy fur-trimmed cost, very|have understood these things bet-|@pplied himself to eating with a hy 7,000 and radio employes by 15,000. ture of Prime Minister Stanley % 62 He rose from 42 Pertaining lovely her golden-brown hair under | ter,” Eleanor whispered, the silence | deliberation that made for a silence A pri Rea Baldwin than that of King Edward Born. ees the close velvet hat, The drive had ji lasting throughout the meal. printer today can set more than five times as much type to great __ to the cheek. becoming too oppressive. Yet these |'™1, A aoe Pe ted: “A wide “44Prevaricator honor, 44 Refined given her the bright color of her | were Emery’s parents toward whom |_“‘Do I remind you of anything?” as one without a linotype did in 1890, yet there are five times 46Enraptured. ” 3 woman, girlhood, but in spite of all she had, ahs Eleanor asked, hesitatingly, after . zg many employed in the industry as there were then because 31 We sree penal ed VERTICAL 45 Soaks flax. pt [the pwoahllaeee sete Feturned Bie mores pi beet scieed, te ma 4 : 4 juring . i meet her ai urst ; was hol raachinery has lowered prices and made possible the vast mae Las be a _caemporary the —— War. 54 Unequal : - “tee of enthusiasm at having arrived, r, rolling it between his fingers growth of the printing and publishing business. Buea ea than of high Mank or || 23 Silk. net. things, the moment that Elizabeth looked if uncertain whether to light it : Some of the greatest technological developments in America Sh ronsumer, 8838 bed. 4 nto Par OSUED er EIB W # G78%, 8 pees ene there oF Wee oun i: = : :, 4 36 To depart by 59 Tiny par- i saw therein an unhappiness that mind me of anyone? Why, ; in recent years have taken place in the iron and steel industries. : ; ticles. : Eleanor sought in vain to hide. A] Eleanor did not realize that as|how?” Then he studied her quite i But the use of steel in the United States increased from 2,600| “The king i Reem. 60 Implement. Foe hunger that money, luxury or mere | the soil in which her love was rooted | carefully for a full minute with a | pounds per person in 1900 to 16,800 pounds in 1935. There| {0% “te toe pe bee aebhe Seeae cee Olen pene ie ee e used to be only two or three kinds of steel, but today there are , i “40 Being. 10Sesh. - 57 Sneaky, “At last!” said Elizabeth, helping | quite cold, and the maid, who came| |“ can sec that you are dressed 3 Ira forward and scarcely trusting differently from usual and that it has not only changed your expres- sion, but your figure also, and very about 10,000 different specifications as to alloys, sizes, fin-| ‘Sie, cies, “ee: ” car ishes and shapes that modern industry demands. e | a Pele LE Tilt Peal) a | Serasit te cee mother?” asked And employment has grown from less than 150,000 sixty : ae | V1 14 MIEN EPS a Rem eegrer Eleanor, holding out both hands. “It| trouble. Enea pe worse. "18: tach, you. years ago to about a half million today, and despite, or because ae wa ale fips og Pac qAiber ad ans mused of the recent technological changes, employment in 1936 passed| paris ‘rhe ; se MRM ¢ “a mee ES <4 amused yourself by making up for the 1929 peak. Production is far below capacity and with wis 7 as Pe ee eee scuuis ioe ens or are you going to a masquerade?” its inevitable rise employment will go even higher. we / P i 4 att that moment nothing coula we forced her to confess that it 7 :: the ot tv Saath tha dara I fot wants, Sh on the standard ee cea La |. on Se the cb ‘ the. , . High prices stifle both pases , t { es ae decid ioreas oe tees Wietclbte thems ant thee caries. ty * Pi ol al old ee bring Re ea ee OSE eee OR atest ris ig also may be the logical answer to the| ward xno ¥ oe fa in ] , hers for pe on chi or expensive and complicated machines by soliite ; ; e aa ies, Bees 4 fe ota Picture oP cannot be entrusted to unskilled children. During the last gen-| with 3 seal Maz ae Pisrigr ree eager veblber iad eration, when the urge to mechanization has been greatest, es re A et'a nen polat ot views ones bee eeually guarded tongue child labor hes decreased more rapidly than ever before in ry y tapest fa Ty A aoa esticad bas opatices) ot i i | + pees He FH

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