| Show ' THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE TUES&AY MORNING JANUARY' 10 1939 i 4- k- Wife Loses Her -e i Take Care When Germs Start Traveling Queenly " Respect for f 'Strayed' Mate By DOROTHY DIX Dear Miss Dix: We are three Wives who are having husband trouble so will you please answer these questions: (1) Do you think it possible for a wife to have the tame faith love and respect for her husband after ahe learns that he has" been "unfaithful to her and had affairs with other women? (2) Just what do childre'n especially boys think when they know their $ k iatheria aphilanderer? ' (3) By DR IRVING S CUTTER Physicians now understand that early in thr coursa of most of our infections the blood harbors bacteria For' example In an accuto inflammation of the air passages' we may find certain germs 'floating along the arteries and veins As a rule they-d- o wotvsdong4n this environment— an hour or two occasionally several And here nature her most benefi-- y displays one cent roles Because the organisms are not present in huge number the natural defenses of the system rpay kill them immediately long before they can spread to vital regions In meningitis prpneumbnla if we are alert and skillful we can probably find the causative microbes in the circulation prior to tha actual attack upon the brain coverings or the lungs a Do Answer: Faith and respect once de- stroyed can neverbe regained When your 'have found that your Idol has feet of clayi'oiLJifiver again believe that it is pure gold It is possible for a woman to con' tinue to love her husband after he has deceived her but it is never with the same love she gave him before What she gives him is a pitying love for a poor weak creature who had not the strength to resist temptation and it has in it respect nor faith Only contempt for him and a little contempt for herself that she could still care for so poor a thing (21 Children" ate secretive things and nobody knows just what they think of their parents ' Also they sit in hard judgments on their parents What a boy would think of his philandering father would a good deal on how his " depend mother treated his father I have ( known cases in which children sided with Jheir erring fathers because they though that their mothers Jiagged too much or were too quarrelsome and they didn’t blame their fathers for leaving them - -- (3) Whether a’ woman deserves credit for continuing to live with her unfaithful husband for the sake of the children depends on three things I think" First on whether she is able to provide for her children adequately if she di Vorces their father If a woman has no money of her own and no trade by which she can support and educate her children I think it Is heroic in her to shut her eyes to her husband's affairs wtih other women and keep her home together for the sake of her children The woman who divorces her husband "la generally" left pretty flat ' not many men make because enough to support two families and the second wife and children always get the most of what a man earns Another consideration is that many a man who is a poor husband is a good father and if children love their father it is a cruel wrong to them to take them away from him But unless a woman can make up her mind simply to accept her husband's wanderings and ignore them It is best for her to leave him because it wrecks children to be brought up in an atmosphere of quarreling and having their parents burl insults at each other authorities agree that vorce inflicts a terrible wrong on children and that it warps their minds and characters (4) All di- (51 1 should have to print on asbestos paper my opinion of the man who leaves his wife and children to run around with other women and pends his money on them that his family needs - (6) Oh yes the philanderer Is Virtually always cured after his wandering feet get too old and gouty to chase women any more Then he always comes back to home and Mother Copyright 1939 for The Tribune iPv !: arar mzi (Continued from Pese Five) world Phyllis certainly knows how totract Strange Adventure Tour put spice into a date! She’s giving Wish empty bottle hi the center Jack a peek into the future by read- of Lay an the circle Each guest1 spins the And how bottle as he makes a wish At the ing his fortune yritWfeards interested he is! 7 end of the spin the bottle neck “H’m— that ten of hearts means points to the "fate" of the foiune-seekromance — an old flame" says Phyllis who’s found it easy to reAnother exciting way to tell formember the card meanings tunes is "Fateful Numbers" By “And that queen of clubs promises arithmetic you find the numan invitation from a dark woman simple ber for your whole name Some Good news in a letter sayS the fjve numbers are lucky --some unlucky— of hearts” but whatever it is your number’s “What— no trouble?" asks Jack the key to your fortune "Just a bit" answers Phyllis: ‘The How to find "Fateful Numfour of spades is a trouble card a ber” is told in your our booklet quarrel perhaps But the queen of “Let Me Tell Your Fortune" Exdiamonds says you’ll be left money plains ways to read tea And your old flame has a rival for leaves fascinating gives meaning the eight of clubs says am exciting of veryhandwriting card jn deck Secrets of new date” crystal gazing dreams jolly fortune Such fun to spin lively tales like games for parties that— and you can tell fortunes to one or a crowd— in a dozen differSend 15 cents in coins for our ent ways Here’s a grand stunt for booklet "Let Me Tell Your Fora party tune” to The Tribune-TelegraDivide a large circle of paper or Home Service Bureau Salt Lake cardboard into sections In" each City Utah Write plainly your write such exciting fortunes as Dan- name address and the name of ger Fame Secret Love Movie Con- - booklet er m Use Judgment in Teaching £hild Facts of Life By ANGELO PATRI Sex is not secret Nature neverfgoing on record now as against thinks of it as something to hide that practice There are many In- - her reainr-i- t' ir a joyoua "every- reasons all or them to my mind day matter to be practical First children mature taken as casually I ’ physically and mentally at differ' as one regards I — ent times The physical growth the sunshine andF the rain Only and the mental growth of one among human bechild do not arrive simultaneously ings is sex some One or the other Mgs Age then thing jo consider is no measure of judgment as to reverently cauthe proper time No two children tiously guardedwill accept the idea in the same It cannot be ly otherwise for the way Their personal attitudes set by home playground and education creation of an- will riot allow that For one child other human the lesson will be wholesome for ing is of the ut- another the contrary So classificamost importance tion in schools will not help us to all nature tov t Sex is no secret Every child at all humanity to! the age of 12 knows something of society with all Angelo Patrl its complicated adjustments made its ways and its meanings Every necessary by custom law and re- one of them has felt something ligion These safeguards have been of its urge has had some experiBut the accepted so Jong that their recog- ence with its influences nition is summed up in society's individual child feels intuitively sex at work within term "common sense" instinctively For long years sex in 'relation him and each must express it to human beings was covered with must approach its growth mist a veil and spoken of in whispers interpret its use and its meaning if mentioned at all The conspir- according to his needs and temperacy of silence did not work Na- ament Sex is an individual matture is stronger than convention ter if ever there was ‘such Then and the truth showed its face class instruction is not the an often 'disconcerting the elders Of swer late we have begun to speak out We have psychology lessons sciloud to acknowledge the presence ence lessons bjology in the schools of a great force of life among us Each qf these must and does touch We have about decided that it is sex in a general way That is useless and foolish to try to keep about all a teacher before a class Youth from discovering something especially the mixed classes of the they know by intuition and in- public schools can do with safety How then are the children to We have about decided stinct matthat it is better to each Youth learn about this about this force than to keep its ter? None of us denies the gravity its consequences and of the question before us The implication children's Us power overthem- secret- intuition and instinct The discussion now centers on and casual experiences must be how this shall be taught By clarified by teaching I would whom?1 Where? When? There make it easy for children to ask their mothers in sex would who have and fathers their re-- ars some relation" to human" belngs "taught ligious teachers "AND teacher in ths junior high schools I am who has been trained for this spe- cifie job in the schools General instruction will not help much and it is likely to do harm" Individual instruction as needed will solve our difficulty This is the hardest way of course but there FORYOUR is no royal road to learning -- 'jt J - soms One of our common enemies Is the streptococcus viridans which is fond ofiurking around the socketsnf the teethe ILcanneaxly always belound on the mucous surfaces within the mouth It is our most frequent cause of bacterial endocarditis and-ware often at a loss to explain why the pumping organ of one patient twill be impaired while another will not be The reason is that we sometimes overlook trivial affairs which may drive these ‘bugs" fnto the circulation Caution has been sounded repeat edly against wholesale extractions from a foul mouth because within a few minutes bacteriologists have been able to detect these organisms in the liquid portion of the blood In 75 per cent of the cases Enough injury is produced in pulling the tooth to open tissue spaces thus permitting the entrance of germs Even in a clean oral cavity the incident ensues now and thefi All of which means that the dentist who removes teeth must do so witlj the least possible damage as there is always a chance that step'tococcic forms will be forced into the blood stream It seems obvious therefore that the members of the human family are menaced with catastrophes of which they are unaware but from which they are adequately protected if the health level is sufficiently high But should a chill ensue followed by a fever we may know that the bacterial adventurers float ing about have increased to the point where’Hhe fighting forces of the body cannot overcome them with ease The individual then faces illness — such as pneumonia— where every resource of medical science will be needed for the preservation o life Few us need give "any concern to this subject but this discussion may serve to emphasize again the importance of maintaining a high standard of well being s CHILD Ir I BAST to wake perfect pies time with KRLSTEA2-A- II the cueeework mum sad fum ere thing of the peek Your work is t mad water and roll— you serve your family or gueola a KRUSTEAZ dretert aota thoir axprcMioas of ddisbv — Mr cial Eatrihasbooklet - prepared--- - f-- May Need Vitamin B son Mrs V writes: My has no appetite — no matter how appealing the meats Do ypu think he needs vitamin preparations? Reply Possibly vitamin B This usually increases appetite and enables one to gain weight Usually writes: Is a baby kept in an incubator for two J Mrs months? Reply Usually for approximately a two months' period The feeding problem is- - of the greatest importance and demands superior nursing skill Copyright 1939 Miss Gayle Cluff Betrothed to Morris D Stark for The Tribune The engagement and approaching marriagp of Miss Gayle Cluff to Morris D Stark son of Mr and Mrs C R Clark 929 East Second Alpha Delta Pi South street is made known today Will Meet by her parents Mr and Mrs Mel- Vin L Cluff 1731 Wright court The wedding will take place JanThe Salt Lake City club of Alpha Delta Pi will hold its regular Suary 20 in ’the Salt Lake City L D temple monthly meeting at the sorority house 70 South Wolcott street Wednesday at 8 p m Miss Clara Sandwich A Cirkel will be the guest speaker Nutty made of graham Sandwiches Hostesses for the evening will include Mrs R A Conely Miss bread with a filling of creamed Florence Sneddon and Mrs Reed cheese and chopped nuts are interF Welch esting Keep Warm in Crocheted Set r j±l spe- (No 301) entitled “Obedience"' in which he tells parents how to cope with the difficult problems of disobedience Send for It inclosing lo cents Address your request to Mr Angelo Patri cars of The Salt- Lake Tribune Salt Lake City Utah In head colds mucousvmembrane of nose and throat is irritated air passages become Copyright 1939 for The Trlbune' puffed-upsmaller— it’s hard to breathe Put 2 drops Penetro Nose Drops BUY NOW AND SAVE in each nostril — your child will feel because the the difference Mr' Wood Returns J action of the ephed-rin- e astringent-lik- e I From New York and essential oils shrinks and cools swollen membranes eases irPATTERN 6294 ritation and discomfort— your child will have more room to breathe— It’s no trick to be a winter queehfrions for making set materials LARGE SELECTION Or every breath brings a feeling of THE VERY FINEST FUR COATS days— not when this fetching quired color schemes illustrations relief of set and of stitches Only The Better Grades hood mittens— the last scarf 1 BUY NOW Be sure to always ask for quickTo obtain this pattern send 10 Cash an Prltee so style-cin be word Special quickly- cents in coin to The Tribune-Tel- e acting Penetro Nose Drops Sold crocheted of yarn Colorful gram Home Service Bureau Salt at all drug stores everywhere7 Wilford Wood Furs scraps may be heavy used most effectively Lake City Utah Be sure to! wrile and make the set match various plainly your name address ahd patNORTH SALT LAKE Waiu 8200 for Appolntmeat clothes Pattern 6294 contains direc- - tern number j j EZJ MJB S 4 KRUSTEAZ comes In large and small Insist on jiackaars at your tracers KRUSTEAZ by asms fore-last- ' sit-do- al REN ETEIOdrok ‘ -- s ab-su- rd legiti-mate- ntof r -- is - rinnhlA®har-RidlIalQgl£s-AndjUiedevelopme- HARD IMlUStEAZ ls — money on them that his family ' needs? (6) Is the philanderer ever cured of the habit and domestiWE ARE SAD cated? (1) By H G Wells experience of the various demors-- 1 The last war on earth the sec- - ‘ lized fragments great and ond war to end war when at last government cannot be a small army large-seaimitation of any exist- over which were - now scattered It could be envisaged as a whole -half the land surface of the ing government It must be a new First cams insubordination was a bilge tangle of thing embodying a universal mu- globe shoot the officers” and "lead us conflicts which began Informally " tiny” Caesar where we want to go” a and did not so much end as s' There had already been a peter of this mutinous reaction to- phase of successful lawlessness' a out It it’ difficult to Imagine how-i- t of of a than rapine feeling wards ths end of the Great war of phase could have followed any other 1914-1- 8 All ths European fighting isolation and fear and a great de- course It was incoherent from start link sire to some to up again greatforces then- - were drifting to muti- er finish The name it still carries order Bodisham and his staff toThe ny The essential Russian revolu-tio- n Ideological War" was first the world from their headwatching 'was mutiny and ths had great maps flagged devised for it by that Interesting - the strikes of the early twenties jn Italy quarters to down “contrite" troops rhetorical ' and elsewhere which Immobilized Mostmark Benito Mussolini Italiah dictator of thess troops had heard factories and the mechanical plant He too with in his time his bright of civilization not by the withdraw- vaguely of Rud As apprehension phases and his long heavy interal of labor but by its cessation were grew in their minds they would ludes was something of a minor claim that they were new u i a RucU- plainly experiments of the common usually man in hi revolt against servitude revolutionaries Rod’s men Andthe Already people operavtonor are beginning to countries lawless to subjected and the exploitation of his necessiforget Mussolini’s rots in tha reand themselves forced to- statement ties These earlier efforts had failed ward of human life He is folfound counterbrigandage because they had been local and relowing Napoleon into oblivion as a contheir of only hope restoring mere energetic personality of no gional They had been premature trol in the of a world fundamental Importance at all The They had anticipated the neces- common lawanticipation too to claimed sary approximations and Coales- be part of the'They tendency when he is mentioned-ireconstruction great cences They- had occurred in a to belittle him But he was by no was too now infested world which was still in a patch-wor- k Every region with denationalized exiles Their means a fool His fustian was of dissimilar phases but it wai d bo to was dominant idea It was only now with the aboil- -' as some new type of "citi- not contemptible He was a man tion of remoteness that the entire zen There conin social relatively intelligent among world was coming into step as one dislocation combs a phase men” had he temporary "strong orwhen the desire for community Now it was no longer der and security for peaceful liv- had early experiences of discussion rein revolt one to crush and editorship and his mind like possible jealing that of his Corsican precursor ran gion before another became aware ousy overpowers partisanship possessiveness of the general significance of the to obvious and often very in habitually losses naval" the After great Bodisham and Norvel attractive headlinetHe was mental-l- y struggle the the year-- of first Wanfthe were excitable and as his temperature energetic and flcicnt in rose his - headlines flushed He military-deadlo- ck In Central the called this 1'simultanousJ awareAmerica and the old world the wanted to figure as a great man ness" throughout the world By strike niethod assumed formidable in history and hs was quite unable THE DIMPLED DEB brushes up 1944 There was not a- country or re- dimensions both in the air forces to foresee the’ unromantic turn that j the "com- and was taking her own short locks pins them In gion in the world where among the munition workers history mon man’s party” was not known These He realized that for any effective as place latter realized their they where Rud's beetling forehe'ad had in warfare there must be began to refuse victory two sides and not mors than two not become the familiar symbol for indispensabiiity of bombs of delivery particular types & vaguely apprehended vast organisides but he failed to grasp the and other weapons whose use they zation of release and where the es- considered further fact that warfare may end common to the sential conditions of any conflict interest 'Theilmical without effective victory Ha got Bella-courof propaganda outhis antagonisms wrong The against limited impatient and had quickened the consciences stresses worn authority were unknown All of and confusions of ths world the airmen ths sir Everywhere over the world there grew up a forces were more and mors manifestly displayed a disposition to solidarity of expectation a sense of question the decisions of the mill the outcome of- - the struggle of all -a new ordeg not simply dreamt of of the the diverse forces making for a tary authorities The common-sens- e but prepared and approaching world state against planes overhead no longer gave the the obsolescent political economic statesmen and politicians on the Connection of Movements religious and educational institusense below of a ground' unqualiThose who were most concerned fied tions endlessly varied in origin and They began to worry character that obstructed them But with what still passed for govern- about power morale forces of the the air he thought the nationalist forms of ment in those days seem to have to organize espionage systems been the least aware "of the essenhistory were permanent The prithese youngsters tial connection of a hundred appar- among mary reality of the age was a world-wid- e conflict of pressures ently divergent movements that Appeal to Common Sense ' undermined the superficial orderliThe propaganda organizations of parallel all over the world for ness of life Whenever for example which the new order had atlU to there was still definitely an organ- ths "disintegrating national govern- find its definite formula To this oT his own obsessions blinded him comized military suppression of social ments did an immense amount ADDS SOME CURLS long ones be- adjustmentAthere-wa- s what one work in the spread of the idea of pletely on of ear mass each them a hind Benito Mussolini with a surfeit may describe compactly and bru' Rud Each assailed the prestige of of bad history decaying in hia Imagtop tally as a “shoot the officers" movefound formal antagonists and ment This was more apparent in its ination could not see the plain what were then" called the authori- an authority in his phrases each realities before him Like most of tarian communities than in those in undermining the enemy morale his generation he dramatized huwhich" claimed to be democratic sapped its own Each appealed to man affairs in incurably geographiBut it was by no means confined common justice and the common cal patches and Ilka most of the to them The ftazis for example sense of mankind against its rival masterful men of his time his belief had never displayed the internal In France and Britain Rud's activi- in his power to mold the life about discipline of the old German armies ties were largely sustained by Ger- him carried him beyond sanity man money In Germany his spread From the beginning his waa an and there was clear evidence temperament he Would be early as 1939 that the leaders did ing reputation was financed and not dare impose too severe an obe- abetted by Russian French and blatant at one moment and weeping dience upon the looting and raping British propaganda Russia paved at another He beat at tha kneea of with which the rank and file repaid his way in China and Japan Ger- mother reality Ilka an unteachable themselves for the fatigues of war- many and Russia in India The child Ha wanted war and conenefare The men jiut their own in- Catholic church denounced him in quest triumph terpretation upon their duties and one country and claimed him in an- mies fierce alliances and unforget- -' treated any attempts to moderate other but everywhere it spread his table antagonisms He wanted glory" their behavior as disloyalty to their name With the moet definite In- He died as his last words testify esprit de corps The Japanese staffs tentions possible Rud could still completely unaware qf the fact that and officers again were often too find it the best policy to remain the rational treatment of human manifestly compelled and terrified ambiguous He was vaguely sup- affairs does not admit of that which the- - traditions of men as the discipline of the hungry posed to be revolutionary and "creahordes of Japanese tive" and at the same time he was warfare require - “DO' Tvs win?” and peasants that still swarmed in supposd to be antired In reality be said He persuaded himself and hs China relaxed By 1939 Japan for he was ultraradical he left the reds instance in China and Italy in far behind him The common man persuaded great multitudes of fo-pl- e that two great systems of ideas Spain had armies that the govern- emerged at last less by a process of assertion than by a progressive faced each other in the world "leftment dared not bring home There was a constant repetition elimination of narrower alternat- ism" and "rightism” and that ha W and his associated dictators emAND LOOKS LIKE A QUEEN of the same cycle of phases in the ives bodied the latter He did contrive with appropriate costume jewelry to heighten the effect finally to impose the illusion of a definitive world war upon great Modern Miss Cards T ell Fortunes With Adopted by In osteomyelitis (infection within bone) a nest of staphylococci may become established near the end of one of these long structures But the invaders did not originate in that location neither were they The modern belle may achieve the introduced from the outside through" of Marie Antoinette's evea wound They were conveyed by the romance style by ttffe adroit adblood and found thereiia site favor- ning hair dition of hair pieces to her dayable for growth The patient unfortime coiffure tunately did not possess enough A bunch of curls here a few long resistance to destroy the cocci But ones there and presto she becomes where did they come from? In the the beauty of a century and a halt majority of instances Such" lesions ago can be traced to the nose the throat The Chicago and Illinois Hairimpetigo on theskfn the teeth or dressers' association shows how it's even a boil done: But what about carbuncles and such as pimples boils? Are the organisms always rubbed into a hair follicle by the fingers? No In at least half the cases— particularly In those who have crops of boils or furuncles one after the other— the source is not the skiu at all Bacteria are being transported hither and yon from remote localities some of which are deeply seated The same may be said of abscesses about the kidneys- oc within the 'prostale gland" The chances are that on more than onp occasi m when we are feeling just a bit below par— half sick— we may account for the episode by a blood infection “which never actually blos- Of — T " you thing a women deserve credit for continuing to live with an un- faithful husband for the sake of the children or is she a fool for doing so? (4) What is the effect of divorce on children? (5) What is your opinion of the man who leaves his wife and children to run around k Curls The Story of Jerusalem masses of people Tomorrow "A Planet in Flames” By UNCLE RAY the of of One the tribes Jewiahftold the height was 100 cubits nation was known as Judah and (about 148 feet) 100 There were thick walls that tribe gave its name to the peo- feet around the temple rising grounds It is a custom to call them One thousand priests were named ple "Hebrews" before the Babylonian to do the mason and carpenter work on the more important walls of the captivity and "Jews" after the captemple— it wag felt' that the place tives in Babylonia were set free and was too holy for common workmen returned to their homeland to perform such labor Before the birth of Jesus the The temple gates wera of mighty Jews had come under the power of size One was 83 feet high and was The Romans made of brass Others were not so the Roman empire named one man or another to have high but were overlaid with gold direct charge over them and silver At last ths temple was completed Among the Roman rules was one known in history as Herod the The Jews wers happy but their Joy Great His rule lasted as long as the was not to last long ' rule of Solomon (For' History section of your not Jew a Herod the Great was scrapbook) by race but he was a native of The leaflet "Cities of Europe” may Edom a region south of the Dead be had by sending a sea The Edomites were related to return envelope to me in care of the Jews and Herod followed the The Salt Lake Tribune r Jewish religion Tomorrow: Titus Attacks JeruHerod’s father had held a place salem of power over the Jews and Herod After Copyright 1939 for The Tribune obtained still more power a visit trRome7 where he saw Mark Antony he was given the title of Room for Admiration ’King of Judea" Anxious to maks his kingdom If you have a fins painting or great Herod sent word to Greek lovely picture in your living room come to teachers and writers to Judea Some of them accepted the by all means give it plenty of space invitation sq it may lie admired without some ( When he was named king many less worthy piejurs also being In Jews did not want him to take A lovely painpowe- r- Before he could enter Jeru- thejjne ofvislonah entira wall to itsalem he had to attack it with anting should have self army of Romansoldiers When "the city was captured the walls of the rebuilt Temple of Solomon wers set afire and the temple was ruined Some years later Herod started a new temple a building higher and probably mors beautiful than Solomon’s first temple Work SUIT£-COAT- S— was done on it during the 16 years which remained In Herod’s reign DRESSES but it was not finished for almost a (If Plain) century Herod’s temple as It is galled covered an area equal to about one SKI SUITS Cleantd (jjjg city block or square It was made and Waterproofed up largely of courtyards open to the sky but on building in it ross to a SWEATERS SKIRTS great height for those days Ws ars TROUSERS SLACKS f De pc ii do DUY CLEANING 69' 39c EAT ROMAN MEAL DAILY Bring and Take Use ge Account PretMt Rmn for The Tribune TUSSY WIND AND WEATHER GET-you- r rain ef wheat nd rye tn Rowen Meal are a knewn lotfrce a Vitamin 9 At aN grace re wintfer supply chapping windburn Eases dryness from winter sun blt-- y ing cold Soothes that sung- ing drawn sensation Use as ben smooth powder-bas- e fore outdoor exposure A hrtriousody ruol - Fee asi two wseka— Dice price geee 8aek te $ X Ihe Paih 7k n 0 i DEPENDABLE MERCHANDISE OUY- LOTIOli at this grand saving Guards skin sgaihst ft fey cervinf deficiency Meol daily Tha whele 1939 Copyright l |