The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 28, 1920, Page 2

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PAGE TWO / 7 BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE : THURSDAY, OCT. 28, 1920. OF POOR LUCK “TN EAST INDIA | Superstition Costs Many Lives, Annually Declares Baptist | \. Missionary | SNEEZE SIGN | | New York, Oct. 28,—Sneezes and superstition cost many lives annually in India. This was the statement of Dr. Anna Degenring of the Woman’s American Baptist Foreign Mission Society, who has just returned here, on a year’s furlough after 14 years as a doctor in Indian. “A sneeze means a great impending calamity to the Indian mind,” said Dr. Degenring. “Whatever happens on the day that one hears a sneeze is sure to turn out ill, and the Indian will enter upon no undertaking of importance on such a day. Many of| our patients have refused to have op-| erations on which their lives depend-} ed on the day that had been arranged, | for, because they happened to sneeze that morning, or even to hear some- one else sneeze.” Indian belief in auspicious days is another “hobgoblin” in the path of the medical missionary there, Dr. Degenring said. Soon after an Indian child is born, the soothsayer reveals «to the family its lucky star its lucky | days. Indians who fall ill or are hurt | in an accident persist in waiting for | their auspicious days before sending | for a doctor. i The Indians, the physician explain- | ed, attribute,epidemics to the wrath; of various goddesses of ill health, add- | ing “there is a goddess of malaria and | a goddess of smallpox—a goddess, in } fact of every, recurringg epidemic.” | Though they belieye in goddesses, they are hard to convince concerning / germs and they have no idea of quar- antine for .contagious diseases, Degenring said. . FIND ROMAN ‘VILLAS Paris, Oct. 28,—Archeologists have discovered in'the wood of Enge, near} Berne, Switzérland, tvo Roman villas which appear to have been construct- ed in the first century B. C., says a Geneva message. Further excavations are to be made th an attempt to establish the where- abouts of the 12 towns and 400 villages mentioned by Julius Caesar which it is believed existed in the neighbor-} hood. Traces of the former existence | of an important Roman colony at this spot have already been discovered. lished. himself in Buffalo, N. Y., | and placed one of his prescriptions, | which he ‘called *‘Golden Medical Discovery,” ‘in the drug stores of { the United States 90 that the pub- lic could easily obtain this very remarkable tonic, corrective and blood-maker. Dr. Pierce manu- | factured this ‘‘Discovery” from ! roots and barks—a corrective | remedy, the ingredients of which nature ‘had put in the fields and forests, for’ keeping us healthy. | Few folks or families: now living’ haye not at sometime or other/used this ‘‘Golden Medical Discovery” zor the stomach,.liver, and heart. Over twenty-four million bottles of this tonie and blood remedy have been sold in this country. | opposition of her subjects on the ! of money spells THRIFT. And this “proper use” ful’ spending but a judi SAVED. 7 Dr. ; | ~The Proper Ulse REPRESENTATIVE MEN CANDIDATES ON ANTI-TOWNLEY*FUSION TICKET E. J, Krueger Gpponents of the fusion ticket apposed to Townleyisra and So- clalism have been\ unable to be- smirch the record ofja single can- didate on the state ticket, spite of many vicious attempts. In the second installment of photographs of men who are en- dorsed by the independent forces in North Dakota, The Tribune in/ presents A. M. Christianson, chief justice of the supreme court (whose name appears on the nonpolitical ballot), Rheinhart J. Kamplin, for Attorney General; John F. McGrann for_Lieutenant Governor and E. J. Krueger for railroad commissioner, Chief Justice Christianson has Made:no campaign in the state. Hie received a higher vote in th primary than his opponent, who is a law partner of Bill Lemke. Judges are named on‘/the ngn- political ballot, and though Lem- ke has dragged the courts into pol- itics, Judge Christianson has re- fused to appeal for votes in a partisan manner. He is making _no campaign—he simply allowed his name to be proposed for re- election to the supreme bench ORMER RULER QF LUXENBURG - TAKES THE VEIL London, Oct. 28.—The former Grand ; agticg. ; Duchess Marie Adelaide of Luxem- | her mother and sister, and knelt hold- ‘burg. who abdicated as ruler of that !ing white flowers nation Jast January and was succeed- | rlotte. hes taken Carmelite convent at ed the veik in a ‘Modena, says a Milan dispatch to the | door. i Times. She quit as head of the Lux- slowly to the door, turned on the of | tteshold to nod smilingly to her moth- emburg government as the result MIMO ONNTONU ue requires not only care- icious use of what is This means that the savihgs must be put at/ = INTEREST where they are SAFE—and you are assured of these essentials in the First National Bank. 4% Interest is paid and Lu i our Capital and Surplus 4 of $300,000.00 protects your funds. We pay you 44-on Savings. | First NATIONAL | Bank BISMARCK, N.D. The Oldest and Lar nthis section of t x RM est Bank e State John F, NeGrann } and suid that his platform was his oath of office. Rheinhardt J. Kamplin is gain- ing strength daily as a candi- date for Attorney General. He is expected to pull thousands of votes of peopie who look with amazement on the way in which Lemke is throttling and_dominat- ing the state of North Dakota. Kamplin is an ex-service man, has a splendid record as a practition- erand asa zen. He is a North Dakota man, born, raised and * educated in the state. His fath- er is@ shoemaker in Grand Forks. John F-McGrann, candidate for Lieutenant Governor, is a busi- ness man with an open record. In his speeches through the state he has made hundreds of friends by his straightforward discussion of the issues. E. J. Krueger needs no introdye- tion as a candidate, for railroad commissioner. Mr. Krueger was a-candidete in the primary, and lacked a few votes of nomination. He was prevailed upon to meye an independent candidacy for the office this fall. Mr. Krueger is a railroad employe, a strong union labor man and an ex-service man. ground that she had been too friend- ly with the Germans during the war. According to the information receiv- ;ed from Modena she walked to the convent of St. Theresa to enter it“as a novice. Her hair had been cut short and she was dressed simply in blue |with-@ black silk cap on her head ;Accompanied by her mother, — sister and two-friends she entered the con- {vent and was received in the hall by |Father Cherubino and other ecclesi- Dhe:.former Duchess) kissed if her hands. Marie’ Adelaide ljstened siniling, to on address by: Father -Cherubino ané the sisters sang a hymn, and n Father ChertWino! pointed to the The new novice arose, walked th ,er and then entered the gonvent. |GOTHAM TEACHERS 'TO EXAMINE PUPILS New York, Oct.\28.—Schoo] teachers | will examine every pupil in New York i November 9 to determine their phy- sical fitness. The Department of {Health set aside the day to stimulate | interest of the teachers in their work, jexpecting them to more quickly de- | tect physical defectives and report them promptly to the school physi- cian. | For 23 years a Department of {Health doctor or nurse has visited ‘each public and parochial school in | New York daily. The teachers report to them any child exhibiting signs of illness. Nurses examine all pupils imonthly for contagious eye and skin | diseases and pronounced physical | strortcomiings. Those having symp- toms of contagious diseases are im- mediately sent home. om In this way contagious diseases have ybeen held under control here. !'This was shown in the influenza epi- ;demics which were checked, in. the schools so fortibly that attendance | was proportionately as great as dur- ing the same period in other years, land the sickness and death rate was ‘lower in the five to fifteen-year-olil !eroup than for any other period of | tite. \ ‘The Health Department expecta to |make vigorous search for unhealthy | pupils in the future. “Most of the men rejected for war service, it has been noted, had defects which could easily have been prevented or cor- rected during childhood. Rummage Sale in Church par- lors, Presbyterian Church Thursday and Friday. Bargains in new goods as well as old. ‘Inatorial nomination, and; the final | will go to the polls to express their | | ber; or 246,000. “This ai ; Supreme cour and attorney genexal. \L> Hilton, present attorney general, MINN. VOTE 10 RBACH 666,000 SCHIAHL STATES Interest Centers in Three Cor- Preus and Shipstegd “St. Paul, Minn., Oct. 2 trom today, the voters of Minnesota. | in common with those in other states, preferénce’ officers. Augmented this year by the gvomen | vot it is estimated’ by Julius A. for national and state Schmahl, the. secretary of state, that Minnesota’s* poll will total 656,000, as again: 387,864 ballots cast for presi- 1 candidates in 1916. . Schmahl places the male~vote ‘or the election next week at approxi- mately 410,000, and estimates that there will be woman voters to the ex- tent of about. 6Q per’ cent. of this num- unts for his total estimate of 656,000. | An informal canvass of virtually every county in Minnesota reveals that ; primary .interest -in the presidential and’ gubernatorial ‘aces. Consider- able interest also attaches ‘to the con- tests for associate justice of the state The activity of the National Non- partisan league has ulted in un- usually warm campaigns, with this issue resting. mainly on the contests, for governor, attorney general, “su- | preme court and several congressiona) races. \ | Run as. Independents Defeated in the June primary in i efiort to_obtain the Republican nom nations fdr state offices, the Nonpar san league refiled several candidates ‘by petition. listing them as Independ- nered Race Between Hodgson, | | One week |- aaah v ————— ——— DAN OW, Uy NE PE PEMUAIVESTHUEGAVAGIUGUQNGSOUOCUOGEOUOOVOQOESUHUAGGOOCAOORGL GTO HAHROOUTOGOUOOOAOOUAUOOONU ANON bi) The Housewifes Burden When a woman 1s almost distracted from ‘overwork, -her ‘home is in disorder, crying children, and on top of all is suffering, from backache, bearing down’ pains, or some other form of feminine ills, ° then she should remember that hundreds of women in just her con- dition have’ been restpred’ to health and regained their youthful strength by-taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and not rest until she has given it a fair trial. ( Proof that it Restored the Health of These Two Women Chattanooga, Tenn.—“I used. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound before my baby’ came when I could no‘ longer keep up. It strengthened my back and relieved me of the ill effect_ Cairo, IlL—“ Some time ago I got so bad with female tyouble that I thought I would have to be operated on. I had a bad displacement... My right side would pain maand'T was so nervous I ant candidates. \ Foremost of the contests of this! nature is the one for governor, with: choice, opposing State Auditor J. A. (0. Preus, the Republican nominee. | and L. C. Hodgson, tite Democratic! candidate, as the other principal can-| didates for this office. i The other two stute office contests | attracting first interest have Clifford | Opopsed as the Republican candidate {for re-election by Thomas V. Sullivan, ! i Nonpartisan league choke filed as In- dependent, and'the supreme court tice race with Homer B. Dibell, in- cumbent, opposing George L. Siegel. | Dibell and Siegel finished first and sec- jond, respectively, in the primary, and as the supreme court justices run | without: party designation ,it placed the two on the general election ballot. the Siqgel has the endorsement of Nonpartisan league. In addition to electing a governor complete state ticket, the vote Minnesota will ballot for state re sentatives, congressmen, justice of dis- trict courts’ in several districts, and tor county judges of probate ,as well as county commissioners and district court clerks in many counties. There is no contest for, United States senator this year. The closest fight in the state is look- ed for on’governor and possible atto: ney general will be.equally close.» In the primary in’ June, Shipstead op- posed Preus for the Republican guber- count ~showed:, Perus 133,586, and Shipstead 125,087. Other candidates for. the’ Republican gubernatorial nomination—four in number—polled a total of 47,493. GERMAN TEXTILE CONCERNS MAKE GREATER PROFITS! REET Berlin, ‘Qct. 28.—Ten large German textile coficerns earned larger profits | for the year ended April, 1920, than in the best years before the war. One> Bremen concern increased its profits as compared with last year trom 4,400,000 marks to 16,800,000 marks. Including shares allotted gratis to the shareholders, the, divi-, dend paid is 62 per cent. q A cotton company increafed its} profits | from 2,000,000 to 9,700,000 marks. . Of the other companies the’ mini- num dividend is 16 per cent. and there are several dividends exceeding 30 and one excéeding 40 per cent. The profits are due to the big price rise of last winter. All finisNed goods put on the.market during the winter were priced on the basis of the-price of raw cotton at the time of their sale, and as raw cotton rapidly advanced ig, price the public was charged sev- 2ral hundred per cent. more than the actual production cost. CONGREGATIONALISTS ELIMINATE WORD OBEY bh ~ London, Oct. 28.— Congregational- ists brides here no longer need prem- ise in the marriage service to obey their husbands. / A committee of the Congregational Union of England and Wales; appoint- ed to draw up a new forny of service, has decided that modern ideas favor [the omission of the word “obey,” and this notwithstanding the fact that no woman sat on the commitiee; neither t a CASCARA Breaks up a cold in Laxative—No Opiate in Hill’s. Dr. Henrik,Shipstead the Nonpartisan . which so often develops at such. times. That was my first extenience with the Vegetable Compourid. Years after- wards I took it during the Change of _ Life and got along so wellI scarcely ever had to lie down during the day could not hold @ glass of water. Many times I would have to stop my work and sit¢down or I would fall ong the floor in a faint. I consulted seVeral , doctors andevery one told me the same *» but I kept fighting to keep from having a j SS i ¥ {pe operation. I had yead_so ‘many .times of, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.and it helped my sister so I begin taking it, I have nqver felt better than I -have since tifen and I keep house and am able to do all my work. The Vegetable Compound is and seldom had dizzy, fainting spells. Tam now well and strong, can do all my housework with perfect ease and it is a comforqto me to be able to say to other suffering women ‘take Lydia E. Pinkham’s medicine and be strong. ‘ill be glad to have you use my name Kill That Cold With ats Colds, Coughs *omi\> c Neglected Colds Take no chances. Keep this standard.remedy handy for the first sneeze. 24 how Grippe in3 days—Excelient fo) Quinine in this:form does not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT I if it will be the mearis of helping any _ one.” — Mrs. R. A. Fampury, 606 Orchard Knob Ave.,Chattanooga, Tenn. } \ certainly one grand medicine.”—Mrs. J. R. Marriews, 3311 Sycamore Street, Cairo, Hl. Ailing, Overworked Housewives Should Rely Upon > > a ~~ cot 9 on were any requests received from w men to omit the fateful word. “All the churches are becoming less strict in their insistance on the word- | ing of the marriage ice,” said the secretary of the Women's Freedom League. “Even in Anglican. churches the word ‘obey’ is sometimes omitted at the bride’s desire, and a great num- ber of leading nonconformist min- isters have lately made a practice of cutting out the vow to obey.” equal to butter for shortening —at akout half the cost. Not Affeet That Does Whe Head, Because of the tonic and | fect. GROVE'S LB. Q ative Bromo Qyilhihe pablets) can taken by, anyone without causing ner- vousness or ringing in the head. Be | sure you get-(the; ge. 1e GROVE'S L. B.'Q: tablets. Look for No cure for it, but welcome | GROVE'S signature on box. 3vc. A relief 1s often brought by— “ VARPORUB — | Qver)17 Million Jars Used Yearly A Quinine better than lard and compounds for frying, ANTI-TOWNLEY Voting School TONIGHT 7:30 and 9:00 P. M. OVER REX THEATRE . ALL WELCOME | | N pteferred by thou- sands to ,the finest AND = La Grippe are Dangerous AT ALL GROCERS NATICN ARCH CO., Petezson & Cunningham, Managers CH Bldg. St. Paul Relieves ‘ leadache ZOLA| co \

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