The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 12, 1925, Page 2

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“4 PAGE TWO TRACHOMA AND GOITER SURVEY WILL BE MADE Dr. A. A. Whittemore Seeks to Learn Extent of the Diseases in State | Believing that trachoma, a chronic contagious inflammation of the lids, and simple goiter, « disfiguri enlargement of the throat and reading over the state and fies, but lacking complete i tion, the state health depar through Dr. A. A, Whittemor health officer, has begun a sh to « nine definitely th ations where these two dis bases are prevalent so that we might tilute and recommend preventive ye « statement of the | ma may cause blindness, | und sears of the causes a useless, tion of the neck, and also may » dangerous to hi br. Whittemore. nelts” in the United Stat where the disease is much more pre- | valent than in other sections, and the health department wants par ticularly to learn whether such a condition obtain n this state. Aid Enlisted th offic physicians, teach ers and superintendents of schools | are being enlisted in the effort of the health de; Whittemore believes thes two dis- ease conditions are fast spreading } over the entire state, no statewide sur has been made to t ituation. In evintendents of schools, who medical knowledge, instructions h: been p nake possible detection of these dis Characteristics Described Trachoma (chronic sore — eyes ometimes called) granulated — lids). Trachoma is a chronic ifflammatory Je of the ey agious. It ase of the in. very con Iness, ulcers, conditions of the over them. other chronic inflammations of the eye. Alf we want is the fact that any kind of a chronic inflammation has existed will then have cach reviewed by their doctor for a correct diagno- viter. (Typhoid enlargement). Fxeryone knows what goiter is. The only trouble is that you may not no- tice the small one or those — just 8 ting. Goiter is a very disfigur- ment-of the thyroid gland situated in m’s Apple’ little be- It shaped like the printed ‘H’, the cross bar extending s the throat. Either one or all ondary the throat or neck front about where the ‘Ad ought to be in boys or of these sections may be et “A large goiter may be s y one across the room, You a small one by opening r and looking at neck from hoth sides. You may perhaps feel one of the lobes with your fingers or if you will tip the head back a , the fullness ove the ‘num may mall goiter is hard to di tinguish in fat children. “Goiter is preve: its early s crime cn somebody with this ous deft lo locate these place | MANDAN NEWS MARCH TERM ENDS to pay. a $2,05! surrender $491.1 by the mortgage. The court ulso ordered a judgment in the case of the Farmer$ State pank vs. Frank Wilder as manager of the Mandan News, declaring valid 2,834 mortgage held by the bank against Wilder. Jwage’-Lembke gave George Kap- ronos and other Greeks who were interested in the defunct Busy Bee Cafe"ene week in whieh to pay for | and_xpdeem a large supply of fix- turégz, Otherwise. judgment would be. entered in. favor of Joesting & Schilling company. BANKER IS ILL searlet feyer. / N ALL OF US MORTALS THERE ARE, WLAKNESSES urtment. While Dr. | ATAING AS A_ PERFECT PMAt ° ing the assistance of sup- red hy Dr. Whittemore to es, With regard to them he By NEA Service “Yet famili lids. d inflammatory ball by the roughened lids moving up and down It is not expected that you can distinguish this disease from “mere man, and nothing mo A. errrect PERSON WOULD | SESUCH A BORE show him to be-—just like his} en nd He has the claim ‘him as a ‘perfect man.’| —there rity of married life, at the club, or any place in the pres-|the ha you could see, what I believe to be true isn’t such a thing IPLAN PAYING OF OLD HAIL CLAIMS MAY 4 Vast Amount of Work Wi « Precede the Distri- bution vast amount of detailed work precede the 20 percent deficit ent of $8 to persons awarded findemnity, for by the state hail’ insur- cnly 80 percent of the total amount jout by Martin Hagen, manager of ithe department, call for payment to |begin about May 1, but it is possi- jble that the time will be later in jthe month of May. Payment of this |20 percent deficit from the surplus ifund of the department is author- zed in the hajl insurance law en- nd 1924 will be deducted from the ‘ual amount of cash paid, according jto Mr. Hagen. The department also {will be required to take cognizance of assignments of |purtiments, which had been made by |persois to whom indemnities were due. The jan 80 percent dditional 20 percent on assignments ble jointly to the assignee and the {if he has since paid the debt for jwhich the assignment was made. While some persons have estimated |the amount of assigned claims at 50 percent of the total due, Mr. Hagen states that an accurate estimate ‘annot be made, but that the total will not reach 50 percent. Hail in- assigned to individuals, counties and rms and corporations. Sev- notably Burleigh and secured nments of | warrants to secure payment jot seed liens, The 1 insurance department will of others, he is just a mere|go to every county in the state. Al- , nothing more. “If you could read his mind, andjtu @ proves to be just what she} check his every action, then And even though a woman looks| expected him to be-—then she alone s the table three times) can a yeur, she never) For at the office, in business circles,| fect man.” though the question of the consti- tionality of the payment was rais- in the legislature during discus- sion, Mr. Hagen, Treasurer C. A. as a per-|Fisher and State Auditor Steen have not indicated that they would seek RESERVE STOCK knowledge of women, Mi American grand opera star, can not INt she believes she has man siz-| ed up correctly. | ked what is my) question floo 7 ver thought there was] ;* and I don’t belie a ‘perfect man’ anyone else believes th Coming from Mary Garde! has been said te the way of Cupi © stepped inte ts on several! ement is start. | Corn But she is quite search would be ho nan might seem per- fect, only because her up all the threads | that weave his ¢ , “He might be married to me— yet at the office he may be paying edurt to his seer Potatoes | Estimated Average Value Per Acre 1922 f the neck or ce would be as seen across the there is no way of telling wh “A perfect man is impossible, For us mortals there are weal And it is well that we have d to grow to adult life figuring and often dan- t. It occurrs in certain lities of the state due to lack of jodine in the water. We wish to “A perfect person would be a bore—yet if not perfect his w ¢ him unbearable, young girl in love, His very words on farms March. 1, 1926 was 3,588,000 bushels or 30% of. the 1924 crop as OF GRAIN HELD [compared with 1,967,000 bushels or |i"® eral as to its validity before pay- ment i: the 20 percent deficit is simply a HIGH IN STATE [iviiets seiining “on farms’ Mareh [ft and therefore is unconstitu- Sees 1, 1923. March 1, 1925, 30% of the (Continued from page one) 1824 crop of potatoes had been ship- “1923 crop in reserve on farms March |ped out of the | 000 tons remain- |grown, and March 1, 1 , and 1; ‘arms March 1, 19 mount of potatoes remaining Jof the counties. —- Reserves on Farms in North Dakota 1925 1924 1923 (bus.) (bus.) (bus.) 3,865,000 6,488,000 5,792,000 pat £539,000 40,147,000 9,126,000 1,005,000 44 of North Dakota Farm Lands = | 1923 40 a | 1924 37 B|1925 .... 35 4] Farm Lavor-—March 1 supply of 3g | farm labor was estimated to be 93.2 = © |per cent of a normal and demand for a g & = 3 & g|normal. The ratio of supply to de- 4 8 ~ = |mand was 100.5 compared with 102.1 z is) 2 £!on February 1, and 106.8 on January 3 z £ g|1. & 2 a a — =z ™ 5 38] More than 1%000,000 skins were 6 2 2 & 3 $ % $ 1916 36 : 31 1918 41 | 1919 43 1921 49 The March term of Morton county riet court was adjourned Tues- fternoon following a judgment ered by Judge F, T. Lembke in favor of the plaintiff, The Farmers State Bank of Mandan, against F. M. Blyth. The court ordered Barth 5 mortgage and to in the hands of the clerk of court in escrow and also gave judgment for the bank as to ownership of four horses which. the defendant claimed were not covered BEAUTY WILL WED IN ROME Mrs. "W. H. Ordway left by bus yesterday morning for Selfridge where:she was ‘summoned as the re- | sult’ of the illness of her husband, ‘W. H..Qrdway, cashier of the Sel- fridge Bank, who is suffering with normally again, nec where the 1923 crop had been shipped out 29,122,000 30,250,000 8,739,000 1,068,000. 1,529,000 1,967,000 5,103,000 1,270,000 3,553,000 Why This Gives. Relief sgary to keep you feeling your best. First, it purifies your BLOOD, every «op of which passes through the Liver every fificen minutes, essences that ate essential to per- \ fect DIGESTION. Liver supplies the secretions Na- tute uses to lubricate your intes-| through your veins. tines so that your Bowels can move Clip the Coupon Below! It will cost you nothing to try every day. When your ‘iver be-|thig health-building vegetable syrup. All we ask in return is you] that you tell others what a few suffer from one or, more of the| spoonfuls did for you. Keep up thig helpful treatment after the simple bottle has demonstrated its mepits in your case. Show yout friends and relatives that the regn- lar dollar size bottle is sold~uneer ‘the: guarantee that every penny will. je refunded if for any reason they are not completely satisfied. naturally, gently and regularly comes sluggish it cannot do these three things; consequently, symptoms ahove described. Shate It With Family! Just to prove to yor CAN get quick RELI are giving away FREE liberal trial .size ‘bottley.of Dr. Thacher’s Liver and Blood Syrup. PURPLY VEGETABLE that you , druggists It is a syrup of ingredi- a trie} size now by. presenting this tional, Under the hail law existing in 1923, it was provided that the maxi- of forney. ‘INOW YOU MAY TRY THIS VEGETABLE SYRUP FREE This Is Your Chance to Prove That Toning Up Your Liver | Will End That Tired, Run-Down Feeling. Up! Win Back Sound Digestion, Strength and Energy—| Feel Your Very Best Again! : In his private practice Dr..H. S. Thacher demonstratew that such symptoms~as Indigestion, Gas on a Sowr Stomach, Belching, Dizziness, Jolds that Hang On, Sick Headaches, Constipation, that Tired Feeling and a general Run-Down condition of the System arg often the result ! of a Sluggish Liver—and ‘tat relief in such cases comes quickly when the Liver is properly C:eansed and Toned and the System ig working ents known to Physicians for their When working as Nature intend-| CORRECTIVE and HEALTH- ed your Liver does three things |}BUILDING properties. Each in- grediept is chosen to help Nature; to cleanse and tone the Liver—to correct this cause of Constipation —to improve Digestion and Appe- Second, your Liver furnishes the|tite—to Nourish and Strengthen the System—to tone the Tired and your | Overtaxed Nerves, and to send purer, Healthier Blood coursing FREE! This Coupon 1s Good for Ove Sample Bottle of Dr. Thacher’s Liver & Blood Syrup: Hi presented before the su iyen ‘away, the detail: for” distribution Is already H tb hen: aet: sboanent a Be 400 ib pn by & nen d E. Enright New York Police Head, -Tells How Yeggs. Plan Crime) cn "Gthers play the part of the ance fund in 1923 and who received |, jdue. Plans at present, as worked | session of the leg- | i Hail insurance taxes due for 1923 ts, which will reduce the act- | RICHARD EF, ENRIGHT BY HORTENSE. SAUNDERS NEA Service Writer 1 New York, March 12.—“The ok! INDIGESTION!!! of today u’es his head to save His oes His job takes more gray mat- ms of the de-} gnments were paid on | is. In paying the) ter than shoe leather. planned to make warrants pay-|equipped and more intelligent than | he has ever been,” according to Rich- | \farmer, so as to protect*the latter | ard E, Enright, New, York police commissioner. , “He has systematized banditry un- til it is operated in the efficient man- ner of a legitimate business corpora-) “Big hold-ups that involve thou- s worth of jewels or not undertaken sands of doll bank notes are the ‘casua) manner of the old wayman who held up his victims they passed by and took potluck, it were, sometimes making a worth- being stung, but taking the same risk for i = b 497,008.39 to be paid out by) Job. today are done on paper first. Drafts, plans, surveys and data th would do credit to a large industria! enterprise are collected before actual “touch” is made. ““Know your first? has become the slogan of the the woman an opinion from the attorney gen- Bae aisaainaices peters sara cial columns as well as in the finan-| stomach feels fine. Correct your in- Know where he spends|digestion for a few cents. Pleasant! his leisure time, where he plays golf,|Harmless! .Any drug store.—Adv. made. It was declared dur- cussion that the payment of what supper clubs he frequents, | what crowd he travels with and if | there is any scandal or gossip at- hed to his name. “To get this information some crooks become butlers, chauffeurs or man about town and even meet their victims sociaily before they become commercial and grab the roll. “The important thing is to get the information first hand.” One qualification for the modern bandit is that he mustn't look the part. He must dress in clothes as good ag his victims so as to avoid all suspicion, He must know how to operate a good automobile—his bést bet for a quick getaway, and rust have an assortment of number plates to change on a moment's notice to keep the police off his track. In weapons he must have the lat- est. model revolver—the —_sandbag, knife and bludgeon be! out of the modern picture. | “Yet with all this modern equip- ment, new clothes and new methods of approach,” continued the commis: sioner, “he still isn’t smart enough to renlize that the odds are against him und that he'll lose in the end. “And though the modern bandit is harder to catch than the confirmed criminal type who looks the part, in- evitably he lets slip the clue that finally trips him for all his elabor- ate plans.” Crimes follow definite cycles. There are always sensational mur- UPSET STOMACH, Instant Stomach Relief! Instant relief frem sourness, gases or acidity of stomach; from indiges- tion, flatulence, palpitation, -head- commissioner |ache or any stomach distress. now his social and business The moment you chew a_ few ing completely; Shattered GAS, GAS, GAS Chew a few Pleasant , Tablets, in” tablets your THURSDAY, MARCH 12, 1925 enough, but the good steady business, in underworld life is ‘the hold-uf This particular branch of crime at- tracts the smartest gangsters and requires the greatest. skill in han- dling on the part of the police. Commissioner Enright is an in- teresting figure in New York life. Having jumped from’ patrolman to police commissioner making stops only at the sergeancy and lieuten- ancy, and having had phenomenal success in directing the police activi- ties of the world’s largest and most congested city, he suggests a fiction- al character. And he himself is as interested in fiction as in fact. He has already written one book, “Vultures of the Dark,” and expects to write more, using the New York underworld and 4! the police department as the back- ground, “The real story of the New York crook has never been written,” he says. “There is much maudlin senti- ment regarding him, much mi formation spread and many extrava- gant yarns spun, but the real truth, stranger than fiction, has never been- revealed.’ And this is what Commissioner En- right will devote himself ‘to doing when he retires from the depart- ment. ALWAYS A FIFE ~You can lead a Sar Franciscan to a dictionary, but an earthquake is always a Life. Love - Should a woman tell her husband all thé’ ts of her past? Should she uncove things gone—but not forgot: ten? Can he hope to find happiness while hiding the truth? In the April issue of True Story Magazine, a woman to whom love and marriage brought only the deepest misery and despair, frankly tells\what it means to seek happiness in married life . While haunted by the ghostly specters of her past mistakes. Her story appears complete in April True Story under the title of “My Own Story of Love,” and is but one of 18 martkable features in this issue of America’s greatest ine. At all newsstands 25¢ man) Hail Gedemal ey whieh Tele e a A MESSAGE FOR MOTHERS charged, was 50 cents an acre for $7 ca lis : ABER Ge ere an acre insuran¢e, and that if thi) — tax were not sufficient to yield enough to meet all losses, the Syraver. }2mount should-be prorated. The maximum tax for 1923 yielded $3,- 382,000 | 586,034.82 to pay losses which to- 21,172,000 | talled $4,485,043.21. 32,057,000 == 7,778,000 1,126,000 | Names Delegates To Convention} Delegates named to represent 32} North Dakota at the’ 29th annual 30/meeting of the American Academy 27) of Political Science in Philadelphia, May 15-16,-by Governor A. G. Sorlie are Prof. John M, Gillette, head of the Department of Sociology of the farm labor to be 92.7 per cent of a|University of North Dakota; Prof. EB. T. Towne, dean of the School of Commerce, and Seth W. Richardson of Fargo, United States District At- Prisoners cost Great Britain about sold at London fur sales last year.|$500 a year to maintain. Build Yourself hould Parents IN the last few years a tremendous ade vance has been made in our knowledge of foods—the necessity and purpose of their various nutritive elements. It is now certain that the character and ability of the next generation will largely depend upon how far madern parents use this knowledge. ' \ Cook Rook. Write Raymond oducts Sdles Company Car Peat ale Compan in Gy Natigoal Bank Bung Know? Here, for instance, is a bit of in- formation of great value: As your doctor can tell you, an essential ele- ment to supply energy and vitality to the blood cells and tissues is Dextrose. And if you want a food which provides a large quantity of Dextrose—to build” vigor and rugged health in growing , children, serve them Karo. : There are three kinds of Karo— Blue, Red and Orange Labels—the nutritive value‘and digestibility of all three are practically equal, ' . F FREE—A Booklet about Dextrose every parent should read—it explains why children . thrive on Dextrose and is sent free with the new, beautifully iMustrated Corn Produ:ts lye Seca ~—onaymand & Vnlversity Axes... --, | Corm Products Sales Com; Twin Clty ‘National Bank miatial ny Bt Paul, Minn, ©. XN

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