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PAGE FOUR ‘HE BISMARCK ‘TRIBUNE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1927 oP i: . pits at the age of 80 for a meager wage, can ° =—The Bismarck Tribune have made a far greater success of his life than | No Wonder He’s Making a Howl pe Independent NER the man, for instance, who owns the mine in THE ST. mae Meet] es “bie eaens which he works. yy - Sana iL AL ALLL. fa, Che | For even in America, where we measure| “Cseterggelts Millard ae licite, ceieserea sk most things with a golden yardstick, and where} 3ismarck as second class mail matter. the man without money is a man without hon-} S D. M ident and Publisher or, it is obvious that riches do not in themselves ‘Sabscriptio able In Advance always bring happiness. And happiness, inj by carrier, Typeodiae +..$7.20|this imperfect world, remains the chief goal Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck + 7.29/for most men. | Er Gn state Ontos Giamatck) ... . 600) It is just possible that an old, toil-worn coal! -{ Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota . - 609 miner could have made for himself a happier. i : more useful life than many another man who cree nn, tesccively cat has made millions of dolla biication of all news « ise credited ocal news of spontaneous oF td sights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. MEASLES When patients are convalescing Until the seventeenth century,!from measles there is very little physicia: s believec that measles was | appetite, so if the patient is urged a mild form of smallpox and, al- to eat more food than is desired, the though the germ of the disease has / results will be even worse than would never beer. discovered, it is quite|be ordinarily soduced t overfeed- certain that measles is prod by|ing at other times. If the intake of a definite form of toxemia which comes to a crisis period mostly during the cold months, but some- times during the summer, when it C Foreign Representatives a to occur in its most vicious q rey G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY men re ‘ Pacions 6 ETR symptoms are usually stamped addressed Chores Bie Kresge Bide. be these of a catarvanal nature, with | envelope for reply. up’ " PAYNE, BURNS & SMITH r sneezing and running at the sents 7 is WINEW YORK - =: - Fifth Ave. Bidg. Tedness of the eyes and lids and,jfood is kept to the minimum for a Ea ae eS finally a slight cough. There is not| few weeks there will be less chance much fever for the first few days|of developing chronic catarrhal dis- but usually about the fourth day orders that so often follow measles. fever suddenly rises, reaching around | Tuberculosis comes on as a common 104 degrees. This extreme fever | aftermath of measles, but will al- makes the rash break out on the/ways be avoided if the patient is skin, and as soon as the body isikept to a strict diet and gr@dually entirely covered with a rash the! replaces his strength through sys- fever oo. to ares ok Se exercises. appears first on the fore! an behind the ears, but spreads rapidly Questions and Answers over the entire body. As soon as} Question: Mrs. R. W. writes: “I there is a good eruption of poisons, have had the itch now for six bec (Official City, State and County Newspaper) bi fro Of Importance to Bismarck n of the war department to e: §-8ish a Citizens’ Mil Training ca: at Fort in@Lincoln, sending her 0 Da- th Sota and the northern t ing for Football tto puta fe the red rash disappears and becomes/ months. All the baths, soaps and of ave a more pink. ointments do not cure or help me, dmlistance whic At the very start of this disease | and I am most anxious to have relief nouravel will be consi the patient should be given warm from this trouble.” isponge baths at least eyery two! Answer: Every kind of itch which hours during the day, and as soon|does not come from an outside in- |as the fever subsides and the rash | fection can be cured by dieting. The begins to disappear, the skin should! main change is to regulate your also be treated by applications of | food combinations so as to overcome jel of magnesia applied after the|excess stomach acidity which is the sponge baths. This counteracts the ; principal cause of any acidosic which jacids and irritants which are being produces skin irritation. jthrown out through the skin, and is | Question: Sylvia writes: “In very soothing to the patient. After England I have eaten a vegetable she diching has disappeared. the fre-| called ‘John-go-to-bed-at-noon.” Is ss ma: iscon- 3, i i: tinued and only used andes or twice | this vegetable grown in this or the camp, a Liquor traffic, which is still hob-|daily, after which the sitin should be COU?” E coal sake every € Frog omy ee a el ee el with almond oil. | Answer: This vegetable is known Wrere pleasant. The see In measles, as with every other |in this country as salsify, or oyster “ ° fever or eruptive disease, no regular |Plant. When the plant is left in me A er Eda! Arcs food of any kind should be een to the ground during the winter, the wrote and cited business prosperity,|th« patient. A plain water fast |Young flower stocks which come up higher standards of living, lower |™may be used, but the rash will ap-/the following spring close during death rate, higher sehool and col-|Peaf more quickly if she juice of the middle of the day—hence the really rep-|lege gttendance, less crime among Several oranges is taken daily. The |name you refer to, os of a fa-| boys, increased savings banks and/0range juice seems to@ have a stim-| Question: Mrs. C.F.S. writes: “I certainly | s0 on. ° | Hae! producing : ren i have wage ish se for a number of Sahuay EIA | ; elimination ‘ough the skin and,|years with my back hurting. My present the satastion | oa oe a pea piece, be ny consequently, the fever goes down |trouble is one to the right of my decreased 21 per cent and arrests | MOTE rapidly. {backbone at the hip. I am enclosing {for intoxication 32.6 per cent. Fur- Food should not be given to the'a diagram and have marked just La-| thermore, the government had is-| Patient until all signs of the fever | where the pain is.” no statement about 200, ,00 | have disappeared for at least twenty-| Answer: The cross on your dia- cotleggers—“Wish best ‘wishes for! four hours. The first meals should|gram marks the place in your back et your friends, I am yours st bie wholly of non-starchy vege-| where pain often develops from kid- or, a@ great thing for wpooperate to insure » yefhat can best be a othing possible to S03ismarck and want to r peamps. lo: LETTE BY RODNEY DUTCHER J rvice Writer Nov. 5—Down at y Academy some x, ell: he Honkers th Maybe the fellow who hon paoudest and longest i ‘ jus the most important person in cet we doubt wg If you're nervou n ly | tionat ” tables, gradually adding eggs, meat /ney stones, gallstones, or oe Kees in rel tone ee letter may be had Labatt ions./ Seed nage Nose the Se iPnly 8 catef diag- ese honker: oys from the Methodirt Board ich | Protes “sebagai € | nosis would tell just what is causing . | published it without names. which Inon-starchy diet. ~Sour_particular trouble. s. such as ginger ale. s them out inal Itsas not be going any-, they're not, but they , #1 to get there the sa and y d think they are i ms of life und death to hear the imperative blasts. m There are other ways of showing selfishness hat are not so blatant and asinine as th of You are just one little car in a traffic jam| : I “ind all the honking in the world can’t help|over with a bang the Unless one of Lamar’s classmates has a father among officers of the! Moderation Leavue or the Associa-! ang s amendeee eh the henge 4 € mar pro! a) . ic be the academy’s authority me el Anne Aus om, hibition from now on. | “Oh, J guess it’s not much use.” happy! Do you think he liked bei | Bob said, “trying te explain a man’s 2 tyrant, that he i psychology to a womgn. A woman that every little m a | translates every generality into a s | personal insoh. I suppose we'd bet-. No dr Paris -~° | ter get home. Look! The streets ig j are almost deserted. And the lights P “ou out of it. When you're caught, the best ————————— . ‘ | have gone out over the theater. It’s 5 9 rs : o: a 2 ov. 5—If you believed the ch o! —4 id etching toe do after all is to accept the situation ied on, aaa | a peach of a night—as crisp as cold! ty philosophically and “pipe down.” | Editorial Comment cchocl, etadente as it pe : iat Paris contained Ute esters Male | Be ™ If motorists the world over devoted the same A s cel ie ed churches, museums and ae | "Please go om, dear.” she plead- + qassiduous energy to learning how to drive that The Scolding of Senator Fess it ts x I pon believed the average myth, ed, fighting back her tears and j Chev lend to the button of their horn. there + “Certain people, sections and; FB would conrinde thet Parie was gm determinedly with her lips. (Minneapolis Journal) wept this | hyoula be fewer accidents. And less waste-| ' (ul and nerve-jangling racket. Y ate ae a haa ore f thi ‘our average doctor still has a trait of the} “The Buckeye leader does not understand Ver: Imedieval man of pills, or to go back farther in mont He doe He) know that “I do ime, the witch doctor. He loves to puzzle and) choose” among Vermonters means “I will n communities a wes just acting—like nine wile. | verdict im regard E | Give me another chance, darling.” | although it hed by ter and the churches, tombs | “Good old Faith’* Bob's b T i | closed over hers tightly. are ~ | real thoropghbred, honey! And é = “| it’s sweet of you to give me @ chance : >; BBC ocher greet to vir these half-baked views of| cities where large messes of immi- jt sts from Europe heve beer kept Mr. Coolidge, it appears, has taken his g friend and occasional spokesman, Senator Fi lof Ohio, aside and rebuked him in good s j terms. is = . a uninformed in regerd to American i + talking nystify. He likes to pronounce big Latin) Ever since the famous ten words were han astitetieed jad teen, Med Bey ce is i - weg: | toe ace Tat > since the en Sons . ied by : : ible to| sbout—the kind you're in danger of | sords. He adores discussing ordinary ailments, |out in typewritten precision to the report f their great newspapers, have t f frossesticiey, ragh tack vate m such a way that the mere common garden| in the Black Hills, he has been going about 4 tried to break prohibition own neck-| think of : rariety of peman can’t understand what he’s clering that Mr. Coolidge can and will be draft- . ‘ {ed by the Republican convention. = Pickett, had | : F pootag a Pig ae aioe oe Eon Now, any ordinary man might make that being sold fhere than oer before. seed violation of th lew and tried has read tor’s ©. a i a leas: try send this informet i. hi ee : prediction without offense. But for the pres =o that a witness can’t be Present dent's own recognized mouthpiece in the sen- /** *°* ** ft mate says there is more bo { he is suffering from “lumbar filson-| ate to ed such a thing, and td sae 4 Se it = happened thet ; Séy| “The existing sitneti fe eons ._ jit, might easily tend to convict Mr. Coolidge of , Picke made @ survey of «: itaution i | i a “What on earth is that?” asks the magis-| iteinerits, of « ae one thing and Gasanine a Batisle rather recently trate. “It sounds very terrible. : lanother. While that danger might not much fiecicet Hostnalgpelg tata bom -® “A strained back,” says the lawyer in the! concern most public men, it troubles Mr. Coo the 3 “Well, why on iit hese 60 i plain! idge greatly—so greatly, in fact, that, for th first time so far as known, since the Black’, english?” retorted the magistrate. lay ‘ hn his si eee Sete ae aches fervent amen. bes surprise. he has broken his silence long 3 Pea if y 3 enough to scold Senator Fess. A The senator has done what he could to clear} ; ” ig ag ag gga he y | the president of complicity in any “draft Cool- ; | , diane ro “ike me husband.” € Slowly, very slowly, but surely, the young igge” talk, by straightway making public con- av . = couse all. : pom ay Hi i @ more chance it has sa . Sef ae 1 Her x | Mand on its own feet. But its enemies within siajpagalad upatis oe —_ a ae A a able, and Dad's wasn't any too! (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.) far more dangérous than its enemies with- Junker class, all the court syco-: monocled officers, all those who prestige with the vanishing of monarchy, are still sighing for the good days. How persistent they are is shown; an incident that occurred recently. In the mand that Mr. Coolidge could not refuse. Maybe so, maybe so. But just at the signs do not point that way. Got ALL“TH” Votes couusteD’ The Right to Kill 1 FAVOR OF “TH” DUMMY, es (Duluth Bene) » x 2 ngland is talking of the case of a father | rracks of one of the Reichswehr regiments|who drowned his three-year-old daughter to. following pronunciamento against |save her from further suffering from a so-| fas painted on the wall: jcalled incurable disease. | | The judge before whom this father was tricd| \for murder told the jurx that it might con-| \sider the analogy between the child in the case| and a suffering animal. He said that if it had been an animal instead of a child, putting it, ‘out of its suffering would have been praised) : ‘instead of being blamed. And so the jury ac- em, nd E a Wage ouitted the father. | € $22.50 a week, was interviewed by a Lon-|” While many British bewspapers approve the/| newspaper, the other day on the subject, | acquittal, all of them do so on the ground that | I made a success of life. the case is exceptional, and all declare that! s rather obvious. The news-' tere should be no relaxing of the laws pro- interbiew undoubtedly went :ecting human life. ; t it that its readers would; “Yet what would be more likely to relax these! idea of an aged miner. taws than this acquittal, and this public ap-| 4!