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» ail - = ee oy | PAGE FOUR nie 1The Bismarck Tribune THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE '_wsiuNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1928 Narger the city the greai jtages and the more : ( An Independent Newspaper sources of a tion, F ( ‘ THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER many of the best things in life the people of| Fe 3 esabiished 1873) the smaller communities must go to the big) BI Published by the Bfemarck Tribune C.mpany, Bis-| Cities. marek, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bis-} But there is also matck as second class mail matter. | tineti ft urbe George D. Mann ..- ...President and Publisher; UNClion of urban size and population its Subscription Rates Payable in Advance | more like so many Daily by carrier, per year 7.29'turbed ant hill. Homes Daily by mail, per ye 20' The few blocks between hom Sati state outside Bismarck), ..... ployment become miles. P ? Daily by mail, vutside of North ‘Dakota cost of living keeps pace with | wth in| population, and even the pure air and quiet are 05 | taken away. for the dis-! ty grows In, ecome more and ants in a dis-| ome tenements. | and place of em- Poutica, § sc CORRUPTIONST Loma, BRIGHT’S DISEASE In yesterday’s article I explained the cause and cure of acute nephritis and explained that a rapid recovery must be continued for several weel order ta produce the dgsiredl re sults, Strenuous work must be “avoided, may be gi ee! in this disorder) but a certain amount of physi if simple eliminative measures are oF Weekly by mail, in state, per year ......- 1 Weekly by mail, .a state, three yea: 2. 5 ; r | — 5 = we 1, ide of Not As they build higher and wider let the towns | ) 4 LD = used to aid the overworked kidneys \Dr. McCoy will gladly answer | 1.59; and cities heed these words of an official of | (ote ‘ é l) f Mepirsbesie Be ate Ea acl personal ‘questsone cm bessth and the United States Chamber of Commerce: : enn Ane tes ed diet, addressed to him. care of ever, offers many difficulties. Tou y In the chronic Hoes cae of the symptoms are present which are scen 4 in acute nephritis. There will be elope for reply. dropsy, and albumin and casts in . the urine. Sometimes, due to the | exercise should be taken in the form persistent injury of the mgr ee of calisthenic exercisc3 and wal 4 toxins, these organs will en Re, Alcohol, tobacco, condiments, and all! but in certain types of nephritis the| highly seasoned f “should bel opposite occurs and the kidneys be- | avoided, and the salt intake should come small and hard. In the most| be small, serious form of chronic nephritis} Patients who are only partially there will be a persistent high blood} cured may live for from %en tol pressure, often reaching as high as|twenty years after the direase is 250 to 300 millimeters, over-1, brt a com.,lete cure is! Where the acute form of nephritis i ible if the patient is willing si disappears quickly, under proper|live an abstemious life, with a diet treatment, the chronic form is a very| carefully regulated and ai) habits serious disorder and requires pro-|of life properly balanced. longed treatment with diet and other) It is better to live in = warm, hygienic measures for correcting the| climate, where the skin activity wiit faulty metabolism and toxic poison-|be greater. The essenttz? thing to ing which is present. As in the| remember is to ketg all the elimin- acute form, the kidneys retain that/ ative chanses fresly open, and to which should be thrown out, andj avoie habits which may induce throw out what the blood should|* general toxemia. , retain. —_ + The treatment with fastiem, and * QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS diet is much the same in acute and} Question: ‘Edward writes: “My, chronic gprtritis, except that in ajageé is twenty. How can I strengthen’ chronic form it is generally neces-| my heart?” mt sary to give tne patient a reason-| Answer: The heart may be able amount of protein in his diet|strengthened through systematic in oréer to make up for the loss of| physical culture and by living on a albumin which is thfown out in the! careful diet. Only a small amount arine. The fast should be followed ‘of the right kind of food should be with a non-starchy and non-protein ' used, and care must be observed in ——_—_—_—_———| dict for three or four weeks, and avoiding all inharmonious mixtures = then protein adced in the form of of food whith luce excessive “While the existence of a town or city de-| Member of The Associated Press ee Acctchody y <The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the Lyte ined Gi atges dy ale wae ae ie use for republication of all news dispatches credited | . 8s the profits of business make life to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper, and | in that town constantly more and more wort! : also the local news of spontaneous origin published | living.” ‘ ‘ Sipe gpa SA ae ee It is as important to the community to guard ef against the disadvantages of bigness as it is Foreign Representatives to strive for bigness, and the place that grows G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY wisely need not regret its greater size. NEW YORK - ~ - Fifth Ave. Bidg. f | CHICAGO « anes j fore Bi ee Editorial Comment | (Official Clty, State and County Newspaper) | i Cruel to Wyoming | London Fog (New York Times) The London fog is up against it. The charge) The president’s curt refusal to “waive his brought against it is not that it resembled pea-! personal preference,” at the request of the Re-! | soup but that it costs money. In three years) publican state committee in Wyoming, and conr- | there have been 27 days of real fog, which| sent to take another nomination, may be in-| | caused the busses to lose 434,457 miles. Aj terpreted according to the taste and fancy ot} 4 lost mile can never be recovered, and each lost| each man who reads it. It is one of those re- | mile represents lost transportation for a great| marks, like Captain Cuttle’s, the bearing of] number of persons. which lies in its application. If the original! Not only is this grave assertion of malicious| announcement by Mr. Coolidge that he would interruption to traffic brought against the/not run for the presidency this year meaht ab- London fog, but its character is assailed. Its | solutely what it said, this new declination adds thumb prints have been taken; its make-up nothing to it. If the other was inconclusive. The experts declare it to be nothing/so is this one. It will not prevent the gentle more nor less than a soot-laden white mist, so| drafters from going on with their drafting. On heavy that the cold higher atmosphere can’t|the theory that the president intends to keep! ; t r id ay N| { eggs and the more easily digestible stomach intestinal gas. depport: it, and down it comes to the warm earth Himnself entirely out of the fight before the n: VAS l INU l if ' beeen Meetclod wn £8 daily | Pret et ah 8. writes: “I like a blanket. Gradually the heat dissolves tional convention meets at Kansas City, but sik “ by ben Ayal enh ee oar anil the mist, but not the soot which remains as a! prepared later to yield to a unanimous demand ! It is important to keep up good grapejuice is harmful to people hace gratuitous contribution to the real estate of at he spa again, all his utterances on tie i skin ec Ronseiieve oe {8a-| ing high blood pressure, ih ‘am very London, nF ee oh re aldara seh aor Loner . if : aralvenbakerer sh baths should pressure, would like. to . pe to convert the descend-|Plained as being merely “devilish sly.” But if BY RODNEY DUTCHER . yards of red tape ought to be thrown pial Pepe oe Nod get _be | sure Sovet tee. seme comes down by itself |that would be consistent with the character of NEA Service Writer Jont.of the government. She wants of the able clantead. “On aioweral” anwar oe ae rink i ay 4 Mr. i “i ignity ;j-| Washington, Marcly 28.—Tens of the darned thing speeded up. and, leposits, forms a coating of |Mr. Coolidge, or with the dignity of the presi- : ig speed dirt. es tens gbeosticnn it is decided to|dency, one man can judge as well as another. | thousands of ahaa quite a rode! “The human mind,” she explained, focus public energy on the expulsion of soot} Several prominent Republicans who have of them distinguished persons, come | has a certain capacity for sustained fa . = | te dd Washi ‘year, |interest. Our one great defect is from lion. If this is achieved the London desperately clung to the hope that the presi-|(oj'no ene ever sain ttees te per that we in this country are speeded should be used if the skin will re-act | lent food drink and when used sh shel warm gioe afterwards. It is|be taken in place of a dei whe best to use at least one enema daily |tween meals, but not in addition to X as long as there is any albumin|an ordinary meal. Those with a ten- showing in the urine, or as long|dency to high blood Pressure should 7 sn i i “apene ‘ti ; j BY RUTH DEWEY GROVES} | as any other symptoms of nephritis |use the grapejuice to whi ground-hog will disappear. x dent might be persuaded to change his mind|fectly legitimate question, likely to|up to a certain tempo. I ny juice to which no sugur It seems as though some one might have|now give it up.’ Senator Fess of Ohio is among provoke many ee et cettee lisennn ne Ea Feral be ts ry "tor the be been added WP. writes: « thought of that before. them. He regards the turning down of the) Miran ® You think of our govern: |inci eet of us are slaves to time.| That was a blow in the solar|lungs can assist a great deal in|have an infected finger uplcr and Wyoming Republicans as a “final” indication|"“This neglect may be largely due|The government isn’t and it simply | plexus, as Alan would say. Your] liminating Lacy tire te pon the nail, -How can I kill the The State in Parent Role that Mr. Coolidge will not yield. This infer- to Washington's smug sense of self- | doesn’t ee eee parade. i erinion. = my tool ng toward sh mone Pane ba toreis vel - i fection?” ea are =| ii i i J ici > which, i st thick} is quite natural that the foremos' et or ¥ ; 4 ly over It is hardly a sq u haere to — tl er SRE aha Lad out oe ae cecum eee ie wy of politicians sharchers should forget those who|think I’ve encouraged him but hon- teh should bo taken Sere re infection now, fore you read . suade them that their duties and respo 8 of this latest deliverance by the presi-) v0 have to count their votes closely. | strazgle far in the rear. estly I haven't. luring the day, and even at nig! answer. It is unwise for any toward their children have been taken overdent. He did not need to reply to the Wyom-|On the other hand, it may be that| “A government of the people, by And to prove I don’t delight in|if the patient is awake. In all, one/of my correspondents to wait for Govceemeneia! and welfare agencies and)ing appeal at all. It came only from a party] the ae waa aac cones time| the people and for the people might having him mooning over me I’ve|F ~ — of water should be = pps in this column in order then, when the children turn out badly, berate/committee. The case was not like complying, |!ong ago and revealed that the aver-|be expected to cater to the temper-|told him that if~he doesn’t stop| Used daily. 0 find out how to treat an acute 5 ‘ A visi i i t of th le. acting as rsonal Santa Claus|_, A milk diet will often prove bene-|trouble. A safe treatment f the parents for neglectfulness. or refusing to comply, with a statutory pro- saverninent and hardy fea gf wi arBut it doem't—and that applies |I won't have anything more to do|ficial in the treatment of nephritis infected finger is to soak the entire * There has been apparent for a number of} Vision that he must file his consent to have.his|one. Personally, your correspondent |to Congress, the courts and the/with him, or’any other kidney disease. one “rsd in water as hot as can be years a process of taking out of the parent’s)Name entered in a presidential primary. He|has been appalled at the number of | whole system, which travels at the; Alan found out al e per-|two or three quarts of milk daily} borne, using this treatment for as ‘ards the guardianship of the child. More) might have ignored the whole thing. And|faitly intelligent ‘and supposedly, szme old pacey ‘eting tanle'asl. f deel "one |e glass. cf milk ray. hoor, pew-lend topenting is mines ofa? git nd more have juvenile courts, the schools, wel-|there is an air of annoyance in the way in| Whether Borah iso congressman,| Miss Hurst is not one of those| what business Alan had to be snoop-| ceded by a few drops of lemon juice|In between times a mild antiseptic i ies, movements and organizations| Which he dismissed it. Jt is as if he had said|i¢ congress doesn't meet. at o crabs the Senate for the num-|ing around there, He also discovered| which help’ in the stimulation of should be applied to the affected : onsi for the physical, moral|to his private secretary, “Why do they keep| White Hotes and whether every bi;;|crous investigations. The senatorial|a note from, Billy. There wasn't|&2stric secretions. This milk diet! parts. umed responsibility for the ions children,{On bothering me about this? Just tell themn| city doesn’t send a senator here. |inauity, she believes, is a vital in-|a thing iq’ it that, the whole ‘world [mt A et mental well-betng-of the nation’s chilirep. that I won’t do it.” i Pega stitution. couldn’t read but Alan said I'd have | house instead of the office? That's) bol of old Greenwich Village, with a ; The other day your correspondent! Miss Hurst recently brought out|to stop robbing the cradle. where men have the advantage. If|her gay Gipsy shawls, her bright d conseq' nts have lost| Perhaps the president will soon have Sec-| discussed some of these ideas with|a book called “A President Is] Well, I decided not to make a|I wanted to carry on a secret corre-| waists and her “arty” tea rooms, on aanee of vesponsibility ond their children|Tetary Sanders prepare a form letter for such| Fannie Hurst, the authoress, who Born.” Without knowing anything|crisis out of it. I want everyting | spondence I'd have to hire a post-|The man who trains fleas in the have ceased to recognize parental authority. 4 . here to tell a Senat ittee about the novel, your correspond-jto be peaceful when Florence gets| office box. _ Broadway belt it occasions. It would be convenient to have one of the horrible singe tae feed, Pee ent became bold and asked her whenjhere though how long it will re-| That’s what made me hot—to have|from the four ile And moe To criticize parents who have been. encouraged ready when Mr. Hilles of New York makes his! in the ees mining , com- an ros the next on bik main that nh 4 age pensions in ~ Tony go Mig ms his office. “Cotte ligase” Mary (ips sepcgrd 3 Y @} nex Y ji rafti e| munities. ‘ith apologies, he asked born. veryone here is. asking 81 snooping aroun lon’ ow. n_ suspected | of e Battery lunch te: ‘ to resign their child-raising duties to the state} Tm peupronmls re ep aubhees: ar ning the what che thought of our government questions these days.) Just as if he had a right to|I’d open hié mail. I wouldn't have|an hour when the good folky wre at i fair. : : “Well, y, the | object. t ti i t|read the old letter if it already} bed i or public otal dren of this gen- graphed copy of No. 90 would save time in the a irle ncttider he oseee is Wash- rowel an ie Lg gh hag Tittle note ‘tee Billy after I dis- been open a. But pions te the stiepe ere it regard The accusation the \- | executive offices. ~ington,” said Fannie. Hurst, “is born.” covered a letter in his pocket from|way she addressed him I felt I had\ presses: ‘ eration are more incorrigible than those of for- agreeably shocked to learn that there; Your correspondent braced him-|that freak friend of his; you re-|the right to read the very end. I| And so it goes. \For the half-wit mer generations can only be accepted as an Mistakes in Newspa7e: really is a capital. ‘self against the radiator he had|member the one I saw him lunch-|don't think “Old Fruit” ‘is any way|lad of the tank town railroad ste. admission that the tremendous amount of child 6 7 pene Ts “We, the well known people, pre-'been sharing with Miss Hurst and/ ing with when Norman was here? |to start a letter to'a married man. ie and the crippled pencil peddlers fi welfare work done in recent years has been (Princeton, Minn., Union) : tend to rum our government. ut | admitted the probability.; But—? was getting his suit ready for Dearest love, of the subways hold about the same Last week the Union published elect we aren’t even close to it. We de-| “From the standpoint of general|the tailor which is one of the slav- MARYE. {rank as public characters. - more harmful than beneficial. ti fi Fy eH I a election Fe-| store a great many things, but we| equipment,” said' Miss Hurst, whol ish things he expects of me; and] NEXT: Mom holds up the mirror} One ee this town’s most incon- Even though the younger generation is more turns from eight villages and nine townships |never bother to think about them.’ lives in New York, “it ought to be| when I emptied the inside — coat| to Marye. gruous spots remains, thé horse ( a _|in the county and from five precincts in neigh-| We don’t act.” {Al Smith, | The whole tolerance and | pocket I found the tell-tale missive.| (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.)|™arket. Here, within’ walking dis- Py unruly and-wayward—and there are many P8t-lboring counties. These returns, a num'er of| Did Miss Hurst, in” her goings decency of the nation is at stake.) "I happened to remark that if he *"*-) tance of Broadway, men of “raral _ ents who proudly claim that there was never 8| which were received over the telephone, carried |*0ut, find any particular interest This opposition to Smith based on| couldn't bear to destroy her corre-|@————_______________»|appearance come every morning to better crop of youth than the present—the ad- the names of betweeh 140 and 150 fan didates. pared the citizenry on what went his religion is probably the tans mpomeenre ba re meee his rae i. IN NEW YORK | alk borae flesh and dicker in horses, vocates of the Spartan theory of child raising! rection news which always comes in the day|°“Ncr the slightest!” ‘replied Mus ee time. Our toleration will bejous, the silly, and when he peied|® + | swapped sina ene ariee, are | Prejudice their case by inveighing against the|hefore publication must necessarily be handled | Hurst. “An_important and intelli proved or disproved by his election! around, and discovered. Billy's ‘note| New York, March 28—Larry, the h the aroma of haylonded s indifference of parents and talking sc wi x Tint, gent type refuses to have anything |or defeat. The issue is one of man’s|he said he felt. he had more right] pigm: messenger boy, is a consider- jig Horses are walked up and ith much speed. So far as the Union knows eh 4 . judi ” pigmy nger hoy, ip loudly of the unruly state of the youth of to- manneat wa ade in th i - |to do with it. A wha‘’s-the-use ' prejudice to man. to be jealous than I had. As though| ably better known figure in and|down the streets, often interfering day. . sre made in the names of two candi-| spirit is abroad in the land. And the | Wasn't it, just -possible that Smith! you could compare the attentions of| about Manhattan than, say, J. P.| With the hectic auto traffic’ Mon, t fe dates. Possibly there were more mistakes, and | intelligent vote in this country, under might be licked by other factors a kid like Billy to the expert vamp-| Morgan or John D. Rocketeer, stand about corners with straws in if there were not, it would be very surprising, |our form of government, is really . A 4 ing of his girl friend. Larry is a sort of gnome, just a;their teeth. It is a tiny of of Trade If there were no other errors, that is an effi. imperative.” Hieege [ae don't believe,” said Miss Hurst Of course, 4 don't object to Alan/ bit too tall to goality as a side-show ores Nabe smells and horse _ , Before the Eamaee Canal pug forepiated ciency record of 98.66 per cent. Blas Hort thosshtia tow Dillon cthikeceae gad ge ete ynidget ang wey, ice. PP ages the midst of the go atest pad Admir ral Mahan, whose fame The Union has no apology to offer f Sai a ii ep fF nen cies Sere see os 4h <i on saanonues IS eh P of bobbi GILBERT SWAN, | maritime history spread throughout the world, |ing errors in those ae eee ata it is anos " from behind the office waste basket | (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) wrote that it would in time be of special value to state that reasonable individuals need no|| O'R POAPDING HOUSE as though some Aladdin had rubbed o to the great Mississippi basin. explanation. Names that go into the averaze : — : i ‘They, know. him*in at least halt|| BARBS ; | ' He counted on an expansion of the trade of jnewspaper are handled b: fat four oan ‘ . . : the offices of the mid-town section ¥ ~ the Middle West which would flow through the sons from the time Fgh 5 receive’ in ‘the EGAD MAX, MY GOOD MAN, Sl NUW~AUH!4 BAD ENousH ard in mont of the ‘Broadway "bullae * ewe hardly what you'd call a Gulf to the West coast of South America, | office until they appear in print. With the To GRAMT You “He CHANCE F ; Ss AN’ ings, - Office employes use him for| hear chance these in Wi ts "4 Y app PI AM GOING : A I PRESS Your BAT: ranks on each other when he comes days ss the East and to the Pacific coast of the jchances for four persons to make errors on be- to FAME AND FORTUNE, AS “THE Get DER MONEY, {ocdeliver messages. ‘And he suaies| Steet: eee United States. In this as in some of his other|tween 140 and 150 names, 2 report of only two| + ao fo FASHION AND MAKE = ef ne GO MAKIN’ a healthy income from ‘the accruing |’. They called Lindbergh “Lon : : . 4 . HALL 1e analyses Mahan was ahead of his day. ._,, _,|mistakes would be a record in which any news- MY FIRST AVIATOR'S INFLATABLE FINN’ SurT FOR A @ ee eee Eagle.” We suggest for the gentle- ( - . Industgy. and agriculture in the Mississippi|paper might well take much pride. p A For the in the world is| 2" Who sims to shoot himself to ¥ basin is only beginning to profit from the canal.| Individuals who are working in a newspaper EMERGENCY SUIT, OUT OF Alt ANVUMGATOR, AW HE GOES £ no different a smallest Main Venus in a rocket “the lone cuckoo.” : he Pacific and Atlantic coasts have profited | office are not perfect—they are liable to make ELASTIC RUBBERIZEP MATERIAL! ]"| 700, up nd “TH” AIR, DEN. Street. hamlet when it comes tol after the Missourt legislature had occasional mistakes like other human beings. ae THINK MAN, OF <THE I Don't see Him No es ee sae ee proprinted $10,000, te strengthen If they were perfect, they would have a mighty WORLD-WIDE PUBLIC*.Y You MORE “To GET MY ‘MONEY, inence. -. | ‘ : ja Bagreg Rest gala Mea lonesome time in this world because they would ET lun BY SOVE.. . Thus when Mary, “the apple wom-| tory» a 0 ? WILL G Bi Ee, Be ‘4 tor who had been awarded the Wiad no other geitoct h hele. with wh A . aww AN HE SHALL an” of the Wall district, dis- Job ind no other perfect human beings with whom SIX MONTHS, You WILL . E " announced that his had been to associate, ae FLYIN” MAYBE “To < appeared about: @ year ago,, there! high and that he could do. the terk The Union in one issue handled approximately WAVE _A TAGTORN As ine SWEDEN fu HA-A out ‘of the newspapers as though ie $7,500. Ca § to [ogee 1,500 names. If persons who have a tendency NOTHING BUT M' ; Hig lehe heiress to ‘millions had vanished at ae a ue fe, the con- to become: unduly excited if a wrong letter Pe Fe Lipari Mreer Mary o 98 @ the effect might be if| appears in a name would stop to consider their tion, but Wall Street clerks, sten-|, Jt’s rather dangerous to have un- “A piopmcrd on Sites average, boy would not be sur- oe piling Biogen = beeiton dee as er Z hard trans- | prised if they occasionally see an error in some P| A popula song’ writer denies that sad rcs name published in a newspaper. are @ number of Bowery » popular ‘agen steal tunés " ying Newspapers go to press with the proof read- characters equally well known, thought ~/ Just as we ry pe sey of per narraing that errors will p eppeer. pet ae Fes anes: t ie Seteation boo eee Y lication is a newspaper and not a history, Bowe: Sess Prohibition isn’t and there is not time to check until the last dz: that, in 25 Years he bas never been |g Srominent polittan. "Tho pes: tail is correct. fimeclt aa potted are talking = lot about prohi- ‘A good example of the accuracy which the street, : give icf tat dant | average city daily can afford to work for in ee” ooh gy ees Ree listing news was furnished ori Monday evening feting him in the “he looks | 4, novelist alb women are by the Minneapolis Journal, one of thé leading ase ke |mental dubs. " Wonder‘ the newspapers of the northwest. The Journal in flesh pots rn hence ph Ss writen ome book or ether ting the names of the eight delegates that Ce are ie: dealt meet 2] (Copyright, 1928, NIZA Service, ine.) ar eee —_ Lacs oom; a suniag hog state con- P i jon mana: to get five je names cor- ial size: Among cities| rect, and the list of names was furnished in lets of. y typewritten copy. “Axel Anderson” appeared as “Peter An er val “Silas Li ey Wi berg” as gherg.’ ‘willing to wager a. handsome eee .