The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 4, 1928, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THURSDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1928 The Bismarck Tribune, As Newspaper You might take warning from \. THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER | aod learn hew to card year | Jamp to the conclosion that (Established 1873) 7, Bis | but if you x postoffice st ‘Pebiished Bismarck Tribune Com! merck, X. vied ceceret at the Be af Bis | troit lady, i} matter. D. Mana <n... Presidect and Publisher | or even acquaintances; and ail her pro pleas would not more him. that I advise in cases of tuberculosis stands on| The patients must avoid wasting their nervous energy. Short period: A will | Dr. McCoy eS an $.00 thus when autumn’s tints are on ¢ * 600) becomes burdensome during the latter half of the af-} \ternoon. To baseba. ery part of the] all the superlatives of p these glands we may look of super men The H glands or adrenals are two a is of fru capsules, one attached to the upper! followed by a diet rich in proteinr part of each kidney. _. | and non-starchy vegetables, prove It bas long been known that a dis-/ the most satisfactory dietary mea- ease of these organs produces exten-| sure. 2 2 sive changes within the body. The/ This treatment is also beneficial most pronounced symptom of a dis-| in certain cases where there is a de- ease is a bronzing of the skin simi-j ficiency of adrenal secretion. In lar to ins from walnut juice.| some of these cases where the hair Sometimes this stain is very faint,| has fallen out in patches it will and can only be detected on the! grow in again if the adrenal glands mucoms membranes of the mouth,! are quickly to their norma! but it may become so extensive as | functioning through the fasting and to cause the skin to resemble that of | diet treatment. suprarenal Questions and Answers capsules has been termed “Addison’s} Question: W. J. L. writes: “Your Disease” in honor of the man who | articles are well worth reading, and first des-ribed it. The term “Addi-| we derive knowledge and common son’s Disease” usually means tuber-| sense from them. Will you please culosis of ie suprarenal capsules, | tell me if an enlarged kidney which | although Addison included any dis- | has caused three or four hemorr- for a race ee tea: ! of is exclusively entitled to ¢! Associated Press it area of five to eight days of fruit fasting maper, anc leted v: Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY NEW YORK Fifth Ave Bldg cmcaco DETROIT ez Bldg. Eresge Big. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) eben dev daca s aneceeer er eapeves UEP OOO TOT AremEE SEEDS OF SOCIALISM z. ke HO Ont on SE etn rene ee mere ) druggist and customer used to looking on the drug ; P sunk, in 1919, in an engagement with a Bolshevik war- 1 1 i ‘ t J 1 s « ' t Pi t t L 1 ' i 1 } A pied Tl city is, in some de danger. The soap-box orator demanding state confiscation of gree, s eyes to glaring abuses, crooked counts at el @fator ammunition that can make him powerful. - ‘The radical is neither popular nor numerous in the | United States today. But, as Governor Fuller warns, the will increase amazingly unless we have a drast housecleaning in our politics. Once let the average | a become convinced that present-day political ma-j ines are beyond reform and you will see a growth 4m socialism that wil! astound you. | THE NEW DRUG STORE The drug store of the old days was a place where you could buy drugs and little else. Today it is a place where you can buy anything from fishing tackle to phonograph records. How did it happen? Dr. Logan Clendenning, writing in the American Druggist, believes that the humble postage stamp is to blame. The public had a way of wanting postage stamps at Dery odd hours; and it began to discover that the drug store was apt to be the only place open. The druggist was forced to carry stamps. This got both store as a convenient place for emergency purchases; and the druggist gradually began to stock up with other things that people might want. Out of it grew the drug store of today. THE MEN WHO DIE IN SUBS _ England recently gave military burial to the bodies taken from the hull of a British submarine which was ship in the Baltic sea. The Russians recently brought ‘the submarine to the surface. = One wonders how the relatives of these dead British | i feel. What did these men die for? England not officially at war with Russia. The World war was over. Their deaths accomplished nothing. soviet is as secure today as it would have been if it submarine had stayed at home. | The answer, of course, is that some British officials excited and blundered. It was alla mistake. That tmay be cold comfort for the relatives of the dead f but it is about all that can be said. A NEW ‘QUENT IN ROOSEVELT’ odore Borutzki, veteran of the German army who to America after the war, became a naturalized citizen in Oskosh, Wis., the other day. To that he renounced all allegiance to his former , be not only gave up his name, but surrendered of his most prized possessions—an iron cross heroism under fire while fighting for the kaiser. his new name this immigrant chose the name of Roosevelt. And his iron cross will go to end, fastened to a wreath, will be placed on iting tale. Somehow, we have a feel- - s the making of ship models { materials. A AUTOS AND W) f India, 2s we z BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) yhad each been a damn fool—what would you be?” The colonel must have that was going to end it, but be- fore the crowd could laugh the the around here to date have been pret-/ ae |: Two samples: | | Chairman Raskob showed sense in hastening to repudiate talk ‘about Candidate Hoover's drinking. Editorial] Comment ENGLISH AND AMERICANESE ‘officials in Washington whose name is not a ek in paoaeaee ae fied drinking in high» places. le ‘seldom if ever been seen at drink- ing parties here and it is common report that he has not served a Grink in his house since he entered the cabinet. One hears that Jy other one t knows was pulled by a. t who wired in to a radio sta- r many years of co di tors Curtis and Robinson, the presicential tes, | gee —— , | Provides the last scene in the endless scenario of the soil. West street tells you, as you walk through its crate-laden lanes, he sites (or omnes nel Jaber ee gone on through many seasons in many yhically scattered points to make soi] produce its I prevail : ‘ is a nuisance to any . There's always likely to be some shrewd old duck in the crowd who may have been plotting trap weeks in advance. Even tl best pla.form speakers some- ,times lose Aine eazkas of repartee wit! lers. recent , 5;. Fs Schii i Robinson and Curtis episodes have | lived in Michigan, for instance, that reminded ome older members of| iin’ tt makes one just a bit lonely this generation of Roosevelt's crop- | 4.7 the old farm. 1912 during a Wisconsin speech in|” por here the earth and the trees, 9 j “ | A voice in the rear of the hall | 5, 3 those old methods of we rsman and Several times repeated loudly: “I’m the heart of a vast market the Indian vying with each other in exercising the tac- 2 Democrai!” | 1 | wherein the fruit of the trees and tics of fighting through forcst ard along stream. Th Well, why’” Roosevelt finally the vegetables of the field are dis- took great chances. and the stake, the dominion over demanded ‘after several interrup-/ played rere jow there com he mi s ese are adopting American garb and that flv bes and turbans are being displaced in Indi: ock coats and fedora h: Sta! tion can be carri ‘esque into oblescence. Much is now being written of fr: uu speak of frontier life, rises to the mind. The: Place ; tions. i boxes and stands. iN ever write névels | “My father was 2 Democrat, my West street, which faces upon Perheps a Fred-|grandfather was a Democrat, my the docks and backs into the sky. is new | Wife’s father was a Democrat, my scrapers of lower Broadway, seem than | Wife’s grandfather was a Democrat,! strangely out of i 4 Bee age é \ where a tree is so ee In this new border warfare we have no a*original as! “Suppose,” shot Roosevelt,' It often seems even unfair that a retreating hero, iersn d i der the “your father, your grandfather, one city should get the choicest banner of a new ci The only werriors 2re your wife’s father and grandfather that the earth affords. Yet, such merican citizens like Jacob + - y nes that would! ‘on’s offense » Numerous com- been made citizens cf Buffalo that their pleasure craft have bezn fired on by rum chasers. Now comes M. F. Bramley of Clevelend with the com- plaint that rum-chasers fired on his y; % Verily, we are having border warfare without its rom: Ard the worst of it is that most of the ligucr that enters this country from Canada comes in uf the connivance of the men who shoot to kill or sink. about the border wz: erick J. Turner will ho recen: m blind for plaints ha MISTAH MASOR,~-T HEAR “TALK Goms' AROUMD “THAT You LINKED ARMS SoME , IMPORTANT MONEY $< T AIT HIASTINN? ANN THING, BUT Is THEY A PICMRE OF WASHINGTon ont A-TEM DOLLAR, BILL OR A EAGLE 2= 01S NICKELS, MA HAs -To HAB A HERD OF ‘EM | THE HONESTY OF WOMEN | (Minneapolis Journal) | Mrs. Florence E. S. Knapp, first womar. ever elected to high office in the State of New York, is sentenced to jail for stealing public funds while Secretary of State. Mrs. Knapp’s con’ ion and sentence in no way re- flect on the ability and integrity of women in the field, somewhat new to them, of politics and office-helding. Among a ia aed in polities there are bar goon many who, rs. Knapp’s opportunity, w: ve made her pilferings look like petty larceny. For every woman who would yield to temptation as Mrs. Knapp yielded, there are hundreds of women in politics today who would die before touching a cent that did net belong to them. Were the public offices in the Country equally divided between men and wom- en, the chances are that the incidence of graft and peculation among the men office-holders would run more than twiee as high as 2mong the woman office- | BY 1 Roosevelt, if he were alive, would | us this man’s action in taking Quentin’ ease of the suprarenal capsules, such | hages should be removed? A noted morning, reminds a lad who once trude i \arcrrenag is; ttan, fragrant miles of lace in a city [UK BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern | You BRoUGHT uP THe ‘ SUBSECT, SASOMS !~YES,-} UM-M =~ HERE IS $10. To Go ons ACCOUNT! ~~" as cancer. The pigmentation of the skin is not always present, but it indigestion. In addition to the digestive dis- turbances, the patient notices a mus- cular weakness, chronic tiredness | and languor, cevere pain and ten- |derness in the abdominal and lower \hack regions. The muscles are us- ually not reduced in size in the earl- ier stages, but advanced cases may | be attended by severe emacjation. ork does get! The disease is accompanied by symp-' H choice. No|toms showing an irregular or defi- | half-way products find their way | cient blood supply, such as sleepless- ; bere. The apples have the rosiest/ ness, sleep-walking, headache, diz- of cheeks; the grapes are fattest | zi ringing in the ears, neuralgic ‘and sweetest; the oranges are a| pai muscular twitchings and, in | study in symmetry—color abounds. | advanced cases epileptic-like convul- tradesmen gather in groups and! sions, delirium and coma. These bargain in the tiny pathways be-| last three symptoms usually precede tween crates; horses stamp on the death, and the symptoms greatly re- | cobblestones; there is the atmos-j semble those of patients suffering phere of a super-county fair. from uremia. eee tween the ages of twenty to forty | in this belt than one will find any-|t).. | Stns Laae Spa Manhattan, this is ope] that have been present at birth, or i Silage blackemith = “Few excect 14| that occurred in extreme old age. ifind the “smithy,” “under the}, The disease is most commonly i spreading chestnut tree” of the vil- jiage. Far more likely is one to find found among males of the laboring classes. |a garage. But here, under the tow- | ering: skyline, a little row of smit Advanced cases show very low blood pressures, lack of appetites, ies carry on. The clang of hammer fon anvils is all but lost in the roar nausea and vomiting, alternating constipation and diarrhea. Any jot traffic, but the it odor of mental or bodily exertion is followed hot irons on hoofs cannot be downed. | PY extreme exhaustion. +s @ In the treatment of this disease it is considered positively dangerous to _ Gotham glimpses—George Abbctt/ use purgatives. I believe the best Broadway's most magic name. Ab-/ results can be obtained by using the it is, who a “on as a short fruit fast and dieting regime y wi r a drama is doubt. It is Abbott who puts on 5 ~3 © al that AD || Our Yesterdays | —_—_—_ OO "9, 5 jiggers the all that. A play bearing ¢ is as good as sold and his is al] that a young dramatist to get a production. He is i and generally | id 1 fe TEN YEARS AGO Joseph Brych, Bismarck resident, ly in demand i New York, Oct. 4—West street) manages to keep three plays behind died from injuries received when he| himself. who came ! ay tried Ti Il, by the way | Lignite Coal company plant. | 8 one popular stage idol who in-| The highest price ever paid in i Kithoogh offered wane senor ent; | Bismarck for hogs was received by j Although offered ‘any number of/ Capt. I. P. Baker for four pedigreed | emotional roles, she is determined yoryshire hogs, sold to a local joan merehant for $250. {fell from a wagon at the Washburn Forest fires were sweeping Min- nesota and victims ~‘~tal over 1,000. The Minnesota } ublic Safety j ae | formance with her husband. oe ‘donated $84,000 for re- ; Owen Hiagetperss novelist, eo - | sueceeded in e1 dozen a —— ‘i Christian G. Lucas was ordered =e Meliical workers] report in Minneapolis for exam- |—not an easy task. include|ination for admission to the Naval | Gertrude Atherton, H. L. Mencken,| Aviation corps. George Jean Nathan, J. P. McAvoy, IVE Y rf : TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Nea ee Boker tae| Ea Gran, miner, of Duluth, Minn, was in mine at New Salem when several tons of rock caved in. The Monday club and Current Event clubs of Bismarck were ad- mitted to the tate Federation~of Women’s clubs. Gov. Robert-La Follette of Wis- consin was scheduled to open the winter lecture in Bismarck with a speech on November 2. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Franklin, who ied here in 1878, ‘cele- ;have none of it. Now and then she can be seen at Broadway per- GILBERT SWAN. ——_—_ A Youngstown, O., country club has a golf course built over the abandoned workings of a coal mine. HM-mM-2 ER~ GLAD FORTY A huge locomotive weighing 110 tens passed through Bismarck, arousing considerable interest. “Te WAY, IS MRS. HOOPLE PAYING You For Professor Montgomery of Grand Forks bo eg skeletons of six mound which ‘had existed in the hills near Bismarck. The -|skeletons were mammoth fectly formed. Plans were being made Lawrence order a new county h would divide : } BARBS | eee may precede or follow symptoms of | thi The disease is most frequent be-: as in the case of tuberculosis, but} were married brated their 25th wedding anniver-; Per- | hit specialist in Nice says an operation is the only thing. My friend, who is e one in question, is over sixty and in good condition otherwise.” Answer: It would be unwise for me to try to ad: ou about your friend's case, as all of the facts must be known before I could give you a sensible opinion. A diagnosis by mail is always very unsatisfactory and in your friend’s case I could only make the wildest kind of a guess. Question: Mrs. H. asks: “Will you kindly print again the recipe for wholewheat muffins? Answer: To a well beaten egg add one cup of sweet milk. Then stir in one cupful of genuine whole- wheat flour until smooth. Next | add a half cupful of the wholewheat { flour into which has been thorough- :ly mixed one level teaspoonful of ‘baking powder. Bake in muffin tins in a moderately hot oven until rown. The quantity makes medium or eight small muffins. tion: Mrs. E. W. wri ; little holes in it. Do you think any | serious illness could be caused from this? What is the cause of it? And | the cure?” Answer: You probably have the same over-acidity of the mouth that you had before you lost your teeth jand this is the cause of the holes appearing in your plate. However, the plate must be faultily made and the materials in its composition not Properly mixed. To get rid of the acid mouth you must diet so as to overcome excess stomach acidity Pay special attention to your fooc combinations. | |ordinance ordering all hens to lay Jat least one .gg each day also ought to help along. eee A Boston newspaper chronicles the fact that Senator Arthur R. Gotld of Maine has recovered his secret recipe for pea soup. We are janxiously waiting to hear how both major parties stand on the question. | (Copyright 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) At the Movies ‘APITOL THEATRE “The ‘ing of Kings,” a picturedra- ma dealing with the last two years jof the life of Christ, will be presented lat the itol Theatre tonight. This if the film on which Cecil B. De Mille was engaged for a year and |which he directed from an adapta- ion by Jeanie Macpherson, based n_the New Testament narratives. | In “The King of Kings” are re- {produced the great historical locales of ¢ alilee, the Temple, and Halls of |Caiaphas and Pilate, the Hill of Cal- jVary and the Easter Garden so fa mir to ee of the narrative or those wi ve traveled {Holy Land. la i Pitiioen :princines ot ale. im- portance were required; re were no Jess than 550 named roles and 4,228 supernumeraries, Among the noteworthy principals may be men- itioned H. B. Warner, Dorothy Cum- jming. Ernest Torrence, —Jgseph ; Schildkraut, Jacqueline Logan, Ru- jdolph Schildkraut, Montagu Love, Sam De Grasse, Victor Vareoni, Theodore Kosloff, George Siermann, Majel Coleman, William Boyd, Juliu ‘aye and Robert Edeson, ELTINGE THEATRE The Great White Way of New Sargasso Sea of play the one-time “ 1? who has later been known as a “but- ter and egg man” in some circles, has on many occasions seen his fondest hopes decay along the crowded thoroughfare known as {1 © 1 But once in a blue moon, someone who has the apparent qualities of 2 “sap,” in the vernacular, proves Tiss than those who seek ‘to pluck ima Such an instance is shown in “The Butter and Man,” which will feature Jack Mulhall. It comes to the Eltinge ¢or Friday and Satur. -

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