The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 26, 1929, Page 4

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‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, "THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1929 -The Bismarck Tribune en An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLI“ST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Pi marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck @8 second class mail matter. George D. Mann.............. President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier per year.......... Daily by mail, per year ir Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state, outside Bismarck) Daily by mail. outside cf North Dakota. Weekly by mail, in state, per year..... ; Weekly by mail, in state, three years fo! Weekly by mail, outside of North Dakota, POT YOAT..... ec cece seeeeerense tree eee eeeee oe 150 Memb-r Audit Bureau of Circulation q Member of The Assuciated Press The Associated Press 1s exclusively entitled to the ase for republication of all new: hes credited to tt or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also the local news of spontaneous origin published ein. All rights of republication of al' other matter herein are also reserved. Foreign Representatives 4 SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS 4 (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK (Official City, State and County Ncwsparer) The convention of the S: Clubs at Dickinson affords a the women’s club movement ot it as highly organized, of tivities and filled with a s It exists in the sphere of cultural di field ef domestic arts, has been dipping } . 9f, politics and embraces a wide -: North Dakota clubwomen -prehensively and operating on 3 . plishment, probably, than those of any ¢ state. The East with is indust ground has the incentive for extensive c of morals, of politics, legislatic here in the great wide open spaces stricted. Here there is home ma! child welfare legislation to be sou! fostered, tastes for music, ar veloped, some political activ! ideal of womanhood to be c: The clubwomen of this s' to any of these purposes. The: of their time, thought and encr jectives of the North Dakota Feder able to report progress and hold cut hi vances in their program for making this a bette and life in it ampler, brighter and rich Not a little of the success and pro; Dakota club movement. has been due to b: with the extension services centerinz in t’ college at Fargo. Out of that inst help by which a wide field in the ¢ in the state has been cultivated tering the home life, lifting brightness into its drear plac and narrowing the bouncs of bane. of agricultural communiti ‘The leaders of the women’s ‘elud serving of the grateful recognition of obiigation likewise to the extension se: promoted their program is wor' of mendation. — - An Emergency to Remedy ‘The conference which A. L. Bavone, s 2 ginger, has called, to be held here O: to assume an importance not foreseen ¢: son wheh the idea of getting togethe: sewerage superintendents of the state first developed. t In the last few wecks a serious situation in both these departments of municipal functio: Due to the long drouth, which has pre elsewhere, North Dakota is finally getting aroun stage in which other drouth-afflicted comm other regions have found themselves we: state. “Water sources are alarmingly low on the lesser streams of the state and th fects the-potable supplies but implies Ppallution through inability to dispose of R. E. Kennedy, state engineer, has been over the en- tire state and has taken note of the degree of emergen created by the drouth.. He has found some most.dried up. Others.have so little flow t unable to carry off the sewaze poured into their c! nels. Where these also have to furnish the water supply the: emergency, is doubled. health and protection, whether considered from the standpoint of water supply or sewage disposal. It ought to furnish a pressing topic for the water and sewage con- | erence to discuss, driving home upon the various cities and towns the gravity of letting such a condition recur and awaking them to the need of steps to end the menace. permanently. In matters of water and sewage, many of them have shirked their responsibilities too long. They need to be stirred out of their sluggishness and neglect. for their own benefit as for the welfare of the state. ‘The new bureau of sanitary engineering, furnished North Dakota by the Rockefeller foundation and main- sirtet-dast:fall—to grapple with the state-wide problem of ‘water:.supplies.and sewage disposal. Other problems as of milk; of sanitary legislation by the municipalities and ‘of garbage have drawn upon its time and on the cnergies of #ngineer Bavone. What is needed is the awakening of # spontansoys spirit of cooperation with the bureau ‘on the’part of the towns. Engineer Bavone is a trained and so is Engineer Kennedy. Moreover, the latter 1s sd full of ambitious energy that he recently com- plained his office no longer affords sufficicnt work to make the job interesting. Here is an emergency calling for wise technical. action,.and the communities .which New Rapid Transit Facilities . ‘Crand Trask: railway, acnzuacing p.ant for a nature's flowing channels. pe e men and women throw their cigar-|manack.” She has extreme good | plumbers. Here, then, is a situation of the gravest menace to; It is an economic necessity that they act now as much | tained by it, has been in existence too short a time—j ured in dollars and cents. | of rapia transit—by rail and by auto. It is a plan that | deserves to be adopted in many other places. | pee mae Imperishable Empires i read a gocd deal these days 2 | into common use. | Evers , ertear turer bullds a branch u oe e ry time a European government floats a new Stre bis cas DIETARY TREATMENT FOR difficult breathing. These foods ASTHMA should thereafter always be tried with In yesterday's article I wrote about | caution, owing to their tendency eith.+ the exercises necessary for develop- ing a strong chest in order to prevent asthma, but after a case of asthma has fully developed such exercises cannot be taken Saar the re Lendl of acure. Ina typical case 8 or cardiac asthma it is first ‘ 4 necessary to free the diaphragm from Bu 9 any pressure due to excessive stomach 38 Gee or intestinal gas, and to get rid of | er to produce flatulence or excessive any large amount of mucus which is | catarrhal mucus. clogging the lungs and bronchial! The deep breathing exercises suc- tubes. The quickest way to accomplish | gested in yesterday's article should these results is through the fasting | not be used at first but should be and di treatment. started after the paticnt has been “The asthmatic patient should first | normal for four or five weeks. Then start on a fast, either using plain wa- | these exercises should be gradually inep troduced and increased to develop a it | strong diaphragm and chest, and thus assure the patient against the return of asthma, Pose, but in some bad cases it seems _—_ 5 r that quicker results are secured if QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS 1 te sig sis ak th < SS the fruit juices are left out and only Heartburn After Meals | a plain water is used. All fruit juices contain a considerable amount of su- gar, and sometimes this continues to produce too much flatulence. The fast | causes this and how to get rid of it.” should be continued at least until all} Answer: Heartburn simply means wheezing has disappeared, but some- | Over-acidity of the gastric juice, and times it is not possible for the pa-| is caused by bad combinations of tient to entirely eliminate all of the | foods, wrong kinds of foods, condi- bronchial mucus during the fast and | ments, too much liquids at meals, etc. in some cases a slight whistle will con-| A teaspoonful of baking soda taken tinue for some time, due to the pres- | just after the meal will relieve the + ence of mucus in the bronchial tubes. | heartburn, but a real cure can only A few days after the breathing be- lips and su invariably pleases a: of these United States. Everyo ted that America is entcring on a pe- | orld dominance, and—on this side of the At- | idea 1 € Se Nee e OP ee e e ée we . é & e | get* to build an pind it ts to be. a British dip! i ind Question: W. H. K. asks: “Is it all right to use stewed prunes or figs or applesauce with a breakfast of oat- meal porridge?” Answer: It is all right to use ears and increasing avoir- }a $600 check she had indorsed was the ubiquitous dread of /returned by the bank. Counsel for Miss Charlotte Calegarde argued that xe * she was unwilling to pay $600 for four THE REAL INDEPENDENCE -querts of champagne in Miss Nesbit's This type of confidence in one's in- |club and stopped payment on the tu is a thing American wom- | check. Now the grand jury is to look Frenchwomen have it, ap- |into the matter. thout striving for it. When nerican woman from 16 to 106 ing to get thin and all were ie p-and-down styles, uck to her curves, wore s With belt-lines and knew she peal because she was herself, more example of a tire- ‘women bah trae for ndependence, their daring. KEEPING FAITH women are criticized because (By Alice Judson Peale) to vote with men. It seems to| “I am afraid that Frances has lost at ao the last herpedinn having | her faith in me. She tells me noth- of personal le) lence in| ing now of the things which I know °-; dress, manner and type requires more as in | bra in the face of almost uni- | troubling her. Always until re- 2il conformity than any mass | cently she has talked to me freely. movement on the part of women as | You see, not long ago I told her father a whole to get freedom for the whole | 0mething which she had told me sex. confidence and now I am afraid she has determined to fight - . ry ——paRes tles without help from anyone.” Af MB w It was revealed during the recent | early years they unwittingly put be- . ‘convention of bridge players in Chi- wat pases Seews/eebpuumw tha cago ‘that bridge is sweeping the lead country. The game isn’t doing a great from | deal of good to the kitchen, how- tions | ever. Alice | x ee as| The band of New York University to, went into training with the football team. Maybe something can be done for a now about punting the piccolo. WHEN AGE STARS . + * priate tha tomtionn ch tie sniee ot In this age of youth. it will be con-| The smallest fish in the world is . trusts by the to many of us over 20 to know | said to be the Philippine goby, three- | ne of the biggest Broadway | sixteenths of an inch long. Strange Alexander ‘drew up the document, of the New York theatrical sea-| to say, no vacationist has reported son is a star who made her debut | catching any of ‘em. * * i i -signed by the three rulers In addition to the original back in 1888, got a strong start at the | time of the pugrege bg ag and| ‘The English schoolboy who defined Bianinas (ican | was a toast in the days of the Span-|“elocution” as the method used in Fireless Cigarette Stubs ish-Ameriean war. This is Trixie! America for putting people to death (Time) | Friganza-hale, far more hearty than | was on the right track, anyway. 8 ten seconds for | any Broadway hit for years, white se & haired and proud of it! ‘A British doctor says the bathroom She is the leading woman commed- ! is the most restful room in the house. A i rH [; Hi 5 ‘ace. A match burns-one-half onds. Tf the stub were fire- a careless fire would be’ prevented. - |ienne in the lively revue called “Al-| This was discovered years ago by ; : the butts are between one and one and | taste in the type of comedy she puts *** * ionz. If the stub could be fireproofed, other | over, never trying once to simulate} The rising generation seems to be ould be prevented. : youth. It is sound, human stuff, with | quite air-minded. @ really.excellent moral lesson in the | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Setvice, Inc.) Fe eFs EEE apts i way Trixie flaunts her years and pounds with such self-confidence as CHAMPAGNE WORTH 9600? you endl gic yecorg es eg ae ater to make you think that after all, Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 26.—(>)— nen-inflammable waterglass to within the useful half- | maybe the worst thing about the in-| Eyelyn Nesbit testified in court that | inch of the head. Cigarettes should have a cork tip one a inch long and lined with waterglass. Congresswoman Edith Nourse Rogers of Massachusetts inspired the in- vestigation. wait The Forest Fire Problem (Great Falls Tribune) Comparatively few Montangns as yet realize the extent of damage done by forest fires within the state’s bound- | | I i i Fe aries this season. Taken as a whole, they constitute one PORE XBABR AGO catastrophes this state ever has suffered. ‘William DeGrass has returned from ad thousands of acres of virgin timber has his eastern trip, and reports having been destroyed, many homes have been ruined, great seen many former Bismarck people, vatersheds impaired and nature's pristine beauty marred. Even when the exact area traversed by flames has been | i i és Ef Bah i 5 H E z f o E ascertained, it will be impossible to calculate the damage w. banker. bought '- done. The value of a-watershed cannot be estimated Mrs. Small and Miss Lisle Cun- |+oonth, pA ‘and a cacily, The worth of a great landscape cannot be fig- ningham left today for howd floors of a new Fifth Avenue building: It is apparent, however, that the disaster is one which { will be generally felt. It will be felt by the nation to some lextent, but by Montana to a greater extent. The forests ate an asset as necessary to our wellbeing as pur rivers, ow mines, or cur farms.. The utility of our ls and mouniains 1s.not solely in the timber they-yjeld, but in the water they conserve and the glorious back« ‘ground they provide for recreation. We can ill afford | vo lose any of it. . % | : aE £ i a] iit i i i i 3 Li Incredible : i . é ; 1% ' : (Duluth Heri cae | \ N a: ie z ” It is no longer accurate to say of theflight of an air- ~ . ‘ ‘ ‘ plane that it is as flect as a bird on the wing. That isn’t fair to the airplane. No bird cen fly, even under the spur of fecr, faster than a hundred miles an hour. Sat- urday Flying Officer R. L..R. Atchcrly of the British Schneider cup team flew at Yhe'rate of $33.49 miles an No man or bird ever moved that swiftly before. In- Atcherly’s speed is almost incredible, * i 2 If you say “Hee he comes!” it will take you about = second. If you hed started to'szy it when Atcherly was Be fect away, before you had finished He fis Hl # i ii i E t all : {

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