The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 7, 1930, Page 2

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2~ THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MAY 7, 1980 CHAMPIONS WILL BE ~ SELECTED AT FORKS Bismarck Boys and Girls Will Have to Compete With Pick of N. D. Prep Talent NIGHT FOOTBALL FEATURES Band Concerts, Luncheons, Dec- lamations. and Plays Part of Four-Day Program Grand Forks, May 7.—Between 1,200 ‘and 1,500 prep students from all sec- tions of the state, including Bismarck, will take part in the twenty-eighth ‘@nnual High School Week events, which will be held on the University campus May 14, 15, 16 and 17. * Accompanists, coaches, teachers, parents and chaperons are expected to swell the number coming here for the meet to more than 2,000.» With district contests to determine jinalists in music, declamation and divisions completed and the state debate competition, \prepa- rations for the annual’ competition which will result in the naming of state scholastic champions in many varied fields are now being: completed by University extension division offi- cials, Ny Schedules for the four days of Competition have now been completed. In addition to. music, declamation, commercial and debate, contests will be held in publications, drama and athletic divisions. A new feature of hool Week Will Draw 1,200-1,500 Students to University . STATE SCHOLASTIC |[SIPEGLANCES ~~ - By George ciark }/ACCIDENTS INHOME |& = See — ~Aren’t you putting anything aside for a rainy day?” my work at the office.’ PERIODICAL CHECK ON HEALTH URGED ON UNSUSPECTING Under Appearance of Wellness Disease May Be Sowing Its . Seed, Dr. Lockhead Warns Grand Forks, N. D., May 7.—(P)}— Outlining the differences between doctors ‘interested in preventing ‘dis- eases and those interested mainly in ks | curing them, Dr. D. C. deputy ee enn of Rochester, Minn., tonight wi practi l= siclans to call the benefits ot adequte steegs care to the attention of People. Prevention of: disease, Lockhead said in an address to the North Da- kota state health officers meeting, does not megan that the cost of serv- ice to the patient will be reduced or: that the income of physicians will be impaired. It does, mean, he said, that people will get more returns in} from their money because they will bugage rae le Ce) have less pain’and misery and less loss of time from productive work. doctors sooner or earlier than they have doing, so that the words chepetee and incurable” will not be heard so Tragedies of Ignorance “We have seen so many of the | wrecks of humanity strewn al the University of South Dakota mu- sic department; Lieutenant J. O'Donnell of Winnipeg, former tor of music in the British army and partment of the Oxford University American 3 and T. W. long life’s highway and known them to be tragedies of ignorance or neglect that we believe in going out into the high- ways and tg a gual py sis your doctor | the house-tops “ and your dentist periodically for a cutting in half during the last 20 years the tuberculosis death rate. ‘The anti-tuberculosis campaign has brought other benefits, Lockhead said, in that it has taught the public the importance of fresh air, better housing conditions, proper nourish- ment, controlled “spitting and the Proper pasteurization of milk. Cancer is on tthe increase and many persons are dying of it, and yet it is curable in the majority of cases if it is recognized early enough and correct treatment is given while it is still a local and comparatively mild and minor condition. If everyone, Particularly persons past 40 years of age, would pay attention to appar- ently minor troubles’and go to their Physicians, cancers would be discov- ered in plenty of time to result in a cure in a large majority of cases. COUNTRY PHYSICIAN TOP MISHAP DEATH LIST INN. DAKOTA): Children Victims Most Nume ous From 1 to 9, and Males From 10 to 49 Grand Forks, N. D., May 7.—()—If North Dakota had_a lower rate of deaths from accidental causes it prob- ably would have the lowest general death rate -in the country, Myrtle O. Lee, director of the bureau of vital statistics, told North Dakota health directors at their convention here to- day. Accidents cause more deaths among children of from 1 to 9 years and ‘among males from 10 to 49 years than any other single cause, she said. During the last three years, from 1927 to 1929, inclusive, 1,871 accidental ‘ths were reported in North Dakota, Lee said. And, strangely enough, he tabulation showed that more acci- ts occur in the home than in any other single place. ‘ . ‘The total number of deaths for the three-year period she divided.as fol- lows: Home accidents, 341; public. ac- cidents, other than motor vehicle ac- cidents, 261; industrial accidents, 218; and motor vehicle accidents, 286, Of the home accidents, 97 were due to scalds, 84 to burns, scalds and ex- plosions, 47 to ‘asphyxiation and suf- focation, 36 to poison, 10 to cuts and scratches, and 67 to other causes. Classification of public accidents, other than those involving motor ve- hicles, show 32 persons were killed in railroad accidents, 13 in accidents —S———— Konjola Truly Great Medicine,’ Says Omaha Lady New Cpmpound Quickly Ban- ished Stomach Ailment and Wins Eager Praise The amazing record of Konjola, the new and different medicine for ills. of the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, and rheumatism, neuritis and nervousness would often challenge belief were the actual facts not known and verified. PASSING FOR LACK |} ~ OP NEEDED INCOME Dr. Westley Also Di: Shorter Life Expectancy ’ *” in Mddle-Aged Grand Forks, N. D., May 7.—(P)— condi- | wi Dr. Dr. }»_bright’s MISS GRACE HENLEY It should be remembered, however, other medicine.”" Compounded of 32 ingredients, 22 of them the juices of roots and herbs of known medicinal value, this ‘super-medicine attacks the very source of the ailment, sweeps the system free of accumulated poisons and impurities, stimulates the ailing organs and thus aids Nature in the restoration of new and vigorous health. The experience of Miss Grace Henley, 122 North Twenty -sixth stteet, Omaha, should be of interest to all who suffer from stomach ail- ment. The Konjola Man at the Hall Drug Store, Third and Broadway, Bismarck, can tell you of hundreds the KonjolaMan today and hear more of the record of Konjola. Learn what it is, what it does, what it can be the chest cavity became so severe that my heart action was affected and I ing and structural accidents, 8 by drowning, 46 by firearms, and 51 from other causes, Of the 286 deaths in motor vehicle collisions vehicles, 10 by crashing into fixed objects, 154 in non-collision operating accidents, and 3 in non-operating accidents. quest them to levy a one-mill tax for four years for the erection of a war memerial for Cass county. “Home Movie Camera . $39.50 ‘Your own beautiful moving pic- tures. Simple operation. Very low cost. * _M.B. Gilman Co. Broadway at Second. Phone 80§ Dodge Brothers Cars and ‘The New Plymouth sour liquid heartburn for hours at a time. Griping pains in my abdomen, |. more frequently at night, made my ., | life & misery. There ball, Dotted = ; «ll to an Oshibitlon : Yercest of Nore | \ “Cranscoitinaital Coal Tae NORTH COAST LIMITED a. P. DEPOT, , SIEMARCK. ‘$200 P.M. TO 7:30 P.M. THURSDAY, MAY STH » | in a. cigarette it’s Taste that is Miss America’s, but her genuine wholssome- IN A CIGARETTE, TOO, the réel appéal is whold- _ every, day. No flash in the pan, but = popular: . ity, earned by giving smokers 2 cigarette of better \ quality, sicher aroma and finer fragrance, blended and cross-blended to just one end... “TASTE above everything”. . Fils oe Ebes I company, Fargo: a Mota Senn, ‘ant , Minn. ¥ 1 hesterfield | © 1930, Licceer & Mygas Tosacco Ga. Fi For some diseases, he sald, cures are available, but the causes of others are obscure and the medical Profession still has to rely on general measures such as quarantine, isola- ‘glad. to learn tion, disinfection and proper health store, Bismarck, North | habits. f been sppointed exclusive | Among diseases for which there are in Burleigh and specific cures or preventives, he said, are smallpox, diphtheria and typhoid fever. of pe ean a Development of strong bodies and fe tories h'of° fei! You abour them, | tne dissemination of information re- Mipollet Ave. Minneapolis, Minn. Garding its control have resulted in TEE Brg Capital Funeral, ¢ : ; Parlors By : 208 Main Avenue ; Phone—Day or Night—23 Licensed Embalmer Jos. W. Tachumperlin introducing - and explaini: Prop. new and different medicine. Tree given.—Adv.

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