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TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, 1937 eet POSTE : Your Personal Health By William Brady, M. ur se 1 Pe dy will answer Quen in ciefly and in. In Pre dines te letters Queries must be Secomy ws 4 THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER CRstablished 1873) Scenes Sate, City ana County Official Newspaper Washington faete saree ca ROULOSIS mati. @ Company, Bis- | Here Is Reasoning ts Aanoct class mail lene; Take Your Y's TUBE! D,, and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as second Sides in Strike is EVERYBOD iinet Choice. ? ibuted by — oes An instructive folder distr ve of youths . tlon describes “SIGNALS” which if heeded, will sa pati aioe Mrs. Stella I. Mann President and Treasurer £ tive tuberculosis, owt isade 0. aun Kenneth W. Simons erty, Declares Bosten Group; Make * a , } young saute from Leta Ves) harbor Jatent or smouldering feel ef 44 Vico Pree. asé Gen'l Meneger Secretary and Editer 1 : E sere | ‘opal ph nodes. The freat majority a the eee i fs berculosis joais from becom! provided they 7) BS 2 unity to prevent the tubercul e 3 Subscription Rates Payable in Advance ~ pong nd faty hygienic conditions. oh os, 3 / ‘ y ‘ Infancy and early childhood is the time Of HiT tract (in food or a | Daly F wi ADE. 3-— Per | J becil, entering the body eliher by way Ct Ta) or by way of | Dany oy | : Fate stray infection, through cl0se OF iis 20: cond by ( Imonary tuberculosis), Yout aes i | wean Infection, which overwhelms the immunity produced by 1 10 Weekly plants in Detroit. ; \ aad the disease he — ee seroand a ‘Yet it is possible to be violently pre- a : ‘The immunity con! t Ee is ni Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation fudiced on elther side, and ~, NTA childhood (“everybody ee ee eriies frequentiy Tepes y patted infection in late ch! Member of the Associated Press ; aol Lf vital thing spe ore vals (akin tests) ot ation ea ad rs / Routine tuberc X-ray examina’ coiires ‘The Associated Press is sree? fie to the an ot ; ‘ J chest examinations, together with ° forereteteted May A mamammermeraam cessor whMmn rns rm S| ttective prophylaxis tion of the ne: 161 s 1o cooks nS { to the test, is perhaps the mest 5 to the laws or Filles of good Ai slgute ot 'repubtication ef all other matter hereia ate aiko reserved 2 . : tuberculosis, aside from knowledge and obedience a : ° \ wwered Dr. DeLansey Rochester, : Expensive py Seg =F ae a : Sa te 4 France and England join hands to construct a mighty air | President Emeritus A i. 7 air it the medical student's mind the fact th 5 os { armada which will dominate the skies of Europe. It is the an- | lowell of Herverd. and other | “ 4 : y symptoms of any description may be to patient will give nega \ swer of European democracies to the threats of Fascism. It|cnrysier sitdown strikers to oe ~ ‘ nae Cheeta Te ding questions about such arog te 2 . uberculosis—thet will be effective because they have the money. Germany and |" Murphy, | | ' ; stead, the young pero with Ancient amen : Italy haven't. rend ety! \ r ae peeinntng= Besides, German and Italian planes haven't looked as good esau ae 4 \ . oe Dyspepsia and Anemia. as the Russian fighters in the new world war raging in Spain. | ing iike wildfire,” says the Especially girls in their early — = \ “ ‘ dary anemia, But the trouble is that even France and England aren't rich | group. “It is rapidly growing = . N : tion, waterbrash, euler erie ley enough to keep their air fleets at peak strength indefinitely. ((0n0l What determined « NS ; : ; oe ear euncneay, simple dry pleurlsy, or pleurlsy with effusion (fhujd An effective air fleet means constant building to replace obsolete | weeks ago, or a few words of counsel ‘ ‘ ae : in chest). Instead of making « complete recovery i Baal models, France dominated European skies only three years ago, |PY, ‘he president, would have ended : tient remains weak and continues to be slightly feverish afternoons. third of all pleurisy attacks are tuberculosis from the + but those planes now are out of date and Italy is the probable of Ment ren rea and cat 0 ; aan = (3) With symptoms like Malaria. leader. “No question of the right of labor in on swallowing, per- si] - ries) Fs to lberal wage and healthful work ciation - (@ With Laryngitis. puaiowe Sea eared examtnaticns by be nu Mussolini can’t go on spending for war. Next year he will be| ing conditions is invol sisting over a few days, warrants care HE | if behind. France and England are the have's and do not want universally conceded. i War. Hence, if war is coming in Europe it will come soon, be-|issue now agitating 1! fore Mussolini and Hitler find themselves too far behind in the|it attacks and undermines i armament race. If France and England definitely get the upper | {undation of our poll sician. a (5) With Bronchitis. Diagnosis of “acute bronchitis” in youth or adoles- cent is always provisional. Expecially significant is bronchitis 2 in @ young person who has been troubled for some time with “catarth’ pat a “inusitis.” Many cases of tuberculosis purport to be “bronchitis” or Semssmcme, | chial trouble” in the early weeks. z PAL : me mtd Reseda coughing up of freah blood or blood streaked material. ' hand there will be ‘no fighting. unless Mussolini or Hitler are os pies y, red @ wn: sudden coughing Wp ot te bond pater. er vy cesveration to) start somettiig. abheg M on Bridge have the benefit of careful physical examinations by the family physician i 1 dislodge them, intimidate properly = not just one examination but examinations 2 = Not atte Arie dventtig Sone inthe Arctic, Se Sa a Pin A ES Bema ialiaa 0 5 jot. ie Arctic adventuring is done in the Arctic. potence, ER HEC Gis RE sais coocinaice ta every instance good deal of it is available, along about this time of year, to the |r ate", “ne, Soverument becomes DOUBLE WARNS BIDDE Renae Re ca el fresh-water sailors who man steamers on the Great Lakes. mob rule and ruthless dictatorship. Ice covers the lakes in the winter, and the steamers are laid Rare legislatures, it be =: up in port. But the moment warm weather begins to break the|of the president and the governors By WM. E. McKENNEY small diamonds. East discarded one|® ‘transfusion CES - - ByGeorge Cl ice, the boats begin to venture forth—for there is good money Snact aiid eniorce leeleticnn (Secretary, American Bridge Leagee) | club, his last heart and one diamand, | Hats. . SIDE GLAN' ry - mn i to be made by shipping men who can get their boats moving a|at once put an end to this t; Good bridge players generally reel-} = son UTION TO PREVIOUS statistician few weeks ahead of schedule. defiant insurrection ao! themt 1b, 6 tie (Hee oe toy 0 ELEM double an opponent when he is in a That is what has been happening during the last couple of| cumane or partisioate in it weeks—and the result is Arctic adventure. Drifting ice floes a tees aaa ‘an come up to hold the boats fast. Sudden blizzards sweep down| national and state.” from the north, with snow-laden gales, to make the sailor’s life . B i | ** 4 hoth uncomfortable and perilous. The coast guards drive their| wow intent tre Chevette » sturdy cutters out through the ice to open sea lanes, and a red-|as they expressed themselves blooded adventuresome time is had by everybody. bak Ud agreement for evactating the It’s all very Arctic—except that it happens within a few| “Our employers have refused to re- , miles of some of America’s largest cities. cognize the principles of collective Novel Stunt The gentleman in the soldiers’ home at Los Angeles who has written a 50,000-word novel, complete with plot, characters, | and conversation, without once using the letter “e”, may not _ | have added much to the world’s great Iterature, but he has at | least performed a literary stunt that must have looked almost impossible, Try to write one ordinary sentence without using that | etter, and see how hard it is. Then imagine writing a whole | book that way, and you begin to get some idea of the difficulties k And if someone objects that this bit of work must have ( been more stunt than novel, it can only be said that the same f i ge = obi e FEE i of : thing is true of about two-thirds of the so-called novels that get published: these days. Since most of them are written for almost any reason under the sun except the desire to create something of real literary merit, why isn’t this Los Angeles man’s motive as good as any? ji 24 i ae s. i ERS gEga Fetes i Bee 4 Z ex to do thelr ar ae 3 i is a matter of et 1 Unity With England? le record,” We were subject to ine “1 wish T could be left alone long enough to Ania this | Lord Tweedsmuir, Canada’s governor general, told mid- comparables cgi aH sted book on how to influence people. | shipmen at the U.S, naval academy Thursday that “every addi- | ton to your navy is an extra addition to the security of the | world’ i He may be right, but he had better kept still. : There are too many Anglophiles in America now. It was they, largely, who got America into the last war. Ties of blood = of speech are strong and there is no question that they do it. But England had better not presume on any intention of this nation to unite with her in “the preservation of liberty and peace.” We did it once and the result was neither. No matter what the Anglophiles say, England's interests are not our in- terests. Any American who tries to prove otherwise is either E ! if fs gi gs 2 as e ss & i i By William Ferguson i z a E E a § 2 i | g Er Y E ; i f i Ey E fl ! 3 fe 3 z gE [i | Hy $ eeessoauns SSyseeuess La iy i F He FETE. i i ts E pet j i i ff net or is deliberately doing a dis-service to his coun- bonita "rt land, O,, style <a igang | slag ; eee ron oe Thirteen billion mosquitoes weigh Taro paste. ‘ 26 tons. That's equal to three big Flannel. \ ‘Wolf’ Scares elephants, and is an awful lot of bites. Leg oveg Wy Representative Samuel Dickstein (Dem., N. ¥.), whose izging moequto contra in Mew sere] $b Young cow. ~alarm over gubversive influences in the United States almost ay. cae Corded cloth. amounts to what the French call an idee fixee, now asserts that | & band of 100,000 Nazis in America have taken an oath of - } allegiance to Hitler. t Like the boy who cried “Wolf!” Representative Dickstein _ seems to have failed to give his countrymen even one {ittle , jitter, The nation not only is unalarmed over the possibility that forpign influences may be at work in the United States, but it has cracked down on Americans, such as the Black Le. — who have assertedly grouped to combat such ele- __ It is hard to imagine a dictatorship following a similar ty. But then subyersive movements rarely get far in a Jlalig whose conditions the vast majority of its citizens | tense. a? i & f 3 Fa f Z a* ‘The office blond thinks double talk is a conversation about Simone ‘The Olean, N. ¥., baby, who been ail iskey soon ld cocagh t'tabe his fiw stagger. * sae pe A Connecticut solen asks in alarm what would happen if snakes @maped. There probably would be a caoeried rush to sign pledene,