The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 3, 1937, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Y ° , The iiamarck Tribune THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 3, 1987 Behind Scenes There’s the Makings of a Big Issue Here Your Personal Health An inéependeat Newspaper . 4 Mj ha THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER re By William Brady, M. D. (Established 1873) e ar SELINA but mot dis Washington pets ac a ear State, City and County Official Newspaper f The Tribune. Brads JU self-addressed envelope. Published daily except Sunday by The Bismarck Tribune Din of Disapproval Over Jefferson marck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck as Memorial Plan Makes Project P<! < rAS Cipkiaty, oe matter. F Doubtful. | F ! a THE QUESTION OF VITAL to explain about the phy- Rel Mrs. Stella I. Mann —— : ‘h Ms ; C In an article here Tecan we eee pectty” indicates an individual's President and Treasurer . alology of breathing and how the 'vitt! Cob (the eyed of at er Archie O. Johnson Kenneth W. Simons \ a i ; h ordinary breath (usual than K Vice Pres. reper Manager Secretary and Editor : y ; ‘ i be expelled by the strongest effort after a tity of seems it ceivable that the rie i Ve ry oe aon et z See oe . air that can be.taken in by the maximum effort after an. res cai spiration (this ts of course the same as (2), Average vital saree Ao od males is 3700 cubic centimeters (approximately 7% oat) and female is 3500 cubic centimeters (approximately 7% Pl aaa a Reader inquires whether I mean that the greater the vie Co more physically fit the individual 1s, regardless of sex, size, height, age, weight and habit especially as regards dally exercise, athletic ity, sym: nastic training and the like. tet of the explanation of vital capacity as repeat ge properly : i [| aphtare thowshtful reir of the reader's queries. Of course sex and sie and ay Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation Me reseas ! SS an ane: aay 12 oF 13 oars Of age. Bs regards daily exercise, athletic activity, gymnas- Member of the Associated Press points: tis eukine: icra eared etc, has @ sod = eae wale is oe less : ! capacity. Reasonable physical training alw fepublica- Y rare iters so simple a practice as a few moments of belly breathing last ae ered ia te 4, & thing at night as you sete down to ep Delps fo maintain good Teas oe ‘also teserved, : Leona Meee stop here to describe Belly Breathing, Send stamped en-| for Cheering Young America CEE eee pacity si have a leh diaphragm, Most iar Young America, or at least that part of it which will gradu- : ; ae a" seers Nutuing pulls the diaphragm down, pushes the belly out—inflates the ~- * ate from college this spring, has reason to be cheerful for the j b a ae bellows, ‘The diaphragm is pretty high in dead people too, pvaedigeantted prospect is that jobs will be easier to get than at any time since - : Ys J : eee iteaty 10 be high in Badia have the wrong idea about good 1929, according to a survey of leading colleges and universities. Engineering, business administration, teaching and general business classifications are offering employment in greater volume and the outlook is that more than half of those who graduate in June from the 185 schools questioned will have found places on payrolls before the end of the summer, From 163 schools came word that they expect 70 per cent of theiy graduates to be at work within a few months while 28 schools placed the estimate as high as 90 per cent, This fact is important to the future of America. Nothing has been harder to deal with than the problem of the youth who feels he has been trained, at great expense to himself or his parents, but who has had no opportunity to exercise the skill and knowledge acquired. It has made for bitterness and hate of the accepted order and has found manifestation in the trend toward state socialism which has been so apparent in the last few years. It isn’t a good thing for either the nation or its youth to have the latter with too much time to ponder its real or fancied grievances. % old in the posture, the chesty complex, the bad habit of trying to pull in or h “abdomen,” as Mrs, Malaprop calls the belly. ‘ I attempt to explain how the diaphragm works in booklet No. 20 in "Little Lessons in the Ways of Health” series which is entitled “The Art of Easy Breathing,” but darn it all, it costs ten cents, Visit the public library some day and read few chapters in Howell’s Text Book of Physiology, which 1s ‘available in every public library worthy of the name, and perhaps you will get some inkling of the function of the breathing muscle, Other muscles help the diaphragm, of course, but they are of minor importance. How the diaphragm works, then, has much to do with vitel capacity, physical efficiency and longevity. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS # » a th tr gt Can you tell me whether vitamin D has any e! on , Should one whose metabolisin 1s low (20 per cent below normal, the doctor said when the test was made) take vitamin D at all? (A. E. A.) Answer—Vitamin D increases the metabolic rate, Any one who needs {odin to speed up the metabolism, any one who is hypothyrold, probably also nééds vitamin D. Bilver Nitrate — Is silver nitrate injurious to use es a mouthwash? (¥. L.) (Béltor’s Note)—The Trid eas silver nitrate is commonly cae bape caustic, os wo rs on subjects of interest.” cette! be unwise to we anything stronger than a one- ‘one per cent solu letters on subjects of 1 Latte: tn the mibalh chore than ones” oy . Please tell me how one can make raw carrot juice, there being so little Loar hare ehech wondered “about thet if, In fect, I had @ ; xs Answer— won at myself. : wyer-lobbyist th it, We reserve dreadful dream about it—a big bozo handed me a mortar and pestle and took 3 ‘ : to thi me by the ear to a vast bin of carrots, about a ton of them, and said you The Drouth’s Official End i) bol oh laid 11 thas eal This week marked the official end of the 1936 drouth. a Coprriatt 1807, olin F, Dille Co. Evidence to this effect is provided not so much by the Public ‘might know “the truth” | the interest attaching to weather as by the government’s discontinuance of its Drouth about the rural school system. | subject and - od tel eines News Bulletin, issued weekly since last summer to apprise ane Tey ey Roloc rare ehsead edo farmers, county agents and others of where feed may be had te made in ints aude becuase ot Drenintereeti ee in the Middle West and its price. Discontinuing the publication, the department of agricul- ture says: “Officials of the federal livestock feed agency be- lieve that the emergency which resulted from the 1986 drouth has been sufficiently relieved by favorable spring pasturage . and farming conditions that the specialized news and informa-| engineers and tion service may be discontinued at this time.” In many parts of the Middle West this appraisal of the facts is correct. We hope it will soon be true everywhere, including the southwestern part of this state where the drouth has dis-|¥ played a tendency toward persistence.~ Tr ae ¢ ke < 3 8 3 3 = nnwn ocecen SOHSY QZUETRBBHA SBRTRTS .2SESE. Bs ule att Hl | se § al a By 8 E g i gs BEEF ate Busily Building-to Accommodate Millions of Coronation Guests, LONDON SMILES Through Its TIERS i Be BF Hl g 5 i POPULATION CHANGE AFFECTS EMPLOYMENT gage age g E a gg" sk etisetst Bi eR a seeeee Se a eeiaay ® robing room during trasting sharply with the age-grimed Abbey walls. “flat” happens to be blessed with a of Corona- Fags & fortune May 12. sills going from $5 to $100 per person, with & maximum elbow capacity of twelve, Ans Gould 8 hotel room window over! neato nS tf Pomp and from $50 to In Mayfair, Park pera oead Mall the visitors gets tie same Nellans beryard panorama—wood to invite raised scaffolding and busy carpen: ‘his personal ters at work. No inch of space has window aill, ag his royal procession “tay 1s, "Ben hostelry managers on. this early, there must be enough speculative dangers in this the times sadam against them. Bodies pe the But usual) Want covered to racketeer his windoy ai the during As this for @ profit among si his 1930. the King Jor hotel lease on his room can automatically centage of the population at work. higher than in ‘boom’ bef rhe ee ie te hon was y fore a x Civil War.” iis torla's, Abbey Closed te Public ’ Age Change Important ee oe Hee The cet nth Sennlorment 1s attributable ® number ot erie ee ae epee don Places, Westminster Abbey same spread on thousands closed ethene Nom Sale rc poyynivechape er Getting Nearly Year's Rental in One Week i i rf An automobile accident is invari-) reports by statisticians of The Trav- Su tee rornlt Oke mlbtebs br aome, elers Insurance Company shows one, ite often the pedestrian is exceeding the speed limit is the at fault; once in a great while the jerlinceiage piety Driving on the finger of guilt points to the engineer wi side of the road is the next who designed the highway or the| "25 Gri off. man who designed the car, But in| ™ost common efror and driving three accidents out of every five the | the roadway isa close third. Failing blunder is made by the man behind | to grant the right of way and reck- the wheel, : less driving follow in that order. What are these driver-mistakes| Other common mistakes include that result so frequently to death | “cutting in,” passing on curves and and injury? hills, failing to signal, and passing | 48 Analysis of the 1936 accident |standing street cars, ° a i : : i i oF gE E E : F i ft a if E g, scsi

Other pages from this issue: