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NEW HEAD OF: STATE SCHOOL TELLS PLANS W. F. McClelland Served in War and Comes. Well Recommended by Leading Penologists NO POLITICAL ALIGNMENT Episcopalian, Shriner and High in Masonic Circles of the East—College Graduate Wm. Fred McClelland of New York City; Plattsburg man and captain of infantry during the war, comes as su- perintendent to the State Training School strongly recommended by men vitally interested in welfare work, notably Wm. R. George of the George Junior Republic of Freeville, N. 'Y., and T. M, Osborne of Sing Sing prison fame. In an interview today, Mr. McClel- land stated, in answef to questions, that he had no political affiliations in North. Dakota, was not particularly cipline and further declares himself | against any form of religious or rac- jal intolerance. His private affiliations cover a fair field—he is an Episcopalian, Shriner and 32d degree Mason, an Oddfellow and an athlete. He made the track team and played halfback on the Col- gate college team. He also attended Cornell university during the yea 1912-15, and Mrs. McClelland, who h: been of great assistance to him in his work, is a graduate of that school. PIONEER RESIDENT OF MANDAN DEAD Stephen Frankl, for thirty-five years a resident} of Mandan, died here Tnesday morning, at the age ‘of 83. Mr. Frankl, who came here from Austria-Hungary, was well known to all the .old timers and had been in good health until just the week before his death, There survive how two daughters, Mrs. Henry Helmsworth of Mandan, and Mrs. Geo, Platzer of Alberta, and two sons, Joseph, of Mandan, and Andrew, living in Omaha, Neb. Funeral arrangements have not sheen completed. BANK OFFICALS GUESTS OF HONOR Mr. Joseph P. Hess, newly elected president of the First National bank, and Mr. J. H. Newton, equally new acquainted with the political problems! presfdent of the Missouri Valley Gro- of this state, and Had as a sole aim,| cery Co, and vice president of the the boy. welfare question and its prob-| bank, were honor guests at a lunch- lems, which he seemed to think was! eon Tuesday at the Lewis and Clark. sufficient. “In fact,” he said, “in con-| Mr. Hegs and Mr. Newton are re- sidering the appointment no mention | ceiving. the heartiest congratulations was ever made of my political or re-| of their friends. It is very pleasing ligious beliefe—they did not en@r in-| to Mandan people generally that two to the equation at all.” lot the men whose energy and ability Captain MgClella#di}intends to in-| have contributed so greatly to the up- stall in. theory and “in practice the; building of these institutions have form of self government which has | been rewarded by being elected to the proven satisfactory in the. eastern | highest positions they have to offer. schools. He hopes to establish ai ———_—————_ up-to-date curriculum and a modern! SUBMIT NAMES, agricultural course, fashioned after; Senator Mees. at the meeting of the those of the Junior Agricultural| Comercial club which took place on Schools in the east, the manual arts| Monday night, presented the tollow- training so, emphasized as to run it ig names for approval as members that direction. jof the park board to be elected in He gives as his most centralized | June—W. G, Gill, to serve one year; aim, that of teaching citizenship and! making the boys and girls under his direction an asset to the state. He founded a plan of self govern- ment in a private school for delin- quent boys at Athens, Georgia, work-| ed during one summer with T. M. Os-: borne of Sing Sing prison, and was associated before and after his war) service with the George Junior Re- public, which some years previously he had entered as a “citizen.” Mr. McClelland at the present writ- ing is.a very: husky “citizen,” indeed —32 years old, Ang around, t says he d Honey and ‘Tar COMPOUND. 18_A TIME-TRIED REMEDY thet can be relied upon to get rid of coughs and colde that lead to serious illness if neglected. Every User a Friend hed sony i adi ever eee for TartCompound. It It be hos, hipema ford by er yan. and i eever fad us. — ‘oley, Marquette, Mich. F **] surely know the worth of | Foley’ e Howey aod Tar, as I have taken it ‘with good resulls. “Aho have sold buadrede of bottles.”"—A. L. Stans: bury, Parkersburg, W. Ve. Children like Foley's Honey and Tar. It contains no.opiales, and will not injure a. delicate stomach, Spring Suiits Made to Your Order $22.00 the 00 F. W. McHenry, for two years. | trude Ritchie, three yea! Dr. H. 0. | Altnow, four years, and W, G. Black, r five years. These names were unanimously. ap- proved by the members present. |. INVESTMENT OFFICIAL DEAD. ‘Word was received in Mandan Mon- day by his friends, of the sudden death of Frank O. Brown, an official of the Mandan Loam and Inveitme; Co. Mr. Brown had a number | friends here, being connected for se’ and the news of his unexpected. deatir on ‘Sunday morning ame as a great shock to them, IN-HONOR OF BIRTHDAY. Mrs. Evert Lanterman was hostess at a charmingly affpointed little din- ner of Tuesday evening; the affair be- ing in honor of her husband’s birth- day. > | with a centering of sprit guests. ' | SELECT HONOR STUDENTS. | For the senior commencement exer-| | cises, class of ‘21, William Gussner jhas been .chosen valedictorian and James Hanley, Jr., w: ted editor- in-chief of the Spattering staff for the coming year, and Erwin Gussner iness manager. GUESTS AT DINNER, - W. G. Black and E. R. Griffen were! guests at a dinner given’ in the Lewis and Clark dining room on Thursday of last week. The guests were all of- ficers of the American Association of Engineers, Mr. Black being state pres- ident of that organization. ‘ iT0 PLAY. THURSDAY. It-has been finally decided to stage the Fat and Lean baseball contest Thursday evening. It will be played as a twilight game and fans are ex- pected-out in full foree, GUEST OF SON. and Mrs. C. C. McLean at the Lewis and Clark hotel Tuesday. TO TWIN CITIES, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Griffen wil! leave Friday night for St. Paul and Minne- apolis, to be absent for a week or s0. GUESTS OF BISMARCK FRIENDS, Mrs, J. W. Hintgen and Mrs. Steve! © BISMARCK. NORTH DAKOTA © Kaew ell over the Northwest fot Oily ® MAIL US YOUR FILMS © 214 Main Street. Phone 978 House of Baldwin Pianos Howard Modello and Monareh Terms for Those Who De Not Wish to Pay Cash Pianos, String: Instruments and Phonographs Repaired Last Word in Piance . MANUALO “The Pluyrr Piano That ‘1s AU Bat Human” oennvanananaatint Aner Fs a ae ie © eral years with the Lyon‘ interests, and covers’ were laid ‘for twelve}: Ralph Countryman, -.satatatorian. | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE “EVERY STATE SHOULD HAVE WHIPPING - POST,” SAYS NEW YORK New York, May’ 9.—What {s the cure’ ; BY R. H, WHITNEY. for ert “Lay the lash up- on the felon’s back! Administer _ sharp physical pain, and thereby purge. the criminal of his de- slre for evil “deeds. If you do that you will protect inno- cent citizenry against the crim- inal’s depredations. Every state should ake its whipping Such is the frankly spoken opinion of: Sup Court Justice Lewis L, Fawcett of Brooklyn. His statement: has aroused a whirl- wind of comments. “How awful,” says Judge Jean- Norpis of the women’s court. “Still it might help,” she adds. “We've got beyond the days of brut- ality. The stocks and the whipping post .belong to the’ inquisition,” says District Attorney Swann, “Advocacy ‘of the whipping Post discouraging to those who are inc ed to beliéve the world. progresses. t ward enlightenment,” answers George W. Wickersham, former attorney gen- eral of the United tates. What's Your Opfatent What do you thing about each state following .in the lead. of Delaware and. instituting -~ whipping post for wife-beaters, pickpockeis and. high- waymen? “If the rod administered, ” Judge ravcatt ‘says, “the criminal won't for- “Men go to Sing Sing and comezeut time and again with a. feeling they have not been punished, but have been given a pleasant asylu Then they repeat their crimes, * | “In: England in 1913 they restored the: whipping post: 1 have earmety that since resuming the lash no has returned for another beating.. In our own state of Delaware we still -have the whipping post, and as sult there is less crime in Del than in any community of tts America. Hoboes, wife-beaters, pi pocket: hate Delaware as a “A burglar who I know was once lashed in that state. : Then. he sent word to all his gang not to go to Delaware as. the punishment, wt ing | only a few mirutes, was worse tha life imprisonment elsewhere, “Now, instead of. giving. a “fourth offender a lifagentence as the law re- quires me te do, I would recommend six months in with a lashing every 30: days. x “At "the end of his-stx monthé’ im- prisonment when he gets the last lashing, he will leave jail, in pain, of| course, but ‘cured of a desire to do a Spar Justice Fawcett ‘Miled that he would never whip a woman under any circumstances. ‘What: .do «the Deleware Tecords show? Has crime increased there? Last fall Wilmington was overrun by hold-up men from Baltimore, Phil- adelphia“and New York. It wasn't! safe.for anybody to be on the streets after dark, With gun and bleckjac! | The table was splendidly appointed; ords show,.crooks kept u Then the legistature passed the law making highway robbery punishable by 20 years in prisom and 40 lashes-on |.the bare ‘back. The highwaymen disappeared like flurries of -anow before the morning sun, : : y % of Mandan, were the gneats of Bis- marck: friends on Tueaday. (ISM ARCK VISITOR. Mise Jean. Stutsmand was a Bis- marek visitor ‘Tuesday, between trains, #-- + y TO HOLD SESSIO $ The: Readitig Club will meet at the tesidetice of Mrs. Boley on Thursday afternoon. CALLING ON FRIENDS. Mrs. J. J. Morrow and Mrs. Frank Dow were calling on Bismarck frail j Se: fi “Mra, Colby. and: daughter - were sal Mandan Tuesday, visiting friends and, ‘opping. Their home is at:Beulah. old. Sprieeteld rifle, aad a-brass It. buckle, were found on the: site belt of the old battlefield, which is now occasion of a recent. visit to the ‘his- toric- spot, The ‘relics recall the, en- gagement of Custer, in which about! 225. soldiers. were. qorrouatea kill ed..by a. force of Indians greatly out- numbering them. NAPOLEON’S IDEAL WOMAN. ‘The great Napoleon, in response to Pl ly: beautiful society. belle or the. butter- fly fashion, but the matron who reach- es age in. complete. preserva- gt n_of health, with stalwart children There are a great’ many women of middle age who owe theif good health to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- Pound, that famous medicine for fe- male ills. For almost fifty years this ‘wonderful medi » compounded of roots. and herbs, has been restoring suffering. women to health. TO’ AID. ROAD K Diekinson, May 11.— inson Town Criers, 20 strong, in all their regalia, are touring Stark county as a “flying " auditorian here next Thars- day evening. at §& o'clock under the auspices of the ‘Dickinson Automobile Riva veo a Biscuit Company SUPREME susmic T0. REPRODUCE ~ -CUSTER BATTLE s Bowman, N. ,D., May :10.—An exact reproduction of Custer's famous. bat- tle on the Little Big Horn will be staged at 11 A. M., June 25 on the site |: of the massacre, by 500'Crow and Sheyenne Indians, representing the Sioux, and by members of the Amer- fcan Legion ‘and troops of cavalry representing Custer’s forces, 4t has | been announced by the Custer .Battle Anniversary association of Hardin, ‘kMent., which is only 13 miles from the scene of the historic: massacre. - Permission has been secured from the war ‘department for use of the national cemtery for the spectacle; and Generak Hugh L. Scott of the historle’ Seventh cavalry has an- nounced he will. attend, as- probably will Mrs: Custer: ‘The war depart- ment has offered to eo-operate in every way to help make the program a great: success, “The observance of the anniversary ofthe hattle of the Little Big ‘Horn which marked the beginning of the end of active ‘warfare: between the @lonx. and’ the ‘government will he of interest to the Indians of the Stand- ing Rock reservation, many - ‘of whom are still living. Many of the : grandsons and nephews of the Indfans who participated in the Custer massacre fought in the World wa 19 TO GRADUATE, Dickinson, May 11.—Nineteen mem- hers of the senior class of the Dickin- son high: school ‘wilt’ receive their diplomas at the annual commencement exercises’ which will be held in thé high school ‘auditorfum ‘on Friday evening, June 3. ‘Rey. JG. Duling of Minneapolis, former | pastor of the WEDNESDAY, MAY 11, 1921 sive the commencement address, Bac-' calaureate services: wilt be held in t ‘auditorium on Sunday evening. May. 29. Rev. J. D. Smith, pastor of the Methodist church, will deliver the ser- MILESTONES How happy are. those mothers who have portraits’ to visualize life’s milestones. Children ard? -ever changing. Photographs bring you endless joy and they never grow ”SLORBY STUDIO successors to . HOLMBOE STUDIO SHO-CARD jae 1 ‘an SIGN PAINTING - Phone 669 219 Main Street i Bismarck Furniture Co. s FOR SALE CHEAP Two new one and one-half “ton Trucks’ >) > ** Corwii win Motor Co, | Dickinson Congregational church, wilt bak ye 4 sou Z SHE fact stint Big Sioux Bisc its © ‘are the most popular biscuits in their home: states, proves one outstanding thing: Quality. Better wheat, better bak.. ing—these are.the secrets of the damabelly " inviting flavor of Big Sioux. And Big Sioux Biscuits are fresh and ' crisp because they’re baked here in the . West and sealedsight in. large, full-value - Sy, Big Sioux Packages. ‘ Always’ have Big Sie Cookie-Cakes and Crackers in the house and serve them with everything from soups. to. desserts, big-value articles o evidenced by their enthusiasm in selling Big Sioux Biscuits, Your Grocer. renders an important service in the community ee on and patronage: Sioux Falls, S. D. and Fargo, N. D. 3 « Batablished 1902 |