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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Clas3 Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY =:CHICAGO : - - 3 i Marquette Bldg. t ‘ PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK : - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. Publishers DETROIT Kresge Bldg. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are| also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION * SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year............eeeeeeeee daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck).. 3 5 +» 1.20 Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.............. 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER SIXTH SENSE Seals have an odd way of making their living. Pa Seal establishes his residencé on a big floating cake of ice. drills a hole down through this ice, into the water. Every | morning Pa Seal and Ma Seal go down this hole and swim off to bring food to their babies, whom they leave playing on | top of the ice around the hole. Along comes Captain Robert A. Bartlett, the explorer. ! He mixes up the babies of various families of seals, shifting | them from one ice cake to another. But he reports that | when Ma Seal returns home she detects the’ substitution in- | stantly, and hustles around to the other ice fields until she | finds her own babies. \ That is instinct, the sixth sense. | (Established 1873) | . Bartlett also learns that when the baby seals flop down through the hele in the ice and take their first swim, they have no trouble finding their way back to their own iceberg, even though it has been moving steadily with other bergs in| the ocean current. _ This, again, is instinct. “ ¥t’s like the dogs or cats which travel phenomenal dis- tances cross-country and find their way ‘back home. Bees fly: by a sense of direction, or instinct; move the hive a trifle and they bang into where the entrance used to be. So on, all through nature. ‘ At some time far back in the past, man probably had the sixth sense or instinct of other animals. Lost, long ago. It survives faintly, at times, as when we are conscious that some one has turned on the street to look at us, or in the dark when we “feel” that we are about to collide with furni- ture we cannot see. So-called psychic phenomena may be related to the sixth sense. é STAMPEDE OF CIVILIZATION In the darkness of a New York movie theater, Robert a ‘a Tose to leave. His seat was halfway to the orchestra, jut his first move was observed by the patrons’standing four déep in the rear.: s Pastra woke up in Bellevue Hospital. He tells the surg- eons that he had, barely risen and.stepped into the dark aisle when eight big women, in competition for the vacated seat, crashed “into him simultaneously. They walked over him, trampled his breath dut, and fractured his left leg. He has a confused recollection of one woman winning the battle. seven retreating wrathfully up the aisle. An artist might paint a picture of this and label it:| Civilization. FATAL DISEASE | The death rate of tuberculosis among Americans has i been cut in two in the last 50 years, says Dr. Stephen J. | } Maher, chairman of the New England Tuberculosis Con- ! ference. | On the other hand, many other diseases are increasing | their death roll, cancer especially. We also have maladies, like Spanish flu, that were practically unknown to people of a:half century ago. i In solving one problem, we usually create several new ones. -And as fast as we protect our health in one direction, | nature attacks us in another. It’s her old system of sur- vival of the fittest—strengthening the race by making the individuals constantly fight to keep alive. VALUES SHIFT ,. A big locomotive works gets a cablegram order for an oil can worth 40 cents. To send the cable, cost $10. So the oil:can, normally worth 40 cents, was worth $10.40 when badly needed. * Values are volatile, more shifting than quicksand, more changing than the winds. They are relative. A loaf of | bread is worth a ton of gold to the man starving in the Far North. A dime represents more imprisoned pleasure in childhood than $1000 when we are too old to enjoy it. Carlyle toiled seven years writing a history. One morning he*woke and found that the maid had used his manuscript to-start a fire. That was the extent of its value, to her. ; “GAS”. FLUCTUATES « Gasoline recently has been retailing at an average of 16 cents a gallon in 30 leading cities over the country. . A ihe average price in these same cities Jan. 1, 1921, was 9 cents, | he cause of this price drdép is the tremendous over- | tion. of gasoline-bearing crude oil, due chiefly to Cali- oil: gushers. °° | { gasoline sold for. 29 cents, 999 out of 1000 oil men id haye bet heavily against a drop to 16 cents. Oil isa fing industry. Remember. this when tempted to buy uncertain stocks. “ SENDS i i atic ea ...,. GERMAN BIRTH RATE ~ Se al ver babies are being born jin the large German cities, the Berlin correspondent of Journal of the American tiation. This year the birth rate is tower in n cities than in leading French communities, a situation, prolonged, might easily have a deep ) Buropean politics, For France fears the Ge ‘traditionally high: birth rate, a lot more than sh ny of today. -“ pe Rreraee European pol: He | | started something that he will not} . | Herald. jit?” asked Nancy. “First, I'm going to find her nest.’ the e: i ing a yes of men with th let | And then I'm going to fool her,” letter. See chuckled Mister Dodger. “Come on/| | even blinking her eyes. jstatue or something. ; the fairyman put them | (Copyright. 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) ; ‘Tey’ | EDITORIAL REVIEW WELL GenTiemed —# of important issues WHO EVER'S GONNA Deing discussed in th the a N YEAR OUGHT TS GeT ON AND GeT Some | PRACTICE | | | | | WALTON’S FINISH IS IN SIGHT | | Governor Walton of Oklahoma eccr- | tainly did try to take in too mu territory when he urdertook to pre-| {vent the people of that state from | voting on an initiated constitutional {amendment authorizing the legisla- | ture to convene itself in extraordi- j nary session for the purpose of im- | peaching him. For not only did the people vote despite his effort to prevent them, | but they have voted against him if fcur to one, and the amendment appears to have been adopted by an overwhelming majority. It is true that the calling of the eléction seems to have been sudden and perhaps rather informal, and there may be legal obstacles to carrying | out the will of the people thus e | pressed. But on the face of it, the | militant governor of Oklahoma has suffered a smash ng reverse. It is not likely that the legislature will be merciful. The Ku Klux Klan is strong in its membership, und to \ | its strength has been added the suy- rest of manv who do not sympathize with the Klan, but who do resent very vigorously the governof’s high- | handed methods. It is not a victory for the masked pnd hooded lawlessness which governor has been fighting, thengh | of course the friends of the Kian will pdvrst'-> it as a vietory. The} highest estimate of K. K. K. strength in Oklahoma is fifty per cent of the! volers, and the vote on the amend-j{ ment is too overwhelmiag to | he be counted as a vote of Klan sympa-! thizers. It is simply that Governor Walton | he able to finish. Not content with | fighting the K. K. K., he has gone} vy on until he found himself fighting WS the entire legislature and the whole oF people of Oklahoma. His cause was! SS sound, but his were a yudged. He is metheds through.- Duluth ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS By Olive Roberts Barton “Do you know, my dears, I have more trouble watching the chickens than al] the other animals in Squealy- Moo Land put together,” said little Mister Dodger, the fairyman, as he dodged under the haystack and out LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT, TO LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF THE SECRET DRAWER (CONTINUED) | | | | | Ruth raised her eyes to mine. af-| |ter she had read that poem, ‘Dear | Little Marquise, and I thought “I am looking into wells of sérrow” deeper, and darker than I have ever seen be- ‘fore. : Eat “I had only. been married a year, Leslie,” she suid, “when someone came to me and told me of Harry’s have they been doing now?” asked Nick. “It’s Missez Henrietta Hen,” an- swered Mister Dodger. “She's got a an whole nestful of eggs hidden away |the chorus of oe of the _ musical somewhere and: she’s clucking on ‘comedies. It was then I found that | them! I'd give'‘anything to know : bit of verse I have just read ‘to you Rherenith is! and something went out of me, dear, “What is clucking?” asked Nancy. |S°mething went out of my love that “‘Clucking’ means ‘setting’,” said |W@8 of greater importance to Harry the little barnyard fairy. “When |than it was to me. she takes a notion to hatch out a| “I do not know that he has ever family of little chicks, she hides her | ™i8sed it, but from that time. he nest and sits on it for three weeks | *#® never had the devoted loyalty to keep the eggs warm.’ Then out 224 utter adoration which I. gave pop the chicks und there you are!” {him before, I still clung, however, “Well, isn’é that all right?” asked |'° the feeling that men did not re- Nine gard the Seventh Commandment as “Certainly!” » A _| binding upon them, but new that p ; ( |the Eighth. I said to myself, ‘My pine tree! If this were April or May. | husband is an honorabl f, “Mi But it isn’t. It isn’t far from win-'dotine honor” men ter and Missez Hen certainly ought ak Eaties 4 2 to know that baby chicks hatched | quise to hams toe ents, Mare now would be sure to freeze or die | rity myer tie aek “what ...the le | Bighth w: Of course I, like every of whooping cough or pneumonia or bei ne jother feminine human being, had is - ‘known, since I had known anything, What are you going to do about that if a woman broke the Seventh |Commandment, she was marked in d “The Eighth,” srid Ruth, ‘ and help me hunt.” . {shalt not ‘steap.” Finally they found Missez Hen | “Oh Ruth,” I exclaimed in horror, settled on her nest behind the oat- “surely you don’t mean—” 1 bin in the barnloft. She just sat| “Oh, I don’t mean that Harry de- there and looked at them without liberately picks his friends’ pockets n Perhaps she ' or goes into their houses and holds was trying to pretend she was a| ‘Thou “Come on, children!” said, Mister Dodger loudly. “Come away! And let Missez Hen alone.” The Twins were puzzled, but Mis- | ter Dodger winked mysteriously so they knew it was part of the trick So they climbed down the ladder and waited, ' “She has to eat,” whispered the fairyman. “She'll leave her nest for two or three minutes pretty soon, | and when she’s gone, we'll get her | eggs.” i} Anq that’s exactly what happened. Naney held her apron and Nick and | carefully in.‘ And then the fairy did a asa thing. He took a glass egg out of | his Pocket and put it in the nest. | ‘She'll sit on that and never know the difference!” he chuckled. “when | of / she finds it doesn’t. hatch, she't | it.’ | “Tt seems kind of mean!” sag | RIF TY THERS oes ae a 1 |alwats Bustep -!t!t Not_menn at all!” asid Mister | Dodger. “She had one nice family this venr. Besides. foolish people have to be managed.” | (To Be Continued.) i es they choose. ‘ aa CUT THIS OUT—IT Is WORTH . ‘ MONEY, | fend this ad and ten cents to Fo- Co., 2887 Sheffield Ave. Chi- .. Writing your name and ad- But You've neve BESn CUSTSD . HARD SNovcy tt! “sample pa f PILLS for "back, Bid: escapade with a young woman inj, . Yes, MRS. TRVE, IT’S FIFTY HERE And | icTangle | ™ them up at the end of-a gun, but I heard him boast of putting over practices with even his dearest have friends that meant nothing more than, stealing their money. “What would you do, Leslie, if you were married to a man whom you didn’t love any more; whom you didn’t even respect; whose presence made ‘you grow‘ cold allfabout your heart?’ What. would you do, dear?” “[ wouldn’t live with him a min- ’ I’said impulsively. wonder, I wonder,” Ruth sed musingly. ““Harry would: not give me)ane cent if I should try, to di- Vorce him and I do not believe. I could carn my own living. My par- ents are both dead and I have no money. Tam a coward. I’m asham- ed to confess it, but I'm a coward. Even’ when there is a door open to me.I am a coward.” “What do you mcfn Ruth?” ‘Tf mean—have you never guess- ed?” ‘ “You-are not in love with Walter Burke, are you?” ute “Thats just it, Leslie, I don’t know. I am afraid that I am so unhappy with Harry that Iam all ready to do anything to get away from him. But if ever the time comes when I am sure that I love Walter, I shall go to him. Why should I give up my chance of hap- piness for the sake of public opin- jon?” (Copyright, 1928, NEA Service, Inc.) A pear! discovered in a fresh wa- ter mussel in the River Conway, North Wales, is said to form one of the: crown jewels, Tiled walls, rustless paint, and ew ventilating “dodges” are the latest luxuries in the Lion House at the London Zoo. ACC YEU THINK OF 13 Youre OWN Conrory fi! 7 NoU_ DON’T SEEM To REALIZE THAT MARRIAGE 1S A FIFTY-FIFTY PROPOSITION !t! Cooking is an art. It is the art of interior decorating. A cook should know what is good taste. While gelatin is palatable food, children eating too much may grow up and become shimmy” dancers. Never think the washing powder. is breakfast food or that the break- fast food is washing powder. Always have tomato ketchup handy. By using enough of it you can eat many things you don’t like. The most sanitary.way of learning to eat“dpaghetti is to practice with a clean bunch of string. healthy if. you don’t drink too much water after eating them. Keep a little canned soup in the pantry. You can either feed it to company or throw it at burglars. Never pick your teeth at the |table. Sitting’there feeling as if you would like to is more polite. What kind of tooth paste do ‘you use? Get a good reliable brand that ean be digested easily. _ Kitchens should be covered with linoleum so steaks accidentally dropped won't get splinters in them. | Teeth should be brushed with an up and down motion as if you are removing restaurant steak. i Do you know how to shake hands? | Shake too hard and strangers will think you are selling something, Have you a lazy daughter? If she has bobbed hair you might make her use her head for dusting, — How far down do you wash your neck? You may have to remove your shirt “before Strangers some day. : i | Take a tip from the laundry. Re- move ink spots from clothes by running them through w meat grinder, ;_ Fargo, Dried peaches and apples are! j.include 8,284,414 tons of bituminous Purchases Load i Of Purebred Cows | Wimbledon, N. D., Oct. 6.—A car- \tond of purebred Holstein cows, se- lected from the prize herd of 0. S. | Hartman at Aitkin, Minn, fave been placed on the farm of G, S. Baxter, | superintendent of thé Soo line. The cattle were selected by. Harry Duns- ton, agricultural agent: of the Soo line, Missionary Meet Opens In Minot Minot, Oct. 5—-the “Minneapolis | of the Minneapolis Woman’s Foreign Missionary socie- ty opened Thursday, continaing Fri- day, Saturday and Sunday. - Approxi- mately 100 delegates are expected to ‘|be here from Minnesota, South Da- kota and North Dakota.~ The meet- ings are—held at Vintent M. E. | church. | Duck Banded is In Mo. Is Shot Wannaford, N. D., Oct. 5—The mal- |Griggs county, about three weeks at Cuivre Island, Mo., on March 23, 1923, by L. W. Walton of Firma, Mo., according to advices received here from the department of ,agriculture, |bureau of biological survey: The duck when shot bore a band on ita leg inseribed with the number 205,+ 1934, | Skeletons of Indians Found Oct. Barrett, Minn., fill for a road leading through the town. The skeletons were those of two children and a woman, and are in a “fairly good” state of preservation, according to Dr. F. W, Powers, who made an inspection df the bones, which were found huddled. together in one grave. Mother of 17 - Children Dies Oct. 5.—Funeral services for the late Mrs. Hugh McGillivray, who died following a paralytic stroke at the family home in Norma Sun- day morning, were hel Tuesday. iurs, McGillivray is survived by the husband and 13 of their 17 children. 4 grand children and two.great grand children. She was born, October 18, 1855 at Langside, Bruce county, Ont., and lived there until 1882, when she moved with her husband to Inkster, N. D. They resided there until 1602 when they moved to Burke county, where she resided until she died. i Coal Receipts . At Lakes Big Duluth, Oct, 5.—Coal. receipts at Duluth!Superior docks slackened up during September but the total ton- nage received up to Sept. 30 is more than 3,000,000 tons larger than the average total recorded on. that date for the last six years, according to the official monthly report announced by the local United States engineer's office. : The total receipts on Sept. 30 were 9,219,283 tons, the report shows. They and 984,869 tons.of anthracite. ‘The average, total for..six years is 6,130- 476 tons, | MANDAN NEWS ‘Northwest News lard wild duck shot near Capt ; - FRIDAY} OCTOBER’ 5, 1923. -\ Farmer’s Arm Parshall, N. D., Oct. 5.—Henry Kunde, Parshall farmer, lost one of his arms, which was practically torn off when it became caught in the drive belt of a tureshing engine and the gears of the separator. The arm was amputated at the shoulder. | Belt Tears Off Crane Protected By Game Law, LaMoure, N. D., Oct. 5.—-Game Warden H. A. Brown calls attention toa new provision in the state game law, which protects crane. There delegation to the dnnual convention! ean be no shoéting of crane which » branch of the| are protected by federal law, and the state law is now the same, Grand Forks To Sue Official Grand Forks, N. D., Oct. 6.—State's Attorney J. B. Wineman of Grand Forks county was instructed today by the county commission to insti- tute proceedings against Charles Al- len, former county treasurer, and his bondsmen to recover $5,078.50 of county funds deposited by Mr. Allen in-the Peoples State bank of Grand Forks and tied up there since that \ ago by Chester Jackson, was banded | institution:closed in 1921, Threatens To Shoot - Neighbor; Arrested Balfour, N. D., Oct. 5.—Peter Klein was arrested on the charge of thresi- ening to shoot J. B. Pendroy on a warrant sworn out by the latter. The complainant alleged that after he and Klein had settled some business mat- ter, Klein pointed a loaded revolver ‘at the complainant and said that this 5.—Three| was the way he wanted to settle the skeletons of Indians, thought to be| accouzt. more than 500 ycrrs old, were un-| tinued threatening him for an hout earthed in this village Wednesday,| and half and that he did not desist when a road gang began cutting a] until the arrival of a neighbor. vendroy alleged Klein con- Alco-Rub Case — Before Jury’ argo, Oct. 5.—The Sherwood, N. D., alco-rub case is among the matters before the present federal grand jury for consideration. Jacob Sair ang Wm. Niminski, of Oxbow, Canada, are held under $1,000 on a charge of having alco-rub in their possession with illegal intent. Their arrest followed seizure be federal authorities of 15 cases at Sherwood hilled from the Fox Sales company of Minneapolis to a branch ‘office of the same company at Sher- wood. Officers believe the company is fictitious."" Two hundred and thir- ty-nine cases withithe same billing were seized shortiy after, The problem of the federal officers is to prove the intent as the alco-rub is manufactured under legal condi- tions. The jury pfobably will make its re- port tomorrow. HORSES BURNED. Wyndmere, N. D., Oct. 5.—Fire of undetermined origin destroyed the Wyndmere livery barn, a residence adjoining, four horses, two cows and a calf and some harness, hay and feed. Two horses were saved. Th barn and résidence was owned by G. W. Warner. The Jake Gessel family. occupying the residence, lost part of | their household goods and some cloth- ing. * BLOCK RECONSTRUCTED, Wahpeton, N. D.,Oct. 5—The Ben, esh & Pierce block in Breckenridge, which was recently destroyed by fire, is being reconstructed. Tenants have found temporary quarters until the work is finished which will be about Jan. 10. his bicycle. He was pinned beneath his Bicycle as the car, a sedan, pass- ed over both wheels. Mineral production in Canada last To Seek Federal Aid To Pave Road Morton courity commissioners thave passed a ‘resolution asking for fed- eral aid in the development of the Mandan to St. Anthony road and ih Socks with holes in the heels that show may be worn by pulling them on only about half way. Have you got holes in your hand- kerchiefs? . M few: more to match and claim it is fancy lace. If you are setting new silverware you can make {t match by always going to the same restaurant, Tarnish may be removed from old. silverware by letting children play in the gand with it. No matter how great the tempta- tion, never ‘try td bathe tl with laundry soap and d. Make the children study. Nothing makes a. boy sicker at school time than not knewing; his! lessons, are more effi- except when it comes to chasing: the ‘cat. A bles. Watched percolator never bub- | Ce aa > Suffer ilttle children, and forbid them not, to come unto me; for a {that this’is one of the most. import- -| visit with graveling the same. It ‘is believed ant highways in the county, as it is a part of the direct’ road to Solen, Breien,‘ Timmer, serves as a thickly settled farming \ community and would be an important “leg” of a still further improved road to Flash- er. 1 Mrs, Walter Janssen, who has been spending the past month‘ with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R, Heater, te returned to her home at Chicago, ml. ; : Mr. and Mrs. E. C, eapolis, Minn., are spending a few Mr. and Mrs, J. F. Place. ae as Mrs. E.G. Collig’and ‘son’ Lowell returned-this: weck.from'a Spokane, Seattle Wash. John Axt, father’ of the four boys | who were killed at Almont two weeks ago, has entered the. hospital for, treatment, of ,his sight. hand, which ‘was cut severely in the accident, and ecome infected. Little Joseph Axt, who was badly injured in the accident recovering. ed Mr. dak Mrs, Otto> Bauer - are such in. th iryrdom’ of es Mie ee oe a > There is a feeling of Eternity i youth :-whiel: nade o¥ made tor every’ : Do he young is to be e immortals. rtals.—Hazlitt, piled ii ioue Gaye vighsing in Dangl Rafferty, son of Mike Raf- ferty, was Dadly ‘scratched and: bruts- ed yesterday~ whi 'driven by: Miss’: Ma pal of the days here with the latter’s parents, 5: year was worth $180,622,000. There are branch factories in Canada for 675 United States firms. =< —= — ® LAVORT Lavort is perhaps a bit ex-* treme, but young men with the modern complex will like it. ‘One can give it a twist and a pull and it’s theirs—made to order! - Silky velour finish in come- Jy colors. ° oo PHER# ee