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PAGE TWO tHE BISMARCK TRIBUNE , Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. ntered at the Postoffice, Publishers Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Marquette Bld NEW YORK : MEMBER OF winted Pres: DETROIT ig. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH o Fifth Ave. Bldg. OCIATED PRESS ‘lusively entitled to the use or ation of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. : -All rights of republication of special dispatches herein ere also reserved. is @3 MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE es Gag - $7.20 | ty by mail, per year (in Bismarck) a ef we Mae) Baily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck).... 5.00 Paily by mail, outside of North Dakota .. 6.00 THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873 | FAIR DEAL TO ALL In utilization of the Roosevelt School, it should not be ecessary to work a hardship upon the patrons of the Villiam Moore school. ianding is that the All the west end patrons are de- me seventh and eighth grade facilities e- given them as are accorded the Richholt school. It should not be necessary to circulate petitions among the patron: and start a neighborhood contest over the affair. Respons ty rests solely with the Board of Education to give each ality a square deal. In giving the Roosevelt school patrons . seventh and eighth grade, it should not be necessary to leprive the William Moore school of those grades. Tf the patrons of the William Moore school desire a con- tinuation of the seventh and eighth grades, what is more simple than to discontinue the Junior High which is more or Fess of an educational fad and take two of the four teach- erg and install them in seventh and eighth grades in the Roosevelt school. -By a simple process of red grade pupils between the three schools a hardship will be worked upon no one, There is no necessity for petitions and stirting up of neighborhood rivalry and feeling to solve this problem. With school facilities as limited as they are in Bismarck, distances as great, the maintenance of a Junior High if it is ro prove a stumbling block to the utilization of the Roosevelt School would be folly, a blind sacrifice to an educational idea which however meritorious cannot outweigh the necessity of giving the west end of Bismarck the same facilities the Richholt school now enjoys. Depriving the William grade facilities naturally will cause opposition a: jorhood feels entitled to the same school facilities as the Rvosevelt and Richholt. No one in the west end is asking additional school facilities at the expense of the William “Moore school. Circulating petitions stricting seventh and eighth Moore of seventh and eighth s often a nice way of passing the buck, Responsibility for school management rests upon the shoulders of the school board and these problems cannot be settled by the very unsatisfactory method of. petition. The school board is hardly justified in having four teach- ers crowded into the William Moor hool teaching seventh and eighth grades when four beautiful rooms are going to waste updn which taxes are being paid and for the main- tenance of which the overhead proceeds whether occupied or vacant. } The Roosevelt school can be given seventh and eighth grade facilities without additional cost for teache of course an educational fad may get a jolt, but in any event lets bring the schools as close to the students as possible. When the tax wastrels in some other departments of-govern- ment cease their prodigality, it may be possible to stand the luxury of a junior high, but just now full utilization of our school system seems paramount to any educational fetish. “ETHNOLOGY” DOWN TO DATE The New York Times enjoys itself with a burlesque “ethnologically” speaking at the expense of the Northwest. In an ‘editorial headed “Not So Far Apart,” in which a report m the negro race’s inferiority by H. U. Hall, curator of ‘ethnology in the museum of the University of Pennsylvania is discussed the following “ethnological picture” is given of the: “radical” west: r In the region of the Upper Mississippi and _ its ~=major tributaries, among such tribes as the Wis- consians, the Illinoisans, the Indianians and the ~Non-Partisan tribes of Minnesota and the Dakotas, the custom is to select every four years a chieftain, =resident at the national kraal called Washington, whose chief function is to make rain, develop a high =production of sunlight, ward off cyclones, and in every other way promote the growth of the crops ‘and the hogs upon which these tribes depend for their subsistence. If climatic conditions have been “unfavorable under a chieftain of ‘one great clan, known as the Republicans, the tribesmen replace him with a chieftain from another clan, known as the Democrats, and vice versa. The Republicans have amassed a large collection of magic rain-stones, such as Home Markets, American Standards of Liv- ing, Foreign, Pauper Labor, &c. When the kettle begins to boil, once every four years, they plunge these magic stones into the hot water and, taking -up,a magician’s wand, known as the Tariff, they perform incantations with it, and immediately the rain begins to fall, the crops begin to burgeon and the hogs begin to fatten like anything. How the East loves us! : DIET CHANGES ur generation eats 30 per cent more food and, 374 per fent more sugar than our grandparents, claims the Boston Medicat and Surgical Journal. | The claim about increased sugar consumption is indisput- ble; Sugar has naturally taken the place of its twin-brother, ‘alcohol. - : © But we doubt that modern people eat about a third more eir grandparents, who thought. nothing of a food. than thi i : Found of ham, four eggs and 35 flapjacks apiece for break- food is being consumed. st, Statistics may indicate more 1 | Our guess is that the increase goes into the garbage pail. A SPENDERS \ Phis country of ours spent over 36 billion dollars in _ That’s shown by hank checks.sent. through the ing houses. In three weeks Americans write enough ry that neigh-|" EDITORIAL REVIEW column the op 1 Mey OF ine, ulon of The ‘bey sented here in order th: A GROWN-UP PRODIGY Child prodigies thave a distres ing, if normal, way of growing up into men and women, With matur ity they apt more often han not to sink into normaley No such thing is happening to Pamela Bianco, Unlike some oth ers, whose art dies out with adole ence, she has kept on developing, Her arth of au extraordinary the thoughtful exy ture a her exhibition aty Knoed alleries in ‘New York need no longer be prefaced as tl work child prodigy it re » judged on its merits stone. It wa Pamels vrown from the work child genius to sion of a ma-| London in 1919, when years old, that she held her first) exhibition, which brought the artistic world to her How it came about was this in was way Pamela is the, daugh jan father and an Eng hota of them with distinct ar illustration of inings, but ith a technique and y different from that child. Bianco was Pamela's gift always When an of exhibition of children’s work was held in Turin he sent some of her awar drawings to it They immediately made such an imp siog upon critics that Captain Bianco Was pre- vailed to give an exhibition of her work in London. It was the sensa- tion of the season, Artists, authors, collectors and museums bought her work ? John Galsworthy wrote to Cap- tain Bi begeing him to exer- cise th atest care in not allow- ing her talent to be forced. “She must go on,” he said, “discovering beauty in a simple wa Through Mitchell Kennerly, the publisher, Pamela and her father and mother went to New York, where she held her first exhibition at the Anderson galleries, The London sensation was repeated. lovely dank - eyed little shy and a little amuse: itement ‘her simple draw- causing p has exhibite ities, but her ex- which “opened recently is the first one to have been held in New York city since her first ap rance there, “T haven't any special ideas about my work,” she id the other “E just paint. Sometimes what 1 think about, sometimes things | see through my wind and sometimés portraits and still lites. Of course I do other things besic paint, but then 1‘ wonld rather paint than do anything else in the world.” Pamela is part ment,” whieh i for of the “move- the term used by who are mod- ndencies. © though she seen the wor ain, it is alm or Der- nd been THE SMA ING OF PINCHOT The Republican voters of Penn- vania stepped on Governor nchot in the recent and smashed him rather flat. Mr. Pinchot prohibition enforcement. anyone else ‘The Republican voters were fatigued with the Governor that by ‘Hardly delegate to the N tion, and the chief reason appar- ently was his gnerilla war on Uncle Andrew Mellon and the Coo- lidge Administration. ber of more or less open atta en, Mr. Coolidge and Mr. Mellon. He began with the coal worst of it. Secretary Mellon with letters on enforcement of the Volstead Act. fonnd that epistolary the Secretary as adversary is cool on vulnerable points. Governor Pinchot’s latest show to hire Francis J. Heney at his own the Senate gate Mellon. Mt. Coolidge to administer sharp committee to of department morale. Pennsylvania's great son, tary Mellon, Governor Pinchot delegate. at-l. mystery ‘is that olis Journal. MARSHAL SHOT Littleton, Colo,, Stevens, town wounded perhaps fa May 1.—Virgil escaped from the Denver county jai William Delihunt of St. Paul. of the fugitives was probably fat ally wounded. un spots are closely related to elec trical storms, to pay off the entire national debt. : g absolutely no excuse for poverty in the midst of s wealth. | observing meteors, tic and literary gifts, Pamela h always drawn, many children | do, the fantastfe and whimsi childish Al- studied or taught by them. There is some-/to the people we serve in attending | thing about ‘her form, her use of|to the editorial work of the paper line that reminds one at once of} and the management of our business the Italian primitives. — Brooklyn |than we can be as member of the Eagle. legislature subject to the criticisms and petty jealousies of those who primaries | ys the issue was kes that view of it. so a two-to-one vote they refused to give him the traditional election as ational Conven- The Governor has made a num- contro- versy, wherein he had much the Then he attacked Like Senator Couzens later on, he an trenchment, long on facts and.short of anti-Administration spleen was his project to get Senator Couzens lexpense as a special prose¢utor of investi- This ultimately led rebuke to the Senate for tolerating a plan both illegal and subversive Despite these repeated evidences of unfriendliness, to use no strong- ed term, to Mr. Coolidge and to Secre- wanted to be elected a Coolidge e to the Cleveland Convention. ‘Naturally, he was 4 Fi a, turned down with great emphasis |Ptrer who sincerely helicyes thats he by. the Republican’ voters. The} 2m Serve best and pro it moat” by he should ever have chanced the issue.—Minneap- IN.GUN FIGHT marshal here, was ally, shortly be- Tore noon today in a revolver fight with two men suspected of having last Thursday in a delivery led by One Rapid movements and changes in| tu were elected yesterday when he | | | THE BISMARCK | | | | | | | | | | | TRIBUNE Left at the Dock } TRUBSHAWNOT T0 SEEK PLACE INN, D, SENATE Jalley City Man Decides To - Stick to His Knitting in Newspaper Office P, R. Trubshaw, editor of the Val- ley City Times-Record, who planned to become a candid: for the state Senate from Barnes county after or Ployhar was indorsed for Licutenant-Governor, has decided not to become a ‘candidate for that posi- tion, and also will not. seek relection tothe House. In a statement explain- ing his position Mr. Trubshaw says in part: “In our decision to drop out of the political game we have done so for the one reason more than anything As a newspaper man owning ly newspaper, we believe and feel that we can be of more service cannot see any good in anybody ren- dering public service, It is difficult for any person to serve the public—- no matter how hard they may try to do right—because there are always those who are ever ready to bury the hatchet“in your back at-the first opportunity regardless of how good you might have served, Again, we are independent in thought and ac- tion and we e nat at any time felt like crooking the knee on being subservient to the will of every little coterie of political advocates of various political notions. We do not | like the proposition of curbing our thought to curry favor for votes and we are not going to try. We want to be a free lance—absolutely free criticize the good or bad in our state or national governments t's our thought. We have al- ways been a square shooter and have had the courage to express our con- vietions, but we are finding out that a newspaper man cannot do that and run for office. In order to win sup- port he must overlook many things and subscribe to many things that he would not do were he not a can-| didate. We are going to maintain after this our editorial independence taken this step in order that we can do so. Politics at the best are not always square and there are many things done in a political way that do not appeal to us or any other right thinking individuai. In other words, if you get anywhere in politics you must bow to the supreme dictation of this bunch and that bunch, and submitting to any clique has never | been part of our newspaper ethics. | We believe that if the supreme cthies. | of Rotary, “He profits most who} serves best,”-can be applied to a member of that organization, it can also, be applied to the editor of this being free and independent in an en- deavor to give the people of Barnes county a better. newspaper, uncon- trolled by political environment but positively free to write and print just criticisms as he sees them nec- essary.” EMPLOYERS NAME LBE| other officers and directors of the Associated Industries of North Dako 1 i -| executive board met in the Gardner | hotel here. ‘ The general membership meeting October is a favorable month for| of the organization is to be held in Fargo some time next December, iv wl was meeting - of the state attended. ,outine matters taken up, the boara took betw: the Workmen's compengation bureau at B dust and we feel mighty glad that we have |- announced after yesperday’s More than 15 men from all parts In addition to action for greater co-operation en employes, employers ana marck, for speedy care of in- injuries. Other Officers Chosen Other officers chosen wer Dis- triet vicepresidents, J. L. Bell, Bis marck; L. H. Piper, Minot; and John M. Ryan, Grand Forks directors for three year Frank Bakke, Devils Lake; |! Amundson, Jamestown and R. ‘reeman, Fargo. The retiring pi laud, Grand For! Other members qf the board of di- sident is G. L. Ire- rectors ure: Frank Chaney, Harry Howland and J. A. Jardine, all of Vargo, whose te pire in 1926; W. A. Collins and R. FP. Bridgen 1 of Grand For whose terms expire in 1926, Wenzel Asks Co-operation Rh. EK. Wenzel, Bismarck, of Workmen's compensation outlined the need for prompt and proper care of minor injuries which he said frequently develop into. ser- ioug infections not only causing the eniployee suffering, serious disability and sometimea death, but also mak necessary heavy reimbursement charges. TWO SPURN ahd O, J. the bureau, GRAFT OFFER New Orleans, May 1—(By the A. P.)—Archie Rennison, superinten- dent of the New Orleans parish pri- columns of the Tribune. ¢———_—___—______® i People’s Forum AN ANSWER Editor Your tained 3 of tleman with political ambition, a writer of humorous article pearing from time to time in the The gentleman from Baldwin in his latest article takes me to,-fask and even challenges me to debate this matter with him. ) He also refers me to Chapter 61) ssion Laws of 1935 to prove that s figures are correct and further states that his old can und stand his figures even if I cannot. T am glad to know that his horse understands, him, for | am sure no one else does, and ar as Chapter 61 of the Session Laws of 1915 prov- ing that his figures are correct, T am satisfied that Mr, Meyer is again mistaken, The Law referred to -by the gentle- man from Baldwin, creates a Budget} Board, and just how Mr. Meyer con: | nects the creation of a Budget Board jin 1915 with the 9 appropriation for the Attorney General and State | Auditor is hard to comprqhepd, I am satisfied there is'#drfething | wrong with the set of Law Books that Mr. Meyer gets this information | ‘from the school children in his v cinity, ———————— threat if it was not accepted the Ilinois Central train on which the convicted men would-be taken from New Orleans to Amite for cxecution would be wrecked en route. THREATENED son, today received a letter offering him $50,000 and Col. Guy Moloney, superintendent of the New Orleans yolice department, $25,000 if they would permit the escape from jait of five of the six Italians conderi- ned to die at Amite on May 9. Coupled with the offer was a EVERETT TRUE GvSesty, OUTFIT INSTACLED NOWe NO THANK S — THE CHANCES 4RE 1r SOUNDS AS GooD AS \T CooKs — Baton Rouge, La., April 30.—Gov- ernor Parker, who fited:May 9 as the date for the execution of the six Ita- lians for the murder of Dallas Ca mes, received several alleged “black- hand” letters today threatening his Tife unless the lives of the six Ita- lians are spared. BY CONDO LVE GOT MY RADIO CAN'T “Ov COME OVER SOME EVENING AND, CISTEN IN Eu the other night in a story af the innerm loving woman from the first met the man she | until she diedy until she was old, and | the whole theme of the sto |to me to be her husbani | her, ETTER FROM LESL in aver: I) wert “Mary, with ine S$ answe | Your lover was a-king, and you h | te love him ines My lover and Sour Je or gt. n REE be flaunted’ in the ‘eyes of ine know-that in my. he: s in yours there are see-ets | that I can never tell to. anyon | cept. you, time ns to lo y sen want I. want herself to him. her found that variety that made hep al- in love; that dependence upon always life to age heart. that her charity; that ufter trust which made her incapable of failing him, As I saw m W. Wyatt, ing a bad MeMullin’s pounds in 6 You should colds, bronel hay fever. ful results, MeMullin Co nhart Dru t ©. A Virgini: could rob a it will be 50 cording to 2 medel of in them out of A great bonk and w: lectors he door, It only tal und that is s ase of lung trouble Tt “T bave, 3, To her, love was the grdat advex- ture always. ov t Dv red at One Evén through’ middle romance still det in real In her husband she appealed. to this picture I to accepting his challenge to debate I must decline the invitation, las there is nothing to debate, and Turther I suggest to Mr. Meyer that Henge his political opponents ure would gladly debate n that he might suggest. w. W. Herber WEAK LUNGS Leeton, Mo,, s ‘ormula. and months, try MeMullin gained for weak lungs, old standing cough, hial trouble, asthma Hundreds report wonder- Til Sold Mird. gonly by ». Sedalia, Mo, ge CO. ~-Adv. Tom Sims Says ‘a boy who thought nian’ tnd 4 hefore he g 1 judge: s nway, If you don't believe the ant is a just try to k dustry the su; fishermen! wo many play golf if you had to sit on ihe ait for a golf ball, A man is known by the bill col- keeps knocking at ne to staré afi always the other ¢ was two yéars'ol thougit of an. old poem that had beea writ- ten some years ago: away with ie est 9 her cally. t. or den by ndl That he is not sated in all iis days. may Imiration I'm divorce, TOMORROV frem 1 woman his money he slaps his foot on it. pays: read over again the letter Harry Ellington wrote to She brought it over to show not bright gold. not flout his teal true mate render : you,". he kept] One » saying through all the years, and] oy Jife will ffable lové in her eyes, hate.” \ pred, s, John.” W \i} 1 watched Ja | x wealth. of understanding she gave" that letter. O ding that Fliington, wike. glad Ruth,” E PRESCOTT | A man may make for his love 2 bed, © LESLIE PRESCOTT, CARE OF | And though they be mated, he is THE SECRET DRAWER not wed; I must talk to you a while, little} A man may love wth his seul | Marquise. g’m leaving for New aloof— iYork tonight, and 1 do not know| But a woman is welded in warp | when I will be able to sit here again and woof, una divulge my seeret thought. t [do nat kaowowhy,; little: -Mar-p 2 WH love me one; 1 will! love ome quise, you seem such a sympathetic] i yo) | confidante, for, your dove. ie, mast 20@ unto Noth shall mg Henrt Oe have been very different from mine. eld But this is the price that he pays I could not help thinking of this z | te Jack last night, Here was a man to see Norma made! that had said to himsel “Twill re Te was | ove me one, 1 will love me tw t soul of @/ and he had learned what another tanza in that poem said: “This is the Inw that is made old squander fons of surprise, of then as he looked at Ruth, of gr and respect. letter, that been wrong in both his estimate of his 1 are going to get he More of the letter eslie Prescott to Leslie Pres- cott, care of the secret drawer, you don’t know anything. who No matter how f when n. The funniest thing on doesn’t talking with a man who does. h __A Thoug r me from all my transgres- § his love's him back in as he fead 1 the emo: of digust; ck knew, he had friend, and a said emphati- a ta is use perfume man is wit” e drops a nickel ae : o | od he eep ald his he i Sense is what gets: you. by: when Shredded Wheat Biscuit, Biscuits eVery morning for his breakfas is.true three hundred ‘ant very often for hie dinner at noon. He is the picture of heal ae: taricié J. Orr, Peatt’s Junction, Mase. same thing, dayva year, Mr: f nueueennemcit a \ of age. who, Ct | Cook by Electricity. It is Cheaper. natural bowel gt about “LITTLE JOE etn DO YOUR PRESIDENTIAL SHOPPING au . The body needs a “‘spring house-clean- ing’’ after the heavy foods of Winter. Give Nature a chance. There are a lot of toxins from undigested food that must be thrown off by. the eliminating organs. Help Nature by eating Shredded Wheat and milk with green vegetables and fruits, It. means,mental buoyancy and:physical alertness. Shredded Wheat is all: food, easily. digested, with just enough. bran. to. insure movement... Eary tl ed on has at least, three. ood for least n t, and the and sixty-fira