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PAGE FOUR - THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1924 | THE BRUTE IN EVERY MAN By Albert Apple Editorial Review Comments reproduced in this |i column may or may not express |; 5 B 4 i - the opinion of The Tribune. y |! ee are presented here in order that % our readers may have both sides of important issues which are being discussed in the prese of the day. Matter. BISMARCK TRIBUNE CO. : Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Publishers Here is some common sense and an idea that will be new {to most people. Williami Van De Wall, a Pennsylvania state (Official, says: “Our intellectual life has progressed at a ‘more rapid rate than our emotional development. The struggle of very primitive fundamental instincts, revealing |themselves through imperious emotional demands, with |present day conditions and social demands, is claimed by ‘many Scientists to be at the bottom of many mental disturb- jances.| In other words, modern man has an enlightened twentieth ‘century intellect obeying and serving primitive emotions. CHICAGO DETROIT Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exciusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise entitled in this paper and also the local news pub- lished herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. THE NEW BRITISH CONSERVATISM » (Minneapolis Journal) The Huglish ruling tamihes are! passed out, no matter if sons of | theirs of conspicuous abilities, like Mr. Winston Churchiil, be recognized with a cabinet position. | : 2 | Mr. Stanley Baldwin, the new | Prime Minister, is aimself as dis- tinetly a new man as is Mr. Loy Georg Ramsay MacDo ‘ Stevenson, in writing “Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” ad- a ae Helone 5 UNE oH ivanced the idea that in every man two natures struggle for ramed for iene ain supremacy, one good, one evil. : ( useful to that \\ a | The good being is intellectual and spiritual. PX peor Dore 4 The evil being is emotional. Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)........ 7.20 was in the third quarter of the} last century. Mr. Baldwin is a All of us are descended from brutes. And their brutish 2 Se emotions still lurk in us. We have inherited them, though Daily by mail per year (in state outside Bisraarck) ....., 6.00 M f : ll Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota.......-+++--+ 6.00] yin nay agrhigeen! trom these tel oN Master, a man Ktly as our own | through long generations we have, to varying extent, learned } to repress our brute natures. THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER as Ce aie / AE NS (Established 1873) “Lhave a profound faith in " é Z MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily by carrier, per year.......... cece ecec cece ee $20 i ld 4 } Rage, whether silent or expressed in a torrent of curses, is a repression of an inherited primitive emotion that led to the British worker whether =e BURIED CITY he toils by hand or brain, He physical attack, even murder. ; Te REU TE SATS TATE RETE Se Bs : j ; 5 i In evolution, there are “throwbacks to primitive types.” Ruins of an ancient city, that housed 20,000 Indians} deed, 1 know, 1 am his friend. MES ; A long succession of very decent fathers and mothers may 3000 or more years ago, are dug up in southeastern Nevada.| ‘To all British workers 1 would! |have a son, for instance, who is a “throwback” to a brutal Stone street pavements with curbstones come to view, but Hee aRAE Ti ieee ie “ ancestor of long ago. Repressed primitive instincts explode, the inhabitants used arrowheads, crude pottery, and were! anxious crisis that face our break through—produce a fiend. e primitive. The marvel of this archeological dis nation. Stand steadfast to the | “Being good” is a matter of sitting on the lid—keeping sof the town, I{ may mean that our conti-| Constitution that has’ in the our brutal natures imprisoned. Some find it easy. To nent at one time had a fairly dense population. When Col- Teas others it is a lifelong fight. Accordingly, walking the umbus later discovered America, experts estimate, Indians! Gur jaws, our customs and our straight and narrow path is more commendable in some cases trom the Rio Grande to the north pole totaled not over] institutions. They are the bul- |than in others. The man who can be good only by powerful 250,000, Chas co parent indi- ieffort, but nevertheless is good, deserves more credit than vidual prosperous: & the one who has few if any cravings to jump over the traces. It works the other way, too: Criminals (unfortunates. & |who have inherited more of the brute) cannot be judged by ithe same standards as others. An enlightened system of justice is gradually recognizing this and making allowances for it in inflicting punishment. - i i LACK ORGANIZATION / American business has built up an intricate selling and financing organization that has invaded all foreign mar- kets. Our farmers Jack such organization for pushing the for- eign sales of their products. Quite naturally, exports of foodstuffs the first nine months this vear were not quite a sixth as big as exports of raw materials and finished or in-process manufactured goods, measured in dollars. The new conservatism, as dis- tinguished from tie old ‘Toryism of Mr. Baldwin's party, is voiced in that utterance of the first Prime Minister since Disraeli, who ais commanded an absolute par- jority in the House of to the proper |heen there always. | “Ego on my broom," said Moth or so this | : nt sort ‘at con- | er Goo: “I'm not comfortable any, servative I ster, with the ether w ly, | Daddy consent of his pa - : erkain, | Words \ ) as though it had nder said some the Unionist, Joseph Chambe w nd away went the Ho was foreing through Parliament a | That-Jack-Built, Twins and all bill that turned primary education, te Pippin Hill where it belonged. | in England over to the cle Bins alba Gis On lhe, Simei =e the established churci. hack poreh talking. 5 Pate | thur Balfour, a high Tors “Well, I don't. see anything else! turn ef events to speak, but the gir high churchman, himself a man of saying. “Jack will, knew J ed. 1 surpassing intel anc culture, ! just have to go out and gather mo “Harry was always good to did not believe in too much pop-; wood and get another house bu Mrs. Burke," she continued. “He | ular education, preferred in fact! before winter comes, But i too, kept me in school in Geneva from to keep the masses ignorant. ‘The|bad about the other one disappear-' the time my mother died when I price he exacted for tacit support) ing the v it di After he had; was three years old until last year protective ff reform was worked so hard ‘n everything!” a aduated. He came a Chamberlain's Suddenly Mrs, Spratt ays after that looking ill and heme of edue: shrick. “Why there it i nd took me away. Well, the w ied, < coming on Daddy Gar its progress disclosed England’s | der’s dust-pan.” weakness a8 compared to Ger-! Mis. John couldn't believe many’s strength, in the particular’ eves, “Il have to touch it. befo of untrained Englishmen as con-, 1) believe it's true,” she de eee : sJuck! Jill! Come quick, everybody! |g: } Come and see what's happened.” dack Spratt rushed out TER FROM RUTH BURKE TO'Then he handed me this letter say- LESLIE PRESCC . CONTINUE! WEATHER You know how the sun early in 1922 began giving off less heat, plaving havoc with our weather. A complicated ientifi art shows that, to date, the sun has only recov- cred halfway to normal radiation. Several very cold win- ters are ahead. experts pred Long-range weather forecasting two or three years in advance, may result from recent studies of the sun. It’s now believed that sular heat regulates temperature of ocean currents, which in turn slowly contro] inland weather. CHINESE BUYID China is buying five times as much American - made gocds as in 1914. Though our orders from her now total 1. villion dollars a year, she still ranks only eighth among our customers. The day may come, however. when China will rank first. Our real Japanese problem is to keep Tokio from getting economic control of the Chinese. That appears to be their drezm of empire. A great fuss about: immigra- Man he Gall oe wecceaieity Wie tion is calculaced to keep our eyes away from China. Oxtorderindethavemrs Bullouraiiinie — ——S t received, but the techn RESPONSIBLE nd scenic sort re ante Nervous or malicious auto drivers curse confused walk-| jn eee ait he The might of ers who get in their way. They forget that the pedestrian | Germany as demonstrated in the! has other cars to dodge every day—hundreds of them, war, consisted’ not only of the su- The pedestrian must be cautious, as well as the driver, | Peron myiary raining which het that’s common sense. But the driver has the lion’s share |the superior education which gen- of responsibility, the same as the hunter. The man with |erations of Germans of all sorts the instrument of injury or death—a hunting rifle—should |"@¢_ enjoyed. In this modern be many times as careful as the outsider wearing a red hat so he won’t be shot for a deer. So with autos. ing, ‘It you get into any trouble try | and see the dear woman to whom it | is addressed. Don’t attempt to mail j The letter will keep years if nec- | y.. Time will only have left the best of me among Ruth’s memories. You may never have to deliver it, but if nec y take it and Ruth will advise and help you.’” The girl handed me the letter. I didn’t read it then and the girl pro- ceeded to tell me the rest of her st Leslii this | 4 it. xe me, | | arry died that night. As soon as possible I went to Paris and. very soon got a position in the family of Leonard Stores as nursery governess for their only child, a tiny girl of three. “From the first I could see that Mr. and Mrs. Stores were very un- happy. Their only bond was Stella, whom they both loved almost to id y broke out and in, “We went over to the Italian lakes but it was not the right climate for He grew more and y as he found that jhe weaker and for you. It was t you were the ve me a letter | then he told me t d the | kindest and tenderest and most loyal hoe Woman rushed out and all} woman in the world. It was then her children, too. And Poppleton} he told me you had been his wife. j Bun rushed out puffing like every-j “*Zoe, he said, ‘Iam not going to| thing. And the Crooked Man andj be with you long. I have very little Humpty Dumpty and everybody in} money left. 1 was in hope | would Mother Goose Land rushed out to{ be well soon to earn some more. see the strange sight. However, | think there is enough to The House-That-Jack-Built came! keep you until you get something nearer and nearer and finally setcled down on the exact spot it had left! so many hours before, i Mrs. John rushed in “My bread-sponge is gone the first thing she said. Isn't that just like a woman! But} she remembered her manners later, yes and she and Jack and Jill thanked! yery decidedly that 1 could be a gov- Daddy Gander and the Twins for all! erness. had done. { “Well, dear, if I were you I would re you are 4 go back to and get a pla as y and Niel -| governess in some American family ji “We've had a fine tine. ae conyuctl atngdand % oe eel inynictures jonfsliver—Hray: (To Be Contin t this I burst into tears and he,|~"* * esas) Y trying to comfort me, said, ‘Don't Honest, I'm ready to go. I've an awful mess of it and P’m I'm sure you will be more sful without me than with me. peak French and Italian and i surely your education is of the best.’ ety matches may be lighted “He was silent for a while. It was|by striking on common glass if “la great effort for him to breathe.| there is no match scratcher handy. EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO PLE DE EGER | EVERSTT, YOu KNOW THESS HERS CROSS- WORD | (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.¥ Pvz2zces THEeyY’ee Who remembers ago when] [PRINTING UN THS FABLES ON HEALTH. the only men who carried golf bags | were unbrella mend LET THE MUSIC RING | “Stop that racket!” educated even vine } suppose that the Mr. Balfour, to the much education for e At first I saw very little of Mr. Stores but after a time he formed the habit of coming into the nursery ind watching ‘his little daughter for an hour or two every morning. “He seldom played with’ her but Stella adored him and was continual- king him questions and was al- ng to bring him into our work or play. He, however, paid no attention to me whatever.” (Copyright, 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Sp aboabosaelity A spot in the sun and the want ads te xead—a, familiar sight In Bryant Park, Madison or Union Square, New iork City, where there are always hundreds of jobless. can do something your ” he asked pathet A “[ had no idea, Mrs. Burke, of what I could do. I had not been trained for anything except to do those little things that a girl mu do for herself but I answered ‘ye to earn ly ie New York, Nov. 15.-Gil Boag is broken-hearted, Broadway ain't = what she used to be. bs = = > 's first big strike at wealth and {| fame was in the Palais Royal. The | ___A Thought A other day Gil came back from Eu- % rope with his wife, who happens to be Gilda Gray, the shimmy queen. “Gil, I want you to ride past the Palais Royal with me,” said a friend who met them at the pier. “You wouldn’t know the old place. You can get a fine mess of chop suey there now for 55 cents.” “Nothing doing! I couldn't stand it,” Gil answered. ‘And he hasn’t passed Broadway and 48th street, since. and advertising. The hotel dining rooms are dead. All the gaiety in the cabare is forced, artificial. Everybody is out for money and nobody's out for fun, They old stem isn’t any more attractive than the midway at a county fair.” world, a people to hold their own, require as much and up-to-date education as they possibly can get, and in the future the best echcat- ed nation in the Twentieth Cen- tury sense is likely to prove the conqueror. | The Conservative Party of Mr.ic Stanley Baldwin are all for educ tion, hey want an educated Britain, with no iNiterates, literally as much education for every girl and boy as can be given. propose to that the next generation of Englishmen, Scots- men and Welshmen shall be as well trained as our Americans or Germans. The old ‘Tory notion j#bout educational limitations they | uve altogether rded, They that their country’s place the Twentieth Century worll depends on popular education. The new Conservative Party ishes large schemes of educ for all classes and for every indi- vidual. ALCOHOLISM Deaths from alcoholism are increasing steadily, medical statistics show. At least twice as many are being killed by liquor as in 1920. And not all by poison booze, by any means. Chronic alcoholism still leads. Maybe the deaths are jump- ing because 1924 hooch kills earlier in life than the old- time “aged in the wood.” Green whisky is an assassin, not so much on account of the alcohol, but because medicinal compound high ethers haven’t been developed by aging in the cas A word fit n is like apples sfidly anekes He The man from California is right. In the old days men came out f Deain valleyiang. ade ot rittesurde with bursting dust bags and bill folds und turned Broadway into a stream of flowing yellowbacks, Ovea- sionally young ladies slipped them knock-out drops and took their rolls away from them, There was color in that, It has been years since a real spender has hit town, Knock-out drops have gone out of style. ‘The girls employ legal counsel to make pussyfooting sports write a check for them, It often happens that those of whom we speak least on earth are best known i ‘aussin, de LIGHT ON GLA’ EXPORTED What's our country’s leading export? Guess again. First place goes to textiles, including everything from raw cotton to finished clothes. Oil ranks second. Theoretically, by reason of our enormous extent of land, farm products should make up the bulk of our exports. Countries of small area and dense population are by nature adapted for exporting finished products. Are we pulling against the tide in concentrating on manufactured rather than agricultural exports? Our unbalanced economic ¢ tem looks like it. An old-time New Yorker dropped in from California the other day. “Why don’t you write something about Broadway's old age?” he ask- ed. “There’s nothing doing on the street now. Nobody has a good time, The. placg is covered with a lot of A little thinking now and then is! Just what marries the best of men. | winternalte —JAMES W. DEAN. tours before makes several de- ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS Our ancestors lived in tre and i many men of today are up : tree ae i everything in their power to encour- PRIZE You cannot know our relation to the past or the extent of our generation’s accomplishments, without a knowledge of economic history. Schools give only a smattering, their histories being too busy with the record of wars and politics. In 1831 the B. & O. offered a $4000 prize for a railroad } engine capable of hauling 15 tons 15 miles an hour over level | tracks. Compare, next time you see a 1924 freight train ' | | | | of destruction. whiz by. We should teach more of this, less of the history | Vg j =" Australia, big wheat grower, expects in six years to be ex orting as much cotton as wheat. A large acreage already “devoted to it. Northern states do rot realize the terrific havoc of the ~bol} weev Unless checked, the United States may take a gaipor position as a cotton exporter, or even grower. The s8 would be national, not merely sectional. Accordingly, . ¢he-nation—Uncele Sam. an’t do too much to fight the little | gray beetle that came from over the Rio Grande. MORE A ton of coal now is made to generate a third more elec- tricity than five years ago, government bulletin claims. At that, fully nine-tenths of the potential energy of coal is wasted.— goes up the chimney or out in ashes. Not to mention the terrific power locked up in coal atoms, which future generations will unprison and use. BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTOR- JACK’S HOUSE COMES HOME “Here they come! Here they come!” cried Nick as he looked out of the window of the House-‘That- | Jack-Built. | Sure enough! Mother Goose on her | broom and Daddy Gander on his | dust-pan were riding through the air | as fast as magie could bring them. They landed right in front of 's house, and the Twins and Mister Pim Pim, the brownie man,| rushed out to meet them, t “Well, here we are,” croaked the white crow, hopping off the handle | of Mother Goose’s broom. “And now | ody ig safe and sound, ing back to my nest on the mountain. [ am greatly in need of | sleep. Good-bye, everybody.” | And: flapping his wings, he cried, | be ! Caw! and flew off. “And now that everybody is safe and your friends are found, I'll be going, too,” said Mister Pim Pim.| “They are looking for me in Brownie- land, \Good-bye.” | And he shrank up until he disap-/ peared altogether, before the Twins had time to thank, him for helping| them out of their troubles, “Now we shall go back to Mother Goose Land,” declared Daddy Gan- der, So he spread his magie dust-pan _..,Industrial chemistry is easily the greatest field that lies Wefore American youth. Electrical engineering and aviation are others. onthe grass and said a charm. most of the time. important as what you overhear, You take a baby learning to talk, and it earns its board and lodging. In Denver, a cigar factory burned, destroying thousands of cigais, and we'll bet they were not nickel ones, Just when we had a fine para- graph thought up we saw a bathing girl picture in the, paper and forgot it. of anything, made a mistake by not being in this presidential race. We hope the man who names moy- ing pictures gets a headache. Jugt when father lets up on cuss- ing about the price of school hooks he sees Christmas coming, Pittsburg’s in luck. burned there, Beauty parlor Practically all of the water in. the ocean is below sea level. The Egyptian scarab is the com- monest Juck charm, while a. tittle extra hard work is the most efficient. Instantly the | House-That-Jack- Built slid over and rested on the dust-pan (which stretched itself out The hard thing about being the What you hear never sounds as‘ oldest man in town is you have (o start first. P 3 WE, THIS ONE'S GOT me STUMPED) MAYBE ‘You CAN HELP NG OUT WITH IT — THERE'S NO MAYSS ; aBsouT (tT EL! How many mothers shout this at the children who go about the house singing? It may be that the songs seem like racket to a tired mother, but it would be ‘far better to tolerate the singing than be bothered later by sulky, unhappy children, There is nothing: better for the | stimulation of the child’s state of mind than singing or humming a jtune, No tune-humming child is likely to be unhappy or brooding. It would be well for parents to do Is This Your | Birthday | SATURDAY, NOV. 15.—' ile you are going to be successful in busi- ness adventures, especially those in which you take the initiative to es- | tablish, your love affairs will be just Jas successful as you use good judg- ment. You are affectionate and are apt to, permit your better judgment to go unused. Public spenking ‘would be easy for you and you could make many friends, 9° ed now, will bring you the respect and confidence of all who know you. SUNDAY, NOV. 16—This would be a good day for you to. resolve to break away from your present sur- rol ‘and to..start life's.journey. age the children to sing, if for no other reason than to instill in their minds an appreciation of music. But, beyond that,*there is actual healthful lung exercise to be had and the type of breathing engaged in by the youthful singer, is excellent for lung ‘development. So teach your children songs and encourage them to sing tunes, to make ,up their own tunes and thus stimulate their musical imaginations. Musie will always be a mental com. > fort in later years, ‘by profiting by the experience which has made you of value to others, In doing this, however, be kind and sympathetic to others, and sur- round yourself with friends who will benefit you, You can bring out in yourself a magnetic personality that will earry you to great heights, _For Sale — Choice Canarie Singers, Imported German Rollers. Jacob Bull, Dickin- son, N. Dak. Box 728. ¢