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TWO BISMARCK : TRIBUN N. D,, as Second Class | Entered at the Postoff ice, Bismarck, Matter. ‘ - - - Publisher GEORGE D. MANN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPAN DETROIT Kresge Bldg. CHICAGO S Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH - - - Fifth Ave, Bldy. W YORK POLITICS IN THE _Editorial Review || Commenta repoduced in this column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented hore tn order that our readers nay have both sides of Important. ixsues whieh are being discussed in the press of the day. NORTHWE (New York 1 famous ¢ mes) aad go qitick even the NE = Nic acta bi Bi and specuiation is already with) MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ue eye Monae The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use) scene. Attention will first be cen for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not | tered upon Wisconsin, pitter | otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news ot Fee pete fe siaek aot spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republi- Ministration was counted upon | cation of all other matter herein are also reserved. Lenroot in his effort to secur to influence to Senator re > throw all Daily by mail, per year din oh s 7201 Repubi Nis ea th ; ferutars ( Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . pea ued Leet Granite ly by mail, outside of North Dakota. . ATR'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established 1873) i conciliation, or (ler, as Chairman of the Repwblicun | National ¢ minitiee and also i litical Kiel Marshal for th ‘resident, will bring his powers of | he reverse, to bew Te & EPR IESE tpon the y situation in Wis | (Official City, State and County Newspaper) j consin | — er 5 x —-| Prat particniar State has been EVOLUTION NOT ON TRIAL eee eee ee ciaTeMiedietl Whether Darwin’s theory of evolution is true or false is|name may persist there longer) hot the issue in the case of the State of Tennessee vs. John | than in othe of the North west. What shit of sentiment. if} T. A number of newspaper articles have confused ihe issue. William Jennings Bryan, it has been heralded | abroad, will go to Dayton, Tenn., to see that evolution as 4 theory is properly branded and forever damned. It is hardly | likely that the issue of whether it is right or wrong to teach | the thec of evolution as propounded by distinguished) Scopes. any, will be caused in the Dakotas, | by the deitay in lowa leadersh nd Kansas, La Follette? He had aj ng in those | he question is whether it | attached to his personal) than to the p Mitical | Sen scientists will ever be argued in this case. Jideas with which he was a ut=| The pertinent issue before the court, however, is the eee ae eae elitr Ce right of the legislature to pass an act to restrict the teach- (Of the insurgent movement wit in | ing of certain subjects in the public schools. The sole issue} the Repudlican Party. But if the} doctrines of the dead Senator) is whether the law-makers under the constitutional limits prescribed by the state of Tennessee or the United States had the authority to prescribe what can or cannot be taught in the educational institutions of the state. contd mos: in rallying support for him ious impulse w in the | orthwest, the rebel: | continue to mani | est itself. ‘y i THE BISMARCK TRIBUN A Hardy Perennial NONE OF THE GARDENERS CAN KEEP {Tour ye almost certain to veto any Dill WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1925 . SE Sa BRYAN ATTITUDE REAL TRAGEDY I Chester H. Rowell aw is doubtless a smart-Aleck, whose brilliant epigrams illustrate his contempt for readers too stupid to be attracted by anything less highly seasoned. But his characterization of Bryan as a man “with an. ex- traordinary uplift, but with no discoverable brains of any kind,” and of fyndamentalism. as “infantilism,” will stick for its very smartness, even among those who think it un- just. ig Actually, its chief injustice is the sneer on the “uplift.” The moral and spiritual qualities of Bryan are real and have deservedly endeared him to multitudes pf the American people. That is the real tragedy of his exposing himself to their intellectual derision. It is a logs to the idealism of the people. George Bernard Sh The Right Kind of Security Pact _ If the security pact between France and England can really guarantee the frontiers of Germany as well as of France, it will be the firmest foundation of the peace of Europe, and of the world. s A one-third security offers no permanent hope. A peace , based on Gemany’s.weakness is safe for a time without any guarantee, but it can not be made safe permanently by any amount of one-sided force. It. is impossible to keep beaten prisoner of war. Th peace which will still be safe after and Russia is restored. 3 "A western alliance, for a peace of |” Under such a system, the legisla foree and. repression, means, sooner | ture will dare delegate enough power or later, an eastern alliance -against| to the cabinet to make it efficient, it, with Germany and Russia in it} and may itself remain numerous from the beginning, and Japan and | enough to be representative. China dragged into it later. Efficiency and _representativeness ‘And that means, not European| are not possible in the same body war, but world war, with America} We need both. in it, willy-nilly, Only by guaran-| TWe only way to get them is to teeing peace both ways, instead of| have two bodies, and to make the imposing it‘one way, is there, safety | efficient one operate under the con for Europe—-or America. stant inspection of the representative one. » Religious Hatred Behind This Law Archbishop Curley, of Baltimore, in a commencement address, i ported as attributing the immii bill to “antagonism to the religion of the non-Nordie races.” Doubtless there are Ku whom such motives can be attribut Germany forever a cowed and e real problem is to establish a Germany becomes strong ‘The Flaw in South Dakota's Scheme South Dakota, already an interest ing Inboratory of experimental poli- ties, is. discussing abolishing its present legislature, of two houses of 46 and 103 members, and setting up a single house of perhaps 16 mem- hers to sit all the time, or so much of it as may be necessar: Ni Klux to Evolution then is not on trial; neither is the advisability i IE ane sense, ut Jeabls Senator) oy pills which might come to nim Similar schemes have often eu ed, and there may have heen Ku Klux of-teaching tha jec or fire. all extré {La Foblette’s personality was esl touching a hai the gray head e ee digcussed. The trouble with them | votes for the bill. But even the Klux f-teaching that subject under fire. When all extraneous | Cntia to tie Third P aioye: | ouculne 2 fay oa a a 0 5s FiscUS ed ne tant think the | do not base their intolerance on re issues have been ruled out by the presiding judge, the case | mei He wa Re Clie UE cee 4 : o Qed e he ligion alone. . : A eae jose at cou ‘could take such a form as to give y problem throug! ; ith a joes will narrow down to a humdrum discussion of constitutional | held it ther. Nobody else | him eericuan ¢ politically. Because prevent iat are ie ? ae pena Ch tataettn issues in which the faney and oratory of Bryan will hardly could have executed such a domi-! wat iw to be done Ellington died because she would|efficient,.andithis:would be e's Leh |f he) a eo ithe facto Heese me cibimatenplices: : van PCI eeion over they variouswanilidica| Van vould Hy aoe Ge Ellington diet because she woult|and would escape the dictation by| slower or more rapid assimilation ave a legitimate place. ape lave h napa AL a Sale : analy: ji ‘nee | the governor to which we have sub-| We can safely take n peoples cordant elements that came to Taug ll if the spec hardly think this can be true, since . 7 penne as ae ea: a i ary-Haugen \bill if the sp e y hay Cel mitted because nothing else in. the] only as fast as we gest. them gether temporarily under his ban My I I have been much] You have not found them. If thats Citing scheme worked, the temp-| Which would swamp Italy aqui INIVE TIES or year © compelled ‘ \ Jortt ;Jannoyed and chagrined by. seeing s' J e 8 vO! F anaged | existing r ad gine) vemty aL AE, aly “quit You heard quite a bit of talk, a year or so back, abou! rate fet “aha time elbe; inallicl a srs of late. It seems to me that I} io the man who got away | that this 8 the way out, many Ys kee Puritans from the “redness” of many of our colleges and universities. ‘iatiorm which he wrote amd ts ad ti UE hie k devel ine Eee their ees Re taie: SoTL AIOUENETG heey REL i e northwestern Eure If you would believe all you heard, you would become con- |torced them to adopt ; uring ia ADVENTURE OF CT Oe ae endict 3 be the place to get small numbers and | t, southern and castern vinced that a college di a was sport Moscow, and | @ueatian he eeded, for tie) I don't think I shall come to you|efficiency is not n the legislature, but) slowly, and physi that I ! i : eolege roe ed ut are pete ee and | most i in holding tac lunatic! THE TWINS of the Pr ». I find it very pleasant! in a cabinet or ministry sitting with | vat Lenin and Trotzky ranked ahead of Was ington and fringe in check. With such an im : in a newspaper. My rooms are comfortable, I{that legislature, and subject to its| The purpose of the law Lincoln in our academic halls. perions control now removed, it! BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON You know I am an old-fashioned becnme used to Miss Anderson| constant question and supervision. | speed of immigration to those facts But a visit to most any college or university commence- | *°T ean Pel doe SE EU OO ce Coe aan ee net ii We —— * so tia arrels ne pst ol THE [6 ‘ IGHTERS | notoriety of a [ iibso y A 5 ment this month ought to have been enough to explode this | (oheston of the ‘Phivd Party move DHE SING ANDES Tae soeat ein my telegram to you last week, 1 taken ime itovehuxehy- and cone FABLES ON HEALTH Jae idea once and for all | mest story is going to be about! intimated that it would be good| certs and other — entertainments ( : i" ' | id his three daughters,” said A which I consider respectable and ap- » INE AIL What is on the undergraduate’s mind? ;_N > Loe he! Mi i, the Story Telle : f SLeslic (adld thoze) pestle ant i ; Ay nanan TAKE SOME I0D 4 a ‘ i No figure loems today in thes} Mi, the Story Teller, to the any| Propriate for a lady of my years and ats 5 Well, football and track and baseball and so ‘on occupy a|Senste or out of it re or likely) it-funny of sada? asked ele suck, | Position, } 33 large share of his attention. Then there are the girl and |') regen latte Wal aear| who hoped it might be another 4ike| ° een, pas Bol yeu nee cer end Seer crore During the bathing and vacation) sult from @ Demin. ath vena ve 2 4 ‘ dispute surgent| } Yeu 8 my son, is more mone! R Miss ; a on care of. shows and dan and things like that. Maybe, at times, | republicans 3 rea an Mi OU MAE! + of| than any of us -@ver had as far back check und let us go into New York; season it i well to watch with ‘care RS ELokS Matte, cone Walt Gunes: even his studies come in for a little notice. There may be no open sMMel1? nal MUO) MMi SUVs Or Caijes, oles Netory, wuge\ Undisto ene ee cee next wack Mr. Gibon! 1s} for) bruises, scratches) aull/AlrobioN®|/tinetics of weniea ane cule: iilute But Moscow. and communism? Forget it! ‘The average | the succe iiiraneat noe OT URAL that your wife has that much money) going down next welt ink per-|on one's feet and hands. : two und a half ounces, : ! , s i ! aera e ee ee dersunag econ tlt al Fe aoe cegorick stintng ed ahs in) Baubles) to) wear hans R000, will: ta 2 , Sharp stones often cut the feet ‘ two and a half ounces, college student cares less about them than about what's on} ite in their separate areas untill one day, as kings in olden times al- her Ha isa sin. i oe sonal eae re ong} while in water, If the water is ‘not an excellent solution for the other side of the moon. it appears whether one of them| Ways seemed to be doing. cad Ae igh te denn. Pe of thie Wiees: tell Leslie not to get pareiiiiate a pre qalnnget: Shela: Hee. eats inaearspoulticese alno ss may develop the qualities of a}, {He called his three chicsen, i | ways bad blood in that family. rei) Jo, into another. Scratches on the hands also are|are good for bruises. Bread crumbs commander-in-chief. Mea ei a q urke couldn't live with the brother S$ soon. as ss common with vacationis in cold vinegar, and CANADA commander-in-chiet. Meanwhile it! 1 2 git and all my lands” andy Bark ae h the broth As soon as things settle | down! common acationists. should be soaked in cold vinegar, an 1 ee . . : is evident that the causes of the ne and aS oly anes: and why she should take the si again, I will come over and see the!” AQ good and simple remedy in| the mixture should be be oi Somehow, you aren’t heari uite as th about O1 riches do not mean as much to me]; a rs P y the mixture should be beaten t s , you aren't hearing quite as much about On- i party troubles and tue poli c an 3 me| into her house and pass her off ‘on| mew house. But you know youné |g ee cisciodines (pateei Maae tae : a party P sreeue. love a Witteh ofl yous \ovesl ; i A wleither case dine. If iodi 's| paste. Apply this as a poultice. fario's beer now as you did for a week or so. vest in the Northwestern ‘Si line the best?” ‘ pews ere tag 1 ean aalye: ce a ren always worry me a go00d] applied quickly enough after the| Children should be taught the ad- This 4 per cent s uff that was to quench Ameri a's thirst leane ee ees Geren ‘ Bacany the oldesUaau rite to fal her herself. ep LT Sincerely your mother, morn madeathere bagnaiece egy See eee —has the thirst been quenched — or wasn’t it quite up to/@ue Mar tions are that the| quickly, ‘To head neaiidly and) sel There was a very romantic. stay MARY ALDEN PRESCOTT. Weakened carbolie acid also is! Remember a cut would never get standard ? haerleved farmers will be asking a| should gladly give my blood.’ u in the papers to the effect that Miss} (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) | good. sore if poison was not permitted to ee ‘ 2 ets so a j re ‘ Discoloration of the skin will re-| enter the wound. The fact of the matter is, this beer is far from being what we used to call beer in the United States. We used to measure our percentage of alcohol in alcoholic | beverages by weight; the Canadians measure it by volume. Hence 4 per cent beer, by Canadian standards, is far from being 4 per cent beer by ours. So if you go to Ontario to try out the beer, don’t expect too much, CHINA News dispatches from China occasionally tell of Amer- icans being fired upon. But they are the exception. The comfortable thing, for us, that stands out in the Chinese situation is that Americans are shown more friendly feeling than any other foreigners. British and Japanese are especially hated. But there is a general feeling of trust for Americans —a feeling that America is really China’s friend. It would be a tragedy of the greatest size if any act of ours should cause China to lose this feeling. Whatever hap- :pens over there, let’s show them that it isn’t a mistaken as- sumption. DIET AGAIN Whenever a hot spell comes on—and that will be often for the next month of two—one of the wisest things any man or woman can do is keep a close watch on his or her diet. Of course, it really ought to be a year-round practice. But it’s especially important in hot weather. If you’re given to three solid meals a day, winter and «immer, with heavy steaks and pastries at_ mid-day, don’t wonder if hot weather leaves you grogey. The wonder is it | doesn’t do worse to you. Salads, fruits, cool drinks and so on are in order now. Save the flapjacks and hamburger for next December. * | | TOBACCO y Secretary of Agriculture William M. Jardine is taken to task by officials of the Anti-Cigaret Alliance for pledging his support to the tobacco growers. Oh, stuff! z Maybe a Ict of people would’ save money and be healthier if they n't smoke. Ritt the interference of busybodies in affairs which, after all, coaern only the individual, is tolerable. And, that being the case, Secretary Jardine is doing ex- actly what he was appointed to do. TOO MUCH GOTHAM A magazine writer recently lamented the growing tend- ‘ency of American cities to strive to be like New York. The Gifferent sections are losing their individuality, he com- plained. = He's right. Why should New Orleans, for example, or Sait Lake City or Atlanta or Dallas try to copy another city? {ernment to fix prices for them or to it 1 « i 1 ‘Their own traditions are worth preserving; let's keep them. ‘And, incidentally, isn’t one New Yor ‘enough even for a nation as big as the United States? . Ae As discovered in ‘ York pretty nearly ¥ Australia. Now for a scandal: |- jon of Congress on ihe part ©! their Senators and Represen' tive vainly would have pretty well lost ‘hope. something fully as “disturbing to] Repub ce is reported to be | in their minds. From various sources of information, both politi mation comes that the farmer at, q ty violent swing of pr in the wheat market has demo rated to them that tae increased duty on imports of wheat was merely 4 hollow sham. up to the fact that if ah th of the main products wisest course with the aid of the Democrats in Congress they may be able to ne- duce the duties ho bear most nge of tactics in the next Concerning the special measures of relief for agriculture which were it advocated last Winter, appear that the farme! The 9 not any longed look to the Gov- urplus. But} the farm buy up the clear inti of and ‘business, have But they ar ould help them it may ¢ em. It cannet put up the price: which the have to sell, but it cost to them of many thing: they ‘have to buy. So they are coming to the conclusion that their i to make a next hing the hope ¢ set on the They are ‘che heavily upon the consumers on the | farm This is to reckon Hl by out President Coolidge. ibeen accused of maki cratic policies bis own, but {rade has never been one of them. On that swhject he remains ‘soun.t in the face of the Home Market} Club of Boston, So that he would] vin He has o—. | LITTLE s0E \ Wows WILLISTOP A J} LAUGH QUICKER ‘THAN TO FIND ‘THAT 1T WAS YOUR OWN TIRE THAT BLEW OUT greatly pleased be sure. ‘Ah, there's! a daugl proud of!’ he cried. Then he turned to Goneril, his sec- ond daughter. Goneril was still more beautiful than Regan, her older ani serve Your Highness night and day with diligence and love. New York,” June 24.—They _ call “Then he turned to Cordelia, his! youngest daughter, and the most! beautiful of ull, ‘And how — sayst! hot, humid nights eat wave, From s one of t recent of the d sidewalks. too, father, would undertake hawking of an ny hardship to ‘save you a mo-| ment’s worry,’ said she. ‘I shall Tucker. ols above, below and all about projected the silhouetted figures of people try- ing to gasp their portion of air from fire escapes, roofs, porches, cellars Suddenly I heard the scraping and fiddler, wheezing out the notes of “Old Dan ‘ime The heat, of course! was playing. tricks; bringing incon- gruous associations with days long “King Lear was so delighted that] new York the 24 They | Gho| past. No! There it was again, And he ‘eriga “out, “Wou glad ‘my. souy| NeW York, the, Sats pit Souher| A crowd upon the street, pressing its daughter’ and stroked cher fair| NOtd. | Perhaps |B tlong Chris-| noses close to a pane of glass, curls. br street in Greenwich. Village.| Above their heads swung a great wooden horseshoe, long the symbol of the “village smithy” (yes, It they thou, my youngest girl, how is thy | love ‘allayed?” he asked.” “What did Cordelia say?” Nancy. “What do you suppose?” declared Mi 0’ Mi, “She said simply, ‘My love, which I owe to you, shall be the duty of a child.’ “ What!" cried the king. ‘Would! you not show more love than yi duty? Henceforth you are banished! from my court. You are no child of mine, and no part of my realm shall ours.’ he next thing he did wa divide his kingdom into two parts, and over one reigned the oldest) daughter, Queen Regan, while Queen Goneril ruled over the other.” al asked —AND SUCH SUPINE SucH MACHIAVELLIA SUCH SUBVER CONCEPT, To VIRTUAL “What happened to poor Corde-! lia?” asked Ni \ “Poor — th wandered up and down for mor without food even sometimes,” said Mi 0’ Mi, “She had to beg for bread. But she} was sweet and good, and people were} kind. By and by she got to France,| where the king heard of her. He! sent for her and seeing her beauty! and goodness, married het, and she! became Queen of Frince. “But the other sisters forgot their} promises very soon,” went on Mi 0’: Mi. “King Lear lived in the castle of his eldest daughter, Queen Regan. | At first he had twenty men to wait! on him, then ten, then three, then none. ‘Then Queen Regan chased him out altogether. The poor old king then went to the castle ; of Queen Goneril, hoping for better] treatment, but it was even worse! there, for he had to beg crusts in the} kitchen. So much for all their fine promises! | “At last he was forced to seek help} T—"“OTHER, ‘IDEA, MR- SPILLMAN — 4 yi IB a) BY CONDO ACQUIESCENCE, N SUBTERFUGES; SIONS OF THE PRIME 1S UNDENIABLY TANTAMOUNT) NON-ESPOUSAL . IN OTHER. WORDS ——— Ea J, race in France from Queen Cordelia, his youngest daughter whom he | had driven out. “She remembered her words. And not onlv did she receive him kindty and with honor, but she and her hus- band sent soldiers to England to drive out the two wicked queens and get his kingdom back. “Did they?” asked the Twins. -“Yes,” said Mi O’ Mi, “but not be- fore a great many people had been killed.” (To Be Continued) OTHER WORDS” \4 (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, inc.) Coffee is believed to have beth i inja,. Tt was!’ which now | durnishes two-thirds of the wor!d’s \ coffee: supphptyes: WORDS” — THAT'S THE =F = oe if still have blacksmiths in New York,| pam even if they have vanished: from Main Street). And here, upon a sweltering hot night, in the very heart of the. so- called “ultra-modern” and “sophisti- cated” village, a little group of lads and maids were tripping the steps of SIS ‘SAYS the barn dance in Ted Robinson's ra | blacksmith shop. What is more, they knew their steps—they knew Variety {s the spice of life. But the steps of the Irish reels and the| things pall when life is all spice. Virginia reels and the square dances. Lads and lasses from the farm belts’ of everywhere, met accidentally upon a sweltering night and forget- ting the heat and their loneliness in a return to the barn dance. I recognized the fiddler as a musi- cian who charges from $7 un hour up for lessons and three of the dane- ers, I noticed, were students of one of ‘the ultra-modern, schools of de- sign. When « man can't get a grip on himself someone else can. ‘The only reliable thing about some people is their unreliability. It’s a-lucky June bridegroom who gets a good looker and a good cooker. One thing about bathing suits is a you no longer have to take a girl The ambition of almost every | at face value. chorus girl, and, for that matter, a every stage-struck girl, is to be} Silence is usually mistaken for accepted for a place in the Follies. | sense. . The other day two young married pd women reported at the Ziegfeld office] Every man has a lame excuse for when try-outs were being given. They were told to go through vari- ous simple, dance steps and asked ‘to walk across the stage several times. Both were accepted for rehearsals. Neither desired a position in the Fol- lies, having reported for the try-out just to see if they would be accepted. ‘And while they were being accepted dozens of disappointed aspirants were being ‘fejected. This is not # press-agent yarn, 1 know~the two girls. getting his leg pulled. _ One way of getting what you want is by wanting nothing. The value of a hug depends upon the law of supply and demand. The practical man puts two and two together and gets’ four. dreamer gets 22. (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Many employers here allow their help to take afternoons off during the hot spell to seek relief from the scorching sun. ‘This: generally re- sults in the employes being unable to report for work the next day or for several days after because of ucute sunburn, Those who suffer| most ‘from sunburn are folk from the hinterland who do not realize that salt water and salt air make the skin | more susceptible to the sun's rays than the water in the old swimmin’ hole. H JAMES W. DEAN. Pa ra —_—_—_—_-—_—_—_—_——_* | A THOUGHT | $+ He giveth power tothe faint; and to them that have no’ might he in- creaketh strongth,—Isa, 40:29. Patience and gentleness. is power. —Leigh Hunt. * North Dakota has more babies to every 100 inhabjtants than any other state. More than 14 ‘per cent of the population is under five years of oge. ‘| The District of Columbia. with 7 per cent, ranks lowest. ‘Love’ may laugh at locksmiths but Wot at grocery bills, Very few: soris increase © in | weight “after” they reweh" 21, The: ¢