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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBU Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class | Matte GEORGE D. MANN - Foreign Representatives G., LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldy. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The A for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not DETROIT Kresge Bldg. ociated Press is exclusively entitled to the use otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news Of! second on spontaneous origin published herein. cation of all other matter herein are also reserved. “MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADV: NCE Daily by carrier, per year... ........ eee ee ays) sepia $7.20 Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck)............ Daily by mail, per Daily by mail, cut DHE 5.00 +. 6.00 ATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) year (in state outside Bismarck) . de of North Dakota Publisher ' | (Sst aul Dispatch, { AML that cor territory up land down both banks of the Mis-| sourl river in rth Dakota’ is ‘mightily stirred the fact Uhat “Bil” Jarcine, Secretary of Age culture, is comi ie to spend the Four He has an appeal to possessed by | vy the imag {ination of the that once cow Like + eye wh . he d cattle” and as 4 f North Dakota when it a territory, Was. still | activ 9 | velt, he will not 7.201 snd’ the $i pe Vek Editorial Review the All rights of republi- Tacodore Roose Comments repsoduced inthis column may of way not express the opinion of The Tribune. They are esented vurder that our aders in © both sides of tmportar which ure being discu: in the presg of jay. HOME TO CELEBRATE a blaft” dof + now head of eriment station in time; jin in Tukho, it he wag too @ brone, pat oe ea |. . wal had (Official City, State and County Newspaper) 1 cele and a ais nee a —— — us t 4d that if he WHAT THE EARTHQUAKE DISCLOSED | Secretary of Agriculture: would Dr. Bailey Willis, president of the Seismological Society | have to “pull ieitier’--a procedars of America, after an investigation of the Santa Barbara earthquake, declares that buildings properly constructed withstood the tremors. “Badly designed reinforced concrete — failed, Rrick veneers which were not tied to the frame fell out. In gen eral good design and honest workmanship stood, while in | tol | The | ype into see him make good, on Ui ‘ourth of Jul ed only in tenderfeet and ceful 16 the Western rider Secretary will ride, for he aled bis s bluif and tay country is moving to Man it is curious competency and bad workmanship were exposed in all their) West,” with its: traditi miserable nakedness.” ee ee iat Tine: SiGHERC cE California has a lesson to learn from its earthquake. | j"’ country —hut-it4g th Probably in the future, restrictions will be imposed upon} dairy Taat region is the building that will safeguard structures against tremors. ! finest ‘iutterta p er als aa nt 4 ; rhs e § every yea Mandan After every earthquake there are enough buildings left) ere ee ee ea aiae standing to prove that a type of construction is available! ;jaeo d bands of Indians tre that will withstand a severe tremor. jthe re tions north and s The dishonest architect, engineer or contractor was ex-|#long the Big Muddy erect :, fang 7 @ jtepees and share in the exp posed by the San Francisco disaster. Now the Santa Bar- of horsemanship. At one time bara earthquake has added to the indictment against prac-| was recognized s< the State tices followed by certain agents in the building trades. }until the legislature gre j conscious of it # n anachront: ma a and withneld the appropriation THE COPS | But wie Wild W neld its own, The papers recently gave considerable space to a college | and cach year saw the wiry ras graduate who joined the police force in a western city. He |tamgs and cay TE eae i i f ye lrown in a cloud of yellow dust to explained that he intended to make it his iife work, believing | the yearly meet. ‘The legislature that police departments were in need of educated officials. | relented aud renewed au ‘ay He’s right, of course. nulon snd this yea aan ; Police i ari Dt Bodnaineh pala oalaei: {Jardine in ee sadddo. Police in American cities are nearly always both hone tl ome to eelabrate; there wiltbethe and brave, but all too often they sorely lack competent dircc- biggest crowd that the old town ot tion. Mandan has seen gince the North- < ¥ >a railroad arew its One reason why London has so many fewer crimes than or ea t {Toad boas Chicago, which is but a third large, is that Scotland Yard almost invariably brings criminals to justice. and this goes for almost every other large American city— the reverse is true, If every man knew before he started to commit a crime that the chances were 20 to 1 that he would be caught, he would think twice before doing it. It isn’t the severity of punishment so much as the certainty of it that scare. triminals. ROTARY A little group of men in the city of Cleveland paid the members of Rotary International a high compliment the other day. Rotary had just held its convention there, with some 14,- | 000 in attendance. These Clevelanders were bootleggers. They had laid in extra supplies preparing for a rushing business. But they were sorely disappointed. Most conventions mean heavy profits for the bootleggers. They have learned that when a lot of men foregather in a strange city they usually call loudly for drinks. But with Rotary it was different. Sales absolutely were not above normal. Hardly a single delegate bought a drink. “These guys must take their ideals seriously,” complained one of the bootleggers. That’s just it. They do. That’s why the name Rotary is honored throughout the country. ONLY A THEORY The evolution rumpus at Dayton has helped keep alive four erroneous notions. Let’s straighten them out now. Evolutionists do not hold that man descended from apes. They hold that men and apes descended from the same an- _ cestors. Darwin did not originate the theory of evolution. Ancient Greeks held similar theories. The Darwinian theory, strictly speaking, is that evolution is brought about by the survival of the fittest. Darwin’s theory is not universally accepted by science. It has been and is being constantly modified by new dis- coveries. Lastly, evolution is taught as a truth only where the teacher is ignorant or overly enthusiastic. It is merely a ¢ theory. It cannot be scientifically proven. But circum- stantial evidence leads scientists to believe it is true. FREEDOM -What do we mean when we say we, as a nation, are dedi- cated to the spirit of complete freedom? Do we mean exactly what we say, or do we really mean that we want everyone to have only that kind of freedom which we, as individuals, wish for? We call for freedom of the press, for example. But let @ newspaper print some story that tramples on one or an- other of our pet private feelings and we promptly remark to our friends that that paper ought to be suppressed. It’s the same with free speech. We're all for it until some person makes a speech that hits us where we live. Then we want him arrested. Before we cry too loudly for freedom let’s make sure that we're willing to stand for freedom if we get it. BE THE CLASSICS The old dispute about the place of Latin and Greek on school curriculums has been revived lately, with a number aie S82 4 se StF 3 larger place. It all depends on what you want your school to do, 2 j pupils to be successful carpenters or engineers or architects . or lawyers or salesmen, then the classics are more or less out : of place. » But if you think a school ought first of all to teach pupils haw to live, how to enjoy life and work and play, then by ali means restore the classics. #2 ye Ra RE Se ea A In Chicago— ! of college professors pleading that the classics be given a. If you want a school to do nothing except to train its! Te jner |bailoon by jone bound y | Twelve Toes was so surprised that | [he almost forgot to gnash his teeth as he always did when he was dis appointed—or surprised—or cross. ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS k BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON |} the Woman was right, a weeewne ea | Wind was a dangerous thing. | A i eed (To Be Co. : do you want?” asked! (Cop-ripht, 1955, N Toes, the Sorcere Lee ad ‘ appeared i me to get th | red balloon for thi “That's too bad,” said we have eh The Twins were over the Wob |Mountain before Twelve Toes quit jrealized what had happened. Then he was too far behind to fol- low, £0 he waved his magic wand and muttered: “Eier-brier limber lock, Thorns t around, but saw no one. remembered thut the thicket had not been there when they had come that |{ way before. thought. “And being miagic it is the thicket talking.” So he reached out and touched a Who - L y Nick. ! I don't care if ‘ou can ‘Have looked gic along?” fs t our shoes,” said Nick ho! You don’t carry gs near the ci Seizing his heels grow thick, block.” their way to Instantly a thicket of thorns ap-!t peared before the Twin: their path. Remembering what the Sour-Old- Woman had said about thorns, Nan- cy pulled Nick by the coat-tail. “You'll “You will spoil the balloon if you go on.” Suddenly a voice said, “Feel directly in have to stop,” she said. us! The Twins looked Then Nick feel us!” “It must be magic,” he thorn. Instantly it bent. K! horns are made of rubber, F he said. “C me y along. Thev can’t prick the balloon.” ; And he plunged right through the ‘woman wko won't try is trying. ila PRAT he ESL Like Roose | le like that, aA] at| past | 4 Guest s off with! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Feeding Him Raw Meat moi f the around them. ntain, suddenly a fire s throwing = sp: top, cried Naney. “If oon at will hand and fell star- “They are sparklers ourth-of- July re cold. 0 h n right through the s. But when they t moun- tain, the a great almost wrenched the is hand. ‘The string broken, but Nick balloon’ in his arms, y and balloon and carried them led Naney. “Come And |, They took ht in the head of a Dall cause he faile |. They ha © much jazz masic on jthe tdims the cows may become the laughing stock of this country. stitches (Tex.) swimmer be- ei ‘Tried to dynamite a Chicago hotel. put out the bomb. Maybe [thought his room was high enough. is a.tarly good chaperone. y jailed a boy of In Tennessee th a ;more child labor i laws. your car fails to start unscrew the cap and see if the radiator hap- pens to be frozen. y a shoe with a hole in it steps as in a big car. be fine if flies liked cuss in an emergency. These days are so long it looks as jif payday never will come.’ husband. We wouldn't mind iiving to be a hundred if they would let us sit ; down the last 20 years. If silence was golden Coolidge |would be richer than Ford. Men may have the most sense, but ducks don’t have to put on bathing suits to go in swimming. | Twelve-foot shark caught off the Florida coast. Of course he was out- witted by a realtor. | ‘The way some people let their children run wild you would think they had a million of them. \ |. A note at the bank can slip up on you as quietly as if it were wearing | rubber heels. i Looks as if the backbone of win- iter is just about broken. ; (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) ee eee i o—_________-_____«4 Why dost thou judge by thy broth- ‘er? Or why dost thou set at nought \thy brother?—Romans 14:10. Look thou with pity on a brother's jfall—J. Edmeston. QUEEN’s HANDICAP The “Queen of Queens,” the zirl jchosen during recent festivities in | Tunis as the most beautiful girl in the city, had to renounce her throne imedan population. They objected to ‘her violating one of the precepts of the Koran by showing her face be- companion, fore crowds —Youth’s Being in love with somebody else! wmeh I though perfectly Faint complexion never won fair| ———_______,| | A THOUGHT | ibecause of protest by the Moham-! crossed the next! ‘did not come home until late. puch as a serateh,| The Tangle . e LETTER FROM LESLIE PRESCOTT} to us, is more than I[ can under- TO THE LITTLE MARQUISE | stand. —CONTINUED husband, how looked I could this disturbin suit J Little Marquise, that ng of his plans did not He has inherited the wish to lay out life that comes near him ns and he had none to off put off yetting a ery govern y [cannot help f hate to see in Zoe's place. I think of her every day and wish she had at leas ared up some of the mystery life. She was v beautiful and I hate to think that so much beauty should go to waste. Little Jack s fretted greatly be- cause she does not come. Nothing I can do will make him forget his “Doe,” as he called her. He remem bers her every night in hb little prayers and he asks bwing Doe sate hom I like to feel that those little prayers will float up to the Great White Throne of Justice and maze the Judge render a merciful d and give Zoe another chance The night before Melvilie come to town, Little Marquise, He | did not come to my bed to bid me good night and by the uncertain stumbling of ¢his feet 1 knew he had been drinking. Neither of us refer- red to this the next morning at the bréakfast table. The telegram we had been expect- ing from Mr. Sartoris came to the house before Jack went downtown. He had dawdled more than usual over his breakfast, although I noticed that most of his attention was given to his coffee cup and his water glass. The wire was addressed to. me natural | for in the nature of things, as Mr. for bootlegging. The state necds| Sartoris must have expected that it would get to the house after Jack had left. Of course, I know that it was poor Jack’s bursting head and rebellious stomach that made him so cross but why he should take it out on me and j the man who was trying to be nice from home as much as, lived long enough to} y than a thunder cloud when {1 handed the telegram to him. Al- | though he k that I had glanced | over it, he read it aloud Hope you nd Mr. Preseott will be able to dine with me tonight at the Travelét's was not sure that I could y until this morning and as Iam leaving day after tomorrow for a long voyage to the Orient on the jantis I shall be greatly honored you can accept this invitation. I J wonder if you aud Mr. Prescott will invite some of your friends to bid me | bon voyage at a luncheon on board my yacht tomorrow. {[ can accom- modate thirty people comfortably in the salon MELVILLE SARTOR. | Jack threw the telegram from Sartoris on the table almost tively. | “f can’t understand why | did not address bh { said after a short nee | ‘it should be very easy to under- stand.” I answered quietly, “if your brsin were not muddled. He did not expect you would be here at this time of day. You know he told us in note of last to save 5 him and! e middle of the ect we'll have to go,” in a grie 1 had expected to go to night. I don't see wh give us a dinner for a! “I presume it is because he feels indebted to us for the invitation to the party we gave. If I Mrrange a luncheon party for his vacht tomor- Uli have to get busy. What makes you do that, Leslie? It is absolutely unnecessary. Damned cheeky of him to ask you to play hostess for him.” “I can't. understand mean by that, Jack. I think it quite an honor. You, of cour know that the Atlantis is one of t finest yachts in American waters. It is just finished and everyone will be wild to see it.” “Oh, T expect all you women could not be hired to stay away but you'll he wants to what you EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO STEN, EVER OGSERVATION BUMP I ) HATe It | HAR ! GROW FAT !! SOMETHING- ) DON'T KID ME “ABOUT Lay BALLOON TROUSERS! OWN —— THEY LOOK LIKE AN. ARMY HAR LOOK AT Your MONDAY, JULY 6, 1925 not yet settled down. ant when he says: ‘tion.” A few years ago, that | week.” \for granted now. calamity than war. | precarious they are. jeven know, or i terrestrial sphere, minds are | minds never to bad brains. the liver secretes bile. The eye. ip, jnot the author of light, the endo- {erine glands of righteousness, nor jthe brain of mind: But they are the necessary ter- restrial organs for the integration jof these forces into a personality. ‘The Wronp Wav to Do Your Thinking The worst feature of this anti- | scientifie movement is not its fool- jish conclusions. It is its method of | reaching them. There is not so much harm in the opinion that man was made of mud and woman from his rib, that disease is caused by spinal error or mental {subluxation, or that it rains when | the new moon is tipped our way, as PEACE ON EARTH LONG WAY OFF By Chester H. Rowell | there is in reaching these or any |conclusions, even correct ones, | wrong-end-to. | That what cur anti-scientists [persistently do. They evolve a theory from their inner conscious- jness, and then make the fact | When you do that, you fi |rupt the integrity of’ your own soul Then you reach unsound conclu: sions, And you treat disagreement with those conclusions as moral wickednes g | The most important thing about science is its method, which is the ematic and critical examination lof the facts and the acceptance of the answer they give. | Whoever uses this method is en- titled to a patient’ hearing, even when his results turn out to be mis- is In addition to the embarrassment caused by the odor from perspiring ‘feet, the person is likely to suffer from aching and burning feet because of the tenderness of the skin. An absolutely sure remedy for the perspiration is impossible for all per- jsons. However, here is a solution which has proved effective in a ma- jority of cases where. it has been : tried. | Tannin 30 drams; drams; alum, 1 dram. Another solution is made from oxide of zinc, 1 ounce; starch, 2 ounces; salicylic acid, 1 dram; talcum lycopodium, 3 FABLES ON HEALTH FOR PERSPIRING FEET “Peache on earth” is as far away as ever, ; With fighting in Morocco, chaos in China, unrest in | Asia and discord in Europe, the human race has evidently } | Premier Painleve thinks he has said something import- “I do not despair of European civiliza- would have been a good deal like saying, “I hope these mountains will still be here next But we do not take the immutability of life quite so much | And the British ambassador, with the characteristic pessimism of his race, reminds us that universal bankruptcy, which he regards as decidedly possible, would be a worse The safest thing about these parlous times is to know how The brain of Anatole France turned out to weigh less ‘than that of the average nobody, who probably does not care, who Anatole Dotbtless if only the gray matter of the frontal lobes had | been weighed, it would have been up to or above the average. Or, if not, there was something else, in the microscopic structure of this brain, more important than weight. For Anatole France had a superior mind, and, on this rance was. attached to brains, and good But don’t jump at the materialistic conclusion that thought is a substance, which the brain secretes much as [; taken, by ‘a further and more critical examination of all the facts, Whoever revérses this method is not entitled to credit, even when he happens to hit on the right answer. Japs Making Divorce Easier and , Harder Japanese divorce is to be made easier, by giving the man as well as the woman the right to sue for in- fidelity, and harder, by requiring the permission of parents, if living to _a divorce “by consent.” Both are in the direction of the stability and equality of the mar riage relation, while still leaving the marriage dissoluble in law when it has ceased to be a marriage in fact. In the first rule, Japan is just catching up with the Occident. In the second, now modified, it was already ahead of it. “Divorce by consent” is an estab- lished institution in many American states. But our laws compel the courts and the parties to pretend it is something else. At Least, the Senate Has Its Pride The trouble with the newest “Dawes plan” is that it has to be determined by the Senate itself. Submit to the people the proposi- tion that the Senate is in disfavor and needs reforming, and you will get plenty of votes. But submit it to the Senate, and what do you expect? The inferiority camplex is not the chief of the Senate’s faults. powder, 7 ounces, oil of winter green, 5 drops. Mix these well, adding the oil last. These solutions should be made by a druggist unless the person is equipped with apothecary scales. When the feet burn from long standing, soak them in @ basin of warm water in which two table- spoonfuls of baking soda has been dissolved. The warm soda water softens and relaxes the tissues and opens the pores, allowing the undue: quantity of blood, present in the feet, to dis- perse. have to count me out. Melville Sar- toris being one of the leisure class does not seem to understand that most men cannot get away from eee business in the middle of the ay.” I laughed, Little Marquise. for I happened to know that one of Jack’s| | most particular habits is lunching} with a number of his men friends from twelve o’clock until three at/ least three di in the week. “What are you laughing at?” my husband asked suspiciously. “At your excuse for not accepting Mr. Sartoris’ invitation. “Don’t lie to yourself, Jack. It is a very bad habit. Of course, you can try to lie to me but do not insist ‘upon trying to make me think you cannot go if you want to. “Well, I don’t want to go,” he said belligerently, “and you know it. I don’t e his hanging around here anyway. “In the nature of things, my dear husband, Mr. Sartoris will’ not hang around here long. He is leavi right after his luncheon for the Ori- ent, as you saw. by the telegram. Don’t you think you had better change your mind and come? I’m going to invite the whole five men with whom you lunch almost eve: day to. come and bring their wives, Mr. Sartoris’ guests.” “You'll not get one of them.” (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) New York, July 6.—Broadway has its many disillusionments, some great und some petty, but not all of them are unpleasant. After all, the wickedness of Broadway apple with’ a bright skin and taste- less center. Last night, for instance, I waited outside a stage door (properly chap- eroned, of course) to see the members of a very, large and very dazzling chorus leave and to learn if any of the old-fashioned stagedoor Johnnies are still to be found. Only a few moments before I had. witnessed these same girls shocking @ most sop! ated audience. Many of them had appeared on the stage almost nude in some sequences and at other times dressed in most magnifi cent costumes. Now they were filing out the stage door. Most of them were in most ox dinary and modest clothing and wors little or no make-up Fathers were ing for some of them. Others were met by their “steady fellows” ie ar red, a be poor but ‘hone: men. Some came out in twos and hurried to the-subway atound’ | theater partie \or the corner, looking neither to right nor to the left. : One of the first to leave returned fter an interval of ten minutes. She was carrying a paper bag that con- tained among other things a canta- loupe and a loaf of bread. She in- quired of an acquaintance, “Have you seen my husband?” After waiting a while she said said, “I wish he'd hurry up. I 'm tired and want to go home.” Yes, we hear all about the scandals of the great white way, the after- the sugar papas and the butterflies. But did you ever before hear of a chorus girl in a $15 dress waiting with a cantaloupe and a loaf of bread for her husband? There are just as many of her kind as there are butterflies, Lion-hunting until recently has been pretty much of an indoor sport here abouts. A popular name has been sufficient to bring capacity crowd to almost any bazaar, dance, _ card party no matter how uninteresting the affair might be otherwise. The dear ladies of the town, and many men, too, just must dodge the lion-hunte These lion-hunters read The Na- tion, Town and Country, Vanity Fair and the other smart publications not so much to keep in contact with the thought and the trend of the ties as to learm in what puddles the big- gest fish are disporting. Now this game of lion-hunting has been carried to the great outdoors. One bright young magazine editor is not going on a vacation this summer because he doesn’t know where to dodge the lion hunters. And many of the smart magazines e carrying advertisements of — re- sorts telling the world at large just who their patrons are. This seems 0 an open invitation: “Come here, lion-hunters! Ga: plentiful. We painters and nt.’ W. DEAN. — JAM) LL THINGS ARE LIKELY: TO COME TO HE WHO WAITS ——IF HE ALSO WORK,