The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 29, 1925, Page 4

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PAGE FOUR THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter, GEORGE D. MANN Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY Publisher CHICAGO Marquette Bldg. PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth A MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news of spontaneous origin published herein. cation of all other matter herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCUL SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE Daily by carrier, per year....... : Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) asset } Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) . Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota... THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAP (Established 1873) (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ' STATE MILL AS LABORATORY Gov. Sorlie is studying the mili and elevator situation | in the state looking forward to a final solution that. will | an ultimately the withdrawal of the state from compet- itive busines If he can work out his plan, he would | reduce the ( nd Forks institution to a great serve the miliing and wheat growing industry of North | Dakota. He pointed out recently in a statement that Hen Ford maintains a great technical laboratory where problem: incident to the automobile industry are worked out. North Dakota’s chief industry is agriculture and Gov. | Sorlie’s position is well taken when he maintains that the! mill can function as a great experimental laboratory in the interests of the milling industry of the state. He is seeking to promote private milling ventures and in his hands much of the ruinous competition with private ventures has been | eliminated. Gov. Sorlie eks to climinate competition of | the state-owned mill with private ventures as much as pos: DETROIT Bldg. ATION IN ADVANCE . be «$7.20 7.20 -. 5.00 6.00 R sible. ; The state has no business in any commercial venture for | profit. A state mill and elevator is bound to be a white ele- phant upon the shoulders of the taxpaying public. vator or public warehouse may give a se. adequate grain storage facilifies operated to care for all demand. If the state mill and elevator can be turned into agencies to promote the milling industry and incidentally to create a better market for the products of North Dakota's farmers, ; what is now a drain upon the public treasury might be con- | verted into a useful institution. Ultimately the state mill and elevator unless reduced to serving the farmers for experimental purposes must be; leased, sold or junked. Losses, it is urged, have been r duced through curtailment of operation and reduction in overhead. Credit should be given for this, but the admin- ; istration shouid not, and probably will not, be satisfied until the unfortunate venture at Grand For s put on some kind, of a basis that will mean the elimination of loss and the withdrawal of the milling units from competition with the} legitimate milling and elevator business of the state. It is to be hoped that Gov. Sorlie can work out his idea of transforming the institution into a great laboratory to function in the promotion of North Dakota’s greatest indus- try—agriculture. Doubtiess the task will be hard and the way beset by} many legal obstacles, but Gov. Sorlie is entitled to the co-! operation of every citizen in his plan to make the mill and elevator serve the milling trade and the farmer. To grind flour there in competition with privately owned mills means merciy piling up of losses and deficits without any advan- tage to the farmers of the state. Even if the mill could be made to pay, run strictly as a commercial venture, it would! serve no legitimate governmental purpose. Those who have the state’s welfare at heart hope some plan can be worked out that will make of the mill a labora- tory for milling experiments and to seek out new ways to improve the products of North Dakota’s soil. Gov. Sorlie’s idea to link it up with the educational facilities of the state as well as with the agricultural extension work may prove; An ele- | vice, but there are privately owned Kresge Bldg. | All rights of republi- | aboratory to |“ and |. 5 ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS \ BY OLIVE ROBERTS BARTON The Twins were having tea with} | the Fairy Queen when suddenly,! |just as Nancy was helping herself | | to more honey. there was a loud re-! port like a shotgun. = i “Dear, dear!” sighed the Fairy | Queen. “Puff has lost another but 1 ton. That's six this week, He keeps ‘blaming it on the washing-machine {and the wringer, but I know it is be jcause he is getting too fat that they | ‘tly off.” i | “Who Nick | the Fairy | is Puff?” asked | “My cook,” answered I Queen. “We c reasons. Fi such delicious puff paste. because he is so puffy himself.” At that minute Puff appeared in the doorway. large spoon in his hand and a large white cap on his | head——also a large white coat almost | lcovering him up, but not quite, as | | all of the buttons were missing down the front. | “Roo hoo, hoo!” he cried. “It got j away before T could catch it. Went | right out of the window and over the thill, so it did.” i “Wh cried the queen. “What | flew away?” | “The button.” sniffed Puff. “It } my last button, too. The pepper | de me sneeze and off it flew.” | “Never mind, don't cry,” mistress soothingly. “It's his ime | high we were getting those buttons back | anyway match Buttons are so hurd — to] ys and I'm sure that Tr, never never shall be able! more like them. Just. let me | te. T have it! How ike to hunt for the | i shouted Nick. “wert| * nodded Nancy, her mouth | ney. it's settled, Queen. “How lucky it is that you | were here when this happened! But | it may be a long hunt. You may | have to search through ever: my nine-hundred | kinedoms.” | Then turning to Puff she said.| “You must stop tasting so much and | you won't get anv fatter. and and send Juggle Jump to me.’ Puff bowed, la ne his large spoon like a sword, andj together at das! to me done, Y Juggle curiously. Jump?" factotum,” said the! Who?” cried the Twins. ! ry Queen laughed. what a general factotum ! she asked merrily. ti here is Juggle Jump no see for yourselves.” At that minute a most surpi person appeared in the doorway Puff had just left. If the cook Ii buttons, the newcomer seemed to have all the buttons in the world on him. Naney said to herself, “Rich. | man, doctor, You may c st si 7 merchant, ons be for _ (To Be Continued) (Copyright, 1925, NEA Servieo, Inc.) di b: o New York, July up and down Broad cent Lopez, the band back from’ Europe, in his” usual black und white ‘and wearing 9 29. Tl leader, just and hastened to the hospital, wh: hing like a totem pole?” it was found that a Caesarian opera-| asked, don’t want to leave all the: THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Looks Like Mamma’s Vacati TO LESLIE PRESCOTT ; My Dear Leslie: Yes, our dear Bee is dead, Her “Don't fears were not unfounded. She was taken sick on Thursd e ‘jon was necessary, s .” said their hostess.) She seemed to get through the “A general factotum is a person OPeration all right, and we were who can do almost anything. But Steatly encouraged. She soon came out of the anesthetic and apparently there were no bad after-effects from The next morning, however, ied me into her room and qlemnly: “Sally, it's all over. id ie, “Don't say that, Bee,” [ Temon- trated. it “You're getting along fine. he doctor s: ou'll be out in a IT bent down to kiss her, and she held my face close to hers. i he doctor does not know, dear I am sure that I will never leave this bed alive.” “Don't you want to live, Bee?” I “Aren't you going to make ny effort to live? I'm sure it all lepends upon you now. The doctor says there zre no complications any- where, and you have so much to live for—a lovely little girl, and a hus- and who adores you, besides a host f affectionate friends. Surely, you ese. “Yes, I know that, and sometimes I think I do want to live, but I know it would be no use.” “What makes you so morbid, Bee? The Tangle ed ‘LETTER FROM SALLY ATHERTON Why I'm going to; are you so sure you aren't going to live?” I asked. “Are you in_ pain?” “Not the slightest, but, Sally, I just don't feel alive any more. it’ is as though I had no more interest in any of the things of this world. , when Dick comes in to see me st se an effort for me to my yes to his face. When raise ’ they put my little girl in my arms after I came out of the anesthetic, I expected that wonderful thrill that I have always been told comes to a woman at that time—and Sally, it did not come—I looked down at the little downy head pillowed on my bosom, I felt the moist mouth nuz-| zling about my breasts, but that | peculiar cestacy composed of mate- rial and spiritual emotion was not mine. y, I had no feeling but the tdisappointment. ‘The baby seem mine. I tried—oh, I tried to get hold of myself. You do not know, Sally, how I tried to un- derstand ‘it all. But some way it would not straighten itself out in my mind, “I had the pleasant feeling any woman would have when she feels the satin-soft skin of a newborn babe} against her own, but any other sen- ation beyond the mere physical one is non-existent. It has all been such a disappointment. I am sure I do not have a mother’s feeling toward my baby, and IT am so disappointed with myself for not being equal to it.” (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) winged collar so shiny it seemed to inQuite! isc. c ses. Saw Lila Lee, whom I remember as a sweet young thing in the jumping flickers, put now quite a mature young woman in e 10 be one of the old-fashioned celluluid| trouble ............... .. Saw Nor- ones, though if it were I am not at,man Bel-Geddes, the stage scenic all sure, not having the temerity to/ artist just returned from Europe, and always I am confusing him with | Ben-Ali Haggin, probably due ; to the ies of their names........ Saw Gilda Gray, the queen cent: f the shi sivery jusine stage play. And I) of t afay shsiete. about to sail Ale A 5 recall the tale I.onge read of how, to Europe and she doth appear some- the real solution of a most perplexing problem. He has the] (°° father who ran a restaurant in| What slimmer than when. last I ] well wishes of many citizens in his endeavors. Chicago used to give free meuls to! Slimpsed her, albeit [ can see not condemned men just before they|Why an habitual shimmier should Siler Cangas Ee ae were to swing on the scaffold. not always be slim . Saw - BABE RUTH ++... Saw Frank Sulli Dauntless Dunk, a ist of Babe Ruth is now said to be on the warpath for those newspaper writers and others, who insist on spreading stories to the effect that he can and will tread no paths but the primrose one. The big athlete is hardly to be blamed. True, his own missteps gave the anvil chorus the idea in the first place. But now that he is walking the straight and narrow, he says, they won’t believe it. It isn’t really much of anybody’s business but his. Be- sides the case of swelled head that he acquired a year or so august editor of The Blot: livan is one of the foremos characters of his time, having organ- ized the expedition to discover the Gum Drop Islands, or was it the! polar antipodes of the West Indies? At any rate, Mr. Sullivan has always recognized the broad field of human welfare as being as much in his Province as the mere editing of ‘The Blotz ..... : om oe Saw Bill Naylor, wh pei acquainted with more newspaper editors than any other man in the United States, mayhap, for he doth b: Fy b ally d following notice: to this cuff link—Will Buy or Sell.” Waco, Tex., who came to town in a flivver covered from i from head light to tail light with a to izzard, or right quips . Wilton Lackaye, the actor, has at- tached a cuff button to the bulletin oard at the Lambs’ Club with the “Lost, the mate Everyone who bets on the races loes not lose, of course. A book- ing agent for cabaret entertainers : t e told me yesterday that he had i ago seems pretty well to have subsided. nathing! but travel through the 48) won $400 on a Tong shot in a elaine ‘a Leave the poor chap alone. When all’s said and done, he| Saw teyin eagle, the tot woman | iy Tact, Mt ame, gt the local tracks eS does provide a lot of us with a whole lot of entertainment. in at Price Glory.” She uses| nings in one of the horses which was : the same pigeon English off-stage as| among the losers. Two days later z she does on. On the yituge she is|he ‘entered this ‘horse in «nother i yather frowsy, but on the street—oo,| claiming race and, much to his sur- ’ There is one comfort about the present controversy over ight ats hattees ene portion of a Hie S000 He aad i evolution and religion; it will soon be over. mas BB cegnwent in Texas| the horse that day for $1,000. Two oa The tumult and the shouting will die presently, and then |htiping the wecry te tong not Rbrorte a oo OE qc both sides will be able to resume constructive work once Beis ce | more. The Proprietor of & very tony i ae AeA sped: gown shop on Fifth Avenue wi fa If our ministers and religious leaders and men of science once a model in another establis an would spend half the energy on righting the wrongs of our ment. A millionaire became enamor- ge * existing social order that they do on trying to make one an- Gates Tee we ae (her, breneau . other accet their divergent doctrines—what a fine world case in such instances, the new shop ~-this mig! e. was a financial success from the = ‘ Fy ve beginning, th j |, = , And that goes for both sides, liberals and fundamen- TEVing A GEER coeble ek barn | 1. talists. man. And now the millionaire visits 12: the shop to buy Bowns for other girls Bc a o} whom he has since become hei 3 : CHINA | ‘ . enamored. And there is no moral to | 4 Concerning the troubles in China don’t form your opin- this little tale, whatever, i | 2 =: ions too hastily, and above all, don’t insist in hasty action = DEAN. x by our government. Out of the unrest and battle over there may be born a conflict equal in horror and destructiveness to the World War. If such comes, the United States must not act precipi- tately. It must not leap to a conclusion or take a step with- out long and careful thought. , ‘ Don’t let catchwords or slogans sweep you off your feet. Figure the thing through. { er ay Ce PI Then, whatever comes, let America do what its soul demands. The way those Riffs seem to get through the French lines the syspicion that they are being officered by rum Ci A good spaghetti.eater rolls ‘his own, . anniversary flight will be in August. On his first flight Count Zeppelin succeeded in remaining in the air only 20 minutes. coming of economics vited. in the Union Army. he was in America that he made his first ascent in a balloon, i) Berlin in 1917, elebration to Recall First pelin Flight 25 Years Ago Friedrichshaven—()—The 25th of the first Zeppelin celebrated in this city To the a’ number of s in the world ind science will be in- celebrati. rominent personal Count Ferdinand von Zeppelin was born at Constance, in Baden, Ger- many, in 1838. During the American ivil War, he served ag a volunteer It was while He died Japanese Mountain Climbers ea To Explore Canadian Rockies Tokyo—(#)—Under the joint au- spices of the Tokyo Nichi Nichi, the Osaka Mainishi and the Japan Moun- taineering Society, an attempt will be made by a party of Japanese mountain climbers to ascend the heretofore insurmountable peaks of the Canadian Rockies. The party, which will be captained by Mr. Maki. one of the leading mountaineers of Japan, will include representatives on Will Have to Be Postponed | from the Peers’ School and Keio University. Final preparations will be_made at. Vancouver. The climbers will start out from Jasper with 30 horses and a number of native guides and a base camp will be established at the foot of Mt. Columbia, The party is expect- ed to be away about three months. TOM SIMS ‘SAYS ay One yard of short skirt can look more interesting than half a yard, of bathing suit. It is easy to laugh at your own ex-' pense until the bills come in. Time it is cool enough to sleep it is almost time to get up. Blowing your own horn a little is all right. to beat the band If there was a moon every night there would be no bachelors. everythipg Time cures except having to shave. If you are always as busy as a bee someone else is litble to walk away with your honey. All you can say for some of the young doctors is that they mean well. Lots of girls who threaten -to scream if you kiss them are more liable to scream if you don't, It would be easier to quit smoking if the men who don't smoke would look more comfortable. Nothing can make a loafer more energetic than there being some show girls instown. The way to a beautiful but dumb girl's heart is a round trip, (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) Gusrtidhee Te Sor Dees —- CAN 17497 Cure ‘SAY xouv cone enw Pere Ve An wnat “a —NO,—E SAY You <y.. ons BARK Aw sen ¥2 No, BAC ALD ee NO, NO, NOn— < SAY. You wiser Ae NO,— I My vou UO. CHIYT AR —Csre y— T7 Tt preom 1 OVTUA~G WO Ur ecnmcae - GST Ana TMS 'PHONTS AND. BEAT (IT TO TH] WASHROOM — oO. Do TAPE ERE tH ————— Y FROM THAT'S THe PLACE [> But never try to blow it! LET DE VALERA STICK'TO | HIS MATHEMATICS By Chester H. Rowell Eamon De Valera is returning to his old profession as a teacher of mathematics. him. A mathematician needs to think clearly, inside his skull, ’ It is an appropriate calling for but he need not see plainly the facts outside. Given a certain assumption, false or true, he can figure all that is involved in it. He could even answer the question, “if, twice two is five, what is three times seven?” The answer is “2614.” So, to Valera, it is reasonable to ask—“if Ireland is and always has been an independent nation, what is its present government?” The answer is, “foreigners and traitors.” The fallacy, in both cases, is not in the reasoning, but in the original assumption. That may be harmless in mathematics, but in politics: it is fatal. Let de Valera stick to his equations. Is He Rich? Ask Yourself On his 99th birthday, a Seattle man gets word that he has just inherited $3,000,000. Is he rich? Answer it by asking yourself if you would trade places i with him. Which would you rather be, penniless and 20, or millionaire and 99? After all, life itself is the only real wealth. valuable only as it contributes the abundance of life. Youth and health are valuable be- cause they contribute to the same abundance. Age is valuable if it mans the stored wisdom of evperi- ence. What youth anticipates, age remembers. Both of them “have” it, and both are good. Ninety-nine years means richness of life lived and {still pos- sessed. Twenty means richness of life yet to be gained. Money is, at best, a minor tool of either. SCHOOL CURRICULUM FAILS TO CHANGE The required course of study in the California elementary schools has been cut to 12 subjects, plus three more which local boards may add to their own selection. : And here are the 12: reading, writ- ing, spelling, language, geography, arithmetic, history, civics, music, art, hygiene and morals and man- ners. The history is confined to the United States and California, and the civics includes the Constitution of the United States. The hygiene is “training for healthful living.” Figure these out, The first four are the English language. The next to Sufficient rest and sleep must not be neglected. Yet those who are troubled by insomnia should be quite careful in the methods they use to induce sleep. Many cures for insomnia are quite harmful, especially the use of opiates. If you will chage your worries, re- sponsibilities..and grievances from you before retiring you will find that sleep will come easier. Try ito read or study something that will produce laughter or a goo mood prior to. retiring. A comic phonograph record is conducive to relaxation and rest. ¢—__.__________+ | A THOUGHT ! o—_________-___+ My presence shall go with thee, and I shall give thee rest.—Exodus 33; 14. How shall we rest in God? giving ourselves wholly to him. Jean N: Grou. BOY WHO SHOT YOUNG FRIEND IS RELEASED Mandan, July 29.—Marvin Sieg- fried, 10-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Julius Siegfried, who live south of Judson, was yesterday acquitted by Judge H. L. Berry in district court of any crime in connection with the death of Oscar Juhnke,aged 12, who was shot and instantly killed July 6, while sleeping in the Sieg- fried home. i Although the €oroner's investi tion in which Justice H. T. Mic! of Judson served in the absence of Coroner Kennelly from the county found young Juhnke had be lent: charges of second deer ter, the case re-opened and a hea: ing held yesterday before Judge Berry in district court. re examined, all Eight witnes: béing questioned as the mentality of the boy who secured, loaded and fired a 50-70 Sharps rifle to waken young Juhnke and his brother—with din his opini the death of the Juhnke- boy wi purely ‘accidentil ‘and a ‘misfortune which was to be tted, but there 10 evidence to show that the lad wi jot through any premeditation on the part of the Siegfried youth. 125 TEACHERS ‘TO BE HIRED FOR COUNTY One hundred and twenty-five teachers will be employed -in the rural schools of Burleigh county in the 1925-26 school year, according to an announcement le this mornin; by Miss Madge Runey, county intendent. Only accredited t will be accepted. Fifty applicants have been a ed and placed. There shorta; of well qualified . t Runey said. Many app! been received and will be considered this week. mits to teachers who have not ed the necessary examinations are not c@'nted in Burleigh county even in case of a shortage. This chers custom is common in other parts of |, the state. ab oa IN THE SHADE do you find Esry? rs Took in the ree nearest his work. four are all book studies, covering things which the child never saw and will probably never have directly to deal with. There remain, as minor incidentals, the personal graces of music and art, and the personal cate of the body and character. So far as the pupil can learn from this curriculum, life consists of book learning and personal accomplish- ments. The trees, flowers and birds* around us do not exist; the stars above us are sparks in the sky; ma- chipery, electricity, the telegraph, telephone and radio, the automobile and airplane have not been invented, and livings do not have to be made with hands, in the trades and busi- nesses of this complex modern world. Nothing needs to be taught to a child who is to live in the twentieth century excent what his grandfather needed in 1850. Perhaps it is all right. The pro- fessional experts and the “practical” laymen both favor it. But it does seem strange that the greatest change in practical life which has taken place since civiliza- tion began should have called for no change whatever in practical prepa-: ration for that life. FABLES ON HEALTH WHAT TO DO FOR INSOMNIA An appetizing fruit before retiring is quite good. A hot bath, a warm foot bath or exercises before an open window are all excellent sleep producers. simple method for inducing sleep is to ari and, standing straight, rise on tiptoe to the fullest” height a number of times in rapid succession until one feels the blood coming into the calf of the leg. hen lie down and begin long, quick breathing. In most cases sleep will follow as_ this process draws the blood away from the head. It is a good natural method if you are not too lazy to try it. RIFFS READY TO OPEN NEW DRIVE ON FRENCH Fez, French Morocco, July 29.—() —The period of relative calm which. has existed the last few days along the Franco-Riffian battle front, is showing signs of coming to an end. The enemy now appears to have com- leted re-grouping of his forces and is beginning to renew his activities. |. There seems to be no doubt that the Riffian leader intends to try to make up for the non-success of his drive toward Fez by an attack on even larger zan before the of all the French reinforcements MAN FOUND DEAD MAY BE ROBERT SCOTT Chicago, July 29.—()—Scant be- lief is held by the police that an un- identified man, who shot and killed himself in a Reading, Penn.. hotel, is Robert Scott, brother of Russell, under sentence of death for killing a drug clerk in a holdup. has been sought’ since the killing which Russell says his brother did. ‘The description of the suicide who cut all labels from his clothing and left a note: “ nobody from nowhere,” s only slightly with that of Si i ell’s hours before the time set. for his hanging, attracted national atten> tion, Robert has been reported found in various parts of the country. ae een Cl Can you imagine than being in love and auto in the shop? We had alm have some jobs. | LITTLE JOE | OME FOLKS CAN ‘wy J JUST BEEAUSE THEY s@ REALLY HAVENT ANY THING To worry ‘g ABouT~_ having your rather work than i Money is ° Robert ything worse

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