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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune! An Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER ablisheg 18 Published by the Bism: Tribune Comp Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, ay second class mail matte orge D. Mann President and Publisher ck n Subseriptio by carrier, by mail by mail (in stat by Rates Payable In Ady per year, sariemnce per year din Bi r year outside Bismarck)... outside of North Dakot not Ciren Daily Daily Daily Harehy Daily . 6.00 Member of The Associated Press Th sociated Press is exclusively entitled to the hae for rept on of all news dispatches credited to stor not « dited in thi Sand alse the local new neous orig All rights blication of herein are also reserved, A pape Forelgn Representatives LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY I h SMITH F G AGO Bldg. PAYNE, NEW YORK CHIC Towe ROIT. BURNS AND : fth Ave, Bldg (Official City, State and County N arty aWwspaper) If the views of tained, the A with third partie to the it mmittee iF wer are jean ition of Labor is done Re. that if lutions the Fee adopted re centl effect ne Bederation i be true to its mission must be om politieal jomin: A al reRed the Pede tion. w The om hol in devision, lute Samuel Gomper to aloof polities. Me wi La Folle yam endorsemen t bu vot the L. ip has been able to handle this bloc flectively amd the 1 well alignments labor did not follow wcti ution bor usually votes independently votes bor has never prosper us when leaders avoided partisan The political nature and to ent eof pended upon to be true to the people.” Federation desires to be in matters of ith de a a campaign the purpo supporting those who can be Those r lab responsible for the policy of hands off, state S position as follows Since the nonpartisan followed political independent policy has been many or third party move have and they gone, Generally existed only for one election bs partyisy he generally at to hide-bound All too frequ in respected people © ning realize that does benefit learned not not them that ly the pledges were iy bur used simply as a stepping stone to office. “The Executive result of its nonpartisan politi the launching of third pn proved wasted effort and injuriou the vith 4 political this fact. hay taught labor that 1 politically it must continue in the past follow political pol Council believes that as a al policy aptly movements has favor desire to ¢ able records. ‘Phe ign ance camps determin| Exper definitely therefor to be successf in the futur nonpartisan to its > Men cr Women Teachers The National Union of Teachers the preposal that everybody o has branded pn years of age principle that ought mad-house pugnacious hould be taught by men to be relegated to the and the tant educator, It was the National Ass: that started the controver: is confined to Engli bstitution men teachers for boys in the United States has been debated to any extent, but the Bri are quite agog over the educational issue. ‘The Milwaukee Journal answers the question for most normal Americans in this way: a ot of product war prancings” the mili ation of Schoolmas: As yet the matter of not h educators “Most any middle-aged American could answer this question that the. English are wrought up about. He would remember, back in the grades, some kind], man who was the mother of his school days and who gave him qualities of heart and soul that have always remained. He would ber other women who taught him respect for womanhood, patriotism, love of home, love of community, courage and faith others. He would remember his first con- tact with some man teacher who taught him the delight of physical prowess, fair play and the honor of the field. And he would believe that the boy—and the girl should rub elbows with both masculine and feminine qualities. wi remem- in “We have accepted in this country the principle of coeducation and it should ap- ply to teachers as well as to pupils. Many of our grade schools fail to meet this test, being under the exclusive control of women. But it is not easy to introduce men into the traditional grade building. Deyartmental organization and the platoon school do make it easier to have both women and men on the faculty, and to that extent they ap- pear to meet more fully the child's needs The schoo! prepares for life, and life con- sists of things both masculine and feminine, doesn’t it?” Brings New Responsibilities The automohile and the well kept public high- way present a police situation whch ig difficult in the extreme. Crime on the public highway is fast ‘becoming as prevalent as on the city streets. Motorists touring go armed in many localities, and hardly a day goes by without the story of some crime committed on the highway far from the cit; limits. That day is coming soon if the highways are to ‘be safe when each state will have its constabulary or.state police. The job is too big for any cit Cooperation with state police in some states has ‘cut down the prevalence of crime on the important highways. If well paved roads are to be built and not policed, the pleasure of using them is reduced. In some ae localities, it is not safe to drive after dark. Thugs | sge Bldg takin, unpoliced country Modern and tected, convicts are methods of | tne ens upon the police d | sate Tammany vs. He: | Open rebellion against Mayor H Twill put spice into the next ei » side is the Tammany Hearst Hylan faction he force Ww yo reformy electing. i Phe sway oming campaign will had pu th mach Tammany Without the to has over the backing of r how Hylan tare With his newspapers ean « to iter New many hi publican backing remain friend also in Hy York ire ant victor eens likel It than local in will conte and of mor t s the After R through the government's tay bill Germany Me hours of debate the (Dawes pln ty stabilize the finan Under the Reieh plan the marks and Dawes p financial t, criticizes the new tax discrep is Dillion goid paym under the un Dr, expe une rsure betw Resources of Na Resources of mor cu dollars the Controller of ene m ‘four. billion the is gre | time in nati h ember, history of exception when in De (this mark by a few millions Surplus funds in banks amounte which is m by $18,000,000 than Figure an 1 by government improvement in banking cond ithe nation Herbert: Hoover's summary He says of United s in the Nation’ but look is cheerin economic situation the than it ever w a statement entitled to er sweeping Hence, Roosevelt lo: It could find party is seeking a yo at any race wri He Belongs the Age (Champaign News Gi: Once more, arch: The bones | ound, after resting for near | Peter [and a band of penniless i selves. pology dix it news, of Peter the t was ‘both and a m au took part inthe just preceding the y with ry a fact | the yea : But | Peter 4 leader, of a now almo: the legends grew became the inspi as mythical wf Tas the ym the medieval son of the. spiri ito die, i Then and one of few came a generation that and forgot him. a instead of poetry of his bones mak to the knows, him back only notice the con Put his bones back, and let 1 haps, some day, there will come a reads poetry, and cares. A farm organi | ducers’ Alliance its territor: parts of Nebraska Minnesota and North D, meant in previous years. grain - much 3 line possible of the wheat or th the a jists everywhere. the fall s | To go Wg in wheat prices further than that ana t |prices in January, is problematic much lower than usi has ‘been hit by rust and frost possibly the ad {But under the cam | Union, farmers in Ka {states are not rev ign waged msas and ot pt for the government estim: t something of a gue Agi age cone the Canadian crop is not nor can it be till after the Nort |and for the most part threshed. | Pxce exports will be so gr wise guesses, particularly to meet his export contr the tariff. In brief, that farmer {, to pour his entire c: op on the ary, he can sell as s90n as the to him, or when the basis now mos jcan market intelligently. transportation coming the news, and revived the old cry, “Hold your wheat.” is wisdom remains to be seen, if it means what it But the appeal of the: speakers that the farmer refrain from dumping his that he feed the market —that he keep as of the unpre have impose wut vorities of th arst ylan of New Yor election, On ti and opposing then ith this split th t the test year to © city ine, wi » lack Gov for ulation Thea ni spt i ether of Smith an Ip, AO Re municipal affair “ Vs worth watchin Issue eichstag has s in line with t es of the G TH red as seve ent obligation n of taxutior clares that th ional Banks 1 8,000 banks reporting ty nore than twenty than with “ an er panking, on p figure passer to $1,600.63 ar ago. 5 indie throughou 00 official itions iness out large bette That Hoover yoand ates ory from sterace in Africa wek. Editorial Comment of Poetry zette) up history and makes Hermit have beet housand years. yth. Actually, he who called them First Crusade, it 1100. centuri un the Godfrey was crusade, », he names not Was a here born read newspape Now the findin ngs hin ntemporary world Per tion sain. nother gen The “Hold Your Wheat” Cry (St. Paul Dispateh) Dakota who h That thi South jakota— n his farm—i rgument of the Department of Agri- culture, the railroads and the agricultural econom- It is the dumping that produces o argue th continued export of wheat on a crop that is appar- jently little over the domestic need, means higher ity jit be taken for granted that the winter wheat crop , that the Canadian crop and that spring | Wheat is even less than government estimates, then ce to “hold your wheat” is sound. in its value. the winter by her antity ate, that crop known definitely est crop is cu That is anothe! | guess. Once more, the extent of our commitments for export can only he estimated and that th as to compel oar mill to import wheat and pay the 42-cent tariff are like the latter, for the miller, of flour, may ship ia wheat under bond, grind and export without paying | the back eddies of life have washed fortunate who is not forced market from th: threshing machine. With the remainder in his gran- recently visited Ne: price seem tly estimates righ nal) be changed to facts, upon knowledge of which he| can’t believe that the dramatic critic Putting all his in one basket—whether in selling now or holding| was city to sell all later ig not in the long fun any more profitable than putting all his land dato one crop. , wheat the | il 3 whent ing the extent of that crop, | 'by withholding shipments in any large is in, the extent of dan: e | dead. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE | eal ne the n yt FROM LESLIE . TO RUTH BURKE— CONTINUED. tane the awkwardnes han the circum been no standing th in the clasp of Melville [knowing that my hust id” ne “know what he had been telling me | for life of me I could not kee from jerking them away, and. blush ing. And as this sequ - movies—was not in ck forgot to act and be Ali the way to our house he pr ceeded to tell what an immoral 1 Melville Sartoris was. [was furi ous, both him and with Syd with him ying these things and with Syd for not shutting hip up. of not m he i ( shouid bout the me reall . Jack div I thought any cours to make mun who us, before Syd. poured oil on t nT got 1 pa n just trout the up a Jack h the lune not tow tet ) had told himself. Toran quickly up the steps, daining the help of either When T got in the door 1 was hi the tel mn aNHOUnE NE of and all was f d everything else When Jack came in could not go to the luncheon this sad news. Then my husband turned completely around and insis ed that I should go. He that Mr. Sartoris planned the whole thing on an e higa a mau -: The Tangle PRES- dit would be most un-| rime to refuse at the last n when Bee lay deat ni | nted out that It would be different, he! ummers had lived and ied in this city her than in Los Ange 1 let them have their way, 1 the 1 h 1oat the ound all ow iutiful flo: friends. There wer rooms, | around with | All of us wo-| ck looked \ asked us to put} the day was in turn if we ice house. 1 but no rtoris an-! “to lunch » but I to try on th it to sce: to fit before we go in| them warm were thou one sw in the just: want if it is x to luncheon much laughter nd found th him the ! we ti ping: e doing t for Mart young widow who has recently ot Pit After divest outs, We Were Jing room whe Huncheon was | table ume vies, con ourselves. of hered into th the most exqiti served, the room being one jers. I had told Mr. {own party that my | were white. | (Copyright, 19 the Jin. , ite and of white flow- rtoris at my avorite flowers i Y: Service, Inc.) | ation known as the National Pro- is now sending out speakers into Montana, New York—The mist from the East River and a dingy, n-like building ty-ninth street. Il about ments and poverty. This borhood where tragedies the comedies. And e in this dingy old building which is New York's morgue goes on from day to| day the tragedy of death. To this morgue comes the failure the down-trodden ones, the human. ground to grist in the mill, of the great city. Men and women who have fought what in the e: low men is the losing fight, but who in the end find here sure their struggles. Suicides, land others w! a in the great city, hiding from troub) or from the long arm of t law They so lived as to keep fi being med by their responsi ties and so die unclaimed. Their for- tune is a number that temporarily identifies them, a shallow grave in Potter's Field after that. ight there s hing procession of the living pass. ing through the door, They come to| meet tragedy, with no alternative. | Mothers huntii VC arenine. form dren tracing senile parents. quest ends there in the gray mist} they come out weeping. If quest fails there they come out Fiabe anguish of uncertainty iner red. Also the police visit the place fre- quently to scan the features of the Recognizing a face they ha , long sought they pull out their little books, cross off a name and relin- seeps envelops Th outnumber If their| was no escape. When I pass this disquieting place T look upon it as a harbor into which their flotsam, as the port of missing men who floundered going upstream. Walter Kingsley tel dramatic critic of Is of a veteran ‘incinnati who w York and told {him that he had never heard of | Karl Kitchen or Odd Melntyre, al- l'though both are Ohio products. I | is such @ veteran, because it seems | only a few years avo that McIntvra Post and Dave Tarbell, the pubisner. of the Norwood Enterprise, would send me down to him with ‘ig note that would read something like this: Dear Oom—will you please let th oung fellow the cut of Ren| Mulford that) ran in Post? I'll buy yousa dri y come out to Norwood to get it. Dave.” Of Course, m: ew Yorkers are | numbskulls, but don’t believe that | the fifteenth reading. | was lightning or an liean radio There Has to Be One in Every Community ing in Read- wear inment here In ers of the out 149,000 books period of time 1,125, withdrawn by patrons of the libra a total of 9,549,000 times. a book is sent to the binde Also it need then. After 30 to 60 such condition t carded. MES W. DEAN. SIMS comes to odds and ends. a new cover dings it odds soon Whe these u see you tree torn know uto. y a ne Next to the water cooler and the soda fountain the bath tub is our most popular summer resort. young. Just as soon wine begins to get ills it. The good die as home-made good its owner When you see corner k from his v nding. on is just man » tehing tion, th h for it. ts of who go. aw without About the only way to keep the ants out of your pienie lunch is to let some cow get it. Be careful about looking at ther- mometers in August. It is not po- lite to cuss much before ladies. There’s a roughneck soft collar. He who thinks he knows it all doesn’t know the half of it. many in a Never count your insect bites be- fore they are scratched. So Swedish people can enjoy Am programs the official edish radio service will offer a course in English this fall. WHAT: S_ SAY, BARTLETT 2 ish their quest. Either way there] THAT You WHERE'S tHe, RAMI Tat pesiaar Prrerr ned WHAT ARE You TRYING To Do? —RUPTURE mY EAR DRUMS J editor of the Cincinnati’ TUESDAY, men of the four s + all i. Confue but nes it seems doubtful whether jthe world has found it out. | Confucius himself was Chinese; | j Buddha was a brown man of India; | jdesus was a Jew, | {| Any one of them would ha £ ‘fieulty getting by the immigration of the port of New York, and of them, if perchance he en- Htered the city, would be eligible to j membership in its hetter clubs. The | eof brotherhood is not yet. | Yet there are corners of the earth | where some beginnings of the broth- erhood of races have been Witness a Chinese dinner uttended in Honolulu, The host, Dr. cultivated) Americ: Chinese race, and hi |lady of the ‘same sort. a number of distinguished Cainese from the Orient, the elite of to Chinese societys and a number American. visitor: The talk is gossip of American and | European universities, stories of | travel, personal repartee, and touch- es of the greater things of many lands. | One of the guests, Jame: Y. ¢, Yen, is the head of the history of | the human race—the mass education of literally hundreds of millic people, from six to 60 year: whole race , almost over night. rece | 3 | The gu: | of | ‘ons {teachers and enth of pup whole arm a whole jof culture and distinctio jof his d | sharks’ fins, birds | year earl _ In a few years the newspape ing publie of hitherto China be four times that of the United So mach has been said and written during the la about the danger of ght that one is in- clined to forget the danger of un- | derweight. Of course are no insurance undernourished to many fatal dis. If underweight, sult a physician to de are any nt might indicate disease. If there are no such symptoms then one may take himself in hand! for a time and with a little care and atténtion he m pers risks by | still, an! susceptible | should | mine if there symptoms which | one | weight. AUGUST 11, 1925 States and much more than that of all Europe. Other guests were almost a tinguished? the leaders of the rer sunce of China. The lady the we takes out to dinner is a Wellesly graduate, and honor to her col- lege. hese representatives of 4 people which provincial America thinks of as a race of laundry: They show a fine pride are only amused at Caucasian lusions of superiority. One of them, a world traveler, ter of many langu gentleman tells with some glee the story of the conductor of an American railway train who was curious to know in which laun- dry he was going to work in the city tination. dinner, just for the interest was Chinese, with chop sticks, nest soup, and But the culture was cos- dis- are the de The of if the rest. mopolitan. Are such people our superiors or our inferiors—or just, in the words of their own sage, our “brothers?” Are the Black Ones Our Brethren, Too? another in far It recalled r, a pa Tea served the great library, lined with thousands of books in every. European language, by a lady of queenly grace and dignity. The conveysation: books, art, phil- osoph ation, the influence of various religions on the temperament peoples, the gossip of many lands, international repartee—such talk one expects only in the most cult vated circles of Europe and Ameri And the faces, with pallid ex- ception—blacker than Thackest ro! Are those, too, our brethren? oceasion, Ceylon. a The house the FABLES ON HEALTH DON’T LET YOUR WEIGHT SHRINK of fresh air, exercis food and eight or nine p daily will do it. In gaining weight good muscles should be developed. fat is not desirable Therefore the basis should be milk, butter, potatoes, cheese, _pesnuts, crackers, rice muffins and mixtures of all kinds. Also vegetables, cereals and fruit Some folk may’ be thin because they are too active, or because the work at too great ‘a tension. These should change their habits of thought d work if they would put on Plenty wholesome hours of strong Mere of the diet cream, oil, bread, flour ADVENTURE OF THE TWINS BY OL[VE ROBERTS BARTON |, “I think we shall have to look on the Moon after all for some of Puff's lost buttoms,” said Juggle Jump to the Twins. “Mr. Peerabout may have heard of something.” So he pushed one of the magi buttons on his coat market “stretch And taking the Twins by the hand, they stretched too, With one long step all three were on the moon. Then Juggle Jump ushed another button market shrink” and they all returned to their proper sizes. “Why, how do you do!”. said Mis-, ter Peerabout, the Moon Man. “Do you mean to’say that you haven't found the lost buttons yet!” For hey | knew all about it. “Some, but not all,” said Juggle] Jump, patting his pocket where the| buttons were tucked safely! away.| “We came to see if you knew uny- thing.” “Not very much,” said the Moon| Man. “I have had so much trouble | with my brakes lately, I haven't had | time to think of much else.” “What's wrong?” asked Nick. “I can't say exactly,” said the Moon Man. “But the Moon goes too fast, particularly: down hill. The ‘first half of the evening it does ‘pretty well, goes right up the hill of the sky without any trouble. I scarcely ever have to change a gear. “But when I get to the top, it wants to go down lickety split, like a racing car, I can't hold it back. Why, the other night I was right over China when I should have been only as far as Japan. fied to death.” “Queer! Queer! said Juggle Jump. Just then the Dream Maker Man and his three sons came along.- His three sons were Snoozle and Snuggle and Snore. “I know the trouble.” said the| Dream Maker Man. “It's the clouds. | The Weather Man makes the clouds run too fast past the moon and that makes the moon look as though it was fairly galloping along. “Snoozle, you run along the Milky Way and ‘tell the Weather Man to blow his clouds more slowly. That will fix the trouble, I'm sure.” So off went Snoozle on his errand. | Pretty soon he came back. “The Weather Man says he can't help it.” said Snoozle.. “There's a queer-looking new star in the sky, and he’s trying to blow it out—the star, I mean.” They all ran along the Milky Way to see the queer new star in the sky, —what do you think! One of Puff’s pearl buttons was haging to another star by a thread. It had gone all the way to the sky when he sneezed. “Hurrah!”, cried Juggle Jump and the Twins. “Another button for the Fairy Queen's cook! Puff will soon have enough buttons to hald him to- gether again.” (To Be Continued.) (Copyright, 1925, NEA Service, Inc.) ee A THOUGHT ‘A thousand years in thy but as yesterday when it is past, an a watch In the night —Pealms I was morti- Very queer!” O time! Time! How it brings forth and devours! And the roaring flood of existence rushes on forever, for- ever changing.—Carlyle. The temperature of the sun's | mercial photegphere is 12,000 degrees. Fah- renheit, : Sates eS ie le NATIONS SEEK SYNTHETIC GOLD BY DAVID DIETZ NEA Service Writer An animal no bigger than a large insect. He's to be found on most farms and in many large gardens. Because of his size, he usually es- capex attention, Farmer s finding him in a trap usually call him baby mouse. creature, Person- the long: grown ame is Sore: His ordinary name i tailed shrew, As a rule, his body out three inches long, his tail one inch, The shrew is of particular interest to the pioneers on the frontier of science who are engaged in investi- gating evolution. They believe that the shrew more nearly than any other animal alive today resembles the first mammal to appear on earth. Some ten million years ago, the great reptilés, the dinosaurs, ruled the earth. Some of the dinosaurs reached a length of 100 feet. About this time, scientists believe, jthe first mammals made their ap- pearance. They were only two or three inch- es in length—much like the litle shrew of today. But conditions on earth changed. The mighty dinosaurs died out. And the little mammals thrived until they in turn ruled the earth. Attempts to produce gold by sfn- thetic methods are going on in three nations. Professor Miethe of the Photo- chemical Department of the Berlin Technical High School, Professor Nagaoka of the Tokyo Imperial Uni. versity and Professor H. H. Sheldon of New York University are all en- gaged upon the problem. Their method is to send heavy electric currents through mercury vapor. The current, they believe, knocks electrons out of the nuclei ot some or the atoms of mercury, turning them into gold. So far, the method has no com- c value. It is believed that microscopic amounts of gold have been produced at a ocst of more than 100 times the value of the gold, It is interesting, however, to sve science at last beginning to realize the age-old dream of the alchemi: | of turning “base” metals into gold. Photographs have been Mt. Hamilton in California show the highest ranges of the Nevada mountains more th: miles away. made at o——_-. ———_——_—_» LITTLE JOE OMORROW 15 JUST ANOTHER ZE, WHEN YOU DON'T, KNOW WHAT YOURE WORKING TOWARDN_