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PAGE FOUR The Bismarck Tribune An Independest Newspaper THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) —___—_———————— Published. by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bismarck, N. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck, as second class mail matter. ieor; Mann. ...President and Publisher Subscription Kates F Daily dy carrier, per year............ Daily by mail, per year, (in Bismarck) Daily by mail, per year, (in state outside Bismarck)...... wee 6.00 Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota........ 6. Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the ase for republication of all news dispatches credited therwise credited in this paper, and alsvu ~ spontaneous origin published here- £ republication of all other matter jable in Advance « 120 Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY CHICAGO DETROIT Tower Bldg. Kresge Bldg. AND SMITH PAYNE, BURNS NEW YORK er ee - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) ——_ $< Food and Weather person of normal mind is quick to of dressing for comfort as the y one is wise enough ng to conform to the ablished by medical science d investigation. =Almost any appreciate temperature to change principles of } after much study In the summer months it is the part of good sense | to ignore even the injunction of the federal axri- cultural department to “eat more meat” in order to help the stock raisers, and it will be found that persons who are moderate in the use of meat, prac- lly eliminating it from the ration in summer, will find it easier to maintain a condition of health. Any other articles of food which are found to overwork the vital organs or bring distress in any way should be readily discovered by the adult, even without the advice of a physician, and such foods may be abandoned to the advantage of better health, Foods which are promptly assimilated in the winter months become harmful in the summer. Nobody likes to have the charge applied ‘to him- self, of course, but it will probably be found that excesses in eating are at the foundation of more physical ills than almost any other cause, The dan- gers from over-eating are multiplied in the days be- tween June 20 and September 20. ‘The butcher and the grocer may find their busi- ness somewhat reduced by an extensive practice of moderation in eating, but after all the conse tion of life and health is about the most important business in which anyone may engage. Eyes on the Thermometer Some say, when the mercury soars, forget it and keep cool. Rubbish, Keep your on the ther- mpmeter. When the bulb ds 80 o’mornings, think to arise promptly at the alarm’s first tinkle. e plenty of time for a refreshing bath and a sensible break- fast. Keep your eye on the thermometer and don’t run for the train or car. .When the bulb reads 90 at noon, think to cat lightly—no meat or rich dishes if you are an office worker. Walk on the shady side of the street. When you return to the office, if you are overheated, Keep your eyes on the thernrometer and keep away from an electric fan. = When the mercury re: 92 at 5 o'clock, keep your eyes on the thermometer, and walk leisurely to trol- Téy terminal or railr station or parking p It’s better to walk home than be carried to the h pital in an ambulance. When the tube sizzles at 8 o'clock, keep your eyes om the thermometer and find the shade of a tre God gave us trees for the summer evening, and man hasn’t been able to improve upon his handiwork. = When the sun goes down red, keep your $s on the thermometer. It’s Nature’s warning that it will be hot tomorrow and you shouldn't dance away your energies half the night. There will be plenty of cyol hours for that later. Keep your eyes on the thermometer! Ayell. And keep e Neglectful Mothers =There are many who will agree with Dr. Esther Loring Ric of the staff of the Phipps Psychi- tute of John Hopkins university when s mothers who are educationally and socially active but are neglectful of their,own chil- dren. She proposes, as a constructive measure, that some of these mothers give up their lectures in child] study for one season and devote themselves to a serious study of some of the behavior problems of their own offspring. “Dr. Richards is right in contending ~that delin- quency and other conduct disorders among childres are, to a large extent, the result of parental behavior problems. There is no doubt that the solution of the trouble in the child generally rests on the suc- cessful treatment of the adult problems. “There is much grandiloquent theorizing today on “psychology of the child” and similar subjects and tao little practical observation of the actual reae- tions of an actual child in its own home. Parents Become “hipped” on some particular “ism” and forthwith try to make their child conform to some lialf-baked theory, when, as a matter of fact, what the child needs is simply intelligent guidance of nétural impulses. Let us educate the children and let us educate the parents, who need it more, but let those parents che the proper method of child study is to ' one’s own in a practical, helpful manner, P Smuggled Aliens ‘The inerease of the border patrol is reported to e made a 75 per cent decrease in the smuggling aliens into this country. “The importance of this plishment can be more fully realized when it sunderstood that the greater number of smuggled are of the class known in immigration, par- as “undesirables,” persons who can not, for reason or other, enter the United States even were no quata regulations, ers and bays through which incoming boats can slip! with a minimum risk of detection, is the country’s | worst problem, Even with a 75 per cent decrease, the number of smuggled aliens is known to be large, but even with a further increase of the patrol it would be dif ficult to more materially decrease it, and practically impossible to altogether wipe it out. It would seem, then, as if the maximum of efficiency with a mini- mum of expense had been reached in this work. | Mothers and Children Many people find a sob in the story of the mother | blackbird who was dashed to death with her five fledglings when she refused to de: them. The mother and her brood nested high up on the H girders of an old bridge across a riyer in Ohio. ; Wreckers razing the bridge sought to drive the mother away before the last hack of the g chanical axe sent the bridge hurtling into the river 80 feet below. But the mother bird would not stir, clinging to the | nest, calling out in that weird cry of terror whi sometimes birds, always mute before, can bring | forth. The poets and mother idealists find a tear and parallel! here for the glory of motherhood. They are right. Nothing in the world equals the eternal devotion and stand-byingness of mothers. But—on the other hand, children of today whose minds are sharpened to keener thinking than their mentalities, react to too wholesale a lauding of pure- ly biological qualities that are born in a person and not developed through rigorous training and self- control. For instance, in the bird case, this new type of child might ask, “nice of her, but instead of-flying around and clucking like a frantic emotional | biddy, why didn’t she get busy and try to carry at least one or two of them away in her beak before the crash came?” = Just an answer to parents who wonder why theit children seem sometimes so unkind! { May the bride and bridegroom be affinities. One of the pressing needs of the season for suckers A ceiling put up by a $14- is known as heavy overhead. day is a closed { day plasterer is what Still, despite the multiplicity of laws, it requires a bit more effort to be a decent cittzen. | Editorial Comment A State's Reputation (Kansas City Times) It is a wholesome condition when citizens become jealous of the good name of their community or state. That seems to be the case in Jefferson coun- ty, Alabama, where a grand jury recommended abol- ition of the convict leasing system, which repeatedly has been condemned throughout the country. The grand jury’s report states the nation-wide criticism of the system has been justifiable. But it would end the criticism by removing its source. That is the proper way for any state to preserve its repu- tation in the eyes of the country. The leasing tem has led to shameful abuses; it involves the hir- ing out of prisoners to individuals or concerns who are interested only in getting as much labor as pos- sible at the least expense. The prisoners frequently have been left in charge of incompetent subordinates who have used cruel and uncivilized methods in handling them. It was the death of one prisoner and a series of complaints of cruelty to others that brought the grand jury investigation. The jury found the charges were well founded, that at one prison camp |. ruelty and inhuman treatment by those in charge was the the order of the day,” and that 90 per cent of the convicts who were examined bore evidences of mistreatment. There was no desire, it was held, to pamper those who had been convicted of offenses, but only to have prisoners handled in a civilized fashion. The attitude is reasonable. No state can afford to permit an obvious injustice to any person within its borders. The abuses arising out of the system still operative in Alabama have led to its ebolition in other states. It is,a system that has no place anywhere in the country. And How (Chicago Tribune) Jess Sweetser, who used to play football for Yale, is the first Am n by birth and breeding ever to win the British amateur golf championship. Wal- ter Travis, an American by adoption, won it years ago and Robert Gardner was runner-up back in 1920. Americans, including those who never have broken 110, will: find in Sweetser’s victory a source of gratification. It is particularly gratifying because of the man- ner in which the victory was achieved. We need not consider what happened in the final match against A. F. Simpson, a Scot. Sweetser simply played sounder golf to win 6 up. Sweetser was a good golfer, but he did not prove he was champion in the finals. He showed his stuff in. the two preceding matches, Sweetser and seven Britons were left in the tour- bnament on Friday morning. Swectser’s first op- ponent, Robert Scott of Glasgow, was three strokes to the good at the ninth tee. If Sweetser had been less a bulldog he would have blown up. Instead h> whittled down the lead and had the match squared at the fifteenth hole, gained the lead at the seven- teenth, and held it at the eighteenth. He proved he could come from behind to win and his victory landed him in the semi-finals, His next opponent was a young Irishman, W. C. Brownlow. This match started more auspiciously for the American. He was two strokes to the good at the seventeenth-tee. He had only to hold his lead to win. Brownlow won the seventeenth with a heart-breaking fifteen yard putt and the eighteenth with a fifteen footer. Sweetser had seen victory in his hand only to have it elude him. He was slip- ser managed to hold the Irishman even at the next two holes and win the miatch at the twenty-first. ‘The fellow who can come from behind has half the makings of » champion. When, in addition, he shows he can The boy ig there, 0. stirring about, but no one said any-| cock-chafer, spots and all, he prompt- ly went to sleep again. So there was not the slightest use of the Twins staying there. bag boy by the arm. “It can't be far] i now cy. and a big book under his arm. ping and Brownlow was on top of his game. Sweet- | be hi and Yale men particularly, ought to THE BISMARCK ERY There had been phere in the store t noon, I knew that go: queer atmos e whole after- ip had been | I saw Mr, Rob- mplacently down | ood boiled as Tl Cleaver as I st room, her cold) clammy | t pretty creature. ld have thought she} t 4 more beautiful. is man didn’t know the girl who had_ seen for he that T r Miss Cleaver in her agony, said to me with an unctuous smile: Dean, that you 355 swwon SS" “ASTIONALAWEN OWN WE have not been under the discipline of know.” when I went into the woman's room d man crumple. counter toward anyone, ofthe stote if anyone should hear the Where, Oh Where, Has My Little Dog Gone? Sw eo \ jong enough to be obeyed. ppened to you were away at | t with you thi y time, how: 1 think you didn’ Mr. Robin- But “L returned in time on. 1 was only gone an hour. o hang up my coat 1 found Mis: ng, and I stayed fo help. Wa: of the store? It did my heart good to see that e and leaned over the me. this He grew 7 jon't tell to “Don't, pleas ’ hurt the business It woul “TWINS CLINE ROBER?s BAPTA f When the kiwi bird “had eaten the ‘Come along, Whiffet, we'll be go- in, said ‘Nick taking the little rag- to Mister Snoopsey’s cave Hidy Go Land.” “Here comes somebody,” said Nan- “He's got spectacles on his nou le looks wise enough to know everything I in the world. We'd better ask him if where Mister Snoopsy’s in he knows cave is. So when the learned gentleman came quite near, they stopped h _ ‘ou tell us where Hidy Go Land is?” asked Nick politely. “We're looking for a robber by the name of | 1) Snoopsy, and he lives there.” “I'll look. in my big book if you'll wait a minute,” said the man, whose name was Mister Knowitall, for it, was printed in big letters on the back of his book and that’s how the Twins knew it. “Let me see—I'll look in the H’s. That should give it. Here’s high, hire, hind, hive, hide— yes, sir, we're coming’ to it, I do be- y lieve. Here it is—Hidy Go Land. Aj place in Fairyland where folk 4 when they wish to hide. There are several ways of reaching it—down through the cracks in the porch, down the drain, through the dark corner behind the sofa, down the funny little holes in the field, down the mouse-holes and rat-holes in the barn, and by the Zigzag Path through { the wood.” | “Well, where's the Zigzag Path?” said Nick. “Here's the woods.” i “That's just it! Where?” said Mis- ter Knowitall, looking over his spec- tacles. “Oh! I have it! I’ll look it up in my book also, It should be among the Z's. Here we afe! Zither, zeal- ous, zone, zip, Zanzibar, Zigzag Path! My! My! This book certainly tells everything. It says, “The Zigzag Path is the path that leads through the woods to that part of Fairyland ; called Hidy Go Land, It is extremely hard to find as it is hese one day and gone the next, there the next day and gone the day after. not a safe path to take as it is likely to) jump around while you are on it and spill you off into nowhere.” “That doesn’t help much, does it?” 8i Nancy. “I'm afraid not,” sald Mister Knowitall. But this much I will sa: T had a second cousin whose aunt's step-brother’s son was walking along the Zigzag Path one day and sudden- ly—just like that—off went his shoes! He never did find his shoes and it was certainly too bad: They had been half-soled once and as he had sthpped. growing, they’d have lasted quite a while. Well, I must on my way. If 1 come upon anv more directions in my big book, I'll mail ag a letter.” “Wil you please look among ‘he S's too,” begged Whiffet. “Shad- ows and Snoopsy and stile and words like that?” f “Certainly,” said Mister Knowitall ingly, shutting his big book and {. Suddenly he nearly lost ce for the ground he wa: on gave a ferrible | j children, come quickly!” Zigzag=Path now. Land.” (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service. Inc.) low to make money is to it in air castle building. and yet it doesn’t pour. School if it didn’t make the neigh- “9 Don’t educate your hens. Keep] them ignorant. Make poor fish out of them. A fish lays a million eggs. The quickest way for a young fel- -|bors think they, were henpecked. his must be the rodd to Hidy Go|. (To Be Continued) BARBS BY TOM SIMS be born nto a rich family. Germany plans to lead the world in aireraft building. She once misled All the old sayings are not true. it never rains in the Sahara Desert, More men would go to Sunday When they want“a divorce in China hey break two chopsticks, but in America they break a few heads. 1 ney Fit too, but who wa 11 sorts: of ng about. I am afraid that would even say that she i herself.” I asked tersely. of course not,” an- quickly. “Doctor he thought it was id of epileptic attack. He has no at she will recover.” “Iam glad you told me that, Mr. Robinson, for I thought it was poison she had taken. You see, I saw her, tle on the floor astonishment I thrust the bottle with the red skull and cross bones on it into h (Copyr! TOMORROW: Refusing a Bribe. You cat’t eat your cake and have $8 a piece uf cake that can’t be eaten? A new fisherman tells us it is his honest opinion that fish won't bite in water. One of the most enjoyable features of a spring picnic is-ants are not so large as elephants. A sure thing is when daughter de- cides she needs a new hat. A defeated politician must feel something like.a ticket to last night’s performance. All’s well that ends. ———_—__—__—__—_ | A THOUGHT -__——_-—-o great gain—1 Timothy, That happy state of mind, so rarely possessed, in which we. can say, “F have enough,” is the highest attain- ment of philovophy.—Zimmerman. EVERETT TRUE BY CONDO “HEY, WAW A MINUTS, GVEReTT I. Did You HEAR ABour WILIKIN py Nes — THAT \S, HEARD, HE WAS PRETTY BADLY USED YF IN AN AIRPLAN] ACAAPENT 3% Yes, One MianT SAX “Down'!! But godlineys with contentment is to please her impoverished fam- She sacrifices her love for Tim my, a boyhood sweetheart. Her mar- ried life is @ series of humiliations by Murillo. She writes to her cou- sin, Judith Moore, a San ncisco stenographer, for advice and possible assistance in her plight. Then di covery that a young life is hov ing near seems to cement her bond- age. GO ON WITH THE'sTory FROM HERE Chapter 17. Murillo's pride was restored. He saw a reson for the vicious wound she had given. In the light of thi great news, Sandy’s flight, with her subsequent hysteria, was beautifully explained. It had no relation to him. He was willing to pardon her erratic behavior; overlook that note and the insulting conditions of her return to him. These conditions, meant nothing; now. There would be no further talk of her leaving. She couldn't; leave. His-emotion was tinged with cx- ultance. This proud, vivid creature, who had flouted him so insolently, yet beauty maddened him, was now hi Cate irrevocably. He could afford to be magnanimous. He stooped down, letting her hair brush his checks ‘He slipped his hands under her arms She movéd a little, the blood surging to her face. “I'm so proud, Sandy: you don’t know: how proud this makes ‘me.” though she were honored to please him, She said: “I'm tired—awfully tired. I hope you'll not tell any one; else. Please don't!” | “Why? Aren’t you gald, Sandy?! Aren't you overjoyed about it?” She made no answer. She looked out to the waters with the light swinging like a pendulum over the waves. She tricd to unclasp his hands. ; He kissed her; “Of course you're proud, Sandy. I kaow you are.” It was futile to resist him. understood this with « completeness. She shivertng Early inthe softly ‘throigh road. The fi in the breeze and in the gray ripple of the waters. She held out her hand as though she expected it to rain. She blinked—walked on di tractedly. She said to herself, “ doesn't’ matter—nothing | matte And she fought desperately against her sick, furious resentments. She led herself to endurance. hat eveni: Murillo took a litt! box from is “pocket, opened ly, glanced indulgently at Sa: “Do you know what I haye jhere? In his ceremonious way, ‘he reached for her hand, slipped a ring on thej little finger. It was a pretty stone, set with emeralds ito match the bracelet. He waited some gushing exclamat lj. woo-! ing}; “Not such a bad idea to ple me a little, is: it, Sandy?” an effort she checked. the hot retort, kept her eyes down. For five months—nearly six he 1 an: e morning she the garden to weut the miliated her in mohey matters. hadn’t a dollar in her purse. Now| he. would act the*prince . ... show her how fine he could be when she _. FRIDAY, JUNE4, 1926 And he went on talking like this, as| Ti irst touch of winter was]: dy! Richmond, &. 1. sae, ELENORE : MEHERIN ism. It made him vicious with re- entment. He sought to.compel her fection, dominate her whether she willin, oe ine 4 le was intensely proud of the no- Itice she attracted. Sandy was a prize that he liked possessing . . . now, more than éver, He wanted to patade the Naha ue, ‘of his own- ership. He decided to give a house- warming. Sandy seid: “Wait a few months more. I don’t’ feel like @ celebra- “Why not now. six months marrie< She answered lightly: “Oh, make it a year.” ‘A few days later he came home ‘with engraved invitations. It didn’t really occur to him that she had ‘Seriously opposed her will to his. ‘eames ee gt Hgts paar: would be only ai - tile threat, Maen re Murillo made out the list of guests. He passed it to Sandy, told her to add any names he had overlooked. ‘There were none of the young friends of her girlhood included. She added ten of these. They were the" ee and boys who had sat at her tidal table—companions since child- hood. Timmy was on the list, Heinic, Dick Chapman and a,number of girls. One day Sandy was shopping. She met the Artiss sisters. iy said: “Old thing, it di do,us much good that you married a millionaire. Wn don’t you liven the town up a bit “You're comin; ve it when we're . ing, aren't you?” Sandy asked. ney had received no invitations. Heinie had received none, nor ‘had tamy. Sandy -walked homeward, her brain on fire. She guessed what pened. She said to Murillo: “Some of the invitations have been lost.” 7. She defied him with blazing eyes. ‘May Arliss received none. Timmy received none—nor Heinie nor Dic! Chapman,” She went up to him with a cold menace: “Do you know the reason?” He had been smiling, about to speak confidently. At the look of her, he became excited, tried to take her hands: “Don’t lose control of yourself, Sandy, I know the reason— certainly. You'll understand.” ‘Contin Ta e lashes of Lif ' i “ New York—George Koskozka, tired of big city glitter, attempted suicide by hanging himself from a clothes ine three stories above the groun A neighbor tried to save him by cu’ ting the rope and Koskozka fell to the ground and fractured his skull. Ni —The past has struck at Charles Houard Capen, of Port J His wife obtained « divorce alleging indiscretions of her husband in Panama 20-years ago. > jewark, N. hi Paris.--One of Napoleon's famous cocked hats has been sold at auction for 43,000 francs. The purchaser is pthe Prince of Monaco. The hat was brought back from a campaign by the emperor's chief veterinary. sur- geon, Giraud, as a souvenir. —— Chicago.—Arthur and Mabel Witt- ren have decided they can’t get along together, but it isn’t as if they hadn't tried. "They've been married kowtowed to him, “Don’t you like it?” he asked with a touch of injur; “Oh, yes: the ring’s loxely. I can't with your’ presenta- ‘tion speech.” The long eyebrows went up inquir- ‘ingly. ‘ Sandy laughed. “You'lb to pardon me, Benny, but I can’t share your belief that I was created for the sole purpose of giving delight to one Benvehuto Murillo.” She twisted-her finger, gave an impud grin. b, jo shrugged. Then he was smiling again. “ your own way, Sandy. You will anyway. Oh, before I forget it, I've asked my family to dinner Sunday. They've “overjoyed.” She was stunned. “You don't mean you've told them? You surely haven’t told them already!” ‘Why not?” “I asked you not. to.” * “You can hardly mean that you wish me to hide the fact. You watt me to keep it from my family?” Tears flew to her eyes. je said, trembling, “What business is it of ‘theirs 2” “What business of theirs? You're not thinking of what you say. Sce- ing that I'm the only generation, it is certainly a matter of family interes _ She had a vision of the whole Mu- rillo family—the mother, a brown, shrinking little body, with snappit black eyes and thin parchment lip: the three siste: Hof m wore @ great deal of jewelry and we very effusive; the aunt, who wi patronizing and nose; ndy’hed @ picture of these Murillos coming up one by one and officiously congratu- janes her as Beatrice had already jone. ‘ She said nervously: “Call ‘off that dinner, Ben, please!” Saturday morning she heard him giving orders to the maid. She asked flamingly: “Are. you.-having Peggle here tomotrow night?” “Wes.” ‘ “I asked you not to.” He smiled, patted her hand: don’t get excited. must be done.” Now, Certain. things She walked out of the room, tears rning her eyes. But she held her ead insolently high, knowing ali the while that her biuff was called. The feelings that she had frightened her. Try as she would she couldnt ma: ‘them. She hated hii ated; the whole arrogant tribe of Murillos— resented violently the fact that now her doubly one-of them. 1 made no difference how. many she said to herself that she 3 that she was going to he game. No amount of reasoning vanquished her emotions. ‘When he came slowly. behind her, as ‘he ‘had a habit of-doing, and mk fed this hands under her, @ or when he looked at her with th #hough her beau. treation, she to pet ery p looking et ‘YU go out Pere When she saw him, jurillo in this | three times—to each other, and alveeeed three times—from each other. Chieago——Now that the honey- moon is over Mrs. Hugh Miller must go to the sixth grade, school offieia’ . Her husband wants to compromise and teach hig 15-year- old bride at home. Knoxville.—Alleging cruel and in- human treatment, Mary Jesse Doug- Jas has filed suit, for divoree. She asks as alimony 18 hens, a rooster and a motor truck valued at $300 and also asks an injunction to prevent her spouse from “pestering’’ her. ———__________, | MANDAN NEWS Siac All but three of the teachers in the Mandan city schools will return in the fall. ‘ith the closing of school” this weck the teachers ere leaving for their homes or on vacation trips. Thirty-eight young women and twelve young men received their diplomas last night at the Mandan high school commencement exercises. Rev. Paul S. Wright of Bismarck gave the commencement addre: i | A city-country picnic for farmers and Mandanites will be held Sunday, June 13, at the John Christensen “Plymouth” Rock Farm,” 16 miles southwest of the city on the Heart River. According to T. .G. C. Ken- jnelly, chairman of the tu: rel tions committee of the Mandan Chamber of Commerce, four such pic- nics are being planned for the sum- mer. Senator Charlic Whitmer of Yucca is sponsoring a rodeo to be held his ranch Thursday and Friday, June 24 and 25. A corposation is being formed to stage the wild west show and: a large arena is under con tion. Mr. Whitmer says he hi ‘ surances from a- number of cow |Punchers promising their entry. Flapper | Fanny Says: to my housewarnm.- \. seu | 6 al at [TS | sole eo 9 eo ’ ‘ SSS oe + ee ee