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Published the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- marek, N. Dee and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck class mai! matter. ass 4 Gcorge D. Mann................President and Publisher Subscription Rates Payable in Advance yea Member Audit Bureau of Circulation Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it ef not otherwise credited in this newspaper and also local news of spontaneous origin published herein. All rights of republication of all other matter herein are also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Treaty Will Furnish New Round Having been beaten on the debenture plan, the flexible tariff provision, on farm relief and on the tariff revision, the senate now aligns for a new line of attack on Prest- dent Hoover. The London naval pact is the issue chosen for continuing the hostilities. The initial challenge of the president comes in the senate foreign relations committee demand for the con- fidential details of the London conference, which Scvre- tary of State Stimson has refused. There arc ‘wo ways of looking at this demand. If American policy were-one of alliances with foreign gov- ernments, the senate, which must pass on treaties, might be justificd in asking for the confidential record on the ) steps which resulted in the submission to it of the navel parity treaty. The first of these was the visit of Premier Ramsay MacDonald to this side of the Atlantic, after which he and President Hoover sat,on an old log along the Rapidan and arranged for calling the conference. As that meeting proceeded at London, its doings were rather fully aired in the news reports cabled over to this side. At no time was there any suggestion of anything re- sembling an alliance or any other form of obligation or entanglement between this country and any of the pow- ers participating. It is a 1air assumption that no public interest would be served by making confidential memoranda on the treaty public, while a great deal of harm could be done. In advance it is known about just who is going to vote to ratify the treaty and who is going to oppose its ratifica- tion. There is strong reason for considering the coming action on the pact just another repetition of the prior opposition to all that the president has proposed. The vote probably will read very much like that on the de- benture, the flexible tariff revision provision, the nomin- ation of Judge Parker to the supreme court and, only the other day, the vote on the tariff bill conference ad- justment. Nothing that is being kept confidential would hardly change a vote by being disclosed. The demand for the information is largely made by senators who are go- ing to vote against the treaty and want an excuse for their attitude. As said, it came from Senator Berah’s foreign relations committee. Making treaties on such matters as were considered at London is a process invested with considerable delicacy. It is better to get confidential information in the form of news that leaks out of the proceedings, and in the ses- sion at London, correspondents openly sat in the mect- ings of the conference. The back-stage proceedings were disclosed daily in the cables. France and Italy made impossible demands and refused to come into the plans for limitation. On the basis of these generally known facts and by weighing the provisions of the pact, the senate committee and the upper chamber itsclf should be able to pass on the treaty on its merits or demerits with- \out dragging delicate matters into the light, to the pos- sible offense of other nations in the parley. That is the attitude that the white house and the state department stem to take on the demand from the other end of Pennsylvania avenue. This view also is taken by a number of newspapers throughout the country, which have -been able to take the measure of the probable motivation of the senators who want to pry into the president's confidential records. The Duluth Herald sums the matter up by the state- ment that “the senate couldn’t any more make a treaty than! any other mob could, and therefore its duty is fin- ished when it deals with the finished product as it. is placed before it by the executive department. To have it bungling with the preliminary conversations that lead to treaties,” the Herald continues, “would utterly paralyze treaty-making and bar the highway to peace. The presi- dent is right and the senate, as usual, is wrong.” Golf Grows by Democracy Golf lends itself more to philosophy in the vicinity of the big cities than on the greens of the Bismarck Coun- try club or the municipal course along the Heart in Man- dan, but between the big towns and the smaller there are some things in common in this sport and one of them is the tendency of the game to supplant bascball, hitherto the national game. You can’t get up a local baseball team here any more, ‘and it may be that this is the result of the popularity of golf. More and more ig fellows who. in the ab- sence of the competition of the two would spend their time on the baseball diamond are turning to the golf greens here, while solid business men of the type who used to patronize bascball and make its financing possi- ble now belong to the Country‘club and spend their spare time on tae course instead of sitting in bleachers and grandstands, making screaming maniacs of themselves. Why is this? Golf is not the cheapest game in the world, what with the price of clubs, balls and greens fees; but it is swiftly being Americanized into a very democratic affair. It's Worth reflecting upon briefly. ‘To get an insight into golf-democracy, don't go to an expensive private club. You can learn nothing there, except that a rotund captain of industry can, on occa- sion, look highly ridiculous in knickers, Go to a public links, or to one of those suburban or small town clubs where the fees are within reach of the average man. When s man steps on a golf course—and here, per- haps, is the real secret of the game's amazing growth in popularity in this country—he leaves his caste behind him, When he waggles his club hopefully at the first tee, resolved to imprint on the yet stainless record of the life he is respected and obeyed. He in it. ball in a babbling brook. And so it goes, for two or more hours. His companion @ $85-a-week youngster who. off the course, is just an underling, obliged to address this man with awe and respect. But on the course the positions are reversed, The young nobody slams a 200-yard drive straight down the fairway, and a look of unqualified admiration enters rive like that. ‘When the round ends the men step back into their daily roles. The young man runs to catch the trolley, and the elder one gets into his $3,000 automobile. He is a Somebody once more. But for a short time he has been a nobody, a duffer, a despised underling—and it has been good for him. Oh, yes—one ought to add that in all probability the two have been accompanied on their round by a 15-year- old Italian caddy in patched pants, who could take a set of discarded clubs and lick the daylights out of the two of them. A Great Life Saving Field Effective safety activities have their greatest oppor- tunity for prevention in the field df automobile accidents. The national conference on street and highway safety, calling attention to the 31,000 deaths from car tragedies last year and injuries of a million more, notes that virtually every one of these deaths and injuries was of @ preventable character, provided there had been the exercise of ordinary care and caution. Fifty-five per cent of the automobile deaths in 1929 were of pedestrians who were run down by automobiles. Available statistics indicate also that more than one- | half of the accidents involving motor vehicles and pedes- trians took place at street crossings and intersections. These figures give a definite indication also of the Places where safety activities and measures can be con- centrated with the prospect of the largest measure of result. With pedestrian-vehicle accidents, “crossing the street at intersections” where there were no traffic lights or signgls and “crossing the street between intersections” are the most productive of injuries and deaths among all of the causes and circumstances that lead to or in- volve accidents on the streets and highways. Reports of the police departments and motor vehicle bureaus of some of the states and cities of the country, covering a large number of accidents in 1929 and care- fully tabulated and analyzed, showed that the number of injuries where the pedestrian was crossing with the traf- fic light or signal amounted to 4,244, while 37,681 were injured or killed while crossing against lights or signals or at crossings where there were no lights or signals. These figures are believed to reflect the general condi- tion for the country as a whole, but covering only a frac- tional part of the accidents and casualties of this na- ture for the year. The circumstances of pedestrian-vehicle accidents where the pedestrian was crossing the street at an in- No signal, 27,177; against the signal, 9,022; diagonally ‘across the intersection, 1,482, and with the signal, 4,244. Of this number, 1,438 were killed. Accidents due to crossing the street between inter- sections caused the injury or death of 27,392 persons, while “playing in the street” caused the injury or death of 17,193 others. In the list of accidents involving the occupants of mo- | tor vehicles, and not involving a pedestrian, are the fol- lowing: ows his job and he knows it well. No one can find fault with his skill But out here, on the golf course—what a difference! | He is, as we said, just a golfer. He swings his club fu- riously and his ball flies off at an unaccountable and il- logical tangent. He pursues it, assails it with another club and succeeds only in ruining a bit of turf. With a strange gleam in his eye he tries again and plants his | in play, perhaps is a chance acquaintance of the links— tae older man’s eyes. His money cannot buy him a) : Gil Zi (" faptagie trae! fi $ i SEER TOME TCT ay Today Is the Anniversary of “LEAD, KINDLY .LIGHT” On June 16, 1833, Cardinal John Henry Newman wrote while crossing the Mediterranean sea the famous hymn, “Lead, Kindly Light.” liant man in the Church of England, beloved and admired for his character and great gifts, Newman nevertheless became ‘a doubter of Protestantism. So he was moved to write: Lead, kindly ght, amid the’ encirling 1 Lead > The night is dark, and I am far from Lead Thou me on, Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see The distant scene; one step Nine years after he wrote this, Car- dinal Newman retired to the little/young people respect for authority and law—they ‘want to kiss thelr way through life.” —Samuel Insull, public utilities mag- nate. silence with his attitude toward the church. Emerging from his retire- Wusban © 1950 bY NEA SERVICE INC. BEGIN HERE TODAY NATALIB CONVERSE, Exceeding the speed limit, 17,564; on the wrong side of the road, 16,842; did not have the right of way, 34,- | 197; drove off the roadway, 11,316; failing to signal, 9,159, | and cutting in, 7,349. Amozg the 96,427 involved in! these classifications, 3,820 were killed. Other causes, | such as passing street cars, passing on curves and hills, | improper turning and double Parking, caused the injury or death of 10,808 persons. | Violation of the right of way was one of the most pro- ductive causes of vehicle accidents, caused in some in- stances by collisions between two cars where one of them had just previously been forced from the right of way by another car that escaped the accident. | Editorial Comment baer | Dictation The little boy's definition matey le! may be right, at that, whe: he intimated that “dictation” is arate man takes from his-wife and gives to his stenographer. Canadian Money Good for Face (Toledo Blade) Although the federal reserve board cannot make Can- adian money legal peer. in the United States, a plan money accept- country at par. In Toledo and other border cities, Canadian money accepted at face value, but this custom oy More on the Big Belt (New York World) With respect to the question that we raised the other day as to what became of the ancient custom of award- ing magnificent belts to heavyweight boxing champions, | Mr. Ned Brown comes along with some more information. The thing was abandoned, it seems, simply because it became too expensive, not in initial cgst but in upkeep. John L. Sullivan, for example, who finally gS gBe Hd a Lie sE ee ad 3 Spartan idea of money, which it corrupt the soul - mext two hours a more brilliant round than he has ever | ‘on. A belt made of this metal, suitably chased and en- before accomplished, he ceases to be the John Jones or Bil ith of everyday life and becomes just a golfer. _ And what. s multitude of sins and sinners that word __ Your golfer, let us say, is a man of substance; & mid ‘man of position and authority. In his ordinary ~ ¥ graved, would vividly symbolize the kind of fist that it takes to win a championship; at the same time we guar- antee that it would appear in no hock shops, for your uncle, as it happens, cares nothing about sentiment, being interested only in intrinsic values. However, the modern champion does not seem to visit hock shops as often as his te Ageia did, 80 we shall see what happens to ‘the belt. sec WEST, for cone suggests that he NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXXV left Alan to his while she prepared She knew well enough that they were bitter thoughts, of the kind she wished him to have, Now and then she glanced ap- praisingly at him, as she hurried back and forth between her tiny kitchenette and the combination dining and living room. His air of utter dejection pleased her. He had said enough in the taxicab on the way up to convince her he was deeply disappointed in Natalie. She surmised his bitterness was growing moment by moment, but she could not delay dinner indefi- Besides, she was bungry. So finally she went over to bim with a tray and put it down on @ tabouret beside the deep chair she had chosen especially for him, She spoke to him and Alan ab- sent-mindedly reached ont @ hand for a glass of tomato cocktail. He shivered slightly, opened the windows to free the room of cooking smoke. “Dinner is ready,” she said mat- ter-of-factly. Alan got up and as he stood there Phillipa resisted an impulse to slip under the arm be raised to press & palm to his brow. Tt came rather suddenly, his burst “Phillipa, I'm through,” he ez- ment Newman became a convert to the Roman Catholic church. In 1879 Leo XIII created Newman cardinal, allowing him to reside in England. OO | Quotations | "I always look at the dark side of everything.”—} Miller, actress. -* * “Women are getting dumber as they grow smarter.”"—Mary Garden, grand opera star. ek * “Bingle girls buy three times as many pairs of silk stockings as mar- ried women. They’re job—and beau —insurance.” — Margaret E. Sangster. eke “Loaf like @ man. Women will never have achieved emanicpation until they can relax, with their feet higher than their heads.”—Dr. Olga Stastny. “One of the great troubles with our x ek & today is their lack of Pouring out bis indignation. “I can’t see any use trying to go on with it,” he declared with a vehemence that warmed Phillipa’s heart. “I thought Natalie had changed, but she hasn’t.”, Phillipa uttered a little sound of pity, but she refrained from say- ing: “I told you 20,” “It's no use,” ‘Alan ended welghtily. . ILE he had talked, lost in his own interests, Phillipa bad been doing a little thinking of her “he really was going to throw me over and go back to his wife—just going to Jet me fade out gracefully, licked by discouragement.” She smiled secretly, “Well, my dear Alaa,|® that wouldn't bdve been eo easy, |e but...” “Coffee?” she asked as Alan Dlaced his knife and fork on his plate. “Black, please,” he answered. She brought the dessert, baker's charlotte russe, without asking if he cared for it, and was rather thankful he left it untouched. She knew Natalle had spoiled him with delicious cookery and she did not want any comparison that might reflect to her disadvantage made between them at this time The steak, overdone, had bégn bad enough as it was, “I must learn to cook,” Phillipa said to herself, as she had said many times. She had expected to encounter no difficulty with the art —hbad indeed looked forward with eager anticipation to the opportu: nity for vying with Natalie, But, surprising to ber, many of her practice meals had been sadly dis- appointing. Her coffee wasn’t so bad, though, she congratulated herself as she watched Alan drink cup after cup of it. Phillipa was figuratively holding her breath against time. Where would Alan spend the night? At his hotel, or would be go home? He might be done with Natalle as he had said, but if he went home . . . Phillipa fiercely hoped he would stay away. At last, when Alan was ready to go, and had not mentioned his destination, she delayed him with one pretext or another. She did not want to ask him directly where he was going, but she was about to do so, when he turned abruptly to the telephone. eee PHILLIPa waited, tense and fear- ‘al. She realized clearly his anger with Natalie Was too sudden and too passionate to be trusted. She dou it would endure as he claimed, putting down a fork that | seemed belleve it would. But held the mushroom he had been! it might ff it could bo fed. She started to say something to Phillipa started nervously. For halt him, hoping to make him feel ® wild instant it seemed to her he ridiculous if be were {ntending, for meant he was through with her.!any reason, to call Natalie, But But he was going on, excitedly ‘he spoke before she did, And the| eh g s z 4 HA | if 38 8 i i i } 5 a E or g i : i 292 E | : = i 5 8 | i | 3 é g ¥ i gasy il i i | i 5 zg <7 5 8 BR ABR E s ¥ By az88 <-- CT. LTH DEWEY GROVES because of sympathy She been afraid all night that she bad betrayed her jealousy of Bernadine Lamont to Alan's secre- tary., Now she was certain of it. A dull red flush stained her cheeks and hope withdrew a little farther Her voice was uneven when she asked if he had been in that morning. “Oh, yes, he was hete,” Phillipa answered coldly. She knew she kless, but she did not er her irritation was routing her better judgment. “Did he say when he would re turn?” Natalie hated to have to ask these questions. She knew they humbled her in Miss West’s eyes, Dut she was sternly disciplining her pride at the moment. “No, he didn’t,” Phillipa curtly Natalie glanced toward Alan's door. “I think I'll wait in his pri- vate office a while,” she sald, and half-excused Phillipa’s abruptneas. With @ flare of resentment, Phil- Mpa watched her close the door. She knew that in future Natalie would always be distant with her. “If she ever comes again,” she mut- tered, but with small belief in the What Natalie did in Alan's of- fice, Phillipa did not know, but she grew more convinced as the time passed that she had acted foolish- ly toward Natalie. Suppose the quarrel should blow over, and things were to go on as they were Row? She would have no influence whatsoever with Natalie, no oppor- tunity to atir her up against Ber nadine Lamont, She was bitterly regretful, I¢ go in now and have a talk with Natalie. It would be a fine chance to incite her to Jealousy. She could tell her about the visits lan had paid to the Lamont home while she, Natalie, was away. She could tell of the many present had bought for Bobby, of his fond- ness for the little boy. And all in guise of praising Alaa for his -heartedness and generosity. But it was too late now. Eves it Natalie should listen to her, a4 de number he asked for was not that of his home. Phillipa remembered it; knew it-was the hotel -where ed while Natalie was away, She sighed thankfully. Alan asked to have a room re- served. Phillips then let him go without further delay. He was restless new, his desire to sink into meditation gone. She wished she might go with him somewhere, but he plainly wanted to be away, Dimeelt. ‘The next morning she went to the office early, nervously anzlous to see Alan and find out what a night of sleeping on his anger had Alan came in a little after nine, WIAD RH DP 920 5 ain 3:0e—sonantne frown 10:00—1 10:10—Aunt ciliation with Natalie; he knew it now. He could think of nothing but his great disappointment. All the bitterness was gone. He felt, simply, that both he and Natalie were helpless against her obsessing Dassion of jealousy. But what he was to do, what would happen, he did not know. He recognized only an urge to get away.for a while—a day at least— and try to adjust himself to these Rew conditions. ‘He did not tell Phillipa that hej 4! was going to be gone for the day. He guessed she might try to force her company upon him, and in any case she would ask questions which he did not care to answer. So he said he would be back shortly, and left her to her stormy picions. They were stormy, for understood his morning mood better than he bimself understood it. She knew that his temper had subsided, that he was less deter. mined—it determined at all—to have a definite break with Natalie, She had worked her suspicions up to the point of he was even now on his way to meet Natalie, perhaps to make up their quarrel, when Natalie walked into the office. ATALIE was as white-taced, as exhausted looking, as Alan hi Plainly sleep had not sit that night, iked for Alan, and Phillipa regarded her scrutinizingly, Nate- lie felt her gaze uncomfortably. “He isn't here,” Phillipa said jortly, and Natalie supposed she And then, with Natalie waiting there, and Phillipa tensely dreading his arrival, Alan telephoned the (To Be Continued) of disease in your body than you do to the effects. of the more serious diseases do not give much warning just before QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS Question: A. J. writes: “Recently T had an illness which was as localised peritonitis. Am much side of the abdominal wall. Such in- flamma\ ition. may come from a disease of one of the abdominal organs, in which case an operation is sometimes advised for the removal of the irri- tating organ, but such operations are always dangerous during acute peri- tonitis. My advice out e Cy s E would like to know in what combina- tion with other foods they may used, a8 we are all fond of ” very Answer: A mixture of strawberries with starch is perhaps one of the Greatest dietetic mistakes which so many people make at this time of the year. It is better to use strawberries by themselves or with milk, cream or ice cream. However, a dish of straw- berries may also be used with any of the non-starchy vegetables. The rule to remember is that the strawberries or other acid fruits should never be used with starches. /Weaning the Baby have a booklet explaining how: to wean a baby? If not, where can I secure such instructions?” ‘ Answer: I have written several ar- i g g i E g ; sent to you upon receipt of your name ‘and address on a large stamped en- velope. (Copyright, 1930, by The Bell Syndicate, Inc.) —_—_—_———————* TUESDAY, JUNE 17 830 Kilecycles—045.1 Meters 6—Dawn-revellle,, = = isers club, 0—Farm flashes, E—Meattatgn period: ow Bisa = Be Li 00—8) pana hoppers’ guide. ning markets, Weather report: Grain markets. Samm: signal. PO} ‘lara Morris. ‘ribune news and program. 10 Wheat Pool. pe markets: high, low and ES as! i fc, ee and bonds. imarck Tribune sports items. 5—Bismarck Tribune news. an, 5 T , it's 2 well-turned heel that does Rot creck under . “grate” aches,