The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 15, 1929, Page 12

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~e a CimaAm T BSS8 52888. THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE WASHINGTON By RODNEY DUTCHER is t adds and i (NEA Service Writer) it that all rnment ‘Washington—Foreien natior Bil times think of good old Uncle Sar Sa -ebAL tight-fisted, and so do some of ald Uncle Sam's emplo: The government $2500 a year who hh t of who, in add esponsibility for s to pay tor epariment of € arg the bond from his ably is one of those W bonding charge m; his vacation mon keep his bond rene Many federal emp ponded, but perhaps 150,000 are, and althous! ent pay the them in Uncle Sam pay anything. abo ever does anything ab dollar bonded. persons the cus- urety to be bonds in force, a ma " insure the performa The principal of these be the way from $50 to S10, the Navy Department building job, has ex. high as $15,000,000. Fidelity bond run as high as 000 persons in t! bonded, includ bonds run al $100,000, in Phe nighest custodian is en Property Custodian, who as his care ed for the same 's are bonded amount of money fic mail carriers and clerk 00,000. ties range from $500 to Hs Mehta re Until 1894 the gover o lectors oO ny accept bonds from i $25,000 to $200,000. tors instead of from c these men n hundreds of mil- ions in taxes and must also give in that year there wa 000 in accumulated dividuals who had ¢ lic servants and ha been found to be gress gave the busil companies and tod between them is so k keep girls hanging aro house to get each new list of nomi tions as fast as they come fror I id around mint has to be bonded, from the tendent, who puts up — surety 000, to minor employes for een $2000 and vice officers are rybody w surety tition \ | bonded for -| Tt is not rd that } lost his new job | provide a bond. may go after the appointee for his; ny employe either bond business. | h_ dishonesty, ness oF All government bonding is handled } sues through the section of surety bo: | company. in the treasury, the chief of whic! is to pay, but Thomas L. Lawrence. the bondee. he. Th e knew. Would r me, but Tl try to ex. nt went on hurried- flat with Reporters, coming in for their signments for the day, were ing in twos and threes, when © unobtrusively took a chair b; exchange table. om tha point she was certainly out ¢ way, yet could watch every exp! , sion’ on Colin Grant's face’ when he ; tr should arrive and go to Harry Bla She had his | ics, little for his assignments. book in her lap. But when he did appear, stric long-legged through the door reputable grey felt hat cram sideways upon his shock of u black hair, panic seized her. lars a wee! arrett. he < dropsy, and pecially lost her job in a_ tea- nd t bard np. “You're Miss Hathaway, Crystal exclaimed, see- you? I'm Colin nt. eal in a lightning-flash. | you wrote yesterday. ... 3 . that’s her name all right. speak to you a moment? Som :2” Colin Grant did you kn thing rather important ; Again their eyes met and Crystal’s wide and a litt clun a house parly onthe ’ Crystal explained ened. Colin Grant w +} hurriedly, rious telephone his sensitive mouth grim. eo! came for Talbot, who was “Of course!” she gasped. Then,/a member of the house party. The because she hardly knew what she was saying, she thrust out his boa and t a id her name was Cal ko must phone her and said: “I read your book y Later he explained night. Harry Blaine lent it to me.|to Ton ‘Tarver—that Cailie I—I think it’s tremendous. J can’t} was a t tress whom he tell you how it affected me” i kne and for whom he'd Colin Grant looked blank for a] promised t ercede if she lost her moment, then impatient. “Oh!—| job. His father owns the tearoom.! oe yes. Thanks. ... Miss Hath: you're a Stanton girl, know society people pretty well, you?” ¢ Beneath her amazement Crystal | mit felt as if she had been slapped.|vented he “Why, yes, I suppose so. I’ve lived | dresser. in Stanton since July only, though.” “Do you know a male beaui the dark-eyed sheik kind, whose first | te name is Dick? of th “Yes. Dick Talbot, I suppose you|the rr mean. He fits the description. But why?” b : A promise and a date. She had risen and was staring up| (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) ——__—————— ting it out. ... And George Car- ! IN NEW YORK Jpenticr, who once came over as a ° —————-*'|“box fighter,” will be back this fall musical comedy headliner. . . . —what's wrong? anton don't ouble,” Colin. Grant he tried to com- ht, and T pre- aw a picture on her e wouldn't tell me the » but it was inseribed Nie from Dick.’ TI want you 0 sce her first, then get hold Dick chap and make him do nicide New York, June 15.—The Big Town gossip: When Ed Gallagher,' Ha Hershfield tells me that he’s * SALESMAN SAM A Fifty-Fifty Proposition : Small | THE GUMPS~LAKE GENEVA OR BUST __ Toot! Toor! a! Lard JHE GuUMPR ARE CounTRY BOUND ‘Tod you SHOULD NAVE TURNED AT THAT You SAX — GO BACK No THE RED SCHOOL NOUSE — TURN TO THE eee 1 COME_TYo THE = THEN TURN LEFT FOR THREE MILES © WE MUST BE MILES OUT OF OUR WAY—) MOW FAR 18 (T ? THE WRONG MOTORCYCLE POLICE = BEWARE nl WATCH FOR TWAT LICENSE NUMBER Lest ed oO oO & oO n foc] S Q x an z g Q a GEE=1 WAVEAT SEEN LINDY SINcE BEFORE UNCLE HARRY AND IL WEAT ON THAT TRIP To WANA) + WE AUST BE ANFUL LONESOME AT HOME WITHOUT US !! BOY! How A Nice POAN LIKE HIN WOULD LIKE IT IN A PLACE LIKE TAIS \NOULONT HE, FRECKLES? TUERE HE GoES—SaiD SOMETMIN' ABOUT SENDIN’ ’ A TELEGRAN- MUS TA” BEEN MIGHTY 5 WN Z {WE CERTAINLY \NOULO — CERTAINLY \NOULO: MOM’N POP “a WELL,1 HOPE YOU ACCOMPLISHED SOMETHING AT SCHOOL THIS TLL SAY 1f DID, POP, THE MINUTE IT GOT AROUND THAT YOU HAD CLEANED UP A FORTUNE ON YOUR COPPER CLAIM EVERY FRATERNITY AT SCHOOL GAVE, ME A RUSH THERE WAS NOTHING TOT. OUR CHAPTER WAS THE . FRATERNITY ! — YES SIR? WE HAD SEVENTEEN COONSKIN COATS IN CHAPTER ROUSE ON THE CAMPUS AND THE MOST POPULAR BUNCH OF FIGURED SUST ANOTHER NIGHT : WASTED AWAY IF i , SHE DIDN'T HAVE A R : DATE Wit & BLES, HUH! THAT SIGN OON'T NEEOTA CHEER UP, ALERT! WERE GETTIN’ NEARER, VON'T “THINK (TS HOME ENERY STEP — WHOOEY! LooKIT TH’ STEEP HILL WERE COMIN’ Tol eo of the famous “Mr. Gallagher and|Putting his Hip beable Ate a Shean.” died the other day, pen-|* "WC" 5 ve Y | eldonaney niless and alone, someone told me | 4) Berge ees that the song which made them|¢) yearn Wall operat the famous had earned its author 2 mere|W° C"Derant in the vecent’ oarker inaret case. Bryan Foy, of the late| ¥: ©: Durant in the recent market Bide Foy" brigade eee ie i would keep all of my readers by is 10 other people in pin money brought the Gallagher-Shean team} ¢oy tho rest of their lives. I e. SEARCH FOR BOOTS IS GONG ON — AND ON ! i Td : F AN EXTRA SUPPLY OF GAS, \S FLXING LOW — AND é FAST ~~ INTO A TERRITORY NOT COVERED BETORE fame and fortune. the wil aca “« i picture version of “Broad- Announcement of Al Smith’s auto- * the gentle art of doubling is biography is about due, with George ey ts Hi ertime. ... Whenever Pepenkabuer, of Viking Pri let- n, the leading character. ppears as a “hoofer,” the entrance on jis made with a camera long shot and, | LITTLE JOE y tell me, it’s really Pat R the vaudeville gent, who NEA "TEMPERS ARE ce s the dancing. ... Incidentaily. AOMERSOS ENOUGH THAT THEYRE ACT ’m told that the talkie magnates are doing everything possible to put the crusher on news dealing with film stars who have to have doubles for their voices... . Which is quite a lot of them. A * ,, The cabaret scene in the film ver- sion of “Broadway,” by the way, is the sort of thing which gives a New York dweller more than a_sligh' pain, It gives the dweller in the outlands a completely erroneous pic- ture and conception of the big street and its show places. This scene im- that there are night clubs as as Madison Square Garden the Hippodrome ined Whereas night clubs are crowded tittle pr avidin quite fesing in any of the lavish magnificence displayed in the fim. ,. Joe Sin pate oe ve tps " ‘all ages il about. Nor do gents drink out of|of ‘The Post, is likely to get that|learied that this honey-| peat slippers. [ll that belongs. to Wert ee pailorship about moon, she hati we cele but e “Merr: idow”-Viennes: ra mn BO Much con- vintage, And I doubt if there was) han, |fWo months ago to Nicholas Bous- mi ueh of it even then. o pa a Hosa actor, who has been ere is, to be sure, a certail playing small parts in Holl; . foeant of gitabin rut the at run “My husband he plays ime part of mosphere, eral 8) a not aeeolade dahon” ing, 1s Slava: ‘called bad men—what you call them... But imagine the embarrassment|which was co-authored by Florence] Villains , . . and I play bad women— of this columnist when visiting fire- of Mr. irelings.|what you call them ... vam men from home demand to be shown T went to lanova, but he eez verr nice and #0 a1 such sights, and he can’t produce | hes' heart-breaking vamps, In life we are bot verr g em. ; v ye is now tS yey Me she explained, vines cera ee) ring @ vaca' "in order to} | ‘Gl 5 Oh, yew, and Hobért Littell, nove|belp' het Hagish accent: - And T| (Copyright, 1929, NEA Barve tse)

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