Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 2, 1929 - - ‘{ “TRIBUNE'S PAGE OF COMIC STRIPS AND FEATURES ANDY- LET ME CALL Ow? DOCTOR- 'T Says— NERE THEY ARE - 1 DON'T KNOW! 2 y AMPS - Ti Pie ¥ : By RODNEY DUTCHER Jabout later. On the other hand, yoo = pot mst 1 Gony tee ‘sy AH ie. Pil ? READ THE aren NANUTES ! : BR (NEA Service Writer) | hardly anyone ever supposed that the a DON'T BE & DOCTOR — ‘ DIRECTIONS ~ BEFORE weO% FEEK 5 Washington, July 2.—It does not! president would have difficulty in iu ry yet seem 0 be settled whether Presi- | either house such as developed with ‘ Fooulsn ee peoueee sini War dent Hoover is making a large suc- | the senate’s temporary revolt against cess of his attempts to boss congress or whether congress has been run- ning over the president. Nearly ev- eryone who has written about this seems to have tried to prove one thing or another. The important point is that if; Hoover does as well in his relations with the legislative branch in the fu- | ture as he has done to date, he will | have little reason to complain. Un- fortunately, there is reason to fear that his troubles have merely be- gun. The reason concerns the tar- Already the tariff problem has the President in something of a hole. It may not prove to be so much of a hole, or the president may jump out of it into what he considers a more favorable one, but the Democrats are hoping to convert it into a sucking quicksand. A Dangerous Subject ‘There is no more effective way for | al & president to get his feet wet than |seri sing the bill without the deben- ure scheme in it. Borah’s Defection Expected The loss of Senator Borah as a Hoover leader—a position he ac- cepted during the campaign—was generally discounted in advance. Few expected that Borah would stay put And Hoover has in his army there only one general— nants. Nevertheless, wn that the old Progress | Democratic combination which has so joften sickened Republicans had not jbeen killed by events of the cam- paign and final passage of the Farm | bill doubtless found the president with mixed emotion took a licking on the national origins legislation, but not any more of a licking than was needed to prove that the senate often disregards a president's wishes. The senate has vays been like that and this was no defeat. Probably of even the it was SI THEY'RE SUPPOSED | [hi * DOES (17 to allow a tariff revision to enter his administration. The revision now | \ d to appoint the con- Proposed by Republican leaders in i prohibition enforcement cad 7 both houses of congress is the fourth on commission, which WELL--ANELL GET COME ERE! Come VERE !! in 20 years. The only one among the to move enforcement “IS WHERE 2 HEARD OFF AND Look Look AT These ry to the justice de- TwaT BEAR THE AROUND & FONNY LOOKING ‘fh there is no great other three which is comparable to a this one is that of 1910, which is so | partment, a often credited with wrecking the Taft administration and putting the Dem- ocrats back into power. The Underwood tariff revision in the first Wilson administr: & revision downward; bec World war no one knows just how it| s ‘would have worked out. The Fordney- | McCumber Act, passed early in the Harding administration, was a re- vision upward and there has been Plenty of argument whether America’s industrial prosperity of the last few years has been because of or in spite of it. Now comes an upward revision under what may be denominated as normal conditions and almost any- thing can happen. Except for the tariff. neither Pres- ident Hoover and the Republican party nor the country has found any- thing very new to worry about since March 4. Hoover got his farm bill through as he wanted it, which is the main thing to consider, and whether the relief provided in the act will do any par- tieular good is something to worry jrush about that. The significance |scems to lie in reports that action was deliberately omitted because Re- publican House Leader Bert Snell was d_sore over presidential neg- atronage in New York Hearing From the Voters Now most members of congress are at home, hearing what the country thinks about the tariff bill which the house sent to the senate. It ts too early to get a good idea what they are hearing, but there is plenty of reason for belief that the hard- boiled senate finance committee will Produce an even stiffer bill. Already it has gone far beyond Hoover's ex- pressed ideas of what a tariff bill ought to be. Unless the senate tears the com- mittee bill all to pieces, the president probably will have to act on a meas- ure calculated to make his hair stand up. Whatever he does will be pretty certain to make trouble for him. He will simply have to decide which exit is likely to take off the least hair. PERSONALLY, IT MAKES | 1 MIGHT AS WELL 5 ALL FOR WELL, THE BORINGS THAT LOT BY THE GOLF] = HAVE ALL V i ‘ i NO DIFFERENCE WHERE COMMUTE FROM THE WIMMING, } ARE TALKING OF COURSE IS OUR BEST GOOFY COR euG ecrew BASBLE BROOK. i Vester . we BUILD =o) als Deh — HONG- |] CANOEING RIGHT MOVING OUT THERE BET- ONLY TWENTY / FRIENDS USING OUR || WAS EVERY. oF w A KONG AS BABELE- |] OFF THE BACK AND 1 DON'T INTEND TENOE: fs 4 OWN OVER OUR HEADS. / BROOK. TD SPEND pared linia — Leeda BUT FIT DID LD FIVE YEARS pauls ee XE- EVERY TEN HOPPIN’ caer ons ge! ‘ON AND OFF TRAINS tO BE NEAR THAT PAIR THE REST OF MY LIFE © : ‘PLANTED RIGHT HERE. q OFFICE AND — NO SIRLT DONT INTEND ‘THE REST OF OUR DAYS BE- ™ tO BE ANYBODV'S FORE WE CAN ALL AGREE ON “I want to go to work, Pat,” Tony/to him and make him promise not enswered her father's question with| to take me on as a partner!” deadly earnestness. ‘Bet he won't do it,” Pat exulted. “You mean—flying?” Pat gasped. ell, young men in love with “Now look here, Tony! I've been) girls don’t exactly relish the idea an easy mark all your life. You've; of their getting smashed up,” Pat ibaa : : our | Pointed out. : liteh iad to wrap me around your) "stn love?” ‘Tony tried hard to oo keep indignation in her voice, but Tony was indignant. » SITES FOR THEIR 1] “And how you've loved it!” Tony! her eyes blazed with joy and hope. NEW HOME, BUT AN reminded him. “Please don’t get/“I'd like to know why you think INFORMAL DISCUSSION “ heavy and parental now, Pat! It’ Ross is in love with me, Pat SETTLES THE MATTER ; awfully serious with me. If I don’t] Tarve do something useful with my life,|to know! T may come another cropper—” “Why, hasn't he mentioned it ‘Just what are your plans, if Ij yet?” Pat pretended great sur- may ask?” Pat demanded with aj prise. “That's a bad oversight on sarcasm that did not hide his fear| his part, I must say. Probably aigeln. AEN thinks you know it as well as every- lothing very definite yet, darl-| one else. Of course I know you dop't » You see, I’ve only known since hoot about Sandy, i é this morning that I'm free! Oh, Pat os sabeu Peneyiy nay U., GU22, NOwl "WAT ) HOLD ; oy OETetAl AN 1 YER And how she would like TEMPORARILY Gost KNows “THeY —think of it! Free, free!” Pat, don't joke about itt"| | ane eC _) UDION'T BRING Gomi GWE THE AIR Te repr sage S80, you want 0 celebrate by) Tony cried. and tumbled off the arm ALOERT Back — ; ANYBODY, GIVE (IT To seiaendoe breaking your neck, do you?” her|of his chair into his lap. "I low They father growled. “I wish to God T'd| him so much T-can't beat for even so Back T BUNCH OF “Tem you to talk about it lightly. But never given you that blasted plane yes s never said a word, hasn't even “But you did, darling, and I can’t it in its hangar, eating its head off,” Tony reminded him. “And you know darned well you are as proud as Punch of my endurance-flight record. I’d rather thought of going in with Sandy, in his passenger . service, at least antil he has to give it up to be a pilot for the new air sed me since we were kids—and I'm afraid I did the kissing then, not Sandy—” “Um not, joking, honey,” Pat as- sured her huskily, “I'd rather you! married Sandy than any man in the world, and it's been torment seeing you mixed up with a no-good heart- breaker like Dick Talbot, when a Foute between New York and Los}real man like Sandy Ross was wait- Angeles. Bet I'd make a lot offing till you got over your foolish- y ¢ H money, too,” she boasted. “Guess | ness ‘e ‘i t T've proved I'm a swell pilot.” | “But—how am I going to make _— A sudden thought seemed to give| Sandy say something?” Tony wailed, {> new hope. “Have you talked this over with Sandy yet?” : Queer advice from father a ld the drift, and laughed. ghter. “No, I will before you can get| (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) GOING PLACES SEEING THINGS : Nearing Pittsburgh—Manhattan lies j intermittent shots of squalid looking far behind. Fireflies blink against | gullies, dotted with cheap shacks. xe ® . | Pittsburgh—Big excursion signs an- squat on hill- | nouncing rates to Chicago, and from ... A stream runs by, stained | Altoona. No mention of New York! -yellow by chemicals | Perhaps Manhattan isn't so much of ... And there are 12 much after all! | Those red glass signs associated with — most ; packed with thé sort of people who j " : a look as though “they had come into 4 = , j town.” They have that “going shop- look appa sg sects z i || iu rH i I a rt + i i u Ge i eo i ‘ i ! : ithe [ne i Hi fi i i