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M53 THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1929 10 TRIBUN BY RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) ¢ Washington, July 30.—'C ets are tally ominous from the stand- & source of crime,” says President point of the cigarct smoker were the Hoover. words of the Christian Register, an He is thus quoted in a propaganda organ of the Unitarian: sheet being broadcast by the Anti- garded as a liberal denomination—in | Cigaret Alliance, which seeks to make recent editorial this a sweeter and better world by everal yea abolishing cigarets. The piece of not about toba : propaganda is entitled “What Great itor consumption is ram- Americans Say About Cigarcts.” The pant and colossal, and only an as- president is quoted as follows tronomer can give the figures. But “There is no agency the time is near at hand when the today that is so serious! women crusade re going to assail health, efficients bit among women, and the re- character of boys il not be in doubt. Fantastic aret habit, yet. ver" . but fact it will become, that paid to it. Nearly ev will soon be fighting for its boy is a cigaret smoker, ht to be a solace to mankind, as tainly has much to do \ “Cigarets are a source neglect crime at its source is | sighted policy, unworthy of a nation of our intelligence.” Out of a Letter The Anti-Cigaret E quiry, says the extract from a letter to President Cooli from Mr. Hoover written while latter was secretary of ¢ liquor people did the gencration e prohibition came. ‘They sense Medical experiment 4s all weed, as we demonstrated r dinary clinical articles blished in the Register 10 uses tobacco habitually in f t especially in smoking, | ciinic said, is not the same per- 15 he would be in body, mind and | E’S PAGE OF Freckles and His Friends COMIC STRIPS AND FEATURES LIKE BUSINESS <3 YOu CAN WANE THE BEST BAIT IN THE WORLD = i U8S& YOUR BEST NOOK < PuY YOUR FINEST OISPLAY In THE WINDOW = ADVERTISE = ; BUT SOME DAY Si — < You CAN'T CATON yyy sometimes a pipe cigarets. professional reform: The organization 15 rt this Hoover statement at a time when | He'd Regulate the Ads greater tendency than ever off from prohibition vice and take in tobacco. The other ereat American il, Uf he let it alone, We are tell- against the cigaret are Senator the world, And the world is go- Smoot of Utah and Pres hear about it in the next E, Poling of the Christi President Hoover smok: viously, such propaganda is di- The really opposed to all types of ing, but it concentrates it ers are mmok- | t attack on pushing out gambiing and Mr. Hoover, rected inst adult eigaret smoking, dolescent smoking and ad- ppeals to women have of- pecially convenient tar- ent welter of it an e a io Wills to abolish cigarets have introduced vet in congress, but 3 S a resolution de- caret advertising. REMEMBER, SENERAL DAYS AGO TAG MADE A BIRcH-BaRK *CANOE AND MAILED TINGS CERTAINY ARE OEAD WITh FREcaA<s AN TAGALONG AWAY... TLL BE GLAD WHEN PACKAGE FoR YOu, OSCAR «= DIONT 5) SEND Away FOR SOMETHING ON TRIAL, OID You? RANOWRITING- ITs Tass! (T's Taés ae FASE NHE SNS EeES NOE HAE ET Y. 4 sophisticated generation. Maybe— 8 but the fact remains that the un- 4 now covered. 1 1 a a+. .é 4 1 1 t « ‘ pe 4G. eee DSSe FRO FO HSAs cacm Taso. although he appeared to be mainly concerned with the effect of ci on boys and girls. even going so far to suggest that they caused adoles: cents to become criminals. has said nothing against use of cigarets by adults. In fact, it is quite a commer thing to smoke cigarets in the pr dential presence. Mr. Coolidge al preferred cigars, but Harding was cigaret smoker. A few weeks ago the Rev. Dr. Cl: ence True Wilson, general scevet of the Methodist Board of Temper: ance, Prohibition and Public Morals, . publicly announced that the cigaret = The Anti-Saloon league is taking no makers were following in the dang: part in the early s ous footsteps of the old-time liquor cigarets. Some of the league officials, interests and warned by implication. in fact, are inveterate smokers, GOING PLACES AND SEEING THINGS aga San Bernardino, Calif.—Notes from} Old desert rats were always drifting che diary of a roving writer who in with reports of the “lost Peg Leg “came back” after 15 years— mi I have no idea how many It's tough to learn that it never dream-struck men have been lured made much difference whether or not | out by the fantastic tales. you ever left. And it’s no pleasanter Rena to realize that it would have been of course, I would pick a day when equally unimportant whether you tho thermometer is running between ever paid a return visit, = | 107 and 110 in the more-or-less shade! And you begin to look for sray Which made me recall the time hairs when you find that a lad who wien Ernest’ Martin and Milton was then going to school is now m: Stendish got the bright idea of start- or of the city. ‘You remember when ing a fried eg contest in front of he came running into his father’s of- jtne court house. ‘The sun had been fice—his father was the sheriff then— | )articularly hot and the t as you sat there getting notes for a | },. ON 2 SOE Ae Pete DAre De ; |had been hanging around a hundred mewapaper story. lor better for days. So to get our * oe x | minds off the heat, and to settle an But the painting that so affected argument as to whether it was hot those years wherein I first learned to enough to [ry eggs on the sidewalk, we blow foam from a glass of beer, still set out to experiment. And almost, hangs in the Vendome. The Vendome, | wound up before the lunacy commis- however, now serves root beer. As for | sion. the painting. it was one of those huge * OK OK affairs that covered most of a wall. a! They tell me that this is a bold and | ,,, 5 rets exactly on the ounds which alcohol has acked. He points out the ste of money,” the “decreases ney.” the loss to employers ret-smoking workmen, the between excessive _cigaret. and the drink and drug ne soon. He is especially ut t > appeals to potential mokors, though editorial ve suggested that he is for the sugar interests, powerful in his home t the city’s gate there stands an ornate building dedicated to the annual Orange Show. This 15 one of the seasonal pageants of the Gressed young lady of the painting is «Grange belt.” But I'll wager that not even the natives here know how that tt it, rh ce i it I f et was a ar that I first met) It all began one hot day thecolorful Death Valley Scotty. As | Index office, when Ages strange and mysterious a man as ever | talking promoter whose name—if 1 came out of his desert hiding place, recali—was Perkins, came up the Scotty had gone through his famous rattloy-bang stairway and began to bank roll and had vanished again into | “sell” Eddie Wall, our city editor, on} the sandswept spaces. Then onc! the idea of having an orange show. morning he appeared in town—ob- It was Saturday and we were hard viously broke. We took him to the | up for Sunday stories. So Eddie got, bar, bought him some beer and got | all the reporters—both of us—excited him some free lunch. But not a word about the idea. And before we knew of what he was up to could we get. | it everybody was falling into line. The Now, so they tell me, he is build- | first show was in an old tent on a ing a million dollar place somewhere | yacant lot. out in the desert. Where he gets his! Eddie's dead now, so they tell me. Money no one seems ,to know. | So are a lot of other people I asked But then, the desert that reaches | about. Which was one of the rea- ‘out just beyond here holds many mys- | sons I found myself taking a train terles. Legends were always drifting | sooner than I had expected. in about fabulous mines and equally | GILBERT SWAN. fabulous people. (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) ——____. “YOUR him make his tests under our super- vision. I can't think of anything that CHIL DREN | breeds deceit in children quite so fast as the negativistic parent who swings the iron rod. First from fright, then & Rob ts Barton later because nature insists on an outlet and something in him drives | him to experiment. Are you a@ “negativistic’ parent? | To forbid a child too many things, Of course you are—we all are, almost | invariably has a reaction—unless he without exception. | Was born a creature without will and “Jf we're quicker to say “no” than | without imagination. A boy or girl IT BACK Home “To OSCAR eres ELL, WERE'S | will be far more impulsive when once | they have the opportunity to assert themselves, than if they had been Permitted to have a little freedom, we can think up a| ¢Ven at the risk of mistakes, when things for them not to do, they were young. one to do, we're negativis- How Children Learn When will we learn that children learn by mistakes, mistakes in judg- ment particularly. But that’s all right. If it isn’t too serious, let them do a little experimenting then rather than wait until they are older when ‘OSCAR, IT's ALETTER FROM ELEANOR MORSE - SHE WANTS To SEND HER LITTLE GIOL PHYLLIS HERE WITH US FOR AWHILE] PHYLLIS WAS A DARLING BABY AND VD LOVE TO HANE HER. SHE'D BE SUCH A NICE PLAYMATE FoR AMY DAWGONNIT, HERE 1 A MELLIN' “Text” WHEN 1 OUGH BE HOLLERIN' "HELO" — ('4 NEARLY DROWNED ! wreauinasier (aa )- At, Bose and | line and ht at standing “of the peculiar mixing |by the MY IDEA OF A RIOT WOULD BE TWO KIDS LIKE AMY IN THE MOUSE. SUIT YOURSELF, BUT REMEMBER IT'LL MEAN WE'LL WANE TO TAKE HER ALONG ON OUR CAMPING TRIP WO LITTLE TOTS ARE NO MORE (T'S ALL RIGHT WITH WELL.T Tuink FOR ‘TROUBLE THAN ONE AND IF AMY ME. IT'S SYouR OLD THES SAKE t WAS SOMEONE TO PLAY WITH ON RESPONSIBILITY SHOULD WELP THE TRIP SHE'D BE NO ELEANOR OUT BOTHER AT ALL SOME STORM, EH, Sam? DIOJA GET SoaKED? device when doled out to the motorist. Inder normal conditions air is nent d Sescline, but does not increase the volume a} un- til pressures are ey