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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1929 THIS 18 MY INVENTION — IT'S QUST AN EMPTY BOX WITH A KEY HOLE ALL WE WAVE To DO \S DROP tT IN THE AND WAIT = ’ —— me FISH IN THE LAKE THAT WON'T = : BE OVER To TAKE A PEEK IN THE KEY HOLE — By RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Aug. 15. ¢ tember 15 it will be al 4 sovernment if we eat blue sters, the principal local and President talkies at the a week, boys and girls else- rested to learn that in Washington have ree that 4 by the departme! of 1 through its food, drug an administration. ‘The color will be known @ 1 blue FCP, and was thc € vefore being pronour } heaith and otherw Tt will be used mostly in ca re a few ems that t 4 Jess someone seeks to proc bizarre effects in other foods. 7 product is derived from ir. Hi tofore candy manufacturer: sometimes used indigo, whic been approved. but indico ha tendency to fade. ae 0 ou when she stepped out | s plane, wort Alice with coat and hat of} al, printed silk | hose, and black | I Keith's theatre here ‘row Wilson used to co bie, ome woolen mat frock to match, bei g dark for more than a vea sand | F | TF 1 WS OLDER UNCLE Castes Do See THAT =m ry . although the management has hoped) ‘This possibly is old but your ERAL You TREE f OID you THAT DADDY WONT LET tither to open it again or rent it Spmdent has noticed it for the | HARRY WOULD LET ME J TAKES AY Dapoy. || WAY OVER TERE ? weLL, wml A RENOLNER die ne pee Nee neither hope has been realized. : | WANE A GUS 7 SiocT= } LET ME SooT ONE DAY I STOOD JUST A | STANDING WAY NON! \ Until it closed Keith's the capi- one of the main entrances to; Boy! 1 USED % SUOCT | HS RENOWWER-- ABOUT HERE 2 STANDING Back THERE 2? ANY NORE = HE SAYS MY . tal’s most fashionable show hous: rtment of the interior there AN AIR RIFLE LiKe “J | Novs AND SHOT AT IT. fat 4 AIN IS TOO UNSTEADY AND THAT I MiGhT.” HURT SonmeBoDy !! ing of former Cabinet members and other offi who was ac- ; patronized it much more frequé @ than any of the other better the the naval oil} phere. It gained nation 1 celel ‘This paint- a through President Wilson's E r > those of various ‘a nee in the presidential but it was Keith's succumbed to the dises hat it gazed which has ravaged vaudevilie cener- of persons leaving ally. It suspended soon after an enor- | + ;. Naturally, that aroused $ mous movie house opened near by to nt ig offer presentations almost the equiva huge map of the United q lent of vaudeville along with motion where the Fall picture . The talkies appear to have ~ And Mr. Fall has been given another blow to any hopes of moved down the hall. One has to turn B. off into the corridor to see him. GOING PLACES AND SEEING THINGS apa City.—Sitting in the lovely | way over the rugged mountains, ford- Park-like greenery of the Mormon tem- ing the rushing streams and slowly = y " " Hs : — i “= - — S ple block on a hot and lazy July morn garueaihel prin: ae - Mom! surew "TO CHICK FROM PHYLLIS". a SUMPING -ROPE. BORING TOOK MY |} YOU SHOULONT a77 BOY SHE'S A WHIZ! IVE i picking a wa ee a the flood of tourists stro! ; j ; ; rae ly about, it takes a bit of prod- {Such-and-such a spot, you will learn, ding to stir the ghosts of the American |they were beset by hostile Indians. At PHYLLIS CAME TO : SUMPING-ROPE LOVED WIMMIN BUT THIS VISIT THE GUNNS, AND RAN OFF : 1S B/LOVE THAT COMES jepis which brought this spot into be- such-and-such a pass, other Indians CHICK HASNT GIVEN cat detomdleyS stampeded their stock and women and THE OTHER DRUG-STORE : LEAVE THE-REST TO +, UFETIME COWBOYS A CHANCE | ene | ME AND REMEMBER, a ah Here the green grass plots are care- | fully landscaped; the flower beds blos- | Children were trampled todeath. Along A Bor 'T OPE! gem luxuriantly; fountains play; sta-— su d-such a trail, for some 2500 ve pineal — = Your TRAP = }tues of sturdy-looking men are en miles ne the sturdiest of them all— MuGsy BORIN! \half hid by heavy shrubb: 4 eorted group of buildings are s * {tered over the grounds; in the nacle—where you actually can bh the toters of the hand carts—who car- GOING ON Gi ried their few worldly possessions and “THE THEORY THAT. * ; x . : 7 a their food through’ the wilderness, ALL IS FAIR IN : ¢ ; { Sin drop—the daily orzan recital is be- |!eaving their dead by the roadside: ad- LOVE AND RACKETEERING, y ing. given for the visitors. And ninistering to the exhausted and the STEPS ON THE STARTER] } and there the guides are taking littie Wounded AND SETS OUT TO + herds of newcomers about, rapidly | ean h and lovely land of moun- MEET THE CHARMING <) y q 4 + skipping over the story of the Mormon j'ains and fert ile valleys came into be- ATT . A SOLILOQUIZES LITTLE GUNN GUEST 4 s = . ee eat TWAT & GREAT Love WAS COME ATO HIS LIFE oo church. ing. This, then, is the “new Zion” which | the psent tens of thousands of faith-bound | (heir qyfolk from their eastern homes into !nspiring w hardships and hazardous adventures * CHCK WiLL BE the result of which have few, if any, parallels in the __In the muscum which stands just be- , history of this country yond the gateway of the temple block ’ ‘Whatever the arguments concerning |are many weather marked relics of the miracles which started them on | that struggle. this trek, to the impersonal eye the| ‘There are, for instance, two vener- ggmiracie of miracles is this vast pianos which must have caused a Lake valley which truly “blossoms no end of trouble. ‘The guide will tell Cesta and has become a land of milk : ou Bow anes were preserved through ‘ae LADY WeNTED Ta GUY & MUFE WHAT? we ; and honey. | d foul weather. 3 UC, Tt GET ALON . eee Winter overtaking the emigrants on MESTERDAY, GU22, AN’ (T REMINDED CANCEL Tue opin eae, TH eee Wie a eae cet - Approaching this city by train—or | their march. great holes were dug in Me THaT TH EuRS WE ORDERED x) Ff jy Standing upon one of the many hill the hills. The pianos were wrapped in HAVEN'T come NET — looking off into the miles of desert and animal skins and carefully preserved “3 plain—the story of their struggles i ‘ainst the ravages of nature. Thus made doubly vivid. Watching an air- they were buried until the snows y ** plane speeding in from over the moun- | had passed and spring had come again. S Basement - tains with the mail; glimpsing the coils ‘Then they were removed and brought 3 d CALL . 4 tp Of dust which spit up behind the wheels , into the new colony: ‘Today they show — ‘ : : ‘oof & speeding automobile; training a little mark of wear and tear. 4g Pair of glasses on the distant horizon | oe oe ‘ ag Where the colonizing dry farmers have Also, as you out, you might. x , jg Caused the prairie to grow green with | encounter did -a patriarchal old truck gardens—the part these folk | fellow who, they will tell you, is “Broth- jp have played in the westward march of er Ivan” —onc of the pillars of thej ‘progress cannot but command respect. | church. He was born in the wilder- ai Agree or disagree with the faith, if ness—somewhere in an uncharted open you will—the sacrifices and martyr-| space... . and. if you have time, you doms made in the name of that faith | will hear a tale destined to make the bigod pulse a bit faster. At least mine ' did. must go marching on. ee i Less than a century ago. trains of | GILBERT SWAN. |, emigrant wagons were making their | (Copyright. 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) outside the home, as well as in it. Big [eanullles small incomes, too much to lo! So it devolves on the oldest girl, [Sometimes not much older than a baby | ; herself, to look after the littlest one. } | So now we have all sorts of nurseries de Clie Aoberts Barton and kindergartens or play-homes that 2 Barton ‘akc care, not only of the babies, but ens Serveeina | their small nurses as well. Bg Commendable Work ere | ink that heaven will hold special ‘and expense this summer to relieve the | surprise for those women who eres “Uttle mothers” of some of their bur- | ing their time through the hot months ‘Gens and responsibility and giving them |to this work. This comparatively to play. small regiment of women who devote |” Bvery social society is concentrating | their energy to the alleviation of all this lar branch of work dur- | Sorts of suffering among the poor de- People are going to a lot of trouble | | i \ | af ' } tt ant vt the summer months, for it is during | serve the highest tribute. 1} that the vast army of little} But to go back to the little mothers— i minders is recruited. y are not always indiginous to the Ht 1 ay cee ontnrai N ORT. have to work—sometimes ‘Y poor. We find them everywhere | \among classes of people who should know better. ——————_—__~—— *| Before I go on record as saying that LITTLE JOE older children should not help with the @ | younger ones, let me remark that it is with my entire consent that older sis- ters do help out their mothers with the little ones—FOR A PART OF EACH DAY! That's all right, perfectly. But not for hours on end. That is decidedly wrong. Little girls should not be saddled with the care of a baby morning, noon and night. They are not physically fit for it to|earriage turn over and the baby fell begin with. And besides they have a between death Hight to some fee time v9 lat. week "Tuat poor chil waa oo tn: Overworked ' I'veseen little girlsof families “com-|appy to eat. Of course she got the fortably fixed” caring for heavy babies |blame—at home. But the neighbors Bard. if ot harder work than that | "Ghee t ne ler work than that| Uv; c ruled out against children in our child- smere oe tn at enon labor laws. “Little mother.” ' Decidedly not. 1. I have in mind one mother who & turned the baby over to her little nine- SMrpe |year-old girl because she herself was 1 “overworked and continually tired,’ ~ ¥ but T noticed that she ig them. One day —s saan paps donee Sie iy Se