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

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By RODNEY DUTCHER (NEA Service Writ Washington, Aug. 15. al Commission on end Enforcement has committee to invest on lawlessness by enforcing officers. The commissio! position to g: presents a cc situation which 1 touched perhaps f there has becn no offic tion to deal with it. L officials seldom cize themselves extra-legal act before it is thro new field of inquiry. it has included law lawlessness a: Points on its Strates that thi grade lawye! the hich -h prohibition even judges ha hatred or disres| Man: Many will sion plans to to killings of i other abuses and coast guar reveals there are quite a f angles. Take, for instance, the viola * ‘rights of prisoner + use of third-d New York Bar Associat reported flagrant police ward prisoners and cross-examination of y Police. Perhaps the F Commission will make a ommendation. Prison: times died from the effects of t degree beatings. The comm a@ware that the ice to the highest bi from a high window to allegedly to escape { from Department of . The highest courts undoing the departurs Tower courts and prosecu meys. The arbitrary actio: {WASHINGTON L. LETTER, v r in the interests of Violated torneys are is of reelect the leg see only that nt as much to be to get Mooney ¢: of are per “and ‘em the club!” olice break the ven to hirer ainst. the workers. cooperate with improper strike in- ently result m and sometimes in actu but it is not yet the subcommittee ide one of the most inter sion recog! an important preblem—just as do Judge often rob a defendant of the most other thinking persons. ection which he is supposed to be ny exceptions taken cases, resulting in ed in politics. ‘They of the court ecutor’s duty is to ity. But in these of the average i of evidence is there presi of minor criminal cases ts are never disclosed victim's lack of pop- civil liberties by rsistent. of cops in nt of old Cap- ttberger of New York, who a wered a citizen's utional rights dut- are ‘> hell with the Constitu- laborers on strike and kk of legal author- clions of prosecutors ion will consider legal dis- n in favor of wealthy or i en to be a lessness. For- re customarily regard for their legal the native born and enforce- y will pro- ting sub- eports of the Hoover commission. The interesting n attor= is that the comm: now, however, the in- almost convic- ion or ‘al the- justice as it ts a con- asc, in umably protest law in d gun- in fa- ual cor- known of the nizes it AR ACRES ERT RSEL ESRI Bt VE DSA i 2 5 a a = eq a OING PLACES? AND SEEING THINGS Amarillo, Texas, Au: land so very nev so old that they cowpuncher mirror. What's new about it is so new that it glistens without the and what's o! i turesque fla stories. What's new about « tioned in te: years and wh tively young. a: Here you'll of the cow coun magically transplanted { street and Madison avenue. striking relief against the Plains which lie all about ings make you rub your cy embark sleepily froma t something like 5 o'clock in ing. I had the unc ing that the heat of t had been getting me. * * * A few hours later, the lunch table witi home boys, your hee with statistics of ail tha and better.” ‘There's a grand old 1 to the effect that r actually fighting for s battling for choice Whereas, in many part tracks are being torn up. in this < ingly obscure part of the is more new rail constructior way than in any part of the nai It seems the baronial old ¢: ranges have just passed. And ther an undercurrent of excite this transitional period whi: into the air and grows infectio. good old-fashioned boom. -* & Everyone heard of that. Now i solid certainty with pipe lines runn one planned all the way to Chicag ‘There was also some refining—so1 cotton and # background of vast ci nancial stampede. { DITTLEJOE { e eoureR, bors ; SNeLEN TS BE AN OLD TOPPER. mediately one becomes ex-party to a tle ranges. Something hit the cattle country a half dozen years ago and sent scores of the old-timers into fi-| cortain operation. The father pro- Di | wit al Of course, there was the oil strike. into the centers of population, and 0. | | iu new means Hence the o in the street ¢ the millionaires, wh t bow-legged gait * OK place c y years ago. ey ll tell you, for instance, that y the town had a fairly recen' joke on it f. It raised ihe best. chicken feed in the land but didn’t have fresh eggs. It would send its feed on to Petaluma, Calif. (the egg basket) and get eggs back pre on the plains it milk. Its cattle was beef cattle. was before the past few y you can get fresh eggs . The frontier has gi to the whea and the ¢ ator boy. YOUR CHILDREN | & Clive Roberts Barlon (©1928 by NEA ServiceIna iz of mor up childre responsil the more serious things o long-suffering partners, how's this for an example? A mother was told that would never be well until h tested. He couldn't afford it, wes little and he got over it all this fussing. His wife~answered that wheat undulates gracefully i. fast has come ads couldn't hey're building ‘¢ and one or two the old horse-riding cattleman, nifty as one is to meet on Fifth Avenue. ed in whispered conversation, that little shooting” which took it had cattle roaming field, the chick incubator GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) ring and slackers of parents who shift all the burden of of en- swanky o walk which some of had no ven way bility in mn their her boy ie had a he said, They began to split up the thou- | the boy would outgrow it—he's had sends of acres and plant it. And now, | something like it himself when he without, another chronic illness had taken its place as a direct result, he knew v wished to avoid in her son. He Grew Worse ery well, and that that was exactly what she She waited another year, John kept tting worse and finally she said, on “We'll just have to do something about it, Charles. He'll have the hospital soon.” “We can't afford it,” Charles. “You bough: a new radio.” to go to repeated Loo How! exciTeD Your 006 1S, Tac!" Boy! HELL JUMP ALL OVER You WELL, HERE WE APE, BOYS, BACK AT THE OLD RANcH AGAIN == YORE UNCLE WILL WONDER why WE WERE GONE OU- 2 GUESS / HE WASAT [i WORRYING |” GOGH,1 ONLY Gor A DEEP AT HER ONCET. UM PADA' SHE'S A RITZY WREN. IF MUGSY DOPED os OUT A WAY “To DATE HER UD, I CAN. LET'S SEE.T fp« NEWS THAT MuGsy wad SUCCESSFULLY SCHEMED AN INTRODUCTION To PHYLLIS AND SPENT AN AFTERNOON IN HER COMPANY WAS GIVEN TINY STULL A HEADACHE. NOW HE'S OUT To DODE A Waly To MEET TRE SNAPPY GUNN GuéST HMSELF Z HAVEN'T ANY KID BROTHER TO DO THE DIRTY WORK SALESMAN SAM Rerne NG Oe Gow’ Ve SHMOOT, GU226 ('m ALL Eurs Ero “THe / ARs, EVES AN’ PEPE ESKIMOS, | GETTER EXPLAIN ésipansicmanias THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1929 “W FURS —WHEN Ya DEAL A FEW THINGS, SAM — WITH Eskimos Ya TRADE THINGS — (Tribune stone is trying Suffers Fourth Looting in Two Weeks Dickinson, N. D., Aug. 15.—Gisd- \ Service) onivn the mystety WHAT A FIGHT HE PUT UP= LL BEY HE WEIGHS ISO POUNDS = HELL LOOK NICE MOUNTED OVER THE MANTEL IN OUR CLUB NOUSE- TA GOING T Co AND _ THATS FINE ® MAYBE: TE UNCLE Hi, WANE SEEN How TAS IS ANOTHER NUT A NCE Tike ISURPRISED WE WERE } SURPRISE FoR Yous. WWE Hal our WHEN WE SAW IT CAME FoR You iyeerkes TWAT NICE LITTLE 71) GIRL THERE ON GE SERIOUS — FER INS) {may Have TA Give. OFFER @N Eskimo Some |/’EM SOMETH SooT! ARTICLE FER & FUR AND = ee : ARGUE TILL He cives in! OW, 1 GoTeHal AN’ et

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