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__THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1929 - TRIBUNE’S PAGE OF COMIC STRIPS AND FEATURES = THAT'S THE WORSY CUP OF "Ty KN Now COFFEE 1 EVER TASTED IN MY LIFE = A OT CET, REFERENCE Ame 37 RODNEY DUTCHER ! y bill and more lately the AND WHY DIDN'T YOU CALL THE FIRE (NEA Service Writer) | Smoot bill and disclosing to the pub- DEPARTMENT WHEN ‘THE TOAST. You MUST HAVE D Washington, sept. 7.—The most po-| lic eve what it considers great ini STARTED TO BURN—AND SAVED SOME HELD A BROOM OVER b nt factor in the forthcoming tariff | Wities and possibilities | of | great OF IT * THE BACON FRIED YO A SHE MEAG OF YouR LAST TV {, WASHINGTON Besse | WO-LETTER iil gouge: cons! I's 5 ‘Meascht may prove to be the Rawieis| Kaho a alls FO rae jusion some time ago sposed new agricultural delusion and a snare for and that the farmers neck as usual if distariff Bureau, the establishment and ration of which make a x Tory in these days of lobbies 1 nhere er-lobbies. Of WU This bureau says it is fighting the b t | vberia tawley-Smoot t tf the consumer, at ds much to say pe Meisoner in the hoosegow alate’sbout the strength of the | Bist}, It will furnish facts oirtualid to the several progressive W Poliho are about to attack the measure. @Repe will do as much for an: ees Cemocrats and Republic @ne Ommunition for simi @ ety This burcau is le’s Legislativ y S@uUMpas founded by instigation tpliomte Senator Robert M. La | vi 8M a research and publi ubtiess long wleich of Free- in manufacturer 18 factories. proprietary nd similar articles. ‘at admirer and warm c La Follette and it argely answered La Fol- s wish by helping to found and CRISP — NOTHING RIGHT ! ————, WHERE DID GET THE_INEA HAT YOU ERE COOK ? MISTRESS = A CYLINDER, Ty SOUNDS LIKE A Loose WRIST PINS To ME@= He SHOULD Ste A GOOD MECHANK = ¢? ee upon which prog tain the People’s Legislative Serv- GS, O8: Cota, tm al @ Of cors could rely in combs hoopnanced selfish interests fomoting or opposing nat University Man at Head Mts organization has two phases and a staff of associates have ® studying the agricultural tariff @# —hedules in Madison. The results of jese studies have been sent here to ta to the ammunition pile. © tur The bureau's main organization is ~ gre in Washington and the brains @* Tit are four men: Mercer G. John- a on and Richard W. Hogue, director 2d associate director of the People's ve Service, working in close with David J. Lewis, former of the U. S. Tariff Commis- ‘and Charles M. Kelley. a veteran who is shooting out the bu- publicity broadcasts. is the tariff expert and he is from day to day by other ex- called in for consultation on items of the bil - senators who will fight on © Benate floor with the. bureau's and support include Norris and of Nebraska, La Foillette and of Wisconsin, Frazier and Ny North Dakota, Wheeler of Mor McMaster of South Dakota, of New Mexico and others. uch one has accepted a specific por- of the tariff bill upon which to ; and prime himself and the pe Dureau, will provide him with ita on the subjects as- PE Wimed to him. Lewis is staying here act as personal adviser to the ; ‘oup. if this plan works out it will be meth new. Heretofore the pro- . mators have almost invar- fought individual battles. Never has there been such a carefully plan to separate and coordinate | Ir efforts. the tariff bureau has been at | all summer, digging into ane e Prof. John R. Commons, the a4 University of Wisconsin econo- | ; Somehow, this millionaire man- rer became imbued with La assion to make the govern- the public interest the Hawley tariff bill | investi vs he found that wh i lot more than he a If would make. He decided he Id ed any more protection any- | x this proposed new tariff Hiaw p would put a bad crimp | in pro: which would hurt busi- | ness, So he acted both rom the standpoint of enlightened elf-interest and his own instinets for c service. He probably has t $50,000 on the Rawleigh Tariff aul by now and that outlay may | be doubted before the fight is over. He's a Real Fighter ‘There are many interesting yarns about Rawleigh, who is now nearly 60. years old. He has always been re- | belling against something or other. A few years ago a French trust con | trolled the vanilla market and boosted the price several hundred per cent. Rawleigh went to Madagascar, set up his own vanilla bean plantations and broke the tru: It cost him about a million, but h ys he had a lot of fun. Lately he has been working out plans to make his own alcohol be- cause he thinks he is being soaked on that. He thinks he is being ged too much for pepper and cloves and he is going to produce those commodities, too. When the “glass tru got to charging him too much for his bottles he opened up | his own glass works and started scll- ing bottles to his competitors at cost. hat when Rawleigh goes after a profiteering trust it's just too bad for that trust. And those who have been associated with him say that he goes into his ights, including this latest tariff as- sault, with all the enthusiasm of a wild man, far |NEW YORK York, Sept. 7—The vogue for ‘well-known people, thinly dis- | as fictional personalities, is | ° fin, here are now on the market half AB novels wherein the person- | s have been so lightly lifted from that even their worst fricnds| tell them. | has played this literary game for many years and, thanks to sep Confession magazines and the fre- ‘visits to the continent made by writers, it is likely to be Popular over here during the two seasons. ‘am told that a sensation awaits n of the next work from f Achmed Abdullah. The character will be a veteran a Pproducer—and such ad- nce descriptions as have been given ‘this personage show a marked re- ce to David Belasco. ees ne of the immediate best sellers of confessional of married life, “Ex-Wife.” It was signed iymous,” but critics have taken trouble to point out that when atter concerning it grew warm, Mrs. s\ Parrott made a very quict #eneSt from the limelight. A well-known , has been men- Saag Rago Rae Ee: : ye along came Edmund Wilson, has been one of Manhattan’ critical lights for many a ‘a book titled, “I thought of Mia.” And experts say they recog- tie Mana Bt. Vincent Millay, the po- ms; dohn Dos Passos, novelist and ori ‘and several others of the latest from Nancy Hoyt’s pen. Inte ” is inhabited by ‘which appear to be Isadora Bankhead and oth- dictionary of phrases developed in the “black ‘which slowly find their way , who is one of Harlem's interpreters, supplies me o E JOE t ieee al wap woman 2: 88 one of the two leading char-; being the latest: “Collar aning, “take a nap"; who demands liberal gifts. * * * They're telling a funny one about, Jack Wheeler, the big syndicate man from New York, who called London by trans-Atlantic telephone, seeking to get in touch with Winston Church- ill, the great British statesman. ‘Sorry,” came the reply of the far- away central, “but he doesn't seem to be in the telephone book.” eee And here's a little paragraph typi- cal of the ups and downs of Broad: way. Not so many years ago, an | actress named Anne Nichols was play- ing on the road in a company headed by Fiske O'Hara, who plays Irish roles. The idea for the now historic “Abie’s Irish Rose” came during this road tour, O'Hara is said to have had the original germ of the play. But be all this as it may, O'Hara is back on the “big street” starting to plug along another season and Miss Nichols will Probably never figure out how to spend the millions she made from “Abie.” GILBERT SWAN. | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) YOUR CHILDREN | An py “When I get low in spirits, I buy me a new hat,” said a young busi- ness woman recently. “Lucky child. I don't have the price usually,” laughed another. “But T'll tell you how I do my whistling when I need my morale helped over | 2 wall—I go and get a manicure and a hair cut. Nothing gives me so mitch courage as to be well-groomed.” I often think children must feel the same way. Perhaps they don't get as low in their spirits as we older People, but most children in- stinctively like to be clean, Se a Pn i For PETES Sake!’ WWOULD You LOOK WHO'S DOWN HERE ANHY, IT'S OSCAR AN’ WILLIE AN’ SLIM AN’ WHY VES, THE GUNNS HAVE S| BEEN AWAY ON A CAMPING TRIP FOR MORE THAN A WEEK. MOM CALLED JUST BEFORE THEY LEFT VE NEVER RETURNED MOM'S LAST CAI NOT THAT ANYTHING HAS COME mr EN US SIMPLY BECAUSE OF THAT COPPER DEAL POP HAD WITH GEORGEOF COURSE THERE ($ A LITTLE BITTER FEELING, * NATURALLY, WHEN YOUR BEST FRIENDS hI PULL A DOUBLE-CROSS ON You= YES, 1 WILL TAKE ANOTHER CUP HERES THE (GLOO )FINE': ALL WE GoTTA 00 1S GeT ( RENTED, GU22' OUR SUPPLIES OUTA TH’ Box AN’ START SWAPPING THINGS WITH “THE ESKINOS FoR FURS - Pet ett it i Fi EEE ie if Tt SAW Him! 6cE—m (Ti |. BE Good ‘To * SEE FRECKLES AGAIN! 0) ve ‘ Ra « ke wv) | iti ‘yhE GEEWE HANE To KEEP THEM FROM SEEING US GET Offa TD UKE To-KNow - LONG AS THEY'RE QUT OF TOWN THIS 1S A GRAND TIME, TORO ITE