The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 10, 1929, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1929 TRIBUNE'S PAGE. OF COMIC STRIPS AND FEATURES Ce CRYING ISN'T GOOD FOR YOU = WT MAKES LUTTLE BovYS AND GIRLS THERE — THERE — » WOULON'Y CRY LIKE THAT CHESTER — ? SDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sec-j are potable, but legalized by federal bed of three articles by Rodney perm Dutcher, Washington : jondent | C fer The Tribunc and » telling of the present status of prob Pition education and enforcement cf- p riptions. condi- By ROD DUTCHER ‘ s. Drastic prohibition (NEA Service Writer) ited in Lae ; : ai Se in ate: failure of grea’ Wachington, Sept. 10.—Six stat ake. Serie | have prohibition enforcement laws cage in ag: Dover 1928 victories with one or more features “less riets of John J. Raskob, | pungent in character than the Vol du Pont and Captain W. H. ttead Act” and five have no cntoree z to the 1 of Columbia -Volstead Act. | ed by officials | active and zealous. | ily improving conditions | lorida—More or less violation, but | i | fair enforcement in most of the state. (Aand Rhode I: The five are) Hope f@r better conditions despite | J¢ Maryland, Montana, Nevada, New phical opportunities for smug- | ort) York and Wisconsin ine i Thirteen of the League's s - |” Idaho—Prohibition efficiently en- | forced in some counties and laxly in State law holds possession | n 14 Te yy -eanadate -aieetel Kl a Hi States which want to know how | ast year despite wet referendum vic~ Frec ini bad or how good they are from the | 3. State Anti-Saloon es ani is Friends ko igen League's viewpoint may ributed 10,000,000 pages of consult the following summary of re Prohibition well League reports for 1928: Se WELL-1 GOTTA GO OUT Alabama—Enforcement condition: |AN' TAKE A WALK AROUND: seemingly improving. The 1927 law | can s. Has an unusually drastic me NEIGHBORHOOD AN’ ‘Tt making transportation or pos: ment code, Its of from of five or more gallons of liquor has) which ane ut reported. (SEE HOW EVERYTHING had good results. Ki s—State prohibition law has LOOKS SINCE INE BEEN GONE !! C ment codes at all. new Anti-Saloon Leas for 1929. The six are Arizona, Delaware. Ma WHATS THE IOEA? ALL THE KIDS ARE DOWNTOWN BUYIN’ CowBoy SUITS AN’ WERE You come Our ~ DRESSED LiKE SEE IN THE FIRST PLACE IT'S WE THING To WEAR AROUND TOUIN AND THEN Too, NONE OF si Arizona—Voted for Hoover and been as well enforced as any other elected one of the Leagu state | law for 20 yea: All important daily Our trustees for governor. Kn and weekly newspapers support prohi- l*pone-dry,” but hundreds of miles of ! bition ‘nternational border and rugged topo- | Kentucky—Notable improvement in Way: graphy present serious smuggling and | cnforcement conditions since the elec- problems. | tion. ‘Arkansas—Has a dry congressional | Louisiana—Enforcement conditions ‘delegation and various enforcement | far from perfect, but improving. E 'Th Jaws, including one making possession | Maryland—Dry candidates elected ‘of any liquor unlawful. j Jast_year, but dry progress has to be ‘California—Federal § = enforcement | made inch by inch. d has been greatly hampered. with the | Massa ts—Voted for Smith ‘Da law openly violated and certain offi- and w on large majority in pro- @ials indifferent. Scrious problem | hibition referendum last year. Legis- )caused by production of alcoholic | lature passed padlock law at last ses- qwine tonics and fruit preserves which | sion New York, Sept. 10.—New York's) Broadway copper should know the OW BABY, HOME AGAIN " = - policemen and hotel bell hops find| best. show on the street. As a matter Freoc re olteeteae ss RS THE MICE DJUST LOOKAT Tus Mess Owe. OF THE. |(/ HI, Tne army of strangers here a their}! fact. most of them do, keeping pets hh ice WAVE BEEN ALL OVER THE SHELVES: GOES WMS GEEN LEAKING AND CANE THE WEA: YOUR , Posted because of the innumerable a HERE IN THE KITCHEN. T WOULDN'T 77 WROUGH THE CEILING. YOU'LE HAVE TO GET THE! | VACATION ISN'T OP loneliest. | times they ars asked. Furthermore, OLD CHAIR THAT'S WORN TO TWINK OF TOUCHING A THING UNTIL SHOVEL BND CLEAN TS UPLAND 1 FOUND In the mid-Forties and Fifties so a | they become acquainted with box of- FIT AND TO THINK THAT SOU'VE THROWN EVERYTHING ON MoTWs 1H THe BUGS UPSTAN FOR A COUPLE OF number of Gotham’s “finest” tell me, | fice conditions in the various thea- LCAN ENJOY IT FOR TWO THEM INTO THE Hy UPSTAIRS AND EVERY |} Das YET ? AWBAD ON WY J TH they are stopped at least once cach | ters by noting the crowds gathered in DAY'S YET BEFORE GOING TO ¢ LOST OEE SRM WIE. ON SORE aie F thevening by some yearning out-of-| the foyers. THE OFFICE.OH THIS towner who insists on opening his! nee ‘Ss coe watch and showing a picture of a| Broadway hears with amazement T4mby, wife or sweetic. that the world’s most spectacular play Wi More often than not it's the picture | failure is to take another chance this sant of & child, however, and the policc- | winter at losing more money, or stag- man is expected to agree that this is) i comeback. one of the loveliest children cver| placed upon the earth. * x * Bell hops tell me millionaire. It has made half a phor of icc-' P n valiant starts; seats have been Bain Suits very often in the y a have been sold; @ listening to the strange e n four times, and F Ott his life.” itten again for the ‘The visitor, fortified with a bit of | 1 r . More than a mil- «Manhattan's assorted brew, becom garrulously melancholy and insists on n talking of home. The other t, so| in which it ran for a year at a steady I was told, the bell hop happened to| loss has been secured, 1 am void, aint “be a young man who had but recently |many of the original performers will arrived from a small town in the | be re-engaged. middie west himself. Upon listeni 2 Along the East Side highways cer- egin to blossom now with theater followers nce. The same theater | buntings and festoons of electric (WEY, GU22' Bia suRPRIsE! Italian candy peddlers and (VE DISCOVERED “TH BIRO rf © flowers and toys EXPEDITION WEVE READ SO . It ts the season for F MUCH ABOUT! ny of the saints. " "The patient police are called upon | he ceremonies are much the same. some heart-broken oaf in the homeland, through diffieul- rom the girl ck | ties are faced by the passing of taxis him over. Wait ! and trucks. 8) are built against the bare, ace the tenement. In years one a waxen figure of the saint placed in the street. But this summer, I notice, the saint is in a of foolish questioners. One | window, so that the summer rains, tells me that at least one | heat and dirt will not inflict dam- be | GILBERT SWAN. think that a| (Copyright, 1920, NEA Service, Inc.) sos : YOUR self-reliance that starts in early and ‘ | carries on through life—the tendency > is largely toward cynicism of thought and immaturity of behavior, until they are well past 25. And that’s too Barkan ‘old. ‘They should be really adult long | before that. by Serves. a The System pire <i ‘ jon't blame the children. C! lot spout our sophisti- | dren are never to blame—or very a engl memento. ue &ldom. I blame our system — what- pe a4 oat Peper ever that system is. Aren't we at 4 Povgn thinking oe ior | criss-crosses—do we know exactly aes Simo ‘any other country what, we're trying to do for the chil a Ls PE wooder why it 1s. Certainly no| othe, Quncanothen Gispute that they have the) One advocates the | academical v training from the point of culture, an- enermity, number and magniti- | other cries out that that which trains ae erro meen tit a child for anything else but dollars uate ot a O rtcat our |and cents is wasted. There is no ¢ agg pucta re ety program—no fixed idea of what we the ee a in! expect these young people in their foo ios raahigg tas: | teens to prepare for. : ty P mags Ml page as to be trained for pus + | ness, for society, or to keep house ff And yet, instead of de-| raise families? We don't know, 50 how can they? Are the boys to be trained to starve as gentlemen or grow rich in the in- dustrial world? It’s a question par- ents can't decide. So how can the se * veloping a mature and thoughtful boys? ‘The schools do their part, but we weaken- a i ii ral

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