The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 12, 1929, Page 12

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« {uy WASHINGTON LETTER Yom= VM GLAD TO SEE YOU=| AND SAY= TALK ABOUT WELL, ¢ MAVEN'T CAUGHT f ; WHY DIDN'T YOU COME TO Fis — WELL- WHAT You ee t Pisa Ugg pr de nis By RODNEY DUTCHER tor scheme was light green ona i was LAKE GENEVA THIS wuwines ¢ MISSED BY NOT COMING UP = gy : (NEA Service Writer) ! armed with horns, claws and talons. * ‘Washington, Sept. One of the) “Don't touch it!" warned Richey to R Roy - weet Tok Most certain things o thered around the desk MAD — ALL ve oer ae Ramsay MacDonaid's vis tc we. Then he attempted = THE WHOLE SE ington is the assurance that the nit to the can with an en- bel MROUND AND LOAF — ish prime minister won't come unless | velope 0 cessful until Hyde oer. Let MYSELE REL he and President Hoover have reac a complete naval understandine Vhat are 3 o darned afraid advance. d as he tossed the His appearance here is pl hing 1 woop. a gesture of agreement bet h 1 e heast was being Enelish king peoples. a fel psyehe at th of En- move of eat moral of toward world e. The fteelf is still being we i BA a cna ceeuat politieal mansley ik thee Bere is still just a bar rumor that Assistans Secretary of es OM aed conclusion A Joseph M. Dixon is bein ached. I any understood that M ¢ no thought of coming over conclude the unsettled nese Person. MacDonald and Hoover both re that the British premi tert trip alata red There are some reasons. The political effect \ ‘ however, why he might both countries and mis fea i ce Walsh, tals react against MacDona iad “Mae lcete jabs a ms Hig Is Hone too stron oeratic senators where the race is Freckles and His Friends on British and American psychology | ¢ustomarily close. Probably would be even more serious. | Dixon wa sent to one of the west- * Ok O* n governors’ conferences to pass 5 Laurence Richey, the Hoover sec the message from Hoover sug- SWuCcKS! DONT LET OSCAR mey I OOUBT IT=1 WANE) werL- my tary, captured a strange bea pnt - ing delivery of the public lands to TELL You THAT ALL ThE 6u) To St& THEM BEFORE T 7 por ly on the Virginia estate where the | (he states and more recently satin KIDS MANE COWBOY suITs... ) ANIGUT Hane, @euiede “it. We gust on oe president goes fishing. Returni 1 an important reclamation confer- SaRirmasest agi eae vost from a holiday devoted to fire-fight- | ence in Chinook, Mont. ‘Thus he is ues J STRINGIN WANTS ME TO PUT AY To Siow im, HoH? to oppose Senator Thomas « ing, Richey brought the anima! back | enjoying Chec ea He woe Ms US ALONG, 716" WE UNOW, OUTFIT ON Ww So He in @ nice clean tin can to find out | the home state which should make a . ees we AGA’ what it was and dumped it onto | good campaign material in line with ae iene CAN COMPARE Twn Secretary George Akerson’s desk for|the old argument that each state WIS THAT'S ALL tt the inspection of Secretary of Agri- | should have at least one Republican culture Arthur M. Hyde, who was | x while the Republicans control ‘waiting for an audience with the pres- | the administration if it is to get all . that’s coming to it. Walsh is not as ‘The critter turned out to be of thes among Montana farmers as erawiing varicty, about six inches r, nor as food a campaigner Jong and less than an inch thi ; the younger senator, But he will fearsome in aspect. The gen col- a hard man to beat ——— nape New York, Sept. 12—Manicure girl-; One group of New York hotels, for fes, having remained in the back- y 3 winter print and ground for a few seasons, are back in distribu newspaper. Some favor with the big spenders. of Manhattan's best known. writers MOM’N POP ; . Yam told that the niftiec Nellies of rities, stance, will keep the the nail polish brush in several of the transient thousands informed on the awankier hotels now rate more dinner: daily events in Manhattan. The af- \ parties and baubles than the leading | fairs of the city which might interest NOW. AND LISTEN, PAPER-AND Pay . beauties of the Main Stem musical |a stranger, rather than the news of soni iaawenient aumceeee ATTENTION. NOUVE PUT.ME beg * shows. This is due largely to the im- will be featured. The the- TION. 5 i ? ~es! ‘ Provement in manicure girl types. | aters and amusement world will be- 3 OFF LONG ENOUGH ABOUT ANYTHING ONLY ome years ago, the little French | come the center of this newspaper's : & NEW COAT WW, 2 D-D.DON'T TICKLE manicure girl of the musical farce| attention, and a hundred thousand 2 : Me ANYMORE. variety disappeared and there came! copies a day will be the guaranteed A fan era of efficient but uninspiring | circulation. finger tinters. As competition among se 8 the high-priced hostelries increased,| Speaking of hotels reminds me that A'the barber shops began to be more | the number of the suite wherein the selective and dressed their girlies in| gambler Rothstein went to his death 4 |most fetching costumes. One of the| has been changed ever since the very ritzy spots claims a smail but | tragedy, because of the public atti- select group of manicurists which, it tude tyward scenes of slaying. Scores | guarantees, are as beautiful as any | of timid ones have probably occu- . show girls of the Broadway belt. pied the rooms without knowing the ‘And how this does drag the dear rence, old visiting firemen into the em-) * * * Poriums! Tve just found out that most of ees | the snappier and more successful ne- This rivalry between the newer and! gro cabarets in the Harlem belt are Swifter-paced hotels is, by the way.| not owned by negroes at all, but by resulting in the competitors offering | smart Jewish boys from the down- every form of novelty to get the vis- | town section. itors. i xk ‘The staid old ways of the late la-| ‘The biggest individual dance hit of mented Waldorf are to be found *.| the season, by the way, has been but a few spots. When the revived ; scored again by onc of the sepio hoof- ail 6 Waldorf opens in its new home, it will! ¢1 He takes the fantastic name of id probably have to completely change azzlips” Richardson and was given 4 its 8 old fone and pace. : | is bow to the mid-town crowds in 4 levelopment of a jazz orches-| Connic’s “Hot Chocolates.” Last year y tra which will make a national ae iL was Bll Roblneohcahe seanedsibe MIGOSH, YOU IN BED USE YER OWN WHERE “WH. HECK tation is now attempted by almost! shows with his tap and stairway ALREADY, SAM? JudGMent O1DTA -HANG YER, every metropolitan hotel. Several ho-| dances, “Jazz! however, dances 4 CLOTH tels have found themselves with added | in the fashion that Broadway refers national importance, duc to wide dis-| (o as “hot"—and how! tribution given phonograph records GILBERT SWAN. f their orchestra leader. (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) _" + | have no children and thereby wax all | the more wroth about the high hand- 3 | ed methods of the powers that be. q | But that is a large economic prob- lem of expansive proportions. There 7 {is no time now to convince them of | the necessity and fundamental prin- | ciple of such Hanket taxation. j | The thing is that there are so many - | People who object to these more or ‘The Children’s Bureau in asking | less expensive communistic centers the cooperation of parents in combat- | for the young that I think it wise the influence of the public dance | to call attention to the fact that the suggests more community | Children’s Bureau, one of the most ; active and useful branches of the 4 Community amusements include al- | federal government, is itself urging ‘most everything that draw groups of | parents most vehemently to cooper- 5 * om Fas young people together for recreation; | ate in using these school units in op- = ¥ first attention is given to| position to the influence of road Sa sports that center around the | houses and public dance halls. ‘and senior high schools—base-| Y je needn't play all g . . 5 Bee inning, beckeranl | tine, bat’ we know that’ thes mene | BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES : . It’s a Secret No More a dramatics—and more recently | and will play part of the time. They = - " ? POP: = MA 1 and in still more progressive | study and they need some fun. | . unit even golf. | How they get their fun is really up b4 how much scoffing and|to us. Group recreation in the way ing there is about all this latest | of sports is the cleanest, healthiest I wish I had a dollar for | fun on earth. Swimming, football, ne indignant parents have | tennis and all the rest are the great- their ideas of all the new| est safety valves for young spirits of school boards, who, | that can be produced. True, lessons are building “gentle- | may sometimes suffer, but all good these days—not school | titings may be abused. The prin- fad of the thing is 10 per cent ster- ing. A good many of these excited citi- On With the Dance! us, by the way, who have objected| I want to add a word about laving their school taxes spent for | dancing. Young people will dance. , as they regard the swimming | We can't make the world over. They seeis and tennis courts and so forth, | just will, that's all. Why not face it? sila ie | 1 for one will help them to it. But why don't mothers go together often- er and five dances for their young people, the way they used to do? That would be my advice. And don't make these dances too prim and stick-in-the-mud-ish! Make them jolly enough to be enjoyed. Better to haye the children enjoy themselves ; Under your eyes than elsewhere. I never could understand what has be-; come of the private dance. Why, when we were little if we'd gone to a dance, needn't fy His FQ" @ ii: EE Le it il

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