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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1929 LETTER ER jother sy the foundation of a Je) has been laid , this Jewish colony has the midst of a land whose bitterness at idiation increased as pread out. The Arabs fear 1 the day when the Jew may have aj especially has focused majority of the population and edge deep-seated forces ' them out of the territory they have which appear too formids allow j occupied for many centuries. Thev | any forecast of a nea revocation of the Balfour of the Palestine prob! striction of Jewish | War-time cx; id establishment of a} acquisitivenc: t ation where Je F s . protest hating each other and w th led to support | have some ground r ith any! ‘Bgainst the British. The seem due to the fact in past time pron the Arabs and the By (NEA Service Writ Washington, Sept. 18— Sinc ry cessation of bloodst lestine the background of thi f tog » have her eye ch oil fields of oil companies st. The pro- | 1 from. these | pan would 70 | Promised an Arab State b After Turkey entered the war the |! the Arabs under her contro! Appear to have promised Kir sein, ruler of the Hed. and of the Arab movement, th Would recognize the independ F Arabs settle! over a wide are cluding Palestine, where the pop tion was at least five-sixths Arab. So}: the Arabs revolted age the ks | th in 1916 and joyously aided the British | bibs line a line to rn out alestine under her ens her grip on conquest. © no territory of ‘The Arab delegation to W on |} which to take the iquoted the first article of the B h-; 01! to the sea ply Balfour had | Arab agreement binding Great Brit-|th's fact in mind when he lined up! ‘Bin to “help in the formation of MY ere behind the Brit- Arab empire completely independe: mandate, for if the Jews were to its internal and foreign affairs” and | move in some large power would have ing Palestine within its stipu-| to and protect them from the lated boundaries. | But in 1917, still at war, Ev ea bid for the support of Jews jall over the world when Balfour pub- icly promised them a national hom: in Palestine. The League of Nations nothing but | ter granted her a Palestine man- | c if their de-| Gate providing for British cooperation | mai last thing | with the Zionist movement in Jewis remier say Ma nts to | Olonization. In the 5 lives an h str c auch British mone) are now about 150,000 Jc ands of Arabs. And he c pralestine. Agriculture has been de: d, and with schools, hospita © British Labor pa left with New York, Sept. 18.—The coilegr. The point is, that when Wodehouse e been providing Broadway with {first arrived in America many years o, he was an unknown, struggling many of the big strect’s mightiest en-} He de- rtainers, 1 upd ashington Square, Last season is was Rudy Valles, the | wi a f hing-toned lad. who graduated | ed @ university 1 he found many all of whom he re- | When, still strug- home it was with nce of a chance to write for # musical show. i be getting istinguished a clown as the cri tossed’ adjectives at. € ls as “genius” are carelessly drip- | s from important pe And yet % a few years ago, young Butter-|/a new musical h_ was leaving the campus {o/ me, ts his id e his way in the world as a law-| that lyrics are far more fun than a But it appears that while at-|month’s outing at Ostend. g Notre Dame, he appeared in x ok Ox sented a| Which reminds me that he brings | In this act, But-/ with him this time his daughter, a gave a hilarious Babbitt ac irl of 18, to whom he once to a table of fellow Babbitts— a book this amusing dedi- iil of them wax dummies. Somcone | y daughter, but for the act at an alumni dinner and | ¢ assistance in preparing this urged the theatrical gents to get | Id have been written d. Wherefore, the young man! mor a his bow in a revue called ¢ dedication to date, | cana,” and was spotted as a was that penned by Ben } Before this season has ended, is “Reign of Rothstein.” the higher-browed period- like this: “To my ‘will be carrying essays on his re- | i have stood so much nship to the Comic Man, and all | they probably sort of thing. ee * pee, seeking how. This, he tells of a swell vacation; | will stand for this.” xk * of personalities, the} At the midnight sailing of a Eu- wasion is already under ound liner the other night, r, I encountered a personality the week P. G. Wodchouse,| who is unknown to the British creator of Jeeves and | youngster generation. And h, and all the rest, came back to | too bad i for grand stuff he wrote and settled down just above al when he was a national best seller mid-town night club. When|some years ago; when this corre- come to see him, they are|spondent was just getting interested d by these typical uniformed in reading novel jold-braided doormen. Which he| The man was Opie Read—and his ts is highly amusing. One Amer- | “Jucklings” and his “Kentucky Col- BN magazine advertisés him as the | onel” and the rest were as much a jet paid writer contributing to the | part of thousands of youths as Alger tion ‘Whereas, Wodehouse | or Henty. if is large, genial and fond of | GILBERT SWAN. Newspaper reminiscences. | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) ley Editor Named To State Press Post! y, N.D., Sept. 18.—Nels P. meon, editor and publisher of the le County Farmer's Press, has ~¥ y state vice president ‘the Editorial association | A D according to word ond ag H. C. Hotal- “ . He succeeds § Peterson, formerly of Rolla. rs Get $25 in ugby Storebreaking M.D. Sept, 18—Burglars, ‘® panel in the door of store ata LITTLE JOE j ON'T LEAVE IT OPT AN OLD SUIT TO MAKE You SHINE IN COMPANN. * TRIBUNE'S PAGE OF COMIC STRIPS AND FEATURES =: MANS LT, SRR \ CAN'T GET OVER TOM CAR! JROUBLE 1S — ‘ YOMAT YOU SIT AROUND WAITING: FOR SOMETHING TO NAPPEN — + WAS. READING THE OTHER DAY UAT A MAN STANOS SIXTEEN ‘CHANCES OF BEING, STRUCK BY LIGHTNING — TO OF BECOMING A MILLIONAIRE = TOM. CARR 18 MAKING HAY WHILE THE SUN 1S MONEY USED MAKING % 2,000,000. THIS SEASON=\ qo TALK = AND SAVING IT= SMAT GETS MY GOAT = AND AFTER ALL IT'S MONEY THAT TALKS= AND NE MAKES HIS NAY wit) THE GRASS THAT GROWS UNDER SOME PEOPLE'S FEET — \T LosT NS VOICE AROUND MERE = | Ao FOOLING, OSSIE-- WHAT DO YOU TIN OF ME WRITING A Book ON NY EXPERIENCES 7 ALL I NEED IS A COUPLE OF LEAD PENCILS AND Wile KNowS BUT WHAT 2 NY POP KNONIS OF A MAN WHO CAME TO TIS Town ThiRTy Years Aco wim ONLY A DINE = HE BOUGHT A CAN OF SHOE BLACKING AN’ A WOODEN GoxX AN’ STARTED OFF AS A BooT-BLacn, AFTER GETTING A SET OF BRUSHES 7% ON TICs NOSIR- NOT A BEAN, AN HE STILL® OWES For THE BRUSHES !! AND WHAT DO You THINK THAT MAN'S WORTH No! NO SWEETS. vou WERE ALL UPSET LAST WEEK FROM EATING TOO MUCH CANDY. 1'LL BOY WOU A BAG OF PEANUTS WHY, T THOUGHT BUT L DON'T WOU LIKED WANT ANY PEANUTS: PEANUTS, uy vom!