The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, September 20, 1929, Page 12

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1929 By RODNEY DUTCHER t! (NEA Service Writer) Washington, Sept. 20.--Th laudius Hart Huston, the » ff the Republican national » makes all his long ps by air, attributes hi D light eating and i. ood of Locomotiv | and other busin ! dropping to sal job in national . a5 Aide to Hoover close contact with Hoo- hen he assistant arty has He is nnd as far as y He is mor md mixes more 1 iisties of people. 2 fit for his fhe nominatior ir on of Hoover than ! only be credited w ears before the Ki ion he had been the Hoover hc s Hoover n n those acq! He Found the with plute ilists. His ability mate with a active mind. He | y. but speaks | with a clear, con-! entive and he hs ign fund and his a ie will be one of his pr When neces- | ¢ without at the lunch fast 1s nor= In the closet of his hotel room at s City Huston had a dir phone line running to the Hoot e in Washington. The linc v used and after the president ination the sagacious Huston d to tell the candidate f ast. sum- it of the vice presidential con Y i riend fly with fl your friends are in it 1 for Hoover's accept- During the clection campa: nea r hey all backed out to be regarded a P political Huston plays Hather of Col. e ds detec! politician who ha h y in a blue other Repubiican thro ind direction of the anti-Smith De nderstands People prehension of human nature ; to like most people. Few are told about him, but An old Democratic letter rier in Indiana was about to job last Huston heard and mad ecial trip from Washington to save him. ed to have been| Huston made himself. Hi n in Harrison County, Ind: ago, attended a on and became a country » Working on a farm in sv . he picked up enough mone Valparaiso Univers worked with a who had s usi men and manula ‘He branched into the wo: zing and refinancing cor who are at a ns and became onc of the bi - near him, so has Huston. Two men of Chattanooga. He reor- friends are W. H. d the Trans - C president of the lyr 1 as |G ‘Trust Company, and Her- m of its board. s, he has had the mat the banks and other properties o . for instanee, rtist to put on nd plant a hay bit of window space which allow: ep at the East river, for instar eases hourly For a few sq: is Ss npton, with its swanky so- Manhattani 5 i tion, added a score of hount monthly i rush | celebrities to its popula- @ room with a view he t a yan a little theater move- out a veritable -| meni whic d Bre y to send | new apartment houses in a out its scout n lead- | on which once was cluttered with! ing American actors were lending | ents and slums. In this se | their pport Another theater troup. started by Chamberlain Brown ina tiny colony, will probably be it assurance of capturins his cov-| moved bodily to Broadway this win- ted view for more t ny Try-outs of such importance ly has he begun to pat him aged in an old barn that the back when—*00m—up tics found themselves thew skyscraper a few do wn to Connecticut to see d he begins to look out reigh= | w 1 about and producer por’s light well. { t least two or three of It’s all very sad! | the plays. "This season many tenants are de. Pelham has for years been a lead- nanding that their leases audevilie colony, Hundreds of inobstructed view for the period of | variety entertainers live least a year and some of the wi ome retired and others rest- S now buy up nearby land to! inz between engagements. At one themselves against the in-| time the chief of police was a form- | er trick bicycle performer, who made ! hn | his rounds on a bike. And most of the | city officials were song and dance | s, acrobats and what-not. Meanwhile, the upper Fifties held only the,exclusive Su ce mansions, noy i cluttered with | men. jugs tment hunters their | GILBERT SWAN. before the ground has been| (Copyrisht, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | for a foundation. I kno pral people who already have rented | partments in places which will not | completed for two The: hing comic about a fellow who Beets: * CHILDREN | old ene Palle pon, with ————s | nt on jap, while future tenant. “4 se living uarters that ‘wit noi| | @ Olive Roberts Bartay | Hoover's, which | Freckles and His Friends ee half statements | into existence before ancthe:, 023 byNBA Servicetnn | ee * | t teach institute in ‘The past two seasons have \ jucater emphasized the matter of ‘ d an amazing growih of art*col- i that faulty studying in the rural se 5 ntable for more failures York. These coloni Pr of ability on the part of the the arts—actors, si | To this I wish to voice an em- phatic Amen. That children do not geore of new colonics leaped into know how to study until they are life and the old ones experienced a| taught how to do so is as true as srowtl tly displeasing to the pio- | trouble. And they are not always did not fancy invasion. ight. stport and Woodstock have been isn't it a strange paradox that they two leading art colonies over ape-' 80 to school to learn how to do of years. And both have been | things, but the very heart and lungs the rush of newcomers.| of the whole matter seem to be left went in for farms in a big | 9ut? They don’t learn how to study- ii nd if they don’t learn that, how can | they Jearn anything else? They Can't Stady almort any colleg> instructor he finds the most discouraging thing in his work, and 3 am pretty 5 that the verdi TRIBUNE’S PAGE, OF COMIC STRIPS AND FEATURES | =: | THE GUMPS—LOST—ONE SALE <a si orion anipleacls. =o88 tang VM SORRY — WHY “THAT'S ABSURD — MRS. ZANDER — THIt 18 PREPOSTEROUS — BUT I'M AFRAID WE'LL * , * MOT VERY ON THE BROKBTAIL COAT Noueer wan oe ELIWERY ON f UNTIL YOU MAVE PAID WAITING THAT LONG = FOR THE LAST SUIT You BOUGHT — V THINK | — (WE'LL DO Vay BUY THAT: EVERYTHING GRAY BROADTAIL COAT= be SAN To RUSH JHE ONE WITH THE - SILVER FOX SHAWL COLLAR= ey AE HOW LONG WOULD 'T “ALK TO ‘TAKE YOU''TO MAKE SHE ALTERATIONS ? WHEN ey WHY, WHEN WE FLEW OVER NNHALES WOULD COME To TUE PACIFIC OCEAN TO Bers THE SURFACE OF THE WATER AND, (Since Tauun’ To oscar INE DECIDED NOT To JUST A MINUTE, FRECKLES +s WATS THE PRINCE WRITE ANY Book AT YEAH-AN' HONOLULY WE SAW ALL Noses > ALL-WnAT 16 INTEREST- \ BESIDES IT KINDS OF THEN: roe see Oar nee GOT TO 00 wih 7 ING T NE MIGhT NOT J wouLo BE AENER San ea THEM? @ @ Kz) ; QE INTERESTING To ANY. ) A LOT OF SO MANY WHALES i" BODY ELSE «THE work — wihcrtiele est aN (2) f WHALES FoR, \WHAT AgOOT \NDALES ¥ . MOM’N POP — HE WAS WUST A | HILDA says HE WHAT DID UM, LWONDER (F WHAT WAS HE AWA HERE WE LOOK ec tt, COND HAVE, > LIKE? WAS HE BIG ropa pcre feos CN THE SAME MAN oe oR SMALL 2 Nou > THAT WAS ASKING = SALESMAN SAM WELL FER GOSH SaKes | LOOKIT HEY, SAM, TAKE @& LOOK AT THE FUR Rav TWAT PUNK FUR! LOOKS Like. (T "BROUGHT IM! ~ ALL FULLA HOLES LOOKS \RADED MIM 6 CRLLAILGID came FROM CHICAGO, STEAD ° LIKE WE GOT IT IN TH’, HECK ww. ove! rit wil We wouldn't ask children to sew | ———— without teaching them how to hold needle, cut the cloth, and run We wouldn't expect them to music without first | a| to the im- | teachers’ memorise, teaching | matter RECORD PEAR association of ideas so | repaid Heslehurst, Miss.—A. forget, and wilt be claims to have a what they have YES, INDEED date year the i : Waiter, have I left . om my ee oe es hilt i ah

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