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TTER out WASHINGTON O- LE (By RODNEY DUTCHER rs (NEA Service Writer) Washinzion—It may not be ter of news, but thought not to be o the most popular of Am Gents. There is nothing about his person- ality, as thus aled. tha. would he likely to endear him to the popu- But he has shown plenty of in not opular things and in doin Even the Democ praise him so frequ considerable pa Y cnt knows a do Hoover well ally, yet are Something Like And although it 15 { any safe pred with some assurance th continues to show up @ has in the first sever mo! rank in general esteem wit velt as one of the two ot Republican presidents since Lincoln. Of course, there is plenty of likeli- hood that Hoover will have plenty of trouble before he leaves the white But the assertions made herewith ‘are based on what scems to be the opinion of correspondents and public men in Washington and of editorial ‘Writers everywhere. Lately Hoover has been in the midst of what appears to be enormous strides toward an assured world peace. Amid loud cheers on all sides, he has been conducting negotiations with England which ought to result im a permanent understanding with our main naval rival. Thanks to Hoover and Premier Ramsay Mac- | Donald, the whole international at- mosphere has been changed. The | peace treaty was negotiated in the Coolidge administration, but Hoover is the man who intends to make it stick and who actually secks | to cut military and naval expenses. | Nothing, apparentiy, could have been more popular than Hoover's | | peace policy coupled with his strong open attack on the big navy propa- gandists who were trying to interfere with his naval reduction efforts. Ev- erybody has joined him in landing with both fect on Mr. William B. carer and the shipbuilding tom- panies which employed him. The pro- THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1929 60 NT YOUR WHOLE LIFE ‘TRYING Tek HERING NUTS=— - WIS CLOMES GETTING THEM= TEETH CRACKING YHEM= FILL HIS STOMACH iv PE AN INSATIABLE APPET: Ae WR HUNGRY GA | posal for a Senate investigation of 7 ( VT WA a Sm , 7 a | I , "nat! ndal was the most popular one s kind that anyone here remem- 1_as an issue for Hoover saw to it as done about it. fe ‘al problem is solved ly solved as a result of the the new farm board, Hoover most of the credit. Appointment of the law enforce- nf commission was another popu- : move; hardly anyone saw any~- ¢ in it to complain about. At et of his administration he the famous “White House an” and one recalls no ob- ons to that, but many commend- i" c progressives. who generally at- on specific principles, and the Democrats, who attack on general principics, were pleasantly aston- ished when Hoover abolished the cy of secrecy on income TAS TOLO ME ABOUT THAT tc spe pas = ™MEe on, surcewmy || WERE THERE Any FINE AN Say! YOU N CERTAINLY KNOW WHATS. 1 WASNT BEEN GING ON ERE TAHY, NEXT MORNING AFTER TUE FIRE, THE DAPER SAID = DAT AFTER ME FIRE WAS Y'KNONI, Z TOLD You WE OTHER DAY TD LIME H BE A BUTCHER WELL- TM GOING TO BE A FIREMAN INSTEAD —They WANE NORE SHOULONT 1 ?| | FIRES WILE WE WERE GONE, ANIAY ALL oscar ? SUMMER LIKE ven the World Likes Him isn't space even to summar- y other acts and state- ich Hoover, by common consent, bh uustified at least most. of the trust placed in him. The New York World, very much pro-Smith in he campaign, recently admitted that © have had a steady succession of p decisions and prompt action” IT WAS AT NIGHT AN 1 DIDNT GET To SEE Te BOY! Those FIREMEN HAD ments with sh with which it apparently found little, if anything, to complain. Sometimes in Washington one hears on undercurrent of criticism of Hoover's achievements to date, but they're very faint. One hears that he hasn't made his stand clear on prohibition and on the tariff bill, for instance. But the fact is that, in the first seven months of the Hoover adminis- tration, the applause has consistently drowned out the hisses and the boos. New York, Oct. 1—Surveyors for social welfare organizations have dis- covered that, in addition to the. nerve damage exacted by the routine noises | desk bears the information that a of Manhattan, one of the most dis- | fairly staggering number of books turbing factors in the slecp-destroying have just been published for the win- night noises and carly morning phenies. OM ew YorK ga MOM’N POP YOU SEE L HAVE REASONS TO NOPE,1 AIT CUCKOO VET BUT BUT THis OTHER BUSINES: y AR. THIS, " BELIEVE THAT CERTAIN INTERESTS LAINT TAKIOARY CHANCES. 1 DIFFERENT fatten. SAS wl ‘UP, WELL LET ME THK. And yet millions of people choose ARE DETERMINED TO OBTAIN THE NEEDED SOMEONE TO BACK ME. OBTAIN A PATENT. chs anaes OVER. WE MNCHT BE ABLE TO to live here! SECRET OF MY SELF-OPENING AMD THATS WHAT LCALLED TO UT UP CAPITAL AND YOU'LL weep ee * PARACHUTE,SO WHEN L WENT INTO SRE POP Gut ABOUT.NOW AW ATTORNEY TO LOOK AFTER YOUR POP GUNN'S OFFICE TWAS CAUTIOUS AND LOOKED UNDER HIS DESK AND AROUND TO MAKE SURE NO ONE WAS IN THE ROOM Another statistical report upon my AY BIG WORRY 1S,HOW AM U GOING To GET OUT INTERES TS. WELL, OF COURSE NO er season. It is, I believe, a book ecord for America. And. like so many mushrooms, new Certainly in no place outside a mad- | publishing houses spring up out of touse could a greater variety of dawn- | old ‘i i | This season, for instance, has seen destroyers be conceived. The shrill | the young Mr. John Farrar withdraw sirens of the fire engines. for in-| from Doubleday-Doran with Alan stance, are never muted. And fi Rinehart to form the firm of Farrar have a spectacular and disturbing | and Rinehart. From the British pub- way of breaking out just as the sun| lishing fields has come one Jonathan is swinging up from the East river. To | Cape to form the firm of Cape and anyone who has been in New York | Smith. The suave and youthful Eliot for more than six months, there is} Holt, having withdrawn from the old- something about the whistlings, | er Holt establishment, now operates a ecreechings and gong-ringings of the| one-man concern. The brothers fire. trucks during the night which | Boni having split up in an argument, greatly affects the imagination. The| onc finds A. Boni turning out his pa- tragedies of tenement fires are too| per covered book club. And so it common to wipe from the immedi- | gocs. ate memory. Lying snugly and warm | se in bed, it is not hard to be visited |’ The theatrical field has seen a sim- by a sort of nightmare which pic- | ilar activity among youngsters and tures the crowded dwellers of the] oldsters who suddenly felt the call of slums trapped in their cages. production. Abe Blatt, who was a Meanwhile, from the various rivers | mere publicity gent a season or 50 which hem in this island comes the| ago, now wears his name in large early morning chorus of strange | type, thanks to the success of “Har- whistles—sounds which range from a| lem,” and steps forth this year with moaning fog siren to the shrill blasts | a novelty in the form of a subway of a tug going out to meet a daylight; murder mystery. And scanning a liner. The garbage men rattle their, number of programs, I find myself cans and the milkmen toss their bot- tles up stairways; trucks ratt!e by on! as Irving Lande, Lewis Gensler, and their way to the waterfront, and be- fore sleep can be recaptured. some early riser has turned on a phono- | graph and begun his daily dozen. YOUR _ CHILDREN by HBA Gervicetnn Now, children, I want you to de food while I'm gone. Remember and don’t touch the cookies, don't cut up; the magazines, keep the tricycles out of the parlor and don't slide down the not kind of mother to suggest these teacher said: “Now, children, to write some things on rd that I don't want you to say. Remember, when you go to say these things, stop and wrong.” seen the boy;” “I “She don't like ” “Give it to Mary and I.” children carried the im- ‘of those words through life, and they didn’t re- ‘The children did all four. Was it) looking at such relatively new names Lew Cantor, with many others in the offing. GILBERT SWAN. (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | member what the teacher said, but the image of those incorrect sentences remained. Suggestion! | Now many suggestions are good. So gocd, indeed, that they are consid- jered oné of the greatest powers in child training. “George, pick up your cap. Gen- tlemen don’t hang their hats on the floor.” i “Clara, straighten up. You never) . saw a round-shouldered girl in the | : : movies. No one can be beautiful with : humped up shoulder blades.” “Louise, don't shout so. You have a lovely voice if you use it properly. That's better.” So much for the necessary habit | training. | ling Character ‘Then there is the character mold- ing. This is where constant sugges- tion is absolutely necessary. “I want you to go out and pass around the box of candy Aunt Mary sent you, George.” Not-too-generous George needs this. ‘Clara, isn't it nice that Sara Lou got that sweet little dress? I know you are glad.” This because Cla has a tendency to jealousy. “Louise, here comes a storm. Per- haps it’s hail. Let's get out the na- | ture book and see if we can learn ohh REE: A ane