The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 14, 1929, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1929 TRIBUNE'S PAGE. OF COMIC STRIPS AND FEATURES THE GUMPS—NOT SO BAD JAWASTINGTON g LETTER » By RODNEY DUTC (NEA Service Writer ) | formed Shington. Oct. 14.--It is trur. of And it can hardly be said that the ® that Mr. Hoo i al alli which these two have re... blished and which is not in any lal did not spen MES LO exclusive or in any way ominous, her cookin: \ng Y Id be any the le: : THE STAMP MILL TO ME 13 1a pee at he Ee Ma ae ere eolata MAY | PRESENT [bination of nations which might be Ma! PIECE OF MACHINERY IN THE inst them. NT = YOU FEED (TA SHEET/ MR. BACKUS ~ PLAI NERAL MANAGER, AND SHE FINISHING lof STEEL _AND QUT COME ($ Sf. Bh CSUpERINTENDENT. . ‘Ace VWANY TO SEE\ Hl se CUT AND SHAPED WE IS THE wito Ke ROOM — EVERYTHING = SES FOR THE ALARM — , ‘ALL OF THE WHEELS TURNING THEN WE'LL LOOK SEE THE HE CRUSHING POWER (// ME IS A WIZARD HIMSELE TT ; WHEELS GO OF (y MAKES THE SHIVERS)// WATH MACHINES incl eNTAY ay the imp’ OWN: PINE = ARM’ ee nicbi Pr ital Europe were to refuse to unde peiaaee’ Tey Reg 1N A NICE INCOME © .y eee presui . I'he feet is that France, % Y ‘ AYA PRO MAN ax) ? Ish nationalistic conid not well afford to wrench into the Hoo- d mechanism. Donald arrived in this t ome distinctly sour notes to the bene- | have been sounded in Franee. Also all other nat ( in. Taly and ey ed to enter into the spi f are those in each coun- | n alliance <i suspicions are not | tand in the way for very and Brit- governments will devote them- 5 to removing them. One excel- reason f virtual certainty y three nations will fall om an old-fashioned y a most important onc— at each one stands pretty well under the present scheme of a BB mrs. ZANDER — % with such a br benefits of worid-wic A and the stu h other words, men who co-61 ism with Everyone ic inte: 1) k they would if it were made. these two incompatible. assumption in Wash- ertheless, if there are a> | ing! aut the two men had which fail to fall bmarines would make United States and Great Br going to be just too bad—for Naturally enor Boy! 1 WISH 2'D HURRY UP AN' GET To BE A BIG NAN SO 2 CouLD GET ANSELF A‘JoB AN’ TM GOING To RUN ONE OF THOSE MACHINES ANSTER EDISON MAKES, YOULL WANE T BE PRETTY BIG To MANE conference at C n these two pr ners failed to app t z . ‘The same thing would have A true had France and Italy been ted, which they were not ut if the United dd Great are going to lead off an in- tional parade for reductions of ments and world p any nations whic and on fand stick out their tongue: to be out of luck. There few where their attitude would be and, most importantly of all, | d be distinctly unpopular with Sam and John Bull, both of people are enthusiastic over | new order of thin the naval | Succeed ines will not be allowed to | wreck the five-power conference three months hence and Hoover and | MacDonald did not decide to ram the measure down anyone's throat. Nothing in this dispatch or from any otf source should lead anyone to believ that the Kingdom of Heaven has arrived on earth. Time may undo the work that Hoover and acDonaid are doing. There are bound to be some bitter rows over naval strength before the five powers are through. The freedom of the seas issue will have to be threshed out ooner or later. The debt issue is far from dead. Hoover's hope of naval | reduction probably will not be realized ” there is no getting around the | immediately. that America and Britain far| The main point is, however, that way the two most p rful na- | there is going to be a five-power na- on the earth. If they did care, val conference which America and an alliance in the old sense | Britain will enter with a construc- could casily enough dominate tive program and it will not be al- ONE HUNDRED FEET A SECOND IT world without fear of any coy- | lowed to fail. AUTOMATICALLY RELEASES THE LOCK TO THIS Aah NEW YORK Bee) As Clear as Einstein Theory THE ENTIRE MECHANISM, OR CONTROL, \S CONCENTRATED IN THIS LITTLE DISC + CALLED AVELOSTAT.IT'S THE KE TO MY IDEA.NOW THE INSTANT (T TRAVELS, {| tect AFFECTS THE VELOSTAT - TCLATIVELY AS HEAT AND COLD AFFES A THERMOMETER. TO EXPLAIN THE ge DELICATE MECHANISH OF THE VELOSTAT, L WOULD HAVE TO USE TOO MANY SCIENTIFIC PHRASES FOR YOU TO peimeaireey sien PRINCIPLE = THE SIMPLEST (IND.CAN GRASP THE MECHANICS, OF IT.AS ‘TMS PNUTE. THE IDEA OF YOUR AGREEING TO PUT YOUR MONEY THROUGH SPACE AT A VELOCITY OF NOW YOU FIND OUT EXACTLY HOW THIS PARACHUTE az y INTO A PARACHUTE AND THE WEARER FLOATS TO lew York, Oct, 14.—Under the very | Jimmy Durante, who came up from |' — 8 of Unobservant Manhattanites Elizabeth street, which is New York's erica's one free or market.” In years agone his is been operating for some tin ‘9 be sure, “The La UL fous theatrical freak ran for most @ season without taking admission | y_at the gate. it Butler Davenport's idea is quite | erent. Setting up his theater in eums and | art galleries and free n however, lasted one fight. They car- the repertoire would be choss refully as would the band num- for instance; or the exhibitions | A Davenport's theater, the plate is about and members of the lence who care to help it slong y drop in what they cheose, though is no insistence upon contribu- | customers. hey ran a barbershop there and on Saturday night Jimmy made his dimes going about the chairs and dousing soap suds on the faces of His gamin life in the East Side trects called for a handiness with fists. And so, without thinking about it, he found himself in the fight rack- et. His public career in the ring, ied him home, and then his father arted in on him, * ee So he became one of the East side's | piano thumping kids. Which means that he went about to private homes where there were patti or where ks wanted to be entertained. A number of performers took this door- * route 4 Eu iN, SKIN, WALRUS -1/°T' OSaL's bell route to fame and fortune. One y our WALR i en’ Oread | ten 3 of Jimmy's regular customers was a Shut eh Geter pent eed — ee he highest p emand- | fent named Al Smith, who was a ris- ANY . WHER “Naas - of Broadway's aty i mblyman in those days. é ad moment to Jackson . “I Ups to Him,” writ- @ Durante—a trio that has made its y when he was ill with in- ty up from the night clubs was the “torch” song which their nut stunt on the ca started a long vaudeville career. Up a to the time the trio marched into a ety experience had intimate company would consider ls gathered in the smoke of s were paid and a min- | supper st Between running; be spent in getting | afoul of places which were padlocked into Hollywood and hack to|or which were getting a solar plexus oadway. blow from the public, they found the fou can do those things when! theater a comfortable and profitable re “on the up.” harbor. picture. Their * ok * x GILBERT SWAN. leading clown of the group is| (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) ae al people around him. I'd not inter- fere, but rather kindly and tactfully ¥ C L | t him. Keep the little secrets he i | pers to you and pretend to be | | Very much interested and surprised. The thrill will wear off after he! 4 Olive Roberts Barley | °ablishes the fact of his own im- | .BA rtance to his small satisfaction. yy Serviceine = When he is ready for school the ong about the fourth and fifth | Chances are that he'll not be at all in- , When a child discovers that he | terested in secrets any more. iB unique personality, and begins to| But there is one thing that mothers iment with the big world about | *Pould watch out for: that is a differ- common reaction is that | emt sort of clandestine urge from the natural cecrecy found in character de- & child of this age begins to | Velopment. : things and hug bits of knowledge Measure in Concealment “heart, things that no one else | _ It is the deliberate action of a child but his very own self. there is | !0 conceal what he doesn't want other for trying to break him of | People to know, because he finds more and no reason to worry, | Pleasure in concealment than in open- of his experiment to set his | )e55- apart from that of the other} Now it must not be supposed that o __ | children fall into secrecy only from motives of misbehavior, although that is, I suppose, the commonest cause. But there is a sort of sensitive, shy, i i

Other pages from this issue: