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4 Ap Independent Newspaper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) @s second class mai) mattcr. George D. Mann .............-- President ana Publisher __- ot spent ile leila aaa Subscription Kates Payable in Advance Daily by carrier. per year - Daily by mail. per year ‘in Dally py mail. per year 5 (in state. outside Bismarck) - 7 paily by mail. outside of North D: 2.00 Weekly by mail. in state, per year ‘ Weekly by mail. in state, three years { Weekly by mail outs'* of North Dako.a. Ber year ~. The Bismarck Tribune! Neen nn EEE ET Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis- | of signing the protocols involving American admission |. D., and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | into the international tribunal. | yr Congressional elections are to be held in 1930 and it 2s | i s+ere 150/ the court project after the long delay in advancing it ” THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1929 May Delay on World Court Now Entry of the United States into the World court of Permanent peace is foreseen by publicists who have fol- lowed the steps which, Monday last, at Geneva, Switzer- land, seat of the League of Nations, reached the stage OUR BOARDING HOUSE A AM Yes, GIMBLER, MY MAS @ Sig “ ~~ IF $65,000 WERE ONLY MY LoSS,ALasS weer na WHY, HE'D TAKE IT TLL REGAMW AT INH’ CELLAR) STRAIGHT IF YousTOLd Him Dr. McCoy's menus suggested for Saterday LEAST A HUNDRED | MRS. Hoome the week beginning Sunday, Decem-| Breakfast—Oatmeal with mi: of 3 FoR THE SAKE’ OF H MRS. GIMBLER, L Hobe THAT NONE OF “HE BOARDERS HERE WILL BRING UP “HE SuUBSecT OF “THE STOCK MARKET? ww WE BOTH WERE Hirt VERV HARD wo The final action on which entry depends, the sanc- tion of the senate to the Root reservations embraced in the protocols, is not expected to ensue soon, however. possible that cither the president will hold back the sub- ject or that, if he lays the protocols before the senate, that body will see that they do not come up to become $65,000 To BE EXACT! | -THOUSAND IN Time! J ber 15th: cream. entangled in the national 1930 congressional campaign. aw AND AMY REFERENCE No mention, 1 ASTER ws ene haven ee ti ta ia cearer Lol rol The situation in the senate is delicate enough ana there is held to be no need for further complicating \S MADE oF “HE MIDGETS) toast. Stewed figs. AWAKENS A : aan w celery. PAINFUL Dinner—-itoast chicken, cooked cu- this far. The “irreconcilable” senators will fight the cumbers, asparagus, salad of diced arate | p proposal again as they did before the protocol reserva~ ’ - Member of The Associated Press 3 ots, bers and The amined vated ts exclusively cititied 0's est tions were devised as a way around their objections.) 6 (—— j ped ean. CARGO WHEN for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or | They insisted on barring advisory opinions by the court ‘ Monday ‘not otherwise credited in this newspaper and Isc the | on any subject in which the United States has or claims s Breakfast—Wholewheat mush with focal news of spontaneous origin pub'ished berein. All| to nave any interest. What the League of Nations, spon- milk or cream, rights of republication of all other matter herelr @Fe | 9. tor the court, conceded was the privilege of the Uni- y x also reserved. (Official City, State and County Newspaper) Foreign Representatives SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS «incorporated) Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. CHICAGO NEW YORK BOSTON Stolen Goods for the Loser Seats on the New York Stock exchange sometimes sell. if memory serves correctly. as high a5 $300.00. But they | 2514 and Lithuania, the only three of the 53 members have never been obtained as stolen goods, as the senate seat from Pennsylvania has now disposed of. That 15 the difference between gilt-edged honesty and grand larceny. ‘The reason that the Pennsylvania senate seai has bee: disposed of in a way that is worse than shady, is that the clected candidate, William S. Vare, and his friends spent | the original court statute of 1990, the Root protocol for $785,000 in winning the primary nomination that elected him later on in the state election. This the senate decided, 58 to 22, was buying the seat and should not be tolerated in an organizatioin so conspicuous for purity a5} | doors of the tribunal will be still further opencd. ind ti the Root by all 53 bers: and ratification of protocol by mem! z aoe esi Late | has cooked for thirty minutes or | of the court. At = Lunch—Wholewheat noodles | s¢8- | longer, depending upon the size of the The three protocols Charge d’Affaires Moffatt signed HE BIS atl =O soned with butter, spinach, raw celery. | roast,” at Geneva in the absence of Minister Hugh Wilson are PLU NGERS= > m ole aaa pork Srey alan: = e = 1B. sparagus, y . QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS weer pee. (Tularemia) | protocol containing amendments to the original statute. Dinner—Broiled steak with mush- rooms, cooked lettuce, tomato-spin- ach-asparagus salad, ic2 cream. “Soy bean dressing: Crumble into @ large bowl the number of soy bean muffins desired, which have been Icit * over from Tuesday's breakfart end Lunch—Cooked celery, small lima ted States retiring in the event the court insists on ignor- x Ne 4 pec ea salad of shreded raw ing this eomtenition. a s . Dinner—Vegetable soup, Salisbury It is possible, pata bind Sue Aiie ati ease wal r oar tea, eben apple. -eelery and of the opposition have had their say, they will make way a i for ratification of the protocols just signed, and the AS ae Sun ee Te ee muffins, (recipe Nov. 29th), stewed | fins add about a cupful of diced A situation that scems almost a burlesque also must be i } raisins. creer eee ae hiner ripe hurdled before the path is completely clear for this coum- E ‘ ee eh i i ase valli Oe ermine CAO Bt Woes Yainliss, ” reas eel try. As matters now stgnd these steps lie before entry: . ‘ Seuss be. R tee whieh you Pence Rinse nen ay be added D First, signature of the Root protocol by Abyssinia, Al- ia j Dinner—Roast mutton, mashed | {2 Place of or in addition to the cel- ~TaLkiie PietuRE i RA _ pumpkin, string beans, head lettuce, | FY one a beg me gach spin of the court who have not already signed it; second, : == PpRopuceRS ——) pineapple ai Sith eens pai to cna Rie ents ratification by the United States of all three protocols a <> — Breakfi Fr meen A wattle, Abert being mushy. LSet around = if * | roast partially cover er roast Py fo THE MARKET : MARKET HERE au Lunch—Baked potato, spinach. Question: H. M. P. asks: “Will you Please give me the symptoms and treatment for the disease known a: tularemia caused from the bite of a rabbit?” ¥ » the Z . (RES. U.S. PAT. OFF. = meeting the senate’s reservations to the statute, and : quate we Wir ‘Thursday Breakfast—Cottage cheese, baked apple, Melba toast. — Lunch—Stewed corn, parsnips, 1 be revised to read, “By thy campus | some congressman is going to the| Salad of raw spinach. Both of the protocols were drawn up last April by the jurists’ committee of which Mr. Root was a member and the United States senate. So. Mr. Vare was rejected 85 / adopted by the conference of court members on Sep- B ARBS gently flowing. Llinois, Illinois.” bottom of this matter and find out|, Dinner—Broiled lamb chops, string} “answer: The disease known as t! a tainted senator-clect. | tember 14. eee eutaka whee er where the Philippines are. ond salad of stuffed celery, apple | isremia usually comes through ah in - : ey . * i . Pp. As he flew out by the door, all the c! lesitioat Some amendments in the last-named protocol were Tight shoes for women are sald to’ club hostess, advises the ladies to let whit inie cutee en ‘cases Friday freee ih the hands which comes that figured in his rejection wa: y tossed out | designed to facilitate American entry. be unfashionable this winter. Some | husbands do whatever they want to|tesking suitcase for congressmen. Breaktast—Poached egg, retoasted| being cleaned’ tris sheen ene the window, it would seem, for the senate now has ac-| The United States is the fifty-fourth state to sign the | other discomfort will be found to take | do. Of course she means their own * * i Shredded Wheat Biscuit. tines broom but iM reWein niente , sually cepted in his place Joseph R. Grundy, tie woolen mit] man from Bristol who helped to raise the more than million dollars which were used against Vare in the | protocol and the forty-ninth to sign the amendment primary but failed to defeat his $785,000. Think of the brazen cynicism of it! If you spend $785,000 in a Pennsylvania campaign for the senate, you are a crook, but if you spend more than $1,000,000 you are 2 saint and entitled to sit in the sanhedrim of Heflin | compulsory jurisdiction of The Hague in all legal dis- nd Borah, of Bingham and Brookhart, of the Robin-/| putes, which all the other great powers save Japan al- sons and Shipstead, of Whecicr and Wes Jones and the other pundits of the higher scnatorial righteousness | and which has been ratified by 19 of them, including onc and political fundamentalisin. ‘The Grundy-Melion faction in Pennsylvania Republican politics backed George Wharton Pepper, at the time ineumbent of the Pennsylvania d lost the primary contest for the senate to Va for gov , Joha A. as was Vare in his senai | idaic | civilized state of society the wisdom and justice of the * original statute—there was hardly room left on it for Mr.| their place, however. husbands. ‘The queen bee has 5000 eyes. Al-|, Lunch—Cooked carrots and peas, se 8 ees most as many as the lady who keeps | turnip cup salad. weakness. Twenty-one students were expelled| The measure that would give the | track of hee i spigtibortoocd bl odin Dinner—Baked white fish, cooked! win be effected through a rigid ¢ on liquor charges by the University | Philippines independence comes up spinach, beets, salad of sliced toma- protocol. The latter already has been ratified by one| of Illinois. Maybe that song should | azain in congress. One of these days | (Copyright, 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) | tocs, Jello or Jell-well, no cream. Pinel seaueaiuatonar treatmen: state, Belgtum. REE anise eit — given in this - The only document relating to the court which the United States did not sign was the optional clause for recovers after months of extremc | Moffatt's signature. It is the fifty-first to sign the Root A more speedy recov T. Y. writes: “Kindly 2D state what fruits and vegetables to avoid if one is inclined to gas on the , stomach.” Answer: Those who are inclined to flatulence should avoid using the ready have signed, as well as more than 30 other states. acid fruits with meals, and should great ver, Germany. pow ny not use onions, garlic, cabbage or - navy and Umited of the Enforcing Law ©.1929 by NEA Service, Inc. aareny foods very of the 1 b y THIS HAS HAPPENED (Increasing Height) All Jaw ought to be self-enforcing. In any really | " : Seer ie yee EMMA NUGANTH, aleer, keep money im her rocm opinion, would a height-increasing er was elected | jaws would be universally recognized and crime would of mus. pcan ig “si ES: beardiag house. g Fe 5 injurious to @ person 19 Governor Fisher | be unthinkable. This ideal and unattainable state of af- agled toseath. BONNIE ‘Dune 2: ‘ years oki? I understand that the ob- .5 pppoints Mr. Grundy to the scat from which Senator- | airs would be possible only through complete enlighten- c; senaen ee ha ; Se 7 Ject of hee course is to eeoiey vias elect Vare is barred. From the winner it is taken, to the | ment of the people on one hand and of their representa- loser it is given. All ever the country there arises a cry against the sham of it all. Senator Nye. of North Dakota. who sought like St. George to slay the dragon of Pennsylvania po- | violation, exactly represents the degree to which socicty lities, finds that he wore out his sword on a stuffcd | falls short of a truly civilized standard of thinking and monsier and when the real repiile comes along he 4s/ collective behavior. Largely for this reason the persis- Cisarmed and impotent. He stands alone in battling what | tent talk of prohibition enforcement by more and more in *hich he was proud to goos2step wien ihe admission: | q of Vare was before the senate has deser.ed him with a stampede. if The senate has staged a sham battle of honor i c * the disposal of the Pennsylvania senatorial clection. It 1 was three years in coming to the p: in doing it. sense of rectitude would not allow ii to precipitate earlier the action it took the other day. But having swallowed st nate ‘The new tenets of decency are adjustable because they are clastic. The governor's appointee, Grundy, the ‘man who said such western states as Norih Dakota, Mon- tana and Wyoming should not have the same representa- tion in the senate as Pennsylvania and the more popul industrial states like Rhode Island and Delaware * given the glad hand and robed in thai spotless raiment of statesmanship, a United Statcs senatorial toga. God save the commonwealth! aq ; 3 Reviving Gems of the Stage ‘The East is having an interesting theatrical revival appearance here of “After Dark” under the promoticn of William A. Brady. “After Dark” was one of the teeming melodramas which made their eppearance in the early 80's 2nd ran through the 90's, largely as 10, 20, and 30's, eventually +o be succeeded as the vogue by a high class of musical comedies and by modern cultured icgitimate drama. In the earlier period there were only Shakespearean plays for the intellectual playgoer and melodrama for th2 popular taste, with comic operas, as the Gilbert and Sullivan cycle and the old Charley Hoyt masterpieres, a “Trip to Chinatown,” “A Texas Steer” and others, for ‘ot the comic operas. ‘Then came the era of the musical comedy and the vogue of William Gillette in “Sherlock Holmes,” of dames K. Hackett. of “The Wizard of Oz" and Mont- gomery and Stone. of Raymond Hitchcock, of Otis Skin- ner, Mrs. Campbell, “The Heart cf Maryland,” Ellen the legitimate and tie musical comedy. S.ill later came the Victor Herbert cycle of light opera ; @ gnat it now presents the amazing spectacle of swale | lowing a camel. No straining in the senate from now on. | do it. of which the West. got a taste in the recent screaming) Terry, Minnie Maddern Fiske, to mention just a few} as memory recalls them at random out of the realm of fi meanwhile robbing Pennsylvania of its constitutional | time was well on his way to coloring a new Christmas representation in the upper house. Its slowly oozing | meerschaum? | | i i | | \ the average theater fans. Lillian Russell was the queen . vi | both failed at a point where human society must policy for $2000 was taken out by tives on the other. 5 Arango a ‘ z Pectally the spinal column, which The fact remains that the degree to which violence bey iy yey oe aS Answer: If this treatment is given appears, either in the enforcement of taw or in its eer mt RAR : ; { carefully it is of great value not only pon parts ‘ wran te the a from the stimulation to the spina! 7 a . Other _nearders enter suspicion (Copyright, 1929, by The Bell Synci- are: HENRY DOWD, MR. and | oi MAS OU ARE, NORMA PAraR cate, Inc.) tH | Our Yesterdays | rhe ts hearé ia room aatil 03:18. Psychologists claim to be able to tell what children fries gay ad aa ang DAIRY SREPHERD. Possess exceptional ability, but then parents have always FORTY YEARS AGO ) been able to do that. e C. A. Ullem leaves this week for { ‘ Kansas City to spend the winter. What's become of the old-fashioned man who by this Senator A New York preacher looks to youth to produce the superman and youth will readily admit its ability to Winter tezcies us one thing. Sidewalks may be casy on the fect, but they are hard on the head. It's casy to meet expenses; the trouble is dodging them. “Listen, Holloway: Have you anything new on that Sally Graves murder? ... Well, I've got Editorial Comment SNE AIRE: 2 Grifin—a very bad pensy!” fortunate enough to have caught Talent Not Enough lining of this trunk 11d 1s loose.” ie on that en ane. oS ~ (Des Moines Register) and he tugged at the stif, cretonne |as he scanned the precious mar after an exchange of cordial covered pasteboard. “A good hiding | riage certificate. “By George! Sally | greetings, O'Brien rumbled into the lace for documents—and here they | Graves, or Griffin, was murdered on rt . ay are!” ‘ her seventh wedding anniversary!” oe geen “If that’s the great hidden! “Another aice little coincidence?” | Sally Graves murder? . . . Well, Dundee taunted bis chief good-| I've got some news for you.” bumorediy, “Listen, Strawn! {'m! with an astonishing economy of Bot leaping to conclusions nearly 80 | words O'Brien informed the New Tildly_ a2 you think 1! am, Sally | York detective of all that had been afraid.” Dundes ugreed solemoly | and all her papers were burned by | warned trom the documents biden “The life insurance policy referred | her murderer! Can't you agree with ‘ to tm the diary. {8 spite of Mrs.jme that, ip all likelihood, there at Bi Hogarth’s prophecy. she did out-|were letters among them those than that Pag igo iced live her ushter, though she never | papers from ber mother, Emma Ho Oscar Wilde wit atways te 4 ba pigs Be aw faite: dante ais Garth — letters which carried the . crackling green-end-white docu Houser” ee ‘Wright. ment. “You were right, boy. This) Tne natural supposition would and FRG Sally Graves was real he rh isl i aii that they not fai Sarah Harkness Griffis, ‘also kno be that he killed ber when she re | «Guess 1 Hollo al SS as Sally Graves, uged 27 years, ‘ung | fused to take him back as her bus | right, inte naltoney 2 iets De Gustibus ts made payable to ‘Mre. Kmme | >and. If it were not for the fact that | the made (Baltimore Sun) rkness, also koown as Mrs America is a land famous for the conveniences it has | assembled in order to make life worth living. Foreigners never fail to be amazed at our success. M. Andre Sieg- ried, » Fecently spoke of our “creature com- 5 A 3& gis 83 H 4 i tt i + * a tall Hilt ; i [ i § s 3 od I é Qa : E i : for instance, forts.” If there F 3 z / E ier if lil i Hl i Ee il il Hl SE e H i | i fil f iy pl | i ; 2 Et if att ii hy : na ull i i He fl Hp 4 if H i i 5 E é ‘| a | 5 z fu i i | bd f § zi H ea? i I 4. Fl § §gF 32 te i H 3 e i aif i ff Continued)