The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 18, 1929, Page 4

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he Bismarck T ribune, Christmas: Once-a-Yezr Brotherline: ha Cabibeaient Hewpanes The Christmas season is a funny time of year, whe: THE STATES OLDEST NEWSPAPER Peseta A Bier shen ‘Established 1873) | Yor a briel two or three weeks we sem to step out ar ordinary characters. We take op a generasity 20! Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company Bie- a thouzhtfuluess that we don't exhibit very muen :+/ wasck. N. D. and en at tbe postoffice at Biemarce i r prople’s poverty and ) ¥ Ee use. sre ciiss.+ Bredent ine Publusts ee Se eile he land people are joining hai a: 19 the homes of the unfortunate. ‘ and clothing are being got toretne tand to be cold and hungry this t: cheon clubs, charitable organizations ups are collecting toys. boxes of candy and Jaren who are looking forward to a barren ho! will be turkey ¢inners for folks who hi had & good, square meal for wecks. 1 in all, people are really going to a good Cee: v1) ble to see that those who are less lucky. less wel | nis world’s goods get an even break on) Subscription Kates Payable tn Advance lvaily by carrier. per year ....... .- ly by mail, per year (in Bismarck) . y by mail. per year Bismarck) t e, years fur veekly by mail gute’ of North Dezow Pre bet veer gisksers SOOT Member Audit Gureae of Ciresiation Member of The Associated Press The Aswciited Press tx exc tion of all news ed encouraging. No one can lovk on thi: Gen flare-up of generosity and kinc-| of millions of people—without getting # n nature. range rece, at that. For we tend to con- ity and our thoughtfulness to this one epectacie—this 51 f (Official City, State and Coenty Newspaper) iM 3. Atte aeedemaad bictesetinc » lime we get so that we're botherec e are people in our town who much as we have. It makes apps m; so unhappy thet we get busy and co, about i. wine to think abou ristmes lime can ff! lification Becomes Respectah: ig a beautiful thing. But + ‘O weeks out of the w amount w quite as m only carry over, into every-¢: and consideration that we dispia 28, we Could make this into a pre’ The job of building the city of God, right ked up to be. It would be dead easy if we'd start in © And where is that right place? Right in our own hearts, of course. our daily life the anxiety about your fellow welfare that you display on Christmas, and youll have done your part. Es ell there is to it. Simple, ism't it? Onc of these n't we be able to do it? a congress of India adopts an indepence lifting much of it verbatim from the Ameri “ can Declaration of Independence. Thos: India: had er be careful; we signed the thing 153 years ago! and now jook at us. log civil wer ‘The na Daflict Neeale tHe nal. eag the old threat of respecting sume laxs and ignoring ‘The “first robin” story is already at hand—from Ohio i only trouble is that it’s impossible to figere her this particular bird is getting theze ahead of st getting away late. in this country @ crown It ts expressed in i. pa it ds pr ed in others on @ ‘cu ‘phasis to the abuse wrong hes become b. t cities and b: tis needed now to make the British situation for some hard-boiled old Tory landowner to issue a statement bleming England’s recent s¢ and floods on the radical Labor government. Mats stage of law violati tive body the legal compact fixing the led tas unk wen violated | Editoria] Comment | ust been flouted, ha { was what happenca when the Uniiec Be senate tairned down the ce A Loaf of Bread (New York Evening Pozi) ee oF Fenny) the greatest wheat country of the world, eee te pol Consumption of bread is half a loaf a ¢ om fee she nd and France is a whole loaf. If and when | might repre: million-Gollar advertising campaign shortly to | ‘BM ibe land. rated by organized American bazers puts the 4 he uid be no vs per capita use of bread on a par with that of eee could be no val Enzland and France, one at Jeast, of the major econom: i i this was done w Provlem: of the Americen vheat belt will be solved. | 4 the senatoria! campaign was offered as the hith mo- Conceivably. congress could break the bacz of the farm | the senate then an appointee of a bloc, if ego gis thought Fade given to edlgiead Mighs ‘ ang means of increasin ree: prion insteed of ; { under an expenditure even gre gutta woh tebiaed prt shay te Pp: Writ aomenia | ee eee = that governor's mlection for bread consumption doubled, the bugbear of foreign com- | as with cynical valiousnss given the stolen roods. petition with our surplus wheat would paspiead Fest, “gy Senator Nye caw this, but his colleagues, for the time, thin air. Florists through compztent publicity have “Asore of a mob in spirit. than the deliberative body the Talsed their industry to affluence. G0 have the candy | ker:. Why not the bakers? ; SPnate vaunts itself to be, had become exh: — . fase D p{De-drawn-out false righteousness and were weary t/ ‘The Senate’s Challenge to the States ped the strain by a short cut. That short cut was to (New York Eve Post) | Gecept the certificate of appointment with which Joseph gyjtnerto the senate has paleo itself with refusing ; “6 Grundy cam: from Governor Fisher to claim the seat admittance to a senator-elect whose nomination or elec- | ‘We people of Pennsylvania had voted Vare. He was a ticn Wrscnbeyired teinted perl pa on meres | . would doubtless have spurned wit! ignat: e sug | ity pets. he was a ne se aa goa pai ans gestion that some day they would go so far as to attempt | jutely nothing to recommend him to the seat he amity par a person from the sacred chamber in advance of claim. Even the senate which accepted him had appointment or election. But thit ts exactly what | -“S>ndemned him by pillorying him as a lobbyist and had Senator cueaey. on. goes = materited Lggrians | so with every indication of intended contumely, his commiltce on ying activit joseph R. : Grundy of Pennsylvania, the senator from Arkansas | pitt 20rt of legality bolstered up this bit of procedure? | cays that if Mr. Grundy is named for the seat left vacant | 4 constitutional prerogative of a governor by appoint-'by the rejection of Mr. Vare the appointment will be! ? to fill a vacancy expressed in section 2, article 17,| made “by the people who bought and paid for the office ; ‘amendment to the federal constitution proclaimed | the governor of Pennsylvania now occupies. a 4 31, 1913. | Such a statement can have only one meaning. It is: How did this vacancy occur? It didn't occur, it was 2, Satan Cus enaaienion Sucre ie see Tees jeated by @ fiction of righteousness presuming to over- formal notice upon Pennsylvania that if it sends Grundy | _. de the lawful procedure for filling a senate seat. The ' to the senate his name will be held up, for a time at least. q said a citizen presenting himself for admission] On whct grounds would this unprecedented action be h a record of having spent much money in his cam-| ‘taken? On two, apparently—that Grundy is not suf- n was not fit to sit in it, but it tly gave the | ficiently Bublic-spirited to deserve admittance to the ‘ promptly Gave t* | noble-minded band already occupying seats in the cenats to this attitude when it accepted Grundy, the great- | and that he was appointed by ‘whose office | fat frier since Mark Hanna. ‘had been “bought ani paid for.” Feason, then, being beiied and dissipated by its; people of the various states t setion, there could “have been but one test | “€Y may choose as governor, which to act when the Vare certificate of election | Presented. That test, in the same amendment to the | hey turned down the greater spenders of that senate exalied these. hen that provision of the constitution for election the poopie was ignored, what was the action of the te in essence but that same perversity so freely in- hed against when « police regulation is violated, is time applied to the very fundamental law of a? Sf that was not nullification, there is no nullification. 5 i = 5 eo & i ze apie eet at me E, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1929 |OUR BOARDING HOUSE By Ahern|| SS! AH ~Now I Know WHO You ARE!~ IT Jes CAME TO ME wet a" BUCK-TeoTHd LEW, “TA” LYK OF “TH” Loop” NouR WIFE, { "CHARGE ACCOUNT ANNE “! [were WHEN J TA” SHERIFF'S OFFICE FREEZE , You Bio HUNK CF SHARK- BAIT! ~. ~~ Go PACK UP, ANE. I KeEeP THis WAFFLE ON TH’ 1RON PAS ~~ YEH. NouR FACE Now ~~ ~—~ You WERE A DEPUTY SHERIFF For COOK COUNTY aA’ HELPED KNOCK US ONS TH” MONALLY JoR ~~ WE Dip A TAO YEAR STRETcH AT DOuET For 1F You HEAR wi NANNY COMING , LEW, CHILL Him wrth THe BUTT END OF THE GAT AND SAy HE ~~ Tit PACK iy A HURRY? + muH- UME = (> bi i jority of cases cured by proper dieting, the necessity of the operation. QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS | Question: Mrs. B. E. 8. asks: “What laa weEE ti Hrsrobties dermatitus ibe A ent? Is it Answer: The fundamental cause of seborrhea Preniety tied is the same as E 82. jalways show a toxic condition due to |® definite intestinal poisoning ln: Dally from slugeishness of the colon. must be done to cure con- Ah psenal will see a rapid is trouble-stained earth, isn't half as hard as its | ~ rapid response will be f olive of] and frutt juice method. g @ one case where it wasn't cheaper than to kill time.—Rev. Joseph R. Sis00 i i “A man is said to be getting oléer i145 nich when be thinks the girls are getting _ prettier and the climate is changing.” —Wilam Feather. “My only regret is that the final installment of the story won't come! cut unt I'm gone."—Rollin Derisson, © on the gallows. ‘An educated scoundrel is a double ce."—Milton Fairchild of the Character Education Association. A remarkable group of petrified Theo- trees, some of them 12 feet in diame ter, exists in California. and another in Yellowstone Park. in which the plain trees are still erect, though converted , | American reads books for culture er | into stone. I g Service, Inc. "s @ chance that that el is worth $48, the amount) Rhod It he'd paid) leave as much as J hated to havi job and less her go—bung around in the kitchen |no one could think her dearer, morning, first crying and then |sweeter, prettier . . ughing at herself for a big baby, but—you'd bave died Jaushing at the sight—muoching at something | Advocates of ea: us to be on our well—everybody elie is on ‘em. 1929, NEA Service, Inc.) Quotations “I have found that ‘spend 24 years in baseball and the: forget it."—Ty Cobo. shopping advise i t fur neckpiece siyle has 4 rouge compect in t can swallow it as far as we're concerned. In Pennsylvania's compulsory in- to require repairs be a bad idea to inspect the Grivers. It's fine for little folks to go sled- Ging now. if they con't trr to coast through life when they grow up. take the plece of character building."—Gor ; ex, dore Roosevelt of Porto Rico. Plaining the cause and cure of .; ema, and in the meantim is i] @ follow the i each week in this 500,009 Americans That's ebroad statement. ©.1929 by NEA THIS HAS HAPPENED i to come back to Mother: 4S. EAM. ROGARTH, anid 10 jously from girls. Dundee glanced to at them enviously. So msny people knew her better tten he did. but more attention to bi to that siliy invention of his. he; could heve kept bis job and paid bis board bill—’ GHTING with the felt at the thougbt of rummag- ing among her intimate belongings, the young detecti the Gresser. in neat little silver Dundee inquired. “Ob, some silly gadget to be ap-j nearly oll the time. plied to a eewing machine.” Mrs.{such a girl for eating in all my Why, when I came baci Reodes answered 17. “I never | born da: did get the straight of it. but he down used my machine to try it out on. | C Well, bave you found anything to get all bet u ° UNDEE flushed and laughed. “Nothing much.” when she confesses murder one of Norma and Wal {& tphee bon ter sitting very close together in the lawn swing: Cora and Norma it's another rel other of Bert, the sie! @ group of small ren. with Norms a laughi: nucleus for the charmi aoe For a moment Bosale Dundes tempted to commit @ small burglary jon bis own, but ha UT whoever it was and whatever further confidence in regard to | child happened to Daisy's greediness bed been inter- ;Tupted, Dundee did not wait to fin “Norma took bim, though tt's/ out. Very slowly, more out of a sense of duty thas /he ascended th to Norma Paige “There are so mary possil les to this fendish case that I’ dippy it I don't Sind @ solutio: soon,” the young detective told bim- self disgustedly. ry thoughtfully, stairs op bis way anything clee. bose that’s all si "il get out of being | heiress, and she afraid of the bird.” ied “Im rather fond of Cap'n my- {self." Dundee smiled. “Belicve I'll run up and take a look at him.” Sighing, be forced himself te go op with his ugly duty, which be performed as thoroughly as if bis heart were in ne way involved. But io dresser drawers, book case and clothes closet be found nothing to cast the slightest shadow of suspi- elon upon the girl be believed in so a!” Dundee went to fearlessly reached in | th f geting AP to stroke the green-and-yellow head. Those sound like banker's 0 “Y quick work of it, for N wencomers in the W Dowd and Magnes. Sones j “Im thinking of turning this pesky case over to you, old sport. How after bis unchivalrous visit when ped ogi light, swift steps upos the room. ON WITH THE STORY CHAPTER XXIX sy THINK I've found the culprit | who ha» been blowing out your, fuses, Mother Rhodes!” i Mrs. Rhodes looked up from the though personally 1 don't hold with check she was writing. Her bisck'a husband and wii “She's not working now. She's The parrot turned gravely on bis going to business college, to learn perch and cocked a bright ¢ye at Denny!” he croaker. proud of ion te bis extensive vo “Right you are!” Dundes laughed. “Between us, we'll avenge your dead mistress yet. Cap'n. for reminding me.” “Ob, hello, Mr, Dundee!” Norma Paige greeted him with @ cordial owile. She was swinging ber brimmed leghora ‘bat, | keeper. { reckon 8! | work in Walter Styles’ shop by fall, E t i i ‘much of each other. Dundee hoped for more crumbs information about the girl whose the power to make bis beart beat faster, but Sirs. ots abruptly changed the sub- % “Theo I'll give you @ recommendation as a detective.” | of she promised grimly. you find?—a fan with a D. C. eu rent? We have A. C. bere—" “Bert Magnus bas enough elec- | is room to blow out Dundee laughed. “I never suspected be was mechan- fealiy inclined.” “He's aot, and I'll have to take back that promise to give you recommendation.” Mrs. Rhodes re- torted. “That bos of junk was left bebind by @ boarder who sueaked out in the night with not! but @ suitcase, leaving me to the three weeks’ board be owed me. 1 rented his room the very next day to Bert Magnus. before that worth- lees hushang of mine bad sot around to storing the box fp the basement.” it. Dundee grinned. “And Dusty still king the 3 Ey i “ 9 Z & Hl bi Paige’ the parrot's words seemed like a good omen. The room, unlike Henry Dowd’s, was redolent of its owner's “I'm going to depend on you, Mr. Dundee, to help make things leasant as possible for poor Cora. | personality. ‘m giving you credit for enough | white voile, eeuse to know she didn’t have a|daffodils, fluttered at the doubdle ‘thing to do with murdering aad| windows, and the same waterial— robbing Mrs. Hogarth.” maculate, “Thanks,” Dundee grinned. “Of| bedspread and course I agree with you, and I'll do| Dundee bad that the “You don't have to fas a to make Bert jealous.” ‘irs. Rhodes = sauna’ s pote groy with one of ber grim | daintiness. ruffled—was used for z i fl Hy i iF 3 i ile tl HE = i i ‘ii fi ites x # cold day in August when Dosty to do anything tha that much like work. If the i if if S3¢ 2g H hought I'd just leave it ther the 30 eye are up. The hold @ boarder's trunk for 30 days before selling it to sat-| came out fi paid board bill. Not that | began to ery on my sheulder, ¢ it iis ti £ £ 8 z ad H

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