The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 4, 1930, Page 4

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The Bismarck Tribune|mwets Sith “tts atte ws Andepe lewspeper THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1673) describe the marvels of the Yellowstone or Dakota's Black Hills and Bad Lands, Nor is that all. The city man is finding himself able —— Published by the Bismarck Tribune Company, Bis-|to leave his cramped quarters close to the factory and f@arck, N. D. and entered at the postoffice at Bismarck | ting 9 place far out in the suburbs, where his children Daily by mail. outside of North Dakota can have fresh air and trees and green grass. The joys of the open country are his, now. He ts not tied to the immediate neighborhood of his job any longer. Small wonder, then, that we make big events out of our auto shows! We ought to. The automobile belongs on our national coat of arms. It has started us on a new (heed exciting pathway. BRUARY 4, 1930 Time for ‘Disarmament’ Here, Too! : : a | toe ae at out, Lory a tomato shell. Mix the cel- POA arto Weekly by mail, in state, per year ....... 3.06 Weekly by mail. in state, three years for ... Weekly by mail outs' Member Audit Bareao of Circalation — eS | Of the far West. + 230 Filipinos Give Trouble of North Dako.s, California is having her trouble with the Filipinos and prefers the dusky Mexican to the yellow Mongolian ‘That state is resenting immigration Member of The Associated Press from the Philippines. Filipino leadership on the Pacific ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the Use| -oast nas not been conducive to peace in the labor circles for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this newspaper and visc the of the Sunny State. fe eat 3 to pulp and fill local news of spontaneous origin pub'tahed herein All! gouthern California is almost solely dependant upon rights of republication of al) other matter hereis are the Japanese, Mexican, Filipino and Chinese labor. of on lettuce leaves. also reserved, these four, the offlcials and press of California prefer (Official City, State and County Newspaper) the Mexican and are fighting vigorously the efforts of organized labor to clap down the lid upon unlimited Foreign Representatives Mexican immigration during the seasons when such labor SMALL, SPENCER & LEVINGS (Incorporated) is urgently needed. CHICAGO Formerly G. Logan Payne Co. California experiences little trouble from the Mexi- NEW YORE BOSTON cans, They keep to themselves, do not seck social equal- ———— ity with the whites and, usually, after they have earned Exit Taft, Reenter Hughes their stake, return to Mexico, often to introduce better The resignation of William H. Taft from the post of | standards of living there and improved methods of agri- chief justice of the federal supreme court and the prompt culture learned while sojourning in the various states appointment of Charles Evans Hughes to the vacancy |of the Colorado river basin. thus created constitute twin political sensations of the/ ‘The Filipinos, on the other hand, are not tractable. firs) magnitude today. They foster propaganda for independence and, as Ameri- In their personality and in their connection with thejcan subjects, insist upon many privileges which are government since shortly after the Spanish-American | genied the Jap, the Mexican or the Chinese. war, these two men have constantly loomed large in the!” sosistance of the Filipino to associate with white girls affairs of the nation. If Taft had a term in the Lebel! and their use as entertainers in many public dance halls @ency while Hughes missed that eidcd by the defection to which the Filipinos are admitted has caused many of California in 1916, the New Yorker's prestige as one of race clashes in various sections of California. the biggest men of the tountry nevertheless held firm ‘The Filipino engaged in California industrial life is ‘and brought him great opportunities later for further not as dependable as either the Jap, the Mexican or important public service. the Chinese. QUESTIONS AND AN! (Protruding Navel] Question: Mrs. H. P. you could tell me if any: thing can be done about a child's carefully washed pes: . Vegetable soup: chopped celery, % cup diced carrots, % cup on the protruding navel. will usually correct the trouble McA. asks: “What the Jay Treaty with Great Britain, began to attack our shipping and, by indicated that it was pointing for a war. n, “Millions for defense and not one cent for tribute.” An army was quickly raised and & few warships built. One of these was the Contellation. After its victory in| pe the Caribbean, the Constellation, un- Today Is the Anniversary of eee eee ee CONSTELLATION’S VICTORY like a puff ball the ankle bone, also in the at the knuckles, and under the would cause a swelling Adams sent a commission to Paris to It is Interesting to recall that a it git bl hataty: Those who understand the Pacific southland, realize dency, Hughes was heir to a political legacy growing Out) 11,4 restricted immigration from Mexico is going to stir of Taft's attempt to succeed himself in the White house, which brought on the rump candidacy of Roosevelt and Johnson on the Bull Moose ticket. It was the defection A puffiness of the joints indicates the start of heumatic trouble, especially where extends from the ankles der Captain Thomas Truxton, de- feated and captured the frigate La After these blows, the On Feb. 4, 1797, the 38-gun frigate | arrange matters peacefully, the gov- Constellation captured~ the powerful |ernment refused to receive them. The commissions, on the other hand, were | Vengeance. approached with the proposition that |French government signified its wish if they gave money to certain mem- in that it avoided an almost inevit- | bers of the French government, all up a lot of trouble and work a hardship upon the agri- cultural states of the Southwest. To establish quotas for Mexico would result in serious economic difficulties, as French frigate L'Insurgente in the Caribbean Sea. This event is important in history & of the Johnson wing of the Republican party in Cali- well as stir up more hatred in Mexico toward the north- fornia that cost the former New York governor the su- preme honor of public place in the United States. Now by the whirligig of Taft's retirement he is raised! ern neighbor. fe The U. S. bureau of standards esti- mates that the earth weighs six sex- able war between France and the United States. France, enraged be- cause the United States had made would be well. ‘This news, made public in Congress, gave rise to the popular war cry, jtillion (6,000,000, 4 large tomatoes, 1 finely chopped celery, %4 cup ,000,000,000,000) tons. | carrots, and oil dressing. g i In any event, some regulation of the Filipino invasion of the Southwest is bound to come. A serious impasse i to the highest judicial honor in the government. lias been reached along the Pacific coast because of the Hughes, in fact, has had many exits and entrances 11 | easing i i numbers of Filipinos coming to our shores the political drama of the United States in the last 30] 9 are decidedly not assimilative. years. you to give me a diet to Once before Charles Evans Hughes sat on the federal Los Angeles is attempting to establish the lowest death supreme bench, but @s an associate justice. It was the | rate in America. Of course deaths by automobile, which summons to lead his party in the 1916 campaign for the is as bad as by epidemic, are excluded in the grand totals presidency that ge him away from that congenial ‘American cities will have to figure the deaths by acci- Tabor. When he lost because the star of Woodrow Wil-| dents soon in establishing health ratios. It might de- gon was still ascendant, he found plenty of demand for| ...4.6 auto accidents if civic pride is pricked a little. his services to keep him in the public eye during the) qney have such a bump of it in Los Angeles that includ- years when the country was participant in the World ve ing accidents in the death rate might be one way to Then when peace came and the Wilson policies to tie| secrease the terrible toll of California highways. America up with the affairs of Europe caused the coun- © 1930 AY NEA Service Inc. . BEGIN HERE TODAY JUDITH CAMERON, typist ta ‘orks pul fries ARTHUR KNIGHT, he Gepartment tn AAINCe. AURA LOU BROOKMAN IN ub 2 try to turn to Warren G. Harding as its pilot in steering] with a “wet front” at ‘Washington and a “disarma- , aad @ Con, JUNIOR, ee course of the paccenigh through the ee ae ment front” at London, President Hoover must com- waters of the after-war period, it is a tribute to the| ong all the skill he acquired during the World war. statesmanship of Justice Hughes that he was asked tO} +5, wilt need it before either issue is even half settled. assume the difficult post of secretary of state in the Ohioan's cabinet. He was the man above all others Al Smith got the key to Miami, Fla., the other day. thought to have the necessary caliber for the administra-| 4. that city is the wet capital of the nation, the present- tion of tne nation’s delicate international affairs. As secretary of state, Hughes evolved the plan of the first naval limitation conference, the five-power Wash- idea amazed the world. It is @ striking coincidence ington arms parley. ‘There was no parallel to it. that now when the London naval conference is on, he ation was not without significance. is again recalled to a great public position, This con- A Feller Finds a Friend ference is in a way a sequel to the Washington conference (Milwaukee Journal) which failed to cover the Hughes arms proposals fully.| «pon’t dress a child differently from the youngsters he ‘The central feature of his plan was adopted, the 5-5-3] plays with,” advises Miss Gladys Meloche of the uni- ratio. Hughes was presiding officer of the Washington| versity. “Children are essentially democratic and if a conference and it was largely through his guidance that | boy is dressed better than his playmates, he'll be as self- conscious as though he were dressed worse.” Good as much as was adopted was put through by this coun-| sound stuff, as all men will testify. And we're glad little Reginald and Algernon are finding friends. We try. ‘William H. Taft owes his place in history to that | rather thought the cartoonists, the lamented former North Dakotan, Theodore Roosevelt. It was their Briggs. Webster and the others who picture boyhood 80 truly, had with their pencil that so often is mightier Fauntleroy friendship that caused Roosevelt to take the Ohioan into! than words put an end to the Little Lord his cabinet as secretary of war in 1904. Previously Taft] stuff. hhad taken a prominent part in the handling of the prob-| But it there are mothers who think it’s nice to send Jems that arose out of the accession of the Philippines fn the Sapnish-American war. their little boys out dressed like “little gentlemen,” that Phrase that Booth Tarkington's Penrod so detested, we're His activities in the) giag the feller has found another friend in Miss Meleche. Roosevelt administration led up to his nomination for| And won't someone protest in like sane fashion against the presidency in succession to Roosevelt. Then came that earliest overdressing a boy gets—when he’ 2 the great feud that separated these two men, with|¢d high sounding names that the “regular tellers” will use for the torment that only @ boy's soul can devise Roosevelt opposing his former friend when he sought 2] or gee] the sting of? second term, to lose to Woodrow Wilson in the three- cornered fight between the Democratic, the Republican Our Greatest Asset ‘and Bull Moose party. The resignation that removes the (Forbes Magazine) @Ohioan from the supreme justiceship and places Hughes} What would you call America’s most there thus is linked up with the most momentous po- litical history of the last 30 years. The Auto Makes Its Annual Bow Again Bismarck and Mandan are not to have any auto show this year, but all over the country other cities and towns @re displaying the annual change in styles and improve- ments of this reviser of so many of the conditions of life as to constitute it a remaker of civilization itself. ‘We haven't yet quite got used to our automobiles. The annual shows still thrill us. This, after all, is as it should be; the automobile has turned our whole civilization @round, and it is no more than right that we should continue to make a big fuss over it. The automobile began life, some three decades ago, as @ toy. Then it became a luxury for the well-to-do man. ) erieee And then, in no time at all, it became every man’s nec- care essity—and the end is not yet. This last stage has come within the last 20 years. It has worked an incredible change on us in that time, and it is still working. Probably it will be another 20 years before the ultimate effects of the automobile are fully apparent. Twenty years ago America was famous as a country of from the main currents of life as effectively as if it ‘were enclosed behind the Chinese wall. Among ordinary ttce ‘she telle Jueith must leave the house. Knight, ring, forces Tony to apele- ‘Tennessee thief stole a feather Maybe the police should try to ‘The girl much of her time with MICKEY MORTIMER, wt amusement-seeker whom she met in Paris. Janler arrives home for the holidays and treats Judith with cold, aleot Christmas proves day with beth children 2 heme and Knight's eager rat ted. enladlth te encom fertable bey returms te school. A lette: trom AUNT HELENE, whe It’s never @ dull season for para- » with groundhog day just the corner. Delegates to the naval conference in London were offered punch, sherry. and other NOW GO ON WITH THE STORT CHAPTER XIX UDITH KNIGHT hurried away from her encounter with Andy Craig with the uneasy knowledge that she was late and would have to make excuses. It had annoyed her to be caught like a truant) that redecorating their home would give her something to occupy the At least Judith told herself that|time. Ever since Arthur Knight's How fovl-}son had made the scene over the the girl had put “Andy doesn’t come here to see me at all father. He comes here to sce Judith.” In spite of this abuse Craig con- husband's jealousy! Do you think tinued to be found frequently at|you dare accompany me, young the Knight home. It was not at all| man?” unusual for him to drop in about eight o'clock of an evening to chat|tail wrap and a small black lace with Tony or, if she were absent,| toque which was a new acquisition. to stay for three-handed bridge| Craig rose smiling. with Arthur and Judith. was what annoyed her. Judith wore her gleaming broad- ish she must have looked! Arthur Knight, the wife of the|/change in the house's furnishings eminent publisher, scurrying own | out of her mind. @ back street in short skirt and thick jersey, carrying skates. There | money.” she said hesitantly. probably was a smudge on her nose. A pretty picture to meet one of her|all right. We want the place fixed up in first-class shape—don't we, “It may take quite a lot of “I would defy even such dangers, 4 Madam.” HEN came the night in early| The goodbys were said quickly. February when Andy broached| Judith assured her husband that the subject of the dog show. It was|she and- Andy would be home be classic event of its kind for|fore he finished the reading which year. Would Tony like to go?| he turned to almost every evening. Then she and the young man went “What on earth makes you think | into the hall and out of the house. I'd lke to see a thousand bowling hounds all cooped up in little “Well, I guess I can manage that husband's employes! a Sobered, and with the sparkling) Tony?” enthusiasm which came from exer. cise dimmed, Judith went up the|task next day. The exterlo: of the house was colonial and she admired early American furniture and fab- rics, She wanted to blend old- time ‘pieces with modern things| pei and give them an air of comfort. To achieve this required many 8 p. m., according to an announce- made today by H. E. Herman- She set eagerly to work on the “A dog show!” eye steps and into the bouse. “Yes—yes, Arthur!” She beard him coming toward the ball from his study. ~ “Why, my dear, where've you been? I looked all over the place “Dowa the street—playing with Isn't this just a Mttle—er—unconyentional?” “I know, Arthur, but I was so |B sound of the car disappear ing down the drive came to Knight and bis daughter, Tony snuggling closer and resting her head on his shoulder, “it’s awfully Bice to have an evening alone with “Oh, but they're such beauties: “I should think you'd enjoy it immensely, Tony. put in Judith. ‘The old walnut furniture which| “You can go see them then,” stood in Judith’s own room was to be stored in safe, dry quarters over the garage. The room was to be done over completely with tones of blue, ivory and raspberry predom- “Why not, Mrs. Knight?” Craig Really would you like to go?” Judith hesitated and Arthur| off with all these wild young men!” Tony raised her eyes to her That's @|father’s seriously. splendid idea, Judith, it will be| shook her head slowly. Knight answered for ber. Arthur Knight fooked down on “Of course she'll go. his young wife for @ moment,| Tony announced she was satis- people of limited means a trip of 10) miles was an event.| Covi Snumunioate Probably the majority of all native-born Americans| copy of this home in| Prench police and had never been more than that far away from ‘This discovery studying the depths of ber blue e Then he raised ber head, holding her chin in his two bands, and kissed her lips tenderly. “I don’t want you to be lonely. Judith,” be said, “We must do something about that.” Instantly she was regretful. “Oh, it was @ silly thing to do!” “L didn’t mean to be But, anyhow, I shouldn't bave gone skating on the children’s fied with her French boudoir and wanted no changes. Arthur Junior’s bedroom was to remain exactly the same. The task of doing the house over, begun in January, was not completed until early March. first invitation to Knight home was followed by another and yet an- Arthur sang the man’s praises continually and Ju- ith stated quite openly that she And there are lots and lots| enjoyed his company. Tony was the of other things for me to amuse|one who could not be counted upon. There were Saturdays Tony, in high good humor, set off in her own buff-colored roadster HEN they were at the table aj with Andy Craig beside’ her for up| hours on the golf course of Knight's the subject of redecorating thejexclusive club. There were eve nings when she remained at home, “I thought you were going to,8z| sweetly affable, listening to this place up a bit, Judith,” ne re| music and conversations between \ minded her, “Hadn't you better be| Andy, her father and Judith. There getting that job started? Why don’t| were other times when the young you go in town tomorrow and look|man telephoned or stopped at the over some truck to decide what you| house when Tony mocked him, turned her back on him, apd scoffed Judith keew be was thinking! st his ides of entertainment. good for you to spend an evening in town. Tony’ll stay with me|she insisted. “I like to have you here, won't you, Pet?” ny glanced at her father from under lowered brows. “I'd rather,” she said testily, “than hang around a dirty old dog “But it's not—like this, Father!” alone to myself!” She reached up soft fingers and touched his cheek. You know you'd rather be frisking around young folks. That makes me think, She seemed entirely to have re-| Tony. You know there's something covered from her pettish bumor,| in 1 wanted to talk to indy Craig called| you about tonight. I don't like the the following evening. Tony wel-|way you're comed Andy at the door. She was/ Andy Craig! playing the role of the dutiful] “Mistreating him? How?” daughter and playing it perfectly. Tony wore # simple yellow din-| you night after night when you go off on other engagements or make of the same shade about her hair,|fun of everything he says. adding to the demure effect. When|® Andy was ushered into the living] girl he pays attentions to can con-- room Tony returned to the divan|sider herself lucky.” where she had. been sitting with| “I didn’t want to tell you,” Tony her father and fondly placed an|said in a strained voice, “I wasn't arm about Arthur Knight's shoul- mistreating young Gracious—why I've got everything in the worla!” “Well, he comes over here to see e had bound a ribbon Kittle later Arthur brought boy, I e boy, 1 want to tell going to—but maybe you'd better know, Andy doesn’t come here to 1, father. He comes to

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