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on Wings éf t Schilling: | | THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1982 THE GUMPS— THE WORLD'S GREATEST SANTA CLAUS (a NOSE DEAR O10 GUMPS— ANDY AND MIN = AND THE HOLIDAYS COMING ON= HOW COULD OLD UNCLE BIM KEEP AWAY ~— ie Boks WHAT LUCK = WusTt AS WE WERE WONDERING WHERE THE NEXT DOLLAR WAS COMING 2 FROM: IMVAMA AND BEAUTIFUL MILUE DE STROSS = WANs COULD. DEAR OLD LOVABLE, GUALIBLE KEEP AWAY FROM THEM AFTER READING THE FROM MILE, WHICH HER MAMA DICTATED — | coffee | tors and deans of education in North Dakota have been requested to attend, a conference in Bismarck Dec. 2-3, called by Miss Bertha Palmer, state superintendent. of public instruction. The conference will aim, through a& comparison of work now offered, to set up minimum standards for physi- cal training in the high schools of Fred V. Dale Denies He Is Guilty the state. | Miss Palmer points out that at of Purchasing a Stolen present there is neither uniformity in ~ the physical education requirements Automobile ‘of the different schools of the state nor an adequate course of study. Fred v,,. Miss Palmer returned to Bismarck 'y |Monday from Ann Arbor and Lansing, | Mich., where last week she attended the annual meetings of the Associa- |tion of Governing Boards of State Universities and Allied Institutions. t two days session were at the ty of Michigan and the last sat the state college of agri- re and manual arts at Lansing. Important items brought before the eeting included the presentation of {state programs of education versus athletics and the organization of a course in religion at state universities. Always start the day right | he morning! Minot, N. D., Nov. 23.—(?)—1 Dale, 65, Minot, convicted by a jur on a charge of buying a stolen auto- mobile, was sentenced to serve an indeterminate sentence of from one to four years in the state penitentiary |, by Judge H. L. Berry of Mandan in} Ward county district court ‘Tuesday | ; forenoon. | Halvor L. Halvorson, counsel for, Dale, who asserted before the court |... he was positive his client was not guilty of the crime of which he was convicted, ordered prepared a tran- script of the testimony, and announced | he would make a motion for a new anit Awe a trial, and if it is denied, an appeal AIR SHOW DATE SET will be taken to the supreme court. Detroit—Officials of the 1933 Na- The motion for a new trial will be} tional Aircraft show, to be staged at Saas poe Bee Berry at Man-/|the Detroit City airport next year, n, on a date not yet set. sey Dale wept when sentence was im-| have set a tentative date for the Posed. He remains at liberty under |OPening of the event. March 25 is bonds, Judge Berry having stayed exe-|the day selected. The exposition is cution of sentence until the motion is} the industry's only national show, and submitted to him for a new trial. jit is expected that manufacturers from A sentence of 90 days in jail and a} all over the country will exhibit their FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS THATS FUNNY... B52 IS A WHEN “THEY'RE BUSY HERE THEY AIN'T IND DEVILTRY. ‘EM GOIN’ IN e AN! OOT. 1S FUSSY ABOUT THAT SHACK THE KIOS HANE, PETE. I'VE IT OVER TS SATISFY \ HEAR THEM TALKING. ree DROP IN ON WELL, THATS THE NUMBER. COACH ROOSE GANE ME.... COME ON, WE'LL FIND BUTCHER THE COACH OF THE GHADYSIDE Foor BALL TEAM SAID FoR ME TO COME TO THIS ADDRESS....IS HE OF A JOKE ON MES PANDEMONIA! fine of $200 and costs was imposed on Carl Gallagher, who pleaded guilty to| charge of engaging in the liquor) traffic. He will begin serving the; Sentence Dec. 26. The trial of Mattie Handy, Minot, ! charged with arson in connection with a fire in the Home hotel in Minot on) Feb. 5, 1932, was begun Tuesday fore- | noon before Judge John C. Lowe. The woman is one of three defendants in the case, the others being James Mor- Tow and C. E. “Eddie” is. Nor-| ris, now serving a fiv term in} the Atlanta federal penitentiary for | violation of the federal liquor laws, | never has been arrested on the arson} charge. { The court granted a motion for a} Separate trial of Mrs. Handy from} Morrow, whose name is listed upon} the information as a witness for the | Prosecution. State Educators to | Confer Here Dec. 2-3) City superintendents, high school Principals, physical education instruc- | wares, More than 9,000,000,000 cigarets are smoked each month in the Uni- ted States. NDORRA ts 4 5 ing in the PYRE! between FRANCE and The columa shown ts DORIC RUSSIA fought against ENQ- LAND FRANCE TURKEY and SARDINIA itn the CRIMEAN WAR AT THE MOVIES | New Holt Film ; Fast Moving} The oldest and the most thrilling | game known to man is brilliantly im-} mortalized by Jack Holt in his latest Columbia picture, “This Sporting! Age,” an invigorating story of sports: men and thoroughbreds, showing! ‘Wednesday and Thursday at the Cap. itel theatre. i Considered by its devotees the first | among the three great sporting part- nerships between man and horse—the other two being steeplechase hunt- ing and racing—polo is not only the| “sport of kings” but the best possible | training in horsemanship and lead-| ership. | ‘Holt himself, trained for years as an} expert horseman and considered one of the finest polo players in Southern California, brings to his role as a Cap- tain of Cavalry, who obtains a berth | on the United States team for the in- ternational matches, a vigor, sincerity and an adventurous spirit which makes “This Sporting Age” the great- est of more than 100 pictures he has made as a movie star. Interwoven with a fine, dramatic story of the loving friendship between John Steele and his daughter, play- | ed by Evalyn Knapp, the excitement | and exhiliration of one of the most and thrilling polo games ever at the Riviera Country Club, this Columbia picture utterly unique. Plans First i More than twice as much time is spent in the preparation of an Ernst Lubitsch picture than in actually film- | ing it. Lubitsch, whose latest production, “Trouble in Paradise,” comes to the Paramount Theater, with a cast head- ed by Miriam Hopkins, Kay Francis, Herbert Marshall, Charlie Ruggles and Edward Everett Horton, is one of the most painstaking of Hollywood directors. Though the principal charm of his pictures les in their apparent spontaneity, they're worked out far in advance, and all that ap- Pears spontaneous has been mulled over time and again until Lubitsch is sure it's absolutely perfect, according to his way of thinking. In preparation for “Trouble in Par- adise,” for example, he worked daily for three months with Samson Ra- phaelson and Grover Jones, who wrote the scenario from a play by Laszlo Aladar, Viennese playwright. Not only plot, but dialogue and the deft, whimsical touches that trade-mark a pictures as Lubitschmade, were work- ed out at this time. SAVE THE SCALES Fishermen during 1928 made a SAIL BIROS AND THE CREDITORS SWOOPED DOWN AND NABBED ALL THEIR NEW DUDS, POP REACHED DOWN INTO HIS OLD CLOTHES BAG AND GAVE CHICK AN EMERGENCY UM GOING uPp— JOE? I SHOULD SAY NOT... IF HE 1S, IT'S A PRETTY NICE Joe... JUST A MINUTE UNTIL L GET SOMETHING SALESMAN SAM ; OH! Ya WaNNa GET OUTA HERE, HUH? WELL, HOLD “TH’ BALL FER META KICK, AN! {! THAT Ya GET OUT, PI C'MON, HOWIE! JAW, 1 aln'T INTERESTED PEP uP! IN TH’ Game! { Wisk t 1 WAS OUTA THs Tair! x by RONTO! SWEET Taine! Yon SROLDVE WEARD HEN , BRIGHT EXEO = CIMERE. OL’ PAL OF MINE —— G\GGOZO WHE'S TW Tis sannie | 1 WANTOAN YMEET At “FORTUNE TELLER FER G\GGOZ0? WEY YOU” CANT ve. T= Way, T 309" CAME ++ 1 GOT HiIMn. Gee! THATLL Taste Goop!! Boy! IMAGINE THAT, OScAR! GIVIN' ME A TURKEY !! GET HoLD oF By BLOSSER NIX! NOT TILL THIS LITTLE LESSON SOAKS WAIT HURT HIM ANY AND,AFTER THIS, WHEN Wd GIVE THEM ADVICE THEN'LL LISTEN (Se HOWE HOLOS THE BALL AND, AS THe. WHISTLE. BLOWS, SAM RACES UP TOGING ITA HEETY Boot! ERE | Come, HOWE! DON'T Blane Me FER WHat q WaPPENs | Noo MEAN L AM NOT LOOK ZE SEE, . LEAVE MX MAKE UP PART~ARA!S You y \ ® SUR! SAW THe oo! STE WT ARE AO BOdIeS LAST TIME T SAAN ~ XN gtoss income of $134,000 through the sale of 2,344,000 pounds of fish scales, BETTER THAN A ‘These were sold to paint manufac- turers for use in “pearlessence” paint. PICTURE BOOK. Re PRINCIPAL oF PANDEMONIA PRESENTLY THEN RUN ACROSS A FUNNY FIRST WAS! AATTUE CART AND A WINDMILL, A REAL. DUTCH AAD EASY ARE NOT IMPRESSED WITH IT. WINDMILL WITHA WAGONWREEL. FOR A TAIL ‘