The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 7, 1932, Page 8

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)

Me TH BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1982 ——— THE GUMPS— HAPPY IN LOVE SIDE GLANCES - - - By George Clark | = o—= - a stitch GE OF OUR ; ——— BOOK AND SEE WHAT TOM CARR AND HENRIETTA ALL THAT | WISH FOR Lage bond RIM IR THAT - HERE'S A LITTLE BIT oa SOME DAY HELL FIND OF NEW? THAT MIGNY BE OF toreracliny A GOOD WIFE WHO 18 INTEREST TO YOU — I CAN'T HELP WORTHY OF HIM= * BENJAMIN GUMP - THE: FEELING AND LIVE AS BILLIONAIRE RRS SORRY HAPPILY AS YOU WITH HIS RELATIVES — Lavette! \ SHE GUMPS— “BOYS SAID THE GENTLEMAN THE MEMBERS OF THIS IN THE HIGH CHAIR, “LISTEN TO ‘s la BOARD WERE VERY SAGE, DEEP, ME. YOU KNOW YOURE AN ANO ORPHAN, | SUPPOSER “WHAT'S WHEN THEY CAME TO TURN HAT, SIRT" INQUIRED POOR THEIR ATTENTION TO THE flowers for months.” THIS CURIOUS WORLD — A A > es FACE POWDER. 2300 Y4ARS AGO. © 1992 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. | 124 ‘Arrest Fargo Youth In Wahpeton Holdup; Wahpeton, N. D., Dec. 71—(P)—A 17-year-old Fargo youth remains in the custody here of Mrs. D. S. Mc- Ilwain, juvenile commissioner, ‘after confessing participation in the hold- up and shooting of I. E. Lilliegard, ‘Wahpeton garage owner. Arnold Forbes, Richland county state’s attorney, said the boy will be taken before the district judge. The boy admitted driving the car which took Robert Gordon, alias Ernest ‘Whitlow, from the Wahpeton garage building where Lilliegard and Gor- don had tussled. Gordon is under arrest at Trinidad, Colo. He is fighting extradition to North Dakota, where he is wanted for a series of Fargo holdups and the Wahpeton robbery. Wounded Wahpeton Woman on Crutches Wahpeton, N. D., Dec. 7.—(P)— Miss Doris Stock, Wahpeton girl shot down by posse bullets when forced to act as a human shield for bandits as they escaped Sept. 30 after robbing the Citizens National Bank here, is about on crutches for the first time since the holdup. She suffered a fractured leg and other injuries in the exchange of gunfire and has been in a local hospital. Miss Ruth Whipps, teller of the ‘bank, injured also when forced to accompany the bandits in their wild dash from Wahpeton, was released from the hospital several weeks ago. She still suffers from extreme ner- MAN BOUND OVER Fargo, N. D., Dec. 7—(P)}—William Moorhead, was ordered bound ass county district court for oY At the Movies | —— Marie Dressler’s Life (Continued from Yesterday) “Understand me, I don’t mean that women of fifty and sixty should go about acting a kittenish twenty or a simpering thirty. That state of af- fairs is really pathetic, almost as pathetic as the giving up of living. As I said before, each age has its own place in a lifetime. You wouldn't think of doing and acting at middle age as you do in youth. Be- cause you wouldn't think in the same way or look at life in the same light. “When you reach middle age you have a clearer perspective of things, a truer sense of values. That is, you have if you have good sense. You can be giddier at sixty than you were at twenty if you're just naturally foolish and haven't done anything to change yourself. But if you're sane and normal, after living fifty or more years, you begin to see things as they really are instead of looking at them through distorted glasses which mag- nify conditions out of all true pro- portion, “You stop worrying over a lot of unimportant matters. I can remem- ber when I was twenty and thirty how things used to bother me, things which I can pass off now and even smile about. Rumors for one thing. When I was young in the busi- ness of living and heard all kinds of wild stories about myself, I used to be heartsick. I wanted to break into print and into indignant words, denying them. I spent hours of valuable time and energy, working myself into a mental and physical chaos over them. “Do I do that now? I should say not. During my very recent iliness, when I heard and read the stories of my approaching death, even of my death, I didn’t throw fits or add any new gray hairs. I simply smiled to myself and said, ‘I'll show ’em that the old girl's got a lot of stuff yet. You can’t kill me that easily.’ And id. (Continued Tomorrow) SHACK HAS BEEN PADLOCKED. THIS WILL TAKE THEIR ATTENTION OFF THIS LOSS ANO GIVE THEM SOME NICE CLEAN ENTERTAINMENT. OLIVER, WORK HOUSE THEY FOUND— /” . AN’ SEE IF HE HAS ANY STAMPS SHHH..SHH! Tu’ Doctor 1s HERE TO Looé AT Ray! SHH! SEE Ray? I DIDNT kNow HE - I. SHOULD SAY Nor !! WERE PAYIN’ HIM TWO DOLLARS FOR HIS CALL... LET HIM FIND OUT FoR HIMSELF #! DID You TELL, THE DocToR, POP WAS OVER TO-DAY AND BROUGHT SOMETHING FOR YOU. YOU SHUCK THOSE BEANS AND [Lt GET IT~ SOMETHING OUGHT TO BE DONE! OF ALL THE ops! THESE THINGS ARE AS ‘TOUGH AS A SAFE ‘NOW, GENTS, WE WANT THIS PEN TO BE AN A-No.1 Jail AN’ (E AKNONE HAS ANY IDEAS) MisTeR FOR ITS I ZZ BARE DEAR —BOdTs 16 A BIT UPSET OVER AWE NEWS , ABOUT PETE AND 1 DONT , BELEVE TL. DISTURB HER: SPENCE 19 IN THE FRONT , T'S A WIND BREAKER THAT OPENS WITH A ZIP— SEE! f ( Have, SINCE ('VE BEEN HERE, ALL I'VE seen (s STRIPES —BLACK AND WHITE STRIPES! J MEBRE IENERY THING WE WEAR IS BLACK AN’ OUITE/ THATS @ STRIPES-AN' (TGETS DERN MONCTONOUS! ss) A CINCH! LISSEN ,BRIGHT EYES | YOUVE HEARD ABOUT PETE , HAVENTCHA 2 WHIZ LTRRT SURE WAS YER DOGGONE Rion 11 WAS AFRAID FOR A WAILE THAT MAYBE = 19} BUT, Worl YL mee ee ABOUT GIRLS THOUGR, J NRE BG BABOON — 2 AND SIM, AND BUB, AND HORACE , AND WAY, ‘THERTAINLY. YOU WILL BE PRINTH WILLY NILLY AND 0 WILL BE OW, WHAT FUN WE'LL HAVE! You, ATAWELL PRINTH —AND , A DATHING ADVENTURER. ATLATHTS AT LATHT § THALL “THEE LIFE. | THALL BE FRee. I THA LIVE! = whoopee! GWAN} IT's A GOOFY IDEA. IT's IMPOSSIBLE! RipicuLoUS! WHY, WOT WOULD Mi. EVEREST is 29,000" test high. The animal shown is correctly called PANTHER, PUMA or MOUNTAIN LION according to the locality ih which {t is found., BIG BEN is the clock im the TQW: ER OF LONDON,

Other pages from this issue: