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| SIDEGLANCES - - - By George Clark | “Seriously, Emil, when can you drop out to the house and teach my wife something about cooking?” | Regan | — By BERNADETTE HOPKINS Mr. and Mrs. Willard Dimond and family were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Dimond. Mr, and Mrs. Sigmun Rupp of near Painted Woods called on Regan friends Friday. Bismarck callers from Regan Fri- day were A. H. Lundberg, B. O. Lein, Melvin Danielson, Mrs. L. B, Cox and Mrs. A. L. Garnes, Mrs. B. O. Lein and Mrs. Carl Lein took Miss Iola DuToit to Washburn Thursday. Miss DuToit has been a guest of the Leins for the past sev- tral weeks, The Ladies’ Aid met with Mrs. Norton Strand Wednesday after- noon. Mrs. Charles Tedholm enter- tains the society at their next mee! ing which will be held Wednesday, May 31. Mr, and Mrs. A. L. Garnes and O. B. Aune motored to Bismarck Wed- nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Norton Strand and} H. E. Rannestad motored to Bis-j| marck Thursday evening. | Mrs. Luella Stratton of Bismarck motored to Regan Monday and was @ guest at the Uhde home until Wed- nesday. Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Tourtlotte and J. 8. Penner motored to Bismarck , ‘Tuesday. Ruby Guthrie of Bismarck is a guest of her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Garnes, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lein and Mr. and Mrs. B. O. Lein motored to Wing Sunday and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Lein, Mr. and Mrs.’ Mel- vin Lein of Marion, N. D., were other guests of the Leins. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Danielson and family of Wilton were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jake Danielson. Evelyn and Ethel Hendrickson and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Heer were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hendrickson. Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Sherman were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. James Fitzgerald. Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Rierson motor- ed to Bismarck Saturday and were guests of their children. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Berg and fam- ily were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Taplin of near Wilton. Mr. and Mrs. August Westerman and Mr. and Mrs, Allan Westerman and son Everett motored to McClusky Sunday and were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Sam Houser, Pearl Kronick of Wilton was a Sat- urday guest of the Hendrickson fam- ily. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Helgeson and daughter Colleen and Miss Gladys Burdette of Bismarck called on Re- gan friends Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Norton Strand and family and Russel Hopkins motored to Bantry for the week-end. Mrs. Hopkins who has been the guest of her parents for several weeks re- turned home with them, It has been estimated that World War pensions will last at least 100 years. Watches were first made at Nu- remberg, Germany, at the beginning of the 16th century. |. AT THE MOVIES | Versatile Stanwyck Goes Back to Young | Role in Newest Hit A new phase of Barbara Stanwyck's ertistry is uncovered in the Warner Bros. picture, “Ladies They Talk About,” which demonstrates her ver- sality in interpreting characters from every walk of life. In her latest starring vehicle which | comes to the Paramount theater to- morrow, she plays the role of a giri so hard boiled that nothing seemingly tan faze her, which is a far cry from the school teacher and devoted moth- er truck gardener of “So Big,” and the wife of a wheat farmer in “The Purchase Price.” As a hardened, though attractive bandit, she coolly assists in holding up a bank, makes love to a minister to secure his sympathy, assists in the | attempted escape of two male prison- | ers, knocks a woman down with a punch to the jaw, and “gets religion” in order to avenge herself on an evan- | gelist. The story is a realistic picture of life in the women’s ward of San Quentin prison, with a glowing romance in- | volving the infatuation of a fighting evangelist for the girl bandit. The/ sereen play by Sydney Sutherland and Brown Holmes is based on the play by Dorothy Mackae and Carlton Miles. {t pictures the experiences of Miss Imagination Colors Picture at Capitol There is something new under the sun-arcs, and Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack, with their pro- duction of “King Kong,” have done it! The producers of “Grass” and “Chang” have soared grandly into the realms of imagination for the super- fantasy, “King Kong,” the RKO-Radio Picture featuring Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong and Bruce Cabot at the Capitol Theatre. With the late Edgar Wallace, Cooper conceived the extravagantly fantastic idea of bringing the prehis- toric age into juxtaposition with the modern age. First an expedition to a jungle island discovers surviving members of the Jurassic Age — the pterodacytl, trachodon, tyrannosours, brontosaurus, triceratops and others— ruled over by a giant ape standing more than fifty feet high. Then the age is transported to civ- ilization — to New York. Breaking loose, he tears through the streets where people, automobiles, street cars, elevated lines are like so many tin toys beneath one’s feet where even THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, MAY 22, 1938 THE GUMPS— Ti7® CURSE OF A BROKEN HEART WELL~ IT'S YOUR FAULT- DON'T STAND THERE CRYING LIKE A BABY = YOU STARTED THIS YOURSELF — ~YOu WENT OUT AND SHOUTED YOUR LOVE YO THE HOUSE TOPS — AILLIE - MILLIE = MILLIE = LOVE ~ LOVE = LOVE ~ You TALKED YOURSELF INTO ALL THIS - AND YOU GOT HOOKED — YOU CAN'T BLAME MILLIE — YOu REMIND ME OF THE SILLY LITTLE FISH WHO HAD JUST BEEN CAUGHT AND WAS BANGLING IN TNE WATER ON _YHE FISHERMAN'S STRING — HE CAN'T WAIT TO SAY “I TOLD YOU SO" AND RAZZ FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS WEATHER LIKE Mis You FeLas | OUGHT To BE AND WHEN THE LITTLE FISH STARTED, TO COMPLAIN TO A BIG FISH WHO HAPPENED TO BE PASSING BY — THE BIG FISH SAID— 1 YOU HAD KEPT YOUR MOUTH SHUT YOu WOULDN'T SARCASTIC. COME. ON IN,088iE, WHAT'S THE MAI YYOUNG MAN, IF YOU CAN'T KEEP AWAKE DURING THE DAY, YOU'D BETTER DO A UTTLE MORE SLEEPING AT NIGHT! YOU AIN'T BRINGING THE PARROT BACK, BE TICKLED TO HAVE IT... WHAT'S WRONG 2 eg ‘BUT-YOu SEE, THE BABY KEEPS ME AWAKE AT NIGHT, ANI IN THE MIDOLE OF THE NIGHT AN’ SCARED MOM ALMOST OUT IDEA OF BENG | \F THAT'S THE CASE, BRING IT TO THE | OFFICE WITH You ' VLL JUST CUTOUT @ cew PIECES OF ,) FIVE DIFFERENT PATTERNS OF CLOTH 4 BEFORE 1 Go Home! | HAS TRIEO ALL OVER TOWN, WITHOUT, suc- HIS TRAINED worms! HEY, AR. MATOR, UM PUTTIN’ @ NICKEL IN TH’ TILL FER || BUT I'M GONNA HAVE TH’ DRESSES | WANT, \E | HAVE To MaKe Em My¥seLel @ TEN CENT SPOOL OF THeeaol SNe (MAGINE ME A SEAMmsiTrRess!) By SMALU AU), DON'T BE So TICKLISH! STAND STILL! HOWDOYA EXPECT ME TO GET YOUR MEASUREMENTSZ 1 DONT irow WHETHER YOU KNOW «TOR NOT, BOOTS — BUT, THE PRINCE 16 STIL MADLY IN LOVE WTA You x WE WAS BEEN EINER SINCE KE FIRST MET YOO | ROWEVER THE KING HAS OTHER, PLANS FOR WIS ONLY HEIR the tallest building in the world is no more difficult to climb than a tree! The great “King Kong” even reach- es into the sky and provides a new WE WING SENT ME To THS COUNTRY TQ MARRY Nou By CRANE PIE —a salvor's IDEA oF HEAVEN — HOT, FRAGRANT, FROM THE OVEN — COOLING IN THE GALLEY WINDow, BLAZES! | WOULDN'T Miss Mackae when a prisoner in San Quen-| menace for airmen. A snatch at a PORTUNN a tin, where she was sent after the| plane pumping machine gun bullets AN OPPORTUNITY LIKE TH! FF MILLION 00) S. ~ tragic death of her husband. into his tough hide, and it is doomed. PA FOR A MILLIO! 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