The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, May 26, 1933, Page 10

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SWEETENS THE BREATH Learn Beauty Culture at Northwest's Finest Beauty School Sno more of obtaiming: ffer. It REATER, Chicago Hair Dressing Academy BN The First Presb; jon ly Services —Bib!e School: | i H. M. Gulson, Pastor. 0. 7 p.@m.—Young Peoples Society ot; Preaching service 11:30, tian Endeavor, Miss Marjorie! . president p m. Thursday—Juntor and In-; rmediate C.-E. and mission study. Miss Esiher Howe and Miss Ruth| Christ, superintendents. i 8 p. m. Thursday—Bible Study and} Prayer. | 7p. m. Friday chow rehearsal at} the church. { Everyone invitea. Fred W. Christ, | pastor | Sunday y 21st. Rev. J. Way Huey ef Jamestown will preach at the reg-| ular church hour; at 4 p. m. he will} preach the baccalaureate sermon for! the high school class of 1933. | Rey. F. W. Christ is away to attend) ‘ the general assembly at Columbus,! Ohio. {| The Morning Watch Presbyterian Church of Coleharbor Union Sunday School every Sunday morning in the school house. Mr. Car! Carlson, superintendent. Divine Worship with sermon every other Sunday at 8 p. m. Christian Endeavor every Sunday at 7 p.m. Mr. Robert Peightal, presi- dent. A cordial invitation to all. Fred W. Christ. Stated Supply. Sunday, May 28th, Rev. Mrs. Swan- ton @ returned missionary, will preach | the baccalaureate sermon for the) high school class of 1933 at the church at 8 p.m. Alexander Presbyterian Church WILE YoU LEARN" Fargo, demy are NATION. | Church services every other Sunday at 8 p.m. Rev, J. W. Huey of Jamestown will supply the pulpit in the minister's ab- sence for Sunday evening, May 21. Daily Vacation Biole school will start Monday. May 29, 9 a. m. Sloan Memorial Presbytérian H. M. Gulson, Pastor. erian Church —{ Cslencoe—Preaching service 10 a. m if | Sunday school 11 a.m. Mrs. Wm | McMurrick, superintendent. = Westminister Presbyterian Stewartsdale—Sunday school 10:30 G. Davenport, superintendent. Ba'dwin Presbyterian H. M. Gulson, Stated Supply. Sunday school 10 a.m. Roy Lewis. superintendent. Children’s and Young People’s serv- ice 7 p. m. Preaching service 8 p m. The preaching service at Baldwin is held every other Sunday. Driscoll Lutheran Church Lars Foss, pastor. Divine services in Langedahl church next Sunday at 2 o'clock in the after- | noon. ’ Glear Lake — By MYRTLE CHRISTENSEN Mrs. Adolph Hansen spent Tuesday forenoon with her mother Mrs. Christ Schoon. Virgil Newland called at the Henry Olson home Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Schoon mo- tored to Bismarck Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Olson and fam- ily were shopping in Moffit Thursday, they also called on Mrs. Olson's moth- er, Mrs. V. Bentz. J. W. Preston of Hitchcock, South Dakota and daughter Mrs. Helen Ip- son of Huron, South Dakota who have been attending to business matters Five Miles 8. W. of Underwood {here returned home Thursday morn- Bible School every Sunday. Elder] #. A. Christoph, Supt. Divine Worship and Sermon every other Sunday at 3 p. m. Christian Endeavor every Sunday ing. Ernest Schoon and son, also Miss Vernice Newcomer were Bismarck callers Friday afternoon. B. F. Paslay and son Paul, were evening. Elder Walter LeRoy, State | capital city callers Saturday. Pres. of C. E.. leader. | Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Van Vleet were You are invited. Fred W. Christ.; Stated Supply. i Sunday, May 28th, Rev. Mrs. Swan- son, a returned missionary, will speak at the regular church hour. callers at the Allen Van Vleet home : Saturday. John Heisdorf called at the L. B. Olson and Albert Christenson homes You are invited to come. { Sunday. Sunday, June 11, Rev. F. W. Christ | will be back from the assembly to con- | duct the regular services. Miss Vernice Newcomer spent Sun- day with Miss Constance and Cath- ‘erine Lein. |” Wayne and Leonard Olson and Braddock Church , Bobby Beyer called Sunday at the O. E. Kinzler, pastor 10:00 a. m.—Sunday school. Mrs. L. V. Leschur, supt. 7:00 p. m.—Epworth League. Lloyd Wills, president. | 8:00—Evening worship. Moffit Church i O E. Kinzler. pastor ' 10:30—Morning worship. 11:30 a. m.—Sunday school. Mrs. J. | J. Hill. supt. | Joe Paulsen home. Mr. and Mrs, Ole Newland and fam- | ily called at the Will Stiles home Sun- day. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Brenden spent Sunday at the Christ Selland home. More than 150,000 miles of im- proved roads make up the highway system. A man 130 years old in Baroda { state, India, is said to be the oldest The Congregational Church of Wing; inhabitant of the British Empire. Sunday School every Sunday at 10:30 a. m.—Mrs. Clyde Harvey, Supt. There are over 200 rooms, includ- Everyone is invited. Fred W. Christ, | ister. ing 40 bedrooms, in Buckingham Pal- ( ace. _AT THE MOVIES arro Featured In ‘Barbarian’ Film “The Barbarian,” a romantic com- | edy concerned with the adventures of a philandering Arab who falls in love with an English woman, brings Ra- mon Novarro to the Capitol screen starting Saturday in what is reported to be a role totally different from any the popular Latin star has yet port- rayed in the talkies. Myrna Loy is Novarro's leading Woman, coming to this picture fresh | from her personal triumphs in “The | Animal Kingdom” and “Topaze.”| Reginald Denny, as her dull English | fiance. is said to have a role even} more amusing than that he played in “Private Lives,” and added laughs are} insured by the presence in the cast of Louise Closser Hale in another of her typical maid roles. Ti Edgar Selwyn, adapted to the screen by Anita Loos and Elmer Harris, and directed by Sam Wood. In it Novar- ro enacts the Arab guide who plays up to the susceptibilities of elderly Women starved for romance and Pockets a pretty profit for his pains. When he falls in love with the allur- ing Miss Loy, he finds himself run- ning into a more difficult proposi- tion, and is called upon to use all his resources as a rogue and oriental schemer in order to consummate his desires, The author has permeated his story with no end of adventurous incidents with the heroine narrowly escaping a forced native marriage and being in- volved in a romantic escape across the desert sands. Scenes of the Nile country with its celebrated pyramids give the tale a picturesque back- ground in keeping with its colorful ‘nd adventurous plot. picture is based on a play by; ‘The Little Giant’ A Gangster Comedy With No Lives Lost | Despite the fact that “The Little | Giant,’ Edward G. Robinson's latest | First National comedy, which opens at the Paramount theater tomorrow, is a chronicle of gangsters and rack- eteers, beer barons and bootleggers. not a single shot is fired at anyone from the first scene of the picture to the last, no one is “taken for a ride,” no one turns up dead or missing. This is the more remarkable be- cause, at more than one vital point in the drama, the entire parapher- nalia of a gangster’s arsenal figures prominently in the action. Every con- | ceivable kind of an underworld weap- on is an hand and ready for use, from sub-machine guns—familiarly known | as “typewriters” among their owners —to automatics, blackjacks, brass knuckles and stilettos. However the occasion never arises that calls for their use, a fact which | may be an argument for “prepared- | ness” and “heavy armaments.” The | Paradoxically peaceful character of “The Little Giant” is explained by | the fact that Edward G. Robinson, {as “Bugs” Ahearn, Chicago beer baron and underworld ruler, abdicates ; from his “throne” at the opening of the story following the legalizing of good beer to retire, turn gentleman, and live the life of a “society guy.” What happens to him when he tries to “muscle in” to the exclusive so- ciety that has its playground on the shores of the Pacific,.at Santa Bar- bara, proves that racketeering and hijacking are not the exclusive prop- erty of the nation’s criminal charac- ters. Robinson awakens to the fact that he has been taken for a ride by a blonde society girl, played by Helen Vinson. Ca HE TRICK = AUST AS MAMA DE STROSS WAS ABOUT TO SIGN SALLED TO THE TELEPHONE = THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, F Po QUICK AS A FLASH — TOWNSEND ZANDER SUBSTITUTES TWE DASTARDLY QUIT CLAIM DEED For SHE. OPTION WHICH SHE WAS ABOUT To SIGN— 'RIDAY, MAY 26, 1938 THE GUMPS— THE VIPER “HE TELEPHONE CALL WAS ALL A MISTAKE WELL- YOU'VE READ THE PAPER - NOW ALL YOU HAVE Yo DO 1S To SIGN IT— AND I'LL GIVE You THE £500,00- y THERE IT Is. ONCLE JOHN GIVES US A DOLLAR AN’ WE CANT | BURY DECIDE ON A TREASURER OR WHAT TO BUY WITH \T WHAT DO WE 0O FINALLY DELIVERED THE PARROT TO MRS. MONEVYHEFFER WHO, ON ACCOUNT OF HER DEAFNESS, IDOESN'T MIND rs Loud TALK AND SCREECHING! INSTEAD OF THAT PARROT, TD STILL HAVE IT —— T TOLD AGUSTA WE'D Be OVER AT 4:30 SHARP, SO JIMMIE AND GENE COULD PLAY. THE NURSE WANT ANYBODY ] SUSPECT. Z| To SUSPECT. BILLY BOWLEGS, } GO SOME TO OSSIE....1 COULONT TELL HIM WHAT To GIVE ME! ANYWAY ? HE. SURE CAN TELL STORIES, CANT He ? HE Was scaret OuT OF THE LY RIC THEATR: YesTerpey, BUT IS RIGHT BACK TODAY, To stow THE} WITH His, PERFORMERS | MANE & Look, sir! TRaineo Worms! AND OUT SAM WILL GO! NONE OTHERS AND t'm Sust YWELL, Ya BETTER. CRAZY TO SEE THEM BEFORE) TAKE A QUICK Look— THE FOOTLIGHTS! BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES | vert eooy, 3. MENS MAK 727 1) TAD ME EVERYTHING WINDLED / Liye DOES MAMA DE STROSS REALIZE THAT SHE HAS SIGNED A QUIT CLAIM DEED- AND HER PROPERTY NOW. By BLOSSER T REMEMBER HIM SAYIN’ IT WAS SO COLO THAT HE COULON'T BLOW THE CANDLE OUT... SAID THE FLAME HAD VILL NOT STAND FOR-ANY SUCH INHUMAN TREATMENT ABOARD MAY SHIP, Y'HEAR? COMMANDS MR. SLUGG To SToP UNMERCIFUL BEATING OF WASH AND EASY, OE TO TOE THEY STAND, AND THERE'S NOT A MAN AGOARD WHO DOESN'T | EXPECT To SEE A KILLING ANY INSTANT, ; AND THIRD MATES, AND A HARPOONER, BACK UP SLUGG. BACK TD BED, YE MOTW-EATEN OLD) ) GOKT, OR NUL TEARYE CURIOUSLY, THE SECOND (See ef f Z ND THE CREW, LONG DOWN-TRODDEN, EAGERIY BACKS THE SKIFPER. IT LOOKS UKE OUT AND OUT WAR! A BATTLE To THE FINISH! ‘CAUSE TH’ FOOTS GONNA® LIGHT IN SusT ABOUT a Tee! By MARTIN oxen! ceEMe, TIME WES DONE A PRETTY FAR SOB OF T S0 FAR HEN A SUDDEN, WHOOPING SHOUT BREAKS THE TENSION, THERE SHE BLOWS! TWERE! THERE! NOT A WOUNERT FEET AWAY! _/ ee ee ee eee ee ee ee ee ee ee ee air ie lke

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