The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 17, 1933, Page 8

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Church. News Meditation” | | s Our Refuge pnd ng the Inheritance,” Miss Ruth Children of | rt in the page= at between | h schoo) are | HURCH | h cordially | (Ashford). ke Unto ‘the I. Carter, A speci been arranged by the staff of the vacation church school, and is as fol- | lows: | Proc Hymn, ‘sional, “We've a Story to Tell to Nations.” Pledge to Christian Flag. | Prayer. Jesus. Stories of Jesus—Primary. ! Pageant—World Children—Primary. | Hymn, “Think When 1 Read That Sweet Story of Old.” Offering, Offering Song. Doxology. Benediction. —<—_—______ TRINITY LUTHERAN Avenue A at Fourth Opie 8. Rindahl, Pastor “There is a cordial welcome at Trinity.” Second Sunday after Trinity. Church school, 9:45 a. m. Morning worship, 11:00. Sermon, “Danger—Covetousness.” Choir anthem, “We Bring You Glad dings,” arr. Salama, Evening service, 8 o'clock. (cei THE SALVATION ARMY Adjutant and Mrs. H. Smith, Officers in Charge Lieutenant A. Anderson, Assistant Sunday, June 18th: 10:00 a. m.—Company meeting, or Sunday school. Classes for all ages, Including a Bible class for adults, Come and bring your children, George Stebbins is In charge of this service, 11:00—Holiness meeting, or morn. ing ‘worship. Adjutant bring the message and ith will subject will (be: “The Anxious s Ques. | Hon.” A special feature of this serv- ice will be the dedication of an ins fant, The public is invited, 6:30 p. m.—Young People's Legion. Conducted by the young people, but everyone is welcome. Mixa Rosebud Smith is in charge ‘of this service, assisted by Miss Leona Sjoblom. 8:00 p. m.—Rousing Salvation meet- ing. Old-time gospel singing and speaking. A very has been arranged, special singing of sol special program which includes and the enrollment Adjutant H. Smith will Be, speaking on the © for the World. > Army extends a dial invitation to the public. to 1 of its services. A welcome you at the 4 . Dur, Come to the Sal-¢ you will be made or | 933, William | The Ss, Quain class | | ar). | res of | ccom- Uplifted * (Men- | | | “Nothing”. arents and Ribie school. A service entitled, aded Light" will be with us the work of music. At the e the ordinance of will be observed. er Avenue Minister rch school your place in the city. Let's keep our Merrill Larkin, superin- ng worship service. p morning message will Rey. Graunke, Sub- Jesus Come?” 8 op. m.— Mid-week DEN Why Did Wednesday, prayer mervice. Pivnu are invited to attend these ST. MARY'S ROMAN CATHOLIC Broadway at Bighth St. rather R. A. Feehan, Rector ay Masses at 7, 8:30, 9:30 and 10:30 a. m. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1, and Avenue C ¢ Force?” . my testimon fal meeting at mq reading room maintained at 200% Fourth Street is open daily from 12 to 5 p.m; Sunday, & te 5 p.m. All are leome to attend the ehureh § s and to make use of ading room ‘OPAL CHURCH ‘dson, Rector Fritch, organist. Sunday after Trinity. munion, People's services. ing worship, 5 he Value of a Soul.” OH By MRS. ALEX STEWART Mr. and Mrs, Claude Houser and son Everett visited at Charley John- son’s Friday evening. Callers in the Capital City Satur- day were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mal- lard and family, Mrs. Lee Mallard, Andy Lamb, Mrs. Maggie Lamb, Mr. Cameron, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Stewart and family, Edward Bechenall, Ron- nie Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Houser and family, Donald and Ron- ald Nicholson, Jacob Dietrich, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Anderson and family and Bob Fields. Edward Bechenall visited at Chas. Johnson’s Thusday. Jesse Moreford called at Andrew Ervin’s Wednesday. The Cemetery association of Glen- coe will hold their annual business meeting at Glencoe church basement. Thursday evening, June 22, at 8:00 o'clock. All interested are urged to attend this meeting as several items of business must be taken up. __ The Glencoe Missionary society met at the home of Mrs. Bert Buck- jlay Wednesday, June 14. Sunday, June 25, Rev. J. Way Huey, Sunday school missionary for Oakes and Bismarck presbytery, will preach at Glencoe and Stewartsdale and Baldwin at regular intervals. ‘ The Stewartsdale Missionary will meet June 22 with Mrs. Andrew Ervin. Mr. and Mrs. A, J. Stewart and family spent Friday evening at the C. L, Houser home. Sunday, June 25th, Rev. Floyd E. Logee will preach at the Gayton schoolhouse at 3:00 p. m. Mrs. O. G. Davenport was a caller at Christ Yegen’s Saturday. Freda Bechenall visited her broth- er Edward Friday. Mrs. Maggie Fields and sons Sheldon and Forrest were callers at Alex Stewart’s Thursday. Paul Hapel was a caller at Dan McLeans Monday. Louis XVI, king of France, on July 14, 1 wrote in his diary: it was on this day that the Bastille had fallen, a hundred of the king’s men were slain, and the revolution began in earnest. Of the 40,000,000 mail bags han- | dled by the British postoffice in 1932, only 40 were lost or stolen. | "AT THE MOVIES. | Fox “Cavalcade” Ranks Highest in Film Achievements! Neel Coward's “Cavalcade,” mar- velously transferred to the screen by | Fox Films, will open at the Paramount Theatre tonight. ‘avaleade” is absolutely unique as | n entertainment; so much so that | it almost defies aeseription by this | commentator. t There is no “plot” in the con-| strained meaning of the word; it is instead a vast sequence of plots which | Director Frank Lloyd has contrived | to make always absorbingly interest- | ing and with which he has achieved | which fairly lifted the audience | cut of its seats. | Coward has woven the story of the | Marryot family, father, mother and | two sons, their servants, a butler and maid and their daughter with a mas- | terful hand against a background | which compasses historical events be- | tween 1900 and the present time. He presents a terrific indictment against those responsible for the pres- | ent muddled state of world affairs, but | ends on a high note of gallant optim: | ism that all will go well if we carry | - on with courage and faith. The longest word Shakespeare | ever used was “honorificabilitudin- itatibus”; it was in “Loye’s Labour's et.” Lo Sunken "Treasure “Below the Sea” Those who go to see motion pic- -tures for the thrills they. afford— and who doesn't?—will he more than amply repaid by visiting the Capitol Theater, where the feature “Below the Sea” will be shown today and Monday. No sophisticated drama of talk, this! Far from it! It's a tale of a treasure hunt on the ocean floor— and treasure hunts are always fas- cinating. Then there's a battle be- tween United States destroyers and a German submarine, and the sinking of the U-boat, with only two surviv- ors from its crew. And—topping any exciting moments shown on the screen in recent years—there is tense, life-or- death battle on the sea-bottom be- tween a diver and a huge octopus, most dreaded creature of the deep. “Below the Sea,” is a picture of action, from the very first sequence to the last, with the suspense grow- ing greater and the thrills multiply- ing until the breath-taking climax. The melodrama is splendidly cast. Ralph Bellamy, most virile of the younger screen leading men, has the heroic role of the diver, whose defeat of the octopus in the battle many fathoms deep saves the life of a beau- tiful young heiress. Fay Wray is this girl. Fay's titian loveliness is well known. Undersea scenes are photographed ig technicolor. ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1933 AN You BEAT ITs / AY THE PARTY LAST NIGHY THEY WERE TALKING ABOUT MIN'S OLD HOME TOWN] AND SOMEBODY ASKEO HER IF THE CANAL PASSED THROUGH BLOOMINGTON — | AND AWN SAID— SHE DIDN'T THINK 80 AND IF IT DID- IY MUST HAVE PASSED ASLEEP~= NOW 1S THAT DUMB ~ THE GUMPS— STOP THIEF SUMB- THAT SME DIDN'T SEE IT- THROUGH WHEN SHE WAS wonene (ASK YOu = & ‘VE HAD NCLE JOHN! 1S STAYING IN TOWN AND WALT AND SKEEZIX HAVE GONE To HIS FARM. THEY HOPE To MAKE IT SHIP-SHAPE FOR PHYLLIS TO COME To FOR A VACATION IN THE COUNTRY. ARE READY TO GET SOME FIRST |° HAND COPE ON . THE FARM PROBLEM. YOU KNOW. FARM PROBLEMS — \F THERE ARE 97 SHEEP IN A FIELD AND 42 GET OUT— IT ALL LOOKS OK. ONLY “HERE ARE MORE WEEDS “THAN BELL? IT ISNT A SCHOOL BeLL Is 1 UNCLE WALT ) (wee, ARE RARIN' TO GO, RED! Ay aa YOU ALL SET LET'S GET STARTED! APPOINTED. FOR A UTTLE WHICH IS THE BEST TIME, RED ADVENTURE, WAY, DOWN THROUGH KING AND FRECKLES FRECKLES MEET TO | setour [fl <¢ FOR THE. oe OLD CEMENT PLANT, JUST OUTSIDE oF TOWN !! THROUGH THE YARDS... ~ (TS SHORTER THAT Wi GET THERE PRONTO... TT'S BEGINNING TO GET DUSK, ALREADY — WE'VE TIMED OuR- SELVES JUST ABOUT AM.......WE WANT* TO I HAVE A SPLITTING HEADACHE! SOME WOMAN AGUSTA SENT OVER WAS BEEN HERE FOR TWO HOURS, TRYING TO SELL ME SOME BABY DPESSES TVE DONE EVERYTHING BUT KISS HER FAREWELL, AND SHE'S STILL IN THERE. NOW SHE WANTS ME TO GIVE HER THE NAMES OF SOME FRIENDS WHO GOSH OURN tT, UM TWRRIBLE SORRY, YOUNG )KINDA GUY WHO MAKES. vz A SORE POINT! Ya oustta Be! You'Re THe HIGHWAY “TRENELIN' Tous! WF YOU Ack ME, 1 THIWK THIS 16 THE HERE WE ARE | MOST STUPID THING I IER HEARD OF PMR TO GO TO A PLACE THAT WEDE NENER EVEN SUN BEVORE | 1 THINK WE SAOLLOD AT LEAST GO UP AND SEE WF OWE LE IT BEFORE On, VERY Wenn} BUT, Boorse Hie MARK MY WORDS, ALREADY WE'LL HAVE GRAY TAD THE HAR BEFORE THE OWNER THAT SOMMER 19 OVER WE'D TAKE TE TAVERN WASH TUBBS (FER SEVERAL DANS THE MATE 1S CONFINED TO AIS BUNK ‘7 ANAST, THERE! YT TAKING YouR Revowier|!/ PUT WHAT ARE YE n AND BLACKJACK. sete arst (VAL DO NOTHING OF THE SORT! KNOW, MR. SLUGG, THAT 1 MEAN THAT (LL STAND FOR No MORE OF YouR BULIYING . FROM NOW ON, E'LL PO AS | SAY, O'YE HEAR! "LL Have YE DUMBER ~ DUMBE! TLL BET YOU THAT IF | WERE TO » SEND A LETTERADDRESYED To THE DUMBEST PERSON IN THE Tr. AME THE comer! OVED To SEE MRS. SAND THAT WOMAN |! THAT'S A SIMPLE ONE- 'D TAKE THAT BET mM GOIN TO RING fT AN' SEE WHAT WE GET. ae By BLUSSER NAY By COWAN ICANT ~HOW. “TH! HECK AM 1 GONNA THUMB ANY MORE RIDES? FLOAK , TOE® UP ASH IS AT THE WHEEL, THRU THE SKYLIGHT. ON MAA WINDAR S1LL, ANY’ AW FOUND MAK REBBITS FOOT ON OF MOo'NIN' AK WOK LP CROSSED 1A BLACK CAT OW 000°00°*ee.8% AND REARS EVERY WORD

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