The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, July 5, 1933, Page 8

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SIDE GLANCES - —— dad play this time and I'll see that ‘keeps him home after.” revoke - - By George Clark | +. — THIS CURIOUS WORLD | AT THE MOVIES | Comedians Are Novel Delegates to Geneva It isn’t often movie-makers are for- tunate enough to co-ordinate catchy musical numbers in such a pleasing way with a well-sustained but non- sensical plot as in “Diplomaniacs” which opened yesterday at the Cap- itol Theatre. The new RKO-Radio Picture has the irresistible appeal of broad bur- Jesque, opening on an Indian Reser- vation where those side-splitting comedians, Bert Wheeler and Robert ‘Woolsey, are commissioned to repre- sent the Indians at the Peace Con- ference in Geneva. The redskins believe Willy Nilly ‘and Horatio Glub are dumb enough to make good diplomats. Their ad- ventures in Switzerland, where a group of ammunition makers attempt to balk their efforts to get a peace pact signed, and their romance with @ pair of hired Parisian vamps whose kisses make men swoon and smoke about the collar, make lively action and riotous comedy. The sequences which take place in what purports to be the Peace Conference hall are sublimely ridi- culous. Machine guns, mallets, and bombs take the place of veiled in- nuendos and ironic notes. The whole affair turns into a riot of fun and music when Wheeler and Woolsey enlist the entire delegation in an impromptu black-face minstrel act. Marjorie White and Phyllis Barry give the art of making lobsters out of men @ new verve, with just the proper amount of nonsense. ‘The leaves of poison ivy are ar- ffanged alternately on the stem and each leaf has three leaflets. After fontact with poison ivy, the skin should be washed several times with hot water and ordinary kitchen or . laundry soap. | 3. M. Barrie, in “Dear Brutus” said there were three things which a man ean never recall: The spoken word, >be past life, and the neglected oppor- Tomboy of Pictures Turns Ritzie Lady in “Blondie Johnson” Joan Blondell, the wise-cracking hoyden of the movies, has gone ritzie. For the first time in her moving pic- ture career she is all decked out like}, a Christmas tree in the First Na- tional production, “Blondie Johnson, which comes to the Paramount The- atre tomorrow only! THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY; JULY 5, 1933 ~ THE GUMPS— TOMORROW AT EIGHT WHY ARE You ALWAYS 80 IGN HAT WITH ME ? VAN NO POISON IVY PLANT = PERHAPS IF You AND | MEET SOME NICE MOONLIGHT NIGHT- AND TALK THIS MATTER OVER WE MIGHT, COME TO SOME AGREEMENT "DB RATHER TALK Am BOSINESS WITH ¥ YOu THAN SO THIS 18 MILLIE — AND YOUR MAMA'S NOT AT HOME = WELL- | CALLED UP ABOUT THAT NOTE = BUY I'D. WUST AS SOON TALK ‘TO YOU = You HAVE SUCH A CHARMING VOICE = YOU SHOULD BE ON THE WHAT BO YOU SAY TO MEETING ME TOMORROW NIGNT— WE'LL TAKE A DRIVE AND TALK THIS, WHOLE THING OVER<~ WM NOT THE TouGHest }\AT EIGHT. BUSINESS MAN IN THE OF COURSE THERE WILL ALWANS BE CITIES, BUT WE COULD GET ALONG WITHOUT A LOT OF THE DOCDADS THEN MAKE HERE IF WE'D LEARN TO APPRECIATE THE SIMPLE LIFE.- WHAT COULD BE MORE SATISFYING THAN TO LOOK OUT COVER THESE BROAD ACRES WITH A FEELING OR. OWNERSHIP AND. INDEPENDENCE. AND WHAT 1S THERE ANNWHERE THAT YOU (CAN'T GET GETTER Po RIGHT HERE? ONCLE WACT, ISN'T ONCLE JOHN'S FARM SKEEZIX, | BELIEVE A LOT OF OUR TROUBLES WOULD BE OVER IF MORE PEOPLE WENT BACK TO .THE LAND. THEN COULD AT LEAST RAISE FOOD AND HAVE A PLACE TO UNE, FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS SAY! WHAT ABOUT TH’ WELL, IT WHY, THOSE ARE THE PLANS OF | REMEMBER , NOW, PRINTS AND THE INVENTORS SECRET........1F GUESS IF ANYONE ASKS WHY, WE'LL JUST PAPERS IN THE SAFE, \ THEY HAD BEEN STOLEN, ALL THAT'S ALL YOU ANYTHING, TELL ony TELL THEM THAT THAT THOSE FELLOWS / WOULD HAVE BEEN LOST....AS IT THEM NOTHING....IM MR. [eH WE DION'T SEE A WERE TRYING TO GETY 15, YOU BOYS SAVED THE DAY— COUNTIN’ ON YOu, cuccer! |= PHANTOM ENGINE. ‘ NOW RUN ALONG HOME, 50% FRECKLES! o> AND THATLL BE WE CAN GO ON WITH OUR EXPERIMENTS ! ey A FALSE ALARM! \/__ But How CAN WOU TELL WHEN THEY HAVE IT? THEY'LL RUN IN CIRCLES ,OR SUMPIN’, AND FROTH AT THE MOUTH THERE'S AN EPIDEMIC OF RABIES IN TOWN AND JIMMIE WAS PLAYING WITH A DOG OVER IN THE PARK.HE MIGHT HAVE CAUGHT (T Mur!) Hat ain't very mucu! JEST ABOUT ENOUGH Ta GLY ME THREE MEALS A DAY! VILL RAN Ya ev BUCKS A WEEK! It just so happened that in all the Picture roles she has played her part has not called for a dressed up doll. She was a stranded cho flat broke, in “Central Parl Depot” and “Big City Blues.’ “Miss Pinkerton” she was a nurse; in “The Famous Ferguson Case” a reporter. Not that she is a society leader in “Blondie Johnson.” Far from it. She is the brains and the directing force behind a band of bold racke- teers, driving them by the strength of her personality. But she grows rich from the plunder, and dresses the part of a wealthy woman of the underworld, But fine clothes cannot hide Joan's Personality. She is the same gay, Teckless hoyden beneath all her trap- pings, the same personable, likable Joan. Chester Morris plays opposite Joan, and others in the cast include | - Allen Jenkins, Claire Dodd, Earle Foxe and Mae Busch. The screen Play is by Earl Baldwin and the di- rection by Ray Enright. Motor vehicle property in the Unit- ed States has a valuation of more than $4,500,000,000. on which an an- nual tax of more than a billion dollars is paid, according to the American Automobile Association. The Japanese, by skillful pruning, tying and bending of the branches, grow miniature reproductions of an- cient, wind-blown trees. A species of trapdoor spider, which 4s native to Indis, Australis; Africa and South America, kills small birds and sucks their blood. It is the larg- est of all spiders, TWERES NOTHIN: LAKE TA’ BRENM OF DAWN, WAX OFF WA TH’ WOODS LIME THis! LOOK, WW S0N 16 306! COMIN' OP OVER TH’ MOUNTAING == MLL TW WILD LIFE 16 WAIN’ UP — THERE'S A WHIPPOORMOLL — BN" A MOURNIN' DOVE <= LISTEN Bea! HEY, SISEPY-HEAD = ¢Mion, GEX UP! GRAB A SNIFF OF t I BiasT You! ICK ASA FLASH, EASY GRABS - Par THE SECOND MATE 4 I'VE HAD MB THE SECOND MATE'S PISTOL, F TRIES TO STOP HIM! | 7/x ENOUGH ORDERS AND 1S GONE ; i; AROUND HERE, ‘ ; oa) ee i | EASY 1S q DESPERATE, FEELS CERTAIN THAT ' | : FRIEND IS IN = ‘ R / : = = i) ‘ DANGER. DETERMINES =— : eae ‘TO GO ASHORE.€ »AS THE THIRD MATE AReIVes.| T ESEN'S POWERFUL CRAWL NEVER SLACKENS, mueaenenas

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