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Be. i THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1934 THE GUMPS—OUCH! THE GOWNS- THE CERE = THE PLOWERS AND FUSS— MAKE MILLIE HAPPY ‘TO 1S LOVE EVEN SEORUARS, A DOHUNDRED IRVINATIONS FIR&T SEEMS A LONG TIME PRINTED FOR_ FEBRUARY TO. WAIT WHEN (3 ARE AS ihe " WE ARE -LeT" OF Fa MILUE AND | HAVE BEEN TALKING THINGS OVER- AND WEVE DECIDED SHAT IT REALLY WOULD BE BEST 70. SO AS To GIVI BECAUSE | KNEW IT WOULD ALL MADE UP TO AN EARLY WEDDING, WITH A SIMPLE ust A Few ENOS AND A 40 QUIET AFFAIR | [1100 Sam 5 ONLY OF BUT MAMA, Th é AND MILLIE THINK. DIFFERENT. THE AICHEST MAN IN ALL “B= Yat iyi HY! | ‘ AT Claas Free “THERE'S A SHORT-CIRCUIT ON NUMBER GEVEN SWITCHBOARD...BETTER TAKE A RUN OUT To LOCKWOOD STREET Wert, it WONT BE LONG UNTIL TO GIVE ITA TRY! FRECK, 00 Y6U REALIZE THAT, IF THIS THING WORKS, “We seem to be having another run of Peggy Jeans.” THis Curious WorLD Parguen’ | WE'LL BE SU L, FAMous 2 ‘TRIES OUT His HISTO- DETECTOR ve~ ANO TEN. WHAT J GREYHOUNDS GAME Fouow GY SIGHT AND EAR, wisiieiecahdasiadoesonanlet 4 PERFECT! IF I FAIL,I DONT WANT TO BE LAUGHED AT 4 BY EVERYONE! THE NEWFANGLES (Mom’n Pop) HUH! ANOTHER PLACE WHERE THEY WON'T ANSWER “’ CELL! WELL, 0 Lean ON IT TILL SOMEBODY ones! sack Jase's on a PUNCHES ‘Swarped: wHapoa, Na oot? (Screen Improves ‘Emperor Jones’ «| %o the toms, Eugene O'Neill’s first great rama, “Emperor Jones,” dealing with Harlem love intrigues and voodoo- §nfested Haitt, is once again available to theatregores, ‘This time it is a talking picture, produced by John Krimsky and Gif- ford Cochran, importers of “Maed- chen in Uniform,” and released by United Arists, and is the new feature attraction at the Paramount Theatre. Filling the same role he played in the revival of the stage play is Paul Robeson, famed Negro actor and ‘nger, who fills every requirement of the exacting title part in a magnifi- cent manner. Also in the cast is Dudley Digges, noted stage and gereen player, formerly with the The- tre Guild, who makes his character .@f Smithers, the Cockney trader, sec- ond only to the Robeson perform- ance. Predi Washington and Frank Wil- both of whom have many suc- to their credit as stage players, have important roles in “Em- Jones.” Robeson’s acting has seldom, if ever, been surpassed in stage or mo- picture history. He is a magnifi- bragging, swaggering figure th the South Carolina, Harlem scenes, and is at his fi- difficult jungle sequences pursued by hallucinations of his own imagining, his with the trail of murder 't behind during his check- Murphy, the director, has intage of every opportunity “Emperor Jones” as great a play as it was on the stage, and a wider sweep possible in the limited con- the stage technique. Many unusual photographic effects have teen secured by Ernest Haller, chief ca meraman. Herman Rosse, famous scenic de- ? TY Seog TERRE EGEE nat i af a in his jung! for “Emperor Jones,” and caught the Harlem atmosphere and preten- tous color in vivid strokes of his gift- | da ed talent. ' ominous throb of the tom- | ‘Only Yesterday’ Is Feature at Capitol This is a year when the customer gets more star names for the price of | | admission than ever before. Ever ‘since the all-star cast of “Grand Ho- | tel,” moving picture studios have cen- {tered more and more “name” talent \an casts, but Carl Laemmle, Jr., has |gone the limit. The cast of “Only Yesterday,” coming tomorrow to the | Capitol Theatre, contains ninety- | three names of players known the world over. There never was a pic- ture with such a cast. There prob- |ably never will be another one. . John Stahl was given carte blanche to secure just the proper player for every role whether it was important or unimportant. And Stahl is a stick- ler for the right actor in the right role. In addition to the 93 name ‘ts, Universal used 4,500 extras in ‘Only Yesterday” to make this pic- ture the actors’ and extras’ delight. It has kept many a big bad wolf from the Hollywood actors’ door. In the final scene alone, eighteen well known screen players were used. ‘Those who appearai in these final scenes, along with many other supe porting players, were Edmund Breese, Ben Bard, Creighton Hale, Natalie Kingston, King Baggot, William Da- vidson, Lloyd Whitlock, Virginia Howell, Jason Robards, Robert Bol- der, Lynn Cowan, Maidel Turner (from the New York stage), George Irving, Eddie Kane, George Hacka- thorne, James Donlan, Otto Hoffman end Harvy Clark, bringing he total cast to 93 speaking parts. “Only Yesterday,” presented 98 Universel’s most ambitious picture of the season, features Margaret Sulla- van, John Boles, Edna May ou. leading roles. portant sre played by Jimmy Butler, Benita Hume, Franklin Pangborn, George Meeker, June Clyde, Barry Norton, Matt McHugh, Vivien Oakland, Bert Roach, Onslow Stevens and Natalie Moorhead, r Clothes moths cannot eat while in the flying stage, since their mou! are put together imperfectly; they clothing only while in the lar- EXPERIENCE ,1 CAN SEE THAT You Vou ‘Tort! THATS THE TROULE WITA Yoo MOUNGETERS OF TODPN= NO INDINODALICM SURE FUNNY! 1 KNOW OERN WELL THERE'S NO SUCH THINGS AS SPOOKS, Yer——- WHY, ROY! YOU'RE, GROWING A BEARD!! sz