The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, February 28, 1934, Page 8

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— 2 a ig HER HANDWRITING — ONFRONTED WITH iT aa (tT THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS "RS Baek is A LETTER FR MILE! IN BILLS, MAMA, “ a! Bi Mite’ Ake,| | \CORAREET BAREING/ |r Sour Shane aera MR THAT THE SCENE AT : iD THE SWEET! THE CHURCH WAS - MOST WNOCENT CREATURE ALL A VENGEFUL — THAT EVER LIVED— TRIEK.QE TOWNSEND ‘ : UNABLE ‘TO TALK Xo 81M BY TELEPHONE. MAMA HAS SWALLOWED A LETTER= r Ny = WHAT “THEN? Was ALL A TANG OE \ BENS SA ER MeNe wer TOWNSEND One A SHANGE (70 DECENE Ma— a a A Pa EV! OW = PLL NEVER BE. a Baak | iB | 4442 0 0 BE ' ( “THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS HAS DECIDED THAT THE COOK PROPERTY IS JUST WHAT THIS RAILROAD NEEDS FOR AN IDEAL DEPCT IF YOU'RE ‘GOING To HAVE To $7000 1S ASKED FOR} Looe ELSEWHERE... TLL BE ‘TAKING OVER THAT PROPERTY IN A FEW DAYS... AND #7000 ISN'T ENO *BSBnooe eeeaess ananeae WHO'S “THE SLICK LOOKIN’ GAL;TRIPDIN' UP MAIN STREET wens CO. U. 8. PAT. OFY, 1034 BY NEA SERVICE, WIC. “You never think of buckwheat cakes until we come to some place like this.” Tuis Curious WorLD | _ SALESMAN SAM ( ¥SeT em on TW Tasce! eA SOY, YOU came SusTar tT’ RIGHT TIME! 1 WAS ABOUT TO PHONE TH’ sToRE! ( BOUGHT @ DOZEN Ecos WHY, “THATS REALLY YEAH, aN' @ Year Aco, “ose Yestenpey, AND YOU CHARGED) REASONABLE, LaDy! @ @ Lot FRESHER HE BI CENTS! (TS Too MUCH! % 4 SSS [be SKELETON A OF 25 POUND PELICAN : Ral WW WEIGHS ONLY 23 OUNCES. SKIN..17 18 BROWN/ EARLY EXPLORERS SAW “THE RED OCHRE WAR PAINT ON THEIR SKINS AND THOUGHT - 1T WAS NATURAL..... HENCE THE NAME "REO MEN/” EARLY RAILROADS USED WOODEN RAILS, WITH A THIN STRAP OF IRON ON No worro! WELL, LETS 60 — N ¥ TOP, AND PASSENGERS OFTEN SUFFERED INJURY 4 - Z § ‘ ) WHEN THESE STRAPS CAME LOOSE AND RAN UP THROUGH THE COACH POOR. 1934 RY WEA SERVICE a | __ AT THE MOVIES 14 Stars Play Extra _ Lionel Barrymore Tops Roles for Robinson | Famous Names in In His ‘Dark Hazard’) ‘This Side of Heaven’ Edward G. Robinson has the dis- | Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer has dedi- tinction of having fourteen stars and | cated its most recent picture, “This featured players, as well as all of the |Side of Heaven,” which opens today ‘OK. A COUPLE Oo Warner Bros.-First National stock | at the Paramount Theatre, to the i v American family. girl starlets and most of the studio #verage executives, playing extra roles for him | _.78¢ Picture deals with the inter- $n his latest First National picture, Dark Hazard,” which will be shown {Woven dramas, high aspirations, | Youthful romances and disappoint- at the Capitol Theatre today and) ments of a typical everyday house- (Thursday. hold. ° Lionel Barrymore, whose most re- : ni . Bor these sequences at the Compton Ladies Behave,” “Her Sweetheart” Tace course near Los Angeles. The and “Dinner at Eight,” was chosen by stars and executives formed a pert ff the audience of 10,000 paying de- {votees who were at the track betting on their favorite, “Dark Hazard.” As mot only the racing was photographed but shots made of the wildly cheering gudience, movie spectators who see “Dark Hazard” will be able to pick | out Joan Blondell, Joe E. Brown, Johnny Mack Brown, Warren Wil- Of course Edward G. Robinson is there as the real star of the picture. Even Genevieve Tobin, his leading lady, who is supposed to be bitterly gambling in the picture, le of the most excited specta- Others in the cast in- the studio executives as the typical head of the average American family, | whose story the picture tells. Fay Bainter, brilliant New York stage star of “East Is West” and numerous other popular plays, was jbeckoned westward to the Pacific Coast to portray Barrymore's wife and, incidentally, her first motion picture role. Mae Clarke, heretofore known chief- ;|1y a8 an exotic night club girl in , |former pictures, proves her versatility , |by her appearance in the role of a young school teacher, loved by two men, one wealthy and all business, the other a young idealistic newspa- Perman. Mary Carlisle, well known for her co-ed parts in a long string of suc- cessful pictures, again appears as the co-ed. She is the younger daughter of the average family who believes marriage is too old-fashioned for one .|of her young years. Her “Big Mo- have any money after their men il ‘and dénghters go .Westien. ment” in the picture is Henry Wads- worth, young juvenile, well known on the eastern stage and who makes his first Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer appear. ance. ‘We mothers-in-law have too long hnetoe: sie’ Dene oA aes Jokes nd misleading insinuations.—Mrs. N. Griges, president of Mother-in Law's Day Club of Texas. TICKETS TO PRAIRIE HA WE'LL ATTACK IMMEDIATELY 76

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