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ANDY AND MIN! COME Quick! LITTLE NELL IF THAT'S MILLIE AGAIN I'LL HANG UP. | HATE ‘TO BE RUDE- BUY I'LL SHOW HER I'M NOT GOING TO WEAKEN NOW=< Gres OF STONE- BIM HAS HELD TRUE TO HIS RESOLUTION= HE IS THROUGH WITH WOMEN FOREVER - No ENTREATIES- NO ARGUMENTS OR PERSUASION WILL CHANGE HIS MIND= MAMA DESTRaSS MAS TRIED IN VAIN TO BRING ABOUT A RECONCILIATION: BUT BIM WILL Nor BE MOVED- HELLO- YES- \'M THE MAN EVERYWHERE SIDE GLANCES - - - By George Clark | PROPERTY IS VERY VAL: eae? UABLE...VERY! IT'S * { PRODUCING SOMETHING WAMSLEY ] sin EVERY CRANK-CASE IN THE NATION IS HOWLING FoR..Olk! AND WHAT TLL MAKE A ‘TEST AND LET ‘| ‘You KNow «AND WE FOUND WAS DIGGING WITH MY La IT BUBBLING SHOVEL, I LOOKED DOWN AND THERE IT WAS, BUBBLING UP FROM ~~ By COWAN SMOKIN' TURGE-FER- AK-QUARTER CIGARS, EH? You MUSTA MADE A PILE OF MONEY ON “THAT BIG DEAL, WINDY WELL, I DIDN'T DO S'BAD ED!T AT WINERY DAY “MET You KIN CLEAN UP HE SAY, WINDY, THEY'S A FELLER WERE WHOS WEVER HEARD ABOUT HOW You CLEANED ON THET SLOUGH DEAL TLL MAME A OTE OF THAT! YOU. SEE, TAM Tue INTERNAL REVENUE} AGENT Fo TiS DISTRICT Lt “Oh, Mr. Birch, why can’t you be serious? I think I have just the house you're looking for.” Tis Curious WorLD ay wt | a “HAT'D BE @N APPROPRIATE EN'RYTHING- 1 | < ANE ( WERE ONG, FELL ( Have 1S Yours SINGIN’ IT! EVRY THING T GIRL AN’ SHE ieNE (3S SPOURS! stuck me up! UNAZTA MATTER, ) THATS an BUODY2 Ya Look’ (pea ! (mM Bon! TH! KiWoa Desecteo! (eau? wer, | KNow @ More APPROPRIATE one! Que OCEANS WOULD DRY UP IN 3000 YEARS, IF THE WATER TAKEN FROM THEM BY EVAPORATION DID NOT RETURN. THERE '6 ABOUT ONE MLE OF WIRE IN A FULL-SIZEO WINDOW | AT THE “ ORIOLES | CAN TIE MOVIES ‘Fashions of 1934’ | Proves Big Hit at | Capitol Theatre| First National has done it again. In “Fashions of 1934,” starring Wil- lam Powell, which was shown locally | for the first time yesterday at the| Capitol theater, they have come to bat with another smashing hit that) kept audiences roaring with laugh-/| ter and held them with breathless in- | terest, marveling at the rare beauty of the Busby Berkeley spectacles. Comedy drama it is, but there is a| magnitude about the picture which | lifts it far above the usual in this type of production. For it combines mam- | moth spectacle with its spicy ro-/ mance and hilarious situations. | ‘The story by Harry Collins and ‘Warren Duff is not only timely, up-, to-the-minute, as is usual with the) film fare of the associated Warner- | First National companies but it re- | yeals for the first time on the screen the unique and highly amusing meth- ods employed by unscrupulous shop keepers who steal and copy exclusive fashion designs from the world fa- mous couturiers. Milady of fashion will now learn | how it is that her maid or her cook | can blossom forth in the latest of Parisian gowns, identical with her own, for which she has paid fabulous gums because of their exclusiveness, ‘No secret, in fact, in the art of fak- ing and purloining costume designs | ig left unrevealed. A spectacle of special interest to magnificent fashion show isa the BEER? ; Posted at the entrances. Filming Fan Dance Is ‘Madhouse Job’; Hundreds Mob Set Putting Sally Rand’s internation- ally famous “fan dance” in pictures was a “madhouse job!” Everybody on the Paramount “Bo- lero” set, where the filming was tak- ing place, agreed to that. The only Person who wasn’t at'all upset by the confusion was smiling Sally Rand, | herself, who plays a featured role in this picture which comes today and Tuesday to the Paramount Theatre, Starring George Raft and featuring Carole Lombard and Frances Drake. While the scene was in prepara- tion, “NO ADMITTANCE” signs were on all the doors, stalwart guards were Hundreds of technicians, actors, and studio em- Ployes working on the picture were on the set. Hundreds more, includ- ing suddenly important individuals, were on the outside demanding ad- mittance—‘“on business.” One of the fan magazine scribes tried to get on by going to Miss Rand’s dressing room in his shirt- sleeves, joining the entourage of maids and fan bearers as “mirror holder.” He succeeded, held the mirror for seven hours while techni- cians prepared for taking the scene, and then gave it up as a bad job. But once on the set, he found he couldn't get off. Good elbowing of the fan bearers was required to get Miss Rand onto the set, a London night club scene in “Bolero,” in which Raft returns to his once famous hoofing with a series of partners, including Carole Lom- bard, Frances Drake and the fan dancer. BABE HERMAN SIGNS Cal., March 5.—(#)—The Chicago Cubs were ordered out Mon- day for their first drill of the train- ing season. Ployd (Babe) Herman, suspected of being a holdout, signed | Sunday. 7 OMY XACT Ao WF You never SAW) THAT LETTER ! You REMEMBER THE MATRIMONIAL AD 1 RAN--TELLING ALL ABOUT MYSELF ,AND SAYING THAT 1 WAS LOOKING FOR A WIFE ,OONT YOU ? WELL, HE MINOTE ‘THAT LETTER CAME, WITH NOUR PICTURE AND ALL ,1 HOPPED ON A TRAIN AND CAME RIGHT OP HERE, URE YOO ASKED ME To -..- = HOURS: AND EASY PLOD ALONG ‘THE B WASH ‘TRACKS BEFORE COMING, AT LAST, TOA WATER TANK, our, Bow! GETTER COME OVER ANO SET IM TO A PLATE OF BEANS, f WHY, GOLLY 1 THINK YOURE SWELL, OUST LIKE TH! LETTER y HAMLIN