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

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1984 — OM Mitte! MILLIE! MiLie! AND AFTER Hi HIS: REPIN, Mi CAN HARDLY GLAD “TDi -MILRIE— Aad ——— 9 3-28 WiLL MR.HEIL REALLY FIRE You, IF You DON'T FIND OUT WHAT HAPPENED TO THAT 47000 GALLONS OF OIL THAT DISAPPEARED 2 THE GUMPS—O HAPPY DAY 7's All. GETTLED-WERE | THis Curious PER is WoRLD ovation SPEED OF /O MES t HOUR BACKWAROS ATTAINED. OF AN ADULT HAVE A COMBINED LENGTH OF ASOUT 100,000 MES. ONE GRAIN OF MARQUIS WHEAT, PLANTED By OocTOR, = CHARLES SAUNDERS ~* eytull thy 1918, IN NORTH AMERICA ALONE. © 1934 BY NEA ZGN ° SERVICE, WiC. ee er] [AT THE MOVIES Chills! Thrills! Hair- Raising Episodes in ‘Mystery of Mr. X’ With Robert Montgomery and Lewis Stone If you are thrilled by an ingenious- ly woven tale of mystery and intrigue, touched by a charming love story and give into violently waving your hat at the dramatically graduated climax of} ® genuine thriller, then you had better go to the Paramount theater... and see Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's new hhair-raiser, the “Mystery of Mr. X.” tomorrow and Friday. Directed by Edgar Selwyn, than whom there is no one abler, adapted from Philip MacDonald’s sensational Crime Club novel, “Mystery of the Dead Police,” the new film is all that fn exciting mystery should be, and more. ‘There are thrills from the moment you enter and see Robert Mont- gomery, as Revel, gentleman crook, gracefully lift the Drayton diamond from a safe while the shadow of “X,” London’s notorious murderer, passes by, to the final show-down between the engaging young crook and the} fiend, | As Revel, Montgomery is superb. | His clever characterization breathes | reality into the exciting role You) believe he is quick-witted enough to/ have stolen the diamond, to run the ‘If I Were Free’ All Appealing in STARTED SOMETHING HEY, 0522, C'MERE, ) HOLD UP a mUUTE, Sam! Watt @ SECOND, WILL Ya? / “TILL 1 SE] How uct Ts Guy WANTS To TOUCH Me FoR! HE'S @ GCoRROWIN’ PEST! Theme Thought] wAsH TUBES “If I Were Free”—the terse phrase often voiced by the harassed house- wife, the man behind the bars, the henpecked husband, the enslaved worker—provides not only the title but also the theme of the RKO- Radio drama which co-stars Clive Brook and Irene Dunne at the Capitol theater. Miss Dunne and Brook, fresh from their respective triumphs in “Ann Vickers” and “Cavaleade,” are seen in the complications of a very mod- ern love. Both are married to des- Picable mates and are about ready to end their respective lives when they meet at a party. The encounter brings renewed interest in life, and they fall in love. When the couple decides to throw the bonds of Mrs. Grundy to the winds and take up a clandestine romance, Miss Dunne’s ex-husband launches 2 him. John Van Druten is the author of the London stage success, “Behold, We Live,” from which Dwight Taylor adapted “If I Were. Free.” Elliott Nugent directed a cast which also in- cludes Henry Stephenson, Nils Asther, Laura Hope Crews and Lorraine Mac- Lean, i ‘Thousands of dollars’ worth of gold went up in smoke at the U. 8. gold D PRYING TO CHEER MISS LANE, THE BOYS AT THE a RANCH PUT ON A RODEO. ITS A PRETTY 4000 ‘THE GUESTSARE DELIGHTED. ALLEY OOP BESIDES,NO ONE COULD POSSIBLY TAKE THAT MUCH OIL AWAY, WITHOUT A TRUCK, | THERES A MAN rad aT ALL TIEB AND THAT OIL! <A yy LEND ME A DINE FER mY Yoost, I’ SoRRY, ROSCOE) BUT YOU'RE OUTA LUCK CARFARE HOME, WILL Ya, Ov222 Tis Time! BUTT DONT )/ NEVER MIND MEL IF TLEANG om KILLER COMES OOPIN” AROUND “WIS HOUSE, HELL WISH HE NEVER HAD sxippe_! @LL I GOT WITH mE IS TWo-Buck NOTE | Ny | © 1936 BY NEA SERVICE INC. By MARTIN ‘DANGED IF L AIN'T STUMPED, MR: RIVERS. SHE OON'T Ti NO INTEREST IN NUTHIN, AN! GITS SADDER'N EVER,

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