The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 3, 1934, Page 8

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SIDE GLANCES - - By George Clark “Yes, I agree with you; it’s probably the funniest story I’ve written. — a THis Curious WorLD LEOPARDS ANO MOUNTAIN LIONS HAVE BEEN CROSSED SUCCESSFULLY, By William Ferguson a COWBIRDS LAY THEIR EGGS IN THE NESTS OF OTHER BIRDS... 6UT SOME YELLOW WARBLERS REFUSE TO SIT } ON THE INTRUDER’S Vj | EGGS/ INSTEAD THEY BUILD A NEW NEST ON TOP }f ON ToP OF THAT, IF NECESSARY/ ARE ABLE TO DIGEST THE BONES ano TEETH OF THE ANIMALS THEY SWALLOW. © 1934 BY NEA SERVICE INC. | AT THE MOVIES Only Love Able to Tame This Girl of Carolina Mountains As an impetuous, unrestrained, semi-wild girl of the Carolina moun- tains, Katharine Hepburn came to the screen of the Capitol Theatre yester- | day. The star's new picture, “Spit- fire,” is a picturizatin of the stage play, “Trigger,” which had a long un on Broadway a few seasons ago. It is the story of an untamed lass ‘who lives alone in a crude cabin in the sparsely settled hills, earning a meager living by washing clothes. Her character is one of the most unique in the annals of the screen nd one of startling contradictions; one moment she prays with a child- Jike faith in God, where as in the next instant she is a flaming, fight- fing wildcat. It is only when love enters her soul that she shows signs of womanly surrender. And this sur- render is as impetuous as her hostility fn her other moods, She falls in love with a young en- wineer on a nearby dam project andj blindly, innocently gives him her nd her kisses, believing him ‘when he telis her that he is not mar- ried. She is saved from his ulterior and regeneMated by the un- selfish love of this man’s superior on the construction work at the dam, a man who is able to see beneath the surface of her vixenish exterior and appreciate the sterling qualities of her dinner and usually hidden nature. ‘The jewelry and other valuable ar- ticles of the Nizam of Hyderabad, ex- clusive of his gold stores, reaches an estimated value of $200,000,000. International relations are difficult. ‘They depend unfortunately, to some extent, on smell Katharine Puller- ton Gerould. California has 56 state parks, with @ total acreage of 278,000 and repre- senting an investment of $12,000,000. | Norma Shearer Stars In Ultra-Modern Role | Of Her Film ‘Ripfire’ Norma Shearer offers another of her magnetic and fascinating per- formances as a modern woman with ultra-modern ideals in “Riptide,” her newest photoplay which will start | Wednesday at the Paramount The- atre. Lavishily produced, brilliantly ; enacted by its star and an impres- sive supporting cast and bearing the directional stamp of that ace direc- | tor, Edmund Goulding, who also wrote | the story, the new Shearer vehicle stands out as one of the finest pro- ductions to come from the Metro- | Goldwyn-Mayer studios and provides an entertainment of distinction in every phase of motion picture artistry. As Lady Rexford, in this daringly triangular Continental romance, Miss | Shearer is regally supber. Never has |she appeared so beautifully photo- graphed or handsomely costumed. Her performance is nothing less than | magnificent, even more superb than her “Divorcee,” which won her the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science awards in 1929. With the customary flair attached to a Shearer film the star is provided with not one leading man but two. Robert Montgomery enacts the play- boy friend and Herbert Marshall is seen as the more sober-minded hus- band. fach delivers a superb perfor- mance. Tiny parasites get into the mouths of fish and annoy them. The tiny butterfly fish swim into the mouths of these larger fish to remove the Parasites while the “patient” holds Perfectly still. REMEMBER My Boy, THIS FOOL IDEA WAS YOUR OWN..... IF ANYTHING HAPPENS To You, I WON'T BE RESPONSIBLE! Ln ALENT! QUST LIKE THE BABY ‘THAT COULDN'T BE HAPPY UNTIL IT GOT THE BUMBLE SEE =— DON'T STAY IN THERE TOO LONG, KID... THE AIR PICTURES, GH? PicTURES OF THE INSIDE OF AN OIL TANK! WELL, WELL! “THEY OUGHTA GE INTER- By BLOSSER eso GO AHEAD...HAVE YouR FUN! BUT IM COMING ESTING! IF THEY COME OUT Goop, ) OUT OF THIS TANK WITH TLL TRADE YOU AN X-RAY SOME REAL PICTURES, AND A HANDFUL OF LAST _ LAUGHS....AND You CAN PULL UP HERE!LET'S SEE \F THEY'S BIN ANY SUSPICIOUS — LOOKIN’ CRARACTERS HANGIN’ "ROUND PAINT THAT ON AN ESCAPED CONNICT, YA SAY% TLL BET WE WAS THE TOUGH G LOOKIN’ FELLER, HEADIN' SALESMAN SAM So YOU'NE TusT GOT BACK FROM YouR. HONEN MOON, AND YOU'RE COOKING The FIRST MEAL FoR “TH HuGBY i TINIGHT, HUH? WELL, THATS FINE! ase 3A 4 ieee Soe CT WELL, LE | WU2 You, \'o PLaY SAFE | DO Ya ERY TH’ AND GIVE HIN FRIED Han, FRIED BEANS, TO? POTATOES AND Way BEANS! : ) Tit! —ee os GRAY ROOTS AND HER BUDDIES WELL TLL GWE HOPWOOD, CREDIT FOR ONE THING “HES THE MosT PERSISTENT PERSON 1 EVER SAW! HE SIMPLY WON'T LET BooTS. OUT OF WIS SIGHT : MEXKIN. YOU HIRED ‘TO PLAY BANDIT, SUH-ARE. | eg Suns You in aust. ‘| WANT SPREAD OUT AROUND 'EM AN, WHEN | GIVE THE SIGNAL, WE'LL CLOSE IN AN’ SOCKO! I) kor HEAVENS, NO (aug ey OH, THEN (' AERAIO To Boll wax BEANS! 7 1 DUNNO. THEM GUESTS HAS ALOT 0’ MONEY AND VALUABLES. To'ee A misery 1816 TEMPTATION FER HIM TO DOUBLE-cROSS You. TAKE @ CHANCE, ON THEM! By MARTIN NOW-WE'VE GOT ‘EM, GANG! UP AN' AT 'EM/ TAKE'EM ALIVE!

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