The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 6, 1934, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 1934 THE GUMPS—IN TIME OF NEED On), MIN = You ANDY WHY DON'T You [span ll ONGC Gin Ya AT RONEY enn BROKE a AND IMPOSING Seb UP= | BACK-ANO NE NEEDS IT NOW> 8 We GAVED- RITES 5 THIS IS THE TIME WE : You AND J< AN HELP HiMe~ 7 | SIDEGLANCES- - - By George Clark | p ‘YOUNG MAN, LET Tas: Now yeu Se LECTURING HIM... HAVE BEEN AWARDED see” || REALIZE WHAT HE'LL GET DIRK $ 10,000....BUT TLL 1s BE GLAD To GET AWARDED $5,000 JUDGMENT AGAINST (___\ ED MASON, | LocaL a . 3 JEWELER. Py “Yes, I reckon we can give you a room if you’re sure you ain’t hold-up men.” | Ka; 4 © wx K A iM: WELL, 1 THINK (T'S Tis Curious Wortb SHAPE — ANYWAY, TM OYT Twin! (0.000 & SNOWSHOE | RABBITS a HAVE BEEN ¥] | “SHIPPED FROM = WISCONSIN TO NEW YORK STATE SINCE MARCH. NEW YORK IS STOCKING ITS WOODLANDS WITH WISCONSIN'S SURPLUS RABBIT CROP/ aw,Gee, cHier cive ME a Now), ('JE GOT EV'RYTHING FKED, )THASS PIE FER ME, @oy! aM ALL steamed up! CRACK AT CT, WILL YA? Seu ON! ALL YA GOTTA DO IS GO (CHIEF! I'VE BEEN e MY FIRST HONEST-TA-GOSH + Barone Beyer atan aye gare ie mere ae Gece ali THERE, TAKE TH PART OF {CLERK ALL MY LIEE= (U6 MAKE @ NAME FER MYSELE,ER MY NAME aINT | CALLED THE ALATF/SHES, BUT 0 MOT 2 (F YER GONNA OPEN gupierniont= a owen THE RAYS, WHICH ARE THE BE A OKKK, NOWS YER ALATEST on Ale KNOWN i rey die TH! CHANCE Ta sHOW FISHES, NOT BELONG. i (ME ¢ ! IN THIS GROUP. MONTH! JUST GOTA Ree ee CALL FROM OU MAN GIMLET, AN! (M CUT TIN! A MAN ON TH! CASE T'DaY! be KLONOIKE- 1s NOT IN ALASKAS ITIS A DISTRICT IN YUKON TERRITORY, CANADA. | AT THE MOVIES | ‘Lost Patrol’ Gives Sylvia Has New Role Stark Desert Drama In Current Comedy f, para i L | "7 ie, Bai = |e NMG Thirst maddened them, and they A different, but extremely fascinat- Jested of cold drink and carried on.| ing Sylvia Sidney, free for the time Heat blistered them, and they laughed | Of the necessity of appearing morbid, of cool shade and flowing rivers. The| Unhappy or frustrated may be seen in hunger of women tortured them, and} Paramount's delicious comedy satire they talked of past loves, and the|“Thirty-Day Princess,” which opened girls they had left behind. | yesterday at the Paramount Theatre. They were 11 men, facing certain| As the little actress who was hired @eath on the desert, and their story | to impersonate a princess, and wound is told in “The Lost Patrol,” current | UP Wishing that she were a real prin- RKO-Radio Picture featuring a pow-| CSS, 80 that she could hold the love erful cast headed by Victor McLaglen, | Of the handsome newspaper publisher, Eoris Karloff, Reginald Denny, Wal- | Miss Sidney is easy to look at, beauti- Jace Ford and others at. the Capito!| ‘tilly garbed, and refreshingly witty. ‘Theatre tonight and Thursday. Topping the supporting cast is Cary . Said to be a dramatic revelation of | Grant, who could overcome any wo- masculine character, the ~ picture] Man's resistance, as the handsome shows a patrol of cavalry-men turned! impetuous publisher; Lucien Little- into aimless wanderers on a hostile | field, Vince Barnett. desert when their officer is killed| _ The story is an expert adaptation of without revealing his orders. Clarence Budington Kel'and’s popular (Oa AFTER THE HOLO-UP, THE CHIEF OF POLICE It then goes on to show how the| Magazine story, credit being due Pres- QUESTIONS OFFICERS WHO WERE GUARDING THE soldiers wait for death after they have| ton Sturges and Frank Partos for the SANK. af in an , clever adaptation, and Sam Hellman ae ie eae i nae Her, and Edwin Justin Mayer for the bright Said to be of special interest to] 8nd racy dialogue. feminine filmgoers are the scenes in| Marion Gering, one of Hollywood's knowing that they never will see them which the doomed men talk of women, again. John Ford directed the production, Sa all of which was filmed on a pic-| The front page of most Japanese turesque desert location among the pocning Dewspapers is a given over to wind whipped sand dunes near Yuma, fire tha ae the font paneses: ‘The sereen play is based upon Philip | Ukely , print only ad- MacDonald's oslebrated novel, “Pa- vertisements there. lear Timid pacifism lazy pacifism I had an adventurous trip; the|#"¢ N0t enough. We have got to be weather was frightful throughout—|!" @ hurry about peace.—Miss Doro- where can I.get a cup of tea?—Miss | thy Detzer, secretary of the Women’s Jean Batten, arriving after a 16,000- | International League for Peace and racy, flippant celluloid comedy. T can tell you what happened. We just shot the devil out of them— F no killed “Clyde Barrow and HEY? HERE Cc \\— oe —A ers w : eas eee fed TH a8. GEAT Iv, You 6vys/ TH WHOLE GOGGLE~EVED All of us who are worth anything| All I know is that I lost a hunk of Be Ge f ‘ ee LEMIAN ARMY 1S our manhood in unlearning money, — Constance Talmadge, re- one Oe eas cas wintoee oe fercing to her losees in the Harriman he t RIGHT BEHIND mel! Greater love hath no man than this,| Let every man abide in the same ‘8 man lay down his life for his| Calling wherein he was called—I frfends—8t Sohn 18:13, Corinthians, 1:20, o —_ aw = R. C. FORSYTHE ATES FURNISED employed by gas company ;

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