The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 1, 1934, Page 8

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, OUUTUBER:1, 1934 : THE GUMPS—OPENING THE CASE FOR BIM NOTHING COULD HAVE BEEN it | om Né COULD | EEN FARTHER ! WRON ep om HE LOVES BEYOND I ALL. THINGS IN THIS WORLD = HE GAVE i\ HER DIAMONDS - CARS- FLOW EVERYTHING HER HEART DESIRED— ~ HIS HEART= — vb} i T WANT TO ASK YOU— THEN WELL SEE ABOUT FIXING you UP WITH A JOB. 3 la. “Ah, yes, I remember her. She had golden curls and sa next to‘us in the sixth grade geography class.” Tuis Curious WoRLD “nner | a aa | | DAVS WERE VERV SMALL 42ND SOUR: AT THE MOVIES | To Show ‘Cimarron’ At Capitol Theater Five thousand persons made up the mighty horde that performed a re- enactment of the most dramatic spec- tacle of contemporary time—the Okla- homa Land Rush of 1889, for the spec- tacular highlight of “Cimarron,” RKO-Radio Picture. Flanked by squadrons of motor po- lice with the red spotlights staining the highway, oxen and horses drew hundreds of covered wagons, buggies, surries, ox carts and incongruous ve- hicles of all descriptions up in line for the big stampede for government Jand. At daybreak a cannon boomed its signal and the record throng roared its ‘way across the prairie in the migh- test, maddest moment ever recorded on celluloid—the land rush sequence in “Cimarron,” which opens a return engagement at the Capitol theater Wednesday. Old-time plainsmen, veterans of the Oklahoma Run itself, saw the drama of their lives re-enacted as the film thousands surged over the starting Jine with the same fighting determina- tion of the original land-hungry horde.. The weird vehicles, the live- stock, men afoot, on horseback, and Paramount’s Picture Fast-Moving Comedy row at the Paramount Theatre, in which Cary Grant reveals a new facet of his versatility. This bubbling, Continental com- edy gives Cary Grant a chance to display his abilities to the fullest ex- tent as a competent farceur. The story is one of complicated situations in which a young Parle sian man-sbout-town finds himself with an option on a nitrate conces- sion on his hands plus one of his Many sweethearts who, with her hus- band, is trying to rob him of the con- ion, The telephone operator in his ho- tel is also in love with him, and through the medium of the switch- board tries to straighten out his af- fairs, only to succeed in complicating them still further until happy chance helps to resolve them. Frances Drake, one of the most Promising of the newer crop of Players, does some very the telephone operator, ture is made still further even astride bicycles swept over the bY Charles Ray prairie like water through a broken |Comeback in the dam. Scores of cameras, mour.ted over- head underfoot and alongside the milling thousands, recorded every de- | tail of the mighty charge for the film that brought Edna Ferber’s epic story to the screen. Although the land rush ‘screen achievement since | oufstanding the advent ‘of talking pictures, Richard: Dix and Irene Dunne head the great cast in this drama of the romantic: West. “Decorations have just been award- This breezy, int the distinction of being exce] le ly well cast and directed. A wolf has been seen in Pittsfield, Mass., tas the fi time since 1904. What, the depression just hit Pittsfield? Schilling Lemon Extract pute the 3 | pure flavor of fresh lemons ine THE NEWFANGLES (Mom'n Pop) AW, DON'T BE SILLY, SAea! | WOULDN'T THINK OF HANGIN’ 4 YA EER FALLIN’ ASLEEP ON TH’ 308! WHAT | MEAN BY PENOED, 15 THAT YER LAID OFF Naan 7 rage WITHOUT BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES ON, IF (STILL WAS A DETECTIVE, I'DA

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