The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, November 7, 1935, Page 12

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1935 THE GUMPS—JUST A FRIENDLY TOUCH + MANE ‘THE MONEY )] [7/ Cael Noirs s,000- - By George Clark SIDE GLANCES MILLIE, MY DEAR, 1 DON'T Wish — To BE IMPERTINENT OR SEEM 1 To BE PRYING INTO YOUR AFFAIRS -®UT DO YOU MANE ANY MONEY TUCKED AWAY HAT NOBODY KNOWS NOW DARLING- (T'S A LITTLE BUSINESS VENTURE I'M INTERESTED IN@ I'LL ONLY Db THE FOR PN, LRIOHT BASS soo" A ROUTRRPRE rust you j WHATEVER YOU WANT, MAMA, You. CAN Steins SO ‘SHRANGE TO WELL JUST ABOUT HOW GOING INTO BUSINESS —- i ae “ “Don’t worry, he’s not going to fire me. his customers would follow me over to Kelly’s Coffee Pot.” He knows half | Tis Curious Wortp ©," CANNOT FLY UNTIL. THEY ARE SOME BIRDS FLY WHEN OuT UTTLE MORE THAN 4 © 1935 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. ®ve WORD LITERALLY, SIX MONTHS OLO/ OF THE EGG BUT WEEK. CLIMATE,” MEANS, “SLOPE/” \N ANCIENT GREECE, CLIMATES WERE MERELY ZONES OF LATITUDE ON THE SURFACE OF THE EARTH. SHADYSIDE HASN'T A CHANCE ! KINGSTON WILL PUSH 'EM OUT OF THE STADIUM! Look AT THAT LINEUP !! BUNCH OF SCRUBS! NO TEAM CAN BEAT IM SORRY, FAMOUS FRECKLES Guy ?|| YOU HIT OFFICER, BUT 1 HE WAS A BIG SHor | [THIS MAN. (JusT waSHeD ‘Your ) HANDS AND f NAUGHY DoGcie | Youve chewed UP MY SHEET MUSIC! JUST FOR “THAT, YOU'LL REMAIN “TIED UP ALL cay! LWAS JEST WALKIN’ BY AND I weanTen Ta TELL Ya, MADAME SKREECHI-—- Your siglo SWELL WELL, I WAS GONNA SAY, [T'S A SHAME ‘TO WASTE A GOOD FIST, WHILE 1 HAVE A CLUB THAT'S JUST ITCHING BOOTS AND HER BUDDIES HONEY, \TS MISTAH BULB! HE SAYS CAN HE TAKE YO TO DE PROM : : (THE ANSWER ‘It’s in the Air’ Stars |‘Rainmakers’ Film Is It \S_NO, WITH A WANTS TRNOW WILL JIM DATE! U5 Go Ue iM NEXT OP WER SEAR, WIE A oo CAPITAL Q 2 FRE: THING = AND \ a aga g MAME AT, , RE CAN TAKE MY CAPITAL N Benny and Una Merkel There is something new under the bun! And it starts today at the Para- mount treatre in the form of Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer's thrilling laugh- Special, “It’s In the Air.” For a new angle on screen plots, Jack Benny's latest starring picture can’t be beat. The audience screamed, laughed, cried and cheered at the thrilling Stratosphere flight, with Benny and ‘Ted Healy as the novice participants ‘who have to take to the air to escape the long arm of the law for their bhady dealings. Una Merkel, as Benny's wife, shows that she is as adept at dramatic por- ‘trayals as comedy. Nat Pendelton, as the dumb “G-Man,” had the audi- ence holding their sides. Mary Car- lisle was never better than in her characterization of the flapper vamp, while Harvey Stephens and Grant Mitchell turned in sterling perform- ances. Following on the heels of his first Success, “Broadway Melody of 1936,” Benny proves that he is one of the Screen’s top comedians in the Metro- Goldwyn-Mayer comedysdrama di- rected by Charles F. Riesner, who incidentally directed Benny's first made “Hollywood Revue of 1929.” The collection of refuse costs Lon- STopP! pioveu REMEMBER WRicLEYS? Swift as a Speedboat Swift as a speedboat, novel as a cir- cus and packed with laughter, “The Rainmakers,” which opened last night at the Capitol Theatre, deserves rat- |ing among the best comedy features ‘given to the screen by Bert Wheeler and Robert Woolsey. Placing Wheeler and Woolsey in the |roles of scientific “rainmakers,” “The Rainmakers” offers unlimited oppor- j tunity for suspense and humor. | Starting with a recital of the woes of the bean-growing farmers of “Lima Junction” in California, the picture cuts back to a wild scene showing “Roscoe the Rainmaker” (Bob Wool- sey) riding to the rescue through a terrific dust storm. En route he picks up Bert Wheeler as his assistant. | Arriving in Lima Junction, the two scientists run afoul of trouble in the persons of the town’s “leading citizen” and his drugstore cowboy son. To complicate matters further, Bert falls ‘3 love with the local banker’s daugh- | ter. | ‘Through the hilarious use of their rainmaking machine, Bert and Bob overcome all obstacles, however, and the picture races swiftly to an uproar- ious climax. One sequence should not be missed by lovers of drama and fun combined —the rampage of two dynamite-laden locomotives, with Wheeler and Wool- sey in the engine cabs, and the ter- rific head-on crash that follows. Wheeler and Woolsey fans also will | welcome back in “The Rainmakers” that sparkling little comedienne, Dor- othy Lee, who missed two W. & W. comedies because of stage contracts abroad. She gives a splendid per- formance as the banker's daughter. | On leaving school, German girls are required to take a@ post as “mother's help” for a year before en- tering business. No pay except board WELL, THAT PROVES ONE THING, LULU BELLE. IT WAS SLIPPERY BIGGER OH, SO FINALLY GOT HERE, DIDJA? WELL,'$ BOUT TIME? THINGZ ae IN A MESS! TH’ LEMS HAVE CAPTURED AWRIGHT, MAN -OUT WITH IT! IF YGOT ANY PLAI YAS, THEY HAVE — HAVE YOU GOT ANY SUGGESTIONS AS TO_JUST WHAT WE'D BETTER 007 and lodging is given during this period. South Africa’s first chain drug store system is to be inaugurated in Joh-

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