The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 22, 1936, Page 10

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 22, 1936 Sere SIDE GLANCES to. I'll have a piece of eq don’t know why, but I always eat more than I intend a ta i THE GUMPS—THE FOLKS ARE GETTING WORRIED THE N INTHE WATER~ REMEMBER, '- ONE GENERATION BIN as THE TREES, ANOTHER SITS IN THER SHADE — GEE, FRECK, IT'S NICE To KNOW MY OLD FRIENDS HAVENT FORGOTTEN ME! THAT MONEY IS YOUR ALIBI, You KNow! DO YOU THINK ANY- ONE Took fT AND PRETENDED You THANKS, FRECK! AND IF ANYTHING TURNS 9) YOURE A REAL TO LOOK FOR THE COIN, AND IT WAS GONE! apple pie, if you will.” A'FEATHER is like no other object in all the world. White there is no known connecting link between the feather of a bird nd the scale of @ reptile, the development of the two structures is very similar. Reptiles molt, the same as birds, only they shed the outer covering of their scales, while.a bird drops the entire Teather. | NEXT: When did the World War officially end for the United States? Tuis Curious WoRLD By William Ferguson . | UNDER ARREST, EH? WELL, IT / WOULD SEEM THAT "MAJOR y HNSTER' HAS JUST ABOUT [gee OUTLIVED HIS USEFULNESS — IN HARUM =' STO THE THANK: LUCK OF THOSE AMERICAN | AM ABLE TO. INVESTIGAT! THIS SITUATION MORE. RUSHING TO JACI SDE, AFTER LEW COME, LEW WEN -HELP ME GET |. WEN'S STARTLING ANNOUNCEMENT THAT || HIM TO A HOSPITAL-HE'S STILL ~ THE AMERICAN STILL LIVES, MYRA IS OVERWHELMED WITH JOY. FEATHER L238 oe o.oo JS ONE OF NATURE'S MOST WONDERFUL MECHANISMS/ THE QUILL. GROWS ON THE BIRD, THE SHAFT GROWS ON THE QUILL, THE BARBS GROW ON THE SHAFT, THE BARBULES GROW ON THE BARBS, AND THE BARBICELS YOUR MUSIC LESSONS MUST BE TH DOING SOME Good, sammy! EVEN LINK WHEN Your. Bow SOUNDS MUSICAL Toay! | T SNAP XW’ i} THERE (TIS AGAIN, THAT LOVELY MUSICAL SouND! tHe WALKS LIKE 0? PENGUIN. “| OWNEO BY OKIE TURNER oo BRANCH, TENN. WY SEEMS THAT.ONCE UPON A TIME, THERE WAS A PIRATE WHO USED TO AROUND HERE > TART WIDE OUT, OF BORIED OF THESE f Myrna Loy Plays Siren In Will Rogers Picture " Myrna Loy, who plays one of the featured roles of “A Connecticut Yankee,” the Will Rogers picture which comes today to the Paramount ‘Theatre, was at the time of the pro- duction of the picture “the girl the movies wouldn't allow to be good.” Fate, and Hollywood casting directors, had ordained that she could play nothing but slinky, ex- otic creatures, and it was some time before she could assert herself as the wholesome, loveable person she actu- ally is. But “typing” could not put a leash on her acting, and in the scenes Miss Loy plays with Rogers she is revealed as one of the screen’s most able comediennes. The picture, believed by millions of jing roles. David Butler directed this story of high jinks in the high old days of King Arthur, adapted from Mark Twain's classic, WPA Public Speaking - Class Gives Program "Fhe public speaking class of the WPA adult education school present- ed @ program consisting of two plays and a vaudeville act in the first of a series of two entertainments, Harvey . Jenson, class instructor, coached the first play, “Sauce for the actors were Mary Miller, Meyer, Gottlieb Worlitz, War- i i ‘I Married a Doctor’ A Best-Selling Book Once in a generation a book is writ- ten that directly effects the thinking habits, and even the lives of a na- tion, Sinclair Lewis, the only: Amer- ican ever to win the coveted Nobel Prize for literature, wrote the best selling novel of married love, which was adapted into the remarkable motion picture drama “I Married a Doctor” in which Pat O'Brien and Josephine Hutchinson scored a real success at its local premiere at the Capitol Theatre yesterday. The novel struck telling blows at provincialism of thought and life, at Scandal mongering, and at warped and narrow vision. “I Married a Doctor,” the film drama, does likewise. It has all the vigor, the thrilling romance, the ac- tion, and the humor that character- ized the book. But it goes further— it makes the people sketchily describ- ed by Sinclair Lewis actually live— and while the spectator may laugh at them and their viewpoints, he laughs with a lump in his throat, for there is & poignant stirring quality in the effort of these small town people to find themselves that sets this picture enirely aide from ordinary film en- tertainment. Ross Alexander is excellent as the somewhat neurotic youth with a com- plex for love and art, who is unable to stand up under the blow to his vanity when he discovers that the woman with whom he is infatuated really loves her husband. Louise Fazenda gives an outstand- ing performance in a comic Swedish maid role. ATTABOY, \ YEH -I GOT TH’ STUFF IOOR MY FAL, AWRIGHT, BUT I /\ AINT GOT MY OL DINOSAURS HEY, FOOZY- \ tog T’D0-AS TH’ NEW WHERE YA _{ GRAND WIZER OF TH GOIN'?? LAND OF Moos Although we apparently can see countless stars, the naked eye is ca- pable of viewing only about five or six thousand, and not all these at any .|one time, A person with exceptional Sight can see stars of the sixth magni- tude, but most of us cannot make out these dim points of light. BUDWEISER Now 15¢c in Throw-away bottles SIT RE ma nom ~ BEE id Nit ad aA Na ae cate N \e hf

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