The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, June 18, 1936, Page 10

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“We'd like to take a quict. li ee mi Va 64.460 were injured. By George Clark usp ttle place in the country for the summer. but I'm afraid we wouldn't know anybody.” wutes t crash it! KEEP YOUR EYES OPEN for obstructions on the highways. Out of 826,690 auto accidents in 1935, 53,730 were due to colli- sions with fixed objects; in these, 4080 persons were killed and Dee and Butterworth Star in Mystery Hit Alive with romance, breathless with thrills, hilarious with comedy and tingling with suspense, “Half Angel,” Darryl F. Zanuck Twentieth Cen- tury production, opens today at the Paramount theatre, with Frances Dee, Brian Donlevy and Charles Butterworth in the featured roles. It is seldom that all the ingredients of great entertainment are so skill- fully blended as they have been by Sidney Lanfield, director of “Half Angel.” Hilarious tuations and sparkling dialogue vie with exciting i episodes, unusual romance and breath-taking adventures. The story of “Half Angel” is con- cerned with a beautiful young girl. an irrepressible reported, and his comical “stooge.” Miss Dee, the girl, through a series of sinister circumstartces is twice in- volved in poison murders. She is ac- quitted the first time when the jury returns an unexpected verdict of not guilty. But the second time it ap- Pears almost a foregone conclusion that she will be convicted. Brian Donlevy, the reporter, is at- tracted to the girl from the first. He believes in her and takes des- perate risks to prove her innocence. He devises a clever ruse to trap the real criminal but it seems an almost impossible task. Miss Dee's beauty, Donlevy's dar- ing and Charles Butterworth’s com- edy combine to make “Half Angel” an outstanding hit. Also prominent in the cast are Henry Stephenson and Sara Haden. WRIGLEY'S PuTs You | AT THE MOVIES |‘Hearts Divided’ Laid | In Southern Setting | Laid in the colorful and romantic setting of the South in 1803, and pre- senting one of the most distinguished casts ever assembled for a motion picture, Marion Davies’ new Cosmo- |politan production, “Hearts Divided,” {has been booked for the Capitol The- atre for a limited engagement be- ginning Saturday as a First National | release. The story, by Rida Johnson Young, has an historical background, set in the Napoleonic era and touching on the Louisiana Purchase. Leading American and French characters set |the stage for a glamorous romance between Captain Jerome Bonaparte, brother of the French Emperor, and | Betsy Patterson, the belle of Balti- |more and Washington. | Jerome, who is in America as emis- |sary of Napoleon in the sale of Louis- |iana, meets the beautiful Betsy when | traveling incognito, falls in love with \her, and becomes her music and |French teacher. Sie loses her heart |to him despite the fact that she be- lieves him to be only a tutor and then awakens to the surprise of her life when she discovers his identity. Napoleon had a diplomatic match in mind for his brother, but Jerome, |romantic lover and adventurer that THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, THURSDAY, JUNE 18, 1936 THE GUMPS—CAME THE DAWN ) ‘'VE_GOT TO WATCH MY EVERY MOVE— I'VE Gor | TO BE CAGEY -~5 SET 1m ONLytA BIRD. \ ae Sioa case I f— MY PRECIOUS LITTLE CHECK~ Ato HOW DID You REST LAST NIGHT ? OR THAT SCOUNDREL BIM WOULD GO TO GET YOU BACK / y is HO-HUM-I DIDN'T SLEEP A WINK LAST NIGHT=-IMAGINE THAT ANDY GUMP INSULTING ME AND THEN TRYING TO GET OUT OF IT BY PRETENDING HE WAS JOKING: HE THINKS HES, A WIT, BUT HE'S ONLY \ HALF RIGHT! TORIC SPECIMEN, TLL TAKE GARE OF BUT ISN'T IT RATHER DARK TO VISIT THE TOMB,| SHOW YOU ONLY NOW, SIR EDMOND? THE ANCIENT EGYPTIANS IX WERE VERY CLEVER AT CON- CEALING THE REAL SAR- FEARED JUST SUCH SOMEWHERE IN THIS CHAPEL-| PROBABLY IN THE WEST WALL, IS A SECRET DOOR LEADING TO THE SERDAB-OR HIDDEN CHAMBER --THAT ROOM IS WHERE THE SPIRIT OF THE DECEASED IS SUPPOSED TO ABIDE - MERELY HELPING YOU i INSISTS ON SHOWING Hee! THRU THE ‘TOMB. | WHAT LUCKL WE AIN'T )YEAH, WE'LL HAeTA Ear SHOT A SINGLE THING / SARDINES] AN! WILL My WIFE HAVE ee LAFE ON How \WELL, I TOLD |/Leave ir T \woT yA COME, TH’ MissUS CUR] MEL TLL see ] GONNA, OU229 JEIRST OAy WE'D || THAT SHE 0o,sam? HAVE A MEAL : WE SHOT OUR- HA-HA ON ying \ rh SELVES! fe Bee a \ A FER GOSH SAKES, SET’ THEM SARDINES UP A BIT CLOSER! WE WANNA MAKE SURE OUR SUPPERI_, stn, Viel ‘T.M..Rt0. U. &, par. OF8. ©1006 BY WEA SERVICE. we. = f SUT, HEANENS! ITS AN || VERY GooD, \ TSWE CANT ]] WOATSONS [itd FACT, |! . AN' YOU WERE S'POSED TO BE ORNIN! TH! ROC ICERIN TRUCK BLEW UP? GEE Wiz oy LY | he was, could not be crushed, and the | Story ends in a most surprising and | Pleasing climax. leis II So They Say | | ¢—_—_—_—____—______—_-¢ This is the year that women are to \be the deciding election factor. There jare three significant groups, the youngsters, the farmers and the |women—and the greatest of these is the women.—Congresswoman Flor- ence P. Kahn, California, eee You can't beat somebody with no- body, and Roosevelt is somebody. |The Republicans will have to do ;Something more than - just make |Snoots at Roosevelt.—William Allen | White, Kansas editor and staunch Re- publican. *e8 % There are no bargain counters in life. You pay fully for what you re- ceive—Dr. Joseph J. Reilly, Hunter College, New York City. GLEY’s poy TH PERFECT GUM ERY MEAL LEAST I'M RID OF THOSE STS WHO WERE DOGOIN’ CAN SPARE TH TIME, I GUESS - T BETTER GO 4 foe ALOOK- .

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