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{ SIDEGLANCES - - By George Clark | “Yes, and he'll still be going strong after you’ve worn out three more trucks.” | Tuis Curious USED THE HUMAN-LIKE GVES OF CUTTLEFISH FOR THEIR. MUMMIES. 4 FEMALE EARWIGS SIT ON THEIR EGGS TO HATCH THEM. A LOW, aé the weather man knows it, is an area of the relatively It matters not what the barometric reading in a low may be, as long as there is no lower reading within the low. The low is called a cyclone, and the wind around it is known as a cyclone circulation. lowest barometric pressure. WORLD "rwor | AT THE MOVIES ‘| Swing Music King in ‘3 Cheers for Love’ Swing is King in the gay Para- mount musical of flying feet, “Three | Cheers for Love,” coming Tuesday and Wednesday to the Paramount theatre. The picture features Robert Cummings and Eleanore Whitney, “fastest tap dancer in the world,” in leading roles, and presents a list of impressive dancing and acting talent. The story is one of a@ pep-filled, attractive girl, Eleanore, who is the) daughter of a Hollywood movie pro- ducer, John Halliday. Her step- mother, Veda Ann Borg, believes that Eleanore’s hopping around the studio in slacks is not aiding her social standing; she arranges to send the girl to a finishing school. The school she chooses has been about to close, When Eleanore seeks to enter, however, Headmistress Eli- zabeth Patterson, a former vaudeville | trouper, plans to keep it open as a means of aiding a company of strand- ed stage artists in crashing Holly- wood. Abetted by William Frawley, head of the troupe, she welcomes the girl into @ school where the supposed students are really chorines and where the professors are vaudeville stars in disguise. The scheme is to stage a “school show” and invite Eleanore’s father, hoping to impress him so much that he will book the entire crew for his pictures. A fast-stepping between Eleanore youthful member of the troupe. At the close, Hollywood has captured the whole bunch to the tune of $100,- 000, Tap dancing of Eleanore, Louis Da- pron. Cummings and Olympe Brad- romance sets in and Cummings, ‘Bride Walks Out’ Has Its Own Type of Humor Sparkling with a highly individual brand of humor, “The Bride Walks Out” scored a decided laugh hit at the Capitol Theatre yesterday. The film is a romantic comedy— but a romantic comedy of a breath- less, dizzy type with one riotous situa- tion following another. Barbara Stanwyck, heretofore known for dramatic performances, surprises by revealing herself as a comedienne of exceptional ability, and swaps laughs and crackling re- partee on even terms with such mirth-makers as Gene Raymond and Robert Young, her rival leading men, and with Ned Sparks and Helen Broderick. This quintet keeps the laughs in high gear, and with the aid of sharply-etched characterizations and @ grand screenplay, makes “The Bride Walks Out” a not-to-be-missed tare entertainment. “The Bride Walks Out” is a light- jhearted, gay story of love on a bud- get. It deals with the futile efforts of a newly-married pair to get along on the surveyor-husband’s $35 a week. Miss Stanwyck and Raymond are the newlyweds, Young is a giddy Playboy with an embarrassing devo- |HASTENING fey REGRET TO SAY EDMOND GALAWAYS CONDITION WELL, DIDYA SUCCEED —Yex IN GITTIN’ SOME PROVISIONS) GIT THEM TWO FER TH’ CAMP EROM. FARMER INDUHDELL? Ya WANTED, BUT I tion to the bride, and Sparks und Mss Broderick are an acid-tongued married pair who have a sour out- look on matrimony. The interwoven conflicts that go on among this group, along with external disturbances suppiled by Billy Gilbert as an installment col- lector, Hattie McDaniels as a colored maid and various pugnacious police- men who are always dragging Ray- mond off to the hoosegow for one reason or another, comprise che plot of the picture—and from a laugh , standpoint it’s a knockout, Keep on doing the things you have|* tee, BE He RRearies OR. BOW seem insuperab! move away.— Late Bishop Arthur Selden Lioyd, THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE, MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1936 THE GUMPS—BIM GETS.A BIRD’S-EYE VIEW ) WOW! IT'S A GOOD THING] | HO-HO! BURNING THE FINANCIAL WE DIDN'T GO TO THE CANDLE AT BOTH ENDS! PUTTING GRAND OPENING / UP THE DOUGH FOR THE STORE THERE'S MAMA, AND ALSO PROVIDING THE CUSTOMERS / MILLIE AND WELL, SUCKER, HOW DOES IT -MIN/ FEEL TO PAY FORTHE WHOLE 7 SHOW AND NOT EVEN HAVE ‘A BLEACHER SEAT ? ‘ NI BUT sehr KNOW THE DIFFERENCE / ON GALAWAY’S TRAIL NO, NO... DON'T GET ME WRONG - HE WAS QUITE FIT, PHYSICALLY, WHEN HE LEFT- ONLY HIS MIND... YOU SEE. HE CONSIDERED HIS DAUGHTER DEAD, AND WHEN HE RECOVERED WHILE AT THE DOCK AT SUEZ, DEVRIES AND HIS "CAPTOR" ARE BUSY SUPERINTEND- ING THE LOADING OF THE TOMB TREASURES ON THE SHIP. WELL, HE BABBLED INCESSANTLY ABOUT TOMB TREASURES, THIEVES - MERLE! HE WANTED TO RETURN 10 ENGLAND..SO WE THOUGHT IT BEST TO PUT HIM ON THE BOAT, AT SUEZ, THIS MORNING: BUT, LADIES T TO THE [SB Sik EDMOND IS SIR 3 +I, COULDN 100 LBS. O’ BUTTER ? MIGOSH, YA SURE SPREAD yYerseLel OKAY! PUT (TIN | PROPER PLAcE! SOON'S LI KIN FIND @ ROPE, boc! 8 raceme we GrALLONS O/ MILK iS ic, Sts Yann ER Ke (T Down GOT ABOUT 100 LES, = oO BUTTER | Y CMON , LUSCIOUS = | WE'RE GOIN’ BYE BYE HONEY, YO BOY BUSINESS AM OUT DAN TOOTIN’ His OOTAN AT SO 3 WAS. AFRAD OF | AW, BUT THIG'S THAT! MOST OF | OIFERENT! INS FACT, MODR PLANS wv AST EXACT wa AH, ROSES! BEAUTIFUL ROSES WITH THE MORNING DEW War ne WEE FRAGRANT LOVLINESS? WHAT A FEAST FOR THE SOUL. was eer ‘cM hace BUT THAT SWEAR I BELIEVE Hi GAININ' ON US = st ie igh