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Judge, 1924-03-15 · page 32 of 36

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Aspirin Beware of Imitations! Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians over twenty-three years for Colds Headache peothsenhe Lumbago Neuritis Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken ‘age contains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticaci ester of Salicylicacid. Is @ marvelous ipstrament—the only one with convenient waking it sf aad ag ry ‘days tree 1 ing it ver . ‘ria stowed. Write f for Free Book eboat the Sazopbone and BAND INSTRUMENT CO. 4820 IFS INDIANA, AT DONNYBROOK FAIR “You keep yer nose out av this, Tim Feeley! ’Tis Ladies’ Day!” “The — Girl’’—(Continued from page 13) old days they used to exercise much more invention and would periodically change the word “girl” to “maid,” but to-day they feel that there is no necessity for go- ing to so much trouble. Eleanor Painter is the star of “The Chiffon Girl.” Her voi as beautiful as of yore, although I wish she wouldn’t always keep her left foot at a sharp right angle from her ankle when she s. A trivial thing, but musical comedy actresses who do it are not to my elevated taste. Il as admire the “The ” musical shows, my own admiration (often regrettably expressed with a little too much noise) for coon music shows is held to be but another of my many affectations. ‘Runnin’ Wild” is a colorado-madura show. Although it is not one-half so good as either “Shuffle Along” or “Liza,” it is fifty times better than any white “Chiffon Girl” that I have laid eyes on. It has been playing in New York for some time now, but I have been keeping it in reserve that I might brighten up this weekly page with some praise, albeit comparative, when another of the 4 Le 4q, GE Rner a ee Pees if'not For Both Sexes Lure importers, West 2383 Evanston, ls Science oF" AN ABOUT: The Sex putau BABIES ARE"Co! eee iN —"What {9 Old Fallight. Sieep—ete-» 408 pages {ilas cee mi, BOOK | 1 MOF. OF Fo CHORE, Se oe edition of ‘Oriie Pub. Ca. 37 Rou St. Dep 20. New Yak Cty SEXUAL — LOVE AND LIFE/ “The Girl” things came along. Why it should be considered an affecta- tion to admire colored merit as against Caucasian demerit, none of the volumes on higher philosophy reposing in my libra- ry seems to be able to inform me. The headwaiter at the Ritz may prefer a cer- tain talentless white m show star cur- rently playing in New York to Florence Mills, but inasmuch as it is not one of my ambitions to be the headwaiter at the Ritz, I can’t persuade myself to any such point of view. We have too much Ku Klux criticism as it is. If it is an affecta- tion to like a good dinge show as opposed to a bad paleface show, then I confess my- self to be a poseur in the grand manner. 30 Tl Tre DRAMATIC exhibits have been un- covered in the we K ¢ f which I write “Antony and Cleopatra,” with Jane Cow! and Rollo Peters in the title réles, and a comedy by the MM. Gropper and Ham- merstein called To; The Shakespearian presentation goes to pieces on its Antony. To brew a particularly low pun, the production is hoist by its own Peters. The quickest and politest way to describe the latter’s Antony is simply to say that it is something terrible and then shut up. Therefore, consider it said. La Cowl’s Cleopatra, on the other hand, while not to be compared with her admir- able Juliet and but slightly less admirable Mélisande, is all that the M. Peters’ per- formance is not. Yet for all its sharp penetration of the réle, its uncommon in- telligence and its careful projection, it must be confessed that it pos: very little theatrical warmth. If the perform- ance is lacking in this warmth to a re- viewer who believes in its creative integrity, how must its intellectual chill impress the layman who has thought of Cleopatra from boyhood up as a combination of cooch dancer and Palmolive Soap adver- tisement? “New Toys” tries as hard to be popular as a ward politician. It tries so hard, in- deed, that the patience of the onlooker is worn out before the evening is half over. A reboiling of the materials of “The First “It’s a Boy” and a dozen other it resolves itself into an obvious and arm transcript of the box office ho- kums of two and three years ago. The authors have worked like longshoremen to capture “the tear that lurks behind the smile,” but the chief moisture that they achieve is their own copious perspiration. Ernest Truex is the star of the piece and works very hard. comicbooks.com gen! ver} San my “Mi Wal Fra and San Wa: Ma Lal