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Judge, 1924-03-22 · page 34 of 36

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Summons | Winner Know all Menby these. Presents, that ‘‘Summons”’ is the title of another popular drawing by Angus MacDonald. A small payment of fifty cents will insure to you, your heirs and assigns forever, full posses- sion of a reproduction, approx- imately 15x11, made from the engraver’s original plates on Heavy Art Mat. “LIFE IS JUST ONE SUMMONS AFTER ANOTHER” Drawn by ANcus MacDonavp Price Fifty Cents All proofs will be carefully packed and mailed postpaid immediately on | receipt of your order and remittance addressed to Judge Art Print Department 627 West 43d Street New York City N MO Pex HOMES! {YOU can make $15 to $60 weekly inyour epare time writing show cards. No canvassing or soliciting, We instruct you by our new simple Directograph System, supply you with work and pay you cash each week. Write today for full particulars and free booklet. WEST-ANGUS SHOW CARD SERVICE LIMITED ‘Authorized Capital $1,250,000.00 162 Colborne Buildi Toronto, Can. RITTENHOUSE HOTE 22D & CHESTNUT STS. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Rooms with hot and 2 UP cold running water Rooms) wi Ley . $3 UP Club Breakfast, S0¢ up Luncheon, 90¢. Evening Dinner, $1.25. “Spee As well a ice a la carte. 50t0$100aWeek Mi tulta and overcoatadrect to wearn® RUsqunmiD guQol at wool 2 Pisce commer suite $21 60. ‘Wonderfat values, Gcmtacione te wee: 1:0. SiMPSO, Ie DopL WO, BIW. Adame 3, Golesee SEX #222 ip: BOOKS tr in this country. Dept. 191, Counsel Service, 257 W. 7Ist St., New York ee fehl all = matters pee | —- Farmer—Sure. The $25 Prize in Judge's 5 son Street, Louisville, Kentucky. of Judge’s 50-50 Contest No. “Is this road safe for equestrians?” If your horse c’n run faster 'n a squirrel! 30 Contest No. 6 February 9, 1924, issue of Judge, was won by Dewey Jones, 1920 Jeffer- announced in the Mc | Adapted to the Purpose (Continued from page 12) Libbey in the kimono of Victoria Cross stalks the scene. List to the plot! ‘The most mercenary courtesan of Paris —thus Miss Akins denominates her—is the mistress of the richest and most | powerful duke in all Europe—so Miss | Akins denominates him. This duke is a sinister fellow to pulling off his yellow ly and to intense scowls. r, he brings about a meeting with his wife, from whom he has been living apart. ‘This makes Diane a Trouville-Deauville Gare St. Lazare, s mistress, jolly well mad and she de- cides to get even by giving herself to a young adventurer who has flirted with her on the terrasse that very morn. . .. Night falls and we find the twain in the imperial suite. The courtesan, who is dressed up like the “Follies of 1956,” learns that her boy friend is nothing but a poor law clerk, | but—after eating the meal which Miss Akins has kindly sent up to the suite— | she says what's the difference anyway, | gives him a long, warm kiss, and tells him that she is his. ... Comes the | dawn, Her boy friend urges her to marry him. They will be poor, yes, but | happy, so happy! They will ach other! Both get wet around the eyes. | It is all so infinitely sweet and tender. | But no, it cannot be. Diane de la Trou- ville-Deauville Gare St. Lazare is too used to Pol Roger 1911, Beluga caviar and breast of guinea hen. She craves luxury, jewels, yachts, rare wir | reference library. Love—ah, 32 is beautiful, but there is life. The duke waits. His $18,000,000 yacht is even now resting in the blue waters below their window. A long, sad, last look, and she When I was a boy of ten, back in the early 1900's, I once sneaked into the room of one of the maids and stole a paper-back that contained just this story. I recall the incident well, as my father subse- quently walloped me for stealing the novel when, as he said, I was old enough to have gained a taste for better litera- ture. But if Miss Akins’ play were a hundred times better play than it is, which it isn’t, the performance of the lead- ing male role by the M. Sidney Blacker would still make it seem only one-hun- dredtl T have seen some pretty terrible acting in my life, but I have seldom encountered a worse specimen of the art than that revealed by the gentle man in question, He plays eve allotted to him in exactly the same hum- drum key; he moves as listlessly through: the passionate script misogynist; he apparently has no mort idea how to register different emotions than a cash register. Elsie Ferguson is a picturesque figure in the star réle and, though a trifle monotonous, gets all out of the part that the author has put into it. Frederick Worlock is the duke. It is entially a movie duke réle acted by him in an appropriately program announces that the food used in the production is served by Sherry. Unfortunatel as good. y scene san octogenarian movie manner. The there is no mention of where they got the champagne. comicbooks.com