comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1924-09-13 · page 57 of 72

Judge — September 13, 1924 — page 57: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — September 13, 1924 — page 57: Judge, 1924-09-13

A restored page from Judge, 1924-09-13. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

“All you got!” as comicas a risqué play as en shown in this town in many seasons and yet the review- ers for the papers, though most of | them know it, have let it down with a condescending shrug. Just why the newspapers keep up this smug show of morality. so | far as the theater is concerned, the | good Lord alone in’ His infinite wisdom knows. In the papers. on that 2 Were- wolf” was denounced as dirty and the same day dull, were printed stories dealing with the attack of two women in New Jersey | ofachildin | disgusting de young the murder shusetts, further in the social activities of the MM. Leopold and | Loeb, three divorce scandals, and the blackmailing of an old Phila- delphia gent by a rapacious cutie. Jupce, of course, isn’t idiot enough to wish to offend its readers and drive them all to cz weling their subscriptions and to reading the Police Gazette instead, but it also isn’t idiot that it its readers as if such an wishes to treat they morons. It—or rather this department is accordingly were so many lad to inform its Werewolf” mighty funny stuff, and it promises them that they will | old horselaughs over readers that ‘he is » some hot (Continued on page 29) Ask Izzy and Moe, They Know Why does a souse cross the road? eee It’s a poor rum runner that camot cup a “chaser,” these days! ( anarboney Fools used to blow the gas out. Now they step on itt LS —— —Tudge wil pay $5 for cach one printed 7 “What does it cost you to run aca Our Little Red Riding hy George oughly amusing naughty play is thor- oughly amusing. Every once in a while such a thor- y amusing naughty play comes gives most of the newspaper reviewers a noble set of laughs, and is none the less the next morning written about as if it were very dull and humor- less stuff. “The Werewolf” is a case in point. as = AWWA] PW 7A — eS l Mr. Sumner addresses the “Society for the Suppression of Vice” 19 ‘hoods and the Werewolf Jean Nathan I HE New York newspapers are always a bit ‘fraidy-cat when a naughty play, albeit a rib-tickler, comes upon the scene. ‘The aforesaid papers will oceasignally take certain chances at offending their readers, but one chance that they will never take is to come right out and say that a thor- NO NIW gis SIH S| “AGIS SIHL NO S3IGV7 comicbooks.com