comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1924-09-27 · page 30 of 36

Judge — September 27, 1924 — page 30: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — September 27, 1924 — page 30: Judge, 1924-09-27

A restored page from Judge, 1924-09-27. 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.

ou must be slender to have hobbed hair~ For the shingle bob or the straight bob, you must have a youthful silhouette. One simply can't be stout—or even overweight. How thankful we should be that there is one pleasant method of taking off weight. Necxercises or diets—just use Marmola Tab- lets (thousands of men and women each yearregain healthy, slender figures this way). Have you ever tried them? Many of your slender, vivacious friends use Marmola Tablets. All drug stores have them— one dollar abox. Or they will be sent in plain wrap- per, postpaid, by the Marmola Co., 1719 General Motors Bldg., Detroit, Mich. MARMOLA Prescript ion Tablets Oe Pleasant Way teReduce 7 wes, 100 Al pd | De ova Ie? ndaBbte frst. Neath Tn gid four ball \\\\ [EARN MONEY IMMEDIATELY ~ WE FURNISH EQUIPMENT TO START is now more than market my new appliance, which will successfully straighten, within a sh Dow-leggedness and noc) with- . being worn at night F”" Model 18, U.S. Patent, is easy to ad~ Just; its result will save you from further humiliation and'improve your personal appearance 100 per Write today for my free copyrighted physiological anatomical book which tells you how to correct bow kno*k-kneed legs without any obligation on your part Enclose dime for postage. M. TRILETY, SPECIALIST 1036 L. W. U. Bidg., BINGHAMTON, N. Y. | A Diamond and Some Gall- | humdinger: stones (Continued from page 17) through the stageof imitating Ethel Barry- more. She was good last. season and will doubtless be good again next when the present disease is cured. | re Carroi’s new “Vanities” has ~ two highly attractive ensemble num- bers, some very agile hoofing, one or two novel and attractive sets, three or four feminine eyefulls, and a whole lot of dismal comedy. Indeed, the funniest thing in the show is something that the audience finds in the program. Under the heading, “Executive Staff of the Vanities Producing Co., Inc.,” follow- ing the names of the general manager, general representative, general press repre- sentative, company manager, stz tor, stage manager, technical director, art director, wardrobe mistress, company physician and so on, is this succulent Vanities Physio“Therapeu- tist, Dr. Philip Kohnostamm.” Earl Carroll's new “Vanities” may not be the best show in town, but I think I do not exaggerate when I say, quite boldly and fearlessly, that it is the only show in town that has a physio-therapeutist. One can distinctly hear Ziegfeld and George White grind their teeth in envy. The show is weak in the matter of its principals. ‘There may be some who feel diree- | like standing up and cheering for half an hour every time Sophie Tucker comes out on the stage, but the old cynic who runs this department is not among them. Joe Cook, who was hailed last year by the Younger Generation as the greatest comedian the world had ever seen, on this occasion falls down with a loud kerplunk. ing gags, but for dolorous, He has one or two amu the rest of the evening is pret A minor clown named Cashin, hitherto unlisted by my Bertillon agents, takes the show away from him. ient is not without a trace of donke; L still feel that no playwright who makes such long and utterly empty speeches on ope nights as Mr. Willard Mack makes write a play of any merit. The lat specimen of the Mons. Mack's art is called “High Stakes.” It is a cheap melodrama, doubtless suggested by the Dorothy King and other such metro- politan scandals. Aside from some amus- ing wise cracks lodged in the mouth of the central character, there is nothing in the exhibit that calls for notice. Mack's curtain speech, to which I alluded, a fifteen-minute dissertation on booze, Broadway hopheads, the speaker's prohibition experiences in. the West during his three 's’ absence from the Great White Way, and topics of a piece. It was as vulgar as his play. Lowell Sherman is the star of the latter. He manages certain of his comedy pas- LTHOUGH the state 23 Tur Cop—Hey, you! Next time yon pass a traffic signal, you're gonna yet a sages adroitly, but his acting is still in- vaded by the old repertoire of ham tricks Yet the fellow is improving. Wilton Lackaye gives the role of the old dodo who married a cutie the sort of performance that best suits it. Phoebe Foster is much better than usual as the blackinailing sweet potato. Another Swindle Mr, Upstart—I never want to enter that art dealer's store again! Mrs. Upstart—What’s the trouble, dear? “LT bought a painting from him last week, and I've found out that it’s over 500 years old!” soe G. B. Shaw says we should speak English so correctly than an educated foreigner can understand it. But when we get to that point will the natives understand it? pap sine selee comicbooks.com