comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1924-11-01 · page 21 of 36

Judge — November 1, 1924 — page 21: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — November 1, 1924 — page 21: Judge, 1924-11-01

A restored page from Judge, 1924-11-01. 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.

“We once kept a cook for a whole week.” “Good heavens! How did you manage it “We were on a house-boat at the time and she couldn't swim.” VERY MOVING PICTURES! by George ow that the election is all over and one-half of the world is wondering how it is going to pay its bets to the other half, you may, if you still have the price, go to see “The Silent Watcher” and get an inside line on how clections are won... and lost on the se nat least. For I do not mean to insinuate that Coolidge, Davis or La Follette could have been guilty of the social errors of a sercen star. People in’ White Houses should and do pull down the blinds and in that, if in no other particular, do they differ from film politicians. Perhaps you hav “The Silent: Watcher’ picture, guessed that is a political Well, you are right and Hobart Bosworth, running for Sena- tor, hangs his dirty linen on Glenn Hunter’s line which gets Glenn into difficulties with his wife (Bessie Love, in this instance). He ts him into jail. But it all comes out in the wash- ing and, by and large, it's a pretty good picture, absorbing and all that. with the two young people doing a large slab of acti may be a little too large. But it’s good wholesome hokum and, as I say now that the President and those who wanted him elected are sitting back comfortable and all that. we can all get back to also Mitchell normal and sce pictures again . . . and all that. HERE isn’t a range of mountains in all the world that have been so romances Rockies. as we against as our own dear We often sit and wonder watch moving pictures in which they achieve so much notoriety that they don’t lift) their lofty peaks more proudly to. the skies. Probably they do. Its enough to turn any mountain's head. Tovrixe (doubtfully)—Youw're not going to tell me that you are the famous centenarian? Native—Oh, no, it ain't me—it’s my daughter! Rockies have attained a position in the world of adventure that puts all other moun tain ranges to the blush. Everett may pride itself on its height but what’s height to be proud of in a mountain? Vesuvius may get chesty about its eruptiveness but what of it? It’s only to crupt. Ever since “49 the natural for a volcano There's nothing to stop it, Blane and Jungfrau may boast their social prestige and get. stuffy that they are about the royalty have made them what E but the Rockies occupy a position in the world of fiction that should turn all other mountains green with envy Zane Grey has had something to do with this literary pre-eminence en- joyed by the From. tine to time his facile typewriter has bat- ted out many a yarn in which they have Rockies. srved as his environs and now he is at it again. “The Border from his story Legion,” pictured tells a tale of a rugged he-men gal. The y is as old as the Rockies them- . love and hate, honor and this and that with virtue, triumphant in. the happy giving the gate to vice. Let us thank God that all is swell that ends swell band of and a sti selv dis- honor, ending, that Tony Moreno, endowed with perfect teeth, has ample oppor- tunity to smilingly show them in the final analysis and Helene Chad- wick, gifted with arms, is provided with scenes in which she twine them lovingly about (Continued on page 27) lovely may