comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1925-02-28 · page 33 of 36

Judge — February 28, 1925 — page 33: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — February 28, 1925 — page 33: Judge, 1925-02-28

A restored page from Judge, 1925-02-28. 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.

is seated, the husband finds out about it. There follows considerable con- versation on the subject, as the more perspicacious reader will guess, but in the end the husband, who still feels his wife's sex appeal, finds that he cannot give her up and all ends with the promise of what Broadway calls happiness. Although — the materials of the play are so old that it would take the glands of all the monkeys in the Tiergarten to give them enough life to dance even the lancers, Emery has actually suc- ceeded in making them theatrically interesting for at least a portion of the time. Instead of viewing them conventionally—that is, in the theat- rical sense, he has viewed them conventionally in the non-theatrical sense. This procedure gives issue to what the theater knows as an in- nt play, which is to say a play Views its subject matter in the y that an avi nd not overly intelligent shoe merchant views it. But a grain of any kind of intelli- gence always seems like a bombshell in the the Emery often writes well; he is seldom guilty of dramatic affectation and cheapness; he brings to his manuscripts experience of the world and a pleasant, easy sophistication. His “Episode” has some good stuff in it, and some very poor as well. The acting is, save for certain details of Kathlene McDonnell’s perform- ance of the wife, pretty naughty. Emery has cast himself for the réle of the gent who held hands, so to speak, n the wife before the play begins, and as an actor is as suc- cessful as a burnt-cork salesman in Dahomey. William Courtleigh plays the aged husband in terms of “The Iron Master.” Miss McDon- nell is good in spots and very spotty in other spots. Ill Te fact first. I saw only one t of Prof. William McMasters’ opus, “The Undercurrent.” What the second and third acts are like, I shall not venture to say, but the first act was enough to lead me to believe that there was nothing about the second and third acts that I'd have anything to say about even if I were to see them. Of course, I may be wrong, but so might have been Columbus. “The Undercurrent” is a drama dealing with capital and labor When it comes to dramas about capital and labor, I prefer the Four Marx Brothers. There was a time when plays about capital and labor interested me profoundly, but I scem to have lost my taste for them along with plays about ruined shop- girls, German spies, penitent yegg- men, sentimental prostitutes, sweet- natured orphans and the Kentucky Derby. Accordingly, the play in which the hard-hearted old million- aire talcum powder manufacturer orders Lemuel Flannigan, his strik- ing label paster, out of his handsome drawing-room no longer contrives to instill any considerable sympathetic indignation in me. Nor does the circumstance that Lemuel’s year-old daughter, Eurydice, is dy- ing of starvation help matters so far as this tough old hide is concerned. I shall therefore ask to be excused from reviewing “The Undercurrent.” two- Prison Governor (to released convict)—I'm sorry; I find we have kept you here a week too long. Pi soner—That's all right; knock it off next time. —London Mail Slenderness will make you more altractive~ Are you worried because you areoverweight? Afraid you are losing your charm, your youthful figure? Stout women are at adisadvant clothes no longer fit them, th are awkward, their aters them, Friends are sympathetic. But many of these fri method of keeping slender! They use Mar- mola Tablets (thousands of mea and women cach year regaia sle These tablets will make you slender aga too. Try th pleasant, healthful v All drug stores have th abox. Or they will be per, postpaid, by th General Motors Bldg he Pleasant t Way Yy toed: duce ; sania Easy to Pay. True-Tone f Saxophone jest of all instruments to lay and one of the most ree Brat lessons BENNIE KRUECER Director Benrie Kroeger and His Orchestra. Brans- wiek Kecorda, free give You @ qui easy otart—in afew weeks youcan be playing popular Free Saxophone Book fixers models and gives first lesson chart; also pictores of famous ‘sdorchestras, Jost send your name for 8 copy. oO TT EUGART, INO Cleary: in! kin by Your Shia Cen Be Quickly Cleared of Pimp! Eezeua, Enlarged eee nets ite pookeey, rite today. fer ey fits &S.GIVENS, Zi Chenieal Biéz., Kansas $Cityrito. eo Suits $23.50 You know wh le eenastional for an all-wool ult or topceat la How woul you like to be the telling aaent for such a line of ‘clothes ‘and make the bie money that ls to be ma. town? This is an usw Uf you think you are WILUAM €, GARTLETT, toe., 850 West Adams Street, Chicago comicbooks.com