Judge, 1925-04-04 · page 21 of 36
Judge — April 4, 1925 — page 21: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1925-04-04. 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.
QOQO000} YMY¥YYYUYUYUUYUOQUOVOOD MVMVYVY NSS nS nN ee esse ee eee ee Ol le 00000000 ee Od00000000D0DNDNDNDNDONDN0ND0NDNDNDDNDN00N0NDN0NNNNNN ss, didr terest her very much. Simi- larly, I may go off my bean about Colleen, but Pd never phone home to the folks to set ° another place at the table for O Tom. Oh, T guess he's all O right, but the pictures he plays © in—there’s his latest. “Thin Ice,” for instance. But let's just put up the usual danger sign and let the thaw take its course, “The Isle of Vanishing Men,” © or a few pleasant hours among the cannibals, is an interesting picture, but one I'm glad Thad nothing to do with in a creative way. You never ean tell when © acannibal may get hungry, and © there aren't many good delica- 6 one stores in their neighbor- noud. Let's see? Who was that O divorced man who married © Mary Pickford? Oh, yes. «© yby the name of Fairbanks. @ Well, his son (on his side) gets pretty fly in “The Air Mail.” 2 You folks who never lived by the slogan il must go O} through.” can’t realize what © we pilots suffer. This picture is pretty obvious seftimental slush, and were it not for the fact that they made nn gone comfortable at the Rialto, what with a nice loge seat and everything, [ would say that calling it * they do, is misspelling it slightly. [ refer, inse, to the omission of one * What’s What in the Movies The Last Laugh good one, te Greed—Real stuff. dan t Life Wonderful?—Love of potatoes. The Last World- toric 200. eter, Pan—Did't Maude Adams play in this once? Quo Vadis—Thumbs down The Swan—Another good ne wrong. Thundering Herd—Mt s show no dearth so dog- super scoop,” as And a darn ooo00000000000000 A. prehis- Learning to Love—Something worth learning. The Man Without a Country Lately given this juicy title, “As No Man Has Loved,” and just as bad in spite of it. The Goose Hangs High ‘That younger generation again. Introduce Me—How to climb “Let’s not have the Millers— he’s such a bore!’ o00g000000000000000 T WAS a week before their wedding anniversa They sat down to draw up a list of friends for the party Many names went down on the list without question. The Robinsons—Clark and May Harry Parker, who from small beginnings had made himself into the best known architect in the State. The Browns—Mary Brown ¢ always be relied upon to be the life of any party, and Bob Brown is being prominently mentioned for Con- Tess. Yes, it was an easy list to draw up; until it neared its end And then, she suggested Joc Miller and his wife. “You went to school with Joe,” she said, “and he was at our wedding Of course, I know he'll be a dray—but I think we ought to have him." dd. “We've for people v said. “But Let's make it not have the uch a bore!" Her husband fro given ¢ oug: phe to homes in America is een minute s what to do with t make himself interesting and success- ful You will ki now the answer, when you an interestin even reading the wonderful litle free book illustrated on this page. Your copy i waiting for you. It is called “E te it gives the plan, scope nd purpose DR. ELIOT’S FIVE-FOOT SHELF _OF BOOKS s home library that open ¢ to real social and by succes Every formed man and wor st know something abe about it—how to the Harvard 1 viewport versity strives to give. every uni- wrote one man who had little free and it new world of pleasure.” f Every reader of this s hand- enter= little It is free, will be sent by mail, and in- volves no ot gation of any sort. Merely clip the coupon it to- g FIFTEEN MINUTES | P. F. Collier & Son Company 250 Park Avenue, New York City | tend me the tittle guid is Nord comicbooks.com