comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1925-08-29 · page 30 of 36

Judge — August 29, 1925 — page 30: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — August 29, 1925 — page 30: Judge, 1925-08-29

A restored page from Judge, 1925-08-29. 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.

OF PALMISTRY ‘ Sl the ines arth ametion of Gre tarsi Today, despite the fact that Gipsy “fortune tellers” ‘and charlatans in Sherer pre: tended to read the lines inthe palm, it is an accepted fact that the hand is truly individ ualistic and its markings readable. POWER and FORCE William Clarke Late of the Royal Polytechni C2 Tite” Lertlons “Bngtant 2 Will give you, with other interesting facts. very 6 knowledge of the art of reading @ concise explanation of the Eines ‘of Life—Head—Fate—Heart—Marriage— —Fortune or Vocation—Intuition—Health; The Line of Mars, The Girdle of Venus, The Ring of Satur, The Ring of Solomon, The Ras- celtes or Bracelets—Health, Wealth and Happi- ness Fully illustrated and bound in 16 handy pocket size booklets, sets will be sent postpaid upon receipt of $1.00 per set JUDGE BOOK DEPARTMENT 627 West 43d Street of New York ATTENTION CROSSWORD FANS! OWING to the hundreds of letters we have re- ceived asking us to renew our weekly Crossword Puzzles, JUDGE will start them once again, beginning with the September 12 issue, with a $25 prize each week. Order your copy now from your newsdealer. THE ANCIENT ART Second Round (Continued from page 16) two of the children down with the croup. SoI shall refrain from saying that a play that talks golf from the time its first curtain goes up until its last one comes down is hardly the kind of play that drives me wild with interest. After about ten minutes of golf talk I am prepared to wax enthusiastic over even some Augus- tus Thomas philosophy or the prayers of cute child actors on Christ- mas eve. The leading réles in the exhibition are in the hands of James Rennie, Joseph Kilgour and Marion Coak- ley. Renme’s performance is his _ best since “Spanish Love.” Kilgour, on the opening night, took up his cues as slowly as a rheumatic pool player and hence caused a number of the comic points to evaporate. Miss Coakley is still as good-looking as she was last year—which is some- thing of a feat in these days—and us 28 Morovias Are Coming,” ; The Rural Minute Men are now organizing to protect their corn, melons, pumpkins and potatoes from the Sunday marauding motorists. Lapy—What's your Christian name? Proseective Maip—Marjorie. “How unfortunate; it happens to be mine, too.” “Well, you'll ’ave to call yourself Tootsie or something.” does very well by what the yokels call “tan unsympathetic part.” A few words in conclusion about the M. Vincent Lawrence. I am sorry to see him abandoning his former ideals of comedy and descend- ing to the confection of frank box- office bait. Not that I blame him for trying to make money when he needs it; he has made little out of his better plays and no man is to be censored when, broke, he occasion- ally goes out and capitalizes the boobs’ tastes. But I fear that once Lawrence is started on the path to the dollar till he will not be able to get back his former footing. The history of potential Broadway talents is full of such little tragedies. The man who could write a comedy with such good material in it as “Two Married Men” should not dissipate his skill. If he needs money,;let him go up to Leopold Schepp’s house some night, climb up the porch and lift the catch on one of the second- story windows. comicbooks.com