Judge, 1926-01-30 · page 32 of 36
Judge — January 30, 1926 — page 32: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1926-01-30. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Get Bunte Cough Drops. They clear and rest your throat. Made of pure cane sugar, menthol and horehound. The menthol heals —the horehound soothes. MENTHOL: HOREHOUND Bupe” DRors Enid—How do you mean you made a faur pas last night, V: Viva—Well, you see, I told him I'd never been kissed before, and— Applause Card For the Funniest Contribution of 1926 Dear Jupae: I think the picture in this issue Entitled And the Teet in this issue Entitled Should be entered in the Contest for the Funniest Contribution of 1926. (Address) . vows ) ‘y 30) At the end of the year: the artist and the writer, whore contribution receives the iargest aumber of votes. will each receive a $500 Prise. | VOTE YOUR FAVORITE? = “POPULAR RADIO is without question the best radio magazine” You will understand when you see it how very interesting and valuable it is to every owner of a radio receiving set and to every one considering the building or the purchase of a set DON’T WEAR A TRUSS BE COMFORTABLE— Soten a aie i ie salle tom patise. whies fice? EME, It has no, obnoxious Automatic Air salves or plasters, Durable, Cheap. it on tris peony te orth. Ben re= xian Bee eee eons GROOKS APPLIANCE CO..71-B, Stata St Marshall Mich. er—it appears that I was engaged to him last year. Judging the Shows (Continued from page 16) of a fiery Russian Joan of Are who leads her people against the corrupt and dissolute nobility, has been en- trusted to a nice, quiet, little Amer- ican girl who has about as much Russian fire to her as an English foot-warmer. But one could even overlook such casting were the libretto better than it is. The M. Hammerstein is such a sagacious showman, a chip of the old block that was Oscar, that one wonders how he ever allowed himself to let it get by him. Perhaps, on the day he read it, his receipts from “Rose:Marie” were so large that his eyes had worn themselves out adding up figures. Til Te présentation of “Carmencita and the Soldier” by the Moscow Art Verein would seem ten times as good if Morris Gest’s press agent had held himself in check before the pro- duction and hadn’t led us to expect that the occasion would prove to be the tenth wonder of the world, the eighth and ninth being the Russians’ presentations of “La Périchole” and “Lysistrata.” This version of Bizet’s “Carmen” is a highly interesting affair; it contains much of genuine merit; but it falls considerably short of the prefatory blurbs about it. Press agency can do no end of damage to worthy theatrical enter- prises, though our producers do not seem always to be privy to the fact. There may be a fool born every —Gaiety minute, to say nothing of a dramatic but Barnums are born but once in a century. Olga Baklan continues to be the Moscow guild's chief attraction. Her Carmen, from an acting stand-* point, is admirable. Her voice, however, will never greatly upset the garlicas at the Metropolitan. Rr Employer (finding his clerk asleep at the desk)—Look here, Meyer, you can clear out at the end of the month. Clerk: (peevishly) — Well, you needn’t have wakened me so soon for that! —Dorfbarbier sae A wedding was recently celebrated inan airplane. Evidently the things are still far from safe. —The Humorist tas A divorce can now be obtained in South Africa for thirteen shillings. The supremacy of Los Angeles in the film producing business may now cease at any moment. —Eve tae She—I bought a piano awfully cheap to-day. He—How much? “T pay £3 a month.” “For how many months?” “Oh! I forgot to ask them that.” —Tit-Bits tas We hear that it was so foggy during a recent Rugby match that the game went on for half an hour before it was discovered that the ball was lost. —London Opinion comicbooks.com