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Judge, 1926-06-05 · page 30 of 36

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Judge — June 5, 1926 — page 30: Judge, 1926-06-05

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sign on the dotted line....... NOTICE TO JUDGE CONTRIBUTOR: ge when you submit ENcLose no return postag Funnybones, Epilaughs, Toasts of the Day, Di Labels or Lizzie Labels to JUDGE. fear of rejection slips. q Because those contributions that are not accepted will be promptly and neatly filed in the waste basket. The hundreds of Fu Lizzie Labels received daily policy upon us But for prompt attentio in separate envelopes, to the fc Manuscripts— ry Funnybones F of JUDGE Crossword Puzzles Jupce, Lizzie Labels—Lizzie Label Editor of Jupce, ) y And ‘have no Epilaughs and ave forced this drastic ddress_ manuscripts ing departments: ord “Puzzle Editor of Toasts of the Day—Toasts of the Day Editor of JupcE, Dissy Labels—Dizzy Label Editor of JupcE. 627 WEST 43d STREET NEW YORK CITY “And Love compares with a Bobtailed Flush, And the Draw is Marriage we'll say: For whether you help your hand or not, You've still got to ante away.” From SATIRE & SONG MAURICE SWITZER ‘The author is the vice-president of one of the country’s largest tire companies, and a man who in a kindly yet satiric vein has expressed his conception of life in sparkling, spontaneous, jubilant song. Even though you do not ordinarily read verse, this volume will appeal to your sense of rhythm. Private- ly printed in a limited edition, we have a few copies illustrated in color and attractively bound in an Art Binding, size 623 x 834 inches, which we will be glad to send postpaid upon receipt of One Dollar Brunswick Subscription Co. 627 West 43d Street, New York r Applause Card For the Funniest Contri- bution of 1926 Dear JupGe: I think the picture in this issue Entitled...........0006 ateeereawnewS By saweassavessevesacansversweness And the Text in this issue Entitled “Should be entered in the Contest for the Funniest Contribution of 1926. (Address) osic0x scswesseas cease alpine (Week of June 5) At the end of the year, the artist and the writer whose contribution receires the largest number of votes, will each receive a $500 prize. Vote Your Favorite! — qu Waly First Revue Girl—Her past is nothing to speak of. Second Revue Girl—Oh! So that’s what they are all talking about! Judging the Shows (Continued from page 18) these, the show is approximately as interesting as an expurgated edition of a manual on pencil sharpeners. The plot is our old friend about the girl and man who get into the wrong bedroom. The lyrics deal with such emotions as “Choo-Choo Love.” And the humor lies chiefly in vaude- ville acrobatics, gum-chewing §tele- phone girls, allusions to garbage ca: and comments on a man’s avoir- dupois. m “np Sport or K ” by Major Ian Hay Beith, is, despite the military rank of its author, a rank of which he is somewhat irrelevantly proud on a theater program, not to be compared with “The Weavers,” by Rear-Private Gerhart Haupt- mann, ;Amoureuse,” by Rear- Private Georges de Porto-Riche, or even “Hamlet,” by Mr. Shakespeare who had fallen arches. Why is it that these Englishmen try to give their unimportant literary and dramatic compositions a touch of importance by gilding them with their war titl It is a pretty safe bet that when you encounter a book or a play by one of these Majors or Colonels you'll find something that, in the way of meritorious work, gets no nearer to sound quality than the opera of his great American fellow soldier, Captain Charles King. Beith’s play, in point of fact, is as dowdy a comedy as has been brought over from England in years. It con- tains utterly nothing to recommend it. Its humors are uninspired and —London Opinion flat; its theme is an old-timer; its dramatic devices are rusty. The plot turns on a wager that a hypo- critical British country gent can be made to bet on the horses before the end of a specified time. What hap- pens is as obvious as the nose on your face, or at least as the one on Zangwill’s. The country gent falls; the young Englishman in the Hawes and Curtis suit falls in love with the personable young private secretary; the country gent loses his money; and the family fortunes are saved by a bet placed unwittingly by the country gent’s guileless wife. The company, headed by O. P. Heggie, is a pretty good one, but it can do little to save the evening from the Major's manuscript. IV T= Neighborhood Playhouse’s latest offering is “The Romantic Young Lady,” a mild morsel from the Spanish. It is ably acted and adroitly produced. In the trans- continental journey necessary to get to the Neighborhood Playhouse, I recommend that the trip be broken by a day’s stop-over at Ltichow’s. The spring consignment of sauer- kraut has arrived and the manage- ment reports, now that Jim Huneker has gone to his eternal rest, that the supply is sufficient to last at least a week or two longer. AZZIE O IABELS “All Ways.” comicbooks.com