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Judge, 1926-06-12 · page 30 of 36

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THE ANCIENT ART OF PALMISTRY For thousands of years the art of palmistry has held the interest of students of character reading, and today there 1s no more interesting and enlightening study than that of the signihi- cance of the lines and formation of the hand References to palmistry are given in the old- est books of the B 1 the Chinese and the Brahmins of India are known to have read character from the hand for thousands of years before the Christian Era Today, despite the that Gipsy “fortune tellers” and charlatans in general have pre- tended to read the lines in the palm, it is an accepted fact that the hand is truly individ- ualistic and its markings readable POWER FORCE William Clarke Late of th oval Polyte M2 Institute, London, Will give you, with othe: very good general knowle ing palms, inclu Lines of Life ng a cor Head —Fate—Heart—Marriage Sun—Fortune or — Vocation—Intuition Health; The Line of Mars, The Girdle of Venus, ‘The Rir Saturn, The Ring of Solo- mon, ‘The Rasceltes or ‘Bracelets—Health, Weaith and Happiness. Fully illustrat hound in 16 handy pocket lets, sets will be sent postpaid upon receipt of $1.00 per set Brunswick Subscription Co. 627 West 43d Street, New York and the exhaustion, faintness, nau- sea and dizziness caused by travel motion. Journey by Sea, Train, Car, Auto or Air in perfect comfort with Mothersill’s. 32 75¢. & $1.50 at Drug Stores or direct EME O “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 oz the purchase of a set Mrs. B. Doctor (interested ) “Only on the Is it very high? cond floor, sit!” Judging the Shows (Continued from page 17) was played on a stage so highly lighted ‘that the blinking of the actors, due to the sudden and unac- customed electrical radiance. all the ladies down front. the urable impression that the Spanish gents were trying to make them. rleas- I T: s new show at the Winter Gar- den is called ‘The Great ‘Temp- tations.” It is a good one. Its high spots are a brilliantly colored and effective number called “Valencia,” an amusing dumb-bell skit very well handled by a Miss Dorothy MeNulty, a comic burlesque of “The Shanghai esture,”” and several chorus num- bers that have both rhythm and charm, My prejudice in favor of music halls wherein one may smoke is well known, and for this reason I always go to the Winter Garden—or to the Shuberts’ other emporium on the roof of the Century—in almost hos- pitable frame of mind. Yet I wish that the otherwise es Shubert would oblige me by barring from both the Winter rden and the Casino de Paris the customer who sat near me on this last occasion. I have smoked and smelled some ter- rible weeds in my time, but if what that fellow blew in my nose was cigar tobacco, India rubber is made by Coty. The dancing in “The Great Temp- tations” is the best the Winter Gar- den has given us in some days, and The show isn’t tling in the way of humor: one or two sketches with humorous po- so are the costumes. Will you come to “43,” doctor—my Willie’s got a temperature? —Passing Show tentialities, notably the one show- aking in a strange hed, are allowed to peter out; but ing two drunks a there are other things that make up for the lack example, a number of verbal comedy. For called “The Pin Cushion” that has both originality and loveliness; for example, a num- The Girls of Koster and hefty wenches of the era of 1896 march elephantinely around the stage with their vene in which a dozen de spears: and, for ex- ample, the adroit hoofing of a corps of young women who go by the name of the Sixteen Foster Girls. “Sleepy Time Gal.” comicbooks.com