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Judge, 1926-07-03 · page 30 of 36

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Judge — July 3, 1926 — page 30: Judge, 1926-07-03

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“That's a very effective sign, but what keeps the balloon up?” “Uses the hot air generated on the porch. Skin Troubles Cleared Up—often in 24 hours. you can be rid of pimples, bla eruptions on the face or body, barbers’ itch, eczema, enlarged pores, oily or shiny skin, simply send me your name and address today—nocost CLEA NE tried and tested in over toilet. water—is simply magical in prompt results. friends; if not, the loss is mine. WRITE repay the favor by telling your TODA Y. E. S. GIVENS, 425 Chemical Bldg, Kansas City, Mo. —faintness, stomach disturbances and dizziness caused by Sea, Train, Auto, Air or Car Travel. Mother- sill’s will promptly end all forms of Travel Sickness. 35 75¢. & $1.50. at Drug Stores or dire The Mothersill Remedy Co., Ltd. New York Paris Bitters, a delightful tonic F ample by mail 2 Abbott & Co., Balti Judging the Shows (Continued from page 18) A comparatively new and inexperi- enced producer like Joseph Byron Totten, on the other hand, has all the business acumen that these older producers lack. Mr. Totten an- nounces that he is going to put on a play of his own named “Love's Call,” which is as sure to be a great hit as “The Green Hat,” say, is sure to fail. “Love's Call,” it would seem, is ab- solutely sure-fire. In the first place, it is full of love interest, the first requisite of dramatic success. In the second place, it has a romantic Mexican background, something that is certain to draw crowds to the box- office. And in the third place, it contains the vital undercurrent of melodrama. I predict a ye for “Love's Call,” at least. Another apparent sure-fire hit is Edgar Selwyn’s “Something to Brag About.” This contains a very amus- ing idea. A young husband, appre- ciating that his wife has respect only for men who are fellows of romantic importance in the e munity, gets himself involved in a scrape with the police, is subse- quently hailed by the small suburban town in which he lives as a very dashing gent, and thus brings his wife to a profound admiration of him. Here, surely, is a plot that will prove popular. No sex, no dirt—just a nice, clean story that everyone will love. A play, in short, to which a man may take his wife without being ashamed. Mr. Selwyn will make a fortune out of it. “Sunny,” a musical show an- nounced by Mr. Dillingham, is—as anyone can tell—a dead flop before s run es of the com- it starts, yet Mr. Dillingham persists in going ahead with it and says he will put it on at the New Amsterdam. Why Mr. Erlanger is willing to take a chance at having his theater lose money on such a show passeth the standing. The public is sick of music shows like “Sunny”; what it wants is something like Gluck’s “Orpheus,” which the Province- towners are wisely going to offer in their Macdougal Street theater. tae An Eye for Business If the truth were known, it would probably be found that it was a plasterer who first suggested the Charleston as a ballroom dance. —Dallas News Rha They are telling a yarn in the white light belt about a small time vaude- ville booking agent who heard of an all-Indian jazz band recently ar- rived in New York. He taxied to a Brooklyn four-a-day theater and caught enough of the act to know it would sell to the circuit he repre- sented. Back stage he approached the manager of the act. “Are all of you really Indians?” he said. “If you are, I think I can arrange along route. You are really Indians, “Vat vould be the use of kidding mitt you?” replied the manager of the act. ‘Ve are all fool-blodt!” —New York Graphic soe Policeman (angrily)—What’s your name? Motorist—Jones. “How do you spell it?” —Answers “Good heavens! What’s that you've got?” “[’ve just borrowed it from that stingy blighter, Brown. new penny-in-the-slot lawn mower.” It’s his —London Opinion comicbooks.com