Judge, 1926-10-09 · page 30 of 36
Judge — October 9, 1926 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1926-10-09. 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.
She wasn’t over twenty, but she knew her little book, And her manner was so innocently frank, That when she wanted something, she’d assume a certain look, And, really, he’d have gone and rob- bed a bank. FROM SATIRE AND SONG BY Maurice Switzer A business man with a keen but kindly sense of humor, who has put into verse some of his many impressions of human. nature Privately printed in a lim- ited edition, of which we have a few copies, which we want to distribute among those who have an appreciation of the sort of easy-reading verse which burns a hole in the memory. This volume is uniquely illus- trated in color and attractively bound in an Art Binding. Size 614 x 814 inches Our supply is limited, but we will gladly send your copy, postpaid, to any address, upon receipt of $1.00 Brunswick Subscription Co. 627 West 43d Street, New York éircs Earn Xmas Money Pirite for 50 Sete St- Nicholas Christmas Seals. | Sell Yor 10¢ a set, | When sold send us $3.00 and keep $2. fork Just Fans We trust you-—untll CiPisioas, BE Nicholas Seal Cov Dept. 16.5. Brooklyn, N.Y, Copy This Sketch and sample chart to test ¥¢ ability. Please sate age. Always insist upon having 9 ABBOTT'S Tonic Appetizer B ITTE RS fers Years imple by mail, 25¢ CW Abbott C0, Balto., Md. LF anc ¥.8. DENISON & CO.,623 So, Wabash, Devte2i Gemedies, Dram Yacderilte Acts Sica! Comedies Revues, Min= Make-up’ Goode Strel Choruses, Songs, Blackface plays. Everything for ‘Sh All Amateur Entertainments, ‘Speakers “CATALOGUE, FREE. ‘CHICAGO COURT NEWS! The Bachelor—How we change as we grow older! The Divorcee—Yes, d’you know, I used to marry men I wouldn't invite to dinner now! Judging the Movies (Continued from page 19) of emphasizing the absurdly puri- tanical complexion of the Boston of Hester Prynne’s day. These are in- tended to be amusing but succeed rather in being clownish in the good old movie manner. Then comes the love-making between Hester and the Reverend Dimmesdale. This in the book is numbered among the things antecedent to the story and is thus left entirely to the imagination. But the movie, as one would expect, comes right out with it. The result on the subsequent drama is two- fold. It does away with the gradu- ally unfolding mystery enveloping the father of Hester's child with which Hawthorne seduces the reader onward, and it makes necessary, presumably to placate the censors, —Shketch the introduction of an utterly false note. This is the suggestion that Dimmesdale didn’t know Hester was married, that he fully expected to marry her himself and that she had deceived him. Such obscene hypoc- risy is pure sacrilege. But when all is said and done the thing makes a movie of the first rank. In stature and hauteur Miss Gish is not the Hester Prynne described by Hawthorne, but her very wistfulness and frailty help to emphasize the courage of her conduct and the trag- edy of her position. She at least has an adequate conception of her réle and without apparent effort wrings from it the last drop of heroism and agony. Miss Gish has done fine things for the screen before but I doubt if she ever rose higher than she does in this picture. She is fortunate in having to play comicbooks.com