Judge, 1926-10-23 · page 29 of 36
Judge — October 23, 1926 — page 29: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1926-10-23. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
OCTOBER 23, 1926 The Foreign Invasion of the Cinema (Continued from page 11) daughter of a tyrannical old Man- darin. Miss Mary Lee’s eyes slant the wrong way, according to all cinema standards; she igeue a bridge to her pretty nose; she takes steps about an inch long without once showing even her toes, and she neither gives nor re- ceives kisses (not in public, at least), and yet I’m sure the stirrings within my ancient midriff at sight of her will be duplicated with in- terest in the bosoms of all the strong, silent men of the land when they, too, can see her. What an influence for internationalism! Maree I should add that the legend of “The Legend of the Willow Pattern Plate,” though 900 years old, is quite as romantic and sentimental as anything we are in the habit of filming, that a great deal of attention has been paid in the picture (directed by William H. Jansen, an American) to costumes and scenic photography, which are both sipeibs and that the acting, with the exception of Miss Lee’s, is laughable. In other words, the American fan ought to feel entirely at home watching it all. eee “I saw the doctor enter your house. I hope it was nothing serious!” “Tt was very serious! He called to collect his bill I? —Pele Mele (Paris) THE AGONY OF SUSPENSE They sat there holding hands— neither had spoken for some minutes, but the girl had a feeling that soon she was to be asked the all-important question. Her mind was in turmoil— again and again she asked herself how should jhe answer him—should she seem surprised or should she show that she more or less knew that he would ask her? She had only known him a short time—she liked his voice and he played divinely. She nerved herself up for the words she knew must come and turned her smiling face to his. He glanced at her appealingly as if he wished to speak but felt it was not yet time to do so. She looked at him again with her large innocent eyes and then like a woman she decided to play her last card. . Then he at last found words— he could speak now the game was finished. “Why did you trump my ace?” he asked. Cecil Norriss LDOUGLAS i : efhoes for Men 36 038 Jl Good Values A popular Brogue at $7.50 Tue carefully groomed city man and collegian favor this medium Brogue It is cut on Custom lines from top grade, imported, full grain calfskins and has calf-lined quarter. Popular Chestnut Brown or Black. Here ample toe room is associated with trimness. Added style features relieve its conservatism. +» «» «o At $7.50 this Douglas shoe is matching steps with others far more costly. W.L. DOUGLAS WOMEN'S SHOES FOR ALL OCCASIONS $5 AND $6 —o W.L.DOUGLAS SHOE CO. - BROCKTON. MASS. (him. Learn to Draw at Home Simple Method Makes It Amazingly Easy Trained artists earn from $50 to over $250 a week. ‘Tremendous demand right no w for good art work. Magazines, newspapers, printing houses, etc. noe << rom ‘com ar in to draw and earn big money. “Hello, ‘Vanity Fair’? I very nearly forgot Send for FREE BOOK address.” to notify you of a change of te—their suc 4 eay—acti reproductions of their Judge, Jr., Starts a New Con- | Eo ler ibe Bo ae Seas dance test Next Week! | ler. poncard of Weicr mews, ae WASHINGTON Reom 4810-D 1115—15th pages OF AT. BC comicbooks.com