Judge, 1926-12-18 · page 27 of 36
Judge — December 18, 1926 — page 27: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1926-12-18. 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.
still in its treatment of them show the divine cleanliness of understand- ing, charity and justic Another play, dealing with the same realities, never pass beyond those reali- nd in that case promptly sinks agmire of filth and muddled .” “What Price Glory?” the play, belonged in the first: cate- gory; “What Price Glory?” the pic- ture—at least the first half of it— belongs in the second. The latter half of the picture is marred with rhetorical flights on the part of Flagg and Quirt as palpably out of character as if Cal Coolidge were to be cast as a cheer leader. Flagg is permitted to say in one pli while reviewing his men: “It’s a rotten world that would wet the soil with the blood of boys like these.” And in another, “The Marines are always faithful to the old flag.” And Quirt, in his farewell to Char- maine, breathes tenderly: “At last I've found something in all this muck and blood worth coming back for.” But consider the climax when, at the end, these two enemies sworn and tested, these two case-hardened, flame-seared, twenty-minute eggs are shown returning to the front each with an arm over the other's shoul- der. Boys, I couldn’t keep back the tears! Guide to the Movies “The Big Parade”—Still in th “Ben Hur" —Mammoth spect “Moana of the South Seas"—Idyllic. “The Black Pirate”—Douglas Fairbanks. “For Heaven's Sake”—Harold Lloyd. “Aloma of the South Seas’ “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp” “Ella Cinders"—Colleen Cinderel “The Volga Boatman”—Red romanc “The Road to Mandalay"—Lon Chan over, ariety”—The Emil Jannings classic. North Woods stuff. form, Beau Geste” —Deset This Is Paris “The Stron “Sparrows"—Mother Mary Pickford. “One Minute to Play”—Red Grange. “The Campus Flirt"—Bebe, the athlete, “Tin Gods"”—Melodramatic tragedy. “The Treasure” —Beautiful Ufa picture. “You'd Be Surprised”—Raymond Griflith, “The Temptress" —Greta Garbo is good. “Kid Boots" —Eddie Cantor. “The Ace of Cads”—The suave Menjou. “The Better “Ole” —Old Bill himself. “The Magician” —Child “London” —Echo of * “The Sorrows of Satan’ “Bardelys the wyn.” orid Corelli. John Gilbert “We're in the Nary “Ecerybody's Acting ‘orever After” —Mush “U pstage” Van “The Eagle of the “Potemkin” —An y funny. All-star comedy. Banbons Chacaolates Banbannieres NEW YORK Madison Avenue at 47™ Street CHICAGO Michigan Boulevard ak Jackson Maillard Restaurant and Candy Department in Stern Brothers’ store, West 42nd Street, New York La Jeunesse HE perfection of selection in assorted chocolates. Artistically decorated metal package. 1b... $1.75 2Ibs. . . $3.50 Maillard Products are sold at most of the better stores everywhere. DIRZY ASE LIZZIE ()IABELS aAn American Tragedy. J They called him “Hal,” because he never knew. Judge pays $5 for each one printed The Odd-job Lady—I put yer dre: Judge pays $5 for each one printed. in soak as yer arst me, mum— but the mean divils wouldn’t give me more’n five bob on it! E rybody's Weekly comicbooks.com