comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1927-01-29 · page 30 of 36

Judge — January 29, 1927 — page 30: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — January 29, 1927 — page 30: Judge, 1927-01-29

A restored page from Judge, 1927-01-29. 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.

| I want JupcE for myself. I | Date. JUDGE 627 West 43d Street, New York, N. Y have checked below the offer I accept. cash, stamps, money- order) Judge. Herewith is $1.00 (check, | CHECK HERE or 10 weeks of Herewith is $2.00 (check, cash, money-order) for 21 weeks of JUDGE Herewith find $5.00 | (check, cash, money-or- der) for one year's sub- scription to JUDGE | I FOR YOURSELF “(And Love compares with a Bobtailed Flush, And the Draw is Marriage, we'll say: For whether you help your hand or not, You've still got to ante away.” From SATIRE & SONG y MAURICE SWITZER The author is the vice- president of one of the country’s largest tire com- panies, and a man who ina kindly yet satiric vein has expressed his conception of life in ling, sponta- neous, jubilant song. Even though you do not ordinarily ead verse, this volume will appeal to your sense of rhythm. Privately printed in a limited edition, we still have a few copies, illustrated in color and attractively bound in an Art Binding, size 64% x 8% inches, which we will be glad to send post- paid upon receipt of One Dollar Brunswick Subscription Co. 627 West 43d Street, New York kes lowe Wenge Exasperated V isitor-—Have you no control over your childre there’s your little Adbul looping the loop on my best magi Judging the Movies (Continued from page 21) story and character of Don Juan. I need only , then, that in the picture, at a-glance from the limpid eyes of the excessively chaste Mary Astor, he graduates from orgies to knight errantry, defies the might of the Borgias, and marries the girl. To go through all these motions with gusto John Barrymore, of course, has to “fall back on tech- nique.” That is to say, he has to forget that he’s an unusually in- telligent artist whose joy it is to use his intelligence in the interpretation of a worthy réle, and “fact.” Well, what with and acrobatics and sword play, he “acts” all over the place, and may God forgive him! “Pune Lapy rm Erie” is just such a screen romance as one would expect to be concocted from —Passing Show an operetta of the Viennese type. The trouble is that when you pro- ceed to jell these light things in cold photography they betray immedi- ately their essential inanity. For those who didn’t see the operetta let me say that the story hinges on a | dream so realistic that the invading Austrian general actually believes he has possessed the fair Italian | Countess, wherefore he pays the price agreed on for his pleasure which | is the release of her husband. Francis X. Bushman makes an ade- quate general and Corinne Griffith a very lovely young countess. But | such a plot very distinctly needs choral interludes. FUNNYBOVES, What they need around Chicago is a good detour. ‘udge pays $5 for each one prin 23 comicbooks.com