Judge, 1927-03-26 · page 30 of 36
Judge — March 26, 1927 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1927-03-26. 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.
“The Busybody”’ By Sam Brown delineation ot see the turn ductior engraver 84% x1 Careful 50 cents each “Be Yourself*’ By Robert Patterson mad, frolicking impishn saintly mask of demure n captured by the artist in this intriguing picture, Printed in full color on heavy Art Mat, sive 84% x 11 inches, ready for framing. Prints will be car and sent postpaid upon receipt of 50 cents each e has be: . é 4 ies : “Just a Song at Twilight” By Delevante Printed on heavy Art Plate paper with wide margins. Sixz about 19 x 15 inches. Sent postpaid to any address on receipt of 50 cents each JUDGE looks just like him! Judging the Movies (Continued from page 20) James, is good and so is his father, played by Silas Miracle, and the net effect is decidedly stirring and thought-provoking. In an effort to spoil it all, how- ever, the management of the Cameo Theatre had provided that just before the curtain parted for the showing a gentleman named Luke Cosgrove, with a forest of white whiskers and the manner of a patent medicine faker, should jump on the stage and plead with the audience not to think too ill of the mountain people. “They're my folks,” he cried with tears in his voice, which is probably what they would resent the most. Ovex Davis’s ingenuity as a plot carpenter provides some unintentional comedy in “Blind Alleys,” Tom Meighan’s latest vehicl The story is that of a bride and groom who, through more or less tragic mishaps, lose each other in New York. That is to say, the groom collides with a taxi-cab and the bride with a gang of hold-up men, and both are held incommunicado for a space. Then each goes hunting the other, and as one occasion follows another on which they miss meeting by a hair’s breadth the audience breaks into laughter over the tragedy. The ending, however, in its simplicity and surprise makes amends for the naiveté of plot. In this the bride, who has agreed to sail for her old home in South ART PRINT DEPARTMENT 627 West 43d Street New York Farurr (to portrait painter)—See here, this won't do; it exercises the female of changing her mind. Ameri priviles As her steamer reverses in mid- | ocean, she suddenly appears on the pier primed for the embraces | of her true love. | Meighan, as I have indicated, is the hero and Greta Nissen the heroine and so far as the lovey- dovey business is concerned, th do the thing up brown. Those who frequent the movies for this purpose will be satisfied. ett | Stranger (seeing a very long funeral procession passing ) — Who is the deceased? “The one in the hearse.” —Bvew Hemor, Madrid ad A Frenchman has created a new record by dancing for one hundred and ninety-two hours. Possibly he’d just heard of the rise of the franc. —Hewonist eed “There are twelve million pedestrians spread over Eng- | land,” de Spread se ares a contemporary. ns to be the right word. —Passinc Suow AS Give a sentence withthe word ; Fiddlestick” 4° i; 39) If the covers are too short your fiddlestick comicbooks.com v