Judge, 1927-09-03 · page 30 of 36
Judge — September 3, 1927 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1927-09-03. 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.
-MO-LAY- FoR SHAVING WITHOUT BRUSH OR LATHER No Muss-No Bother Just spread MOLLE over the beard-with the finger tips and use the razor. : Incomparable for quick, easy shaving with per- fect face comfort. Lotions never needed 1 Want to Try MOLLE Name. Address. Mail to Pryde-Wynn Co., New Brighton, Pa., U.S.A. — Who Will Win the TUNNEY— DEMPSEY FIGHT? Gaze into the crystal in Next Week’s JUDGE and see for yourself Judging the Movies (Continued from page 20) is shot down behind the German lines and the squadron receives word that he has been killed. The next day the missing flyer’s mate goes out for blood. After a morning of super- human fighting, the revenging pilot spots a lone German plane winging over the Allied lines. He turns to it savagely and pumping the pilot full of lead, crashes the enemy in a French churchyard. However, the victor has shot down his own buddy! Unknown to him until after the crash, the German plane was piloted by his missing mate, who had escaped behind the German lin stolen an enemy plane and then headed back for his territory. This was supposed to be the big climax ot the picture but the insertion of some terribly dumb titles made it the worse sequence of the picture. As the two flyers, Richard Arlen and Charles Rodgers are a Arlen has a likable sullen ality that makes h al- most perfect in his réle. Besides the photography, the picture is superior in that both the love interest and the comic relief are cut down to a minimum of ex- posure. I" is interesting to note the re- vived interest in war, ten years after. “Barbed Wire” is a good movie, with a war story and Pola Negri. It is taken from a Hall Caine novel that deals with a German prison camp in France. The German prisoners are quart- ered at a French farm which is run by a war-embittered French girl. However, the girl eventu- ally falls in love with one of the German prisoners. Her neigh- bors turn against her as a result, and when the armistice is signed the French girl and her German lover find no welcome in either Germany or France. Fortunately, the girl’s brother returns home just as they are being driven out and, although blinded by the war, mal speech on brotherly love that calms down the peasants. The scene like that in “Wings” in which the dead pilot’s mother sa something to the effect that if her son’s death “awakens the world’s conscience, he will not have died in vain.” This is all v well and while “Barbed Wir a good and ac- curate movie, well-played by Pola Negri, and while “Wings a better one, I hope you can take your sub-titles or le: them alone. After all, the Marines are still in Nicaragua, and there are just 10,000 French troops yet quartered on the Rhine. o ck UG 7 Here a jazz musician lies; With Mother Earth he merges; They buried him in rapid time With syncopated dirges. une ania bet 4 et Heta iy onde ‘pays $5 for each one Prince ni “Pull up, mate, you’ve dropped yer blinkin’ engine.” —Ti1-Brrs comicbooks.com