Judge, 1927-09-24 · page 28 of 36
Judge — September 24, 1927 — page 28: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1927-09-24. 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.
Xt ~) =a; rp Cleveland, on the Public Square of Cleveland, has been < The original build- ing was Mowrey’s Tavern—a station on the old Post Road. N Hotel Cleveland The site of Hotel used continuously for hotels since 1802. —the most modern successor to a long line of famous hotels —you'll find the same hearty hospitality, the same friendly helpful- ness of those old coaching days. We like to see to it that you enjoy your stay here. Hotel Cleveland is con- venient to all parts of the city. Every room bas private bath in connec- tion, Servidor service; floor clerks, ‘Room rates from $3.00. HOTEL LEVELAND PUBLIC SQUARE, CLEVELAND Perrect Lwy—’Er? I wouldn’t believe ’er, even if I knew she was tellin’ the truth. Judging the Movies (Continued from page 19) ing in the desert and God gets him out alone in a sand storm, after which the monk confe to his wife and she sends back to the monastery, and we have the closing scene of the lonely woman sitting out in the desert with young fauns, children and musicians lolling at her feet in a truly paradisical setting. The desert scenes were re- markably good, and the new actor, Ivan Petrovitch, goes about looking very handsome, if slightly bewilder: S far as I am concerned, the re However. gious story seemed very ham, and Miss Alice Terry, as the devout heroine, seemed about as roman- tically conscious as a Cook’s Tour spinster hopping around Pales- tine looking for souvenir post- cards to send back to Aunt Carrie. * * * ” remarked one of the editors, hastening out of the Capitol Theatre, “is what I would call capitol punishment.” “CU sperwort” was really in- teresting and entertaining use it moved fast, because it had some remarkable photog- raphy and because the acting was bece —Lonpon Opinion convincing. The story, written by Ben Hecht, is besed on an actual incident in gang warfare ago, and deals with the of a modern gangster in that city. However, while the story has a few weak places, and the ending is very ordinary, the picture is tremendously effective. The use of machine guns seems real to you, and you get the feel- ing of the terrible lence that does exist in the gang alleys of our Chicago of today. George Bancroft is an excel- lent and hard working actor and his acting combined with the direction of Von Sternberk makes “Underworld” a picture well worth seeing. I you get a kick out of seeing Clara Bow then you might like “Hula.” There is no other reason for going. It is the story of a planter’s daughter who grows up with the natives of Hawaii and who goes after an Englishman in a natural preda- tory native fashion. P. She got her It is very stupid and, as far as this department is concerned, it got no more reaction than a library lion might from the advances of a Pekinese out for its evening constitutional, but then, of course, don’t let my misogyny keep you from having a good time. 26 comicbooks.com