Judge, 1928-09-08 · page 30 of 36
Judge — September 8, 1928 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1928-09-08. 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.
putt EVENING radio in every room —and you have your rams. Press a valve — Select a book and it’s sent the morning, and find spaper under your door. ¢ 7 7 A our home away from home.” They organization of Onotatlen and you from the There are Statler Hotels in: BOSTON + BUFFALO Statler and Hotel Buffato) 4 OIT + ST.LOUIS NEW ‘YORK (totet Pennsyteania, Statler-Operated) Hotels Statler 7,700 R ith bath aod radi ‘plea changing ~ DULL sUNP” NO KIDDIN? mis TER I WAS JUST, WAITIN? FOR A STREET-CAR/ | I understand the main stemmers on the Big Apple are calling | it “Hroadicay” nowadays, hey, Walt? Oh, boy, hot dog! “You | should have seen Hadrian's column when you remarked Mrs, Cumquat. “We did,” | it was so lousy stopped buying the paper! thought it was a newspaper column! ere in Rome,” replied Mrs. Subgum, “but Ha, ha! She Os, ——— about it all over again and bores Judging the Shows | (Continued from page 19) staged, but was somewhat invali- dated on the opening night by press-agent whom the manage ment had discharged, who was ap ntly very sore over the treatment that had been accorded him, and who essaved to get even | by rushing down the aisle when converts were called for shouting out sardonic — about his former boss. To m: matters more idiotic, the pro ducers also went a little balmy and, during one of the it sions, herded some of the actors on the sidewalk and made them yell about salvation, much to the visible annoyance of the cop sta- | tioned in West #8th Street and of the actors themselves. n orinis- | It Mie Sone Warren,” by Crane Wilbur, is tedious mush ¢ ing with the Berlin-Ms Ay mar riage, very thinly disguised. 1 long ago hoped that we had heard the last of the marri in ques tion, but it appears that we have not. For some reason or other that eludes the understanding, some- one periodically gets worked up everyone, doubtless including the parties directly concerned, to a fine point of stiffness. Wilbur proves one of the profoundest bores among the pack of busy bodies. His play is cheap, dull and trashy. | Another dose of Understood Women, f child of the Kallesser who wrote the nonesuches called “Marria on Approval” and “One Woman” and a lady named Lynch, previous talents dark. An attempt to be i ‘ results only ina damp gloom. It is evident that the authors on Donnay’s “1 ved their inspira tion, in a careless manner of speaking, from it. But to write anythin x in the manner of “L’Es- Is for comprehension, d wit, and of such n’s. expe qualities neither of the present authors seem to possess so much as a sliver. atic telephones, st long to get ‘the — comicbooks.com