Judge, 1929-10-19 · page 30 of 36
Judge — October 19, 1929 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1929-10-19. 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 PRESIDENT Atlantic City’s Newest Boardwalk Hotel Offers for the Fall and Winter Season th Bath— m $28.00 weekly, European Plan Or $49.00 weekly, American Plaa Double Rooms with Bath— From $42.00 weekly, European Plan Or $84.00 weekly, merican Plan Sea Water Swimming Pool Marine Sua Deck—Concert Orchestra Under the cement of Charles D. Boughton ‘ ” ‘Long, long ago is the humorous cross-word puzzle definition of what six-letter word? If you'd like to know, to page thirty, where you will find this definition and turn instructions how to obtain 6,000 additional humor- ously clever definitions. Diaindids 2 OOS EAE ae Tene diamonds for erample Here's somo vital information for zo:,0 ¥ Century Old House has dia- mond offers, % of market prices. A reason rarely think of mak. sonsibis RADICALLY LOW FRICES, Fa for hiNESt QUALITY. DIA: Why Pay Full Prices? be 12 large loan firme. combined, world's jargest Giamon. institution Seat ares Sea conning unermoticn of ft Jeers. WHICH MONEY was’ LOANED BUT NOT REPAID. from many advantageous sources, Send fll Ip and mail to _Pittabursh Pe. An Acidosis Condition Is Always Serious tt VITTEL WATER "*'° GRANDE source Write tor Descriptive Folder 8 BARCLAY ST. NEW YoRK -NEWS TTEM— BOY ENTERS V4 COLLEGE AT C \ AGE OF ELEVEN TRACK MEET 1940 er $d | THE JUNIOR fs PROM / L/L - ee r BOO HOo- PA - po.o.0 } wae aad THE CAmPus m ny} B40 fetes Judging the Shows (Continued from page 20) and imperturbable police inspec- tor. As the latter, Edward Ellis shows that he has been studying closely the technique of George M. Cohan. As the lover, Edward Pawley displays a virtuosi' ed to his tailor. Dorotl Peterson does well as the wife and a gentleman named Jack Lee, in the rdle of the husband mur- dered a few minutes after the curtain rises, contrives to sit erect and motionless, without so much as an eye-blink, up to within a short time of the play's end. There has been no such impre sive stiff on the American stage since Sheridan Block. W248" certain of my colleagues of the daily press profess to see in Monckton Hoffe’s “Many Waters,” displayed at the Max- ine Elliott, eludes this old watchdog. To him, it seems a wholly unsuccessful effort in simple, sentimental writing and one so slow and dull that two acts of it were all that he could pre- vail upon himself to sit through. Hoffe has, in the past, contrived episodes in certain of his. p! that achieved the mood he vainly tried to establish in the play, notably in “ talinda’ and : ithful Heart.” But in “Many Waters” he mistakes an arch slobbering for gentle pathos. Ernest Truex makes his reap- pearance in the exhibit and is supported by an English actress named Vanne. Both give service- able performances. Ke yA Two women of moderate means were rivals. One had a necklace made of larg: beads. The other immediate ed to order one with larger beads. | “You don’t want a necklace any larger in agate,” urged the artisan. “Let me make you a table top.” —Lovisvinte Courter-Journar 28 i a tall tid ce hslitactd comicbooks.com