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Judge, 1930-11-29 · page 29 of 36

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A TRULY GREAT HOTEL | When you visit Detroit next time stop at Hotel Fort Shelby. You'll enjoy its thoughtful, effi- cient, unpretentious service... its savory foods and cozy, cheerful, charming rooms. q Every unit in the Hotel Fort Shelby is paneled ... servidor equipped . .. attractively op- pointed and popularly priced; all rooms have private bath ond circulating ice water. 4 Hotel Fort Shelby’s location in the heart of Detroit's shop- ping, theatre, financial, insur- ance and wholesale districts is a happy one... no other large hotelin the metropolitan area is so near the principal railwoyterminoals, airports and steamship piers. 900 rooms .+smany as low os $3.00 per day ... suites $10.00 ond upwards. Motorists are relieved of their ovtomobiles at the door without service charge. Write for Free Rood Mop HOTEL She “Aglow with Friendliness” E.J, BRADWELL, Monoger DETROIT Or I The Theatre (Continued from page 16) minutes, the first slice of the evening has some good low fun in it, one or two pretty fair tunes and some very fair dancing. Two of the evening's sketches were originally talkie shorts, which seems to prove something about the effect of the talkies on the stage or of the stage on the talkies, but just what it is I am at the moment too lazy to figure out. When I tell you, fur- ther, that among the items in the amusing first act are a West Point dancing drill by the chorus, a st from Cole Porter's celebrated “C ng, here called “Ex-Gigol ¢ laid in the usual patio with the usual tango monkey- shines, you may believe that the act surely can’t be as amusing as I say it is, but it is, though I am also too lazy to go on and prove to you why it is. The ond act—the dead one—be uins with one of those John Murray Anderson legend-numbers that rela in song and dance the trials that beset the loves and lives of nighting s, young princes or wh at generally drive the audience out for several more cigarettes, The act proceeds much after that same sauceful formula, winding up with the usual “Lady of the Fan” number. So if you go to the show, leave around quarter past ten and you'll have had a diverting evening. Among the princi- pals are Lulu McConnell, Evelyn Hoey and Joe Penner. es, Nathan Recommends “Three's a Crowd” (Selwyn)—Allen, Webb and Holman in a revue far superior to the .itetime” (Music ily woo Box)—Gorgeous ‘As funny a farce as the American tage has shown, “The Green Pastures" —(Mansfield)—The Scriptures blacked wp. A novel and enter ining fantasy “Fine and Dandy" (Erlanger)—Joe Cook provides an evening of chuckles. “Strictly Dishonorable™ (Avon)—Last sea son's favorite comedy. Gay doings in a gin: sneak. Nathan Recommends with Reservations “Elizabeth, the Queen” (Guild)—Spottily in teresting, though Strachey is still twenty miles away—or (s it @ hundred? “The Man in Possession” (Shubert)—An old plot freshened up with some lively humors, Notes on Other Exhibits “Roar China!” (Reck)—Propaganda that yells itself to de 1p Pops the chit-chat is ¢ razzing of stuff (Masque)—Some al, but the play (Times Square): of aks. oth. “On the Spot (Forrest)—Hokum gunman meller. “Pagan Lady” (48th Street)—Lenore Ulric as a quart of pepper in a demi-tasse of “The Greeks Had a Word For It” (Harris) The gay sex life of New York as seen by Zoe Akins. Cheap hokum “Bad Girl” (Iludson)—Some adroit acting visited upon a Liggett and Myers drama. “Princess Charming” (Imperial)—1998 musi- cal romance with the Princess Elaine still doing her stuff “Blackbirds” (Royale)—Ethiopian song and dance, pretty poor 27 THIS KNIGHT , LIFE 1S GETTIN not | The Knights of old were lusty chaps ‘Who wore chain vests and sword-proof caps And liked to stit up lively brawls To test their iron Overalls. But better far than brawls, I wot, Isa lively game of Camelot! CAM‘E:LOT Jump, canter, capture, smash with a Knight's Charge, and clear the way through your opponent's forces to his goal! What Noted Experts say of Camelot Sidney S. Lenz says, “It's a remarkable game. I play it ¢ lot.” Mrs, Prescott Warren says, “It hes edded enother pleasure to life.” Milton C. Work pronounces it “one of the few really great games." E. V. Shepard calls it “a masterpiece!—a new delight.” Elizabeth Clark Boyden hails it as “America’s contribu- tion to the world’s great games.”" CAMELOT fills the wide space which for some centuries has existed unfilled between Chess and Checkers, with « geme far livelier and more interesting then Checkers, and vastly simpler end easier then Chess. DeLuxe Edition, Full Leather Galahad Edition, Rich Binding Tristram Edition, Cloth Lancelot Edition, Heavy Boord Popular Edition, Red AT DEALERS' or by mail. Other Femoes PARKER GAMES: Tosring, Rook, Pesity, Ping-Pong, Pollyanna, Lindy, Wings, Pit, Helme, PASTIME PICTURE PUZZLES, etc. $25. PARKER BROTHERS x comicbooks.com