Judge, 1932-03-05 · page 22 of 36
Judge — March 5, 1932 — page 22: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1932-03-05. 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.
i} a Situation vay Japan disregards Se you'd think son's advic sent collect. Milwaukee is the only large cit the country which boasts of a tr ury surplus. In the old days it was good beer that made the city famous. Nowadays people not only refuse to give eredit where credit is due, but they won't give credit where cash is due either, A Pennsylvania newspaper reports that little elfin of human appearance have bee in a coal mine, Stockholders, probably. inysterious — tie “The depression has hit my class- “Beg pardon, sir! JUDGE “That's the first tim I've ever seen that quy standing up ina ring!” Home Movie Reviews Ture were crowds outside the resi- dence of the H.C. Brays the night we saw the new picture, “Down South,” currently ured there, but they were not drawn the film. It was a small fire in the kitchen which attracted them, After seeing the pic- ture, we can understand why all those people remained outside. You might do worse than to see this picture, but we don't know how. To us, it set a new low mark for dullness. The plot, such as it is, shows how low people can fall when they have a Cat got your kipper this morning, sir!” lot of time on their he Florida, The B the month of iry down t and they offer “Down South” to prove it. As the story unwinds, we find the Brays sinking lower and lower in the sand. In the openi standing on the beach, but in subse- quent reels they are exhibited sitting on it, half buried in’ it and almost completely buried in it. The night we were there, the audience seemed to expect—with apparent pleasure— a climax in which the Brays would be entirely buried, but there was no such luck. The featured players, Mr. and Mrs. , are adequate in their réles as nds down in G s, you know, 5) x scenes they are people who are out for a good time and are easily satisfied. Supportin them is their daughter, Betty, who scems to be a child prodigy as a sand i r. Incidental rél e filled by a number of personages well known in the world of Society, Finanee and Politics, who happened to be lying on the beach near the Brays. They are unrecognizable, even) when proudly pointed out by members of the Bray family. The photography, a joint labor of Mr. and Mrs. Bray, is none too good. It is consistently blurry, but the audi- used to that and doesn't mind except during a scene showing a group of Broadway chorus girls gam- boling on the beach. Sound effects were provided, the night we were there, by a dining-room radiator, with which something seemed to be the matter, —Joun C. Emery comicbooks.com