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Judge, 1934-04 · page 28 of 36

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Judge — April 1934 — page 28: Judge, 1934-04

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Enjoy the luxuries of a modern NEW Hote! Governor Clinton. 1200 spacious rooms with bath, radio, Servidor, circulating HOTEL _ ice.xoter. From $3 for one —$4 for two, Tth Avenue at 31st Street NEW YORK CITY Live in 9 Rooms Pay for One The above phrase adequately de- scribes Allerton living—for here are provided all those extra comforts which make for pleasant and con- nial environment—a variety of features and club facilities, yet the cost is moderately that of ove room. $2.00 Daily up—S10 Weekly up 22 East 38th Street, New York, Fraiernity Clubs Bldg. 143 Ease 39th Street, Allerton Club 130 East $7th Street (For Women) Allerton Club JUDGE PAYS $10 For each Cross Word Puzzle accepted from its readers. A craceruL sweep of cedar... tight- planked ... strong ribbed .. . covered with seamless, water-tight canvas, The effortless stroke-stroke-stroke of a pad- dle unfolds the glory of all outdoors, Get an Old Town Canoe. 1934 Old Towns cost as little as $68. Send for a free catalog, showing mod- els and prices. Also sailing, sponson, *quare-stern canoes and outboard boats. Including big, fast seaworthy models for family use, Rowboats, Dinghi Write today. Old Town Can 584 Main Street, Old Town, Maine. Co., SSH ERSi¢ STOPS TRAVEL (Bia By SICKNESS by SEASICK SEA, AIR ond TRAIN Q os EmMEO CAMP ASHFIELD SOUTH ASHFIELD, MASS. Coach Cate knows more ways for kids to have a slick time and the meals are NEAT! Dad says fifteen a week is O.K. with him. Let's go! REX M. CATE US Northern Bivd., Manhasset, N.Y. HEALTH HOSPITALITY and RECREATION asing in the sunshine upon the open decks of Hotel Dennis is deal—e lusive, yet mosphere—spacious lounge unobstructed view of Boardwalk ord sea AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN Hotel Denti cranrccry On the Boardwalk 26 THE (Continued from pa THEATRE 16) if you could, so what the hell. Others did a lot of comparing with Picasso's painting that got nobody anywhere, and till others, somewhat indignant, simply ented themselves with quoting such lines of Gertie’s as “To know to know to love her so; four saints prepare for saints; it makes it well fish; four saints it makes it well fish”, and dismissed whole business with the literary-critical equivalent of “nuts’ The truth lay pr more in the latter di former. I say probably, because I am a notoriously polite and even chivalrous fellow, especially where the ladies are concerned, and do not wish, whatever my critical conviction, to specify the common denominator between Gertie and the Juglans regia. Suffice it, there- fore, mannerfully to visit what credit was due the event upon the brows of the composer, the scene designer, the cos- tume maker, and the director, and to defer the getting of Gertie’s garter until such a time as I am vouchsafed more bably somewhat ection than in the HE Theatre Guild's fifth offering of the season is John Wexley’s dramatization of the Scottsboro ca under the title “They Shall Not Die”. It is violently partisan stuff and more effective to those who seek the theatre for the yells and screams of propaganda than to those who seek it for the quieter graces of dramatic art. Compared with the same playwright’s excellently trived “The Last Mile”, it is a woefully inferior performance. n= Nathan’s Opinions “They Shall Not Die"—Scottsboro prot ith such a vengeance that the audience rus t at the conclusion of the performance and kisses all the Negroes in West Fort rth —Sinclair ization by Sidney ellent theatrical evening. the Sam. “Richard of Bordeaux"— outatani drama of the year. A splend written sur- vey of the life and acts of the Black Prince's weakling “The Gladys Cooper, Adrianne Allen, Raymond Massey and a generally capable English troupe give a feeling of some life to Paraphrase of the familiar play about the sexually stimulating woman who comes into # previously cowlike household and raises the inevitable hell with the men folk. eer People”—Stale rubbish about the ana- tomical goings-on in dear old Hollywood. One act of it was enough to convert a teetotaler to rum; two, enough to convert even a dramatic critic to morality and the church. ing and Whistle”—Milton Herbert Grop- per's trashy sex farce which again pathetically sought to stimulate an audience's interest by displaying an inebriated couple going illegally to bed at the second act curtain. “Mary of Scotland"—Maxwell Anderson's often eloquently written, if not always dramatic, apocryphal study of Mary and Elizabeth. “Big Hearted Herbert”—Commonplace carpet- slipper farce-comedy with J. C. Nugent earning his salary battling against the authors for laughs, “As Thousands Cheer"—By unanimous vote, the year's best revue. “Roberta”—Jerome Kern's score is responsible for @ success that Otto Harbach’s book left in joubt. “The Wind and the Rain”—A delicately writ- ten little play about a sensitive young English medical student trying to find his heart's way about in Edinburgh. comicbooks.com