Judge, 1934-06 · page 26 of 41
Judge — June 1934 — page 26: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1934-06. 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.
SIGNED A CODE THERE STILL UWOULD BE BUT ONE TuSO Paris Garters —like famous men — achieved their leadership by consistent, distinguished performance. Not by mere compliance with a code. Buy under the Blue Eagle of course—but choose the best. Paris Garters are supreme for style, value, comfort. 25¢ to $1 Paris Gai |, Suspenders and Belts area better buy today than ever! Guaranteed by A. Stein & Company NO METAL CAN TOUCH YOU Try -Extra Long Stretch PARIS GARTERS for Greater Comfort AMERICAN BAR Now Open at HOTEL TIMES SQUARE 43% ST. West of Broadway + NEW YORK - COCKTAILS 25¢ A CHOICE OF 25 KINDS Oe de & & OO & 2 § MOVIES (Continued from page 19) | And so it went for months. What Ben | Hecht and Jack Conway did I can not tell you. They may be responsible for the en- tire picture and they may be responsi- ble for only part of it. Whoever did “Viva Villa” produced an equivocal melodrama with a confused objective, with some genuine episodes in it, a few good photographs, and an amiable, well- rounded pefformance by Wallace Beery. | HE Trumpet Blows” sounds like a rough libretto for a musical comedy, without the music. George Raft again gives a good imitation of a ner- yous young man taking elocution lessons and Adolph Menjou frequently seems like a backward senior from the same dramatic school. There is, as well, a very toothy and unlearned young lady | in the show. Between them they share some pretty awful dialogue. Withal, there are a few bull-fighting scenes which you may or may not enjoy but which will bring you up short because they are skilfully cut into the show and because they are very exciting. E Not Dressing” is a loose- knit musical picture sans chorus routines, for which we can be thankful, and with a certain bounce and good the reiterative musical choruses and the plethora of Bing Crosby solos. Besides, you have Burns and Allen, and Ethel Merman and Leon Errol, with the best | musical scoring I have noticed among the current musical pictures. Recommended “Catherine the Great.” A really fine actress in a lavish but muddled historical drama. “The Lost Patrol.” The best-directed picture of the season. “The Constant Nymph.” British-paced but charmingly managed throughout. “We're Not Dressing.” Crooner and vaude “No Greater Glory.” A sentimental treatment of Molnar’s allegory of war with a remarkable cast of children. Solution of Puzzle No. 308 humor that compensate somewhat for ville, with Burns and Allen and some good tunes. 0 O20 ai Jor ADSINGL hedtog jour chance to ¢ash in on rhymes — é Slooze for each yingle (tick a qo “used (T'S A GOOD i a The manufacturers of Burma-Shave (No brush-- No lather) desire to buy ff, teen jingles for use on the Burma-Shave signs neat year $100.00 will be paid foreach tingle accepted. All jingles must be in our hands before August 1, 1934. Eara some easy spending money, and have a lot of fun doing it NERY Send today forcomplete details ofcontest and free manual oahow Q\ to write Burma-Shave jingles Uo Vita Co., .019 East Late Street, Minneapolis, Minnesota at a NEW HOTEL Enjoy the luxuries of a modern NEW Hotel—tho Governor Clinton, 1200 spacious rooms with bath, radio, Servidor, circulating ice water. From $3 forone —$4 for two. Tth Avenue at 31st Street NEW YORK CITY PH Costs NoMore an Urene Boones Up e) In the Heart of All Resort Activity Room, Bath, All Meals $5.50 Single $9.50 for 2 EUROPEAN PLAN Special Weekly Rates SALT WATER BATHS DAILY CONCERTS GARAGE C. HENRY i KNICKFRBOCKER ATLANTIC CITY: WJ. comicbooks.com