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Judge, 1934-12 · page 26 of 37

Judge — December 1934 — page 26: what you’re looking at

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Judge — December 1934 — page 26: Judge, 1934-12

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"OH OH! THIS IS\JOE!” OU really need a good gas. mask to play blindman’s butf successfully when Joe and his gassy old briar are in the game. That surly tobacco he stokes up with gives him away at the first putrid puff Here's a free hint, Joe. Run a pipe cleaner through your briar, scrape out the polluted bowl—then fill up with mild and pleasant Sir Walter Raleigh. This gentle blending of Kentucky Burleys gives off a deli- cate and seductive fragrance that ap- peals to merry widows and wary kiddoes alike. Sir Walter Raleigh is cool. It's slow burning. It’s pipe smoking at its very best. Kept fresh in heavy gold foil, it will set you back only fifteen pennies. Try it- you'll be the hit of the party. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation Louisville, Kentucky, Dept. R-412 4| FREE BOOKLET neror Later- _ Your Favorite Jovaire It’s 15 anv rrs MmpeR 7) = | Send for this | MOVIES | (Cor | HIS February it will be twenty years since D. W. Griffith showed his “Birth of a Nation” in the Liberty (outraging Negro culturists, wed from page 18) Theatre, ional South- Charles W. Eliot, profe erners, movie-wise financier: do the ie Nation). For all the ery he had to deal with he made a movie that has not yet been 1 for scope, veracity, and native Irama. It seems almost impo: but dur- at ing the two decades since picture have survived policy noring the manners, the traditions, the literature, the culture of the very people who have supported the show We have had Covered Wagon, the ma res such as “The The Big Parade,” “Hallelujah,” but y have had no more effect on the industry than “The Birth of Nation.” We did have an “Un * that became for several years the standard movie plot; at least, the one plot that was realistic, native, and dramatic enough to keep the the- atres open. We have had, more recently, a “State Fair.” It was successful, and it did explode one of the wise old axioms of the studios: “You can't make money with a farm picture.” Sut recklessly buying foreign oper- ettas, British novels, Harvard classics, ind flimsy short stories, you can write off the real native, genuine stories as accidents of percentage. Since were buying scenarios in every it was only natural that the should chance to buy an story ein a while. The producers, then the bankers, and now the receivers, ha in twenty s, taken the movies away from their Simple and child-like though your William S. Hart, your Douglas your John Bunny Mary ford, and your Tom Mix, were intimately related to the nickelodeon audience, its habits, its wor- ri d its wit. 1 veing language produ Americ on your th the various schools rt must be earnest I believe Laurel and Hardy to be of much more impor- than bo and Di But ny dramatic centre that e: ina country that supports Huey Long, Al- falfa Bill Murray, Upton Sinclair, the US. Steel Co., the C.W.A., the Amer- ican Legion, Henry Wallace, Arthur 3risbhane, Samuel Insull, and the League for Decency, and then can produce ten million dollars worth of drama that might just as well have been produced in Berlin, Budapest, or.the Public Li- brary for all the relationship it has to such national figures, is living on bor- rowed time and money. 24 lo not hold th; and grim to be st who believe tance 0 ich Jiouquir WINES - CORDIALS VERMOUTH - COCKTAILS Ever since the days of the famous old Mouquin restau- tants ... where O. Henry scrawled masterpieces on tablecloths and Henri Mouquin of the vintages pre- sided...the name “Mouquin” has stood for only the very fin- est in wines, prepared cocktails, cordials, vermouths and gins. FREE (include 10c¢ post- age) the ‘“MOUQUIN EPICURE, ‘a super-recipe and wine book. Address Mouquin, Inc., 70 Wash- ingtonSt., Brooklyn, N. Y. comicbooks.com