Judge, 1937-01 · page 48 of 52
Judge — January 1937 — page 48: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1937-01. 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.
The pleasant and quick way to make coughs quit is a Smith Brothers Cough Drop. (Two kinds—Black or Menthol— 5¢.) Smith Bros. Cough Drops are the only drops containing VITAMIN A This is the vitamin that raises the resistance of the mucous membranes of the nose and throat to cold and cough infections; If you must Start the New Year Horizontally Let Judge's 6th Crossword Puzzle Book Get You Back on Your Feet. It's a sure way to start the New Year off with a smile. Forty grand puzales chock full of wisdom and wisecracks by America's most talented puz- JUDGE, 16 East 48th wr | Please send me eoples ot Judge's oth | Crossword Puzzle B ‘$1.50 a copy for which i} 1 enclose $__ | Name FOR THE MODERN Automatic table... All ry chairs have the appear- ance of real chairs. RIGID SIMPLE BEAUTIFUL Sold At Leading Department or Furniture Stores LORRAINE METAL MFG. CO.. 332 FOURTH AVE, NEW YORK, Mt. Y. For All You Scribes— The WRITER’S HANDBOOK Edt. by Samuel G. Houghton GUIDE for those who write or aspire to write. Con- tains chapters on writing and selling the short story novel, article, verse, play and radio scripts by such prominent au- thors as Sinclair Lewis, Walter Prichard Eaton, Ruth Suckow, Edward J. O'Brien, and others. Advice on all things literary and a list of over 800 markets for the sale of manuscripts. 352 pages $3.50 From your bookseller, or THE WRITER 8 Arlington Street BOSTON KNOW YOUR BIDDING! If Mrs. Bridgepuss starts mak- ing wisecracks about your bid- ding, be sure you know your game. Make a safety play now and get a copy of George Cof- fin’s Contract Self-Teacher on both the Culbertson System and the “Four Aces,” with all the new Asking Bids. Costs only 50c. Ask your bookseller, or ask us MANTHORKE & BURACK, Publishers 8 Arlington Street STON, MASS. FOR THE RACING SEASON A Gelightfully cheery win- ter home in the most ex- elusive residential district. Rates from $100 monthly $4.00 daily On Smart Wilshire Bivé. at Rampart LOS ANGELES | tures, MOVIES (Continued from page 32) because of the bitter memory of the Sacco-Vanzetti case; if these things do not mean anything to you, then you will hardly notice the slick conclusion to the movie, “Winterset.” But to me it is not just another one of those things. It is not a case of necessary box office compromise—else why buy the damned thing at all? It is, simply, just one more example of the little Napoleon complex which has nothing whatsoever to do with “hard. headed” business; corporations; divi- dends; audience reaction, or any of that executive abracadabra you see strung together in those movie articles in the Saturday Evening Post. It is, simply, the natural expression of resentment exercised by the boys who neither can write, paint, express nor in. terpret beauty against those who can and whom they employ; expressed, per- haps, unconsciously, but gentlemen, ex- ercised every day in the week. And don’t ask me again why we don’t hear beautiful words from the screen unless they first were written for the stage, or in a novel. “Rembrandt” is a very pretty picture in which Charles Laughton looks very cute in Dutch costume, in which his wife, Elsa Lancaster, gives a superb perform. ance, and in which we learn what pre- sumably are some accurate stories about the life of the great painter. There are, as always in an Alexander Korda production, some very fine touches, including the numerous quota- tions from the Bible, and as long as the boys have Mr. Laughton reading such lines, or the Gettysburg Address, I can listen, even if I can’t look at him, for a very long time. As in all these costume historical pic- there is no dramatic structure whatsoever in “Rembrandt” and what continuity there is, Korda interrupts constantly by posing Laughton in end. less close-ups, and by lingering on his speeches long after you have heard and absorbed them. The Laughton physiognomy and the Laughton voice, interesting though they may be, begin to pall when they are given no background of dramatic action. Perhaps, of course, the eminent pro- ducer was thinking of his slow-witted, Welsh, Scotch, and Midland audiences, but he should chop down his scenes for the local yokel audiences. We may not make them good, but we certainly make them good and fast. comicbooks.com