Judge, 1925-07-18 · page 31 of 37
Judge — July 18, 1925 — page 31: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1925-07-18. 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.
she played the princess in the pan- tomime of the stage version of “Beggar on Horseback.” Her act- ing is still of the very obvious stage pantomime sort, the kind associated with dancing, and she has a chame- leon beauty that makes it impossible to say whether she is or isn’t. But she is attractive, in spite of the fact that one emotion is as good as another as far as she’s concerned. A word must be said here for a certain family of dogs who did some excellent work in “How Baxter Butted In,” with Matt Moore and Dorothy Devore. The picture is the inevitable result of the success of “Oh, Doctor!” and shows many of that earlier film’s traits. It makes no bones about being a straight gag comedy and because of this succeeds in being rather amusing at times, especially when Mrs. Purp and her family get a chance to do some real acting in their calm and finished canine way. Just a couple of big, bad and vir- tuous men from the West are Jack Holt and Forrest Stanly in “Light of “What's the time, waite Western Stars” and “Beauty and the Bad Man,” respectively. The former is the usual Zane Greyvy, while the latter is of the Peter B. Kyne. All right! If you like that sort of thing go ahead and see both of these. Whose stoppin’ you? “Smooth as Satin” is meant to be a thriller, It is one of those pic- tures wherein the relentless detec- tive, in whom the entire authority of the law is vested, will not let the two young crooks go straight. It is in the same class, but infinitely better, than “The Making of O'Malley,” which relates the adven- tures of a policeman, who is the brains, if any, of the force and who assists a young bootlegger to get on his feet. O'Malley is the first uni- formed cop I’ve ever seen who didn’t have to work at it, having ample time to cheer up crippled little girls, love an heiress, ete. ‘‘O’Malley” is too bad to even get mad about. I can’t stand Lou Tellegen, can you? Well, then let’s not bother with “After Business Hours.” The half of it I saw was terrible. “Quarter after midnight, sir.” “Goo’ Lor—and the wife is expecting me to lunch!” [Spi tibet dnDe ie iN. cals BE —The Magpie 29 She Knows— a Durham-Duplex Shave is the Good Morning Shave! y Get a genulse Durham-Duplex Demonstrator razor with one blade for only 25¢. A real razor—not a toy. If your dealer can- hot supply, send coupon indicating style razor preferred Inter- changeable Blades 50c package of 5 DURHAM-DUPLEX RAZOR CO., Jersey y, N. J. Factories: Jersey City; Sheffield, Eng.; Paris, France; Toronto, Canada, Sales Representatives in All Countries. The Blades Men Swear By-not At Notice to Judge Contributors ‘O MANUSCRIPTS will be re- N turned unless accompanied by stamped and addressed return envelope, and owing tothe thousands of contributions sent into this office each week, it is impossible to enter into personal correspondence regard- ing them. Donot enclose postage for FUNNY- BONES or EPILAUGHS as they will not be returned. In cases of duplication, the first one received will be accepted. For prompt attention address manuscripts, in separate envelopes, to the following departments: Manuscripts—Literary Editor of Juvce, Funnybones—Funnybone Editor of Juvce, Crossword Puzzles — Crossword Puzzle Editor of Jupce, Epilaughs—Epilaugh Editor of Juvce, 627 West 43d Street, New York City Clear¥e“" comicbooks.com