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Judge, 1925-08-01 · page 30 of 36

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Judge — August 1, 1925 — page 30: Judge, 1925-08-01

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Notice to Judge Contributors O MANUSCRIPTS will be re- turned unless accompanied by stamped and addressed return envelope, and owing to the 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 JupcE, Funnybones—Funnybone Editor of JupcE, Epilaughs—Epilaugh Editor of Jupce, 627 West 43d Street, New York City $ Brings you a Genuine op UNDERWOOD VY Pw Rb eB eR 10 DAYS FREE TRIAL oxr82.0qpneonditionat: not satiated with th 1 UNDERWOOD depazmaare ot ntaedith [ka ‘process. GREAT PRICE SAVING sarc oreo slew tae todas tory of ita kind fa the world by our money saving EASY MONTHLY PAYMENTS Fer fal thet notice it while you enjoy the use of FREE BOOK OF FACTS Be eins a areca peter an ste ane toce Alderman Puffer (at council meeting)—We have been sending our lunatics to Dottyville Asylum for a long time, and it has cost us a great deal of money. But I am glad to make the statement that we have now built an asylum for ourselves! Yes and Nose (Continued from page 19) In “The Happy Warrior,” J. Stu- art Blackton seems to have done something, mainly devise, or pro- mote, a new handling of sub-titles. And right cleverly has he done it, too. Most of them are conversational and flash on and fade-out in word group- ings, such as would naturally be used, with such alarming rapidity that one must keep one’s wits about one if one is to keep up with them. And, I am almost willing to bet—oh, I'll plunge —a dime that the book wasthe golden treasury from which the titles were gleaned. There is a good court room scene, featuring fancy photography, gen- erally capable acting by a cast headed by Malcolm MacGregor, and a story that will, in spite of having a rather —Winter’s Pie flagrant case of attenuated suspense, prove interesting. The glory and grandeur of the probosis de Bergerac has been trans- ferred to celluloid. This was in- evitable. It was equally inevitable that the moving picture would be only a weak sister to the play. However, unless subjected to the most cruel and merciless butchering, which it is not, the intrinsic value of the theme was bound to carry suffi- cient weight to make its own screen version worthy. “Cyrano de Bergerac” is done in what is called ‘‘natural colors.” Natural? So’s your old man! They’re the most unnatural colors I’ve seen since the last time I saw a picture done in “natural colors.” Anyone who wants to tell me that it is natural for the brown of a gentleman’s jerkin to continually jerk into the white of Write for our free Guide Books and CORD OF INVENTION BLASIC" before disc model fnvertion for our Inspection and | {Secructions Free. ‘Reasonable Ter Highest References. VICTOR J. EVANS & CO., 813 Ninth, Washington, D, C. _ es. ee ee ee comicbooks.com