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Judge, 1925-10-17 · page 32 of 42

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Judge — October 17, 1925 — page 32: Judge, 1925-10-17

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The magazine with the SILVER COVER KENDALL BANNING Editor LAURENCE M. COCKADAY Technical Editor POPULAR RADIO, with Which is combined * “The Wire- Age, re-eminent in ed tae cobror Haden you |#0o will find the romance as well as the practical and technical side of Radio. New subscribers may send $1.00 for a 5 months’ subscription POPULAR RADIO 627 West 43d Street New York City Why Pay Full Prices Costs Nothing to See absolutely tree ples, Blackheads, Red’ Nose, Oily ‘Skin, Sallow Complexion and other et miserable local kin afections Sealab A S-oet bot Teseipt of $75. Address M. Trilety, 71 W.U. Bidg., Binghamton, N.Y. eA _— FA A a ‘en nian 2 CLASS ace & PINS Largest Catalog Issued—FREE @ pcan eenrean ohana METAL ARTS CO..Inc., 7718 South hve. Rochester HY. bo. & Earn Xmas Money Write for 50 Sets St. Nicholas Christmas Seale, Sel fer tee 8 eet. 2 a apd us $3.00 'D $2.00. io lork—. it St. Nicholas Seal Cow, Dept. ite renee Y. ri | Ie | a <a Hl "Kk Nervous Little Jones—If you don’t go away—I-I-I’ll call my wife! Antidotes (Continued from page 18) “Madame X”; and Jack Donahue’s hoofing and comedy aremore uplifting than a dozen scenes, like the one in “The Pelican,” wherein a father is brought to his repentant knees by a juvenile actor (playing the réle of his son) whom any other father would take right out into the back yard and shoot full of holes. In a word, “Sunny” is a good show. It begins slowly, but once it gets going it hits a fetching pace. The dancing, by La Miller, Donahue, Webb and the exceptional Moss and Fontanna team, is admirable; three of the scenic pictures are eye-massaging; and there is an admirable bit of mimicry by a vaudeville girl named- Pert Kelton. Another good antidote to “The Pelican” is the musical comedy called “The Vagabond King,” one of the best things the Casino has set forth in some time. The tunes here are Rudolph Friml’s and Brian Hooker, with the aid of one Post, has confected a very fair book and some likely lyrics, The hero of the libretto, based on Justin Huntly —Humorist McCarthy’s “If I Were King,” is our old camarado, F, Villon. In the réle, Dennis King does his salary envelope justice. All in all, an evening well worth your money. “Dearest Enemy,” a third musical offering, contains some pleasing melo- dies by Richard Rodgers, and some attractive stage pictures by John Murray Anderson, but the comedy has been completely overlooked. As a result, what might have been a tasty exhibition turns out to be an only moderately entertaining one. 0 ErorceE S. Kauraan’s “The Butter and Egg Man” provides still another amusing evening. (My God, what’s happened to Nathan? Here he is this week praising almost everything!) The estimable Kauf- man has written a genuinely funny farce-comedy in this tale of a middle- western sucker who puts his money into the theatrical business. Upon a plot structure as crude as a home- made piano, he has reared an edifice of comical wise-cracks founded upon a sharp observation of local theatrical shenanigans, and his exhibit is still comicbooks.com