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Judge, 1926-04-03 · page 24 of 36

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Judge — April 3, 1926 — page 24: Judge, 1926-04-03

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UST as a ship needs the clos- est attention under the water- line, so do the teeth under the gum-line. If the gums shrink from the tooth-base, serious dangers result. The teeth are weak- ene are loos. ened. They are exposed to tooth-base decay. The gums themselves tender become the door- ‘waysof organic disease for the whole system. They disfigure the mouth in proportion as they recede. Forhan’s prevents this Use Forhan's every tooth brush time to pre- Tender gum spots are corrected. gum- tissues are hardened and vigored to support sound, unloosened teeth. Forhan's is used asa dentifrice, though no dentifrice possesses its peculiar gum-tissue action If gum shrinkage has already set in, start ‘using Fothan’s and consult a dentist im. mediately for special treatment. In 35¢ and 600 tubes at all = in the United ates. na Forman. FORHAN CO. ‘New York Forkan's, Lid, AGRIPPA- WEB Boston Garter Skidding Garters! AGRIPPA-WEB makes garters act in an entirely new way—and only in Bostons can this web be had. Even when worn very loose it will not slip. It cannot curl and yet it is remarkably soft and light. Here in fact is the first practical ventilated web garter. In many pleasing colors, 50c the pair. GEORGE FROST COMPANY, Boston, Makers of Velvet Grip Hose Supporters for All the Family. How Did Your Garters Look This Morning? up. They form sacs | h bis HE Brack Pirate” is proba- bly the best thing of its kind ever done in the pictures. Its kind, of course, is not excessively im- portant, no more so than the kind of book G. A. Henty used to write. I was vividly reminded of Henty’s heroes in watching Douglas Fair- banks perform his surprising feats in this picture, and I imagine that boys of the age that used to read Henty (maybe they do still) would be the ones to extract the maximum of thrill and enjoyment from “The Black Pirate.” The story has no direct relation to any historical episode, as a Henty book always had, but it more than makes up for this by containing a certain amount of humor, which Henty lacked. Humor is not only better entertainment than fact, it is better education, too— much better. Doug, as usual, is superb. He goes about his swashbuckling business with a gayety that, like a cool breeze, keeps his romance from spoiling. And yet he never allows it to detract from the impressiveness of his ex- ploits—there’s no clownishness in his flashing smile. After oceans of movie mush I liked especially the frank, gay method of his marriage proposal, out loud before the whole gang. It forms a fitting climax for a brave story acted with spirit. The color photography seemed to me highly successful, suggesting Maxfield Parrish in its emphasis on the tans. It is reported that Mr. Fairbanks chose an overtone of sepia to give his picture something of the effect of an old master, in keeping with its subject and period. To have aimed at an old master and hit Max- field Parrish is not exactly a bull’s- eye, but for cinema purposes it ought be considered near enough. The man who planted wild flowers. ne charm of Frank Craven's “First Year" is largely sacrificed to slapstick in the picture version. I doubt if there was ever a successful lover quite as inept and stupid as Tom Tucker, played by Matt Moore, or a dinner party at which so much went wrong as that which sent Mrs. Tom home to her mother, or a rough- and-tumble fight between husband and would-be rival quite as clownish as that which ends when Mrs. Tom, aiming at the would-be rival, beans Tom with a jardiniére. Out of all this ruck, however, there peeps a bright particular star in the person of the colored maid, played by Caro- lyn Snowden. She, to my untutored vision, is just right. There shines through her interpretation of her réle a humorous knowledge of her own people and thar reaction to “white folks” that is little short of genius. Certainly she could never have given the finished performance she does simply as a result of coach- ing, at least of the coaching that is responsible for the rest of the picture. (I am assuming that Miss Snowden is colored. To do so is a distinct compliment to her acting whatever the fact.) ‘or truly abysmal slapstick, how- ever, see “Miss Brewster's Mil- lions.” As an echo of “Brewster's Millions,” Miss Brewster, played by Bebe Daniels, is faced with the prob- lem of spending a million dollars in thirty days. Her extravagances are forced and silly, the violent con- tretemps into which they lead are cheap and preposterous and the motorcycle chase at the end is wor- thy of an old Mack Sennett comedy at its lowest. This sort of thing is done much better in the animated cartoons. comicbooks.com