Judge, 1926-04-17 · page 24 of 36
Judge — April 17, 1926 — page 24: what you’re looking at
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No Hair Offends Where Neet is Used He had never seen arms so wonderfully smooth — so free from hair. Her beauty fascinated him. As she saw his warm, admiring glance appraise the flawless beauty of her skin, she realized that at last she had found theway to happiness. Theblemish of hair had always spoiled her pleasure— made her conscious of this fault. Then she learned of Neet, the dainty hair removing cream ... .No other method of removing hair is so satisfactory or convenient. You simply smooth this dainty cream on arms,under- arms or legs and rinse away the unsightly hair. Neet can be hadin the ready-to-use liberal size 50 cent tubes at almost every Drug or Department Store. Simply as! for Neet. Accept no substitute. HANNIBAL PHAR, CO., ST. LOUIS, MO. The Hair Removing Cream usea, dizziness and faintness by all forms of Travel Mo- . Sea, Train, Auto, Car or Air Travel Sickness yields promptly to Mothersill’s. 36 75¢. & $1.50 at Drug Stores or direct The Mothersill Remedy Co., Ltd. New York ‘Montreal ‘ou will probably find that two Y things remain over in your memory after seeing “The Barrier,” from Rex Beach's novel. One is the acting of Lionel Barry- more as Stark Bennett, the brutal and cynical skipper. The other is the ingenious photography, especially in the ice scene. It is an old story, of course, that a motion picture di- rector can achieve almost any effect he chooses by the use of double e: posure, miniatures, drawings, dum- mies, ete. Yet I never cease to marvel at the realism of scenes that if they were real would boost the death rate among screen favorites ‘way beyond our fondest dreams. | Here is | which a s scene, for instance, in is crushed like an egg- shell in an ice jam off the Alaskan coast. You watch her mortal struggles in the glacial grip from every possible point of vantage— | from off shore, with the Arctic panorama before you; from an ice floe under her bo from within the ship herself, her decks tilted at an angle of forty-five degrees under the crushing pressure. Finally, you see one and then another giant berg | detach itself from the ice wall tower- ing above her masts and crash down upon her in utter annihilation, just as hero and heroine scale her gun- whale and flee toward shore over the JUDGING, tne MOVIES heaving ice field. The thing is sheer melodrama and you know it is faked, but just the same it is breath taking. The picture as a whole is disjointed and not at all convincing. It is the story of a pretty half-caste girl who lives with her foster father at a trad- ing post in Alaska. ‘The commander of the little company of Federal troops stationed there, a young lieu- tenant from Virginia, falls in love with her. Both believe she is white until her real father, the evil Stark Bennett, happens to put in with his ship. He lets the cat out of the bag. Love triumphs in the end, you may be sure, but in the meantime there is the rescue from the crushed ship and the splendid impersonation of a malicious blackguard by Lionel Barrymore. What a blank, blank, blankety blank that bird can be! sxe Gnev's “Desert Gold” also depends for its most dramatic moments on natural phenomena, if a hill in Mexico which is forever shed- ding boulders like dandruff isa natural phenomenon. These things come skipping and bounding by the players’ heads with an abandon that is positively impolite, until the vil- lain leads his band of desperados up the treacherous slopes. ‘Then they suddenly show a purposeful concen- tration, with the help of a faithful Ss Drersed! Wee hyo The efficiency expert has his own jazz band! comicbooks.com