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Judge, 1935-02 · page 24 of 36

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Judge — February 1935 — page 24: Judge, 1935-02

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DINNER DANCING = EVERY NIGHT IN THE beautiful Delightful ROOMS Single - $3.00 Double - $5.00 EACH WITH PRIVATE BATH ROOM DINNER $1.75 JOE MOSS’ MUSIC (No Cover Charge) THE VANDERBILT HOTEL == 34th STREET and PARK AVENUE == NEW YORK CITY BOVRIL CONCENTRATED BEEF BOUILLON a teaspoonful in boiling water makes a cup of es : delicious hot Bovril You'll welcome the warming, invigorat- ing benefits of hot Bovril when you're chilled, tired or depressed. You'll love its delicious beef flavor. Millions drink it daily... with meals, at bedtime, in stormy weather. Made in 10 seconds. TRY IT! If not available at your food or drug store, use this coupon. ‘Wea. 8. Scull Co, Dep Frout and Federal Sts., Camden, N. J. 1 wane 19057 9 14 Bb Sur ot Bor () T enclose $1 Name... Address — Name and address of store where I'd like to boy Borril... BEATRICE LILLIE has made the smartest phonograph | records of the season exclusively for — || The Gramophone Shop, Inc. These and ail the Iatent and best of beth Imported and comestic, are 18 Cost Fery-signs St New York. GRAY ROCKS peomy INN fos ST. JOVITE, QUE. Oe of Canada’s distinctive all year round resorts. wondrous beauty in the lovely Lauren- ‘of 9 Metropolitan out with several coy oped every imaginable # ing, Toborean dises, ie at F. H. WHEELER, Managing Director gin INSTITUTIONS HELE Wanted |S HOSPITALS Satins 3 came Ergon. ihe ecesanly rare wearers 148'w. adem Se, new VORR Catatog ' ¥.$.Denison & Co. 623 S.Wabash, Dept.45, Chicago MOVIES (Continued from page 16) you of “Laughter.” The rest of it will remind you of Clark Gable and Robert Montgomery and Joan Crawford pain- fully attempting to follow in the light steps of Gertrude Lawrence and the Lunts, and succeeding about as well as. a trio of lumberjacks cavorting in dane- ing pumps. LEXANDER KORDA has a good story and he’s going to keep to it. “The Private Life of Don Juan” is well-costumed picture taken from a short story about the great lover. It is easily the worst of the three similar pro- ductions Korda has sent from London, The Lonsdale dialogue is common- place and stupid thrown inst’ the colorful sets, and Douglas Fairbanks in sound appears to be a successful, com- placent customer's man. The picture full of beautiful | women; what's more, they appear to be British, which, if it doesn't make Korda a great director, at least makes him a first-class magician, LTHOUGH one breathless young critic is on the record against me, I feel that the facts buttress my consti- tutional prejudice against the nodel, Miss Garbo. “The nted a museum piece: a facile Maug- N, Writing about a Kipling India, set in a spurious movie background, en- acted by a lethargic Swede. My young colleague proclaims that “the curious excitement attendant on the showing of a new Garbo picture should be ample proof of her undisputed power as a personality.” Today's curious ex- citement, to my knowledge, seems not so much curious as non-existent. Audi- ences have finally caught up with the mystery queen of the movies. She never has been a national favor- ite; neither at the box office, the press box, nor the cracker barrel. Her latest picture has been attended by small audi- ences, full of the same curious excite- ment which governs a crowd huddled under an awning to keep out of the rain. Vogue FOUND “Bulldog Drummond Strikes Ba “We Live Again,” and “Kid Millions” deficient in too many departments to list right now. Yet all three had some absolute quali- ties: they were beautifully set; they were well-edited; they had pretty girls in them; they looked expensive. I men- tion these four qualities because Sam Goldwyn produced all three pictures; because he is still producing pictures and because, for all the expenses he has to charge against his productions, he is a solvent showman. (I have lived in hopes of a bribe for ten years, I might add, vainly. How about a check in the morning, Sammy ?) comicbooks.com