Judge, 1925-07-18 · page 30 of 37
Judge — July 18, 1925 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1925-07-18. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
FOR MEN ART PRINTS IN FULL COLOR NO MAN'S LAND By Davip Rosinson 1s charming and popular picture will O seveal to all males between the ages of 16 and 96 years. Printed from the original engraving in full color on art paper, it has been artistically mounted ona two-tone mat, size 11° x 14", ready for fram- ing Carefully packed and sent postpai pen receipt of 5 cents. JUDGE ART PRINT DEPARTMENT 627 West 434 Street New_York, N.Y; | TRAVEL COMFORT The nausea of Sea, Train and Car Sickness promptly relieved. Experienced travelers all testify to its positive action. 25 years in 2% $1.30 at Drug Scores or direct on receipt of Price The Mothersiil Remedy Ca,. N.Y. City OTHERS i, p QV SEASICK Abbott's Bitters, a stomachic, meets every requirement of a tonic. Sample by mail 25 cts. in Leas a C. W. Abbott & Co., Baltimore, Md. Learn to Diaw NOW 25 to $100 THE BUTTERFLY AND THE MOTH “Do buy me a new evening dress, darling!” “Why, what’s happened to that nice little green one?” “Oh! A moth’s eaten it.” This Week’s Movie-scope (Continued from page 19) with a bride that is, as the apartment ads say, strictly modern. In view of the fact that Aunt Augusta has just completed - all arrangements for Kennion’s mar- riage to his cousin, and further in view of the fact that Aunt Augusta rules the already-too-inborn-for-high- mentality family with the same iron hand that runs the Ruyland Steel Works and the town of Ruyland, Conn., it looks pretty tough for Kenny, who wishes he'd taken his Twentieth Century bride to Niagara Falls instead of bringing her home to meet Aunty. One thing succeeds in leading to another until it looks as if Aunt Augusta would have her way but she —Printer's Pie discovers that Kennion’s new model wife isn’t so bad, relents and pre- sumably the family life goes on as usual. Mary Alden is superb as Aunt Augusta; Marc McDermott is good in a réle which I have not mentioned for lack of space (having used the space to explain the lack of space); Virginia Valli as the newest Ruyland and Eugene O'Brien, as Kennion, do well. While “Siege” is not marvelous it leaves the average run of pictures several de Mille stones behind. “Lost—A Wife” brings a newcomer to the screen, gives Adolphe Menjou another chance to delight those of us who'd walk a mile to see him and furnishes a decent eighty minutes if you have nothing more important to do. The just-arrived is Greta Nis- sen, who leaped into prominence when comicbooks.com