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Judge, 1927-10-08 · page 30 of 36

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Judge — October 8, 1927 — page 30: Judge, 1927-10-08

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Pay the Price Pyorrhea is a ruthless enemy that strikes 4 per- sons out of 5 past 40 (thousands younger). Tey pay the high price of neglect. Pyorrhea poison sweeps through the system, often causing rheu- matism, neuritis, anemia and facial disfigurement. Never pay this price. See your dentist at least twice a year and start using Forhan’s for the Gums, today. This dentifrice containing Forhan’s Pyorrhea Liquid used by dentists everywhere if used in time, thwarts Pyorrhea or checks its course. It firms gums and makes them strong. It protects teeth against acids which cause decay. It keeps them a lustrous white. Use Forhan's morning and night. Teach your children to use it. They'll like the taste of Forhan's. It is health insurance. At all drug- gists—35¢ and 6oc. Formule of R. J. Forban, D. D. S. Forhan Company, New York Forharrs for the gums MORE THAN A TOOTH PASTE »-IT CHECKS PYORRHEA Mothers prevents exhaustion, nausea, dizziness and faintness of Train ‘Travel. Journey by Sea, Train, Auto, Car or Air in Health and Comfort. 3 2sc. & $1.50 at Drug Stores or dire The Mothersill Remedy Co., Lt WERS; Lond OL KS SEASICK Glass Ginger Ale with tablespoonful Abbott's Bitters delightful tonic and palatable. Sample bitters by mail 25 cts. in stamps. C. W. Abbott & Co., Baltimore, Md. NY. of Hits tiares Om NB OS auuseiliennccs, Farces, Musical Monologs, Dialogs, Comedics, Revues, Entertainments, Musical Readings, \y Songs, Chalk Talk Books, Min- SRNsdhasba co gal Seales Soin Si Eases “My point, old chap—I think you touched the net.” Judging the Shows (Continued from page 16) boys might just as well shut up shop. Ill Bany Cycrone,” by oe I re corge M. Cohan, erately entertaining farce, with little body but with active enough mod- legs. Professor Cohan manages periodically to forget his basic material in an agreeable manner and to work in some very fair laughs. The play is by no means up to his mark, however. “Women Go On Forever,” by Daniel Rubin, contains some like- ly material crudely dramatized, and hence at times thumbs its nose at itself. At moments when the author hopes his customers will be held spellbound they are reduced to snickers. Rubin should have brought in a collaborator to —Gatety help him; a meritorious play might have resulted. As his own work stands, it is like the parts of an automobile that haven't been assembled. But there is enough raw stuff in the exhibition to please the boarding-school girls and moralists. “Half a Widow’’—there are so many new productions that I have to dismiss them in this wise— a cheap music show, utterly with- out quality. “Yellow Sands,” by Papa and Daughter Phillpotts, is a hack English pl that has achieved a great su in Lon- don and that will certainly achieve nothing of the kind over here. If it is still on view when this ap- pears in print, I go to the foot of the class as a guesser. And “Ten Per Cent,” by Eugene Davis, is a stupid comedy that will never cause any prosecutions of ticket speculators by the Rev. Dr. Tuttle. comicbooks.com