Judge, 1929-04-06 · page 30 of 36
Judge — April 6, 1929 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1929-04-06. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
You need more than a toothpaste America lives too well. Soft foods richly seasoned, easy to digest. And asa result a sensible way to help protect precious health from the attack of dread Pyorrhea isto brush gums vigorously whenever you brush the teeth. But for this purpose use the dentifrice designed to in keeping gums firm and sound. Use Forhan’s for the Gums and visit your dentist at least twice a year. This dentifrice is more than an ordi- nary toothpaste, Start now, brushing teeth and gums vigorously with Forhan’s for the Gums. You'll soon notice a distinct improvement in the appearance of your gums. Forhan’s helps to firm them. In addition, the way this dentifrice cleans teeth and protects them from acids which cause decay —will delight you. Get a tube from your druggist, today, 35c and 60c, Formula of R. J. Forhan, D. D. S. Forhan Company, New York for the Forhan’s oun YOUR TERTH ARE ONLY AS HEALTHY AS Your cuss Nary a traffic cop! You've watched soft fleecy clouds in a blue sky, shed you could drift upe er cool q t waters Get away from the dusty 1 Enjoy the relaxation of canoeing in an Old Town. Old Town Canoes have the grace and beauty of real Indian lineage. Easy to haw 1 perfectly balanced. Priced as low as $67, ‘From dealer or fact Write today for free prices many light, water sailing and square-stera ca va It shows and els, Paddling, xtra-safe Sponson 8, dinghies and sturdy family bats. Also edy craft for outboard motors—racing step planes and bydroplanes. Old Town Canoe Co., fois" Fourth Street, Old Town, Maines “Old Town:Canoes” i el Wire (to husband in yachting cap Ted—with that cep on, too! Judging the Shows | (Continued from page 18) and have commissioned Dr. Owen Davis to feet a book that is assiduously kittenish, they man- age the Schwab-Mandel kind of thing only fairly well. Just where the difference lies, 1 can't get my fingers on, but it is evi- dent none the less. The speed there and so is the external lo but something is missing. Yet, I've said—for the fourth time now, I think—the show is divert- ing. It gets under way slowly but after it hits its pace—alon, toward half past nine—it man "3 to provide a pleasant eve- | ning. | s for the other affairs recently disclosed in’ the show-shops, little need be said. “Young Alex- | ander”, by Hardwick Nevin, is a dismal bore. It tries to do some- thing about the illustrious Greek as a young man and doesn’t come within a hundred miles of its in- ition. It is very sorry stuff. olitaire” might conceivably have been developed into some- thing interesting by an interest- ing playwright, but as it stands it is less than zero, ‘There are pos- sibilities in the tale of a Coney Island midget’s amorous diffi- culties, but the present authors have done utterly nothing with them. “The Octoroon” is a re- vival of the famous Boucicault melodrama. It is a well-handled revival but the boozy spirit that | prevails at the revival of Bou- cicault’s “After Dark” over in | Hoboken is missing at the formal Maxine Elliott Theatre. As for | “The Town's Woman”, only “In- I'm surprised at you, Evervnopy’s Wrekny discretion” is sourer. The authors of the dish are the MM. Martin Mooney and Thomson Burtis. A press-agent folder deseribes the former thus: “While still one of the youngest play analysts in his craft, he has demonstrated un canny ability in singling out plays destined for success; he is re garded as an authority on prac- tical playwriting technique and has received liberal acclaim for his lectures “The Theatre From Within’, as well as for his inti mate radio talks—Show Slants’. Of the latter gentleman, the fold er has this to say: “He is one of America’s most popular writers of fiction, He has outstanding dramatic qualifications.” After secir fhe Town's Wo man”, one concludes that its authors must have been two other fellows. Cocknrv—Tails! —Passine Siow comicbooks.com