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Judge, 1922-02-25 · page 32 of 36

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Judge — February 25, 1922 — page 32: Judge, 1922-02-25

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NON NPAREI| fy VERMOUT H! bir BOTTLE v ‘MAKES Se Wat 12 QUARTS Sensracriow Guaaanrete On Your. Mower Back BOOK ON DOG DISEASES And ‘How to Feed Mailed free t ress t America’s Pioneer Dog Medicines Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York DEAF? u HEADNOISES? ? ‘The Theraphone Ear-\ F Dr L} 48-0m" Greenwich Avenue, New York City books on him—if you can keep him home from the movies long enough. ToRY Book. By rrill Co, ORPHANT Johnny Gruelle, ANNIE Bobbs- I is a well known fact that Orphant Annie, after her no inconsiderable day's work was done, used to tell the “Say, mom! tooth I'm goin’ to have pulled?” children stories, which, unfortunately, were imperfectly preserved, and then only in their more sternly moral aspects of retributive justice. Johnny Gruelle has set out to remedy this. Here are some of Annie’s more frolic- some tales, and illustrated in color, too. Gruell’s pictures are full of humor, full of fancy, and he knows how to draw. They are the kind of fairy pictures we have been sending across the seas to get; they have charm. This book is that rare thing —a genuine fairy tale, genuinely real- ized in the illustrations. “All right! Fer the sake of argument we'll say there’s a hereafter. } { | | { what I want to know is, ‘Will there be any cheese there?’” Do I have to brush the | COPLEY SQUARE The BRUNSWICK Boylston Street at Clarendon Two Boston Hotels that have contrib- uted greatly to the traditional distinc- tion of the Back Bay. The LENOX Boylston Street at Exeter SEX KNOWLEDGE MEN-BOYS Including a Program of Sex Education for the Boy that Every Parent Should Know You will prize times , 1400 BROADW. Amateur Knights of the Brush— UDGE will award, during the year 1922, a gold watch suitably graved, to the contributor sending in the illustrated idea, which, in the opinion of the editors, is the funniest. The label “Amateur” is used in this connection with no intention to be little the quality of the art, which we expect, in many cases, will be as good as that of the regular contributions. en THe Van Loon, HERE is a book for young people that costs—but the law won't let us say whatit costs. Anyhow, it costs almost half as much to educate your children in history as it does to take your wife to “The Music Box Re- view,” provided you go in the subway and can get a seat at the box office. Sunday School teachers will not give this book to their little cherubs for Christmas, anyhow. Sunday School teachers are the greatest enemy of good juvenile literature. They must have cheap books, so the publishers of dime novels put a cloth cover on their wares, and sell the same old dynamite with a sanctimonious grin, the teachers thinking anything with a cloth cover must be literachoor. Van Loon’s book, however, is worth the price. It is a history of the world told in comprehensible language, but without that condescension so ob- noxious in most adults, and with the aid of scores of pictures, drawn by the author, which are vivid symbols Story of MANKIND... Boni and Liveright. By Hendrick Now, of historic facts, such as an acutely intelligent boy might draw. We pre- dict that this book is going to be a {classic of its kind, and will usher | many a boy and girl into the wonder- | world of history. Workeo AND Lothrop, Lee Tue Bryne Girts, How THey ‘on. By Mary K. Maule. Shepard Co., Boston. WE gave this book to our mother to read, and she says it is a first- rate story for girls of fifteen up. So that goes for us, never having ourself | been a girl of fifteen. We had sup- | posed, to be sure, from our perusal of recent fiction, that modern girls of | fifteen up read G. B. Shaw, Dr. Freud, | and “Jurgen.” But evidently the pub- | lishers know better.