Judge, 1922-11-18 · page 28 of 36
Judge — November 18, 1922 — page 28: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1922-11-18. 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.
Amazing Offer Genuine DIAMOND PLATINUM RING Send No tu What & OF QUALITY $1,000,000. I:W-SWEET INC. 1650 -1660 BROADWAY, NEW YORK Workmanship! A Keen Kutter knife hides no part of which its maker or owner need be asham- ed. To be really knife-satisfied, carry a Keen Kutter. Simmons Hardware Compan: KEEN KUTIER FLORENCE REED in“EAST OF SUEZ” By W. SOMERSET MAUGHAM, MATS 215 ie HIPPODROME=:::: SEATS DALY MATS 256 NEMS SOF A NATIONAL INSTITUTION Who d INVENTORS wires Shout write for gur guidebook, “HOW TOGETYOUR PATENT” Toodel or sketch and description and we wil give our opinion of ite patentable RANDOLPH & CO., 789 “F” Washington, D. C. Drawn by Hanky C. Seymour, U.S, Naval He people, after the manner of the novel since its Nineteenth Century develop- ment. Personally, we consider this only | justice. It isn’t t for anybody to Jdo as many things well as Broun does. We meanly rejoice to catch him napping. “Where the Blue Begins.” By Chris- topher Morley. Doubleday, Page ‘0. HRISTOPHER MORLEY is also a column conductor. We don't like his column so well as Broun’s. He's not half so good a newspaper ms his new book, “Where the Blue B is a finished work of art. The he dog, but this isn’t a dog story. hero is a dog because there is something homely and comfortable and wistful and and gregarious about do man. Anc “Where the Blue Begins an allegory of the Average Man, who tries to find out | what life means, anyhow, and_ finally decides that a decent kennel, som puppies, and a clear con: best answer at present att Gissing, the hero, asks Mr. Puppy, curate, if he'll have a drink, and- the curate declines, but Gissing hears the | uncontrollable thumping of his tail on the seat of the chair at the mention of refreshments, we chuckled. The humor of the book is all as sly and as rich as this, We are going, ourself, to solve the Christ- mas problem by stocking up with copies. Henry James Forman. Little, Brown & Co. h once climbed the Hartz Mountains in an endeavor to find the cross which about a bachelor who is forced to adopt his dead sister’s children and also the “The Man Who Lived in a Shoe.” By ENRY JAMES FORMAN, who Heine clung to, has written a romance orphant Annie (only she was Alicia) who 26 NAY LANOING oe pital, This gob was through, Discharged at last, No longer did he fear the But after twenty days ashore A lonesome gob was back for more. We Almost Miss the Boat (Continued from page 19) “mast.” What? You haven't How clever of ye “Daddy Long However, the theme of the bachelor with children on his hands is like the theme of Cinderella—a well that never dries up. It all depenc 1 how it is handled. Mr. Forman has a pleasing gift, but it belon: to his last name, not his first or middle. c ‘of them. How to Watch It.” By “Football, Haughton. Marshall Percy D. Jones Co. T'S RATHER late in the season to | Perey Haughton’s all, How to Watch It,” but summer you can re ly for the games next autumn. If you can also persuade the boy’s mother and sisters to at will help a lot. r esn’t need to. F isn’t exactly the father ball, but unquestionably his methods of aching have been largely responsible for the vast improvement in the game as played by smaller ns. He taught and players alike that football is a science, and must be played with the head. As a result, to-day, nearly everybody has learned this lesson except Yale. Now Haughton has evidently decided that even the spectators can be taught to use their heads as well as their lungs. His book explains the game to them. The illustrations, photographs taken from the top of the Stadium with a t photo lens, are the best we have e seen for the purpose, and the author's explanation of them is masterly in its rity. Read this book, and you'll at least’ understand why Harvard has trimmed Yale for the past ten years. We advise the Yale library to get a couple of copies.