Judge, 1927-07-23 · page 19 of 36
Judge — July 23, 1927 — page 19: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1927-07-23. 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.
JUDGE Scratch Pads of Famous Men R (Nero) 2» IMPORTANT Wont fowl to ave Bord in crt! ~99- Meno Order raw 2 i rant of Chsatians (rom Gite. Sromr Look Kaman aha A na MEMO Wane fiddle td YY Ly ate ep. 4 Dee Gur rs Foppina Romulus VU - TL -S-TX Appian way) Oh Bey! QOVQOYYP Orward Chrirtian So€duna Ho Ho WHAT.A LOVELY VIEW ENTHUSED THE DUKE “Here that awful shark person, so let’s beat it!” said a halibut to a carp one day. “Why?” asked Mr. Carp. “Oh, he’s always telling about catching a man ten feet long and letting him get away funned the halibut. Who said @ fish has no sense of humor? comes Smart World Reads As City Swelters Book Mania Runs Riot Amid Haute Monde By Breav Perenman They have lots of literary girls I'm a bookworm myself Coney Island, July eral days ; so the story goes, two young beaux met on the Boardwalk at Coney Island. “Well, Bruce,” said Feinbergh, “T hear they’re having a lot of trouble down with the hookworms.” “So they tell me, Maxwell,” replied Kornbloom, “but we're having more trouble up here with book: And they laughingly their mogador scarve I mention this aneedote simply to illustrate the trend which now ils at this rendezvous of y prominent New Yorkers. All the fashionable sports—bad- minton, Sev- South orms |” adjusted squash, battledore and shuttlecock, and fallen before the great new pas- time, reading. Men whose hands were deformed from holding ten- nis bats and niblicks have taken ards at the library and in hammocks absorbed in standard works, unmindful of court and link. Everywhere one sees people carrying or holding novels. It is the new craze. This latest it is whis- pered, was sponsored by the free- thinking, hard-riding, hot-weather leader of the younger set, Miss Gretchen Eisinwinter. Miss Eis- inwinter, one hears, has been re- eciving lessons from tutors in the art of nd_ the blades about her, eager for a new thrill, have whole-heartedly taken immies—have rage, reading, young up her hobby. Some have even gone so far as to register in night school, and it is no uncommon sight to see a Mercedes, a Lancia, a couple of Puegeots and half a dozen Rolls-Royecs drawn up every night in front of Flatbush Prep, where modern literature up to Henty and Alger are given, Even at the exclusive Goldfarb Plaza, which is loath to accept new fads, Dame Rumor hath it that wealthy matrons have courses in been observed glancing furtively into seed cata . Encountering Mrs. Belmore-Finkle yesterday on the porch of her lovely villa, the “Dew Cumme Inne I i quired of her what book that was she had just been reading. “I hain’t din’ no book, Dick,” she evaded, “I be lookin’ through it for a hairpin I done lost this Lawdy, Lawdy that mawnin’, oh Gad, what a woman The Casa Minsky still con- tinues to be the fashionable place to dine and with the Brodsky Caseades a close second. The new summer revue, ‘Nudel- man’s Nimble Steppers of 1927,” has moved to the Katz Towers roof and has become a gathering stinging wit dance, > for the horsey crowd from nd Street. All in all, it looks a big summer for the manu- facturers of white knickers and striped hat-bands. 17 comicbooks.com