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Judge, 1929-10-19 · page 4 of 36

Judge — October 19, 1929 — page 4: what you’re looking at

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Judge — October 19, 1929 — page 4: Judge, 1929-10-19

What you’re looking at

# Analysis of Judge Magazine Page This page contains primarily **book reviews and advertising**, not political cartoons. The main content is "Judging the Books," a humor column reviewing recently published comics and novels. The reviews mention titles like Percy Crosby's "Dear Snoopy" and J.P. McEvoy's "Hollyywood Girl," critiquing them for entertainment value rather than literary merit. The left sidebar advertises the S.S. "France" cruise ship and a French Line travel service. The right side promotes **Hotels Statler**, emphasizing amenities like radios in every room—a significant selling point in this era when radio was still relatively novel technology. The ad lists Statler locations in major cities. There is **no political satire or social commentary** evident on this page.

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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.

Brilliant with Palm Trees and Drunk with Flowers Ql SHY not spend the holidays / in North Africa, the latest playground of the international set? &% Algiers above a brilliant sea... the clothes of Cannes, the shops of Paris and the Arabian Nights, the backdrop of a pirate town...the Sahara beyond. # Forty-six smart “Transat” hotels at which to stay. ¥ Join one of the Mediterranean-Moroccan Cruises across the South Atlantic by the S. S. “France” Jan. 11, Feb.12, Mar.15, Apr.25 Cross “the longest gangplank in the world” to the “‘Ile de France”, the “Paris” or the ‘France’ with people who take the only trans- atlanticFrench cuisine for granted, who know that chic and gayety are where they choose to be. FIVE days to Plymouth for London, & Then... the covered pier at le Havre and the three-hour boat train for Paris. ¥ Overnight, Marseilles ++. twenty-four hours across the Mediterranean, Algiers. etrench Line e Information from any authorized French Line Agent, or write direct to 19 State Street, New York City. JUDGING BOOKS DeNxy books are as hard to find as pants pleats on stevedores. Also, we'd rather read funny books than novels about the soil. represse young irs, psycho- pathetic cases; 7 jreys and Fannie Hursts. hunted you up a passel o' comics this week, guaranteed to produce honest. hip-splitting laughter—we hope. First, Perey Crosby's “Dear Sooky" is the correspond of, Skippy to Sooky, written before the latter imp-cherub passed away amongst the immortals, Skippy confides his adventures and deepest sentiments with that led sweetness that'll keep thing and crying unless you are the lockjawed sort who is mean to his mother and dog. Crosby's illustrations are ant. Next, J.P. McEvoy's “Holly wood Girl.” in which the author of “Show 1” continues the ad- ventures of Dixie Dugan, that hot number, in’ the letter-tele- gram-menu back—paper napkin method of — literature. It is. amongst redingly screaming moments, a shrewd kid on that Hell of Kleig and mike, Holly- Its fun is brewed from the anties of such clowns as Sol Neb- bick, the big producer with the rat-trap mind, the Frigidaire heart, and nerves like E-strings; Jimmy Doyle, who rose from ghosting on a tabloid to writing lialogue for Rin-Tin-Tin; Mickey O'Keefe, author of the Prisoner's song “I Can't Lock You Any thing But Up, Baby,” and Dixie herself who shakes a sun-kist seanty—with sound. — A pip. Will Cuppy, the darned good mystery-book goggle for the Herald-Tribune, writes on “How to be a Hermit.” Will's a bachelor who lives in what appears to be a pile of old tin cans out Long ches such in- timate sts of Life as bedrooms, implitied clams, hardboiled reci- pes, living from can to mouth, and a plea for better batter. Nonsen- humor for the most part, it can best be described as whimsi- cal, without quotes. “The Stray by Thorne - in the which awrence Lamb, a stodge, is transformed into a succession of zoo pets. His adventures, if not of the cleanest,are of the merriest. Well, there you are. Laugh away. —Teo Si The last word in away-from- home comfort is the homey comfort of HOTELS STATLER which have RADIO IN EVERY ROOM ...and also: private bath, morning paper, bed-head reading lamp, excellent li- brary, all kinds of restau- rants (from lunch-counter or cafeteria to formal serv- ice) —all the Statler com- forts plus Statler Service. ...and more for your money, always: radio when you throw a switch —ice- water when you press a valve —the morning paper under your door—a good at your disposal — a reading lamp at your bed- head — your own private bath — all these things — whatever the price of your room —at no added cost. there are Statlers in Boston Buffalo Cleveland Detroit - Louis New York (Hotel Pennsylrania) comicbooks.com