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Judge, 1929-11-02 · page 4 of 36

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| Pe JIC inter Cruises to BERMUDA Why wait? All the de- lights of a Tropical holi- day await you now—with the added inducement of special Pre-winter rates. ALL-EXPENSE RATES 8 Days - $102 up 9 Days - 108 up 12 Days - 121 up 15 Days - 144 up Including rat-clase accommoda- pai 5 interesting sightsecing 29,000-ton M.S Bermuda S. Ft. Victoria K and the famous S ree, Femecrations and information apply t Whitehall Si kins) oF 563 Filth Ave. New Yorks or any Authorized agent. FURNESS rm Bermuda Line JUDGING BOOKS | ue difficulties of biographsing | a religieuse whose disciples are supersensit and able to kick, are obvious. If their god! A be not handled the kid gloves of reverent ecstasy, they're bound to. rr: merry hell with the skeptical al biographer, booing him down, putting firecrackers in his oat- meal and wishing him all red ties for Christmas. Which is just the spot Edwin Dak hon- picked for himself when cted his splendid “Mrs a Biography of a Vir- Mind.” We think he has come through flags aflying. Cag ily interpreting documentary evi dence, he has set down the life of that Little Lady from Bow, N. H., in founding that medi- cated religion, Christian Scie He never reduces her to the stature of a medicine-show wom: like The So Very Semple Mac- Pherson. Mrs. Eddy was no hymn-and-damnation shouter. She was, if anything besides an un- grasp: woman, a dignified Her faults were strictly human and very, very feminine. She underwent terrific marital strafing out of which, fed by a mystic disposition, arose her copyrighted, pl cd beliefs. Her followers have tried to stomp out the bo It'd mn, after Dakin's _ por- traiture, she shakes down into a considerable, stirring figure, one of America’s most extraordinary characters. The author almost defeats his purpose by losing himself in admiration for her dramatic potencies. But read for yourself. It’s beautifully written. se Penetration be th the skins of several of our generation gals, humanness in picturing what men in love are liable to do and not to do, a smooth, sustained, melan cholic way of story telling, serve to ma Rex Stout's “How Like a God,” a first novel, to be read through from the beginning and not peeped into at the last chap. ter. Mons. Bodenheim, a tyro himself at the same job, could get a few good hunches ut re straint and. What It’s All About from this novel. Mons. Boden- heim worked at the thing (we re- fer to “Sixty Seconds”) with a ner. Mr. Stout sculps balanced eye and hand. —Tep Suane As new as the newest, as modern as today, as comfortable as home HOTELS STATLER Bost« Buffalo Cleveland Detroit St. Louis New York (Hotel Pennsylcania) «+. and more for your money, always: radio when you throw a switch —ice-water when you press a valve—the morn- ing paper under your door — a good library at your disposal—a reading lamp at your bed-head— your own private bath— all these things, what- ever the price of your room, at no added cost. Restaurants, fromlunch- counter or cafeteria formal, a la carte d rooms, in each hot Fixed rates are posted in every Statler room. RADIO IN EVERY ROOM sAPS comicbooks.com