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Judge, 1930-01-25 · page 29 of 36

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mae OUDGIN “Tur Great Fright,” by Madge Macbeth and A, B, Conway, is a entle and sympathetic saga of the nch-Canadian habitat. For once t spared the romantic tinpan- alley characterization of the French Canuck, and instead of the Bees Heart Pierre saveeng ze leetle white gel from ze bad villain, we have a group of simple-minded farmers lov ing, cheating and lying Besides picture of a much-m is a very amusing book. we rustic manner, Since Ring Lardner'’s all-time “Cham. pion” and Hemingw Grand” we can re ries about prize-fighters. them have to do with the who can't fight going out a good in a great big, mus But now Edward McKenna to stomachable works on the bullet- headed ones in his new “The Bruiser.” It is a novel of a fighter who n have stepped into a real rosin-box : not a movie make-up one, It is the story of a lad who might have been Stanley Ketchel fighting in the style of Ace Hudkins. He nothing, fights his way up on his cour- age without benefit of science, and eventually takes the count not because of old age but because of liquor and women. Not a bitter story; not a story written by the impotent pacifist who thinks fighting brutal, but a story by an intelligent observer with an exe to swift tragedy. Incidentally, we liked the way the Bruiser died. It was more scemly than John L. Sullivan's peaceful end. In his youth John L. said, “I can lick any so-and-so in the world!” In his old age he preached. y's equal I no accurate sto- Most of comes. Deny yourself a little bridge or elbow-bending these coolish long eve- nings Sir James Jean’s “Universe Around Us.” It will heighten your brows without giving you a headache. It is the last word on astronomy written by a man who knows just about all there is to know about that science of kings. He writes about the past and future of the universe, drawing on the vast ex- plored sciences that have bearing on and put the time to absorbing | G<BOOKS | from | it. His style is easy-flowing, warm, | and without skull-cracking cinstei isms—he explains the chap very ly as a matter of fact—and you don't need a metaphysic to digest him. or docs he write down to the layman, a heinous crime. You will finish him the better man for it and a good deal more impressed with your place on this whirling star of ours. —Tep Suaxe EMBARRASSING that you thought the hat was yours... be nonchalant... LIGHT A MURAD. Dr. Judge Eminent Mirth, Healer of Worries that sadden the earth, Author of tomes, Visitor weekly in homes. Funny Bone Mender, whose his- tory shows Succor and aid for Society's Woes, Jovial fellow, with practice exten- sive, Mirthful and mellow, and yet in- expensive— Why should a person remain ap- prehensive? Stifle your worry and banish your fret, Clip off the magical coupon and let This be a moment you'll never regret! Doctor of Humor and legions of rollicking thousands of MOMENTS Instead of explaining Judge Publishing Co., Inc., 18 East 48th Street, New York, N. Y. Dear Doctor Judge: I'm weary of worry, I want to be bright, I'd like you to hurry And set me aright, I'm ready to chuckle, » longer to sob, And ask you to buckle Right down to your job! DO 104 Regular Weekly Visits $7.80 Oo Regular Weekly Visits. 5.00 comicbooks.com