Judge, 1930-11-15 · page 3 of 36
Judge — November 15, 1930 — page 3: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This page is **primarily advertising**, not satire or political commentary. The left column contains book reviews by "Ted Shane" for *Judge* magazine's "Judging the Books" section—discussing travel narratives and war literature. The right side features a full-page **Edison Radio advertisement** showcasing the "Light-O-Matic" model. The ad includes a testimonial from "Mr. Lenz" praising the radio's performance and tone quality, emphasizing Edison's reputation for innovation. The advertisement appeals to consumer desire for quality electronics and brand prestige rather than engaging in political satire. The page reflects 1920s advertising practices and consumer culture, with no apparent satirical commentary on the advertisements themselves.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
SUDGING™ BOOKS J™ Tuxty's “Beggars Abros the darndest hodge-podge we've laid eyes to these many years, A clever if maudlin fellow writing about bums, he makes a burr out of this, his trip to the Old World. Discovering Thomas Cook, this wild Mick fish-wife philosopher s ross the ocean in the glass-enes rabin, stopping in London at a fashionable inn. For no reason at all, the trip over reminds him of the Titanic disaster, of which he writes glowingly and dramatically —but then, why? In London he docs the conventional tourist things. He visits the London Tower, the Abbey, Whitechapel, Shaw and Wells in qu ion. Of these sundry hanalities he gets off such startling titbits:—that the Tower of London has thick walls, that Westminster is a place where people are buried, that Shaw has whiskers and that Wells is a stout fellah. He eventually goes to Ireland where ne perked up a bit but too late to save the book. It all looked as if this erstwhile str: k succes ight-punching y, being slightly punch-drunk from too many chuckings under the chin delivered by chs ladies at literary te attle holed up in the slums of Liverpool, inspected for- lad were going lite ming Had he gone abroad on a cign down-and-outers, it'd've been something, boys. Let it rest. nr. Arex Wavan, the Englishman M whose travel book, “Hot Coun- »ped by the Guild last spring, ed up a little number entitled “ ‘Sir!’ She Said” for the fall trade. It is supposed to be London society life, but if London society was 1s dull as this bosk, Mike Arlen and Evelyn Waugh have been misinform ing their public for years. tries,” was I rne’s a novelty—a book about the Great War! At that, it would have been a smash if it | pub lished two years ayo. It’s called “Baron Fritz, was written by Karl Federn, who based it on the diary of a y derman officer. Baron Fritz” is one of the most civilized heroes that any war book has had. A real German aristocrat, he felt not the slightest compunetion igainst shooting down men in cold blood, but*when he was off duty, he read Horace in the original Latin, played Chopin on the piano in his bil lets, drank elegant wines, and made fastidious love. Maybe this is as good a time as any to throw out six or cight of the war hooks you were ballyhooed into buying 1 couple of years ago. “Baron Fritz” could replace them all. —Trp Sitane 1h) | | The Edison is the radio voice triumphant! Born in the | Laboratories of Thomas A, Edison—perfected there—it & the radio you can buy for the years to come... con- fident of its trustworthiness—proud of your ownership. | B* its performance alone you would know | Mr. Lenz its name. By its name alone you can antici- i sayst- pate its superb performance. Rare beauty of tone ... electrical correctness . . . living realism— t 1 find the Edison : ah oT . | these things are the Edison's. These are achieve- | Light-O-Matic Radio @ = ments based on the pioneering, genius and ac- } delightful means of complishments of a half century. These are the furnishing “base reasons why the great name of Thomas A. Edison is the great name on a radio. Let the ground” music during a : a . ‘ Edison speak to you in its own triumphant voice. Bridge Game. ae : ¢ . \ Near you is an Edison dealer, selected because } Bevmgh Soy of his ability to serve you. Don’t fail to visit him. S LIGHT-O-MATIC ADIO THE PLEASURE OF OWNING AN EDISON MAY BE YOURS FOR AS LITTLE AS $175 (LESS TUBES), PRICES SLIGHTLY HIGHER IN THE YAte WEST, THOMAS A, EDISON, INC., ORANGE, N. J. 1 comicbooks.com FROM THE | LABORATORIES OF i