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Judge, 1930-12-06 · page 3 of 36

Judge — December 6, 1930 — page 3: what you’re looking at

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Judge — December 6, 1930 — page 3: Judge, 1930-12-06

What you’re looking at

# Page Analysis This page is primarily **advertising**, not satirical content. The left column contains a book review column titled "Judging the Books," discussing Maurice Maeterlinck's "Life of the Ant" and Irving Fineman's "This Pure Young Man." The right side features a full-page **Edison Light-O-Matic Radio advertisement**. It includes an ornate radio cabinet illustration and testimonial from "Mr. Lenz" praising the radio's sound quality for background music during bridge games. The advertisement emphasizes the radio as a luxury gift item worthy of bearing Thomas Edison's name, positioning it as the "perfected radio the world expected from the world's most renowned Laboratories." This reflects early 1920s radio commercialization and Edison's brand prestige. There is **no political cartoon or satire** on this page.

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

AUDGING™ BOOKS TT time we offer you a book on the noblest, most courageous, most charitable, most devoted, most gener- ous and most altruistic creature on earth: the tiny, aggressive, pesky, kitchen - overrunning, _ picnic - loving Ant. It is Maurice Macterlinck’s “Life of the Ant” and is a masterpiece iny way you look at it. Ripley's most fantastic fairy-tale becomes a harm- less bedtime story when compared to the simple observation made of thes: tiny underworld workers. Thus we find that ants lived long before man and obeyed the laws of evolu- tion: gradually becoming civilized to the point where one group of them, the Weavers, can actually use a tool like man, who is the only other living creature likewise gifted. There are ints, too, that are agriculturists and urow gardens; ants that do nothing but war, keeping slaves for the menial, household tasks; ants so fero cious that they can devastate whole ral villages, passing over them ving nary a human or living thing in their horrid path; ants that keep cattle; ants that cultivate mush- ants t 7 ants that put out fires. lets us into the most intimate secrets of the formicary, revealing the mys- teries of regurgitation, that commu- nity feeding operation which makes for such superhuman unselfishness in the ant tribe; the nuptial flight; care of the young; and a thousand other miracles of organization and execu- tion in miniature. Only an ant that plays miniature golf is lacking. Per- haps this is an example of its better- than-human- which hammers away at. rooms 3 The moral and mystic observations on the author's part are very profound and of the What's Life About? variety and will probably make you Think. Oh, well! Anyway, it’s all very, very fi nating. Incidentally, Maeterlinck that mother ants live to about the ripe old age of twelve years. That is, of course, unless they attend picnics. WNGs are very bad in this country when a publisher offers a $7,500 prize for a novel, gets hundreds of manuscripts from starving as well as prosperous authors, and then hands first money to a book like Irving Fineman's “This Pure Young Man.” Mr. Fineman’s book is no worse, no better than hundreds of other novels published this year—and no diffe either. The hero nsitive, shy w girls, disgusted with fraternities; he learns about Beauty, about Labor. finally about Thi We understand that he dies at the end of the book, (Continued on next page) Macterlinck | Mr. Lenz saysi- 1 find the Edison Light-0-Matic Radio a delightful reans of furnishing "back- ground” music during a Bridge Game. ngehdor HE LABORATORIES OF ya A gift of beauty that’s a joy forever! Surely the radio worthy to bear the name of Thomas A. Edison is emi- nently worthy to convey your good wishes at Christmastide. For there can be no pride of radio possession surpassing that of owning an Edison...no radio gift which you can bestow with a surer feeling that you have selected the finest that is. In beauty of tone... in life-like real- ism...in amazing ease of operation ...in faultless performance, the Edison is the perfected radio the world expected from the world’s most renowned Laboratories. There is an Edison dealer, selected because of his reliability, near you. THOMAS A. EDISON, IN LIGHT-O-MATIC RADIO comicbooks.com