comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1931-01-03 · page 35 of 36

Judge — January 3, 1931 — page 35: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — January 3, 1931 — page 35: Judge, 1931-01-03

A restored page from Judge, 1931-01-03. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.

📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)

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

CuristopHeR Mor-ey’s first fiction in two years! TED SHANE says in JUDGE: “We thoroly enjoyed ‘Rudolph and Amina’. A happy, joshing thing it is. Musical comedy literature it is, what with its simp!e, lahvely tale of Rudolph, the Artist. who wins Amina the Virtuous despite the deep dyed, dirty villains of the piece. A little more and it'd be Beerbohm at his best.”” WILLIAM Al WHITE says: “What a wise, gay and galaptious thing he has done! . . . All the gaudy phantasy of musical comedy in lovely, sparking, crystalline prose, both simple and sophisti- cated, classical and swank. ‘Ru- dolph and Amina’ has all the charm and surprise of Cinderella's coach- and-four hitting on all six.” THE NEW YORK TIMES says: “A delectable “A gay and sparkling tale filled with unexpected turns humor and outrageous puns daring in its bination of ancient naivete and modern sophistication.”"—Memphis Journal. v “It is completely charming and as amusing and enter- THE UNITED PRESS says: “The smartest, best natured work of the year.” “Morley has never done anything better." —Columbus Ohio Dispatch. taining as any books come these days."—Milwaukee Journal. ‘It is a delicate fantasy in prose as fine as it is exquisite.”—Philadelphia Public Ledger. RUDOLPH & AMINA By CHRISTOPHER MORLEY This book may be purchased from your bookseller. If a bookstore is not convenient, mail your order ($2.00 per copy) to the publisher, adding 10 cents postage. Address THE JOHN DAY COMPANY, Dept. J 386 Fourth Ave., New York City QUADRI-COLOR CO. JAMAICA. N.Y. comicbooks.com