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Judge, 1931-07-04 · page 4 of 36

Judge — July 4, 1931 — page 4: what you’re looking at

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Judge — July 4, 1931 — page 4: Judge, 1931-07-04

What you’re looking at

# "Just Missed Him" - Judging the Books This page combines a **traffic safety advertisement** with a book review. The cartoon shows a car driver narrowly avoiding a pedestrian, illustrating the magazine's opening warning: "85 of today's motor accidents will have proved fatal" by the time readers finish the page. The "next time" you might not be so lucky—hence the pitch for Ætna automobile insurance. The book review critiques Maurice Hindus's *Red Bread*, praising it as an exciting, well-informed account of Soviet Russian life. The reviewer notes Hindus, a New York Russian, returns to his native village and discovers miraculous changes: schools, churches functioning, and radios connecting isolated communities to the wider world. The tone is cautiously optimistic about Soviet modernization, unusual for American anti-communist sentiment of the era.

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

Just missed him— ....bui next time? Y midnight tonight, 85 of today’s motor accidents will have proved fatal. Before you finish reading this message, 2 more people will have been injured by automobiles. If “next time” it should be your misfortune not to “miss him"—and you are sued— will you have a great insurance company behind you? Or merely the sleep-robbing knowledge thata judgment may not only seize every form of property you own foday, but may even snatch away anything you may own or acquire for years tocome! An Etna Com- bination Automobile Policy not only covers every insurable mo- . 9 toring risk but can bewrittenwith Going to Tour? Liability limits of any amount Then clip and mail the neededto protect youagainsthigh coupon below for a fas- damage awards. Further, an tna cinating 48-page Policy is acceptable evidence of Book of Motor Tours your financial responsibility in every state in the Union. Canada, too. What's more, A2tna service ‘ covers the country from Coast 22 tours. Each illustrated is i : to Coast through with a large 2-color map. a . Fach adaptable to the 25,000 Ana Representatives length of your vacation See the Atna-izer in your commu- and the limits of your re ; Pena: budget. Avinique guide nity. He is a man worth knowing. to America’s most beau- tiful scenery and most interesting historical points! Your name and address on the coupon, plus 12¢ to cover mail- ing costs, will bring your copy by return mail. "Seeing America with “tna” TODAY ‘The Atna Casualty & Surety Co., Hartford, Conn. Gentlemen: Seod me your 48-page Tour Book “Seeing America with Atna™, lenclose 12¢to cover mailiogcosts. (Canada 220 The Atna Casualty & Surety Co. The Atna Life Insurance Co. The Automobile Insurance Co. The Standard Fire InsuranceCo, of Hartford, Conn, ee Address | JUDGING“ BOOKS t, Comrade § © is about to go Red. To him the Red Menace wasn’t so much danger of the Soviet's erucifyi George Babbitt as the alarming flood of Russian books that threatened to swamp the world. But somehow this Comrade-to-be got him- self tangled up in Maurice Hindus’ “Red Bread,” found it not only the most exciting, well-informed, provoca- tive, freshly written book on anything he’s read in an but he's thinki the Red lands, where big things a happening. (American Defense So- ciety, take note.) In “Red Bread,” Maurice Hindus, who is a New York Russian, goes back to his ive Russian village and looks the scene over witl impartial e and understanding heart, his idea i to find out how the muzhik feels about the five-year plan. He finds is village, twenty miles from the nearest railroad and imbedded in a heritage of generations of monotony as viscid as the mud on its streets, looking up. Lo and behold, the first thing that smacks him between the yes is a schoolhouse and nurs- ery—courtesy of the ULS.S.R.! The church around which life used to cen- ter has faded aw lack of customers; come a matter of register-signing and no old-time peasant-foolery allowed; | few children are baptized and the dead go to their clay beds without benefit of Campbell or clergy! And the lone priest, still functioning in poverty and once the chief cheese, confesses to Hindus in whispered con- fidence that he was beginning to doubt, since those who defied his God were prospering as never before. Furthermore, where nobody could read in the old days and newspapers were as unknown as separate bed- | rooms for pigs, there are plenty of | papers (Sovietized of course). It has become a major crime not to be able to read, and the radio works for all, keeping those who had once never ventured further than the neighboring village, in touch with the world. And so forth, miracle after miracle —homely to us, of course, with our sophisticated motor comforts and liv- ing—but simply divine to the down- trodden, dirty, ignorant muzhik from way back. Tragedy, of course, there is plenty—the pathetic thousands of tales and the process of dekoolack harrowing if within Soviet reason. And there is plenty of weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth amongst the old folks who refuse to come into (Continued on page 25) into a ruin for veddings have be- comicbooks.com