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Judge, 1932-03-12 · page 27 of 36

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Judge — March 12, 1932 — page 27: Judge, 1932-03-12

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very often, For invariably one day. if you say it often enough, the fellow will really put it down, some editor will print it on hearsay of its excel- lence, and it'll be rotten. But old Joel Sayre, who scems to hunk of Rabelais grafted to Ring Lardner and put into the body a blimp, has put it down and it s out beautiful and straight and s flat on the brush! It is called ackety-Rax,” a first novel. and it is all about how Francis (Knucks) MeGloin, a racketeer, went collegiate and founded Ca narsie University out of old bits of cauliflower and broken . to get into the foot- . You're laughing already? Well, it’s a natural. Wise sou're still laughing you ought to take a look into the see- ond of the “Ho-Hum" series, that blessed chapbook of news breaks com- piled by one E. B. White (with appro- priate foreword ) from old copies of the New Yorker. The second keeps the idea of the first quite well, which is to set you laughing at the outset and have you rolling on your ribs at the end. Our favorite in the book is this: “Young Writer, now starting on a story with a new idea he believes to WHEN GOLF IS MOST ENJOYABLE f ! When the Jf aky. the course. Jf the beautiful club- {house and delight. ful companionship if conspire to make golf f most enjoyable, a per ff ly matched and bal- anced set of clubs adds VA the final touch. CAML inent makers use Temper” Shafts on their better clubs. Distinguished in appearance —with the life and action of a thoroughbred— be in a class with anything Elinor Glyn or Judge Lindsey ever produced, needs financial assistance. —Adv. in L. A. Examiner.” Thank God for that.” —Trp Suane “True Temper” Shafts contrib- ute to the balance, power and ap- pearance of both woods and irons «+. Ask your Pro to let you try your favorite make of clubs fitted’ with “True Temper” Shafts. « « ¢ THE AMERICAN FORK & HOE CO. Sporting Goods Dirision Kelth Bullding Cleveland, Ohio Judging the Sports (Continued from page 8) He came to New York in the dead of winter with no overcoat and the soles out of his shoes. He fought a ; mediocre Negro for a few hundred | Ba@ . J dollars, was beaten and had one of his at Port Cherte ribs broken. He returned to New York a millionaire and the heavy- weight champion of the world. Two erection Three of the most dramatic chap- THE “True Temper’ ters in the history of the prize ring > Sat éway te chow wall were written around this nad who EXTRA thickness, Section (A) came up from the hobo camps to sit PUNCH it the festal board with English roy- alty, from the lower end of the shaft shows a wall thickness 50% greater than eection (B) taken (A) That night he knocked out from the grip end. Thie Luis Firpo at the Polo Grounds. The j exclusive feature allows G. A. R. of pugilism call that the ratrenath.heckbone, greatest heavyweight fight in history. : lve ettrs punch: Dempsey was cheered when he en- Z Fhe tee Siettogntee tered the ring. This was the first ee nnteteore faint murmur of a tidal wave of popu- ae = larity he was to know in later years. Cp to that moment he had been an unpopular figure. He had not gone to war, and the country still had a patriotic hangover. The first punch landed was a short right hand which caught Dempsey coming in. (Page 27, please) comicbooks.com