Judge, 1932-06-25 · page 33 of 37
Judge — June 25, 1932 — page 33: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1932-06-25. 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.
GID -:. SIMPI BEAUTIFUL. Sold AL Leading Department on Pw ‘Storrs LORRAINE METAL MFG. CO. 352 WAVE. NEW YORK, §. Y. ~ JUDGE PAYS $10 For each Cross Word Purtle accepted from its readers CROSS WORI and ITER e the tio! JUDGE'S 3rd CROSS WORD PU BOOK in every e Order your copy now at $1.50 from JUDGE MAGAZINE, INC. 18 EF, 48th St., New York City has a la solution! DETROIT’S FINEST UPTOWN HOTEL + + is near the General Fisher and New Center Buildings, Motors, also automobile plants. A courteous thoughtful staff Excellent Cuisine Luxurious rooms ct $3.00 per day. THE Abinoton at 700 SEWARD | fans who come | “Morituri te salutamus' SPORTS (Continued from page 10) for a man that is! What a toll of nerves, stamina, and what Gene Tunney called intestinal fortitude, it all takes. Many of those who don’t pay for the roar of the crowd with their lives just drift down and down. Unable to get the scent of ing from their nostrils they bum around from one cheap dirt track to another, following the circuit of coun and carnivals. Here they race for small prizes and face the greater dangers presented by badly banked turns, and loose earth, with the same grim nonchalance they displayed on the big time. They have given everything for the sheer thrill and love of the game to make a Roman hosiday for the half hoping to see them maimed for life. In ‘ay they are the modern gladiato! of the American Scene. They might well line up in their pits before the race and indulge in a little of that stuff, The only racing driver I ever knew ran a gas station in Hollywood. He had to quit racing after a baad jam on the Ascot track. Those gnarled old hands of his could woo sweet music from the ailing insides of the oldest model T Ford. But how that guy xot scared when his wife called for him in the car to drive him home from work! —R. D. Pastural Delight T’s nice to drink milk from con- tented cows, but more fun to drink juice from fermented grapes. And, we are trying to find a yood coffee substitute so we can give it up instead of giving up coffee. The major leagues have adopted strict rules enjoining baseball play- ers to keep their uniforms in good repair. So now it looks as though the Boston teams won't even have runs in their stockings. Translation of Last Week’s Rebus Mystery y trunks are packed and I’m on my way to Reno. It serves you right, you poor fish. If you knew it ‘0 be my ace, why did you trump it? Distance lends enchantment when I think of your bridge. om On Grapefruit or with Ginger Ale Abbott's Bitters! 50c bottle, 2 DeptJ3,P.0.B.44,Baltimore,Md.—Adv. 5e.Write | Qhoy! Pronch CANADA Sunny days exploring ancient French towns... moonlit nights on deck «+» the gaiety of Murray Bay... the grandeur of Saguenay’s austere canyon O appreciate French Canada you need conveyance and a guide... this company’s luxurious white steamers, trim as yachts, carry you beyond the “edge of cultivation” and we see that you see everything worth while in this beautiful land of ours. Toronto or Montreal, starting points, are but overnight journeys, say from New York City. The Saguenay Cruise is an all-expense affair, returning more than your money’s worth in health, novelty and pleasure. * WHAT IT COSTS * The cost of the Saguenay Cruise: From Toronto and return, $79.00; Rochester, $73.90; Montreal, $43.75; Quebec, $26.10; including transportation, meals and berth, % ANOTHER DELIGHTFUL CRUISE on historic waters is our “seven-day house party” from Detroit to Du- luth and return. Cost from Detroit $80.60 and up, including trans- portation, meals and berth. * For complete stories and illustrated folders apply to any Tourist Agent or our Agents located in leading cities of United States and Canada, uszeen CANADA STEAMSHIP LINES | T15 VICTORIA SQUARE, MONTREAL, comicbooks.com