Judge, 1932-10 · page 31 of 36
Judge — October 1932 — page 31: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1932-10. 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.
t pleasant. Ale travel is ateal. clean, ern Ale iy the pt line of the EASTERN AIR TRANSPORT SYSTEM 1 Dicision of North American Aviation, tne.) s for 1 r e' Bitte Better Tast eZ To ginger ale naALY . adds that ce H The. Indispen: RICE Dy, ce" good eatin JUDGE PAYS $10 For each Cross Word Puzzle accepted from its readers. DETROIT’S FINEST UPTOWN HOTEL + + is near the General Fisher and New Center Buildings, also Motors, automobile plants. A courteous thoughtful staf. Excellent Cuisine Luxurious rooms ot $3.00 per day. THE Abing ton at 700 SEWARD | but lousy, and ca ing her first appearance on the New York Ambitious young producers, hearts itching for Kudos, who 2 nounce a program of productions in- cluding the works of Moliére, Ibsen, von Hofmannsthal, Stephen Phillips. W. B. Yeats, Goethe, Rostand, Dunsany, Hauptmann, Benavente, Pirandello, Porto-Riche neterlinck, Beaumont and Fletcher, Shakes Ra Synge, Tolstoy Echeg: Bjérnson and and who open up their se “Detective Sweene Alibi Plays in which an actor who looks, walks, talks, acts and smells like a waiter gets enthusiastic notices from the reviewers for playing the réle of r on with a waiter with startling verisimilitude. | Producers who put on a play of tenement or garbage-flat life and invite the very doggy and fashion- able set to the opening, the elegantos | arriving at nine-thirty full of cock- ils, highballs and champagne. ily bruiting y consider the play not only sordid sing the producers to wonder the next morning why the opening wasn’t a suc a _uathania Opinions Tetay Some con a play sin this Much Ado A HEATED cross-examination w: progress in the court. A terri- fied witness was being questioned by counsel for the defence. “And,” said the latter, “you told Mrs. Griffin, did you? What did Mrs. Griffin say?” The opposing counsel objected to | the question, and took place risters. At last the judge intervened allowed the question. “Now,” said the triumphant coun- sel for defence to the witness, “I you again. What did Mrs. a Jong argument between the two bar- and replied the witness. —Answers Last Month’s Rebus Mystery scorE of Scotland Yard men have ‘been following me for days and days but one of the finest things I do is escape arrest. I live over e Headquarters at Andover, M where I can be seen between nine and eleven every morning. I’m a wise crook and not afraid of cop- pe: Catch me if you can. Bill Underhill, forger. 29 age vives a good performance. | their | about the fact that | Motel Sherman, Chicegy ‘Coeatan Master's Touch MAKES it a COCKTAIL H®? yourself to a long drink of original College Inn Tomato Cocktail. Taste it—then you'll know why it’s called tomato cocktail—more than mere tomato juice. It’s carefully, delicately seasoned to provide a flavor un- matched, unequalled anywhere. There’s no more reason to drink unseasoned tomato juice than to eat unseasoned salads or meats. Only College Inn gives you mas- terful tomato cocktail blending— all the glory of whole tomatoes plus the Master’s touch, Insist upon Original College Inn Tomato Cocktail and you'll enjoy a better tomato drink, College Inn THE ORIGINAL TOMATO JUICE COCKTAIL Cotrecre InN Foop Propucts Co 415 Greenwich St, New Yous comicbooks.com