comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1933-02 · page 24 of 38

Judge — February 1933 — page 24: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — February 1933 — page 24: Judge, 1933-02

A restored page from Judge, 1933-02. 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.

PICTURES OF BEAUTY AND COMFORT DAY-BY-DAY: SINGLE ROOMS, $4, $5, $6. bedroom and bath, $10, $14, $18, $20. Better than description, are the pictures we send to guest in- quiries, showing our luxurious suites and private rooms...for- mal settings for receptions and parties... smart restaurants... famous dance floor. Before your next New York stay, write us for information, pictures...and see if you don’t think we can make you comfortable and happy. . DOUBLE, $7, $8. Parlor, None higher. Revised appropriately for longer stays. Coming to New York? Then consider the 1,000 room Hotel Croydon as an excellent place transiently or permanently. these advantages: Splendid location a few steps from Central Park, Fifth Ave- nue, Metropolitan Museum, busses, subways, hospitals, fine schools, churches and only 15 minutes from shopping theatrical districts. and to live It offers Apartments of one to eight rooms, furnished or unfurnished by day, month or year from $4 daily, $100 monthly. Sun roof and children’s play- room (with attendants) free for use of guests. Beautiful restau- rant and private dining rooms. Booklet ] on request fintel Croydon 12 EAST 86th STREET NEW YORK BUtterfield 8-4000 UNDER DIRECTION OF WILBUR T. EMERSON JUDGING |W atten by Raymond L. mars, the Big Snake Rhino Man from the Bronx, “Thrills of a Naturalist’s Quest,” is a worthy sequel to his “Strange Animals | Have Known.” As in that boob Mr. Ditmars starts at a given point and rambles on pleasantly thru a beastly life, telling this and that that has cropped up along the way mostly hair raising. Mr. Ditma | hair rises in a quiet sort of wa you admire him tremendously for it There is no rushing into the lion's den single-handed, grappling the beast barehanded and choking him into submission. He is a modern Daniel—a genius with animals. Curiously Mr. Ditmars never tires, or never grows tiresome on his pet—St. Patrick’s eel. a deadly fascination to his rses and anecdotes on the slithery hipless creature. With his | easy, natural discussion of snake psychology, he almost gets you to lose a little of your timidity in the face of a three-inch garter snake In fact, tho we never hope to have the pleasure, we know what we are going to do should we meet up with a copperhead in our picnic basket uy to Connecticut next summer. We're going to look the snake in the eye and cry: “Keep your fangs to your- self, or I'll get Mr. Ditmars after you!” Mr. Ditmars also gives some handy hints on how to start a little nakehouse in your duplex ap’t. starting with a shoestring, a 40 ft. python, a bushmaster and a few other little worms. Dit- and OHN D. ROCKEFELLER, the Sun- day School superintendent, once piously remarked that God gave him his money. Which explains every- thing, including how John T. Flynn came to call his exhaustive biography on the Old Crate, “God's Gold.” It ought to be an incentive to every little boy to get to his prayers early. hereafter. Who knows, he too may some day toss off Radio Cities and new dimes. It seems, according to Mr. Flynn, that Sunday School those days taught queer ethics. The ethics of the budding Rockefeller were merely the ethics of the times. If anything John’s were a shade higher, for Mr. Flynn rightfully points out many in- stances in which men who claimed later to have been Rockefeller’s victims, were trying their best to outwit the Oily Man but the Great Man merely beat them to it. Secure in the belief of his own up- rightness, young John D. went his way with a tight lip, refusing to comicbooks.com