comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1933-06 · page 25 of 38

Judge — June 1933 — page 25: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — June 1933 — page 25: Judge, 1933-06

A restored page from Judge, 1933-06. 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.

1 , C t t 7 Chateav. Cote d'or Burgundy .. full- bodied, of rich bouquet and delicious in taste, as of old, All good dealers, Rhine Claret Seuterne Burgundy Walle waiting for that tardy ““fourth''; introduce “STRAIGH ms ‘intlawlog litte playing card ‘simple in appearance, yet capadle ef keeping master minds of the bridge world engaged te hours—er perbaps you'll scorer the secret of tts stution ina few mingtes. To preserve your own social standing, to pass the tine while traveling, of ring & new, Interest to, some ouvaleacent, friend—ask, “STRAIGHT” uickly an Uocle Sam's mail can deliver It Hy, ;betee weet “This thruline te aay address for only 25e. A dollar will bring you tre ef them, each neatly bored. Enclose stamps or ater with your address and mail to Amsteréam Lithegraphing Ce., Amsterdam, New York ‘Service... Discover at Long- champs that perfection in service only obtain. able by rigid exclusion of tipping. Here, fixed tandards of excellence may be enjoyed at really moderate prices. ‘ RESTAURANTS ‘ongchamps NEW YORK CITY 423 Medison Avenve Bet. 48th & 49th Streets 19-21 West 57th Street Neor Filth Avenve 1015-17 Madison Avenue Bet. 78th & 79th Streets 40 Eost 49th Street Bet. Modison & Vanderbilt Aves. 28 West 58th St, off Fifth Ave. 55 Filth Avenve North-eost Cor. 12th St a shout; and smells of politics behind those green silk pajamas of state he affects. We think him an American Hitler and if he should bully his way into the White House, it'll be worse than having a Republican again. The best thing is to pay no attention to the tornado from the South. Px of our task as picker for a clownsheet is to keep you away from the depressors—the casters down. We've done pretty well thus far, thanks, but now we're going to let you down. For you've got to read Nathaniel West's “Miss Lonely Hearts,” a blue book, true; but a not unpleasing one. It tells of an idealistic young gent who operates a column on a tabloid, answering the bru- tally pathetic heart throb letters that come in, gathering a complex as Miss Lonely Hearts. You won't flood with joy as you read the book, but its Hech- tian ironic feel will get you. ARQUIS JAMES has done an- other clean job on Andrew Jack- son as he did on Sam Houston. But why do our good brown biographers go out of their way for subjects. The deuce with the dead, what about the living ? ND here’s a new Rex Stout. Truth to tell we’ve never burned with that enthusiasm once so markedly felt for Stout (except if it was stout in bottles). We've always felt there was little to Mr. Stout but those whis- kers which he put on to look fierce. Actually we’ve thought him an affected fellow out looking for abnormality. And in “Forest Fire,” the newie, he goes into the woods for it. Stay out in the open, folks. —Tep SHANE. Slightly Misleading EGGY had learned about Mary’s un- happy romance and inquired for further news. “Why have you broken off your en- gagement with Harry?” she asked. Mary tossed her head. “H’m,” she replied, “he told me he was connected with the movies, and the very next day I saw him driving a fur- niture van.” —Tit Bits He came along the road carefully looking at each number on the doors of the houses, After a while he stopped and called to a postman. “I say,” he asked, “does a family named Greenlee live here?” The postman shook his head. “No,” he replied; “but there is a Mr. Green who lives at one end of the road and a Mrs. Lee who lives at the other end.” “Oh,” said the inquiring man, “they must have been divorced.” —Ohio Hobo 23 Why rope ’e you can dope © WONDER that cow was cowed! Brother, there isn’t a steer in Texas that could stand up un- der the fumes of that smudgy smokel But that’s the only good argument we ever heard for strong, heavy to- bacco in a soggy pipe. Every man in the cow punching game—and out of it—should smoke good, mild tobacco in a well-kept pipe. Take Sir Walter Raleigh’s Burley mixture, for example. There’s a smoke that’s as mild as a prairie evening, but there’s flavor in it... rich... full bodied ... satisfying -..and kept fresh in gold foil.On your next trip to your tobacco store make this resolution... “‘Smoke the tobacco that has become a national favorite.” Browa & Williamson Tobacco Corporation Lexile, Keath, Dept? R-36 Send for this FREE BOOKLET ‘Sooner or L Your Pavoute