Judge, 1933-12 · page 26 of 37
Judge — December 1933 — page 26: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1933-12. 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.
The Lindbergh Line Passengers Mail Express The Douglas Airliners soon to be put into service mark the begin- ning of a new epoch in air travel. They are quiet and comfortable. They are fast enough to make new records in commercial trans- portation. And they establish a | new standard of luxury and con- venience for the public. Pennsylvania For Reservations: Call Penna, R. R., Postal Western Union, Greyhound Bus, ws, Hotel Porters nearest T. W. A. T. W. A. 1775 Broadway, BOOKS (Continued from page 1) The First World War. Jumbo pic- ture history compiled by Lawrence Stallings, very effective despite liter- ary, monotonous captions and soft focus carnage scenes. The American Procession Picture Book History. American Life from 1860 to 1917 as interpreted by the eye of the camera, Timber Line by Gene Fowler. A hard-written, unpolite and generally terrific biography of Tammen and Bonfils, a couple of frontier business- newspaper rogues. Wonder Hero by J. B. Priestley. The unimportant but meaty adven- tures of an ordinary English working feller—and hero for nine days. Mandoa! Mandoa! by Winifred Holtby. Extremely Swift Satire aimed at some British imperialistic foibles. Extra peachy book. Homecoming by Floyd Dell. The autobiography of Mr. Moon Calf and also a splendid history of the Post War Greenwich Village Art age. After Such Pleasures by Dorothy Parker. Laughter and poison by our National Woman Problem. Cash Item by Catherine Brody. Formula-plot novel, plainly written, Jamming the whiskers of our new ational Villain: the Bankster. Very effective. Death of a World by Romain Rol- land. Another hunk of 67 yr. old Mons. R.’s_ swansong encyclopedic novel. This one is a melancholy in- dictment of modern materialism. For serious thinkers and your Prof. friends. Limitations of Science by J. W. N. Sullivan, Exactly what its title says. Mellon’s Millions by Harvey O'Con- nor. Mellon didn’t like this one. Enough said. Peter Abelard by Helen Waddell. | The lovelife of the great Schoolman. Passionately and beautifully written. All Men Are Brothers trans. by Pearl Buck. 1280 pages of Chinese life in the 13th Century. Looks great on a library table. We Are the Living by Erskine Caldwell. Hot stuff in short bits. Dark Hazard by W. R. Burnett. Another chapter in the “Little Caesar” series. Very swift melodrama about dogtrack life. I, the Tiger by Manuel Komroff. Ingenious animal story told from the point of view of the tiger. The Autobiography of Alice B. Toklas by Gertrude Stein. The Mis- tress of Babel writes an informative and genuinely understandable auto- biog. Fast One by Paul Cain. Dark, dirty deeds done in Hollywood, in the Dash Hammett manner. —Tep SHANE. 24 A Rpular HOTEL Every Reem with Bath Daily $2.00 up Weekly $11.50 up Double $3.00 up Weekly $19.00 up Located in a delightful section which retains traditional dig nity and quiet charm. Here is every provision for comfort. Solarium, roof garden, lounge, library, recreation rooms and entertainment DAYS IN N. Y. 2 EVERYTHING INCLUDED $530 Dinner and delightful room—2nd day—2 meals and lodging. Visit to Radio City Music Hall. DAYS INN. Y. 3 COME ANY TIME 310% Delightful room and bath, with meals— Sightseeing on Royal Blue Lines—Loge Seats at Radio City—Trip to top of Em- pire State Bldg. WRITE FOR DETAILS GEORGE WASHINGTON 25rd Street and Lexington Ave., New York City It's Worse To Be Poor At Christmas CTime Other parents taking dolls and trains and new clothes to their children ... your boy and girl wondering why they are passed by... not understanding that the Blue Eagle can’t help every one. Long lists of needy families. . looking to The Salvation Army . . , 686,946 Christmas Dinners last year. . . 319,283 children made happy with gifts . . . People don't intend to be thoughtless... they just forget. . . and Christmas passes. Mail your check or money order today to:* Commander Evangeline Booth National Headquarters QMHE SALVATION ARMY Ulacorporated} 120-130 West 14th Street Tew York. N.Y. weom ne *Or, if you prefer, send your gift to your local branch of The Salvation Army. Gifts may be designated for any specific purpose or district. eee —— — comicbooks.com