Judge, 1934-05 · page 24 of 36
Judge — May 1934 — page 24: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1934-05. 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.
TRAVEL. on UNITED AIR LINES =“ UNSURPASSED RECORD “OF EXPERIENCE — — _ _ 8 Yeats 65 MILLION wzcZexs SYOU %*& The weather reports are in—clearance papers signed —express loaded — pas- sengers comfortably aboard —stewardess and pilots at their posts—as you take off in one of United's multi-motored planes. And the word flashes out hundreds of miles ahead... * Instantly a nationwide network goes into action—a multitude of unseen “hands” reach up to guide your great liner on its course. With United, air travel is much more than a plane in the sky. * Behind the ease and the efficiency of your flight is the entire United Air Lines organization—behind the organization, years of experience devoted to the prog- Pioneer in Coast to Coast Service For schedules, tickets or reservations, call United Air Lines ticket offices, Hotel Porters, Travel Bureaus, Postal op Watern Union. AIRLEXPRESS . . . Phone Air Express Division, Railway Express Agency, Inc. ress of commercial aviation, years of re- search and practical development which have won for American aviation the ad- miration of the world. * Pilots, dispatchers, engine experts, instrument technicians, and the entire maintenance and servicing personnel — 1480 highly skilled employees —all contribute their seasoned experience, and all share in the constant urge to achievement that has made United Air Lines the most experienced, and the fast- est transportation system in the world. * ke ok 3-mile-a-minute va -powered Boeings... 2 pilots . away radio... directive radio beam... lighted airways... every proved aid t0 avigation. Every provision is made for your comfort... spacious cabins ... wide, reclining chairs for relax- ation or sleep... stewardess service. CALIFORNIA TO NEW YORK — 1933 HOURS 3 flights daily each way CHICAGO TO NEW YORK — § HOURS 6 flights daily each way CALIFORNIA TO CHICAGO — 13%; HOURS CLEVELAND TO PHILADELPHIA — 235 HOURS. CHICAGO TO FT. WORTH-DALLAS—7% HOURS LOS ANGELES TO SEATTLE — 83; HOURS (Westbound schedules slightly longer due to prevailing winds) Consult new United Air Lines time-table for schedules to intermediate and off-line points. UNITED AIR LINES JUDGING THE BOOKS T IS a curious paradox but when- ae es our five star special writer, Lion (Wet Feuchtwan turns to an age not his own, he is successful in hi . which was of t “Josephus” wh Cheek) nany, ho was of time-p Rome 3 ses in. plu ho was of | s y, and now The s of Nazi-rotten ten postwar Opper nt day minus example ; jot a re i ectual Germ, prese ee Cases on humanity or there was not "except that it was too b: human consumption. mendously wid passionate pol Tt had you could want in a novel everythin: except. Warwick Deeping weeping at the Wall of Blighted Romance. It ever had a perfectly drawn picture of the early Hitler. But it was a book which required too much mental w ning d. “The Oppermanns,” the auth- t, its faults are i rable. It nished job as a novel in every way. It lays whole story of Jew-bait- ing in many without — bittern Feucht er might have cast himself ibout in his pages like a madman had he wished to. His provocation justi- tied him doing so:—he had felt the heel of Hitler—with hobnails in it. But gentle irony and the simple truth was all he summons up. And that is the chief fault of the book. Howeve we say, it is doomed to failure. W fed up easily and we get Hitlerism cast at us evel Yes it is a terrible Alas! Feuchtwanger, because it is too clear an is too full of pity. HERE is that qual phoney to Erie Link nus Merriman” we can’t quite put our finger on. But we can put our foot on it—it’s as large as the nose on Caesar's face. Offhand we'd say it’s a quality that would endear the book to the boo! ish heart of Christopher Morley that automatically shuts us out there is something we can’t a Morleyism, It is best described as being more literary than literature it- You Love Books and their Char- rs all over the place. You are author and you know it, Now we don't want it to get around that Mr. Linklater is anything like Mr. Morley. That he has a curved stem literary pipe, a curved literary bay win- dow and an appetite for drinking tea with lady bookstore owners. He is not fusty enough for that, being still sel comicbooks.com