Judge, 1934-05 · page 25 of 36
Judge — May 1934 — page 25: 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.
"EVEN HIS WORST FRIENDS TOLD HIM!” | HEY SURE DID—when they recovered! But recovering from the K.O. of that sullen, soupy pipe was harder than holing a golf ball from a sand trap! A pipe-cleaner, an orange-and- black tin of Sir Walter Raleigh— and how his circle of admirers will widen! This happy mixture of fine Kentucky Burleys has the body that men want, with a calm fragrance that raises you in the estimation of your friends... . «and yourself. Try it. You'll like it. Brown & Williamson Tobacco Corporation Louisville, Kentucky. Dept. R-45 Send for this FREE BOOKLET It’s 15%—anp rrs smpER young. But somehow Morleyism reeks all over his writing. True, Linklater has a considerable flair for telling a story. He has lots of good red blood ressure, he has a raft of book knowl- Which is his shortcoming. If he didn’t know so much about the great authors of history and wrote the simple things he saw, or straight adventure ter off. As it is, h f as a dandy little sati and wit—a self-assumed inheritor of the pants of Dickens, the vest of Cervan- the unterhiusen of Voltaire, the of Evelyn Waugh and the belch of ff. To these he tered patches of Shakespeare and the kitchen stove. It comes out very sophomorish, It sounds as if it had bee: itten by a man who mounted hi ¢ and rode off in all directions knew that he was doing it. tes, ho} 1 and Shor ‘ HE Shadow Before” by William Rollins, Jr. The “left” hand of John Dos Passos is seen movit pen of this young first novelist. A 1. bor novel, pink but not red, it prese a union square picture of all sides ¢ New England mill strike, tryir right down to elemental bras man fa and hu- Very much of the times; it has been written a few hu dred times in the past by our radical writers, what of it? Nobody has really read it yet. “In Sight of Eden” by Roger Vercel When you next swallow your cod liver oil pills better have a glance at this one. It'll make you think twice w you read of the brooding, Moby Dic ering drama that surrounds captu the emulsive cod in the Arctic wa wo fishermen tangle very melodramat ically in the plot, which makes the marvelous sea description that much more effective. You'd never think there was so much drama in a little would you now ? T Went to Pit College” by Lauren fillan, The horror story of the year ¢ author, a half pint lady ha ow news, went into a Pennsyly mining town for a “human intere porter” story. She got more t cute little bellyful and her story ta on a potency you'll never find in your Sunday Herald Tribune. re Robber Barons” by Matthew Josephson. The gory biographies of our great American rackete par- don—capitalists, from 1861 to 1901. s—ber “The Economy of Abundance” by Stuart Chase. If you want to kn what America is coming to socic ally and politically read Mr. Most of the ideas of his other boo incorporated in the Brain Trust pro- —Tep Smane. Ssuti¢, the installer takes his leave. He's been courteous, careful, quick. He knew just where the telephone should go. Just how to place it so that nothing should be marred. And now —“You're connected!” A few days ago, having a telephone in this house was only an » A hus- band talked it over with his wife. They decided to go ahead. Now the tele- phone is a reality —tangible, delight- ful, vitally important to the family. A new neighbor has been linked the millions of other telephone equipped homes that make America one neighborhood. Another household has discovered the security and conve- wil nce brought by the Bell System's unified service of communication. BELL TELEPHONE comicbooks.com