Judge, 1934-10 · page 24 of 36
Judge — October 1934 — page 24: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1934-10. 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.
TAGE-FRIGHT? No, sir. Dirty work in the dressing room? No, sir. Two or three whiffs of that over- stale pipe and heavyweight tobacco did what fifty-seven opponents couldn't do... floored him! A good pipe, like a good athlete, should be kept in good condition. A few moments’ daily exercise with a pipe cleaner and a steady diet of mild, gentle Sir Walter Raleigh Smoking Tobacco will keep any man’s briar right in the very pink. We think we've found a milder combination of fra- grant Kentucky Burleys. We think we've discovered a cooler, slower- burning blend. A large and growing army of contented pipe-smokers think so, too. Try one tin of Sir Walter and see what you think! Browa & Williamson Tobacco Corporation Louisville, Keatucky. Dept.R-q10. Send for this FREE BOOKLET Sooner ot Later Your Favoute Jotacrr It’s 15$#—AND IT'S MILDER JUDGE ON THE BENCH | (Continued from page 14) Naturally the tennis players like you and me know this not to be true. That | tennis is a darned hard game guaranteed | to push the energy of a physically sharp player to the limit. at it has never become in- fested with certain nts with white | livers who threaten to make it so. When } ulversity , Is; when their severest smashes keep get- | ting returned, they no Ic er grit their teeth and dig in harder: they slump down in a little white puddle on the fi a dead faint nglen, of when her first defeat What it did for her T wouldr She didn't win the match; s ay only gave the I mean fall on Compare it sport. Much more ¢ foothall, es into yet aman is when a large cleat with a size 12 hoot attached comes fying in between his brows. W1 At soccer? ntally twenty-two men football : I have three offici, i ve twenty- | nen play ter and MISTRESS PEPYS’ (Continued from page 8) to step | whilst Twas giving me about my literary activitie what to my emh: how a zany ntanece had asked Edith Wharton how she came to write all those books and short. stories. adding, “I could never find the Which minded me of the shipboard flap- per who t rset: Maugham that she J elf ied to write but had heen unsuccessful, and then mused, “It ust be a knack Out to a great din night after which we fell to ord! the chairs were so ito that T was at some pains to keep my me, and had lost sixteen doll: ore TL could eis nought so ortable ar . methinks, as mless chair, and al I do not go so far as the ancient Romans and their sofas, if | had my way, even the seats and a dining-table would be fauteui ‘or not only would arm- rests an padding render> eating a greater pleasure, but they would enable one, when dinner partners started in on the New Deal or their prize hogs, to lean well back out of the alert. isiting New York means living at the HOTEL MONTCLAIR In the new smart center of New York Lerington Ave., 49th to Sth Sts. e Come to New York now. For this is the time of year when New York is at its gayest! The Great White Way is ableze with lights. The theatrical world hes scored hit after hit. The proudest names in opera are singing at the Metro- politan, The shops ere crowded with temptations. And when you come, make your trip completely successful by liv- ing in the new smart center of New York at the Hotel Montcla The Montclair is modern, at- tractive, comfortable. It is con- venient to all railroad terminals, to the fashionable shops, to the theatres and to Redio City. And the service is in the finest tradi- tions of the Continent. 800 Outside Rooms With Bath, Shower, Radio $2.50 Double from $3.50 Dine and Dance here every evening in the city’s smart- est restaurant CORAL ROOM Enlarged . , more beautiful. Fea- turing a famous orchestra and stars of the entertainment world. comicbooks.com