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Judge, 1934-12 · page 25 of 37

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Judge — December 1934 — page 25: Judge, 1934-12

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GLOLITE Flameless & Windproof Cigarette Lighter A Matchless Gift for Any Smoker Smart as it is efficient. Just hold your cigarette against the lighting tip, puff and smoke— that’s all. No odor, taste, or scorch, GLOLITE operates without wheels, flints or other moving parts. Lights in the strongest wind for there's no flame to : blow out. Besides—flameless lighting, prevents stains on teeth and fingers. GLOLITE DE LUXE (illus- trated) in black and chrome, is $5.00; without key chain $3.50. GLOLITE is also available in $1.00 and $2.50 models. Available at all leading depart- ment stores and smart shops, or direct, by using coupon below. Fluid obtainable everywhere is 25c for a two-ounce bottle. Guaranteed One Year Unconditionally If lighter ever fails for any reason, it should be returned to us with ten cents in postage for repair or re placement. ) PLATINUM PRODUCTS $0... Ne. S21 Fitth Ave. New lor. Black, Red, "Yellow, Blue, Green, Wi hite, or combinations. | | | {Platinum Products Co. Inc., | | 521 Fifth Ave, New York, N. | | Enclosed is $ for which : please send me the following: | ..De Luxe Glolite $5.00 | ithout chain $3.50 de t Glolite $2.50% | Glolite Midget $1.00* to | oChe 1 i] t BOOKS | (Continued from page 1) | cent Van Gogh, the Dutch Master and | probably the burliest and goofiest of all paint slingers. It is a juicy life full of | glaring gargantuities and incredible | drama and passion, but Mr. Stone ap- proaches it with all the restraint and wit of a True Confessioner. But don’t | let this notice keep you off. Van Gogh's | life was as impressionistic as his goofy art. I EX STOUT is another gent who has gone straight. Up to his neck in libido a few years ago, the defeatists could hardly wait for his next little sex number to appear for them to commit suicide over the pages thereof. Sex having become a chore in recent days, his books happily disappeared from this blue world. Can you imagine reading a Rex Stout in the depth of the depres- sion? Now we have a New Deal Rex Stout, and guess what he is writing? Mysteries. And pretty good ones, too, judging from his first, “Fer de Lance.” | It only goes to show. | B*. LL means read Ike Hoover's Forty-two Years in the White | House.” If you missed the reminis cences of the best usher in the world this side of Roxy’s when they appeared at a nickel a throw don't miss them this time. They are the most fascinating small talk about our recent Lincolns and turn the White House into a sort of next door neighbor’s place. ND another “by-all-means” for the kiddies: “Hansi” by our own Herr Bemelmans, who is not only a most literate child writer but a sterling illus- trator and master of non-nauseating whimsey. —Tep SHANE. | State vs. Pen LL right, you guys, snap into a huddle for your final instruc- tions, I want to refresh your minds on some very important inside facts that | our scouts found out for us. You, Bill, | steer your men clear of that left side. You will find nothing but veterans there, men who know the game, and | they are watching you closely. Our | only hope for success, then, is through the weaker right wall, and that’s the ce to slip through. Take that rig d out at the start, and keep him ou ¢ you men get into an open field, light out. If you get any bad breaks, fight to turn them into good ones. The time for talk is over; the time for action fine. the warden. this will be the most succe: in the history of this priso: 23 Scatter now, Do just as I told you, and 1 break | | is here!! Are you going to try? That's | fellers, here comes | AMERICA on tl? AMERICANS get moro out of the telephone than any other people in the world. Partly it is the pioneer qualities. We are rest- because we still havo less, inquisitive, ambitious, sociable, ingenious, enterprising. The tele- phone is adapted to us and we are adapted to the telephone. But an- other reason why the average Amer- ican uses the telephone more is that there are more telephones to use— more than thirteen million in the Bell System alone. And the service is better. Your telephone grows in value the more you use it—the more you rely on it to help you through the day's activities, comicbooks.com