Judge, 1934-12 · page 30 of 37
Judge — December 1934 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1934-12. 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.
Speak FRENCH «.. in 3 months «+.» of German, Spanish, Italian, Rus- sian or any of the 23 languages offered by Linguaphone Institute. Thousands of men and women are finding the Linguaphone Method the simplest, easiest, and quickest way to speak fluently and read understandingly. 150 Language Teachers of the leading universities—Columbia, Oxford, Cambridge, The Sorbonne, Bonn, etc.—made Linguaphone courses. They are your teachers, always at your command, in your own home. THE modern man and woman must speak another language, in order to feel and understand the thrilling pa- geant which the twentieth century is unfolding. . . . Sinclair Lewis, Emil Ludwig, H. G. Wells, Alexander Woollcott, and thousands of others have mastered another language by the Linguaphone Method . . . right at home. YOU CAN ALSO—no special gift for languages is necessary. You learn as easily at 45 as at 12! Some of our best students are folks past 60 years, and children just over 6. Send for FREE book Get the complete story of this world- famous language method endorsed by 11,500 universities, colleges, semina- ries, high schools and foremost edu- cators, Linguaphone Home-Study Courses GERMAN RUSSIAN DUTCH ENGLISH GREEK SPANISH FRENCH ITALIAN SWEDISH POLISH LAT CHINESE JAPANESE CZECH IRISH ESPERANTO PERSIAN BENGALI Call for Free Demonstration at Our New Audition Salon LINGUAPHONE INSTITUTE 59 Rockefeller Center New York Tel.: Circle 7-0831 LINGUAPHONE INSTITUTE 59 Rockefeller Center, New York City fe send me your Free Bon ip Pay as You Learn Plan.” Nemo Address cy I Wish to Speak and windows, MISTRESS PEPYS’ (Continued from page 7) she did produce two five- dollar gold pieces, vouchsafing that she had been reading the public prints and feared that she would be apprehended by the police if they were found in her possession, and when she confided that she had had them for over ten years, I did tell her that there was no doubt in | my mind that she was a hoarder, but that I did not think President Roosevelt or the Treasury Department would take the matter seriously enough to incar- cerate her, for I do verily believe the poor through bars. wretch saw herself peeking Moreover, I assured her that if she never served us brocoli again without use all our influence in her behalf should occasion est flight of stairs that ever T saw in m: life in order to reach our loge and I w obliged to take the last six treads on my hands and knees, causing remark that had I not kicked so hard at the slats of my cradle in my infantile mirth, my toes might now be in better shape. So toa night club to meet Reddy Hallett and old Marge Boothby from her travels, and Reddy was so bored with the whole business, in es- pecial the musical reprises, that he was Hollandaise sauce, we should arise for it. Some of my cronies in for bridge this afternoon, and I was mighty shocked at the number of cigarettes they smoked, there being one point at which I feared we should have to call for aid from the street cleaning department if aught was to be done about the ash receivers. with Samuel, and then to see “Madame DuBarry,” at the cinema, finding it lav- ish, jerky, shall T sit again at these picture palaces in any but the ch forasmuch as we h A quiet dinner and incoherent, and never cap first floor sea’ 1 to ascend the long- as n to back | obliged to confide to me privately that | fully. be suitable?” if smoke gets in your eyes, lobster gets in your teeth. Last Resource HE Bright Young Thing entered the clothier’s shop and approached the counter. “I want a present for an old gentle- man for Christmas,” she said. “Yes, ma’am,” replied the clerk. “Something nice in ties?” ‘No; he has a beard,” the girl ex- | plained. “H'm,” the clerk murmured thought- Perhaps a fancy vest might “No; it’s a long beard,” came back the answer. The clerk sighed wearily. “Well, how about carpet slippers?” —ANSWERS 28 enjoy a/ °* «Jay mas and new year in new york at the HOTEL MONTCLAIR Lexington Ave, at 49th Street in the new, smart center of New York * Make this the merriest Christ- mas and New Year you ever en- joyed! Celebrate in New York, the world’s capital of Gaiety. Broadway is ablaze with lights! © theatres are crowded with pleasure seck s. Shops are Wed with gifts. And the beautiful Casino Montelair at Hotel Montelair will be the un- and a per. rtainment, jal midnight s Of course to make your holi- day completely successful, LIVE as well as DANCE in the new smart center of New York at the Hotel Montclair. The Montclair is modern, at- tractive, comfortable. It is convenient to all railroad ter- to the shops, to the theatres and to Radio City. And th in the finest tradit Continent. minals, fashionable service is s of the * 800 OUTSIDE ROOMS with BATH, SHOWER, RADIO Single from $2.50 Double from $3.50 VATIONS ARE RECOMMENDED comicbooks.com |