Judge, 1935-03 · page 29 of 40
Judge — March 1935 — page 29: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1935-03. 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.
.. SEE RED-HEADED | PICKANINNIES Yes, and they have a real Irish brogue and names like ** Kelly’? and “Reilly”! There’s a beach of black sand, too, at Montserrat... a Hindu temple in Trinidad «a buried city in Marti- nique. And these are only a Sew of the unusual things you can see on ESS e MosT UNUSUAL INDIES cAuIses TO TH! 1S PORTS. ..TO ST. THOMAS, | ST. CROIX, ST. MARTIN, ST. KITTS, ANTIGUA, MONTSERRAT, GUADELOUPE, DOMINICA, MAR- TINIQUE, ST. LUCIA, BARBADOS, ST. VINCENT, GRENADA, TRINI- DAD, DEMERARA (S.A.) Furness leads the way to these fascinating, different islands. Be sure to e to th fullest under Furness auspii with Furness luxury, attent Furness stewards and Furness meals on the popular cruising- liners “Fort St. Georg: and **Nerissa.”” All modern facilities for sports, leisure and good-living-at-sea. An experienced Furness Crui Director is aboard, heading up a le program of cruise activi- ties—contests, bridge tourna- ments, dances, horse-racing, theatricals. And of play-spaces ... and swimming deck pools! 22-25 DAYS '150., as low as 5G avay Sailings twice weekly from New York Apply, to local TOURIST AGENT or Furness West Indies Line, 34 Whiteball St., (Where Broadway begins); 565 Fifth Ave., New York. Phone BOwling Green 9-7800. She said, cette.” Bertha, then,” I said. “And if you don’t mind will you hustle it a bit because I feel the need of a few quick ones before I turn on the sleep.” “Mr. Birdbrain,” she replied, “I've heard all about you. The R.N. after my name means registered nurse Also, it doesn’t mean that I am going to crawl out on the wing with you tonight and hold your pulse in the moonlight.” “My name is not Georg- 1D with these unkind words she began busying herself transform- ing the sections into uppers and low- ers, And not even my sprightly ob- servation that even the lower berths were some four thousand feet up in the air seemed to have any softening effect. Once in my berth T did a W. C. Fields trying to undress. Somehow it was familiar and I didn’t feel badly about having no ground underneath. The berth was long and comfortable. T adjusted the fresh air ventilators and the warm air control beautifully (there was none of that tussling with stubbern train windows). The sound-proofing of the plane had turned the roaring motors into a Wright-Cyclone lullaby and I fell asleep among my shoes with my head in the clothes hammock. At Tucson, Arizona, IT half waked just as dawn was breaking but dozed off again to hear Miss R.N. calling, “Rise and shine, my friend, and get in among the orange juices and coffee We're coming into Phoenix and will be there in a jiff.” So I unpajamed and enFinchleyed myself and we slid down on Arizona in what I thought was a thick fog. Which it wasn’t. It was only the steam from a thousand coffee pots rising on the morning air. We made a safe landing in the Chase & San- born mist, had breakfast and back in our Condor quickly. berths had now disappeared everything was strictly club car. were The and HE next zoom took us over mountains and we felt tremendous power from looking down on the sleep- ing giants which seemed strange from the perspective above—entirely differ- ent from any view from a train or mo- tor car window. I felt so powerful, in fact, I even tried to best La R.N. in lip battle. But evidently the moun- tains had given her the same feeling. So I soon thought better of it and fell to wondering how much bigger our horizons would be in generations to come thanks to this bird’s eye view one gets from cloud scraping. (Next page, please) Pz) FIFTY YEARS OF PROGRESS In 1885, fifty years ago, the Amer- ican Telephone and Telegraph Company was formed. There were few telephones then and service was slow, uncertain and limited to separate com- munities. Today, from your own Bell telephone, you can talk with 17,000,000 other telephones in this country and most of those in foreign lands. This year marks also the Twen- tieth Anniversary of the opening of the first transcontinental line, from New York to San Francisco, and the Eighth Anniversary of the opening of transatlantic service. Further improvements will come through Bell research, System manufacturing and unified operation. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM comicbooks.com