Judge, 1935-03 · page 30 of 40
Judge — March 1935 — page 30: 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.
am eG want to hear from the 10,000,000 new GEM RAZOR users and from < ALL men who shave with SAFETY BLADES Or OLD FASHIONED razors. — A FREE MEMBER- SHIP in The Shavy- Easy Foundation <<< provides you with the ONLY method of GUARANTEED shaving at a cost of than TWO CENTS A WEEK! * less YOU may begin this | amazing experience the minute you be- come a Member of THE SHAV-EASY | FOUNDATION! MAIL COUPON TO- DAY—smile in your mirror right while you're shaving. | : 2 3 2 i «4 $ z 2 nm s z 3 a ul CERTAINLY To PATRICIA, President, THE SHAV-EASY FOUNDATION, 68 Boston Post Road, Old Saybrook, Connecticut CERTAINLY, Patricia, you may tell me (by mail only) SHIP in th enjoy super-shaves for less than 2 cents a week. NAME___ — 2 (very plainiy, please) ADDRESS | myself in y | continental air HIGH HAT (Continued from page 27) And before we knew it we were in California. How could we tell? Well, for one thing, having enjoyed perfect weather all the way from the East it was foggy and raining. Accordingly, we dropped down on a town called Indio, just a newsreel’s throw from Palm Springs, where we waited for three hours while the California press agents shooed away the fog. UDDENLY it lifted and so did we. Through the San Gorgonio Pass nd down the San Bernardino valley, slipping between blue black moun- tains fringed with white whiskered clouds that overshadowed the cool, green valley below, in which date trees, orange groves, phoney architec- ture and impressive gas stations snugged snugly. Everywhere I looked | below men were running about with | huge blotters, blotting up the rain | puddles and cutting the telegraph wires lest the news of the heavy dew | get East. AY? so we arrived at Glendale, air- port. And as I stepped out of the plane I caught a mental picture of s to come, sitting be- fore a crackling fire, stroking my long gray beard and telling my six little wide-eyed grandchildren how grandpa had blazed the first southern trans- trail. Blazed it, at three miles a minute, sound asleep in a Pullman berth, And, oh yes, I must tell you about the fellow we saw in the Arizona desert. He was standing on a step- ladder looking upwards and waving his thumb on which there was a re- volving light that flashed intermi tently. He was the first airplane hitch-hiker. —Junce, Jr. Jost Your JQ Q. What important literary work was published re- cently in this country? Judge's Sixth Crossword Puzzle Book. . What does it contain? . Forty provoking puzzles by America's most tal- ented puzzle makers. . What is it good for? . For hours and hours of entertainment. For more fun than a Huey Long cabinet meeting. . Who is it good for? A. Night watchmen, Polar explorers, stratosphere flyers, bathosphere div- ers, brokers, congress- men, Eskimos, and you and you and you. . How much does it cost? . A dollar and fifty cents. . Isn't that a lot to pay for it? . No, no, a times no! thousand How would | go about getting a copy of such? By signing the little cou- pon below, getting on your skates and dashing to the nearest post of- fice. copies of Judge's | rossword Puzzle Book at $1.50 @ copy | i for which | enclose $ | | Name... 2nd, 3rd, 4th, and Sth | ble 1 comicbooks.com