Judge, 1936-01 · page 36 of 36
Judge — January 1936 — page 36: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1936-01. 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.
THE TOWERS OF MANHATTAN froma new angle—New York's new Tri- borough Bridge, which is rapidly being completed. In the foreground: Howard Hougland, McClintic-Marshall engineer, wearing the picturesque engincers’ “hard hat,” a necessary protection on big jobs. “An engineer's life is packed with action,” he says, “It calls for physical fitness and energy to stand the strain. When my pep is at low ebb, there’s nothing like a Camel, for smoking a Camel chases away all signs of tiredness. I always get a ‘lift with a Camel. I also prefer Camel's good taste WINTER SPORTS TAK RGY TOO. But to enjoy the fun you have to be fit. “That has alot to do with why I prefer Camels,” says Margaret Lynam (heft). “1 know that athletes approve of Camels, as they do not affect their wind of nerves. That goes for me too. And Camels renew my flow of energy.” “TAM A STEEL WORKER on the } | COSTLIER Triborough Bridge,” says Ben Parsons : 2 | TOBACCOS! (above). “When tired, I get a ‘lift’ with a Camel. Camels have all the full flavor anybody could want.” TUNE IN! Camel Caravan, with Walter O'Keefe, Deane Janis, Ted Husing, Glea Gray and the Casa Loma Orchestra. Tuesday and Thursday—9 p.m. E.S.T., 8 p.m. C.S.T., 9.30 p.m. M.S. T., 8.30 p.m, P. S, T.-over WABC- Columbia Network. @ Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS —Turkish and Domestic — than any other popular brand. (Signed) R. J. ReyNotps Tosacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C. © 1995, R. 2, Reynolds Tub. Co comicbooks.com