Judge, 1937-02 · page 44 of 45
Judge — February 1937 — page 44: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1937-02. 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.
“Tll back that to the limit,” says Miss Dorothy Kilgallen, spunky globe-circling girl reporter AROUND THE WORLD IN 2 DAYS. “It was a breath- less dash,” said Miss Dorothy Kilgallen, famous itl reporter, back at work (above) after finishing her assignment to circle the world by air in record- breaking time. (Right) Her exciting arrival at the Newark Airport. “I snatched meals anywhere,” she says, “ate all kinds of food. But Camels helped me keep my digestion tuned up. I'll bet on them any time—for mildness, for their delicate flavor, and for their cheery ‘lift.’ Camels set me right!” Hea" nerves and good digestion enable you to glide over trying incidents and get the full enjoyment out of working, eating, and playing. No wonder that so many who make their mark in the world today are steady Camel smokers! At mealtimes—enjoy Camels for the aid they give digestion. By speeding up the flow of digestive fluids and increasing alkalinity, Camels contribute to your sense of well-being. my digestion,” says B.C. Simpson, Between meals—get a “lift” with a Camel. mm oil-well shooter. “I find Camels put Camels don’t get on the nerves, or irritate a heap more joy into eating.” j the throat. Join the vast army of smokers /, fat who say: “Camels set you right!” CM Sie Copyright, 1997, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Caruiins “MY BUSINESS MAKES me careful about COSTZLILR Camels are made from finer, MORE EXPENSIVE TOBACCOS TOBACCOS —Turkish and Domestic— than any other popular brand comicbooks.com