Judge, 1937-05 · page 36 of 37
Judge — May 1937 — page 36: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1937-05. 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.
HEAR JACK OAKIE’S COLLEGE A gala show with “President’? Jack Oakle in person. Fun and music by Holly- wood comedians and singing stars! Tucs- days—8:30 pm E.S.T. 9:30 pm E.D.S.T.), 7:30 pm C.S.T., 6:30 pm M.S.T., 5:30 pm over WABC- Columbia Network. ‘WELCOMES A“‘LIFT.” “I have my hands full,” remarks Mrs. Richard Heming- way, housewife. “When I feel tired, I smoke a Camel and get the grand- est ‘lift’ in energy.” What a power-line “trouble-shooter” is up against Tafft works in a maze of high-voltage wires. Around him—11,000 volts lurk. A tense job that will test digestion if anything will! Here's Al's comment: “Sure! Working among high-voltage cables isn’t calculated to help one’s di- gestion. But mine doesn’t give me trouble. I smoke Camels with my meals and after. Camels set me right!” Make Camels a part of your dining. Smoking Cam- els speeds up the flow of digestive fluids — alkaline fluids. Being mild, Camels are gentle to your throat— better for steady smo! PRIZES HEALTHY NERVES. Fred Ja- coby, Jr., National Outboard Cham- pion, says: “I smoke Camels regularly, They’re mild—and never get on my nerves.” Copyright, 1937, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N.C. COSTLIER TOBACCOS-—camels are made from finer, MORE EX- PENSIVE TOBACCOS— Turkish and Domestic—than any other popular brand. comicbooks.com