Now almost impossible to find, two Philadelphia-published Column Reviews, each at 96 pages. These for September and November 1937, volume 5, #1 & #3. Each has a little wear to wrappers, but are otherwise very good copies. This monthly was edited by Daniel G. Redmond and featured selected reprints of notable newspaper and syndicated columns and articles from all over the country, and from some foreign sources. These newspapers, large and small, have by now almost all gone out of business or changed hands. See cover photo for complete contents. Some highlights from these numbers include:

Louisville-Courier editor and award-winning journalist Herbert Agar's "City Life Stifles Sterility."

Robert Van Gelder on Walter Durant's "One Life, One Kopeck." From the New York Times.

John Heffernan, from the Brooklyn Eagle, on Teddy Roosevelt.

Hugh Johnson on Mayor La Guardia.

Dorothy Thompson's "Concerning Vermont."

Heywood Broun's "Betting on the Horses."

John Kieran on the Washington Senators' Clark Griffith.  

Carl Van Doren, from a Boston newspaper on Jean Giono's "The Song of the World."  

Yankee great "Lou Gehrig on the Radio: Cigarette and Cereal Advertisements Are Better if They Are in Writing." Apparently, the Iron Man had some radio broadcasrting shortcomings. From the Boston Post.

Isabel Bacon La Follette, the first Lady of Wisconsin, from the Madison Progressive on the "W.P.A."  

Ernie Pyle visiting Alaska for the Scripps-Howard Syndicate, offers "At 50 degrees below--the Dogs' Tongues Freeze."

Dorothy Thompson, then married, sort of, to Sinclair Lewis reports from the NY Herald-Tribune on "President ]Roosevelt] and the Budget."

Walter Lippmann on "The Reaction Against the C.I.O."

Numerous other poems, stories, reports, etc.