Judge, 1918-10-12 · page 31 of 32
Judge — October 12, 1918 — page 31: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1918-10-12. 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.
Vith ry sur \merica o much you to ladies lots to cen out ne not it write 20 and help. remain Aerien some ork f your esp ruld be ations, trying to the ase of JR he 18 puvent GE, ¢ re une ird’hu le bie inaitre ungais ruven Chars bitant , deux ssi, et > sovur rable ; me onvoi October 12, 1918 a TE a TY $100,000,000,000 represents only a tithe of the cost in life a champions of right and justice knowledge That this priceless knowlec ely digested, and presented in immec Every American’s Reference Library | ‘This famous 16-inch Shelf of Reference Books weighs only 16 Pounds, including the Booke Wi y Imerican’s conveniently at your elbow, on library table ce desk, there is no more searching around in isty corners of the library shelves for some ponderous tome when you want to tisfy yourself about a fact our political hin the reach of all, the memory to. loc and ke industries of towns in tates and in foreign count down i smallest, and industry, will bx rman i the re aintances as Yet all these ¢ urs at an outl, IGNORANCE—GREATEST OF ALL HANDICAPS Conscious Ignorance Makes a Man Ml at Ease; Unconscious Ignor- ance Makes Him Ridiculous When discussing the war with people of education, do you suffer embarrassment when it comes to the pronunciation of the names of French cities like Soissons, Chateau-Thierry, Amiens? Every dAmer- ican’s Reference Library will put you at eascin the bestof company, no matter what the subject under discussion, because it gives you the pronu tion of all proper and common names, and tells you just the things every well-informed person must know things. Whatever the nature the subjec mediate interest Huns, ead Laws, Hu manist Hindenbur Hyp ans; Joffre, Jansen ists, Janizaric rae z2aTOni: which al hing understandable uction of human labor to be collected, classitic BRUNSWICK SUBSCRIPTION CO. 1116 Brunswick Bldg. and labor, in brains and blood, of the knowledge we inherit to-day. The things we enjoy that lighten the burdens of life, that add to its ‘pleasures, that have made us a free peo; { social systems, our literature, art, science, industries—are the result of gained through ages of slow development at an incalculable cost in life and treasure. might be wi aims of the publishers who have caused this vast a accessible form, at an unprecedentedly loz by all, and usable by all, are the } price, in i Takes away all thought of drudgery in connection with the pursuit of knowl- When fact-findin edg made so easy, “looki up” in the Encyclopedia, or in the Dictionary, be- comes a pleasure instead of a bore. American's Refer mber our limited Ke J. 10-12-18 New York City comicbooks.com