comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1919-10-11 · page 32 of 36

Judge — October 11, 1919 — page 32: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — October 11, 1919 — page 32: Judge, 1919-10-11

A restored page from Judge, 1919-10-11. 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.

Disease-Prevention is Patriotic Defense By C, HOUSTON GOUDISS Dibluher, The Forecast; Founder, The Perecast School of Cookery; Food Director, The Mother's Magazine, and National Lecturer, We are a powerful nation with possibili- ties for progress and helpfulness which are limited only by the HEALTH of the men and women who are American! National health is the one solid foundation for national wealth. No war can be su cessfully fought with sick soldiers. No peace can be profitable maintained with sick workers, The way to get wealth, individually or nationally, is to get well individually and nationally: The way to keep wealth is to keep well. The way to keep well is to PREVENT disease nce has shown that nearly all disease is preventable. Science also has shown that the surest way to prevent 75 percent of the diseases which keep us weak and inefficient is to keep open the colon— the body’s main highway. Heretofore this has been largely a matter of dosing with powerful medicines which, tho they may effect temporary relief, do 60 at the cost of injuring or overworking other organs. There was no way of fighting the widespread foe CONSTIPATION without some measure of self-injury ; some lowering of the reserve forces all the more needed because Constipation already had eaten into body resistance. Then came Nujol—a relief without a comeback! Nujol is a colorless, odorless, tasteless liquid which softens the impacted mass, loosens the grip it has on the walls of the intestinal channel and lubricates the NOT a medicine and not a particle of it remains in the body or in any way wan or tihaue. Tt ig abso lutely harmless, And tt sot only. ¢ relieve Constipation, but will prevent its recurrence. This means that Nujol is a powerful Weapon in the great. war we must wage against disease in this land, for until Constipation is conquered, there can be no such thing as a healthy America Nujol ts sold only in sealed bottles bearing the Nujot Warning: 371i jn sate represented to be “the same as Nujol”. Beware of products ts may suffer from substitutes. Nujol for Constipation AEG US. PAT. OF SICKNESS PREVENTION Nujol Laboratories, staxoarp o1t. co. (xEW JFRSEY), $0 Broa BE Constipation la pregnancy and nursing F TWIG 18 BENT tion in infaney and ehildhoo 3 OF NEGLECT” fon aa a cause of piles “AS THE SIADOWS LE! NorTHe! Constipation in old ag Name Addrett, nccnccocss cocess THs attractive picture, in full colors, mounted on a heavy mat, || x 14, teady for the frame, will be sent post- paid for The Man in the Moon * JUDGE 225 Fifth Avenue 25 Cents ART PRINT DEPARTMENT New York City JUDGE A Plagiarized Poem T sometimes happens that one meets an old acquaintance whose identity for the m ment is lost in the effect which a new hat pro- duces. Jupcr pleads guilty to a lapse of the faculty of recognition and apologizes to Arthur iterman for publishing in its department of reprints on September 20 a poem with the titl “The Baby, the Bunny and the Prophylact Pup,” which was clipped from The Watch on thy Rhine, published by soldiers of the A. E. I in Germany, and which bore the name as author of Major R. S. McKenzie. This major ought to be court-martialed, for he is plagiarist. This amusing poem, written by Arthur Gu terman, was collected in his volume entitled “The Laughing Muse,” published in 1015 by Harper & Brothers. Its original publicatio was nine years earlier, in The Woman's He Companion, for July, 1906, with the tith “Strictly Germ Proof.” The poem has been stolen by more than one conscienceless person and published erroncous as original by more than one reputable jour: A. Francis Walker put his name to it and it was printed by the New York World as original with him so me time ago, under the title “The Modern W "Punch, of London, recently printed it as original with one of its contributors under the title “A Germless Eden”; and it has had other adventures at the hands of perso not entitled to it in publications which assumed that they were first giving a good thing to th world. Prop Plot for New York ‘Knock-out” 1 dressing table. 1 desk. Several chairs. One boudoir cap. One set negligée. One pajamas. One bed. I it or owe Drown by Cursten I. Ganoe “Out, Damnep Spot!” Custis (643 23~