Judge, 1920-12-25 · page 30 of 33
Judge — December 25, 1920 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1920-12-25. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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“What I Think of the Newspapers” A smashing arraign- ment of the unfairness and irresponsibility of the press of the country in dealing with men in the public eye. This article is written by fT Ogden Armour who is President of the Chicago firm of Armour & Company, | the largest packing concern in the world. Mr. Armour says: “You may turn to almost any newspaper in the country and find that a fair number of the most important stories of the day are colored in the text to suit the policy of the paper.” This is one of the big features in LESLIE’S | WEEKLY December 25th issue i| On Sale December 21st Why Publishers Die Young By Besyaws De Cassenes ts the Grape methine to say. I never pick up a book by a Latin writer with- out feel am going to read some Why? Well, Lombroso told us—and Herbert Spencer confirmed it the corpuscles in a Latin’s blo« pinate the umpteenth part of a second faster hose in the blood-vessels of an Anglo-Saxon, a ‘euton, or a Philadel; Why do the I quote the g dry, never was says he was raised on Chianti. Cicero says hi nal trade was pounding the grape with his baby standpoint; but I advise you, O arid Ame hustle right over to chapter IX, entitled is Pancredo comes out flat-footed f nd alcohol for rheumatism! >rohibi- beer and Good boy Tancredo ‘crodo. by wireless Lauder shakes hands with Tancredo and Blasco Ibifiez And did you ever get a niftier bi sense then this: “Let those drink who wish todo and let those refrain who do not wish 1t; let cach side carry on its pro} as it sees fit, but let us make no law dictating to cach person his men| Deeper wisdom hath nc like original Americ in this book that is wort Latin “kick” in our life I salute Tancrede and the Latins! A Regular Dog's Lit ONSIDER the doe! From Cerberu ig mastitf who watches 80 faithfully at the gates of Hades to sce that no landlord breaks out, to that dog that became immor- tal by listening to his master’s voice on the phono- graph the history of sub-human loyalty summed up in that word Dc Sub-human, did 1 say? Beg your pardon, old Bobs. Bobs is my pal, and when I take my pen in hand he always curls u paper. He saw me write can you? as plainly as a human being indeed, the highest form of human intelligence (satisfactory grunt from Bobs and vio- his tail). If you don’t believe it thomas L. Masson has compiled on ur esteemed contempoary on But we flatly deny that Mr. Masson loves dogs better than ourselves. ‘The fact that Mr. Masson never said so proves it. ‘This is a great book on dogs, and we would say the greatest conceivable if it were not for a little secret we are letting out to all dog-lovers—that Junee is thinkin, ompiling a dog-book that will compel Mr. Masson copy de luxe. Mean- while this the greatest book ever yet. (“Dogs from ‘Life, compiled by Thomas L. Masson. Doubleday, Page & Company.) THERE are tw “thrill One is produced by n that thrill and sing like charged tel s in a windstorm. The other kind of “thniler” is produced by the man who has studied the me 's of thrill and imi- ates the first man. The man who puts his own nerve-thrill into his work all k Poe, De Maupassant, Balvac. * es You a story that toils like to horrily yo who doesn't * urer, not a p< Robert M. McBride). latter's short. storice, translated from the French, are perfect bits of craftsmanship in pat horror and “my say in the but when you have I for the gc story you must feel you are a murd t ghost story you must have scen believe in ghosts. You can't fake these exy You must be born to it even as Falstaff wa n to the bow! or as Don Quixote was born to * gine M. Revell sitting down after t in his Pocantic with a fount hand and a wad c bond paper before him and saying, * I'm going to make you all thrill in three th d six hundred and eighty-four words, ‘They're off!” It is fine carpenter work, and although he is a Frenchman, | must say that our own American Edgar Poe had it all over him Regarding Editorial, Subscription and peckiptomecl Matters SUBSCRIPTION | OFFICES Persoms representing themselves as comnccted with JUDGE # be asked to produce credenival {DVERTISING OFFICES: Rronewick Bids Avenue. New Vork; Marquette Bldg. Chic a Heary Whig. Seatthe. (Rates $1.5 25 Fifth iite Bide. CHANGE IN ADDRESS: Subscriber <t sent in 2 change. EDITORIAL OFFICE: 235 Filth Avenue, New York City jokes and To Contributors: Juve will be xh by post= ‘butions should always be accom pani ura, Hf unaccepted. Entered at the lished weekly. b New Vork Secretary. 2 a Printed by the Schweinler Press. Address all correspondence to JUDGE 225 Fifth Avenue New York City