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Judge, 1921-01-15 · page 28 of 32

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Judge — January 15, 1921 — page 28: Judge, 1921-01-15

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A Close-Up of South America What is the condition of things generally in the big continent south of the Equator? What are the chances of doing business down there? What are the opportunities for a young man in the big towns of Brazil, Argentina, Peru, Bolivia? How much civili- zation exists down the Amazon, in the foothill cities of the Andes? Do the people love us or do they dislike us? These and a hundred other questions everyone wants to hear answered are in the first of the series of vivid adventure stories told by the man assigned by LESLIE'S WEEKLY to visit South America, photograph the worth-while things in towns and wilderness and tellthe whole truth, nothing but the truth about our little known and less un- derstood neighbors on the other side of the Panama Canal. It’s Great Stuff! Don’t fail to buy a copy of this issue of “the oldest illustrated weekly news- paper in the United States.”’ LESLIE’S WEEKLY January 15TH NuMBER On Sale Everywhere January 12th =, While the Home Bruise Heals By Bexyaty De Casserts ERF'S ws that’s fit to print! How to live to be one hundred and forty still buck-and-wing around ¢ Thompson in his new book, , Page & Co.) es us sad before we've real start? What makes the man of forty think he's over the fence and out? What makes the of thirty-five begin to rouge up for the last ner in the dining-car? “Live and Be Young” (Dou- ue? Lack of self-indulgence. Fear of letting lo duces fat Storing up money in t The way to have and to h > to Prof. Thompson, is throw your hat over the mill, sow your wild oats and keep sowing ‘em, put money in your purse, and see that it doesn’t stay there, not the nter your rd eternal Havanas but the city), eat late dinner ht on Today These are the main anti-Blue Law amendments to t you should put through with- out the advice or consent of anybody's Senate And, above all, be a good mixer. Join a smart set The poor are always old. Poverty knows not youth. Live and let live! And before you know it you'll be a hundred, and rong. \ book for all small-towners. your constitution th A Dictionary of Mars iting along so well in our Martian ar Rice Burroughs has written a dictionary of slang in use on that bit of swimming red-eye which hovers right over. the Aquarium at an angle of five-eighths of a degree Maid of Mars” (A. C. McClurg & It is appended as a glossary. It is the most fa cinating thing in the book, and I am adding it to my youngest kid’s language course. \ Bar Comas on Mars is a Jeddak of Warhoon. is an earth descendant of the Sandjack of Novibazar and cousin pro-german to the Akhoond of Swat. He \aanthor is a dead city on Mars. Certain blue laws got into the red eye and put the city in the ashcantine-goat cycl \ Zode is a Martia in in fifteen of our minutes 19 work on one of his canals r hours late in getting io his office. all young \ Woola is a Barsoomian calot. It has long hair, and walks like a Zat. “T prefer to die standing,” says Thuvia on page 231 as the Kadabra Kuks broke into her pea-green palace on the Bhuze Canal. “The Kadabra Kuks! ‘They raised their Kad- kazas— (To be continued in the “ Movies.””) hour. An hour on Mars is Thus a Martian y often be four This keeps them wears undie Pat's Slippers wits Max Beerbohm set out to write a life of his brother, Herbert Beerbohm Tree, the famous English actor, he asked everybody to help him out. (“Herbert Beerbobm Tree”; E. P. Dutton & Co.) Edmund addon Chambers, W. L. Courtney, Lady Tree and Louis N. Parker, among others, contributed Now, among these “others” was the famous Bernard Shaw, the Charlie Chaplin of words. You, of course, may wager a six-gallon crock full of ra- dium to a revenue agent’s oath that G. B. S. will alway’ put over something unusual and eccentrically ic on the public. And he does in this fasci- nating book. There isa scene in in the heroine is Tree, who was re gmalion,” by Shaw, where- wher slippers in his face. ¢ Pygmalion, with Mrs. Pat Campbell in the ling female réle, was un aware of the latter's athletic skill. But the wily Bernard, who was directing the rehearsal, knew she sure-shot Pat. So he lay low and said nothin’! Mrs. Pat, who had evidently wrestled with the servant problem all morning, did not arrive at the theatre in the best of humor, so when the slipper- hurling episode came on she let the unsuspecting Herbert have both of them smack in the face with all her force. Curtain. Riot call. G. B. S. titters in his beard. This boo but is really a history of social and theatrical life in the England of Tree's times. th Draen by Dox Heo 1 co To THE MOVIES NOW ALMOST EAGERLY, WITH MY FAMILY ON ONE SIDE AND THREE STENOGRAPHERS ON THE OTHER comicbooks.com