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Judge, 1921-06-11 · page 34 of 36

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LESLIE’S Now on Sale Printed in an easy-to- read size and contain- ing the work of the best authors obtain- able. Every subject new and timely. No money will be spared in making this Magazine the best Weekly in America. LESLIE'S will have the following for fre- |] | quent contributors :-— Arthur Ruhl who is well known for Special Articles on Timely Subjects. Hereward Carrington, Ph.D. tamous writer on Science. W. E. Hill known everywhere for his Newspaper Illustrated fea- ture “Among Us Mortals.” Albert Rosenthal of Philadelphia, who is painting a series of portraits of famous Americans, ex- clusively for LESLIE'S. “Your Dad Always Reads It” and you had better ask your Newsdealer to reserve your copy, Now on Sale by all Live Wire Newsdealers Fifteen Cents a | became a craze. | skinning off to How Humbug Makes the World Go Round By Bexyasiy De Cassenes Wastrel Mike IKE was an Englishman, an_ off M shoot of an old private stock As the bars closed for him too carly in London, he emigrated to Western Canada, where there being no legal bars, the saloons never close. Puget Sound laved the dry docks of Seattle in a steady swish-swash Mike suw this through an opera glass that the Countess von Nierbeerstein had given him Mike finally returns to. Paris he had never been before. Who do you think was waiting for him at the the Bull Mich and the Rue de Cognac? Nifty Nance—sweetheart of Lord Get- away She put a peony in Mike's coat and made him It They hurried to the Cornish coast, where there are lighthouses. “1 wonder if my pearl necklace is los whistled Nance to the wild winds. “The Black Knight"; Mrs. Alfred Sidgwick and Crosbie Garstin (Henry Holt and Company) “No,” replevined Mike. “Our creditors have it.” “Let's go back to dear old Lloyd George!” whispered Mike. So, you see, once an Englishman always a pippin (But where does all the ink come from?) Those Mystic Isles ‘THE South Seas have now got the call Remember when everything was Coney Island? Then the Cliff House in Frisco, Central Park had a run where ner of for a while. But French painter, who did what he wanted when he needed it where the sea is painted blue by the air and where one gets souser on Papeete bananas. But, my sons and daughters, if you are troubled with efficiency and duty, read “The Mystic Isles of the South Seas,” by Frederick O'Brien (The Century Co.) The pictures alone are worth the price of The (No, 1 do un what you think, old Blue Nese.) admis gals—wow! not They are brown dreams: chaste, nude and vous-limbed. This is the trip fantastic, the trip unbe. lievable, the voyage that you may never take. If you can’t, read this purple book It tells how missionaries introduce the idea of “sin”? to pure peoples Cheese It, Pat! N the carly stages of the world living was a luxury, as about one out of every ten thousand persons survived the club of his neighbor. Later, living was a gift as the Kaiser of the tribe gave forth decrees of life and death according as his stewed-hyena digested When civilization began living became a necessity—people were needed to live in houses so that landlords could buy parlor tom-toms, Today, living is a sport—a game of tag between Labor and Capital, Mars and the Dove of Pe: Income and Outgo, your Hootch and the Revenooer. Living may yet be a blessing Wondering when this kind of living was going to butt in on the planet the bell rang and in walked Pat universal now everybody's Tahiti, Tonga Bungo-Bunko the Isles of Gin and Sampo-Ryo, Why? Reaction from civilization and the grand old wake over its corpse in Europe. Somerset Maughan hit the trek to the lands and seas where clothes are immoral in his “Moon and Sixpence.” Then the confessions of Gaugin, the Draven by Aw Hews ast Kro. Because GorTEN GAINS. Wity bo You onjecT To pocTORS? THEY = Gallagher. Point- ing his finger at me Pat, shouted “Why did President Wilson assent to the Shantung arti cles? Should the Japanese be giv en racial equal Did the British help the President?” Just then I fired a book at Pat's head—"* American Aims and Asia's Aspirations” (The Century Co.). Pat himself had written it. ALL LIVE ON Lie