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Judge, 1921-08-27 · page 34 of 36

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Judge — August 27, 1921 — page 34: Judge, 1921-08-27

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Cars Are Now at Their Lowest Prices The last two months have brought decided revisions in the prices of automobiles. Many which had not previously been reduced dropped from fifteen to twenty-five percent. Not since the war have prices been so low. It is useless to anticipate further declines in automobile prices; in fact, costs may be increased. Now is the time to buy. There are many excellent values available to the man with $500 or $5000 to invest in an automobile. But the best car made for some conditions may not prove _ satisfactory under others. The Motor De- partment of Lrstiz’s WEEKLY will furnish readers with un- biased, expert advice free of charge. Use the coupon below, filling out all of the blanks in order that we may advise you thoroughly. COUPON Harotp W. Stauson, M.E. Manager, Motor Department Jupce 627 West 43d St. New York City I am considerng the purchase of a car to cost about $..... and am especially interested in one Of 8hO spare cman sa (make) (type) My requirements for a car are as follows: Capacity Type of body . Driven and cared { eiereine Lf for by .. chauffeur Kind of roads over which car would be used. I have owned other cars of the following MORESS wrecese eerezesniexe vimeseieremists + The following cars of approxi- mately the type in which IT am interested are handled by dealers in my territory best suited to my requirements. Name.. Address...... EXAMINATION QUES TIONS. 23, ey Bugs’ Wings OR as the Rajah, arm. in arm F with Fred Beauvais, stepped away from the door, farther into the room it came. On the same day Charlie Halfounce called on Vic- toria Finnegan Elysée, kissed her thrice-coated lips and told her in a voice hoarse with tonsilitis that he was off to Tom Taggart’s. Oneypore! It was a fascinating town with crooked streets, sanded bar-rooms and six o'clock showers. Cool gardens were ablaze with man- goes, rickey trees and the flowering sloe. Mrs. Barker Harrison swooned dead away. Wash-day always un- nerved her. The Professor looked at her huddled figure unmoved. He was pickled. He was Jemchung, the Hin- doo Einstein bug. Farragut Hutch- inson had died. Would his soul re- turn to the scenes of his private stock? Had Cheesil, the child, made good on the Follies roof? Khizr was leashmaster of the famous Kabyle dogs. They had black, bristly hair and sirloin jaws. They guarded the bathtub in Nassin’s harem. Even Ed-Din, the Great Kutb, dared not approach them. No wonder Khizr was the Khizr he was. These are merely indications of “Wings: Tales gf the Psychic,” by Achmed Abdullgh (James A. Mc- Cann Company). Stop! Look! Read! F course you read—because you read JUDGE. Of course you read stories—be- cause you read Burgess and Waldron. Of course you have taste—because you have read Leonard Merrick. The latest of the Merrick books to come from E. P. Dutton & Co. is a collection of his lighter-veined short stories (“A CHkir on the Boule- vard”’). Let me tell you, you are in for one of the treats of your life with this book. Twenty short stories—and 34 Just How Words Make the Dictionary By BENJAMIN DE CASSERES you'll carry ’em wherever you go till you’ve devoured the whole works. Lives there a man (or woman or child) with soul so dead who never to himself (or herself or itself) hath said: “I do not like’a story”? Read these stories and blow the cobwebs off of your brain. What's This! AM a man who loves common- places. I dote on self-evident truths—such as, America is the land of liberty, or, It is only by steadily upholding the hands of our rulers that our children will get pure milk. But once in a while I go in for ex- traordinary and bizarre statements. Now, pipe this gem of Guy Emer- son’s (“The New Frontier”; Henry Holt & Company) : 4 “A considerable part of the pres- ent unrest in this country is due to the widespread failure to understand the significance of the American sys- tem of society and government. An honest but often somewhat superfi- cial Americanism needs to be en- riched by a more specific, reasoned patriotism, based upon a knowledge of what America was and is and may become. ... If we are a ‘nation of idealists with a genius for the practical,’ if we can revivify the splendid vision of the pioneers who firmly established and handed down to us a nation great in material wealth and equally great in its fun- damental idealism, we can proceed with stout hearts toward our own frontiers.” It is hard for me, as a practical, head-and-heart-of-oak business ma to sign on the dotted line of the above. Bs I am a conservative. Now, our “pioneers” were pretty hard nuts, had radical booze habits, started a revolution against the established government, and were otherwise red. Back to sanity, Mr. Emerson, I beg of you! PRESS OF WILLIAM GREEN. NEW YORK comicbooks.com