Judge, 1921-09-17 · page 2 of 36
Judge — September 17, 1921 — page 2: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis This page is primarily **advertising content**, not satire or political commentary. It promotes Leslie's Weekly magazine for September 17th, 1921. The headline "Two Miles High With the Mail!" references the **U.S. Air Mail Service**, highlighting a contemporary achievement: pilots flying mail routes across mountains, deserts, and valleys. Arthur Ruhl's article "Hurdling the Sierras" describes the westernmost leg of the Coast-to-Coast route. The page lists other Leslie's features: articles about Mascagni (composer), South America, a short story, and baseball content. **Bottom text** indicates this is from Judge magazine, September 17, 1921, Volume CXXXI, Number 3381. The page serves as a promotional cross-reference between competing publications. There is **no visible political cartoon** on this page.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
JUDGE N Wiit c ¢ City Two Miles High With the Mail! | ecg day Uncle Sam’s intrepid pilots of the Air Mail Service fly over hundreds of miles of mountains, deserts and valleys to get the Coast- to-Coast mail through on time. How it feels to dash seven hundred miles through the air on the westernmost leg of the route is thrillingly told by ARTHUR RUHL in an article—‘‘HURDLING THE SIERRAS,”’ in Leslie’s for September 17th There are many other interesting features in this issue of Leslie's. A few of them are: MASCAGNI SETS DEMOCRACY TO MUSIC—By Gil- bert W. Gabriel. A NEW ELDORADO IN SOUTH AMERICA—By W. Nephew King. BUTCH’S BABY —A gripping short story by Paul Sand. THE HARDEST WORKED MAN IN BASEBALL—By Edwin A. Goewey. A $3,000,000,000 JOB-——By Donald Wilhelm. And many other notable features—informative, instruct- ive and entertaining—that will INTEREST YOU. Get Leslie’s THIS WEEK and EVERY WEEK from your newsdealer