Judge, 1921-09-17 · page 33 of 36
Judge — September 17, 1921 — page 33: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1921-09-17. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
With tion to its treasure this novel. of a camera. 41 Mt. Eight Unique SMALL, Vernon Street z ‘ ce The Editor of JUDGE has written a novel which you should read and enjoy. A THIRD OF LIF By PERRITON MAXWELL | ERE is a book which, primarily « work of fiction, contains more real facts about the dream state than most scientific treatises devoted to psycho-analysis, and in addi- abundance of entertaining data is a captiv story in which love, money, crime and the struggle of a fine, upstanding hero to achieve success against overwhelming obstacles, carries the reader along to a dramatic climax, If you are fond of a good story well-written and like your fiction to mean something, you will [tis a book that while entertaining you, will also startle you with its daring, compel your thought, and serve as the theme of many a discussion. ‘The illustrations are photographic compositions of an unusual nature the visions of the subconscious mind during sleep have been conveyed to the sensitized plates On sale by all live booksellers and department stores (price $1.90) or sent postpaid ($2.00) by the publishers, MAYNARD & COMPANY Boston, Illustrations by the ating romance—a powerful Its title is Author and for the first’ time Mass. The Principle of Success By Rate W. *PHE secret of REYNOLDS success is quite simple and can be quickly learned by anyone. Very few people ure capable of grasping the subtle principles that lie behind success, the study of which requires years of leisure and a brain of rare intel- ligence. Do not be content with the advice of only one friend; get a consensus of the opinions of several. Don’t go from one friend to another seeking udvice; take the counsel of one and follow it implicitly. Decide on one occupation and bend all your energy and thoughts in that direction. Be versatile; always be qualified in a dozen or more voca- so that if you fail to find an cpening in one occupation you will have others to fall back on. Be truthful; every employer ap- even if it reveals lack of qualification Lie like the devil, weaknesse for the position. don’t admit ignorance on any subject, or bluff your way through; everyone does it and the employer expects it. Be conscientious in your work, some one will notice your application and promotion will result. “Get by” with everything youcan. No one will notice it and it makes no difference anyway. . Don’t ask for a raise; em- ployer is watching your work and will promote you when your work shows that you merit it. If you ex pect to get a raise ask for it; no one pays more for work when he can get it done for anyway, your less ; Drawn by Ganonek O, REA. “HELLO! DIDN'T KNOW YOUR WIFE WENT IN FOR , OLD CHAP; THOUGHT SHE NEVER IN IT. CADDY’S OUTFIT ALL TO M. PLY COULDN'T RESIST THE 33 asking for a promotion shows that you are aggressive, that you want to vet ahead. Ask questions about everything you don’t understand—no one is ex- pected to know everything and ask- ing questions is the only way to find out. Don’t ask questions, it annoys people and shows your ignorance, keep your mouth shut and your eyes cpen, Be a good mixer, nothing makes for success like being hail-fellow- well-met with all your co-workers. Hold yourself aloof from your fel- lows pu will gain their respect and avoid the likelihood of frequent “touches” to which you would other- wise be subjected. Dress well—nothing truer was ever said than, “Clothes make the man.” Don’t spend your money on clothes, a patched coat and money in the bank is more impressive than a new suit and unpaid board bills. Generalize—the world wants a man who can grasp the tout ensemble, don’t waste time on details, they are for menials. Master the smaller things, they are the most important, anyone can grasp the general idea but it takes a genius to be expert on the minutie of form. As to the usefulness of this advice, it’s up to you—to judge. comicbooks.com