Judge, 1922-03-18 · page 35 of 36
Judge — March 18, 1922 — page 35: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1922-03-18. 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.
Where Is Paradise? Is it where old Omar thus visioned it? A Book of Verses underneath the Bough, A Jug of Wine, a Laat of Broad—and Thow singing in the Wilderness Gh, Wilderness wore Paradise excl Or, did Gray describe it when he wrote: The meanest floweret of the vale, The simplest note that swells the gale, The common sun, the air, the skies, To him are opening paradise. Who knows? Perhaps, after all, paradise is where one finds it. What is paradise for one may be purgatory for another. For some, paradise may lie “neath tropic skies. And yet others have found it ’mid the frozen silences of the North. For instance, Alma and Paul Ellerbe have written a fascinating description of how they found it in a summer cottage—in win- ter, at 50 below zero, and how they solved in novel fashion their own problem of making life worth living. “Stumblers into Paradise,” they call it, and it is one of the leading arti cles in Leslie’s Weekly for March 18. There are many other interesting features in this issue of Leslie’s. Theodore Waters contributes another absorbing in- stallment of his series on “The Désabiliteers’’—more revela- tions of the amazing fakers who make a living getting hurt. Then there is another gripping story in the adventures of the great Black Pearl by Atreus von Schrader. Also, there are other corking illustrated articles, plenty of vivid pictures of events and personages at home and abroad and terse, vigorous editorials that say something worth while. Don’t miss this March 18 issue of Leslie’s Weekly—or any issue, for that matter. It is the livest and most interesting illustrated weekly to-day. You can buy it for 10 cents from your newsdealer, or have it delivered weekly at your home as a subscriber for Five Dollars a year. WHY NOT NOW? comicbooks.com