Judge, 1922-07-08 · page 34 of 36
Judge — July 8, 1922 — page 34: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1922-07-08. 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.
* WE TEACH COMMERCIAL RT Properly Trained Artists Earn $100 a week andup Meyer Both College—a Department of the Meyer Both Company—offers you different and practical training. If you like to draw, develop your talent. Study this practical course— taught by the largest aod most widely known Commercial Art aniza- tion in the field with 20 years’ success—which each wi produces and sells to advertisers in the nited States and. Canada over ten thousand commercial drawinzs. Who else could give you 80 widean experience? Com- mercial Art is a businces necessi! —the demand for commercial ar- tists is greater every year. the cost MEYER BOTH of SOMMERCIAL fet ‘Sepetis’ CHICAGO, ILL We Pay $7 a Day taking orders for new Gu: eed Hosis tor ILLUSTRATED Oy WINFIELD ScOTT mM SEX FACTS MAD. What every young man Every young woman a ttl pas ate Postpaid bind pqe—aasy Mestrations bang sa Table of contents, ond commendations, ameniean | PUB. COMPANY, oes Winston Bidz, Phia INVENTORS iv. Should write tor ow le TE Bade book, “HOW TO GET YOUR P. model or sketeh and Gesertption and we will RinDoLPr “— of its notable nature. co. Washingt Who desi aero ‘Book Potent-Sense, free. WANT Our agents make big MORE MONEY big profits on soap, extracts, spices. tolet articles. | Repeat order come easy. Get our free sample case Write Ho-Re-Ce., 172 Locust St., St. Louls, Me. ae Drawn by Grxarp C. Detano, Miss Monk—It’s a wonder to me, Willie Sloth, that you wouldn’t have the courtesy to raise your hat when you meet a lady. The Manners of the Elect (Continued from page 18) pick it up. Now seat yourself and if you don’t know anyone in the audience— (Caster places a pair of opera glasses, a fan and program on the railing of the bor.) —select a couple of strangers and bow graciously. (Business.) Now, remember, one sure way to attract attention to yourself is to keep Pe slight but continuous movement: opera glasses, fan, program are all very useful to open. drop or rustle. Sweep the house with your glasses, then fasten them on one particular person whose dress you don’t like and comment on it in a loud ce. (JENNY sweeps house with glasses.) Well-bred people always talk while someone is singing. Jexxy: While someone is singing? Count: Yes; and they keep still while someone is dancing. Jenny (sweeping house with glasses): Oh! What a hideous gown! Count: Louder! Jexxy (complying): Oh! What a hideous wn! I don’t like her tarrara— Count: Tiara! Jenny: Tiara. Count: Cough! (Jexxy coughs.) Splendid, my dear! Cough again. (She obeys.) Sus- tain it! Sustain it! (JENNY coughs loudly and long.) Count: Excellent, my dear! One would take you for a regular first nighter. (Turning to Amis.) Miss Pugsley will now arrive and enter the box. (AMELIA complirs.) Greet your hostess, who rises to receive you, giving the audience at the same time a complete view of her backbone. (JENNY rises.) Ame.ta offers her hand to Jenny. AAs What Does It Cost to Run a Car? (Continued from page 27) You have paid for your gasoline, oil, tires, repairs and insurance and yet ten one hundred dollar bills have gone some- where—and of course they must be charged to your motoring cost. Thus 32 depreciation sticks his head up and says, “Charge me with three cents for every mile that you travel, and if you don’t travel very much I will cost you more than if you travel a lot, for mileage doesn’t count so much as ag: in figuring what I have done to the value of your car,” Thus, the automobile owner who is honest with himself will add the items as we have outlined them and find that his ledger looks somewhat as follows: 8.02 per mile Depreciation. $.1125 Tus gives a total of slightly over eleven cents a mile or $1,100 for every 10,000 miles of operation, not in- cluding such items as license fees and the like. Five thousand miles a year opera- tion would cost probably $700 a year, for the greater our mileage the lower is the cost per mile. These may seem like surprisingly high figures to those who. have not considered every item of cost, but the automobile is our own—it is our private means of con- veyance. We can fill it with our family or half a dozen of our friends and bring all the beauties of Nature to our doors, at a total cost for the party of less than one-half of what would be charged by the railroad. In fact, any party of three or more can travel by car cheaper than by rail, and if you already own an automo- bile, the difference will be even greater, for insurance, garage, investment and depreciation costs will go on just the same whether you leave your car in the garage or take it with you on your sum- mer vacation, comicbooks.com