comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1922-08-05 · page 30 of 36

Judge — August 5, 1922 — page 30: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — August 5, 1922 — page 30: Judge, 1922-08-05

A restored page from Judge, 1922-08-05. 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.

“24 Hours a Day” Just Off the Press The utmost in “work i ing value” of secur- i ities explained. Read how it i sible to double income and profits without extra cash or risk. pos: “Financial Success” “The Current,” issued weekly, is bringing financial success to our customers. An invaluable service that you will need always if you try once. Ask for 133DD NOW L 43 Exchange Place, New York How One Man Invested At 8° Mr. Peters was an experienced banker } who had accumulated a fortune through prudent investing at profitable rates. At a family reunion he told his sons exactly i how to distinguish between good and bad investments, and where to place their money | where it would be secured by first. mortgage and would pay them 8 for everyone who is interested in safe invest Anyone can following his i ; The story of Mr. Peters is full of instruction i] ments yielding a liberal return. 1 be as successful | methods. as he was by Write today for the story, j “Mr. Peters Tells How to Invest” 8°, Bonds of $100, $500, $1,000 8’, First Mortgages from $1,000 up Partial payment accounts invited G.L.Miller BOND & MORTGAGE Company Florida’ Oldest First Mortgage Bond House 240 Miller Bldg. Miami, Florida How to Select SAFE BONDS fs the title of a new booklet that points the way to the utmost soundness in mi ing investments. We offer this interes ingtbookiet after our 31 years experience, daring which time all Forman investors avo reccived interest and principal in fall—a record of complete safet: fora free copy by tearing out t a ppail to os with your name and address the margin. No salesman will call, GEORGE M. FORMAN & CO. First Mortgage Investments Dept. 24 105 W. Monroe St., Chicago {97 years without loss te a customer Ke SAMUEL REA President of the great Penn- sylvania Railroad system which recently entered into an arrangement with its em: ployees which gave them better rates of wages than those decided on by the Railroad Labor Board securities SEYMOUR L. CROMWELL President of the New York Al Stock Exchange, the leading arket United States, who has taken vigorous steps to_improve conditions on the Exchange and to safeguard the invest- ing public. STEPHEN BAKER nancier_of the metropolis the Bank of Company of the financial City « of the Investment Bureau ConpDucTED BY THEODORE WILLIAMS ract street address. A The Midsummer Dullness DULL securities market) is natu rally but little to the taste of the speculative trader. He is never satisfied unless prices are moving briskly direction or the other. At about in one the middle of the year he usually has reason to be unhappy beeause there is then a slackening of activity in’ stock transactions. The hopes of some opti mists who thought they foresaw a lively and up-going hot-term market in 1922 not realiz: The seasonal st nation not averted. Speculate chances of profits were curtailed as per the investors who had were was rule, and many bought for the long pull and not for im- mediate profit, were dismayed by. the reactions and the general standstill. Letters to this department from some the these express apprehension us to future, HERE is nothing, however, radi wrong with the situation, In spi appearances, the underlying conditions have not grown less sounc Besides the hig “pep” enervating weather, which drove operators out of town and took the out of the smaller fry, there was a variety of other things that help © the market pause. The two big strikes were not exactly calculated to enliven stock trading. They caused no decided slump but they « mood of watchful waiting. ‘The ineffective proceedings of Congress, the Administration’s weak leadership in important public matters, and the political uncertainties of the time acted something like a pall. Affairs going from bad to worse and the possibility of a crash in Europe, with bad effects on the rest of the world, also weighed on the situation. Perhaps, the most influential factor was the apparent overspeeding by the market of the present stage of business progress. 28 But all these adverse forces will in time be offset and by next fall, if not earlier, a far more encouraging outlook will be revealed. Occasional halts and lapses should not be reg, of fundamental weakness, tors to let them- disturbed by 5 nant states of the market. The successful buyer of the shrewd, well informed man who is not concerned with TIS not well for inve selves be too easily securities is the fluctuations of the hour, but looks to long-run results. He not bother with mere tips, but studies the merits of issues before he puts his money into them, He purchases wisely and then waits con- fidently for his reward. was lately brought to my attention. acquired numerous stocks last fall, making sure t all we and then had nerve enough to hola them, with- out heeding var in prices, until ntly, when he sold them all at a profit in every He will probably. take advantage my recessions to Such an investor © intrinsically tions of summer repurchase, or to repeat his plan. with other securities. ‘This man operates knowingly and scientifically, and he is one of the rather few steady money- makers in Wall street. E: by sp: must necessarily be in the nature of along pull. But intelligent: pureh opportunities in the dullest times and will not hesitate to sow now seed for a coming harvest of investment. «of stocks g ept in the ial influences, purchases ers will sec Answers to Inquiries . Los Axcutrs, Cat make a liberal yield and hy gilt-edged, are Atlas Powder . Granby: United Drug 5s . Torrno, O. "inveigled in toe i Taland & P Among i ert, t . Chile € Ist 6s, Mexic trial bond: sold te comicbooks.com