Judge, 1923-04-21 · page 32 of 36
Judge — April 21, 1923 — page 32: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1923-04-21. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
NEW ow neaby 1923 Model EB t tl wi Oliver ithout loss of Standard 3-Bank Keyboard Send today fet cata capiaiel ig this ng Cre New Oliver—Quiet ‘is the crown- ae achievement of 28 years of manufacturing. Absclately: standard 3-! eyboard, almost Ce ny action, AND a! Sbecat iatiy tema isle tysisgeot the Oliver; Tas p rte itl, clear, logible ‘of the Oliver. The pe the symmetrical spacing. Notyping equals it. SAVE $25 to $50 The superb new model Oliver ig offered at the lowest price andon the easiest termsever offered for a FIRST Q standard typewriter. It has every modern ern fesproversent and many origital features, Simplified construction and efficient manufacturing make it posalble for us to make our money- saving offer on the NEW Oliver. A Week’s Free Trial — Send he FACTS about our FRE! OFFER. Our catalog ¢ |. No money in advanc as $8 a month if you decide tobuy. Retura at our expense if not delighted. * CATALOG FREE It Mostrates every detail and ins fallyall the features of the New Oliver, the Qui iter with the standard 3- bank keyboard, the most “Sortie of all typewriters. Learn ¥ and HOW you can save $25 to $50, or more, on each machine—the world’s best. No charge. No obligation, THE OLIVER TYPEWRITER COMPANY "1634 Oliver Typewriter Building Chicago You Can Grow Genuine PALM TREES in Your Own Yard and Home Ewe Va Our hardy, fast palms will thrive growing in stamps, y order for pack: » seeds and full in- ranteed to grow or money refunded. ESLAND PALM CO. 830-B Loews State Bldg., Los Angeles, Cal. books don't dare p discuss aro plain- 1y told In “Wh ried love. It contatns more real tn formation than all other sez aks put together. Sent in plain cover, dy re- turn mail, for $1.00, cash, Money Order, check or Goes Direct to stamps. the Heart of the Sex Question. Dept 162 KNOWLEDGE BOOK CO. 257 W. New York prods oy and Reed’ certain simple but vital nota Safeze pelyin for Patents. Our book Patent-Sense free. Lacey & Lac y eee. St, Weshingtow, D.C.” ESTABLISHED 106 (Patented) MAKES TROUSERS HANG STRAIGHT If Legs Bend In or Out Self-adjustable | romance. ow the origin of the word D eer? Originally, a bucca- neer was a man who smoked hams. How the practice of such a succulent occu- ‘yand bloody deeds upon 1, you may learn from A, Hyatt Verrill’s “In the Wake of the Buc- caneers” (The Century Co.). Mr. Verrill recently secured a genuine pirate sloop and cruised in her to all the islands of the Caribbean where, of old, in secret bays, the buccaneers gloated over their spoils. His ship was built 150 years ago, but we gather it v a bit like the old man’s hundred-year-old ax, which had had a new head and six new handles. However, he guarantees the keel. And he has 1 us yearn to follow him to those pearls in a sapphire sea, so near our coast, some of them our own possessions, and yet so foreign to us, and so saturated with Mr. Verrill knows, and loves, and reef and cocoanut tree of ns, and he is a pirate fan. Who isn’t? All the world loves a pirate. When a gang of thugs hold up a bank r nger on Wall street and take from him $200,000 of negotiable securities, everybody says it’s a bally outrage, and what is the world coming to? But if a long, low, rakish craft should hold up the Mauretania to-morrow, on the high seas, a thrill would run down every spine from Eastport to Bellingham. Even the captain of the Emden, during the war, was an international hero. Mr. Verrill admits that old Morgan was a bloody, bawdy villain, but still he rolls the records of his deeds like a sweet morsel ‘neath the tongue. And up with the Jolly Roger, ery we, and out from the lee of this rocky island, and over the sapphire waves toward yon proud Spanish galleon, with the yellow ensign on her peak and BUCCANEERING AND MY HOUSE by Walter Prichard Eaton beneath her decks, Pieces of eight, gentlemen—and doub- loons—chests and chests of them! Grind the cutlasses, prime the pistols, get ready the grappling irons, the smokers of ham are about to become heroes! To-d, the United Fruit Company’s boats carry peaceful bananas and bored tourists over those sapphire seas, and thi Windward Passage is as free of pirates as the Bronx River at White Plains. It’s a darned shame. the yellow gold Kk oR FIVE YEARS, off and on, we have been building a house. During the off periods we toil to accumulate. the wherewithal to start a fresh on period. We call ours a period house. Under the circumstances a perusal of “The Book of Building and Interior Decoration,” as- sembled by Reginald Townsend from the pages of Country Life, and issued by Doubleday, Page & Co., is not unfraught with pain. Oh, happy, happy folk, ery we, who commission Lewis Albro or Harrie Lindeberg to build them a stately mansion, or a humbl 10,000 « , and see it rise amid its lovely gardens, like Venus from the furnished with Chippendale or Queen Anne walnut, with carved mantels rifled from some Georgian mansion in Kent or Surrey, and circular stairways of marble, with exquisite wrought iron railings. ‘The well-planned room”—ah, yes, undoubtedly the well- should have a carved planned room Georgian mantel, and an overmantel containing an old-mastery portrait—a Van Dy sent for the purpose. The furniture should be harmonious, of course. We particularly like the idea of a sofa and set of chairs by Dunean Phyfe, with softly shaded lamps made out of Ming vases. A genuine old French land- is Unknown inventor, watching bow-legged men in a fight, gets the notion of an egg-beater. 30