Judge, 1924-03-01 · page 30 of 36
Judge — March 1, 1924 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1924-03-01. 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.
We Teach COMMERCIAL RT leyer Both Com any, the largest Meyer Bett Ore: Nistation sthe World offers you an hal opportunity for | practical training, based upon twenty-three years of success, This nationally known organization each year produces and sells to advertisers over 15,000 commercial drawings. Meyer Both in- struction is the difference between successful fact and experimental theory. This well paid profession equally ‘open to men and women. Home study instruction. Get Facts Before You Enroll in Any School Ask the Advert of the leading newse papers in your here in the United leyer yousbout us. telling about the success of our students—for ‘one-half the cost of mailing—four cents in stamps. MEYER BOTH COMPANY Department of Art Instruction a1 20th $1, Dept.39, CHICAGO, ILL. and Lelia Firms: Secure practi- ‘graduates. Write ws. it. Requires no atten- . ‘out generously to pat- ‘ons and so is played onstantly. Your Or S100 a week by own- ing a few Venders Free Folder giving low cash price and pleasure every week; no sizzling news was there arrayed, but tales of people meek. In vain the questing eye would search for yarns of sinful men; an oyster supper at the church would draw a scare head then. A lecture at the Music Hall was given half a page; the home team won a game of ball, announced the Hick- ville sage. T used to read its stories sweet, and com- fort great they gave, and I could see the ae : sillage street as the grave. And often, tired of city noise, I longed to go back there, and gossip with the whiskered | boys along the public square. If some Jone brought a squash to town that | weighed a dozen pounds, the Hickville Monderfal. new, vice, guides your hand: sorrects | Pade jumped up and down, and uttered sioner, CommpistgestingEREES |i unds., And plaudits. grateful jand grotesque were shouted to the sky. | when some one, on ye printer’s desk, set |down a pumpkin pie. "Twas in the olden golden time, a time that found surcease, when cities had their waves of crime, but hamlets basked in peace. I still peruse the Hickville Blade, but it’s a terror now; through gory tales of {crime I wade, and wipe my streaming | brow. This 8/4=1/18 Ct. perf lent or experience neceasary. Leer esmne nny TRICKS OF THE ives, 100 Alphabets, and "De seat ‘ex! WPA, EARN NG MONEY /MMEDIATELY~ / WE FURNISH EQUIPMENT TO START. The Ostrich. THE OLD HOME PAPER usep to read the Hickville Blade with James Jasper used to run the mill that ground the farmers’ wheat, but now a large illicit still, with fixings all complete, are found in his sequestered vale where once we used to play; and Jasper, he has gone to jail, for many years to stay. And Cripes the banker, in old da) solid as a rock; we all united in his praise and gloried in his talk. We dreamed of him and when we woke we carried him our kale; the Bank of England might go broke, but he would never fail. The Hickville Blade for years and years had chronicled his deed: dried the widows’ orphans feeds. "twas Cripes who tears, and gave the A™” now I lay the paper down and shudder in affright; it seems that Cripes has jumped the town with all the coin in sight. Such stories make my spirit freeze, when in the Blade they run, the sheet that once gave quilting bees three columns on page one. “Four robbers came, some three hours since, and robbed the Blue Front store; they sandbagged Jinks, our merchant prince, and swiped three suits or more. “Last night Policeman Andrew Steen was robbed by Goth or Hun, who soaked comicbooks.com