Judge, 1924-05-03 · page 24 of 36
Judge — May 3, 1924 — page 24: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1924-05-03. 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.
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Cartooning is lots of fun —and fun that pays big money! Learn cartooning at home in spare time this amazingly easy way. SEND FOR FREE BOOK Mail posteard or letter today for Free Book on Cartooning. It tells all about this easy method perfected by one of America’s most successful cartoonists—also is fi with interesting facts about cartooning. Mail card | The “new psy TODAY! Give Age if under 16 years, WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF CARTOONING Room 485, 1113-15th St., N. W., WASHINGTON, D. C. SEND FOR THE INTERNATIONAL CATALOG | 0 Our net price list. | Poll line of | auto bodies | FOR FORD—Prices froth $27.85 up. Factory to 85 consumer direct—Pay only One Profit WWTERMATIONAL SOOT WORKS, 914 W. Ohio St. Dept. 1, Chleage, t, HOW'S YOUR COMPLEX? INFERIORITY by Walter Prichard Eaton HAVE just been wallowing in the I “new psycholog: As Artemus Ward said when he stood at the grave of Shakespeare, “It is a success.” showed me how to be a gi an. It can show you. It can show anybody. It can even show a woman. All you really need is an inferiority With a really firs class inferiority complex, preferably ac- quired very young, and from either parent (but the female is better, of course, if you are a man), there is no reason at all why you should not succeed. It won't even require any great amount of work on your part, either. You press the inferiority comp and your uncon- scious self will do the rest. information was acquired from ican Mind in Action,” written O'Higgins in collaboration with Dr. E. H. Reede, who is a “new psychologist,” and published by Harpers. The price is three dollars, which is little enough for the secret to Success. It is far cheaper than any course I have seen advertised in the back of the American Magazine, and I assure you the book is far easier to read than the front of the American Magazine. Dr. Reede and his disciple, Mr. O’Hig- ins, in this book consider the lives of various typical Americans, from the stand- point of the “new psychology” (yes, I know, these quotation marks are a bore, but just the same I refuse to take the responsibility for the term), and show in each case just how the poor man or woman suffered from an inferiority com- plex, as well as from that commonest of American maladies, inhibited instincts, the result, of course, of the too, too virtuous lives of our Puritan ancestors. The suppressed desires of the fathers shall be visited upon the children unto 22 The absent-minded newly-wed puts baby in neighbor’s flivver instead of his carriage. the ninth generation. The tenth, of course, being our children’s, removes all inhibitions on the primal instincts, and lets her rip. Among the typ’ Americans most conspicuously mal-adjusted to. reality, according to these two eminent “new psychologists,” and suffering from infer- iority complexes, were Ralph Waldo Emerson, Mark Twain and Abraham Lincoln. Mark Twain’s humor w: defensive weapon; he never got socially adjusted and died a bitter pessimist Emerson “introvert a surprising thing for so correct a gentleman to do and protected himself in his inferiority by preaching self-reliance and kidding himself that God was within him, (A de- lusion, by the way, which was cherished by a Greater than Emerson, some 2,000 years earlier.) Lincoln wrote the Gettys burg Address and became melancholy We had, to be sure, always supposed that the Civil War was a slightly contributory cause of his melancholy—but let that pass. The fact remains that these thre: men suffered from an inferiority complex, according to the eminent “new psychol- ogists,” and failed to adjust themselves to reality. You, dear reader, will, I am sure, feel as badly as I did about it. Think, they hadn't been so afflicted, they mi, have amounted to something! All Emer- son accomplished was a body of prose and some poetry, of which the former, at le influenced thousands upon thou- sands of young men in his day, and is influencing them yet. All Mark Twain contrived to do was to write two of the finest. works of fiction ever penned. in America, and to die honored all over the globe. As for poor Lincoln, he accom- plished nothing at all except. to become enshrined as one of the world’s heroes a comicbooks.com