Judge, 1924-09-06 · page 32 of 37
Judge — September 6, 1924 — page 32: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1924-09-06. 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.
f Seven brilliant, blue white, perfect- } ly cut diamonds are set in platinum. ks like 2 ct. solitaire worth $600. Fully guaranteed to stand any test. TWO BLUE SAPPHIRES are set in the shanks of this 18 kt, solid white gold engraved and pene ing to add beauty and style. it to show your food faith (or; ana we well send this han ni ee you can pay in ten ingtalimonts of $6.70 each former price, $100.00. Give finger size ALL DEALINGS CONFIDENTIAL No one knows you are buying on our dignified credit yom niet nlees bee ‘tell thera yoursels, Awritten guar- nies each Fi Yau ce can return the Bing withio tea dayo if not satisied. Send order today. ty 20 00 oes KESTIEG Sa aspert’ See thlusble infefaratica co STERUNGHRR2CO. | $1,000,000 Stock — Est. 1870) es Pant PARK K ROW, Dept. 1747 NEW YORK Do You Owe Yourself a New Car? If You Do, Don’t Buy Hastily There is a make and model best “Do you ever get into deep water, Aunt Flossie?” Aunt Flossie—Never, unless there is a raft of money in sight. The $25 Prize in Jupae’s Fifty-Fifty Contest No. 30, announced in the July 26, 1924, Answers wl 1e, was won by Edwin G. Snyder, Rural Valley, Pa ich received consideration ar Not since Jack told me he believed in freedom of the seas!” street, Dorchester, Mas: nly when there is a strong Eddie to carry me ashore, dear,” Hubert reen, 1919 Robson street, Vancouver, B. C., Canada; “Only when I'm sure of making a good ‘landing,’ ” Dewey Jones, 3624 West Chestnut street, Louisville, Ky. Henry Barrie, 601 Washington suited to your requirements and your pocket-book—and there is the Motor Department of Jupae to help you find that car. The services of the Motor Depart- ment are absolutely free to all readers of Jupar. Motor Department JupGE 627 West 43d St. New York, City We Teach COMMERCIAL ART Comore pany the largest ercial Ro Organization ithe orld offers you a practical training, based upon twenty-five years of success, This nationally known organization each year produces and sells to advertisers over 15,000 commercial drawings. This well paid profession equally open to men and women, Home study instruction, Get Facts Before You Enroll in Any School Manager of the leading about Meyer Ask the Advert newspapers in your city, Both Company—let them tell you about us. Send four cents in stamps for illustrated book tell of the success of our students. MEYER BOTH COMPANY Mieian ve. at 28 $1- Dept 99 HICAGO, ILL. Meteo At so Eariag Fs: teme tists among our pip hy ‘Write | to do. Let Them Talk Her Out of It (Continued from page 18) She philosophy that a woman has a right to do what she righteously feels she wants Just before Delia’s only daughter lights out for college to pursue her passion for higher mathematics (along toward the end of the book), she says to her mother: “You've just used every speck of your margin doing things you hated for the last twenty years, and it’s done for you.” Of course men ought to do what they want to do. too. I can understand Delia’s desire to run a bookstore. When I get to heaven, two of the things I want to do, between my music lessons and golf games, are to run a sta- tionery store and a hardware store. These two desires gnaw at me more or less all the time, though they have never attained the proportions of suppressed desires and will probably not ruin my life as Delia’s thwarted desire jims her life. I don’t see why her husband doesn’t let her go on with the store. It would please me beyond words if Mrs. Herold would start a delicatessen and help sup- 4 port the family. Colored husbands can teach white husbands a great deal about liberality as to letting their wives pursue independent careers; maybe this is at the bottom of the unusual domestic felicity of colored couples. I believe Mrs. Sachs has made one mis- take; I don't think a town of three or four thousand is big enough to support a book- store, even if it carries a sideline of sta- tionery and belt buckles. It takes a good many thousand souls to support a book- store. Even the big cities have a surpris- y small number of them, and when you want some special book they never have it. But “Talk” is the best hook T have read for a while. [ cor te skipping “Phe Golden Bed,” by Wallace Irwin (Putnam), before I had gone 100 pages. On page 148 the poor candy boy was not yet married to the rich little girl On page 211 he had become a successful candy merchant and Rotarian and had gone to the | and ordered himself a new lor in town nit of clothes, so I knew that if I jumped to about page 332 he would be getting married to her, and sure enough on page 332 she was soused at a swell party he was giving XUM comicbooks.com