Judge, 1924-09-13 · page 32 of 72
Judge — September 13, 1924 — page 32: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1924-09-13. 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.
Learn to Draw at Home New Method Makes It Amazingly Easy Trained artists earn from $50 to over $250 a week. Tremendous demand right now for good art work. Magazines, newspapers, advertisers, printing houses, ete. Become an artist through wonderful new easy method right at home In spare time. Learn Illustrating, De- signing and Cartooning. Actual fun learning this way Individual attention by mall from one of America’s most famous artists. Learn to draw and earn big money Send for FREE BOOK Just printed—a new book which describes the latest developments and wonderful opportunities in Commercial Art and gives full details on this new easy method of icarning to draw. Tells all about students—thelr suc- cesses—what they say—actual reproductions of their work—and how many earned big money even while learning. Write for this Free Book and details of special free offer. Mall postcard or letter now. WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF ART Room 489, 1115-15th St.N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C ery way, at TEN DA’ 3 n yy TH DATS TREE TRIAL ND WN 5 aed A YEAR TO PAY Basses do vont perfect and highest class job of rebuild: d te pater per fitt a alee fet ne mana ieee irate Scot be = Ser sodey ‘for. Learn Cartooning ‘At Home—in Your Spare Time ny successful cartoonists of t rhing from $50 to $200 and tr THE LANDON SCHOOL 1483 National Bidg., Cleveland, 0. RITTENHOUSE HOTE 22D & CHESTNUT STS. PHILADELPHIA, PA. Rooms with hot and @o UP cold running water ac eS had Special Luncheon, 90¢. vening $1.25. As well as service a la carte. lusic During Luncheon, Dinner and Supper FILM FUN A monthly magazine with pictures of your fa- vorite movie stars. On all newsstands the second of each month. Club Breakfast, 50° up. Dinner, $1 ver cigal case Of light weight metal. Looks exactly like the real thing! the trigger, back flies ¢howing your cigarettes offun scaring your friends, and a great Q rotector. 2 sively by ug PAY POST. is | man’ si 5 yn de- very plus postage, Money back if not satisfied. PATHFIROERCO., Gep 17158, 834 Sizth Ave.N.Y, tion to * tively. After reading what is left of it, Lam positive that that guy McGuffey was simply awful, and that his first reader is one of the ghin. mest and most under. handed books I ever read, and that it) must have helped to. throw two or three generations of chil. dren off the right track. No Four ancestors wer all wrong. roast it retroac. This book was enough to erush the ju ont of an child who read it. UW was Dilemma of golfer on how to play the shot when he finds garter snake has swallowed the ball. Oh, You Gentiles! (Continued from page 19) the plain common sense and honesty or dishonesty of the occasion.” He says that life with us is a game, including our religion, our business, and our warfare. We make gentlemen's rules, and will die charmingly for them. — The Jews regard life as a sober and somber duty. They do not understand game rules. “You Gentiles” is well worth reading (as a guide book to New York, if for no other reason). | A Review of Half of McGuffey’s First Reader Tre first. criticism that I have of McGuffey’s First Reader (Smith & Co., 1853) is t about half the are torn out of it. My grandmother must have been a very naughty and destructive little girl, if not a little rowdy. Tam a little behind in my criticism of this book, but cannot resist the tempta- supposed to be a first reader but it is the work of a morbid old maid of a man. Little children who finished it must have jumped in the river by the dozens, or else they grew up all warped. From first to last, this book is stuffed with calamity. It is full of poverty disaster and suffering. Its chief charac. ters are blind, halt, crippled, or in their 2 graves, And it draws morals like Bill Hart draws guns—every little while. Practically all children’s books, even to-day, have an ax to grind. I have been forced to read a great many of them the last two years (in fact drafted, when I thought my own privat affairs were much more important) by my five or year old daughter (let's see, is it her birthday or our wedding anniver ). As T have read most of them, T have blushed with shame. ‘There is deal for the child in almost every one of them—a moral put over in the guise of entertainment. sary which comes in January dirty There is practically no free reading for children. It is the chil- dren who pay and pay and pay. All the old folks in the world are in a conspiracy to subdue children, to reduce — their “¢G ive me one gallon of gasoline. Garace Man—S’ matter, madam, got her on a diet? comicbooks.com instr noth neve they thor wan just own