Judge, 1924-10-25 · page 28 of 36
Judge — October 25, 1924 — page 28: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1924-10-25. 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 i | if | } BUT YOUR NOSE! M. Trilety’s | Model No noses qu comfortably at home. It is the only safe and guaranteed patent devi will actually give you ap Tooking nos 87,000 satisfied users. For years recommended by > physicians Model No. 25 Junior for Children No bothersome straps to be pulled, but a fine, light, comfortable appliance with’ 6 movable regulators, which guarantee a perfect correction His is the oldest, largest and best reputed business of its kind in this untry. Avoid worthless imi- tations. If you wish. to >. have a periect looking nose, ask for his latest | catalog_on “How 'To Correct Ill-Shape: | Withour “cost. if) not satisfactory. “Write to, the [pioneer Noseshaping Specialist, i. Trilety, Dept Binghamton, N. Y. est improved Nose Shaper. corrects. now all ill-shaped “baby 18 ca eho penny in a crea Fou pei cr eeztning sold on arias kly, painlessly, permanently and | verroaran ‘Sper ceat ert fetes detaile of this offer: also utes Deter Ee . Sr az maka vousave mousy, Dia: 3. M. LYON & CO., 2-4 Malden Lane Dept, 2588 Now York City & You Have a Beautiful Face, By When the rough seems a very fair way. He Finally Got His Wings Clipped (Continued from page 18) excess of finesse, an overworship of technique, a sublimation of explana- tion, in the world now? Is it not true that half our trouble cause | by fine Italian handwriting? Diplo- mats are perhaps our most dangerous class to-day, and are certainly our most undiplomatie clas I, myself, am not an altogether un- harmed victim of universities and tea rooms and bookshops, but I thank heaven I am still awkward about a great many things and may turn out uncouth in the long run. For one thing, I still draw awfully. It was fun to see Paul Jasper crash finally into his final sweetheart’s practical dad. He did not.last out even his allotted three minutes when he ran into a real guy. (Not that I am unreservedly championing tired business men.) “Wings” itself suffers from too much finesse. It is a little too slick and tricky to be a great book. It does mechanical stunts to give the impression that it is deeper than it really is. It does not help the book with me that it is written back- wards. Book One is the Epilogue. Book Two is the End. Book Three is the Beginning. A book ought to be able to stand being written from the front to the back. Time and time again Miss Kelley lets her poetic instincts get the better of her and em- ploys the oblique approach. She plunges us into conversations and leaves us to guess whose conversa- tions they are. It is not the honest clumsiness I have just said I crave, but a studied and insincere trickiness. I believe Miss Kelley half suspected her hero was ‘too trivial for use in a $2 book and knew she would have to blur him with a poetic smoke screen. The only important person in the entire cast is the girl in the beginning, Eleanor, a girl from the country who came with her parents to New York and worked in their boarding house and, in one of those cross-currents of human intercourse which New York affords, met Paul Jasper. There is greatness in this girl, and genuine tragedy in her partial destruction. If the book is big at all, it is in the intimation (which I am_ probably dragging out of it by brute force, when it is not. there at all) that Eleanor was a larger poet than Paul Jasper, and that it was she who ene Eecpucne on the f so ee a e ions © face or Eccema, Enlarged Pores an yg for my FREE BOOKLET, FREE We erates few S.GIVENS, 224 Chemical Bidz., Kansas City, Mo. “Conductor, the fellow opposite is cuckoo. He’s scaring my wife. Seems to think he’s Napoleon.” Pll attend to hin—NEXT STA- TION WATERLOO, IOWA!” comicbooks.com