Judge, 1924-11-01 · page 29 of 36
Judge — November 1, 1924 — page 29: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1924-11-01. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Very Moving Pictures! (Continued from page 19) Tony's neck and a final benediction in the Rockies without which he never would have had the great big noble he-men to gouge out each other's eyes and chew each other's cars; that the gal (God love her) may be kept safe from whatever it is she is to be kept safe from. If you like “Westerns” you'll enjoy ‘The Border Legion.” H's) good raw hokum, well doue. SPEAKING of the gal and all that x sort of sexography that has out- photographed photography, °T nish” is full of her. Lam not an advocate of a neutral condition, Neutrality is neither here nor there, neither one thing nor the other. It is spineless, opinionless and yet I have neuter gender. Take a table or a chair or a glass of water. They haven't a worry in the world. Smug complacency is theirs. They have no sex complex to stir the even tenor of their way. It is only in’ the animated world, where there are two genders, that trouble results. It i with these two genders that nish” concerns itself as it does in life. May McAvoy is the female, Ronald Coleman is the male. I cannot dis- cuss in this, the world’s half-wittiest weekly, the psychology advanced in this picture but it’s well done and if you are interested in whether it: is right to marry a man who has been through the love-mill or whether you have the time and patience to sit it out waiting for the man who hasn't, you'll have a good time watching this picture and thanking God there is only one other sex to s envied the argue it out with when you get out on the street. What is perhaps more to the point the picture is well made and well worth your money and time both of which you and [have often put to less profitable usage. Rad “The Prince of Wales, the news- papers say, wears exactly what he pleases,” notes the Carthage Press and adds dejectedly : is partly because he is a prince and This, perhaps, partly because he is a bachek —Kansas City Times Class in History “What started the trouble at an- cient Troy?” “A beauty contest.” —Louisville Courier-Journal The People’s Telephone The telephone knows no favorites. the country store and of the city bank. It’ does the bidding of It is found in the ranch house kitchen and in the drawing-room of the city mansion. Its wires penetrate the northern forest, stretch across the prairie, are tunneled under city streets. The telephone knows no favorites. Its service to all the people is of the same high standard—the Bell System standard. Twenty-four hours a day it carries the voices of all. For the benefit of all, the long-distance circuits are kept in tune. Numberless discoveries and improvements developed by the Bell System have made the telephone more useful for all the people. In America, all can afford the telephone, for Bell System service is the cheapest, as well as the best, in the world. The telephone knows no favorites. one locality or by any particular group of men. It is not owned in any It is owned by 350,000 stockholders, who represent a cross-section of the thrift of the whole country. The owners of the telephone are those it serves. In America to-day the 15,000,000 telephones of the Bell System contribute to the security, happiness and efficiency of all the people. AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES SRR. és EN . AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY B Ly) eer BELL SYSTEM One Policy, One System, Universal Service Fishing Not Fiddling First Girk—What air was that you were playing last night? Second Girl—A millionaire, and 1 landed him. © —Boston Transcript Attraction “T notice the ladies all flock to your display of mirrors. What do they see in that assortment?” “Themselves.” Louisville Courier-Journal | “De you believe in capital puiiisl ment?” | “Certainly,” replied the walking | delegate for the Dumb-bells’ Union, “the working man won't get no jus- | tice till capital is punished. | —John Smith in Buffalo Express | eeey \ writer says in ten years: there wil] be no servant maids in America. He talks as if he knew where some —Kansas City Star | ure now,