Judge, 1925-03-07 · page 21 of 36
Judge — March 7, 1925 — page 21: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1925-03-07. 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.
| pulling a young snai Unpublished Interviews The Trained Seal “Gue to see oy trained seal, 1 her beautiful, pink 1 you want me t said the ng me inte “So say a few words for added, blushing ~ red flush your readers, lecomingly as mounted to her “Well, just ss att T hate te toss balls and t Anathema is th mydear. People think that Lk Dut that’s merely clever prop: on the part oof the fish: in Why, at home even on Fe me to quit to the Aquarium, but I must ec that the lure is too great. Some- times I'm on the same bill with jolly ating to me erer serve fis’ not My husband wants mdeville and gi trained dogs and monk the show we have a cozy midnight snack in one of the kennels. “By the way, the Performing Seal’s Benevolent: Association is drawing up a demand for fewer fish and fresher, since we must humor our audience.” A furtive tear splashed on her coat as she added, “Some day. when TE ean pick my own food and recreation, Pm to play mah jongg and nimble paté de foiegras. No inore rubber balls and baby: herring for me, but I suppose one has to make some sacrifices for her art and to please the audience. By the way, how do you like my bobbed whis- As [swam to the top of her tank, pencil and notebook in hand, LT could pl all he grace, eating hal nana that one of the girls in the act had carelessly left in the tank that afterno young and so innocent,” Fimurnu aly see her, in pinnipedian mut of my ; Arthur L. Lippmann “That's just what Ve been looking for. tand I don't i At Your Service The courteous girl at the switchboard speaks the first word in more than two million conversations an hour. Presiding day and night at the busy intersections of speech, she is always at the call of the nation’s homes, farms and offices. Out of sight, and most of the time out of hearing of the subscribers, little is known of the switchboard girl—of her training and supervision under careful teachers, and of her swift and skilful work. Likewise, little is known of the engi- neering problems necessary to bring the terminals of fifteen million telephones within the reach of a girl's arm, or of the ceaseless work of maintenance which in fair weather and storm keeps the mechanism fit and the wires open. America’s millions of people must have at their command means of direct and instant communication, and the Bell System must ever be in tune with the demands of national service. These are the components of America’s system of teleph- ony: The best of engineering, of manufacture, of facilities— and a personnel trained and eager to serve. AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES BELL SYSTEM One Policy, One System, Universal Service AMERICAN TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY See them at the MOVIES! JUDGE’S CROSSWORD PUZZLES At all Loew Theaters comicbooks.com