Judge, 1927-07-09 · page 27 of 36
Judge — July 9, 1927 — page 27: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1927-07-09. 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.
High Hat (Continued from page 11) first, I tried to answer these per- ; sonally, but it interfered terribly | with my afternoons, . . . So | below T have tried to cover all possible inquiries and hope you | ;will understand. . . . At present we have 128 chapters going full blast. . . . Maybe we won’t make , these here now Rotarians feel | sick! oe ed Notice to Local High Hats: Hold all your applications for | new members until you can send | them all in one bunch, and send along with them the price of the key for each one, as this will save a lot of time for both of us... . Whenever prospective members are black-balled their money will be returned, a The first six members taken into each local chapter will be considered charter members and will constitute the Board of Gov- ernors. . . . In cities of over 300,000 we are appointing several local High Hats—one for each district. . . . We shall be glad to furnish a list of the towns in which chapters have been estab- lished, on request. . . . We are gathering together a list of res- taurants and night clubs from all over the country in which holders of High Hat keys will be given special attention, but this will not be fully complete until the fall, as many of the places have closed up for the summer. Got “A sharp nose indicates curi- osity ys a critic. A flattened nose indicates too much curiosity. —Lonpon Opinion The Traveler’s Telephone An Advertisement of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company Americans are the great- est travelers in the world. ‘They have knit the coun- try together by steel rails and made it the largest and most prosperous business community the world has ever seen. Busi- ness, friendship and_ political solidarity are maintained by personal touch, by travel and the telephone. Wherever the business man goesin this country, be it thirty miles or three thousand, he is still within earshot of his office, his family and his friends. He can get them and they can get him, and for the longest call in the United States the day rate is only $12 and the night rate is only $8. For the Bell Telephone System is an idea in force nationally. All the instruments are designed in the largest industrial laboratory in the world and made in the same factories to the one standard of fitness. All of the telephone builders, repairers and operators are trained tothesameidealand aim; stated by President Walter S. Gifford as: “A telephone service for the nation, so far as humanly pos- sible free from imperfections, errors or delays, and enabling at all times anyone anywhere to pick up a telephone and talk to anyone else anywhere else, clearly, quickly and at a reason- able cost.” 7 Girt Voge Asleep ‘neath this slab, Lies Bennie O'Bourser. He raised his insurance, Before he divorced her. ain \ibriabe QUOT tata nil See ‘pays $5 for each one Print et loaf LOVE! Whether you are in love—or are married—you will be sure to enjoy very mushily all the sweet sentimentality in the MOONLIGHT NUMBER JUDGE NEXT WEEK —AT ALL NEWSSTANDS comicbooks.com