Judge, 1928-12-01 · page 27 of 36
Judge — December 1, 1928 — page 27: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1928-12-01. 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.
tha oilman atl wheeze of the husband who takes a fancy to his wife’s lover; and the third—believe it or not—in a lot of slamming doors with the actors dressed in pajamas. We yw engage a dance number in which the dancers wear masks, already scen both here and on the Continent in’ several revues; a travesty of the Chauve Souris, the humor of which lies in. the in- jection of the — exclamation, “Whoops!” into the Russian jar- yon; an oo-l. nd-song. Parisian number called shades of the Folies Berg Moulin Roi !—with the recog- nizable cast of “A. singer, two ere and , If nstitutes a great revue, thing is distinctly wrong with the critical talents of Prof. Dr. George Jean Nathan. "You look very miserable.” “Yes, three weeks ago I drank too much champagne.” “But you must have got over the effects by now, | “Yes, but now T have to pay | for it. —Den Gemvtiicne Sacuse, Leva At the rodeo an agile co rode beneath the horse, on the k and almost on his horse's n tail. One of the party remarked: “That's nothing. I did all of that the first time I ever rode a horse.” —Cineaco Dany News Problem If the little boy (A) starts sliding down the incline plane (B) at the same time that the dog (D) starts drinking water out of the tub (C), and the incline is 16 feet long and the tub holds two quarts of water, what happens to the little boy? Answer on page 29, The U.S.A.is only a few minutes wide An Advertisement of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company Ix THE gold rush year of "49 a stagecoach succeeded in crossing the continent in about three months. Two decades later, for the first time, an unbroken stretch of railroad lay from New York Harbor to San Francisco Bay, and America was seven days wide. Today, by tele- phone, that entire width is only a matter of minutes. And these few minutes represent a round trip, taken in the ease of office or hom The Bell System is ever busy re- ducing the width of America and the distance between cities. For ex- ample, during 1929 it will add to its lines nearly 2,000,000 of the new permalloy loading coils for correct- ing and maintaining the speeding voice currents. Seven thousand miles of new inter- city cable, $40,000,000 worth, will be added to the System to protect against storms and other slowing up influ In the last five years 350 major improvements, as well as thousands of others whose sgregate importance mounts high, have been made in telephone central office equipment, Improved operating practices have eliminated the necessity of your “hanging up” and being called back in 95 per cent of toll and long dis- tance calls, adding new speed and ease to out of town calling. You hold the wire and the operator does the rest. Since New Year 1927, the average time for completing all out of town calls has been cut 35 per cent and at the same time the per cent of error has been further ma- terially reduced. There is no standing still in the Bell System. Better and better tele- phone service at the lowest cost is the goal, Present improvements constantly going into effect are but the foundation for the future's greater service. Tereruone Books ane tue Directory or tHe Nation” PEAR RENT TODAY ARRIVE GUTTA PERCHA ouT WEAVE SPINDLE HARMONY AND DERISION ASCENT LEFT MALAY CHECK IF YUKON SPIRIT comicbooks.com