Judge, 1930-07-05 · page 15 of 40
Judge — July 5, 1930 — page 15: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1930-07-05. 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.
This Is Our America firecrackers fitting to stand off a bit < at this land of the 1 home of the brave. > method of get- cross-section It is to pick up almost at random a copy of a newspaper and try to skim the happenings of a day with the calm, o! server from, new planet Pluto. we pick the American life. Applying this test, following from the A baker's boy s” passed in 1798. The President of the United States, » without w arning, walked into a Pennsylvania a through 1 the servic machine-gun a hotel’ neae’ Chi cago and mowed down five people. automobiles, seven miles cars went through the Holland tunnel at the rate of 2,000 an hour. A man who had been development. of the 3 he was only sixt In New York the new subway stations were a pioneer in tions of 10% al Pershing dedicated a chapel in our war dead. Lakehurst to look at the Graf Zeppe- lin, arrived from Germany. A murderer about to be executed in i 1, when given to express his last wish, asked for a gas mask. The fifteen-year-old daughter of a Cornell professor ran away her stepmother refused to allow her to attend movies, to play tennis or to have girl friends. Admiral Byrd was awarded the Roosevelt: medal beeause “in a civili ion dominated by indust roming ineres revealed the traits of mind and char- acter which brought about the discov- ery of the American continent, its ex- ploration nd settlement, and the westward march of progress.” A lawsuit filed in Oklahoma charged that whites 1 cheated 2,000 ni- nole Indians out of 00,000,000 worth of oil The Mere! Association caleu- lated that last ye: 000,000 worth of goods were stolen in New York and not recovered. The broth of the Anti-Saloon I that the League leaders interest in temperance r of the superintendent gue declared e no real but are inter- ested in political power and the money they get out of their positions.” Yes, my lads, it's a great country — great for herocs and for fools, crooks and saints, poets and plowmen, youth and age, male and female, lofty and humble — Higgledy-piggledy Land. But which among us would live any- where else? Set off another rocket! Oh, Yes, the World Court y once in a while we Ameri- rans, to our shame, have to be re- minded of the World Court. John W. Davis did it recently with admirable terseness: ight years have sed » the first mecting of the court; seven since President’ Harding first laid the matter of our adherence be- fore the Senate, and four the Senate, by a vote of solved to adhere, with certs tions. Six months ago the Ameri- n Chargé d'’Affaires at Berne af- fixed our signature to the protocol by authority of President Hoove still the word to be spoken.” sir to in reser- « yet of final approval awaits 13 As Mr. Davis points out, the court genuinely American conception” of American history The World Court protocol has lan- guished for ibomina ble tariff ment consists matters so that the public will forget the big ones left undone. Take Any Old Job For Now a hot summer, but it will nt college graduate student looking for a vacation job. nd never were there so many 1 personnel experts and women not anything that advising young men to be choos down-hearted if they embark upon the specialized carcers This is sound ¢ Hard though who need the cash present may have 1 situation like the its healthful effect. much emphasis on special preachment should pick a vocation earls and stick to it. id'be fore and say again that | jump- salute Ary eX- nd possib sly disa astrous. a lamentable all-round experi- and breadth Frequent change of voca- y give you a big advantage, in the long run, over the fellow who A rolling stone gathers a lot of momentum. is inthis country lack of people with ence, variety of contacts comicbooks.com