Judge, 1933-06 · page 28 of 38
Judge — June 1933 — page 28: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1933-06. 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.
TET sa Confidence—and Cash “The 1. A. training has taught me how to write a cood tory. and why 1t should be that way, By spolying How do you KNOW you cant WRITE? Have you ever tried? Have you ever attempted even the least bit of training, under competent guidance? Or have you been sitting back, as it is so easy to do, waiting for the day to come some time when you will awaken, all of a sudden, to the discovery, “I am a writer”? If the latter course is the one of your choosing, you probably never will write, Lawyers must be law clerks. Doctors must be internes. Engineers must be draftamen. We all know that, in our times, the egg does come before the chicken. It is seldom that anyone becomes a writer until he (or she) has been writing for some time. That is why so many authors and writers spring up out of the newspaper business. The day-to-day necessity of writing—of gathering material about which to write—develops their talent, their insight, their background and their confidence as nothing else could. That is why the Newspaper Institute of Amer. ica bases its writing instruction on Journalism —continuous writing—the training that has pro- duced so many successful authors. Learn to write by writing NEWSPAPER Institute training is based on the New York Copy-Desk Method. It starts and keeps you writing in your own home, on your own time, Week by week you receive actual assignments, just as if you were right at work on a great metropolitan daily. Your writing is individually corrected and constructively criti- eized. A group of men with 182 years of news- paper experience behind them are responsible for this instruction. Under such sympathetic guid- ance, you will find that (instead of vainly trying to copy someone else's writing tricks) you are rapidly developing your own distinctive, self- flavored style—undergoing an experience that has a thrill to it and which at the same time devel- ops in you the power to make your feelings articulate, Many people who should be writing become awestruck by fabulous stories about millionaire authors and therefore give little thought to the $25, $50 and $100 or more that can often be earned for material that takes little time to write—stories, articles on business, fads, travels, sports, recipes, etc—things that can easily be turned out in leisure hours, and often on the impulse of the moment. How you start We have prepared a unique Writing Aptitude Test. This tells you whether you possess the fundamental qualities necessary to successful writing—acute observation, dramatic instinct, creative imagination, ete. You'll enjoy taking this test. The coupon will bring it without obli- gation. Newspaper Institute of America, 1776 Broadway, New York. Newspaper Institute of America i] 1176 Broadway, New York Send me, without cost or obligation, your Writing Aptitude Teat and farther information about writing for profit as promised in Judge, i Tune. | ur. Mra Miss Address os {All correspondence confidential. Tor363 all on you.) t—-—-——— — — — E- Judge’s Mystery Solving Department Conducted by Inspector Dart of the Rebus Squad Quit cussin’ and get busy, is our advice ‘OR several hard winters we have known that the country is heavily on the pig and we don’t need letters like this to keep it in our memory. If this writer thinks he is telling us something we don’t already know, he’s all damp but we can’t help but indorse the sentiment expressed in his sentence. We must put our shoulders to the wheel, let chips fall where they may. Also, a rolling stone gathers no moss, Britons shall never be slaves and sic semper tyrannus. (Solution in next issue) 333 mane BO > sraTING> JEN arcs ° daring bls ° at unrecl & UNSERTANTY. af Srb4~ é (Last Month’s Solution on page 32) comicbooks.com