Judge, 1934-01 · page 28 of 36
Judge — January 1934 — page 28: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1934-01. 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.
Because My Husband Was So Healthy -We Must / Suffer Want. “It lacked but one month of our eighth wedding anniversary when my husband died—suddenly. He had never been sick a day. He bubbled over with vigor and ene} + He was the picture of health. A chill—pneumonia—and in four days it all over. “He meant to take out insurance to protect us, but he kept putting it off. ‘Why worry about that now?’ he used to s: with his infectious grin, ‘I'm too healthy to think about it, with so many othe ings to do.’ “He left us but a few hundred dollars. It’s gone now—and I'm so afraid of the future.” Putting it off—it is dangerous delays Your second dividend is a Contingent Divide end declare xactly the sa like this that so often bring serine to those least able to bi ount for si c milies leaving no insurance die. by the SF ing life insurance companies. WHY IT COSTS SO EITTCE Ww ds en they 1 Lite > of good ; uson in th world for taking out insuran to protect your family this min- ute. ARE YOU A PREFERRED RISK? y for that class Preferred Risks—if Costs You you qu known as enjoy if h and safe « the so th ound to be lo WHAT YOU GET jeath idends substan- on this limited numt . Fully Paid Up, or w as an Endowment ving make policy— EXAMPLE OF A‘S5,000 POLICY AT AGE 30— you able to y It has many other excellent Endowment (20 Year)....$234.10 Per Year features which are completely Twenty Payment Life... 147.65" “ described in a folder we will Ordinary Life. we « promptly mail to you, 1 SPECIAL FULL LIFE... 97.15" “ Only $8 AN OLD RELIABLE INSURANCE CO. 7.15 a year for a $5,00 For 28 years Postal has been life insurance policy is a remark- g life insurance to thrifty ably low cost—but under the | Complete. Tabi people through the gov: Postal Life plan you don’t even [LSesten Request pay that much, This policy pays TWO dividends—we know of no other insurance policies, outside of Postal’s do that. “the first is a Guaranteed Dividend of ore: satewvard, 9% per cent, that you can deduct in ad- DON'T DELAY—TOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATE the first year This brings tt the rate of id every year t’ cost down to $5 33 month! the annual prem 1 ins: all en Why risk any longer the future of your wife. your children, your loved ones? Don't leave to chance the food, the shelter, the very life of those you hold most dear. Thousands of sensible people all over the country have safeguarded Policies. Don't turn page unti! you have clipped the coupon be the most important thing you have POSTAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., Dept. 277, 511 Fifth Ave., New York, N. Y. Mail me immediately full info il tion about your $5,000 SPECIAL FULL LIFE Policy, without obligation. Occupa Name r | | i | | ' Exact date and year of birth | I 1 1 | Address | | expensive, too, MISTRESS PEPYS’ 13) anyone have the bad taste to question me in this case, to refrain from confid- so enchanting a name. Nor did [ much mind telling the legion of curious what a certain perfume once sent me by the late Florenz Ziegfeld was called, forasmuch as it was made to his own order, and it would have been impos- for them to buy any of it. Most of the day on the ¢! longue reading “The Devil's Den,” interrupted at last by Samuel's arrival with an “I'm killed. Sire! ion and the news that he reat blister on his heel me take watchful care wit! dread (Continued from page expre ad rubbed a The bade s dre asmuch as i lad’s having died through receiving an injury whilst from his goi playing prove fat ital Boothby and Jim) Whitt 1 we gave them pt igus at gratin, very fine, g end of ving struc ed it to his paper of ad of to his cigare oss what to say t ! rbout matches in- } hi due credit t Ted Healy n—the direc movie of 1933 id producer—the best ANCING Lady” represents the nost exorbi waste of talent ind money of the Roosevelt era. Joan Astaire and Robert disconsolately on been colossal—all legs the screen. ITHOUT the expensive players, you can write the same obit for “Take A Chance” and “Sitting Pretty.” Last Month’s Rebus trimming your trees this year, dear friends remember that Christmas is for the little ones. Candies will suit them better than di monds or other gems and are lots less comicbooks.com