Judge, 1900-07-28 · page 5 of 16
Judge — July 28, 1900 — page 5: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1900-07-28. 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.
ON VISITORS’ DAY. Orricer Guxxe— Pardon me, but didn't I meet you here last year?” Epirit JinyexsNan—" I really don't remember, How many times did you propose?" SCATTERING SHOTS. LIKE OIL AND WATER. HE. man who does right has reason on his side; the man who does wrong has reasons. One can be so much lonelier in a g than any- Merritt —"\e wants to keep chickens, while she insists on having a where else that one is inclined to think the hermits of old fled flower-garden. to the deserts for com- pany. If you know who a friend would change places with, were it possible, you have the key to the dearest am- bition and probably to the bitterest disap- pointment of a life. A first book often resembles a cyclorama, A few figures stand out carefully modeled but lifeless; the others are painted on a flat background. Only a gen- ius can make his “ super” real. What a pleasure it is to cease spinning cobwebs from our own weary brains and lose our very identity in a book so great that, in the ease of its finish, we forget the nights and days of labor, the sweat and the tears, that it has cost some one to learn enough to write it. THE STATE OF AFFAIRS. THE war with China now will prove Quite difficult, we think ; For though we doubtless will Pekin We can’t see through the Chink. my vegetables. Cora—" How is it they quarrel so ever since they went to live in the suburbs?" AMATEUR FARMING. "Do your neighbors’ chickens hurt your vegetables much?” just the other way, My next-door neighbor has lost over sixty chickens from eating comicbooks.com