comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1919-04-19 · page 27 of 32

Judge — April 19, 1919 — page 27: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — April 19, 1919 — page 27: Judge, 1919-04-19

A restored page from Judge, 1919-04-19. 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.

IDGE i | isible t for cring The : the your the Phat April 19, 1919 Routine anpes, NOV. Reeri By Loves Wee Private Simpson awakes on hearing reveille, shower and gets dressed, then rushes to take looks at hi Another fire drill ‘ine-forty-five P. atch. Oh!” ik thi 1. E. Fs Fras ver there,” A shell came screaming thr tne air; And yet before I could retreat, It landed there just at my feet I closed my eyes and thru my The things I'd done in years behind Rushed madly thru. My good intent Seemed ruthless in the years I'd spent nind Straighten out M w.L.00uGLas PEGGING Snore, aT SEVEN YEARS. $4.00 $4,50 $5.00 $600 $790 & $8.00 IF you have been paying $10.00 to $12.00 for fine shoes, a trial will convince you that for style, comfort and service | W. L. Douglas $7.00 and $8.00 shoes are equally as good and organ. fill all those vows made between clenched teeth at sundry times during the last nineteen months: “Oh, but just wait till I get that cuckoo in| I groaned aloud in inward strife, And w t I'd lived a better life My folks at home I seemed to see. How saddened by my death would be. Then yet again, perhaps this I Might only wound, who then could tell? I saw myself without a leg; | Would I have crutches or a peg? Suppose that I should lose an arm, What powers did this shell have for harm? Cold drops of sweat formed on my brow; Would it explode? Oh, when and how? I cast my eyes down at the n here laid the shell. It was a * \ lesson from this I have learned; \ lesson that cannot be spurned; Twill help me all through life I'll find, To better serve my fellow-kind; When troubles face me dark and grim, No seeming hope to help me win, The shell I'll think of in the n Perhaps they, too, are jus dud.” duc s Breezy Reply A.C. Wor, Co. C, U8th Bn., Ft. Bs f Trumpeter (to company)—Cas any sort of a wind instrum Look for the Letters Ww. S. S. will give excellent satisfaction. The actual value is determined , and the retail price fixed at the factory before W. L. Douglas i | name and the retail priceis stamped on the bottom. Thestamped J price is W. L. Douglas personal guarantee that the shoes are t always worth the price paid for them. The retail prices are $3$3.5094 | thesame everywhere. Theycost no more in San Francisco than they do in New York. " Stamping the price on every pair of shoes as a protection against high prices and { unreasonable profits is only one example of the constant endeavor of W. L. Douglas i to protect his customers. The quality of W. L. Douglas product is ranteed, by i more than 40 years experience in making fine shoes. e smart styles are the leaders in the fashion centers of America. They are made in a well-equipped factory at Brockton, Mass., by the highest paid, skilled shoemakers ale the i direction and supervision of experienced men, all working with an honest deter- mination to make the best shoes for the price that money can buy. CAUTION—Before you buy be sure W. L. Douglas name and the retail price is stamped on the bottom and the inside top facing. If the stamped price has been mutilated, BEWARE OF FRAUD. For sale by 106 W.L.Douglas stores a President W.L. Douglas) or can be ordered direct from factor; Shoe Co., 14 ark ey i) Weite for Iustrated Catalog showing how 10 oF rock _—____ a ee ? Keep on Buying |Use This Chest FREE and . 15 DAYS’ -saqegere—, Keep on Saving FREE TRIAL i . / War Saving Stamps For sale at post offices, banks, department stores and a multitude of other places. ° ookie—Ves, sir; 1 can play a mouth | Sic Semper Shavetailus By Laver, Gronce T. Howes, U.S. A. Now is the time, brothers of the khaki, to ful- Let a wounded soldier read this copy of Judge when you've finished reading it. The Army authorities tell us they can’t begin to supply the soldier-demand, espe- cially in the hospitals, for good periodicals. ‘There never are enough Judges to go ‘round. Simply place a re. stamp on the cover and drop in the nearest mail box. Uncle Sam will do the rest life.” |