Judge, 1920-04-10 · page 33 of 36
Judge — April 10, 1920 — page 33: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1920-04-10. 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.
imy emit m1 neor Ippe not DG unte ming, rs for ENT when j 5 of Sok uu uneTT Gothar He w et he fel Casey and th: first « ¢ hous wamls mon are April 10, 1920 Winner or Loser? By Iiarry Invinc Suumway OLD Chagins was « hard man to approach on anything, but the young man who sought the hand of his daughter Rose had te Possess courage and then some. Clyde Downell was one of those youths who are forever having an idea that they have an He was madly in love with Rose and figured he could dope out the combination of how to approach the old man on the subject and still retain his well-being. When the idea scemed cooked to a nice brown he approached with it Nothing was stid in the preliminaries about Rose, Instead Clyde’s whole happiness scemed to be in playing poker with her father. He never mentioned the girl of his dreams; all he did was to lose consistently to the old man. Clyde all the while was sounding the depths of the other man’s pet ideas and aversions. The time came when the young man had them all tabulated, and he was very careful to agree with Mr. Cliggins in everything. He was even more pronounced in his opinions when certain that they were Cliggins’. Gradually the young diplomat drew the other out until he was telling the stories of his life, how he caught the big trout, how he broke the colt that nobody had ever been able to mount and still live, how he licked the neighbor who disputed a pasture boundary. These tales were longer than Cooper ever dared to write, but Clyde. listened in rapt attention and asked for more. He even fell for repetition. Then one day he asked Claggins for the hand of Rose, and didn’t © Drawn by Donsuy Mok ex w R.F. D. box. Hain’t ye The old man eved him carefully “Young man,” he finally said. “1 have played poker with you a few times, and you lost like a babe in the wood. You're the worst poker player I ever saw.” Clyde gulped, saying nothing “So far as T am able to see, you haven't 4 single solitary opinion of your ewn. You agree to everything, no matter what it is.” The young man blushed, but could offer no defense for himself “And then,” said Cloggins. listen to those old tales of mine, which I know to be as dry as dust. I’m a punk story-teller but apparently you thought mea penny thriller 1 am forced to conclude that you are a man who cannot play the simplest) game, have no opinions of your own and probably never will “you patiently have, and who can listen by the hour to noth ing but words Clyde said nothing. toppled over like a bouse of cards His little scheme was He seemed in a trance. “Therefore,” the old man shouted. scaring the wits out of the sad schemer, “I cheerfully bequeath my daughter Rose to your keeping. You are the one man for her.” “But I don’t understand: “You will when you marry my girl.” swered old Claggins. almost Drawback Roses are red, violets are blue, And they cost a million or two Yep! Willis—Sce that bum over there? put him where he is. Gillis—Yes; and he put whiskey where it is Whiskey bout the new aerial mail?” B Did You Ever Whip Cream ? I guess, if the truth were known, we woulc find that a lot of men are on intimate term: with kitchen aprons and machinery.’ Ever no- tice how creamacts? You crank the egg beater about1000r.p.m. and nothing seems tohappen ‘Then, just as you are about to advise the bost that the cream is no good, it suddenly stiffens Mennen lather works the same way best results because he won’t take the time to build up a firm lather. ‘These friends of yours who rave about the marvelous results they get with Mennen’s, devote about three minutes to brisk brush- ing, using a lot of water—three times as|] much water as ordinary lather will hold. | About one man in a hundred fails to mf The meanest beard that ever sprouted, curls up and quits after three minutes exposure to Mennen lather. ‘The reason | am trying to get men to use Mennen's ly is that experience has taught me that all the world doesn’t equal the selling wer of . Once a man really knows printed advertisin Mten etter advertisement than | ever wrote. In our giant sized 50 cent tube are the makings of | aves so yorgcous that words fail me when I try to ibe them, but you must do your part. Remember—the proper amount of Cream—plenty of water—h « h fing nd three minute THe Mennen Company Newaarn, AJ. USA comicbooks.com