Judge, 1920-06-19 · page 14 of 36
Judge — June 19, 1920 — page 14: what you’re looking at
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(Continued from page 13) Fuv-ry [st ‘ARTE D with my comrades three Upon a jolly walk Kind was their attitude towarc And carefree was their talk And love their joyous hearts had seized They were my friends—my own "Till all at once [ coughed and sneezed And 1 was alone Tue Race (Winter of 1916) : more spurt, my precious black, Let the wind high wave your hair, Just beyond the straining mare. Just ahead of the pony gray, Pass the goal with triumphant neigh, Show your worth of blood and kin, One more spurt and you shall wi Show that you're a thoroughbred. Prove the coolness of your head, Just exert'your master-force, Let them see how you can course. Would you let the trotter by? Show him now how we can tly, Do it now—a swifter pace, The goal is passed—we've Toxes Fixos a Newsparen ix His Me ore your sinewed back; won the race. Ctoser s! Ow Uxo Sean’ Ti Viotet gentle little face that peers, m out a bed of clover. Little wistful violet arly springtime rover. vound, nw my heart doth leap and When some early morning First signs of the Spring I see Fields and meads adorning Messenger of balmy day's Violet. bobbing. bo Flower dress'd in purple \ Corrace [ SAW the stately hills aris Clothed in a robe of verdant life And capped they were with azure skies Their crests keen-edged like a knife hk And up at top their lofty p Whence nature all the work Where all the desolation speaks. \ solitary cottage stands commands, There where the clouds Hing by 1 where the tower sleeps A sentinel This lonely co mountain against the sky aay SS His Eve Fatts on te Ap, or a Coox Srexese « Posrtioy at $20 rer Mostn! peRnOLT Ryr Working in a Circle By Katuextse Neciey ven, he swelled visibly when folks aid he looked at least ten. he pompadoured his A At seventeen, hair, gloried in his long trousers and said twenty, At twent so he would be taken for thirty At thirty-seven, he combed his hair so the bald spot and the gray hair over his temple did not show. At forty-seven, he knew he had to buy his kisses—but he had the money to pay, so why wor At fifty-seven, he said proudly that most people took him for fifty. At sixty-seven, he no longer mentior but boasted of his early exploits he ven, he grew a mustache his age, At seventy-seven, he made occasion to tell every one, with pride, how old he wa \t_ eighty-seven, he claimed he was ninety and tried to outdo the other old men he knew in tales of his past prowess. A Compromise “Excuse me, old man, but: your nose =I never saw one like it. ‘The result of an accident?” “Partly, but mainly the result of a dispute between surgeons, One wanted to set it Greek, the other Roman.” A 12-Roosr House To Rexr—z0 Dortars! at oe Tun Newspaper Is Datro 1913!