comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1920-10-23 · page 26 of 32

Judge — October 23, 1920 — page 26: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — October 23, 1920 — page 26: Judge, 1920-10-23

A restored page from Judge, 1920-10-23. 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.

Ar Gases ' Sourness Indigestion Heartburr Flatulence \ Palpitation Just as soon as you eat a tablet or two of Pape’s Dispereia all the stom- { ach distress caused by acidity will 1 end. Pape’s Diapepsin ys puts wick, upset, acid stomachs in order at once: RADE’Y 60c case—drugstores, Dives @ %: Gen #. Venezuela, Salvador and India J Qe, atemala. Caina. ete. Only finest - Agents Wanted. Bis stamps, Estab. 25 yrs. 108, St. Louis, Mo. -p. Lists Free. We Buy Q. STAMP CO., Dept. 1 = } - Books Received Social Co by Adam Abat. Publishing Company, Inc.) Mountains, Anonymous. & Company.) The Junkman, by Richard Le Gallienne. (Double- day, Page & Company.) The Drums of Jeopardy, by Harold MacGrath (Doubleday, Page & Company.) (Co-operative ‘ In (Doubleday, Page Little Heroe. France, by Kathleen Burke. (Dou- bleday, Page & Company.) The Heart of Unuga, by Ridgwell Cullum. (G. P. by Henry Seidel Canby. (The ne Cen- by Herman Klein. (1 by Alice Hegan Rice and Cale (The Century Co.) by E. W. Savi You Rice. When the Blood Burns, nam’s Sons.) The Top of the World, by Ethel Dell. nam’s Sons.) (G. P. Put- (G. P. Put- Autobiography. (G. P. Eugénic, by C. Fleury D. Appleton & Co.) and About, by D. Willoughby. (E. P. Dut- & Co) My Kingdom for a Horse, by William Allison. (E. P. Dutton & Co.) | The Sea and the Jungle, by H. M. Tomlinson. (E. P. Dutton & Co.) Lady, by J.C. Snaith. (D. Apple- James Huneker. (Charles Serib- wine Foreign Stamps— Mevico War | | Snoppy-Quops Prentice Has Words with Central By Wa. C. Trrcoup and F. Hello, Central. oh. I say, Give me some one, right away. S. Murray Prentice Oh, Buffalo Bill perhaps would do, Or Will Rogers with his lasso. T never was in such a pickle! Cc. ? Central P. P. The Buffalo's beat it off my nickel! c eR? P. I didn’t see which way he went. P. You ask me if I got a scent? Ain't you the little joker, though? Where you belong is with a show! ( Br ? P. You can’t stand there and talk all night? My word, this service is a fright! I'll tell on you and serve you right. ( ? P. Youdon’t? Oh, very well, good night. The Diplomatic Corpse Mother—And didn’t Jack like that homespun suit you made for him? I never sce him wearing it. Wife—Certainly, he likes it! He sa he wouldn't think of putting it to common, e' day use. He's got it locked up in the bottom drawer of the bureau, and says he intends to be buried in it Just a Difference in Days Mrs. Cromley—I live between a public and a private school, and the only quiet days I have are Saturday's and Sunday's Mrs. Britlen—Those are my noisy days. I live between a synagogue and a church. Often Heard of—Seldom Seen Teacher—Ruthie, name the different vege- tables—lettuce, onions, radishes and so forth— that your father raised in his garden. Ruhie (cight years old)—Lettuce. radishes- Teacher—What else? Ruthie—I—I don’t think papa raised and so forth this year. onions. SEXOLOGY HE GE GHEE “MADE at KEY acid The Taxi Driver By J. P. McEvoy LONG the busy boulevard He tools a wicked bus And all the day he drives it hard To make it tough for us. And when we try to cross the street He pedals on the gas, And mutters to the motor’s beat “They shall not pass!” There is a plangent pedigree To this laconic line That. were it known to you and me, His motives would define, So, let’s recall the days that were In all their mighty mass, And know to what those words refer “They shall not pass.” When first the Frenchmen held the Huns And put their hordes to flight By rushing to the Marne with guns In taxicabs at night "Twas not the soldiers true and tried Who won with shots and stabs “They shall not pass,” the chauffeurs cried And charged—with taxicabs And so today in glare or gloam He chauffeurs just the same; Some day he'll meet you plodding home And lope across your frame, And when above your sleeping head The cows are nibbling grass, He'll feel content, for he has said y shall not pass!” Lonesome Honors Helter—Jones feels discouraged about his boy Skelter—Why so? Helter—He says, judging from what his chums say, he is the father of the only child on earth who doesn’t get one hundred per cent. in everything at school. comicbooks.com