Judge, 1921-02-05 · page 24 of 32
Judge — February 5, 1921 — page 24: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1921-02-05. 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.
Solicitous 1 gg the cara ds She itera lo WAS Speer He were ad h Dame Safety First Cap-tivaTine —Sta Irrepressible, nestled n Massa What Juggler. ford Chaparral Joyous, Irresponsible Are You in on This? JUDGE'S first lege Wits number, pub- lished last March, wos am am: As it has now become an annual eith His Honor, the second number, to d again in March, may be expected even to sur he first im interest 'DGE now asks undergraduate friends to begin sending in poems, little essays, jokes and other suitable matter, including drawings, for the number Each contribution accepted must bear the name, class and college of the contributor, end will be paid for ‘The college making the best showing in the number wins the large silver cup which Cornell won in the first contest. that cup being subject to three winnings by a college before it becomes the permanent property of the college. Two individual silver cups are offered in addi- tion, one to go to the artist whose drawing sidered the best submitted (including @ pos cover in colors). Charles Baskerville, Jr., of - nell, won this last hb. The other goes to the euthor of the best of text published in the number. Albert R. Stewart. of Dartmouth, won this in the first contest. All contributions must be original and exclusive The contest is conducted on the principle of @ track meet, on points All material submitted must be at the JUDGE. office by February except color designs (in all mediums), which must be in hand two weeks earlier Address COLLEGE WITS CONTEST. and inclose postage for return in case of rejection All aboard an Always. ZOU can always tell a Senior, he is so sedately dressed. You can always tell a Junior by the way he swells his chest; You can always tell a Freshman by his timid looks and such; You can always tell a Sophomore, but you can- not tell him much.—Mass. Ag. Squib. The News Genial Gent—(as he purchased paper from newsboy)—Well, well, sonny, what's City Council been doing today? Newsboy—Robberies on page four, sir— Pennsylvania Punch Bout. 7 JUDGE Then Fur Flew “Were you and Daddy good bovs w gone?” asked the mother. “Oh, yes, “And did you trea “T shoul i “And ¢ day “I should say we did! he child. respe rep her good night every —Washington Dirge A Bear She’s rather squat, But she has a peach of a form. Set close to the ground But built for action. She has a ‘ge mouth, right Though she doesn’t w She looks mighty goc Certainly has “that ilding is a bear fornia Wampu Don't Girls Ever Eat at Home Fred—Jim finally found out the real name of that chorus girl he took to supper last night. Ferd—What it? tell she h. Sun Dial f MON cy Nina \ ! it i Was \ oar “1 COULDN'T SEE THE Gint WHO JUST WENT BY THE WINDOW. What pip you THINK OF HER?” “You're ricut.”—Syracuse Orange Peet comicbooks.com