comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1921-03-19 · page 26 of 36

Judge — March 19, 1921 — page 26: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — March 19, 1921 — page 26: Judge, 1921-03-19

A restored page from Judge, 1921-03-19. 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.

by M.A Cossens, New York University, 23 \ Nowe Proression RutNep wy Auatece The English Lingo badly bandaged its antipode; yc ou learn his Priv the steps, while in whe ellow trail tt le falls for her c fl yett fall where from? Where to? A A student falls down n the sea: To bear, of ¢ y up, while it can mear t x e bear-cat that > ar to tell a t id € crib. te ria! ne'er tell a bare And so it ison down the fine, with and battered up—their ! ved and battered all , until, despairingly. yc oO ting?” —Awtuce L. Campnen. Tact By M. Wate, Sage College, Cornell WENTY ha erif's And darn my s t Hd clean and ks eterna Naw! I looked into her violet eyes n fairy-tales and lic wuld she marry me ally angel darling wif I'd pet and pamper her for life I'd buy her cars and jewels—cla: She murmured, “Dearest Henry, Yes! Philosophy By W. D. Caricnart, l sity of North Carolin ton still has got Ties ton si And each of us wii At sixty, g That Grand and Glorious Fe DID you ever ap lect turm« it was time t All the way vecially th tit; write it ing with your mi prayer that you may mitory.—ALrRED W. Poxp, Penn Sta The Plumber's Daughter By Fraxcts Wootsry Broxsoy, J VE raved enc blit I me, Mus Tt ever came That I can sit and ¢ \ portly, plumber's h of col It’s nota case of ser And I'm not often r: And I am positive it’s Because she has I think th tle rease That she’s a clever type, For when I'm stuck to end a verse She says, “Why, that’s a pipe! La Femme By Eowenp F. Burge, Pennsyloania, A Tite, 3 childs at twenty, wild At thirty, wilder’n ever; At forty, fifty, tame: if ever 2t Drawn by Fuaxers L. € he most for By Wituaw B. Buake, Brown Un HEN the Springt » lace-work In the Summer wh {my Maizie ste With elastic bands And you of Ata fe h her stocki nL tell you how t But in Winter when my M. my brothers, wipe your gla And gave the yor The Cosmopolitan By F. L. Weaver, Pomona ( RING me not your faint scent Nor yet the pale lilies wnich gli Amid the silver dew at dawn Naught to me the pansies’ dim fragr: Naught the languid perfume clot The wandering winds of Sprir Brush from budding But bring me dark With their heavy cl Eddying about them Bring me rich lotus bl Bring all which with neavy laden Sweetness numbs the senses For b a Chinese brother Who h bathed for yea Some Neck ving animal What makes you believe that Why, my dear, he overlool > Ewe, Lafaye 21 Stockings ime brings the I'r lance with M low her kne to hear the loung Autumn when you find me h ball game with Mai may be woolen bet that I'm a pair of riding breeche the Maizic Hi see a good thi arried f Blue Mother Goose By Howarp Cnacr, Ohio S ITTLE lola cranked the Victrola 4 Thinking that no body A sanctified So Called the patrol re has blown h © pught it was Saturday 1x. Hareard ‘Tne Moos ann Eve verything et =