Judge, 1921-05-14 · page 18 of 32
Judge — May 14, 1921 — page 18: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1921-05-14. 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.
Husband ready? Married Life & la Mode (angrily) —What! no supper That is the limit! I’m going to a restau rant Wife—Wait just five minutes Husband—Will it be ready then? W No, but then I'll go with you. —Minnea po Ahead Mr the Girl Scouts short. skirts, A Strenuous me Hardfax—I'm told that are pledged to wear no openwork stockings, peckaboo waists or rouge. Miss Makeup Nobody'll come to ‘em Then they'll have to Boston scou Globe Life Getting More Complex—An Ohio physician declares that the length of a woman's second toe indicates her disposition, and he warns us women with long ones. Must the fellow who goes courting Boston ens! carry along an X-ray machine? Transcript. It's Public Now Is the world getting better or worse: Opinions differ as to that,” said the when grand- mother was a girl a dimple in the fem- knee was regarded as a private Birmingham Age- Herald old-fashioned person, “bu inine patter, Strategy I saw the cutest little hat this afternoon “Did you buy it?” Not yet. I've got to pick out a more ive one for my husband to refuse exp mise on this one."* to buy sol has Pick “That lady handkerchief Enough lace Safe pped her it up.” “T hesitate to do so. petticoat.” “You're safe in picking it up. Ladies don’t wear petticoats.” —Louiseille Cou It may be her rier-Jour Dangerous!—“I wonder if dyeing one’s hair is really as dangerous, as the doctors say?” said Watts. “You bet it is,” replied Henpeck “An uncle of mine tried it once and in hs he was married to children, less than three m a widow with four York Globe, Making Politics Pay “My DEAR, HOW WELL DRESSED YOU ARE LATELY!” Yes, troeeo! His POLITICAL views.” —Naggen (Stockholm) MY HUSBAND PROMISED TO GIVE ME A NEW GOWN EACH TIME HE CHANGED “To Rear the Tender Thought” “MAMMA, A LADY CAME WHILE YOU WERE ovr, AND ENTERTAINED HER.” Mother (d Deak sie! “On, pON’t Tosiaoe neueve | weit Journal turbed) worry WAS wRouGuT UP L Bad Dreams HAD a vision, bright and fair; Lam a shameless shirk, And in this dream beyond compare There were no jobs to irk I dreamed I'd reached an island where I didn’t have to work. There, victuals of the choicest kind Were plucked from every tree; Pleasures for body and for mind Were absolutely free; No more for me the daily grind Of toil, no more for me! I had my choicest friends and books, My favorite chair and pipe; The place was full of cozy nooks And fruits both rare and ripe; And there were lakes and babbling brooks Of most romantic type. I'd never have to work again Nor even think of work! A sudden thought o'erwhelmed me then And plunged my soul in murk— How could I shirk from working, when Thad no work to shirk? O vain ideal of happiness That holds the hapless mob! I wakened up in dire distress And muttered, with a sob— “Tt ain't no fun to loaf, unless You should be on the job.”” —Cleveland Plain Dealer. comicbooks.com