comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1921-12-31 · page 34 of 37

Judge — December 31, 1921 — page 34: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — December 31, 1921 — page 34: Judge, 1921-12-31

A restored page from Judge, 1921-12-31. 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.

Turn Your Spare Time Into Cash If you have an earnest desire to make money, let us tell you what acting as sub- scription representatives for Leslie’s Weekly, Judge and Film Fun. some e others are doing by 2, Agency Department, 627 West 43d Address Des! Leslie-Judge Comp: Street, New York City The Pests! How We Love ’Em By BATTELL LooMIS | |" isn’t what she says, | That hurts. 1 A wound begins to heal what time | It spurts; But the attitude of mind, The laxity of fiber, Is what seems less than kind And puts me on the kyber; For it’s that that lets her lash out her | Tongue quirts. It isn’t what I do That counts. A thing that’s done, if well done, just Amounts To nothing in her mind; But undone acts of labor Seem to be the special kind That can cut her like a saber, And ’tis such that make her flare at me, And flounce. One day, I bade her go to Mom-in-law And stay! Then I nearly lost my mind, And I sighed sighs that were lobar, As I thought myself unkind In my second thinking, sober, To have canned her. She came back just then, And say!*—?2%#$$. i) Tf you don’t read Film Fun you don’t get all the movie news ‘The January issue now be- ing sold by your newsdealer | | So I turned her out of doors | See the pictures of Coming Stars. I what the Present Stars are doing. See how they do it on the other side of the world. You get everything in Film Fun for 20c. At your nearest newsdealer, NOW ROMEIKE’S PRESS CLIPPING BUREAU We will send you all newspaper clip- pings which may appear about, you, your friends or any. subject on which you may want to be “‘up-to-date."" Every newspaper or periodical of importance in the United States and Furope is searched. Terins $7.50 for 100 clippings. HENRY ROMEIKE 106-110 Seventh Avenue New York Mother Earth—Oho! So that’s your game, is it? You good-for-nothin’ ol’ dead beat! Sneakin’ out th’ back way without payin’ your last week’s room rent! THE MIRACLE Anne loved Freddy deeply. She was never late at an appointment. She never called him up at his office during the morning and early after- noon rush hours. She loved him devotedly. He was certain of her loyalty, and of her love and of her affection. Yet she did not expect him to talk of marriage to her. For she was married already. And to Freddy. She was the perfect wife. Freddy called her the miracle. WHAT SHALL ONE SAY? He—I seem to have incurred your mother’s displeasure. She—Yes, you are absolutely tact- less. “How’s that?” “You told her how natural her new teeth looked.” 32 BROWN’S CURIOSITY Walking through Wall Street the other day Brown saw gath- ered by the curb, in a little group, the president of a na- tional bank, the vice-president of a trust company, a partner of a private banking house of world-wide fame, and a re- porter. Brown is a good reporter. He scented financial history in the mak- ing. He hastened over and butted into the conversation. He found they each wanted to get either a shave or a hair cut and were matching quarters to see who should pay for the crowd. Brown’s curiosity cost him $7.80, including tips. Slandering the High Collar By Thomas M. Farquhar THE high choker collar “compres- ses the salivary glands, prevents circulation, induces cerebral nervous- ness, checks vocal efforts, and aids chronic congestion of the respiratory passages.” Such is the indictment of a diagnostician. Evidently a propa- ganda in decollete male dress reform is imminent, or a collapsible pattern is about to be put on the market. On hygienic principles the high collar has been assailed with vituper- ative bitterness. Social rejuvenators have ingeniously connected it with aristocratic institutions, and revolu- tionaries have made a collarless pro- letariat an ideal, while voluptuaries have insisted that the soft Byronic collar loosened the ties of society and morality. Sects have maintained that it is fit for clergymen, bride- grooms and cold weather only. All this anathema has placed anybody who dares to take it off under grave suspicion. The high collar is a beneficent in- vention. No patriot can contemplate the chokers of the sages without see- ing in them the infinite stability of disciplined character. No barbarian, torn from his vacation, will challenge the decent opinion of mankind by separating himself from the badge of his caste. We may yield our socks and pajamas; but the high collar is fixed in the universe as firmly as the three rings of Saturn. WITH THE MOVIES IN MIND Teacher—There is always room at the top. Boy—Not unless you git there early. A MENTAL TOURIST “That actor on the screen seems to be wandering in his mind.” “Yes. But the way he looks he will not be able to stray very far.” “I think old Higgs has made a suc- cessful batch of home brew at last.” “Why?” “He has stopped talking about it.” comicbooks.com