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Judge, 1922-09-30 · page 34 of 36

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Judge — September 30, 1922 — page 34: Judge, 1922-09-30

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“Convenient to Everywhere” | RITTENHOUSE HOTEL 22d & Chestnut Sts Philadelphia, Pa .. $3" Rooms w cold Roon bath Club Breakfo al re Time Work Us all a Newspaper Training Assa.,354 Fourth Ave., Dept. 159, New York City Correspondence Course Comic Art & Caricature t Cut and Square Deal Cuticura Soap —The Healthy — Shaving Soap Caticura Soap shaves without mag. Everywhere 26c. As one of the oldest pat eat firms in America we Patents of extraordinary value. Lacey& Lacey, 657 F St., W. CASH Jewelry, Wai Cash sent it you're ‘ not 316 Hippodro INVENTORS“ giv RANDOLPH & CO., 789 iE de W T. TYLER, Federal Reserve | + at Nashville, tells this stor. “A well-known banker of N starting with his bride on their honey- noc Having to leave there very early in the morning he was unable to secure seats in the Pullman, and therefore went into the day coach, Anxious to have his wife as comfortable as possible the al trips to the sleeper to see the prospects for a seat. Finally, finding a lower berth vacated he sat down on the arm of the seat to await develop- ments, when suddenly his head was | red by descending skirts, but not without his having been seen by the conductor, whereupon he ‘beat it.” ‘The | bride, to make herself comfortable, had curled up on the seat, and the banker in his search did not locate her, so kept going till he reached the last coach, whereupon he remarked to the conductor, who had preceded him, ‘ve lost my wife,’ to which the conductor replied, ‘Well I my head under another woman's dress F'd lose my wif tleman mai cov got too.” Py M. VAN SANT, President of the + Manufacturers’ National Bank of Cambridge, Mass., tells JupGE this amus- ing one: “A minister who had few dealings in banking had been tendered his first check in payment of a marriage ceremony. In a bewildered way he went up to the teller’s id very shyly presented the check. ie teller upon turning it over did not bear his indorsement and pa it back to the minister saying: ‘Indorse the check, please.” “The minister said, ‘Pardon me, I don’t understand.” “Tndorse it on the back,” teller. “The minister said, ‘Oh! Yes, Yes! » wrote on the back of the check and 1 it again. > teller turned it over and found the words ‘I heartily indorse this check.’ replied t] as The Clown Is Good Continued from page 11 named exhibit is being hauled off to the storchouse, he has produced “Wild Oats “a dramatization from his owr . Which—unle ing of the popular me—will doubtless once judgment. This “Wild Oats Lane,” a magazine short story in the grand old. style lugubriously sentimental misled girls ued from a | thieves reformed and villains un- . with the spirit of a kindly old dodo—in this instance, ish priest hovering over wh tie critic on a gazette of Springficld, Mi ferred to as the whole tout-en sthma of the mut of date ments agi *ollette. year of Our Lord, 1922, such still reap a rich boob harvest, ‘clare my bet with its author shall stand ready to wear a pink ‘n- derby hat throughout the my own understand Iso deserted in belie his ashioned fron 1 honeysuckh of those about one pieces once re mble, arly “8 as the ¢ s with the its inst pleased te lost, and and wintet Mr. Maclyn Arbuckle has the star réle. Mr. Arbuckle’s art may perhaps best bx deseribed as that of a very fat William Hodge. SAVINGS BANK} Corrected