Judge, 1924-08-23 · page 33 of 36
Judge — August 23, 1924 — page 33: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1924-08-23. 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.
XUM yesterday? rapher is on her vacation. July 12, 1924 i brook, L. I., N phone numbers,” Winner of Judge’s 50-50 Contest No. 28 Mr. Babbitt—Who was that lady I saw you with Mr. Crabbitt—Oh, that was the wife, my stenog- The $25 Prize in Jupae’s Fifty-Fifty Contest No ue, was won by Lily Leonhard, 25 Franklin avenue, Lyn- Answers which received consideration are: “’ re-vamped,” M. D. Penry, Denton, Tex.; ‘That wasn’t a lady, it was my wife’—no, not even to win JupGE’s $25,” Cecelia Inglis, Hotel St. Matthew, San Mateo, Cal.; “Get your own tele- Ancil T. Brown, 306 Guaranty Bldg., Indianapolis, Ind.; “Oh! that was the Democratic Party I told you I was in sympathy with,” R. Sneddon, 329 West J street, Wilmington, Cal. ‘o. 28, announced in the ‘That was my first wife, “I won’t spring that old gag: The New Sears (Continued from page 19) Herold and ask her where in God’s name she had been buying her hats all these years. To do this book complete justice would take another book of equal size. Indeed, to do it justice, we should reprint it en- tirely right here (which, the editor tells me, would be impractical from a techni- cal standpoint, and I admit it might bulk JupcE up a bit; I can, by straining, see his point of view). Let me skim through it hurriedly. Troupes of darling little children start to come out on page 166, There are men’s muslin nightshirts on page 333 which will take you back to your bachelor- hood. There is an airplane on page 528 for seventy-nine cents which is all the aii plane that I would ever want. There is a set of twenty-six tools in the toy sec- tion for $5.98 which is all the tools I would ever want. There are some daring pictures in the neighborhood of pages 144 and 232 which alone are worth all the book costs. And, oh, boy, there are some real dolls on pages 515-18. For the radio fan, as who seems to be not, there is a large radio section toward the end of the book, merging off into an electric iron and toaster department. There are rugs as natural as life, and tents and bicycles, and even one page of horses and buggies—if you love the outdoor life. The furniture department is not ex- actly appealing; the furniture looks a little too new. Whilé the book slumps in the stoves, it picks up in the plumbing and furnace and steam heat pages, and I have figured that in the next house I build I can easily save at least $15,000 by buying my plumbing and steam heating plant from Sears, Roebuck, and _ installing them myself. The green index pages are a refreshing change from the yellow of last year. All in all, a creditable book, and one which should bring Sears, Roebuck and Co. a good many nice orders, if that is what they are after. PAS Wife—My dear Henry, don’t harbor the thought that I am ignorant. I know a good deal more than I care to tell. Hubby—I wish, my dear, that you’d acquire more of that sort of knowledge. —Answers (London) 31 SAVE MONEY Place your subscription orders now before the customary advance in price. HE so-called ‘Last Chance” period is this year a reality. No matter what you read, whether you are a subscriber or not, it will pay you to place your new or re order imm Practically every publisher has auth: weed us tosell tus zine in club combinations at a substantially reduced price for the limited period prior to the regular subscription season. In a short time all will advance to their former prices. So don’t miss this money-saving opport’ As nearly all “clubs” may be sent to different addresses, get your neighbors together and all take advantage of these special low rates for your entire season's reading. Unusually Priced Alll subscriptions for one year Judes (62 issues) Film Fun (To one address) $7.00 Reg. 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