Judge, 1925-03-07 · page 22 of 36
Judge — March 7, 1925 — page 22: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1925-03-07. 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.
‘NOURISH THE HAIR AT THE ROOT’ WITH ED. PINAUD’S HAIR TONIC Che original French Eau de Quinine ED PINAUD BLOG. EW YORK “BS Progress, thrills and true ro- mance, the practical things and technique of RADIO are all best told each month in POPULAR RADIO, the world’s greatest radio mag- azine; edited by Kendall Banning. Any new sub- scriber may send One Dollar for the next 5 issues, to POPULAR RADIO, 1627 West 43d Street, New York City. The original coon hound. —Yate Recorp. Holy Bonds “Lasked the wife if Lcould go down to the gym to play ball with the “No, she socked me.” —Washington Cougar’s Paw Sao “Alu.” cried the egg As it splashed a bit, “I was cast for the villain And made a hit.” —Lehigh Burr SPH pa, what makes a man al- ways give a woman a diamond en- gagement ring?” “The woman.” —Stanford Chaparral Cal “I thought you were suffering from a chill.” “Twas, but I shook it off.” —West Point Pointer ey Young Bragger—My built the Rocky Moun Unsympathetic Listener — Aw, that’s nothing. Do you know the Dead Sea? Well, my grandfather killed it. —Stanford Chaparral grandfather ins id Mother—Yes, studying French and “Good morning” to algebra, Genevieve. —Ohio State Sun Diat Cal Co-ed—Suppose your chick should lay an egg, would you give it to me? Aggic—No; I'd sell it to a museum —that chick is a rooster. —Rutgers Chanticleer tse He drank a quart and didn’t pass out! Now don’t you think he ought'er? Yes, he drank a quart and stood it well, But what he drank was water. — Alabama Rammer Jammer SID She—I was told that you were very shy. He—Oh, that was before I got my allowance from dad. —Stanford Chaparral Weary Wriire—Would — youse rather lose your life or your money? Dusty Ruopes—Me loife. ['m savin’ me money for me old age. —Princeton Ticrn. comicbooks.com