Judge, 1925-08-08 · page 30 of 36
Judge — August 8, 1925 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1925-08-08. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Salesmen t to hear from earnest men ambitious for success and to work hard to achieve For such men we have a propo: tion that is unequalled in the selling field. Our line is men’s clothes, tailored to special order from the fingss quality of pure Virgin-Wool fab’ We sell these clothes direct to the consumer through special representatives at the one low price of $31.50. The values are positively equal to the clothes sold by others at $50.00 or more. We su ful seth ive them Selling ex- hile d s The im- portant thing is honesty, dependability and the ambition to make good. If you have these quali- ties, let us hear from you at once. Sign and mail the coupon or better still, write us a letter. You'll hear from us promptly in reply. Address Dept. 782, GOODWEAR Chicago, Inc. West Adams at Peoria Street Chicago Gentlemen: I am interested in your proposition. Please send the facts without obligation tome. 782. Notice to Judge Contributors O MANUSCRIPTS will be re- turned unless accompanied by stamped and addressed return envelope, and owing to the thousands of contributions sent into this office each week, it is impossible to enter into personal correspondence regard- ing them. Donot enclose postage for FUNNY- BONES or EPILAUGHS as they will not be returned. In cases of duplication, the first one received will be accepted. For prompt attention address munuscripts, in separate envelopes. to the following departments: Manuscripts—Literary Editor of JuvceE, Funnybones—Funnybone Editor of JupcE, Epilaughs—Epilaugh Editor of Jupce, 627 West 43d Street, New York City z 2 g ABBOTT'S Tonic Appetizer For 52 Years BITTERS ‘ Sample by mail, 25 (fF & Co, Balto. Md. —— ANCE SONG WRITERS Gee OO RG vaity mocrigts fot immodite ¢ EQUITABLE MUSIC CORPORATION T658R Broadway New Yor C's Free Book Song Wnt with ’is bettin’! At the Jardin de Carroll (Continued from page 16) In the “Vanities” you find a chorus girl periodically everywhere but on your lap. There are girls at tables in the auditorium, girls in the aisles to serve you sly winks and ginger ale, girls in the lobby to dis- cuss the topics of the day, and night, with you during the intermission, girls to dance with before and during the show, girls under your seat to polish your shoes—girls everywhere. Beside the Earl Carroll Theater, the Folies Bergére is a monastery and a night club a boys’ orphanage. The Carroll girls, furthermore, are no haughty and snooty lot, but appar- ently amiable—if my eyes did not deceive me—to an opulent degree. For gentlemen whose wives have gone to the country, they are full of ingratiating smiles and saucy flirts of the bustle. And what is more, they are—again, if my eyes did not [rs 28 Helper (to diver about to descend)—’Ere—I ’ope that tip you gave Old Ginger for the 2.30 is goin’ to come air pump this afternoon, and ’e fair lose all right, ’cos ’e’s on your isself if anything goes wrong —Humorist deceive me—not only amiable but personable. This intimacy doubt- less woggled my newspaper friends. What would become of Mrs. Whiffen and the American drama if such things were permitted! they indig- nantly ejaculated. What would be- come of the morals of Tammany Hall and New York stockbrokers if theatrical managers were allowed to do such things without protest? they wanted to know. For some peculiar reason, I can never work up any indignation in such matters. Although, personally, I get no more pleasure from having a chorus girl lean over my chair and tickle my ear with her little finger than I get out of a novel by the ““Oswego Marching On!” comicbooks.com