Judge, 1926-02-06 · page 32 of 36
Judge — February 6, 1926 — page 32: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1926-02-06. 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.
What an Appetite! When you don’t relish food—whatever your ‘age—you need what this man found he needed. Hearty eaters—hard smokers—high livers—find Stuart’sa boon and blessing! Don’t give-in te indigestion. Nor fear the consequences of a hearty meal. Stuart’s sup- plies the alkaline your stomach needs—and stops all sign of sourness, belching of gas, heart Full Box FREE! Every druggist has Stuart’s tablets, 25c and 60c. Or, a full box free if you write the F. A. ‘Stuart Company, Dept.76, Marshall, Mich. Get a metal box of Stuart's for the pocket—and keepit filled! It’s instant relief. STUART'S DYSPEPSIA TABLETS ET OFT. BROS.& CO. fér8 DIAMONDS WATCHES CASFior CREDIT Sz SEND FOR CATALOG AS FREE Examina talog explains everything. Birgit see 122 a Week Lorn ng = Pe National Jewelers gCit RADIO FANS- pe EE cokes ‘day. at from 19 to 10: 1000 Little Blue Books ¥ CATALOGUE FREE! Send name [4 and address for catalogue of 1000 classics PE in pocket size—fiction, drama, history, {44 biology, poetry, id other subjects, Allat se per book. iad pes HALDEMAN.JULIUs CO. Dept.7 Girard, : CLASSRINGS&PINS Largest Catalog Issued—FREE ae ler a ¢ each. ‘No order for class, society, cla FE | citicsnisisigsortae saa Speci designs made on request, METAL ARTS CO., tee. TI16 Saath Ave, Rochester, Pie SMoKER (under fire, to himself)—Never mind; Billie Burke and Elsie Janis would love to see me do this! Judging the Shows (Continued from page 14) doodle by Dario Niccodemi, all that need be said of it, of course, is that it should be taken out into the alley and shot. But that is not construc- tive criticism and so has no place in the critical art as your hired pro- fessor practices it. Yet after three weeks of careful meditation, your hired professor can’t think of any- thing better to write about it. It is a profoundly antiquated, dull and utterly worthless affair and the most meritorious criticism of it is a horse- laugh. That horse-laugh I herewith duly discharge. The leading woman is Nance O'Neil. Madame O'Neil is one of the poorest actresses who has ever gained the reputation of being a good actress in the American theater. The reasons for her eminence are beyond my humble crystal-gazing talents. The one and only attribute that she has is a good speaking voice. Her acting is a bag of old tricks all compact. Though I apologize for FUNNYBONES/~) Nowadays many @ woman turns to clay before she dyes. (Judge pays 85 for each one printed the crudity of the expression and though my manners may not be all they should be, she is, I regret to say, a Grand Mistress of the Ancient Order of Hamfats. Nothing Easier A little boy, the son of a lady rusticating in her villa at St. Cloud, was walking in the garden, when a neighbor called him and handed him over the hedge a jam tart. “Thank you, ma’am,” he said. The neighbor was delighted. “How well brought up he is!” she exclaimed. “I like to have a little boy say ‘thank you’ to me.” “Then give me another jam tart,” answered the little boy. —Sans-Géne sae Johnny was in the habit of swear- ing mildly when anything did not please him. One day the minister heard him and said: “Johnny, don’t you know you must not swear. It is naughty of you to do so. Why, every time I hear you swear a cold chill runs down my back.” “Then,” said Johnny. “If you'd been at my house the other day when my dad caught his nose in the clothes wringer, you’d have froze to death.” —Tit-Bits. comicbooks.com