Judge, 1928-11-03 · page 35 of 36
Judge — November 3, 1928 — page 35: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1928-11-03. 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.
Miss Lily Schlough fs probably one of our best known contributors. Lit- tle Miss Lily came into prominence shortly after the war when she be- came a tea-time favorite by virtue of her scintillating wit “Here comes Lily,” hostesses would cry. * 1 just die laughing—she's as funny as a crutch, my dear.” Of course, such a character was immedi- ately in demand by all hostesses, ex- cept that sour block of hostesses who see nothing funny in a crutch, Tt was not long until Lily’s fame reached editorial circles. The little girl's habit of bouncing into a draw- ing room, leaping on the neck of the nearest guest and bellowin “Who was that lady I seen you with last night,” and then, before he could his brain for an answer, splitting hi sides with a lusty answer—“that was no lady, that was your wife—now wasn't it?” became a tradition with young editors, and just two years ago we persuaded little Lily to resolve her antics into print and contribute for Junce. As a consequence, she is our “lady- or-wife” jokesmith, Any joke using this theme is the brain child of Lily, the life of the party. If you have missed any recent issues of Jupce, you have probably been missing some of her bons mots. Just use the pocket coupon on this page, and make sure you have Jupce for this year. n° igre MISS LILY SCHLOUGH The well-kne Junce Jokesmith. Lily is the one with the ‘orite diversion with judge Publishing Company, © 627 W. 43d St., {New York City. Gextunmes: T would like t little gem each we 1 am enclosing hat on, Inc., see your a te www wwwewnnwnnnaeed comicbooks.com