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Title: Captain Billy's Whiz Bang, Vol. 2, No. 24, September, 1921 - America's Magazine of Wit, Humor and Filosophy
Author: Various
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Captain Billy's Whiz Bang, Vol. 2, No. 24, September, 1921 - America's Magazine of Wit, Humor and Filosophy" ***


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Captain Billy’s Whiz Bang, Vol. II. No. 24, September, 1921



Going Back to Paris, Soldier?

Would you like to take another trip to France, visit the old fighting
sectors and spend a few weeks in Paris? You can keep in touch with the
overseas days and with your comrades everywhere through The Stars and
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ride every week through the land of memories.

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    The Stars and Stripes Publishing Co.
    205 Bond Building    WASHINGTON, D. C.

       *       *       *       *       *

BATHING BEAUTIES!

Real Photographs of the famous California Bathing Girls. Just the thing
for your den! Sizes. 3½ × 5½ Positively the best on the market.

ASSORTMENT OF 6 for 25c or 25 for $1.00

Send Money Order or Stamps. Foreign money not accepted unless exchange is
included.

EGBERT BROTHERS

    Dept. W. B. 303 Buena Vista St., LOS ANGELES, CAL.

_Wholesale agents wanted everywhere in U.S. Write for wholesale terms._

       *       *       *       *       *

_Subscribe Now_

                                 +-------------------------------
    If you like our Farmyard    / Capt. Billy’s Whiz Bang,
    Filosophy and Foolishness, / R.R.2, Robbinsdale, Minn.
    fill in this coupon.      / Enclosed is money order (or
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    $2.50 per               / with .................. issue
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                            _Captain Billy’s
                               Whiz Bang_

                             [Illustration]

                         _America’s Magazine of
                             Wit, Humor and
                               Filosophy_

                  SEPTEMBER, 1921      Vol. II. No. 24

                            Published Monthly
                    W. H. Fawcett, Rural Route No. 2
                        at Robbinsdale, Minnesota

     Entered as second-class matter May, 1, 1920, at the postoffice
       at Robbinsdale, Minnesota, under the Act of March 3, 1879.

                   Price 25 cents      $2.50 per year

     Contents of this magazine are copyrighted. Republication of any
       part permitted when properly credited to Capt. Billy’s Whiz
                                  Bang.

      “We have room for but one soul loyalty and that is loyalty to
                the American people.”—Theodore Roosevelt.

                             Copyright 1921
                            By W. H. Fawcett

     Captain Billy’s Whiz Bang employs no solicitors. Subscriptions
       may be received only at authorized news stands or by direct
      mail to Robbinsdale. We join in no clubbing offers, nor do we
               give premiums. Two-fifty a year in advance.

     Edited by a Spanish and World War Veteran and dedicated to the
                  fighting forces of the United States



_Drippings From the Fawcett_


The modern city can be likened to that grim monster of old dreams to whom
a tribute of maidens was offered. The main difference between them lies
in the fact that his appetite for girl-flesh had its limitations, but the
appetite of the city had none. From this vast charnel house of hopes,
beliefs and ideals files upward a steady stream of damned souls that once
belonged to women-children, pure in thought and deed. The crushing of one
or a thousand of these “wee modest crimson-tipped flowers” beneath the
ploughshares of city life and temptation excites only passing remark.

The girl of the city has much more actual animation than her sister
of the country. This is due to the food that is eaten and the social
conditions of excitement that surround her. The country girl lives upon
plain food and has normal hours of rest and relaxation. She does not
encounter the sights or sounds that would tend to divert her attention
from high thoughts to matters forbidden.

Such sights and sounds are never absent from the city girl. She cannot
go into the business part of the city and walk two blocks without
being reminded of her sex. Men eye her with glances of suggestion and
invitation.

       *       *       *       *       *

You don’t have to go to West Point for strategy. A negro preacher in his
pulpit one Sunday said he had a few remarks to make before the collection
basket made its peregrination.

“Now, brethren and sisters,” he began, “there is just one brethren here
that is untrue to his church, untrue to his Lord—and worst of all, untrue
to his wife. Unless he puts a five dollar bill into the contribution box
I will be compelled to call his name out.”

When the basket had returned and a recount had been made, the books
showed forty-two five dollar bills and a two dollar bill with a note
pinned to it saying, “I will hand you the other three in the morning.
Please don’t give me away.”

       *       *       *       *       *

“Only a Mother Could Love a Prohibitionist’s Face.” That is the
inscription which appeared on one of the banners in the Anti-Dry parade
which I had the pleasure of witnessing in New York City while en-route
back from the big fight which ye editor attended.

       *       *       *       *       *

Around Robbinsdale they get up early. Two farmers, jealous of their
rising records, became boastful and one allowed as how he got up before
three o’clock. The other rose at two the next morning and called at his
neighbor’s house, hoping to find him in bed. The farmer’s wife came to
the door.

“Where is your husband?” inquired the sleuth.

“Why, he was around here early this morning, but I don’t know where he is
now.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Gus, our hired man, insists that Deacon Kingdon is a good shot.

“He is so good with his gun that he hit the bull’s-eye the first time,”
Gus exclaimed.

“Very good,” exclaimed Maggie, our cook.

“Yes, but he had to pay for the bull.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Pinkham’s Home Broo

Pursue a wild bull frog thirteen miles, carefully gathering the hops.
Then add:

Ten gallons pickle brine

Two quarts shellac

One bar home-made soap

One pint sweet spirits of nitre.

Boil mixture three weeks, then strain through an I. W. W. sock to prevent
mixture from working. Bottle and add one jackass to each pint to give it
the proper kick.

       *       *       *       *       *

This Is For Railroaders

Casey, a section boss on the Great Northern railway, in making his report
to the superintendent, used considerable profanity, so the superintendent
said: “Casey, I have lady stenographers here and if you must use that
profanity, after this you must write your own reports.” “A train from
Duluth came lickety skoot and passed me hand car by. Some son of a gun
left open a switch and it piled them ten cars high.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Georges Carpenter lost a battle last July, but he won a greater prize
than the golden purse and the coveted belt offered at Jersey City. The
handsome Frenchman showed America the smile of Napoleon; the stoical
smile of defeat.

As one of the multitude witnessing the brief clash of France and America
at Boyle’s Thirty Acres, permit me to remark that Carpentier =_did not_=
live up to his reputation as great pugilistic champion, but he more than
met his reputation as a great red-blooded gentleman.

The American won, but the applause usually due the winner was lost in the
outburst of surprise of the multitude. Carpentier, instead of hanging his
head at the defeat of his hopes and aspirations for the title, hid his
sorrow behind a great big boyish smile. He wore that smile through the
blood-stained rounds, and it radiated as the gong clanged.

The soul of fighting France was behind that smile; the same as the smile
of Napoleon as he handed over his army to Wellington at Waterloo, and
the likeness of Joffre at the first battle of the Marne. It puzzled
his primitive opponent. Dempsey was bewildered—his face revealed his
knowledge that behind that smile was a superior intellectual being.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_What good is alimony on a cold night?_=

       *       *       *       *       *

Many who “kiss and make up” don’t like the taste of the “make-up.”



_Doug’s Peacock Walk_

BY RICHMOND


What are the personal peculiarities of film people? In view of the fact
that it is our bounden duty to torment, dilate and comment upon ye people
of the screen, it behooves us to stop now and then to observe what they
are and how they become that way, aside from being good looking, drawing
big money and getting divorced.

Let’s get right down to business. Take Allan Dwan, a well known director.
Dwan doesn’t hate himself any more than the law provides for. In fact,
there is no reason Dwan should despise himself. He was a good electrical
engineer; became interested in pictures and makes various flurries of
coin according to the Angels who can be dug up to back his ventures.

Dwan formerly was a good athlete. He is powerfully constructed but
noticeably short. About the studios it is well understood that one of the
few faults Dwan finds with himself is that he isn’t just up to his own
personal idea of tallness. If he has a tender spot, it hinges upon this
item of feet up and down. Someone conceived the idea that in order to tab
him “Napoleon.” But that line of bull has been overdone and so another
gag had to be hatched up. “The Big Little Man,” that is what those in
close touch with Dwan call him when they desire to make a favorable
impression. “The Big Little Man,” that’s a good title—better than some of
the ones that appear on Dwan’s pictures and a lot of other pictures.

Thus we dispose of Mr. Dwan, a cocky, brainy, peppy little fellow whose
only regret is that he should be a little longer. Next we will consider
Mr. Fairbanks, Mary’s present husband, barring every state in the Union
but Nevada—and Nevada isn’t quite certain that Mary is still married to
Owen Moore. Doug likes to tread about with his gang of retainers at his
heels. Fairbanks cottons to the custom, styles and bequeathments of the
English sporting gentlemen who stalked abroad with a company of idol
worshippers.

Doug is not always the most distinguished looking of his company. At any
event, he frequently is not the most noticeable. It was Fairbanks that
discovered the now famous Bull Montana, who doubles for monkeys when one
is required in the cast and whose ability to take punishment one time
resulted in nine fire hoses being turned on him at once as he was swept
down the gutter.

When Doug Fairbanks and Bull Montana walk down the street together
the Bull “takes it away from him,” as they say in the pictures when a
subservient character grabs the best of the scene from the star. Bull
has a face, at once fearsome and fascinating. He is so ugly that crowds
follow him around. It is a frequent spectacle in Los Angeles to see
Fairbanks, Bull Montana, Spike Robinson, Crooked Nosed Murphy, Benny
Zeidmann, the press agent de luxe, and Mark Larkin, Fairbanks’ special
representative, beating it down the broad. Of course, Doug always struts
in front, while the others in platoon formation tread proudly in the
rear. The only place where Doug falls down is that some of his gang look
funnier than Doug acts on the screen and the big star stands a chance of
being overlooked in the “what the h—is coming here” attitude that rends
the atmosphere as the Fairbanks battalion bears down upon the multitude.
Yes, Doug likes to lead his gang into the big hotel corridors, where his
cohorts then fade gracefully into the oblivion necessary to leave Doug
alone in his solitude for the yokels to admire and wonder at. You gotta
hand it to Doug for rushing in with his gang and then giving them the
fade away sign at the psychological moment.

Lottie Pickford—we have thought out loud a time or two before in these
columns about Lottie. Unlike the demure Mary, Lottie likes the jazz
stuff, the bright lights and some good looking young dude hanging around
her. We never saw Lottie chew tobacco, but she can stow away a lot of the
“grape.”

If we had our decision to make as regards Lottie’s chief peculiarity we
would say that her idea is to be thoroughly known as Mary’s sister by
doing things that Mary doesn’t. Lottie isn’t the first contrary girl,
though, who can claim to be of famous family. There was Miss Roosevelt
and later Mrs. Longworth. Didn’t the colonel himself call long and loudly
for commodious families? And did you ever read that his daughter attained
any particular fame aside from smoking cigarettes and not rearing
children?

If you are a sort of a junior member of a family and fear that you will
be overshadowed by some relative, cast for a famous mold, one way to
attract attention is to copy the other one—backwards.

We come to Fatty—Roscoe Arbuckle. Roscoe’s peculiarity just now is to
have people try and forget that his name is Fatty. Roscoe is getting
dignified. He has half a dozen cars, just because people came to know him
as “Fatty Arbuckle” and paid a lot of dough to see him. Just where Fatty
expects to promote himself by being Roscoe passeth understanding. Surely
he doesn’t think that he could act seriously without being thought funny.
Perhaps Fatty is subtle. He may have tired of drawing laughs as a result
of acting natural and figures he may get as many more by trying not to
appear natural.

Now we are down to Mr. Griffith. Mr. Griffith, to our notion, is a
great director. But Mr. Griffith is more or less deftly endeavoring
to implant the idea in the public mind that he is a poet. That is Mr.
Griffith’s peculiarity. He would not be seen much in public; rather he
seeks to attract attention by remaining in seclusion. His well organized
staff and his actors and actresses, who like him much, never pass up an
opportunity to breathe it about that “Mr. Griffith is a poet.”

We never read any of David’s verses, but if he is a poet, it devoutly is
to be desired that there were more poets and fewer directors operating in
pictures.

After all, these little peculiarities or hobbies of the picture people
are not harmful to any one in particular. We all like to strut and fluff
and show our fine feathers. It’s human nature.

       *       *       *       *       *

We’ll Say So!

While Al. Jolson, the black-face comedian, was touring the Pacific Coast
with his latest starring vehicle, “Sinbad,” he visited the California
insane asylum, at Napa. Passing through one of the wards he noticed a
rather neat chap and asked the attendant the nature of the fellow’s
trouble.

The attendant told the comedian that it was a new case. Had only arrived
the previous day.

Jolson approached the patient and inquired “If you had only one wish in
the world, and it would be granted, what would you wish for?”

The patient looked at Jolson and said, “I’d wish that Volstead was born
with a thirst!”

With a smile Jolson replied, “You might have been crazy when they brought
you here yesterday, brother, but you’re talking good sense today!”

       *       *       *       *       *

Our Traffic Cop

Thomas Patrick Gallagher, typical Irish traffic copper, was stationed on
Madison street in Chicago at the point intersected by the River.

One bustling Saturday afternoon, Gallagher held up his hand to halt
traffic for the draw bridge. In front of him was a new handsome limousine
motor car.

While waiting for the bridge to close, a runabout flivver crashed into
the rear end of the handsome car.

Gallagher was on the job promptly and hustled over to the driver of the
flivver.

“Phwat in hal does yez mane by smashing into this handsome car? Haven’t
you got any eyes?” he bellowed at the meek and humble driver, “Are
you crazy? I’ve a good mind to take you down to the headquarters, you
blithering idiot. What’s your name?” continued Gallagher, as he extracted
a pencil and notebook from his pocket, “What is the number of your car?”

The answer came back in typical Gaelic, “Me name is Clancy.”

“Clancy,” replied Gallagher. “Clancy, what part of Ireland are you from,
what county?”

“I am from County Mayo.”

“County Mayo,” continued the traffic officer, “County Mayo, say Clancy,
stay here just a minute till I go ahead to that big car and see why in
the devil he backed into you.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Ikey’s Recklessness

Ikey, eleven years of age and of unmistakable Hebrew persuasion, was
taken out of school and put to work in a nearby store, where he was
rewarded with the princely honorarium of a dollar and a half per week.
For the first three weeks, Ikey brought home the pay envelope on Saturday
night and turned it over to his mother. On the fourth Saturday, however,
he was five cents short.

“Ikey,” said his mother, “where is that other nickel?”

“I need that nickel, ma,” replied Ikey.

For the next three weeks this dialogue was repeated when the week’s
pay was turned in. The following Saturday Rachel had further cause for
suspicion, for there was only $1.40 in the pay envelope.

“Ikey,” she said, “what have you done with that dime?”

“Ma,” said Ikey, “I had to have that dime myself.”

“Now, Ikey, tell your mother the truth; are you going with a woman?”

       *       *       *       *       *

Overwhelmingly

A member of Congress recently became a parent. On announcing the news the
doctor exclaimed gleefully: “I congratulate you, sir; you are the father
of triplets.”

The congressman was astonished.

“No, no, no,” he replied, with more than parliamentary emphasis, “there
must be some mistake in the returns. I demand a recount!”

       *       *       *       *       *

Cassidy’s Routing

Employed in the Great Northern yards in Minneapolis is a switchman whom
we will call Cassidy.

One day Cassidy entered the superintendent’s office without removing his
cap or pipe.

“I want a pass to Duluth,” he said.

His evident show of disrespect peeved the superintendent. “Well, Mr.
Cassidy, you haven’t approached me in quite the proper manner,” he
answered gruffly. “Here you have your cap on your head and your clay pipe
stuck in your mouth. Do you believe this is showing proper respect for
your superior officer? If you desire a pass to Duluth, you must leave
this office at once, walk around for an hour or two, and come back. As
you step in my office, you will ask for the superintendent of the Great
Northern; I will reply, ‘I am the superintendent of the Great Northern,
what can I do for you?’”

Cassidy promptly departed. He had been gone about an hour, when he came
back, pipe in his pocket and cap in his hand. He walked briskly into the
superintendent’s office and inquired in a rather superior manner, “Are
you the superintendent of the Great Northern?”

“I am, what can I do for you?” was the reply.

“You can go to hell, I’ve got a pass over the Northern Pacific.”

       *       *       *       *       *

It is always good to be nice, but not always nice to be good.



_Limber Kicks_


Bow Wow

    This is so the entire world through,
    You imagine a maiden loves yough—
        Like the wind bends the bough,
        You are bent by the rough,
    Then left and forsaken—bough-wough.

       *       *       *       *       *

        Before marriage,
    With wondrous care,
    She seeks the mirror
    And bangs her hair.

        After marriage,
    With angry glare,
    She grabs her slipper
    And bangs her heir.

       *       *       *       *       *

Ask Bob He Knows

    A miss is as good as a mile,
    A kiss is as good as a smile,
        But four painted kings
        Are the beautiful things
    That are good for the other man’s pile.

       *       *       *       *       *

    The ballet’s not the drawing card
      That once it used to be.
    Ah! when it dies, may some good bard
      Indite its L. E. G.

       *       *       *       *       *

    “How do you like codfish balls?”
    I said to sister Jenny.
    “Well, really May, I couldn’t say,
    I have never been to any.”

       *       *       *       *       *

    Poor Lot’s wife turned to salt, alas!
      Her fate was most unkind.
    No doubt she only wished to see
      How hung her skirt behind.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Power of the “Press”

“Now, girls,” warned the Sunday School teacher, “I want to caution you
against making friends with the new barber who has just opened a shop
in the village. A friend of mine who knew him in the town where he was
reared tells me he tries to make love to every girl he calls on.”

“The girls in this burg are sure friendly,” confided the new barber to
one of his patrons two days later. “Last night I took a stroll around the
town and every girl I met smiled at me.”

       *       *       *       *       *

    The lightning flashed, the lightning crashed,
      The skies were rent asunder,
    With shriek and wail loud blew the gale,
      And then it rained like thunder.

       *       *       *       *       *

Wall, I Calc’late!

“Well, Si,” asked the justice of the peace of the lone constable, “what
is this man charged with?”

“Bigotry,” answered Si. “He’s got three wives.”

“By gosh, Si,” exclaimed his honor, “where’s your education? That ain’t
bigotry, that’s trigonometry!”

       *       *       *       *       *

We’d Say So

When a young man with his arm around a girl lets a lighted cigarette fall
inside his sport shirt and it feels like a drop of ice water, it is time
either to propose or go home.

       *       *       *       *       *

Female detectives should be good lookers.



_Naughty New York!_


It looks like a pretty dreadful affair all the way ’round to me; here’s
Mrs. Lydig Hoyt says that skirts gotta come down because the girls are
wearing them to the ankles in Paris; but here’s little Betty Compson, the
movie princess, says they are not to come down—not even to the ankles.

“It’s the movie girls and not Parisian professional models nor New York
society women who make the fashions for America,” says Betty. Which,
when you come to think about it, is a terrible slam for Mrs. Hoyt—an
intimation that she is not considered a regular movie queen, in spite of
the fact that she shook the pink teas of the Four Hundred for a part in
Norma Talmadge’s company, and is now about to burst into the world of art
with a company of her own.

The truth is, New York society women have apparently gone dippy over
getting into the movies.

The other day I was out at the Griffith studio at Marmaroneck watching a
starving mob in rags crying for bread in the streets of ancient Paris.
Among the actors there was one who stood out. She was a shriveled old
woman with thin hands and haggard eyes. Her clothes were torn half off,
showing her shrunken breasts and bony shoulders. When “D. W.” gave the
signal for the action to begin, she fairly made you feel the agony of her
hunger.

When there came, at last, an interval in the work, she beckoned to a maid
who stood near the set. “Go out to the yacht and get me my cigarette
case,” she said.

It turned out that the old lady was a very rich woman with a garage
filled with imported automobiles and a steam yacht. She just had the
“itch” to act in the movies.

It’s a little secret that is giggled up and down Fifth avenue that one of
the “extra girls” in the ball room scene in “Way Down East” was Evelyn
Walsh, who is considered to be the richest unmarried woman in the world.
Mrs. Morgan Belmont was also in the same picture.

Perhaps it was the movies that did it; but anyhow, times have changed
in the old Four Hundred in New York. It is only the Texas oil
millionairesses who continue to elevate the haughty nose in mid-air and
give you a far-away stare.

Mrs. Belmont, when I saw her in a picture studio, was sitting on the edge
of a piece of scenery, smoking a cigarette that she had borrowed from
a stage hand. She was excitedly debating an exciting question. She was
contending that Jack Dempsey could have licked Jack Johnson when the big
dinge was at his very best.

It happened that I sat in a business conference with Anne Morgan the
other day. She was the most simple and democratic person present. She
sat still and listened until every one else had expressed his opinion.
Finally she threw away the butt of her cigarette and said abruptly, “Look
here. We are all talking around in circles and getting nowhere.” Then she
stated the case with the directness and clarity of a corporation lawyer.
“You know,” she said in explanation, “My father was a banker.” I wonder
if she thought she was telling anybody any news! J. Pierpont Morgan was
the said father.

Mrs. Morgan Belmont isn’t likely to squeeze Mary Pickford out of her
job. She was just in pictures on account of her name. In the case of
Mrs. Lydig Hoyt, however, it is different. She is really a marvelously
beautiful woman and may go far in the cinema.

Like most of the women in society, she is sick of gadding around tea
parties. This stuff may be all right in F. Scott Fitzgerald flapper
novels, but gets wearisome in real life.

Speaking of F. Scott Fitzgerald, I understand that Princeton University
is so vexed with this youthful prodigy that he discreetly omits the
usual dutiful visits to his alma mater. What’s ailing Princeton is Mr.
Fitzgerald’s book, “This Side of Paradise,” in which he told some painful
truths about college life. I couldn’t see anything so terrible about it;
but Princeton was touchy.

In fact, I don’t see how anybody could “stay mad” at this child of
genius. He is really a charming boy. He looks about seventeen, with
those he-vamp blue eyes. I understand that “This Side of Paradise” was
practically his own life, except that he really married the young society
flapper who “trun him down” in the book. She is a very beautiful girl and
the boy genius is obviously crazy about her.

Another “best seller” who is looking at the tall buildings of New York
is Harold Bell Wright, the sales of whose books have now amounted to
something over 9,000,000 copies.

The first time I ever saw the illustrious Harold was in Chicago, where he
had come to sell his first books. He was a green little country preacher
from a “riding” circuit in the Ozark mountains in Arkansas. He was so
green that a sure-thing man would have been ashamed to sell him gold
bricks. He looked pained when you spoke of writing for money; he said he
only wrote to give a message to the world. I saw him again at the Waldorf
the other day. He has made a couple of million dollars; got a divorce and
a Rolls-Royce and other modern equipment.

In spite of his enormous success as a best seller, I am told that Harold
has a canker eating at his heart. He grieves because the literary critics
will not take his work seriously, but “kid” him as a “he” Laura Jean
Libbey.

The other day, New York was electrified by a story that Hearst had
quarreled with Marion Davies and that that attractive young lady was to
cease to be a film star in the Hearst studios. But if there was a row,
Marion must have won the bout. She is not only still the queen at the
studio at One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, but her brother-in-law has
just been placed in supreme command. I am told that everything is getting
on with peace and harmony—the kind of peace and harmony where nobody
dares to be the first to leave a group and always walks out of the room
sideways with his back to the wall.

And now that we are speaking about Hearst—Like all men of brilliant mind,
he has his little eccentricities. His is that he never can find his
automobile. He owns some twenty cars, but never can find one. He brings
his car downtown; forgets it and walks away to the nearest taxicab.
The chauffeur waits around until he knows that W. R. is lost again and
goes home. Wherefore you invariably encounter Hearst riding around New
York in sad and disreputable looking taxicabs. Occasionally, he asks
his subordinates if “anybody knows where I left my automobile.” Hearst,
however, is a man of penetrating intellect. Don’t let anybody tell you
the old yarn about his success being due to his brilliant subordinates.
He has a mind that cuts like a slashing knife.

To meet him personally, you would think him the newest and meekest
reporter in the Hearst service. He comes into the offices of his hired
men with a shy bashful air and usually says, “I hope I am not in the
way.” But just let them try to disobey his orders and see how meek he is.
Wow!

Our old friend, Wilbur F. Crafts, the reformer, has spent a busy summer
in New York. He has been horrified in turn over the Dempsey-Carpentier
fight, over the frightful case of some girls who wore one-piece bathing
suits at Atlantic City; over some good respectable families who wanted
to walk down to the beach in their regular clothes, with their bathing
suits underneath and slip off the top layer, thus foiling the bath house
robbers. Wilbur also had a spasm of excitement because Tex Rickard had
some children from Panama giving some exhibitions of swimming in his big
pool in Madison Square Garden.

Some time ago, in a censorship hearing, I actually heard the Rev. Wilbur
admit that he was wrong. He had presented a bill he wanted passed,
creating a national censorship. One of his friends on the congressional
committee raised his eyes humbly to the chandeliers and said he wanted to
offer a criticism. Rev. Crafts said he always welcomes honest criticism;
he tried to do his humble best, but if wrong, wanted to be corrected;
hence he would yield to the congressional gentleman and accept his
amendment. The amendment was to boost the salary of the job Rev. Crafts
was after from $4,000 to $8,000 a year. He certainly yielded like a
Christian martyr.

But about these girls and their one-piece suits that shocked Atlantic
City almost beyond human endurance.

Near Atlantic City is a little strip of beach called Somer’s Point. When
the police chased the Annette Kellermanns off the beach at Atlantic
City, the mayor of Somer’s Point said they could come to his beach, b’
gosh. And so they went—and so the road around Somer’s Point has been
blocked all summer—and so Mayor Robert Crissey, who is seventy-two, but
has young ideas, is famous. A discreet man is Mayor Crissey, nevertheless.

After the first Sunday of the girl show, he issued a statement in which
he said he thought one-piece suits were all right. “And,” he added with a
burst of real inspiration, “I am going to buy my wife one just like ’em.”

Some one has lifted up his voice and wept because, among the other famous
New York gin palaces to go with incoming prohibition, is the far-famed
one formerly run by Tom Sharkey, the old sailor heavy weight fighter.

Tom was a funny old fellow with not much more than a distant acquaintance
with English grammar and such.

When he completed his fine saloon, one of his first visitors was his
former manager, Tim McGrath. They looked over the place together. At
length Tim said to him, “Tom, you have a fine place, but there is one
thing more you should do to it.”

“And what’s that?” said Tom suspiciously.

“Right here above the entrance you should have a fine big chandelier.”

“Yeh, I know,” replied Tom, yawning, “But who would I get to play it?”

That “Garden-of-Eden” party with naked young ladies dancing, outside
of Boston, which cost Adolph Zukor and Hi Abrams, the movie magnates,
$100,000 to quiet, and which may cost the Massachusetts district attorney
his job, was the second time this year the aforesaid magnates have burst
into fame.

They—at least one of them—is said to have been in the big stud poker
party in which a slick gent with marked cards took in a circle of movie
men for a cool $500,000. They had him arrested, but dropped the case
because the department of public charities of New York set up a claim
for five times the amount of the money lost as a penalty for playing
poker—which is the New York law.

I can tell you a little secret about that game. That slicker would have
been trimming them yet except for the quick wittedness of Norma Talmadge.

It was at their home—of herself and her husband, Mr. Schenk—that the game
had been taking place once a week for months. Coming suddenly into the
hall, Norma saw the slick guest slip a pack of cards into his overcoat
pocket and take another pack. She told her husband and the slicker was
caught red-handed.

Even New York, the town of spenders, gave a little gasp when the “Spanish
Jade” stepped out of Greenwich Village and went shopping on the Avenue.

The lady’s real name is Elizabeth Darrow. She was the belle of the
village, when a young naval officer named Frederick Linde Ryan blew
in with his new uniform and innocent illusions. He was married to the
“Spanish Jade” and they began housekeeping on Riverside Drive.

The boy, struggling along on his naval pay, tried patiently and loyally
and uncomplainingly to pay; but his debts soon amounted to $20,000, with
cigarettes at a dollar a pack and chocolates at $5.00 a pound. The other
day the case was brought into court at the instance of one of the boy’s
friends and the court ruled that the boy need not continue further to pay
the bills.

As a sort of free circus the “Village” does well enough for a little
while; but it would seem a dubious place to find a wife.

       *       *       *       *       *

Thus It Was

He was young, good looking and had plenty of money. She was also young
and good looking, but lacked the money. Consequently she anxiously
awaited for manifestations of affection.

“What have you named your new island home?” she inquired one evening,
following his description of the wonderful island he had purchased in a
neighboring lake.

“Isle of View,” he answered, and has since been wondering what happened
to the young lady to make her throw herself in his arms.

       *       *       *       *       *

There was a cross-eyed judge in Chicago who had three cross-eyed
prisoners brought before him. Turning to the first, he said, “What is
your name?” and the second replied, “James Smith.” Turning to the second,
he said, rather severely, “I wasn’t talking to you.” The third one said,
“I didn’t say anything.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Wife—Mistress—Lady

_The following is translated from the German, and published in the
Gazette of the Union, February, 1856_:

Who marries from love takes a wife; who marries for the sake of
convenience takes a mistress; who marries from consideration takes a
lady. You are loved by your wife, regarded by your mistress, tolerated by
your lady. You have a wife for yourself, a mistress for your house and
its friends, a lady for the world. Your wife will agree with you, your
mistress will accommodate you, your lady will manage you. Your wife will
take care of your household, your mistress of your house, your lady of
appearances. If you are sick your wife will nurse you, your mistress will
visit you, and your lady inquire after your health. You take a walk with
your wife, a ride with your mistress, and join parties with your lady.
Your wife will share your grief, your mistress your money, your lady your
debt. If you are dead, your wife will shed tears, your mistress lament,
and your lady wear mourning. A year after death your wife marries again,
in six months your mistress, and in six weeks, or sooner, when mourning
is over, your lady.

       *       *       *       *       *

Wifey’s Lament

Clarence—“Do you think it will rain?”

Doris—“What?”

Clarence—“Say yes.”

Doris—“I said yes the other day and got myself in grief.”

Clarence—“When?”

Doris—“The other day.”



_Questions and Answers_


=_Dear Cap_=—Are we not all descendants of the monkey?

No, we are not. My folks came from Wales.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Skipper_=—Can you tell me why a black cow gives white milk that
makes yellow butter?—=_Helen Bach._=

For the same reason that blackberries are red when they are green.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Captain Bill_=—What do you think of a man who throws a girl a
kiss?—=_Ima Blower._=

I think he’s the laziest man in the world.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Farmer Bill_=—How do you keep milk from souring?—=_Reggie._=

Leave it in the cow.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Cap_=—Why is it that professors claim touch to be the most
delicate of all the senses?—=_Hook M. Cowe._=

Well, here’s why: when you sit on a pin you can’t see it, you can’t hear
it, you can’t taste it—but it is there.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Captain_=—What is a button?—=_Holly Woode._=

A small event that always comes off.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Capt. Billy_=—The waiters in our city of Brainerd have just
organized a union and wish you would kindly suggest some sort of a yell
to hand the cooks when they raise the dickens with us.—=_Tillie Olson._=

My feeble effort:

    Grape nut, Grape nut,
    Malta vita force.
    Keep your trap closed.
    Well, of course.
    We want oysters,
    Rah! Rah! Rah!
    Nabisco wafers
    Bah!!

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Capt. Billy_=—I am about to organize a nice little club for
thirsty people. What motto should our organization adopt?—=_Sipper Jin._=

How about this one: “If you don’t see what you want, ask for it.”

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Captain Billy_=—What were the two most popular ballads of the
American doughboy in France?—=_Mona Long._=

Before the armistice it was “I Want to Go Home.” Afterwards it was “If
You Want to Go Home, Just Let Them Alone.”

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Captain Billy_=—My father is a motor-man, and my mother is a
conductorette. What am I?—=_Enter Tainem._=

A transfer.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Cap’n_=—What is a Pomeranian Whiff Sniff?—=_Willack Fulish._=

A Pomeranian Whiff Sniff is a species of small wooly dog with the curious
habit of trying to climb telegraph poles, hind feet first.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Captain_=—Being as you are an etiquette expert, I would like to
ask if it is a gentleman’s duty to approach a young lady and tell her
that her eyebrow is on crooked and that she has a speck of soot on her
right ankle?—=_Inquisitive Andy._=

A gentleman is not supposed to notice the details of a lady’s attire. He
is supposed to be in a state of rapturous admiration of the tout ensemble.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Captain Billy_=—Is a sallow, pale skin always affected by weak
people?—=_I. M. Payle._=

Dear Payle—Not always! I know a chap that was very dark, but he found a
pair of dice and right from then he began to fade, and fade and fade.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Skipper Bill_=—Why is a ship always called “She”?—=_M. T. Beane._=

Probably because the rigging costs more than the hull.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Farmer Bill_=—What is the best way to make both ends meet?—=_Lady
de Barbour._=

Learn to be a contortionist.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Captain Billy_=—What, in your opinion, does love most
resemble?—=_Georgette._=

A roast beef sandwich. Two thin slices of sentiment and the rest filled
in with bull.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Captain Billiam_=—What kind of hand does a card sharper win
with?—=_Pokker Feene._=

An I-deal hand.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Cap_=—Why are eggs much smaller now than in the past?—=_Lee Way._=

I suppose it’s because they’re taken out of the nest too soon.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Capt. Billy_=—A story in a New York paper says a dancer has
insured her legs for $125,000. What’s the idea?—=_Lew D. Fiske._=

We don’t know definitely, Lew.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Skipper Bill_=—What war material did Chili export to the Allies
during the war?—=_Clara Voyant._=

Beans.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Bill_=—If you’re a good little astronomer I know you’ll tell me
what star was recently measured, and found to be of enormous size?—=_May
Triatit._=

Fatty Arbuckle, I guess.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Captain Willy_=—A waiter in the Waldorf Flaskoria spilled hot soup
down my neck, and when I remonstrated with him, the horrid old thing
only snapped his fingers at me. Have you any words to describe such
creature?—=_Ferdie Nann._=

I would say that he is too soupercillious.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Dear Farmer Bill_=—Why is it you farmers always dress your scarecrows
in men’s clothing?—=_Sack Kitt._=

Well, if we dressed them in women’s clothes there’d be sure to be some
old birds hanging around.

       *       *       *       *       *

A friend of the Whiz Bang who served with the British forces during the
World War sends us the following, which he claims was a favorite song
among the “Limies.”

    When this bloody war is over
      Oh, how happy we will be;
    No more hiking, no more drilling,
      No retreat or reville.
    No more shining up brass buttons,
      No more asking for a “leave,”
    For we’ll tell the sergeant-major
      To shove his passes in his sleeve.

       *       *       *       *       *

    _I know a young woman called Kitty._
    _In the dance-hall she looks very pretty._
    _But the next day at ten,_
    _If you saw her then—_
    _Oh, my gawd! What a pity!_

       *       *       *       *       *

Their Specialty

Written by a dealer in electric washing machines:

“Don’t kill your wife. Get one of our machines to do the dirty work.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Friend tells us that the way Clinton’s in New Haven advertises the record
is: “Come Where My Love Lies Dreaming with Male Chorus, $1.25.” This ad
was evidently written by the gent who said: “I stand back of every bed I
sell.”

       *       *       *       *       *

With a girl of twenty, marriage is an adventure; at twenty-five, a
career; at thirty, a goal; and at forty, a haven of rest.



_Whiz Bang Editorials_

“_The Bull is Mightier Than the Bullet._”


In the old days, to the women fell the task of making gentlemen of the
men, but not now-a-days, according to our friend, Bob Toole, who claims
that the boys keep the girls in line during this grand and glorious age
of jazz.

In dancing, conversing, playing, courting and “spooning,” the standards
of young boys and girls were fixed in the good old colonial days, by the
girls. Their natural feminine modesty erected sensible social barriers
and the chivalry of men made them sacred and preserved them.

This order has been changed. Men now fix the standards. Naturally,
they are not as high as they “used to be.” A man is not as particular
in things moral and esthetic as the average girl. The modern man makes
a jazz hound of his lady. The modern girl endures a lot of things she
inherently dislikes. She puts up with annoying behavior just to be a good
fellow. She really doesn’t like this cheek-to-cheek and wiggly dancing;
but she stands for it, for she is too good a scout to be a kill-joy. And
just because she is such a good fellow about it, the men—good-hearted
fools!—become less lax in their behavior until they unconsciously impose
on good nature.

Fellows, we’re going back again to the standards set by the natural
modesty and sweet reserve of the girls! And we’re going to like it, too!

With wine gone, a “powerful” incentive to excessive “good fellowship”
has been removed. With equal suffrage a fact, girls will unconsciously
resent extreme impositions on their fine comradeship. There is certain
to be a good natured reaction on a part of the ladies. They are going
to set new standards. Not by law; by sweet common sense. Femininity
will never revert to prudery, but girls are going to amend sensibly
that “go-as-far-as-you-like” policy of good fellowship so that men will
realize girls are less common and more wonderful than ever before.

And, we repeat, we’ll like it.

Go to it, girls! Make us be good!

       *       *       *       *       *

An Ohio editor allows that a man in Columbus got himself into a ton of
trouble by marrying two women without the formality of divorce from the
first. A Western observer points out that a good many men in that section
had gotten that way by marrying just one. A Southern editor has retorted
by alleging that quite a few of his friends found trouble enough by
merely promising to marry without going any further. And an old doughboy
friend of ours collected a goodly surplussage of grief when he was simply
found in company with another man’s wife.

       *       *       *       *       *

If two souls are happily mated, there is no reason why either should live
in or refer to the past. Their Eden is in the present and the future of
what may be and not what has been. The man or woman should be sacredly
silent about the dead past, unless there is some person or something
which sooner or later may rise to bring darkness or death. The Bible
basis of marriage is a love which takes for better or worse the heart
which it calls its own. People ought not to marry unless they are so
devoted to each other that any later knowledge of what either may have
been or done would make no difference.

Man’s inhumanity to woman is often earthly, selfish and devilish. Women
are naturally and generally better than men. If they err, it is usually
the man’s fault. The average young man is fortunate to secure any girl to
live with him as his wife. Keep still and ask no questions is the wise
way. There is no double moral standard for speech or silence for man or
woman. At the marriage altar, heaven demands no more of the woman than of
the man. That a woman should tell the past to a man who insists, though
it is none of his business, or that she should persist in confessing to
him when he does not care to hear it, is a piece of folly of which some
women are guilty. Where ignorance is bliss “’tis folly to be wise.” After
marriage it will do no good to tell what you said and did before. There
are many homes now happy, as if made under the wings of the angels, whose
members at one time left the paradise of innocence and wandered beneath
a roofless world.

Love is blind. A true and genuine lover does not want to hear a girl’s
past; and if he did hear it from her own or another’s lips, it would
make no difference to him. If any one is to tell let it be the man, for
usually it is the woman and not he who runs the risk of a past. Let the
man confess who places the material above the mental and moral and thinks
of a wife as a cheap luxury, and of home as a dry-dock of repairs. No
matter how greatly discrowned, a woman may be recrowned. With her, heaven
is in the future and not in any past, she may serve, give, work and pray
with the love that is the crown jewel in her diadem.

The sweetheart who is willing to be a wife is not man’s inferior or
superior, but equal in personal equivalent. The mere accident or
providence of sex does not entitle a man to any special privileged of
conduct before or after he is husband. Man’s character is judged by his
estimate of women. Such a poem as Hood’s “Bridge of Sighs” or Goldsmith’s
“Folly” would be impossible if men remembered not to act the part of
Faust to Margaret.

“Go in peace and sin no more,” was the command to the fallen woman.
Confess to the one you have wronged, but don’t make a boastful show
before others. There are converted sinners in the pulpit and prayer
meeting who make a glory of their shame, unmindful of the advice, “See
thou tell no man.” It is the unpardonable sin of society that it would
cast and keep in deeper hell the woman with a past, though she be
willing to purify herself in the fire of remorse and baptize herself with
tears of repentance.

Many a girl who once glittered in Folly’s and Fashion’s court has later
met and learned a true love. She was silent and devoted and today shines
a holy flame in the home as wife and mother. A woman may tell what she
is and hopes to be—not what she has been. The man who is fool and fiend
enough to insist that the Sphinx speak is unworthy of her. Let a man
remember to forgive and forget a woman’s past, as he hopes to have a
happy home here and hereafter.

       *       *       *       *       *

Hello! or Ohell!

Did you ever stop to think that there isn’t much difference between hello
and ohell—that ohell is just hello turned around? There’s nothing finer
in the English language it seems to me than a good old American “Hello!”
But give her the reverse English and you get a cussword—and when you say
“hello” to some people that is what you get.

       *       *       *       *       *

How About This?

The following want advertisement appeared in one of our well known
newspapers the other day:

“Two sisters want washing. Will go anywhere.”

       *       *       *       *       *

My girl shakes the shimmy so much, that she’s shaken herself out of
shape.



Smokehouse Poetry


_Smokehouse Poetry for October will feature three poems: one, the plea
of a prisoner; the second, a thrilling story of the squared ring by the
author of “The Kid’s Last Fight,” and the third, a comic jazz verse after
Langdon Smith’s “Evolution.”_

_“The Prisoner’s Prayer,” which is to be Number One on the poetry
billboard for October, was written on the stone wall of the Federal
penitentiary at McNeil Island, Washington, in September, 1909. It was
later memorized by another prisoner and just recently forwarded to the
Whiz Bang upon his release._

    _“So hear ye the prayers from the prison,_
        _Where fever and famine are rife;_
    _Where never one soul has arisen,_
        _Where many go down in the strife.”_

_In response to inquiries from many readers we have obtained another copy
of “The Gila Monster Route” to replace the one which Maggie, the hired
girl, lost during our last farm house cleaning bee. It will be published
in the Winter Annual._

       *       *       *       *       *

Betrayed

By Angela Morgan

    Bad, hopelessly bad!
    I yielded to love that sways mankind,
    Not the mere measure of bodily pleasure,
    But love that wakes in the soul and the mind,
    Born of the spirit at God’s behest:
    And I bartered all I had.

    I, with the warmth of a child at my breast—
    Am bad, hopelessly bad!

    Yet the power that molded my little son,
    Is the same that moved for the wedded one;
    Creation’s woes were just the same;
    Had he only borne a father’s name.
    Did love, that old fashioned universe
    Fashion alike my curse?

    Listen, you who are true and good,
    White and strong in your motherhood;
    You with your wedding ring safe on your finger,
    You who can linger, righteous and clean in love’s embrace:
    Tell me the reason that I am base!
    Are you so different after all?

    I answered the same high golden call
    I yielded to love that is proud of pain—
    Love, that reckoned not for gain;
    And nature has made my child so fair,
    As the child on your very shoulder there.
    The same great impulse, deep and glad,
    That hurls the suns and drives the earth
    Brought both our children to this earth.

    Yet ... you are good and I am bad,
    Vicious and evil and low, they say—
    “A girl who has gone astray”;

    Yet the milk of my life is warm and white
    That runs to his hungry mouth at night;
    My words are soft, my arms are sweet,
    My hands are kind to his little feet.
    Can I, who live for my baby’s smile,
    Be vile, hopelessly vile?

    O, great, broad, beautiful judgment day,
    When dogmas of man are rent asunder,
    And superstition is wiped away,
    Will you plead for me, will you gently speak
    For us who are voiceless and weak?
    Plead for us, who must ever wonder?
    Why we are hounded and held at bay—
    We who can love, we who can pray:

    We, the mothers, who might be glad,
    But are broken at heart and bitter and sad;
    O, Future Day, will you write in flame,
    The reason for sin and the reason for shame?

    That in all the city there seemed no room
    No sweet clean place for my heart to bloom!
    Oh, will you terribly tell the truth;
    That the world which offers no worthy place,
    For the light that shines in my baby’s face,
    Offered no shelter for love and youth,
    No guarding presence who understood,
    My blossoming womanhood?

    So I sought his arms as a bird to nest
    And I ... with the warmth of a child on my breast
    I ... who bartered all that I had
    Am bad ... hopelessly bad!

       *       *       *       *       *

The Unwritten Law

By Budd L. McKillips

    “Don’t kid me, I know that I’m dyin’,
      The song of my life has been sung;
    I’m done and there’s no use in tryin’
      To patch up a bullet torn lung.

    “I’ll bet, Doc, you think I’m a tough one
      Who’d fight at the stroke of the bell—
    You’re right, Doc, my life’s been a rough one,
      And now I am headed for hell.

    “I used to be decent as any
      Young man in that little mill town;
    My friends in the village were many,
      Until I commenced to go down.

    “’T’aint long when a fellow starts hittin’
      The booze till he’s gone the whole way;
    And then when he thinks about quittin’,
      He’s found that the devil’s to pay.

    “A woman—they’re always the reason
      In my case the girl was my wife;
    We married—were happy a season
      And then trouble entered my life.

    “The man—we’d been palin’ together
      Since both of us started to school;
    I thought that he’d stick through all weather,
      I trusted him—just like a fool.

    “He lived in my home like a brother,
      For months our life went like a song,
    And then I began to discover,
      That somethin’ in life had gone wrong.

    “I watched till I thought I detected
      My wife was wrapped up in his charms,
    Then dropped into home unexpected,
      And found her clasped tight in his arms.

    “I came in the room as she kissed him,
      He saw me and begged for his life;
    I shot at the cur, but I missed him—
      He ran and left me with my wife.

    “My—wife—God! I’d found her no better
      Than women who live on the street,
    So diff’rent than when I first met her—
      She screamed and fell dead at my feet.

    “Then somethin’ inside my brain parted
      Like strings on a harp stretched too tight—
    Doc, that was the time I got started;
      I changed in a minute that night.

    “A few of my friends have stuck by me,
      And assisted in lightening my load,
    But the way most of them would eye me;
      Soon caused me to hit for the road.

    “From city to city I’ve wandered,
      And month after month rolled around;
    What money I had I soon squandered,
      But nowhere was peace to be found.

    “Sometimes for a day I’d be cheerful,
      The thoughts of revenge would be still;
    And then my poor brain would be clear full
      Of him I had sworn I would kill.

    “Well, yesterday evenin’ I met him,
      He begged and he pleaded and cried
    For help, but I’d promised to get him—
      I choked the dang cur till he died.

    “To make the job certain I drilled him
      With five or six shots from my gun—
    I’d killed him, yes dang him, I’d killed him!—
      A cop came my way on the run.

    “I started to run to the river,
      Then felt a sharp pain in my breast;
    And fell in the street all aquiver—
      A bullet had gone through my chest.

    “There’s no use to tell you the rest, Doc,
      There’s nothin’ much more I can tell;
    I’m happy, what I did was best, Doc—
      They’re waitin’ for me down in hell.

    “It feels like the room’s gettin’ colder;
      It’s dark and I’m startin’ to choke,
    There’s somethin’ ahold of my shoulder!
      So long Doc, I’m—goin’—to—croak.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Going Down

    Man’s life is a vapour
      And full of woes;
    He cuts a caper
      And down he goes,
    And down, and down,
    And down, and down,
    And down he goes.

       *       *       *       *       *

    In my ear is the moan of the pines;
      In my heart is the song of the sea
    And I feel his wild breath on my face
      As he showers his kisses on me.
    And I hear the wild scream of the gulls
      As they answer the call of the tide;
    And I see the white sails, as they glisten
      Like gems on the breast of a bride.

       *       *       *       *       *

Hail to the Devil Dog

    He’s a drinker and a driller,
    He’s a gambler and a sport;
    He’s a hard old hand at fighting,
    But at work he’s rather short,
    The devil likes his fighting,
    And the beauty way it’s done;
    He’s a cross between a Christian
    And the devil’s only son.

    His vice is like the most of men,
    His virtue like a few,
    But when you thump his metal,
    You’ll find it’s ring is true;
    He’s honored by the title,
    Of a soldier and a man,
    He’s Uncle Sammy’s nephew,
    And all American.

       *       *       *       *       *

A Tip For Wifey

    When your husband telephones to say,
    “I won’t be home to-night
    Till after twelve, I’ve lots to do,”
    Just say, “Dear boy all right,
    I’m going out myself to-night
    And won’t be in till late.”
    Will he come home on time? You bet
    He’ll also come home straight.

       *       *       *       *       *

Have a Drink, Boys?

They were on a fast train through Arkansas (?).

Every few minutes the lady across the aisle held a bottle to her lips.
The traveling man was thirsty.

“How do you do,” said he. “What have you in that bottle, home brew?”

“No,” she said, “I have consumption.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Always

Face the Music

Even if it is your landlady’s daughter playing “The Maiden’s Prayer” on a
square piano. Some day you might be back on your board bill.

       *       *       *       *       *

    You need your money
    And I need mine,
    If we both get ours
    It will sure be fine,
    But if you get yours
    And hold mine, too,
    What in the divil
    Am I going to do?

       *       *       *       *       *

In the Game of Love

    In her first blossom, woman loves her lover;
    In all the others, all she loves is love.
    Here’s lovers two to the maiden true,
    And four to the maid caressing,
    But the wayward girl with the lips that curl,
    Keeps twenty lovers guessing.

       *       *       *       *       *

The dramatic triangle is caused by people not being on the square.



Our Movie Gossip


Los Angeles lawyers are laughing up their sleeves over the story
whispered in connection with the divorce suit of Agnes Schucker, known
to the screen world as Agnes Ayres, the Lasky leading lady, recently
elevated to stardom through the kindness of Wallie Reid. Because of the
fact that few people in California ever knew Miss Ayers under the name
of Schucker, the divorce suit of Agnes Schucker versus Captain Frank R.
Schucker, now with the United States Army in France, attracted little
if any attention. Thus it was, the gossips report, when pretty Agnes
Schucker recently entered the court room of Judge Summerfield, attired in
a plain brown dress and inconspicuous black hat, there were few in the
spectators’ gallery and none recognized the demure plaintiff as the Lasky
star.

Tearfully Agnes’ mother told on the witness stand how she had to care
for her daughter, because of the alleged failure of Captain Schucker to
support Agnes. The mother’s testimony aroused the sympathy of the court
and the spectators, and there was a mention of a co-respondent “Lillian.”

Everything was going lovely for Agnes until a cinema person from
Hollywood recognized her in the court room and unceremoniously tipped
off her identity to the judge. Hizzoner appeared peeved because Agnes
put on a little cinema drama all her own in his court room, assisted by
mamma’s weeps, and he threw the case out of court.

Agnes’ lawyers then reopened the case on the grounds of desertion and
soon she is expecting to be traveling in single bliss. According to the
gossips, Agnes came back into court in the second trial her own real
movie self, and attired in a champagne colored gown trimmed in green,
and wearing a lavender hat trimmed with ostrich plumes. Mother, so it
is reported, explained later to the judge that she “misunderstood” the
question and that she merely meant she and Agnes lived in the same house;
not that she had to support her “victimized” daughter.

Incidentally, Agnes has Wallie Reid to thank for her rapid rise in
filmdom, and Wallie, by the way, gives so many teas and dinners that it
is said he has to have two homes in order to accommodate all the parties,
the second one being somewhere in Laurel Canyon, and Agnes is rated among
his favorite dinner guests.

       *       *       *       *       *

We have heard a story concerning our good friend Samuel Merwin, and if
it is true, we will have to give Samuel a gold medal. Sammie is out west
writing for the movies, and recently attended an exclusive house party
at Riverside. The story goes that on the homeward drive he was permitted
to escort a beautiful English girl. About two miles had been traveled,
so ’tis said, when the chauffeur reported the usual “blow-outs” and
“missings” and that Merwin and the girl had to wait long weary hours
during the “fixing” process.

All of the young eligibles in California have been trying to land the
lovely English girl, but not Merwin, according to our bevy of Whiz
Bang Bunkers, because even the most loose-tongued gossips admit the
probability that during the two hours of waiting, Merwin went to sleep
and let the London beauty wait alone.

Ah, romance, to where hath thou departed?

       *       *       *       *       *

It wasn’t many months ago when J. Parker Reid, the director, with his
star, Louise Glaum, and other members of the company, took a little trip
to Tia Juana and San Diego. Of course, they went over to the Coronada
Hotel for dinner and there J. Parker Reid met a bevy of society folk.

Now, you haven’t any idea how the society folk at Coronada fuss over
movie people. The Coronada crowd are an idle set with plenty of money,
little to do and an ambition to be considered clever. By informally
hob-nobbing with the writers and players of the movie colony from
Hollywood, they gain a new mental punch and are able to assume some of
the glamour, always emanating from the people who do interesting things.

Louise Glaum has been conscientious in her art, you know. She is one of
the really hard working, conscientious women of her profession, and
we’ve heard she has some dependent relatives to support, and that she
never had much schooling, but has studied very hard by herself, and that
altogether her life hasn’t been an easy one.

Louise’s pictures stopped making money a year or two ago, then she became
friendly with J. Parker and the tide in her fortunes seemed to change.
Reid perhaps fell in love with her, at least temporarily, and she perhaps
with him, and besides he raised capital to star her again. The pictures
were a success financially, and all the world seemed rosy for the hard
working actress.

But, that trip to Coronada. J. Parker Reid, it seems, was fussed over a
wealthy Mrs. Piper. To her, a great motion picture director maybe was a
new idol for adoration.

We wonder how it’s all coming out. J. Parker Reid some weeks ago made
it clear to Louise that their affair was over. In June he married Mrs.
Piper. Life’s a funny little game after all.

       *       *       *       *       *

We are sorry to learn that some of the scandal mongers are whispering
derogatory rumors anent Jack Mulhall, because of the suicide of Laura
Mulhall in Hollywood while the decorations of the seventh wedding
anniversary party were still on the walls of their pretty home. Those who
are well acquainted with Jack declare he always was a “square shooter”;
that he had a splendid disposition and as a husband was as nearly right
as he knew how. He and his wife were constantly together and as far as
friends could see, she had been happy with him. The scandal peddlers
fail to appreciate the damage which they are doing to the future career
of Mulhall, not to mention the shadow placed over the three-year-old
freckle-faced boy.

       *       *       *       *       *

Our Local Color

Our good friend Gemmell, of the Minnesota and International Railroad,
wasn’t the railroad president who thought a gondola was a bird. In
fact, the blame is laid to Mr. Casey for suggesting that his company
purchase one male and one female gondola, so as to stock the city park of
Brainerd, Minn., with a flock or herd or covey of little gondolas.

       *       *       *       *       *

Our friend Liebst reports that since his poem, the Hoboes Convention,
appeared in the Whiz Bang, he has received several letters from railroad
managers requesting permission to name a few box cars after him. Oh,
Fame, where is thy sting?

       *       *       *       *       *

Ham Tomlin says he thinks he is growing old. He used to be able to kiss
his wife 20 times a day but now it take him all day to get up nerve
enough to kiss her once.

       *       *       *       *       *

Don’t get jealous, boys, but I’ve just finished drinking some stuff that
was strong enough to make a rabbit slap a bulldog in the face.

       *       *       *       *       *

It’s a lean Jane that has no curves.



Pasture Pot Pourri


Velvet Joe Says—

_Don’t fuss with hubby about droppin’ tobacco ashes on the carpet. Them
ashes keep the moths out an’ the hubby in._

       *       *       *       *       *

    Some folks would rather
    Blow their own horns than
    Listen to Sousa’s Band.

       *       *       *       *       *

Greatness does not depend on size. Napoleon if he were living today would
never get a job as a cop.

       *       *       *       *       *

And Very Nice, Too!

A feller was engaged to a girl who was a twin. When asked how he told
them apart, he said: “Well, they’re both nice girls.”

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Our friend Deegan insists an Irishman dies only when an angel is needed
in heaven._=

       *       *       *       *       *

How can a man get a headache without brains?

       *       *       *       *       *

A Family Dialogue

He—I’m not coming home tonight, dearie.

She—May I depend on that? (Oh, boy!)

       *       *       *       *       *

Let’s Call It the Cockeyed Blues

My girl’s eyes are so beautiful they can’t keep from looking at each
other.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Remember, boys, the turtle may be slow, but he’s always there for the
soup._=

       *       *       *       *       *

We could love a girl as “pretty as a picture” provided she had a good
frame.

       *       *       *       *       *

Honest, This Is True

    I no’a fel’la named Fawcett,
        Who went to his cel’la dee’pos’it,
            But when he got dare,
            The barrel was bare,
    And “Gus” was asleep at the Fau’cet.

       *       *       *       *       *

Our idea of the height of vanity is to stand in front of a looking glass
when you’re asleep.

       *       *       *       *       *

Pathetic, Ye Gods, Too Pathetic

An Irishman and a Scotchman were standing at a bar—and the Irishman had
no money.

       *       *       *       *       *

Glorious Daze

Two drunks on a train.

No. 1—“Whas sha time?”

No. 2 (pulling card case out of pocket)—“Thurshday.”

No. 1—“Thash our stashon. Letsh get off.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Try This One

=_The wedding cake was heavy, but the candles made it light._=

       *       *       *       *       *

=_If your girl shakes you, don’t get rattled._=

       *       *       *       *       *

Something to Worry About!

A New Brunswick priest covered his eyes in shame as some girls passed him
at a bathing beach.

       *       *       *       *       *

We Dodged Two Yesterday

The starving pole cat leaned against the post without a cent.

       *       *       *       *       *

    “I’ll stick to you whate’er betide,
    Though all the world may scoff.”
    Thus spoke the heavy flannel shirt,
    But the man said, “Aw, come off!”

       *       *       *       *       *

    He led her to the altar, ’twas merely tit for tat;
    He led her to the altar, she led him after that.

       *       *       *       *       *

    He stood on the bridge at midnight,
        Beneath the heaven’s great dome,
    Because he was married and the jag that he carried,
        Made him afraid to go home.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_When I go to bed at night I snore so loud I cannot sleep. In fact, I am
often compelled to go into the next room so that I may not hear myself
snore._=

       *       *       *       *       *

    “How is the milk maid?”
    He said with a bow.
    “It isn’t made, Sir,
    It comes from a cow.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Very Versatile

We heard the story the other day about a sailor at a ship’s concert who
was unable to sing as scheduled on the program, and who offered in lieu
thereof to show the audience the pictures tattoed on his chest.

       *       *       *       *       *

Paris Made

_A world war veteran hobbled into the hardware store the other day and
ordered some “tacks.”_

_“What kind?” asked the clerk._

_“I want to use them for garters,” said the lame Vet._

       *       *       *       *       *

A New Fad

(A street sign in St. Paul)

“GET YOUR SHOES SHINED INSIDE.”

       *       *       *       *       *

X-Y-Z Tragedy

“Combination shot,” murmured the pool shark, as he leaned too far over
the billiard table.

       *       *       *       *       *

A Brief History

Whiz Bang history of the world war:

I want to go home!

When do we eat?

Who won the war? The Y.M.C.A.

Don’t stand there, soldier. This is for officers only.

If I hit, I don’t want any change.

Was that pay day or mess call?

Villa vouz promenade, M’lle?

The battle of Vim Rouge.

Mademoiselle fidelle, finee leguerre.

Hello, Statue of Liberty!

       *       *       *       *       *

An Autumn Song Success

IF I HAVEN’T THE RENT THIS MONTH, DON’T YOU THINK THE LANDLORD OUGHT TO
HELP ME OUT?

       *       *       *       *       *

Our Sentimental Melody

_We have received several requests for copies of our original song
success published several months ago entitled, “You are a million miles
from nowhere when you hold her dainty hand.”_

       *       *       *       *       *

What a Pity

Mike O’Reilly, of Butte, gazed mournfully at the corpse of his late
friend, who had but recently become an atheist, muttering to himself,
“You sure look fine, a clean shave, a new suit of clothes and a pair of
white gloves on you. All dressed up—and no place to go.”

       *       *       *       *       *

Zoology

    When they first met he said, “a bear.”
    He’d dog her footsteps everywhere.
    She monkeyed with him for a year,
    Although she said he was a deer.
    A little horse-play hitched the two,
    Now he’s the goat, it’s nothing gnu.

       *       *       *       *       *

Our London Report

To a young man who stood smoking a cigar the other day there approached
the elderly and impertinent reformer of meek and mild reputation.

“How many cigars do you smoke a day?” asked the meddler.

“Three,” answered the youth, as patiently as he could.

“How much do you pay for them?”

“A shilling each,” confessed the young man.

“Don’t you know, sir,” continued the sage, “that if you saved that money,
by the time you are as old as I am you could own that big building over
the way?”

“Do you own it?” inquired the smoker.

“No.”

“Well, I do,” replied the young man.



Japanese Bathing Beauties

BY REV. GOLIGHTLY MORRILL

Pastor People’s Church, Minneapolis, Minn.


To the religious rambler, Japan is divided into two parts—that which is
inhabited by the Geisha girls, and that “cohabited” by the Yoshiwara.

I thought more of the Geisha dancers than the dance, and that wasn’t
much. The word “Geisha” means accomplished one, and there are schools
for their education in music and the arts. People visit the girls more
for pleasure than for profit, and since they are one of the institutions
of Japan, I went one night to a tea-house to see them. Making myself as
comfortable as possible on the floor, a screen door was slipped aside,
and in came a pretty Geisha girl who touched her head to the floor three
times, sat down and looked at each one of our party. Immediately there
fluttered in three more, and they made the room look like an Oriental
bird cage. They sang for us in a tone that suggested an ungreased axle
or a nail drawn across a piece of glass, played on the samisen and
koto, which nothing but the genius of a Wagner could appreciate went
through a fancy fan drill and proved themselves good entertainers, but
felt embarrassed because we were not familiar and indecent. They acted
serious and spoke to one another, and I asked what was the trouble. It
seems they didn’t know what to make of us, as the average tourist was
usually boisterous, drunk and rough.

The Yoshiwara is the red-lantern district of Japan. One night we formed
a stag party to visit the Tokio Yoshiwara, but we couldn’t shake the
“dears” who were as anxious to go as we were and insisted on accompanying
us. Our rickshaws rolled through squares and streets and miles of mud and
misery, until we came to what was in itself a “city of dreadful night,”
but all ablaze with electric lights. Here were squares of theatre-looking
buildings in which women, dressed in bright and fancy garb, sat by
little stoves, and sullen, smiling or smoking pipes, looked out at the
spectators. The government regulates this “social” as a “necessary evil,”
and houses, supervises and guards the girls. In Japan it is regarded as
noble and filial for a daughter to sell herself to support the father and
family who may have failed financially. The same thing is done in Europe
and America for wealth and social position, but differently estimated and
under another name.

Here they squatted in butterfly regalia, with silk kimona, obi, glossy
black hair stuck full of combs and gold pins, eyes painted and faces
powdered, thrumming a little guitar, squeaking out a love-song, and
making goo-goo eyes in a way that would make one smile if he could forget
the hell-horror of the place. Some of the inmates do not leave until
death; others return to society, which welcomes and does not disown; one
may return to her home, loved and respected, but with none of the fine
clothes and jewels given by her admirers during her absence. However, the
place often becomes a matrimonial bureau, and the girl is met, courted
and selected by some Jap as his wife. In addition to segregation, there
is such a supervision that the inmates can’t leave for even an hour
without the consent of the police.

Hotel life is interesting. If you are curious, you have only to wet your
thumb and thrust it through the wall paper of your bed chamber to get as
many views as Peeping Tom had of Lady Godiva. This hole privilege is,
however, only claimed by the traveler who has no respect for the holy of
holies at inn or temple.

Japan is the land of the Rising Sun—and daughter, who with the whole
family will take their bath and leave the same water for you to swim in
unless you set your alarm clock for a very early hour, or sit up all
night to get there first. Imagine a public bath, if you can, for many
homes have no bathroom, where the water by 10:00 A.M. is like a roily
creek after a rain; by 3:00 P.M., yellow as the Missouri, and by bedtime
like the mud geysers of the Yellowstone.

The public bath was the one thing we wanted to see and kept asking
about. Cleanliness is next to Godliness, and after visiting 2,738 of
the 3,000 temples in Kobe, I wanted to get “next” to a public bath. At
last I discovered one and sent the guide ahead to reconnoiter. He said,
“Come.” I passed the word along and the ladies came, but wished they
hadn’t. We entered and I became a “looker-on” at Venus in the bath, and
not one but many, who made the painted females in the Uffizi look like
chromos or Mrs. Jarley’s wax works. They eyed us with an indifference
that made us blush and look through our fingers for shame. With the ease
that only a model for the altogether possesses, they posed before the
mirrors, arranging their black hair, or poised like maids of the mist
by the steam tank. Their type of beauty is different. Jap beauty is in
angles, the American in curves. Nature made one with a ruler, the other
with a compass. As a rule, the baths for men and women are divided by a
wooden partition at the end of which sits the proprietor or his wife on
the lookout. Formerly there was no privacy and the fastidious foreigners
insisted that the sexes should be separated. This was accomplished by
placing a bamboo rod between them, but even that is discarded now in some
sections. Everybody gets into the swim, thus beautifully illustrating the
proverb, “Evil to him that evil thinks.” O tempora! O mores!

One of the strongest impressions made upon me in my journey through Japan
was at Mogi, a malodorous little fishing village, out from Nagasaki, with
so large a smell that a blind man could easily find it by following his
nose. Coleridge, the poet, whose business it was to rely on imagination
rather than on fact, counted sixty well-defined and several stinks at
Cologne. He would have been overpowered here and called for the help of
a professor of higher mathematics to enumerate the volume and variety of
odors we encountered from Nagasaki to this town.

A well made road lassoes the intervening foot-hills which are covered
with cultivated fields; the peasants were all busy, the children were
happy and more so when we threw them peanuts instead of “pansies” for
thoughts. Men, women and oxen were carrying various loads, but the common
one was a bamboo bucket affair balanced on both ends of a bamboo pole.
These buckets were not filled with milk, or cheese, or vegetables, but
with a substance which they had assiduously collected in accordance with
the Scripture, “Gather up the fragments that nothing be lost.” I can
never forget the ascent or the descent to Mogi. From rocky road, through
pretty forest, by picturesque ravine, we reached the fishermen’s huts
with their nets by the shore and beach where bathing mermaids can only be
caught and carried home in a camera.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Last Chortle

A magician having nearly finished his act without exciting any applause,
gave his best stunts, expecting to get a rise out of the audience, but
without result. He then advised that he had saved his very best trick for
the last and asked all who wanted to see the devil to raise their hands.
Receiving a hearty response, he told them to go to hell, leaving the
stage in much haste.

       *       *       *       *       *

Back to Childhood Days

I visited an insane hospital at Oshkosh, Wis., and the keeper took me
through. Up on the second floor we passed down a long hall. At the end
there was a heavily padded and ironed cell. The keeper said to me, “The
man in this cell is the most violent and strongest man we have here.” I
looked at him. He was of Herculean build.

As we turned away, there was an awful crash and the front of the cell
was thrown out in the hall. I ran down the hall and the big fellow right
after me. I jumped out of a window at the end of the hall and he jumped
right after me. I ran around the hospital and he after me. The attendant
stuck his head out of a window and said to me “Why don’t you run?” I
said, “Do you think I am trying to throw this race?”

I ran across a field and he was right after me. I could hear his
footsteps behind me. I ran into a plowed field and that slowed me up.
He was gaining on me. Finally he got near to me and he reached out and
slapped me on the back and said, “Tag, you’re it.”

       *       *       *       *       *

How’s This One?

Jiggs fell into a big vat of turpentine over at the paint factory.

Did it hurt him?

Don’t know, they haven’t caught him yet.

       *       *       *       *       *

Happiness is a perfume you cannot pour on others without getting a few
drops on yourself.



Our Rural Mail Box


=_Petie L. Arsony_=—The reason why they feed convicts coarse food is to
keep their blood pure, so that they won’t “break out.”

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Johnnie L._=—A divorce suit should always be cleaned before being
pressed.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_Sweet Sixteen_=—You’re wrong. Woman is known not by the company she
keeps, but by the company she does not keep. You did right in not keeping
Johnnie’s company.

       *       *       *       *       *

=_B. Good Tome_=—No, B, all chickens do not use fowl language, but I have
met several who could swear quite fluently.

       *       *       *       *       *

The Vanguard

    ’Tis weary watching wave by wave,
      But still the tide sweeps onward;
    We build like corals, grave by grave
      But pave a path that’s sunward.

    We’re beaten back in many a fray,
      But newer strength we borrow;
    And where the vanguard camps to-day,
      The rear shall camp tomorrow.

       *       *       *       *       *

Ghouls, Take Note

(From San Francisco Chronicle.)

Wanted—Second hand Coffin or couch casket. Box 4050 Chronicle.

       *       *       *       *       *

Drexerd Pulls This One

He—Let’s go to the dance tonight.

She—Why do you like to dance so much?

He—Oh, for many reasons—I can put my arm around you, draw you up close,
feel your soft cheek against mine, and—

She—That will do! Let’s stay at home and make believe we went to the
dance.

       *       *       *       *       *

Jes’ a Jester Jest

Some people say: “Get thee behind me, Satan and push me along.”

       *       *       *       *       *

What Ho?

First Lunch Hound—“Well, old strawberry, howsa boy? I just had a plate of
oxtail soup and feel bully.”

Second Counter Fiend—“Nothing to it, old watermelon. I just had a plate
of hash and feel like everything.”

       *       *       *       *       *

    _He knew that she would thank him not,_
    _He cared not for her scorn;_
    _He offered her his street car seat,_
    _To keep her off his corn._

       *       *       *       *       *

Our Harnessed Bulls

First Cop—Say, did you get that fellow’s number?

Second Cop—No, he was going too fast.

Say, but wasn’t that a fine looking dame in the back seat?

Yep, wasn’t she though!



Musings of A Bachelor


Between two women of equal beauty, always pick the one who closes her
eyes when she kisses you. She’s not so likely to think you want to marry
her.

The proof that men do not understand women is that they love them. The
proof that women =_do_= understand men is that they marry them.

The first kiss is always stolen by the man. And the last one is always
begged by the woman.

The length of a woman’s kiss nearly always depends upon the breadth of
her imagination.

To remain a woman’s ideal a man must die a bachelor.

A woman’s idea of Hell—“Nobody loves me and my clothes don’t fit.”

If there were only three women left in the world, two of them would
immediately convene a court-martial to try the other one.

Men frequently marry to keep other men from getting the woman they
desire. They are not always successful.

The final definition of love is something that gives pain without hurting.

Self-respect means a comfortable sense that you have not been found out.

When a man commits a sin, he says, “How shall I conceal this?” When a
woman commits a sin she says, “How can I let my friends know of this
without bragging?”

The theory that really to know two women one must introduce them is
ridiculous. It often results in a divorce.

A woman’s head is not always turned by flattery; sometimes its peroxide.

When a woman starts an idle rumor, it at once ceases to be idle.

One beauty of being single is that it’s a dreadfully thrilling experience
until one’s wife finds it out.

It must be dreadful to meet at dinner the man who ran away with one’s
wife. It places one under =_such_= an obligation!

If there were only one bachelor in the world, every married woman would
still think she made a mistake when she married her husband.

Experience in man is something which is brought with the tears of plain
women and the kisses of pretty ones.

Love without respect is an angel with but one wing.

To make marriage perfect, the husband should be deaf and the wife blind.

       *       *       *       *       *

Life is a river. Men are the boats. Women are the sandbars.

       *       *       *       *       *

Fashion note: Cellar steps are worn very much this year.

       *       *       *       *       *

Our Army Daze

About 2:00 o’clock one morning while making the rounds as Officer of the
Day, I was halted by a sentry on post. After giving the pass word and
being duly recognized, I asked for his special orders. You may imagine my
surprise as he stood at port arms and said:

    “Sir (hic), my special orders are:
    This post extends from tank to tank;
    Salute all officers according to rank;
    Take charge of all the shot and shell,
    And all the water in the (hic) well,
    And all the wood that’s in the yard,—
    In case of fire, alarm the guard.
    These are the orders I received
    From the gosh darned sentry I relieved.
    If this isn’t so, may I drop dead;
    I’ve only had two hours in bed,
    (Hic) Sir (hic).”

       *       *       *       *       *

Blankety Blank Verse

By William Sanford

    My wife came in very late last night,
    Explaining that she had spent the evening
    With her friend Cora.
    But she did not look me in the face
    When she said it.
    But what could I say,
    Coming in but a moment before,
    After having spent the evening
    Myself
    With Cora.

       *       *       *       *       *

Even a fish won’t get caught—if it keeps its mouth shut.



Larry Turn the Crank


For the past year or so a flock of these motion picture fellows have been
coming to see Ye Editor with propositions to put out a Motion Picture
Edition of this little journal of wit, humor and filosophy, and now it
looks like we would succumb to these offers.

At this writing, our Hollywood representative, Mr. Morrison B. Egbert, is
negotiating with film distributors for the putting on the screens of up
to eight thousand theaters weekly the

                             Screen Edition

                                   OF

                             Captain Billy’s

                                WHIZ BANG

The film will contain gems of early issues and new material not published
in current issues. Jokes, jests, jingles, advice to the lovelorn from
Captain Billy, Mail Bag, Pot Pourri and other delectable offerings will
be filmed.

As this magazine reaches the hands of YOU, the Reader, the weekly film
should be ready for booking. If your theater doesn’t show it, ask the
manager to get busy and climb on our band wagon. In conclusion, as our
friend K. C. B. would remark—

                              I Thank You.

                                                      Captain Billy



_Our Winter Annual_


In addition to republication of gems of earlier issues of Captain Billy’s
Whiz Bang, the first complete Winter Annual of this great family journal
will contain a large variety of brand new jokes, jests, jingles, pot
pourri, stories, and smokehouse poetry. This book, Pedigreed Follies of
1921-22, will contain four times as much reading matter as the regular
issue of the Whiz Bang and will sell for one dollar per copy. It will be
a book which will be cherished by the readers for years to come, and will
contain the greatest collection of red-blooded poetry yet put in print.
Included in the list will be:

    Johnnie and Frankie, The Face on the Barroom Floor, The
    Shooting of Dan McGrew, The Harpy, Lasca (in full), The Girl
    in the Blue Velvet Band, Langdon Smith’s “Evolution,” Advice
    to Men, Advice to Women, Our Own Fairy Queen, Stunning Percy
    LaDue, Parody on Kipling’s “The Ladies,” Toledo Slim.

Advance orders are now being received and will be mailed in the order in
which they are received. Tear off the attached blank and mail to us today
with your check, money order or stamps.

    Whiz Bang,
    Robbinsdale, Minnesota.

    Gentlemen:

    Enclosed is check, money order or stamps for $1.00 for which
    please send me the Winter Annual of Captain Billy’s Whiz Bang,
    “Pedigreed Follies of 1921-22.”

    Name..............................................

    Address...........................................



Everywhere!


Whiz Bang is on sale at all leading hotels, news stands, 25 cents single
copies; on trains 30 cents, or may be ordered direct from the publisher
at 25 cents single copies; two-fifty a year.

[Illustration]





*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Captain Billy's Whiz Bang, Vol. 2, No. 24, September, 1921 - America's Magazine of Wit, Humor and Filosophy" ***

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