Automatic Age

Issue: 1939 June

T
ts a Natural!
“ ELEVEN
and $12 a
Month Profit!
★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
PENNY
SELECTA r a r
Shipm an s
Sextette
6 Columns of Candy Bars
Hershey Bars, Planters Peanut Bars, Mr. Goodbar, Toasted
Walnut Bars, Penny Mint Wafers, Spearmint Tab Gum, and
dozens of other popular confections can be sold through
SELECT-A-BAR. And how the pennies roll into the cash box!
Two columns are adjustable for odd-shaped packages. There’s
nothing else like SELECT-A-BAR. Many SELECT-A-BAR
vendors are averaging over 100 sales a day!
SELECT-A-BAR IS
SHIPM AN BUILT
U. S. POSTAGE
STAMP DISPENSERS
Shipman has sold thousands
and thousands of United
States Postage Stamp Dis­
pensers all over the country.
Wise operators are still add­
ing to their routes. New
operators are buying these
steady profit venders, pro­
tecting their future with an
investment which is 100 %
dependable. A postcard will
bring proof and details.
— which is your guarantee of
mechanical precision. Splendid
slug protection, beautiful Kem
baked enamel finish, assorted
colors, chrome trim. Holds over
375 pieces of candy and gum.
Can be used on counters,
mounted to walls, set on cabinet
base as illustrated. Base, 8%
deep by 11^2 inches wide. Case
over all 22 inches high. Six
columns, six selections, six times
the profits! Little larger than
single units. Costs less than six
single units. Fully patented.
Mpmaii
'( J
'manufacturing ca
1326 SO. LORENA ST.
W rite for prices,
and get started
with this sensa­
tional m o n e y ­
maker!
LOS ANGELES, CALIF.
© International Arcade Museum
http://www.arcade-m useum .com /
D IRECT IO N S
He— If you’ll give me your tele­
phone number, I ’ll call you up some­
time.
She— It’s in the book.
He— Fine! And what’s your name?
She— That’s in the book, too.
* * *
“Is this the N. A. laundry? Well,
you sent me half dozen old handker­
chiefs instead of my shirt.
“Them ain’t handkerchiefs. That
is your shirt.”
* * *
TOO BAD
“Jane’s as pretty as a picture ex­
cept for one feature.”
“Yes, her chin; it’s a double fea­
ture.”
* * *
M ALE SERVICE
“You brute! You ought to be
ashamed to talk about mother the
way you do. For two cents, I ’d send
her a letter and ask her never to
visit us again.”
“Hah! I ’ll give you six cents. Send
it air m ail!”
* =* *
“I never have the slightest trouble
getting housewives to look into what
I sell.”
“No? And what do you sell?”
“Mirrors.”
* * *
When the professor falls in love
with a co-ed, she makes A while she
cam.
* * *
M OTHER KNOW S BEST
Mother: You little brat! Why don’t
you pattern yourself after your
father?
Son: What has he done?
Mother: Why, he has just been
paroled from the penitentiary for
good conduct.
* * *
“What are those brown spots on
your lapel— gravy?”
“No, that’s rust. They said this
suit would wear like iron.”
H ELLO
“Hello! This is long distance. I
have a call for you from Miami.”
“Hello! This is Ben. Listen, Jack,
I ’m stranded here and need $100.”
“I can’t hear you. Something is
wrong with the phone.”
“I want $ 100 .”
“I can’t hear you.”
Operator—“I can hear it 0. K.”
“Well, you give him the $100.”
* * *
“Why did they evict the medical
student from the library?”
“They caught him removing the
appendix from the book he was react­
ing.”
* * *
Another big mystery is how the
average businessman can work like
a horse all day, and then hoof it up
all evening in a night club.
* * *
“What makes you so unpopular
with these other girls?”
“I won a popularity contest.”
* * *
W IL D D R IV E R
“When I drive, I cover a lot of
ground!”
“Say, what kind of machine do you
drive?”
“A steam roller!”
* * *
“I ’m looking for a husband.”
“Well, lady, shall I direct you to a
matrimonial agency?”
“No, to a detective agency.”
* * *
First Beauty— Why did you quit
going around with that handsome
architect?
Second Beauty— His plans didn’t
suit me.
* * *
T IM E W ASTED
“I been window shopping.”
“Whaddayamean,
window shop­
ping?”
“I been looking in windows.”
“What for? Nobody’s in bed this
time of night.”
© International Arcade Museum
Girls, beumre of the botanical lover.
You know, the kind that blooms in
the spring and leaves in the fall.
* * *
An old maid wouldn't go chasing
after every Tom, Dick and Harry if
she had a W ill of her own.
* * *
“Does my gown look as though it
were falling off my shoulder?”
“Naw, let’s dance.”
“I ’m sorry, but I must go and re­
arrange it.
It’s supposed to look
that way.”
* * *
The time a guy ought to have his
head examined is when his hair starts
to fall.
* * *
A movie fan’s idea of heaven is
getting high and having a date with
a star.
* * *
ART
“So your brother is a painter, eh?”
“Yep.”
“ Paints houses, I presume?”
“Nope, paints men and women.”
“Oh, I see. He’s an artist.”
“Nope, just paints women on one
door and men on the other.”
* * *
TAXES!
WPA Executive— If we don’t figure
out a way to spend that one hundred
and twenty million dollars, we lose
our jobs!
Secretary— How about a bridge
over the Mississippi—lengthwise?
* * *
A newly created papa received the
glad tidings in a telegram. “Hazel
gave birth to a girl this morning;
both doing well.” On the message
was a sticker reading, “When you
want a boy, call Western Union.”
♦ ♦ ♦
Inquisitive— What did the Night
Clerk do when he caught you looking
over the girl’s transom?
Bell Boy— Not a thing. He sees
things the same way I do.
http://www.arcade-museum.com/

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