Judge, 1891 · page 28 of 69
Judge — 1891 — page 28: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1891. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
NO DOCS ALLOWED]! IN THIS CAR ‘Tue conpuctor (taking her fare)—"* Thim girls is gittin’ worse an’ woorse wid their shtyle. It's an illigant bale torches, moreover, so that the exhibition might be fully illuminated. They were not exactly a mob, cither, for a portion of them answered to military orders, having been previously drilled as Wide Awakes. “¢Come down, you traitor !’ called out an extremely coarse man, at the same time sending a stone through a pane of lass, “Now, I was always modest, and I didn’t want them to make a show of me. I would rather go and hide than get up before any audience. ‘I pray you excuse me, gentlemen. I havea bad cold,’ said I. “They laughed and jeered and hissed and threw stones, and the roar grew louder every minute. ‘Flank the build- ing!" called out the captain of the Wide Awakes. ‘Sections to the right and left of it! Corporal, go to the rear and cut off his retreat!’ “There was a hint in the words, and I took it. I put out “*M—e—e—o—o —o—ow ! 1!" JUDGE’S ANNUAL. HOW MISS TAILORMADE BEAT A REGULATION. o hay that miff wud make.” A BEE IN HER BONNET. “Where the dickens did that bee go?" & corel eso~ “Oh! there must be pins “Bang !!" Miss TaLormabe (alighting}—"* Come on, Gillispie !”" the tallowcandle. I rushed toa private back entrance and out through a long lane before the corporal’s guard got around there. I mounted the hill beyond it like a deer. I dashed through wood and brake and thistleand grain, I turned my back upon Bull's Bluff forever. The enemy had it, and I learned shortly there- after that they had wrecked the estab- lishment, throwing the type into the street, and dividing the press into small pieces and sinking them in the neighbor- ing stream. I have never seen Bull's Bluff since. It is the worst place to bluff that I know of.” The bald-headed man smiled the sad, sweet smile again, and wiped his eyes with his sleeve. “I shall never quite re- cover from it,” he said, “But you said you lost your hair there.” inquiringly re- marked a sympa- thizing listener. “ Ah, I had almost "Great rats !! I can't get my head out.” comicbooks.com