Judge, 1924-10-18 · page 30 of 36
Judge — October 18, 1924 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1924-10-18. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
HEARING RESTORED =| OFTEN IN 24 HOURS Amazing Results Secured in One Day by Use of K-17 Formerly Known ; As Rattle Snake Oil Des afne: need not be this remarkable for some of the Now it is possibl most obstinate cases of deafne by the applic ption formerly known as R i$ treatment is meeting with wide success all over the country M Nebraska resi f ms to work } ia on people 1 | dent are we that K-17 will cure 1 you, that we offer to send a large $2 bottle for only $1 on 10 days’ free trial. If the results are not satisfactory, it costs you ing. Send no money—just your na | dress to the Greene Laboratories, , | Bldg., Ku and th atment will be mailed at once. “Use it according to the simple directions. Tf at the end of 10 | days your hearing is not relieved, your catarth and asthma showing wonderful improvement, just send it ba d your money will be re- This offer is fully y and give this won- Ady. guaranteed so write tod: derful compound x trial. a Be one of the first. to wear thii tny ladies’ Ring Watch. New} gra Surprise your friends. now! Send size. Order No, L-1919 | Just_pay postman on| arrival our low price, . Your money back if not satisfactory MERICAN NOVELTY CO., 2455 Archer Ave., Chicag I use. home—duri , » No capi- tal or expe : r absolute | Don't miss it. Business ut A-3710, 1135 Broadway, New Vor EVERY READER OF JUDGE might have the print of @ famous drawing, but only one could have the original! Judge’s Originals are by the leading artists in the cor be purchased at stall cost the une you Tike to us and we will do the Judge’s Art Department 627 West 43d Street New York City A Tale of a Shirt Papa and Mamma and the kids (Continued from page 18) restraint, vet watched every loophole to her heart. the girl grew older it was hard for him to know when to be nice and when to be hard. Helen’s father might hav ved and ranted against her marriage to Marmaduke. The father felt it was an error and he tried to bend her away, but should he have been a hard-boiled egg about it? He was never that about anything, and his life and Helen's were at least beau- tiful as the result of the note that he struck and sustained. We almost envy them even the m‘sfortune of the marriage with Marmaduke. The endearing tone of the entire book is revealed in the sentence which opens Chapter XII. It goes: ““Mar- maduke, of course, is the villain of ASSING Snow (Lonpon) the piece, and not so much of a villai either, In my old-fashioned way, I may: put it that he lacked principle. He took no thought for the morrow and, though one agrees that it is easy to take too much, you: must take some, Those who don’t, force others to take it for them... and soon with magnificent gentleness and toler- ance to the very end, even though Marmaduke finally, well, in a way, forged, and spent five years in prison, and caused them great heartaches. “Yet Marmaduke kept us alive, he got the best out of us... 7 is ane other excerpt. Monkhouse can pack five fine feelings into a fifte Like no other writer [have recently read, he grasps the painful exquisite- ness of life at its best. Next week, or soon, I will “The Encyclopedia Britamni one hand tied behind 1 n-word sent ree. svi with yy: comicbooks.com