Judge, 1926-05-15 · page 32 of 36
Judge — May 15, 1926 — page 32: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1926-05-15. 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.
“I FORGET—” To be unable to recall important circumstances, to be forced to the admission, “I forget,” brands one as incapable and unreliable. No longer need the ambitious man or woman admit of an unreliable memory, for a simple, prac- tical and effective method of ‘memory training is now available. POWER and FORCE William Clarke ag [ate of the Royal Polytechnic ayy Institute, London, England Presents in easily understood English the secret of the master key to memory with special chapters on “Memory in Business,” “Remembering Names and Faces” and “Memory Defects Remedied” as well as many other interesting and enlightening facts Bound in 16 handy pocket sized booklets, pro- fusely illustrated, our present limited edition will be sold at the remarkably low price of $1.00 per set BRUNSWICK SUBSCRIPTION CO. 627 West 43d Street New York FOR DANDRUFF GLOVER’S exercises an antiseptic effect on the scalp. Cleanses, stim- ulates. Write for Book “How to Have Beautiful Hair and a Healthy Scalp.” It_ will tell. you many things you should know. Write Dept. ACS H. Clay Glover Co., Inc. 119-121 Fifth Ave. New York City. Date... JUDGE 627 West 43d Street, New York, N.Y I want JUDGE for myself I have checked below the offer | accept Herewith is $1.00 (check, cash, stamps, money- order) for 10 weeks of JUDGE. Herewith _ find (check, cash, money- order) for one year's subscription to JUDGE. $5.00 Address. . The Bookie (to pal who has been mauled in a race-gang fight)—Don’t let ‘em wash yer face. In the Dark “Prost fix it to-night,” he muttered, “Heaven alone knows what will happen if I bungle it again, as I did last time, but my hand shook so I must have made a mistake in the number of drops, and it had no effect. But she is getting impatient, always twitting me to get on and be done with it. Well, she shall have no cause forcomplaint to-night. My wife once out of the way I shall be free to act.” The room in which he stood was small and stuffy, great shutters, with solid iron bars hung on the windows, in a medicine cupboard in the corner were a number of phials and bottles— one, on which he fixed his eyes with a look of keen anticipation was labeled poison. It was but half full, but there was enough there for his purpose, he knew. The moment had come! He nerved himself to steady his shaking hand as he reached down the poison bottle Them footprints may be useful as a clew. from the cupboard and tremblingly measured out a few drops into a glass. Breathing heavily in the hot, oppres- sive atmosphere he crouched down at the table. All at once he stiffened and started up, a look of surprise in his burning ey He had fancied he could see his wife’s face faintly materializing before him. The features were dim at first, but gradually becoming plainer every moment. She was looking straight at him with a pained, reproachful expression that he should have plotted such a thing against her. Gripping the edge of the table he stood spellbound. How had she managed to get there? It was the last face he had expected to see at that moment. “Ah!” he exclaimed at last, “I re- member now, that’s the snap I took of my wife at Margate last summer. Silly of me, I must have started on the wrong roll of films.” —Herbert Hamelin in Passing Show comicbooks.com