Judge, 1928-01-28 · page 30 of 36
Judge — January 28, 1928 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1928-01-28. 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.
and in @ And for a cold harmlessly To break i hurry try 3 of neuralg atism and And ter effect; rs give As pirin to children— en infants. When- ever there's pain, think of Aspirin. The genuine Bayer Aspirin has Bayer on the box and on every tablet. All druggists, with proven directions Physicians prescribe Bayer Aspirin; it does NOT affect the heart spirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Mon ceticacidester of Salicylicacid Is Your HairDying e of Starvation’ hich ¢ bair » just [3 peter to oer mes undernourished, the exist- it OUR SCALP IS THE SoIL from Pres. Ri ing bair cannot survive, nor is new ‘Oncol Prof Growth possible until your scalp is Beroider's many Made fertile arain— just as the fomous patients farmer must fertilize the bare, worn- x . ,0ut soil before the crop can grow. Falling hair, dandru itching sealp are symp- toms of an unhealthy, under-nourished condition of the scalp. If you bave any of these ailments, if write for information about fessor Scholder's H Home Treatment for the hair and scalp. — ——— od .» , FREE ANALYSIS COUPON: | | Mail today, enclosing samples of your heir to PROFESSOR MAURICE SCHOLOER, D.G. fessor Scheléer Institute, Ine, 101 West 42nd St., New York, N. was hut another é GE SE 1, It’s funny how those striped horses in Bronx Park speak: only Zebraic, but anyway, here’s a knot to unravel: “And n Sherman Act?” she desired to know. amining the class in history. sizzled some smart sophomore, How I Spied on General Grant in 61 (Continued from page 10) person. If I Robert E. Lee war would be ours t. Inasmuch as the Confederate government was broke, [ had to work my way north on a cattleboat, but being young, I somehow managed to survive all the hardship Arriving in Washington, I learned that Grant and his staff were on their way to Bachrach’s to be photographed for the next issue of Vanity r. I got to Bachrach’s first and hid myself behind a chair. And would you believe it, when the staff marched in, who should sit himself down on that very same chair but my own dear father, Dr. Little did he suspect my pres- ence, though my deep feelings concealed on his got hold of these, told me, the in a fortn Seuss! and powerful emotions threat- ened to betray me more than once. It was the staff's first awk- and shy and it took Mr. photo together; they were ward Bachrach some forty-five minutes to get a good picture. And while he was getting the picture, I snitched the plans out of Gen- eral Grant's pocket! Ten min- utes later I had stolen my father’s Miss Yerkes was ex- little perverts, what s the Marching through Georgia!” I’m just an ivy-covered locksmith, own horse and, froth-covered and dusty, was racing along to de- liver them to Lee in the South. Alack! Little did I realize that I, too, had been caught in the photograph at Bachrach’s! When morning came and I wa only half a mile from the Con- federate lines, I passed a Union sentry sitting on the roadside reading an carly morn- ing edition of that fatal mags zine. He scrutinized my tures carefully as I galloped past and then jumped to the pursuit. In a thrice he had slipped hand cuffs onto my protesting wrists! THE JIG WAS UP! I spent the rest of the Civil War in a New Jersey prison, As I was only three years old they didn’t dare hang me for fear the tabloids get hold of the story, so they strung up my father in stea When they offered to hind his eyes with a handkerchief he waved them y with a gran who was diose gesture. ot with that he protested. “Blindfold me rather with this!” And he handed his executioners the stocking he had taken froc: my bedside. A great sentimentalist, my father! And had the terrible ar never been, I am sure we would have grown up together as the very best of pals and com- panions. comicbooks.com