comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1928-05-19 · page 30 of 36

Judge — May 19, 1928 — page 30: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — May 19, 1928 — page 30: Judge, 1928-05-19

A restored page from Judge, 1928-05-19. 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.

Hotel Lineoln EIGHTH AVENUE 44%!.45"! STS. 1400 new rooms, each with sunshine, bath, shower and servidor—modern rooms at moderate prices at the hub of the business and pleasure zone. $3 to 85 single and $4 to $6 double Lackawanna 1400 TIMES SQUARE NEW YORK yi a 1G): q om i >} fi 2 i JAMES T, CLYDE Managing Director © Foot-Bath 9 i Allen’s Foot=Ease i) ‘The Antiseptic, Healing Powder if to shake into your shoes Why will you suffer from corns, bunions Muses, bot, tired, aching feet, when } a ittle lien’s FooteEase in the shoes will stop the pain and give you rest and co} ? It takes the friction from the shoes | | Its cost in the r .and your feet arealways ready for the golf course, the dance or a long tramp. You simply forget all abc | your feet and the pain you have suffered, Used by the Army and Navy during the war, by £ tennis, football and baseball players, stage dancers and all classes of people who must have comfortable feet to do their best. Try Allen's Foot-Ease and see how easy it makes your new or tight shoes, | Sold at all Drug and Toilet Counters | In a Pinch, use Allen’s Foot-Ease For Pree trial package, address ALLENS POOT+EASE, Le Roy, N. Y. Firm Maanate (enterin, Director Firm Maonate such an important part? Puppets of Passion (Continued from page 9) enough—an Old Mould, her fav- orite brand, which she could dis- tinguish from the others even blindfolded. She removed the bandage and lay blowing thin spirals of smoke at the chandeliec How like a chandelier was her life, she thought; and the familiar lines of the poet came in to in all their intensit “I burn my chandelier at both ends It will not last the night...’ She looked around at the im- mense room that was her b room. It was, she reflected enough for the whole regiment. To tell the truth, the Sixty-Ninth regiment was in the room, in undress uniform. Dawn was like that, unconventional. A knock on the door aroused Dawn from her lethargy. She hastily slipped it off and donned an abstraction. This was Dawn, flitting lightly from lethargy to abstraction and back to precipice again. Or from Beethoven to Bach and Bach to Bach again. It her mother, Mrs. Whar- ton Ginsbergh-Margolics, a slim nervous woman, nervous like a manatee or Firpo. She wore her hair piled high on her head, an odd place one must agree. But then the Ginsberghs were all iconoclasts. They never gave a whoop. When Dawn, at five, had coine down with the whooping- cough, not a whoop did she give. Perversely, she broke out with the yellow jack. But she lived. studio)—Iho’s that? | -Why, that’s Napoleon. Why did you get such a little man to play sina Snow “Dawn!” It was her mother. “Yes, Uncle Nate,” replied Dawn stretching lazily like a great tawny cat. called her mother Uncle Nate— ask me why? “Dawn, how can you lie i with those three suitors w: hours already to propose to you?’ Dawn made a little moue of dis- taste. It did not satisfy her, so she made another, then still an- other. She lay there making moues while her mother stood there getting grayer all the time. “Dawn, stop making moues and get dressed. Remember, time and tide waits for no man “What the heck has the — tide got to do with it?” in- quired Dawn, “What do I look | Well-known violinist does a 4 little log sawing for his wife | —Everysopy’s Weekty 28. comicbooks.com