Judge, 1929-03-16 · page 27 of 36
Judge — March 16, 1929 — page 27: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1929-03-16. 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.
Here's a nifty I'm working on —just a rough idea. About the chef's son who followed in’ his father’s foodsteps. Or, wait a minute—yep, this is better still . chef's son who followed in his father’s foodstuffs... . Speaking of + another one, but the editor n't print it. He said it was too rough, wou He—Well, Pm proud to say that Lado not loaf! She--Why, don't you loaf me? Splifkins has [hear young toa touy teh! He's not saying any tit! thing “Oh. no » he’s Keeping it under his hat.” Did [tell you about the ner vous tourist who put up ata sinall country hotel, and spent the night Flitting from pillow to post? My friend E.G. says, re ing this here now famous) ing they're all fighting over, trust that Louvre will find a way. Did you hear about the parson who turned harbor pilot, went right on shaving shoals? Yessir, and his wife got sor because he was always out. with the buoys. Did [ tell you about the super- polite garbaye-truck driver, who, whenever he met anacquaintance, bowed from the waste? And then there was the farmer who fell in love with his milk- maid. rah, he ened for her in a big whey. —Jaquira JUDGE “You say it's a crook drama—ihat's this, the first act? The gang of bandits chose the wrong place to hold up Michacl Mulcahey. “Trish Extraction.” comicbooks.com