Judge, 1929-09-21 · page 16 of 36
Judge — September 21, 1929 — page 16: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1929-09-21. 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.
Are ne “B okenook River in southern Inertia, off the coast of Gaskatechowan $ infermittenthy here and there and finally runs up ‘a basswood tree, where it disappears among the topmost branches. WE HEADLIEHT CATERPILLAR j| Shown here at the age of two || months. At the end of a year this caterpillar turns into a railway locomotive OOF! =e The word “OOF” comes y From the vatials oF the Choctaw woras Oy Povey” avd “Dont be bhe thit Ree Fie of Annapolis, Md. drank a quart of line and swallowed two boxes of ight ed bes without injury. 1915 T ff Camena-man—I thought you said his screen-tests turned out fine! Dinector—They did—but he’s never used Fleischmann’s Yeast, Kelly Tires nor Pepsodent Tooth Paste, and he can’t tell an Old Gold from a Spud—so what's the use? “Speaking as a Layman—” “What do you think of it, as a story?” I inquired timidly down the typewritten sheets. “Well, speaking as a layma said 1 who sold stocks, 's pretty good. Of course it’s a bit out of my line, but there were one or two small points which occurred to me.” “Me to made cardl said Whitmore, who d boxes. “TD hesi- tate to speak about a subje which I know practically nothing, but I did have one or two unim- > with what heartiness I could muster. “Every potential reader is a layman, you kno n Davis eagerly, “T didn't like the girl's nam Why must you eall her ‘Sally’? That's an out-of-date name, to my mind. And why not make her a country girl, instead of this bird's ye “Why, because I'm more fa- ar with a city background,” I don’t think that’s much of a reason, do you, Whit?” aid Whitmore, puffing iz And I wasn’t stuck on that hold-up scene, either, if you don’t mind my being frank.” If you've got to kill off a character, why didn’t you se nd him to war or somethin “There wasn't any war going on then,” I explained. “Be- sides—" Another thing,” interrupted is. “I think you're making a ake to kid that policeman the y you do. The Irish clement will be sore as hell about it. “What would you suggest— making him a Jew?" id Whitmore forci hat would be worse. I'd cut him out altogether. It isn’t supposed to be a funny story, anyway, is “Well, parts of it were de- signed to bring a laugh,” I admit ted. “It didn't pop my vest but- tons," he said, with pardonable pride. “And here's another thing, now that you mention it: I'd cut out that part where Fred What’s- his-name finds the crook hiding in the apartment.” comicbooks.com