comicbooks.com Join Free

Judge, 1930-08-30 · page 30 of 36

Judge — August 30, 1930 — page 30: what you’re looking at

📖 Open the full issue in the page-flip reader →
Judge — August 30, 1930 — page 30: Judge, 1930-08-30

A restored page from Judge, 1930-08-30. 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.

TS = ay a ACO SUHLINGERKLUT2 OF DumPLE - DING. WYOMING, DINED WiTH HIS FATHERS FATHER-IN-LAW, HIS MOTHERS BROTHER'S SISTER-IN-LAW; WIS WIFES GRANDMOTHER: WIS UNCLES NEPHEW; HIS NIECES GREAT UNWLES BROTHER ANO A COUPLE CTHER FELLOWS, AND yer HE DINED ALONE. EXPLANATION] He was His owN FATHERS Famer. IN-LAW, HE WAS THE SISTER OF His MOTHER'S BROTHER-IN-LAW, HIS WIFE'S GRANDMOTHERS GREAT UN(LE, HIS BROTHERS UNCLES NIECES AUNT'S COUSIN AND A CouPLE OTHER (ue) FELLOWS “sigh Wj jy tee + Gixteen trees can be planted in sixteen rows an ths way. Prereer BUSH ERowiIné- IN “THE BEER- GARDEN oF HANS SCHNITZELHEIMER OF HEIDELBURE GERMANY, seer, pene = WAM SUCCOTASH OF BOMBAY. mma) MARRIED A GATE POST IN (417 “THEY HAVE QUARRELED DAILY EVER SINCE Niout Watcuman’s Wirr—What do you mean by staying out till all hours of the afternoon? 23 The Theatre (Continued from page 16) would gain the manag of applause. ‘The lemonade on sale in the lobby of the Apollo is much too sweet, and somebody ought to s} a round to somebody about the pscudo-cherries in it. The last time I ate one of those “cherries pulled out a tooth, And the last time Mr. Atkinson, of the Times, negotiated one, he had the bellyache for wee! The check- room boy at the Bijou also needs some talking to. To get past him without having your coat grabbed off your arm, whether you wish it to be grabbed or not, requires altogether too much dexterity. The door leading into the George M. Cohan Theatre from the main lobby is too heavy. To hold it open and allow a lady to enter calls subsequently for a whole bottle of Omega oil if your wrist is to be all right the next morning. Getting out of the Eltinge through the single little exit during the intermissions is much too much of a job. One of the doors to the left of the little exit might casily be opened, to everybody's relief and pleasure. And the same at the Fulton. But it may please the managers in question to learn that this authority can find no fault with the Henry Miller, New Amsterdam, Little, Be- lasco, Barrymore, Ziegfeld, Shubert, Beck, Elliott, Cort, Erlanger, Ham- merstein, Guild, Playhouse, Plymouth and several Chanin houses, Where the Blue Begins (Continued from page 11) rshirt and throw that out, bit by Not if it was cold, I wouldn't,” said Professor Dyke under his breath. Professor de Sitter scowled and continued: “In other words, the more undressed you become the more you » the boundaries of the uni- Professor Brinker said: ‘Meantime while you're blowing all this lint over the border, I suppose a chambermaid is going around with a dust pan.” “There are no chambermaids on the edge of creation,” replicd Professor de Sitter. “You run past planets, stars, ether, 125th Street and cham- bermaids in the carly stages of the journey.” “Another thing,” said Professor Windmill, “you always run the chance that there'll be a strong south wind which will blow the fuzz right back in your face—or it's liable to rain just when you've left your umbrella ought. oughty, ought miles the hell and gon back in your front hall.” | | i | | | | { { | comicbooks.com