Judge, 1931-04-11 · page 14 of 36
Judge — April 11, 1931 — page 14: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1931-04-11. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
Interestina put Nor Materiat “Manifestly, whether plaintiff was dressed like the Queen of Sheba or like the lilies of the field; whether she indulged in risqué stories and conver- Tuat Famity Fry “Tt is a matter of common knowledge that the common house fly has come to be re- garded, not only as one of the most annoying and re- pulsive of insects but one of the most dangerous. ... He is the meanest of all scaven- gers. And summer board- ers annoyed by him may leave without being guilty of breach of contract.”— Williams v. State (Me. sations, or spoke with the chaste purity of St. shether, in her relations with Phillips she sfully acted a réle in which Potiphar’s wife failed—are matters wholly irrelevant and immate rial upon the question 1921), 110 Atl. 316, ther she or her husband owned the automobile Lemke v. Dougherty > (N. D. 1926), 206 N. J He Doesn’t Like It “There may be said to be a primal and rooted an- tipathy in the breast of civilized man against care- lessness in shooting.”—Morgan v. Mulhall (Mo. 1908), 114 S. WW. 4, Tue First Nationar Bank “A woman might with propriety carry things in her stocking for which some people might say she ought to be ashamed.”—Gillespie v. Byrne (1912), 186 N. Y. 207. Even in Kansas “It is our understanding that a Man- hattan cocktail is generally and popu- larly known to be intoxicating.”—State v. Pigg (Kan. 1908), 97 Pac. 859. NOBLE DECISIONS 12 comicbooks.com