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Judge, 1931-05-02 · page 26 of 36

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Judge — May 2, 1931 — page 26: Judge, 1931-05-02

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He fad this Thank heaven we can, soon It's born in ‘em. Nature points the way to healthy teeth and gums and good digestion. As early as possible, satisfy the children's chewing instincts with pure WRIGLEY'S gum. INEXPENSIVE +> SATISFYING BRADFORD of BOSTON A MODERN MID-TOWN HOTEL 15 floors devoted to luxurious hos- pitality. Every room with bath. Single, $3-$4, Double, $4.50-57. LC, PRIOR MANAGEMENT TREMONT ST.—near Boston Common Connotsseurs of fine food dine at Longchamps in high con- tent. Our menu, they say, fulfillsthe most glorious tradition of the French cuisine. a open daily inciude ing Sundays end all Holidays for he TWENTIETH CENTURY ENCYCLOPEDIA A practical Encyclopedia at a minimum cost. Complete in i request without THE WORLD LIBRARY GUILD 120 Beyisten Street, Besten. 1440 Breadway, New York, N. OF DISTINCTION’”’ 24 WIGH HAF | | (Continued from page 23) brought as readily as a party-load. | recommend them only in emergencies the stuff being uniformly fairish | cut for the most part with a Scotch razor-blade. Only if you get on their right side will they kick through witl virgin distillations. The place | infest has the rather cmbarrassing habit of asking me to try samples or they just thought up. “Have you,” thes will urge, “tried blackberry wine with | gin?” And they proceed to break open two bottles and mix me one right in the window, with the world going by with tongues hanging out. Well, th: boys mean well. Inc ly T asked them for a bottle of non-alcoholic cordial the other night. I wanted it to feed to those who have gotten so far into their cups it doesn't matter what they take. My store-owner pal said, “Hell, no! I don’t sell it. Those bottles in the window are just dum- mies new on: The Play’s the Thing H's Broadway for you, boys struggling playwright who is « friend of mine submitted a play to a producer who had heard of it and was noring for it. The fellow read it d sent for my friend. He told him | he liked the pl. but would he mind rewriting the last act to make it go | thus and so? My friend complied, but still the producer wasn't satisfied. He got him to rewrite the second act. This | done and the play reread he got him te rewrite the first act. Then he got hin to rewrite the whole thing. My friend made these changes posthaste working steadily for three weeks, with out letup for food or sleep. And so he sat back after this fourth request. feeling the contentment that comes | with a play well-done and in_ the hands of a man who knew what was good. Just about this time his door bell rang. There stood a messenger | boy. The producer was returning th: | script and it came collect. The Parlor Inane HERE are lots of ways of telling « gal's age. F’rinstance, counting the wrinkles on her chin, examining her bicuspids, and you can sneak up on her by humming Japanese Sand man and seeing if she knows thi words ... this definitely dates her But I have unearthed a way fron Gramma Perkins’ old scrap-book which may turn out to be far mor subtle. The great sales argument about my method is that the girl docs it all herself and never guesses for o moment that she is giving herself away until it’s all over, This is how it goes: comicbooks.com