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Judge, 1931-06-06 · page 21 of 36

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Judge — June 6, 1931 — page 21: Judge, 1931-06-06

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\Al All of a Quiver Ove in Elmhurst, where they claim to have installed the first local Tom Thumb course, the popu- lace have gone woodsy in a big way, ind I don’t mean alcohol. The latest fad amongst the F.F.F. First Families of Flushing) is Arch- As Mac and I drove by in our y steamer the other eve we no- ticed a great many of the burghers out n the greensward practising at the ts. The game seems to have crept ht into their suburban hearts and, fired with the traditions of Robin Hood and Little John (or was it demiz), we ambled over and bought ourselves a couple of quivers’ worth of good clean fun. To be any sort of an archer, you » and then days in the Roto See! I Spent mis at George White's, and Mac, as you all know, was studying on the Mutual Wheel, so what chance did we have? Several of the yeomen present on the firing line seemed restless; they kept up a steady march to a radio shop across the street. A short stay and then back they would come more to t. up their quivers with renewed zest. We investigated ind, just as you suspected, it was a speak,” but they had a lot of ether in the beer, and so I guess that radio front was lega inside once ACQUAINTANCE WITH MEMBERS GF # DANCERS CLUBIN BHAT After the nth trip to the filling sta- tion, Mac's aim became erratic, to say the least. And, as nobody ever mis- took him for Danicl Boone, I left under a cloud of arrows. Moreover, the Elmhurst Citizens’ Committee have written Mac that if he ever tries to puli any more strings in their town, they're going to Sioux him. Eye-Queues ue other day a lady from overheard to ask another in- tellectual young lady for the loan of a “diminutive, young assar was L HE Ate, StePr AKD LIVED ON ! A BILARD Tbe! LK argentous, truncated cone, convex at its summit and semi-perforated with symmetrical indentations.” What did she want? A man came to a coin collector with four coins bearing respectively t image and inscription. “George 1,” ‘George TI. “George TIT" and “George IV." The coin collector bought them all as the genuine article and his friends told dope. Why? him he was a Last week’s—No. 1: Here is. the reasoning that leads to the answer: Mr. Robinson lives in Detroit and the passenger whose name is the same as the brakeman's Chie hence the brakeman’s name cannot be Robinson but must be either Smith or Jones. lives in Neither Mr. Robinson nor the pas- senger whose name is the same as the can be the brakeman's nearest neighbor because the first lives in Detroit and the second lives in Chi- cago and the brakeman lives halfway between these two cities. Mr. Jones earns exactl year. The bra #2000 a trest neigh- bor, a passenger, earns exactly three times as much as the brakeman, But three will not divide exactly into $2000 so Mr. Jones brakeman’s nearest n can Mr. Robinson be the brakeman’s nearest neighbor so Mr. Smith must he that fellow and Mr. Jones (the third passen- (Continued on page 23) comicbooks.com