Judge, 1931-07-25 · page 23 of 36
Judge — July 25, 1931 — page 23: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1931-07-25. 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.
The ‘Z riving and screen. iegticld Follies’ will continue to feld Follies’ stars to s! are constant- “Please, Miss Moore, don’t laugh,” re- quested Mac, “I'm working on your eyes, and [ wanta get a dreamy effect in" Also Iw on me t you to keep your eves steadily Then, in the picture, itll look like ooking at the reader of the maga- Now that I'm looking steadily at you, Mr. Mutermore, your face seems familiar, I've seen you somewhere before. Let me think—" Said Miss Moore, tapping her fore! “Pro assisted Mae, “at first nights, or in supper clubs, or along Park Avenue, or. “Loh where she reealled. “IT know seen you--at that drag store where we girls lunched during rehears- als!!" Mare busted the point on his pencil. “Tell me.” To asked, “has the so-called depression affected the—cer—the bong jewel, and motor gift complex of the en- loor loiterers ninored stage “L really don't know. The only piece of jewelry to come my way is this Deke fraternity pin,” she answered. “Is he from Yale?” asked Mae with a irls are great favorites interposed Mr. S always considered the the last word in’ puchritudinous collegiate appeal. Beauty and intelligence go hand in hand—thus. jegfeld F. ind Yale. xgfeld Follies,” psycholoy are lies’ » Miss Moore, my drawing Wanta come and see?” cried “It's lovely tering—I've You're a dear to be so flat- ved everything so much! I've got to run off to rehearsal now—"” Mae whispered something in her ed She whispered something in Mac's. M wrote something on a bit of paper and stuffed it in his pocket. “y show e-bye, Do come and see our she ued, and they were gone. “Whatcha write on that paper, Mac?” “Her telepl “What is it “To you, Junior, it’s ‘Spring “But that's Police Headq “Right! You phone ‘em an’ tell ’em you've been robbed !” Oh, yeah? Well, Mac’s no Deke! ne number!” Between Rounds ivine the national pastime an African slant, baseball dice is still another outlet for ergy. Set up four of the dice as mond and fling the last dice for the (Continued on page 31) JUDGE comicbooks.com