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Judge, 1931-08-22 · page 31 of 36

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Judge — August 22, 1931 — page 31: Judge, 1931-08-22

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“An Address of Distinct On” ve aN, Au Greater Value . «Too Lien, airy and spacious jook i the quiet shores of Lake Michi; + quickly tion ta ts DRAKE HOTEL, Cc BACKGAMMON A backgammon board that fits Made of wal- nut, with cork playing surface. your card table. Ivory draughtsmen, dice, doubler, leather cups and book of rules. Complete for $14.50 ey ula; Soe 37 E. 49th St. New York x City ME Telephone PLaza 3-6418 DETROIT'S FINEST UPTOWN HOTEL + + is near the General Motors, Fisher and New Center Buildings, also automobile plants. A courteous thoughtful staff. Excellent Cuisine. a rooms at $3.00 per day. Abin gton at 700 SEWARD | street The Bands That Bind (Continued from page 8) was buying cigarettes at the counter when the check arrived. Sneep was living in Larchmont, it seems, and had had the misfortune to lose his wallet, | including his commutation — ticket, that very morning. “This is a hell of a note,” he said sheepishly. “I was going to ask you out for the night, even—no, no, old think of it. Really, been too kind alread In the end, hov ten dollars, promising to return it next day. That was two years ago... . man, I couldn't I mean it—you've Ix the course of that summe the followin °, L began to ex- perience faint qualms as to the whole sale regularity of the brothers, Quite a few of them met me, and most of them had something to sell, once the bonds had been cemented. They bor- rowed my clothes. called up my girls. slept in my room, One determined brother, in fact—a thin youth with thick 4 and a touch’ of acne haunted my place for so many weeks that I began to doubt which of us had been there first. He sat around, eriti cal of my gin, and talked about the futility of trying to sell anything in times like th I finally move the dead of r summer Ned Ross put me right about the thing. “Sure, I've got a band,” he said. “Here it is.” He fished it out of his vest pocket, rolled up tight like a lead pencil. “But only dopes stick out their necks by wearing it all the time. and when I sight one of the brothers who looks about ripe, snap on the old band and give him a Ned grinned. “Lunch money—to one so recently nurtured in cloistered halls—bulks up into a real item nowadays.” “But, Ned,” I said, brotherly nor——’ “There comes one,” rudely, at's neither he interrupted standing on tiptoe. Down the bobbed a fresh- d man, still wide-eyed and pleased with Life. Circling his ma was the band that binds. Fingers twitching, Ned hurriedly affixed his own. I hesi- ing the few coins ed off. rting after me I saw him first! “But I had my band on,” I re minded him. nd he saw mine first. “The hell he did!" Neck and nec we streamed through the noond: throngs, right hands outstretched. young “What's the idea? 29 but now I haven't | and the | t. and left no address. | Along toward the end of the second | I let the freaks pass me by, | wh mn | Tired... | = REAT yourself to nature’s own pick-up . . . a long, cool glass of original College Inn Tomato Juice Cocktail. There’s nothing else like it for real refreshment. Whole, red-ripe, juicy tomatoes—a dash of delicate spicing—not over- original College Inn Tomato Juice Cocktail is America’s most pop- ular invigorator. Sold only in frosted College Inn Cocktail Shakers. pantry shelves, done... Found on the best ‘THE ORIGINAL TOMATO JUICE COCKTAIL Cotrece Inn Foon Propucts Co, Hotel Sherman, Chicago 415 Greenwich Street, New York comicbooks.com