Judge, 1931-09-05 · page 28 of 36
Judge — September 5, 1931 — page 28: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1931-09-05. 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.
I al Ws che O eosin Whenever exciting news orrives, let your jaws flutter instead of your heart. It lets good news sink in grad- ually, and calms the nerves—and incidentally gives lasting benefit to your teeth, gums and digestion. INEXPENSIVE YOUR BABY WILL LIKE THIS HOTEL... Because baby's meals can be cooked in the convenient com- pletekitchenthatisa part ofevery suite. Grown-ups may prefer to eat in the hotel dining room but particular babies want food pre- pored by mother or nurse. Baby will also enjoy ploying in Cen- tral Park—half a block awoy. Write for illustrated booklet, describing the many features of the Croydon appealing to babies (and their elders). Aportments with 2, 3, 4, or more rooms—by the day, month oryear—furnished or unfurnished. Che Crovion 12 EAST 86" ST. NEW YORK Teiermone, ut me * SATISFYING BRADFORD of BOSTON A MODERN MID-TOWN HOTEL 15 floors devoted to luxurious hos- room with bath, Single, Judge is grateful for the - acceptance by advertisers of the value of this magazine which makes it possible to announce that | | orders now scheduled for 1931 exceed total volume for 1930. They were out in his car. “You may go as far as you like,” she said, “but when you park, be sure it is at a Kent Garage." Located at 61st Street’and Colum- bus Ave.—44th Street, just east of 3rd Ave.—and the Newark Garage, Washington and Warren Streets. Reasonable Rates 26 | dent for life. Which WIGH HAT (Continued from page the patient's throat, who is then hacked up against a fluorescope. The doctor then works the dingus from in | front of the mouth and watches the progress through the scope. Some of the things he had extracted and which he keeps on display in a kind of chamber of horrors, include safety pins, buttons, coins, tacks, razor-blades, toys, forks, and just re- cently he took out a shoe nail which »bbler, had s lowed He got the nail, by without even seeing it in the fluoroscope—quite a feat. When anxious mothers bring in the abe who has swallowed a safety pin, sometimes necessary to cut the pin in half. Also a pin has to. be turned over X-ray fluoro nd closed before extrac tion. All in all, quite a man, but as. yet he hasn’t had the pleasure of tak- ing a swallowed me shone out of a crooner’s tummy. He says he lives in hopes!! The Parlor Inane ry the new knee tric gin party. It’s sure fi tim is asked, “Can you touch the floor with both hands while keeping your left foot on the floor and your right k pressed against the door fa height of four hand. spans?” nthe s *r succeeds he is told, ow bark!" Unimportant Items C)>* of the recent covers of the up- to-the-minute New Yorker showed a miniature golf course that was doing a box-office business. Sixth Avenue has suddenly become a nest of Gypsy Phrenologists. Mama | Gypsy puts her family of eighteen in the back room of an empty store. cur tains off a mystic recess where she will read the high lights off the bumps on the ivory domes of the customers, puts up a phrenological chart full of | mystic whowah in the store window and then ensconces herself in full war | paint on a rocker in the store front. Mr. Kaj Silkebong of Norrevold- gade, Denmark, informs me by circu- lar that by purchasing any number of whole tickets for sixteen bucks apiece, I stand a pretty good chance of win- ning the Danish Colonial Lottery, of which the first prize will be ,000 and so on down the line. In other words, I can make myself indepen- veddy nice of him. He fails, however, to point out that there are only about 6,000,000 “(Continued on page 28) comicbooks.com