Judge, 1931-10-03 · page 34 of 36
Judge — October 3, 1931 — page 34: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1931-10-03. 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.
Bacoace Man—Now what'll [ do? He's ate up where he’s goin’! It’s All Due to Lack of Training! SEND your name and address to us, our “goats” are well trained and will put your name and address on our mailing list to- | gether with thousands of others who are enjoying JUDGE weekly. Join the Crowd that has learned to laagtlt JUDGE, 18 East 48th Street, New York, N. Y. Dear Sirs: Here’s my name and address together with my currency. Kindly give it to a well-trained “goat” to put on the mailing list. 1 YEAR, $51) 2 YEARS, $7.80(] 21 WEEKS, $2 0 NAMB) 6 o:5o:5 oie e:eiecs:e:0'e ern e.e:eeeinininieinieie aue'e sree ADDRESS CITY Dataci gale STATE Foreign & Canadian postage, $1.00. 10-3-31 32 You’re So Secretive (Continued from page 9) “No, and it seems to me you're just deliberately trying to keep me from knowing. What did you mean when you said ‘Yeah,’ the third time “When [ said—how the devil do I know? That I'd bring the letter, I guess.” ‘No, that’s what you meant when x id ‘Sure.’ When you said “Ye the first time, that was when you understood who it w: What did you mean the sec you had the letter he meant? r crying out loud—how do I , try to think. What had he said when you said ‘Sure’ the second time “Dammit, how can [ remember? Except that he was asking me to bring the letter— “No, he couldn't have been sayin that over and over. He must have id something else. What did you say ‘O. K." about?” “Oh, f'gossake, I don’t know! What diffe prence does it make? ‘one, whatsoever, but I just think it's very strange the way you secretive about your phone ce tions—never wanting me to hear what people have to say to you. I declare, anybody would certainly think you were trying to conceal something from m t so versa Definition No. 1,000,000 I™ still laughing at the breeziest quip of the day from Fanny Brice, who vowed that she didn’t remember its source. . . Well, no matter—An optimist is a guy who leaves his door open all night—hoping that his wife will walk out! —Warter Wincitetr, in the Daily Mirror Wilbur C. Whitehead O* June 27th we were pro- foundly shocked by wire- less advice that while en route for France, under an engage- ment for Jupoe’s interests, V d had passed on. system of valua- tions is the basis of all modern expert play at Bridge. He had composed a problem for the Third Annual Lenz Bridge Con- test (see page 1). This problem is now presented, not only for its merit as composed by a noted but as a tribute to d's memory. Frev L. Rogan, Publisher of Jupoe. comicbooks.com