Judge, 1932-10 · page 25 of 36
Judge — October 1932 — page 25: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1932-10. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
HIGH HAT (Continued from page 15) fterwards, under pressure, she] ed to take dinner with him and in at a party. The dinner was perfect, a sym- phony of ordering and included | the right wines. The party took place at a huge penthouse on Park Avenue and proved the most Chesterfieldian, glamorous _ thing he'd ever attended. She thought time she was attending a large ador affair of state, there cing a goodly attendance of foreign, vhose brilliant manners and extreme ood breeding shone out like glitter- ing diamonds. She felt stranger than ever, feeling as though a novel f E. Phillips Oppenheim had come to life, characters and all. She went home that night, slightly stunned by it all. 1 she ex- srienced m, such politesse, such suav such fine accents, such | polished talk. But still her queer feeling persisted. She couldn't place those people yet she had the feeling | she’d seen them all before. She sud- denly remembered a small incident and determined to trace it down, to clear her mind. So the next day when her English called in she agreed to another luncheon, they proceeded to his apartment This time, when they stepped into the elevator she kept her ears open. And sure enough, as had en place the day before and to which she had! paid no attention at the time, the tor man put on a big smile, winked, and said to her companion very pally:—“Hello Bob!” She knew then that she was out with a butler and that the party had been given by his servant friends in the apartment of some swank who was summering in the country at the moment! She tipped Bob and fled! Ah! Zoz Franch! I" always been a theory of mine | that the French, and not the| Scotch, ought be the heroes of those little character studies beginning: “Then there was the Scotchman who was so tight—"” Perhaps this ex- perience of Mons. Lyon, Mearson will explai The good Mons. of taking dinner nightly at a tiny French restaurant off the beaten track where the food was superb. In accordance with ze custom he was provided with his own napkin, which hung on peg 31 on the proper rack, h was nged weekly and for which he pa rental fee. (Page 24. in the habit please) AN IMPORTANT MEMBER OF YOUR FAMILY ‘Te telephone is something more thar voice n instrument to carry your across the miles. It most important member of your family. is a Faithfully, constantly, cheer- fully it serves you. Keeps you in touch with friends, Stands guard- ian over your home. Helps to put more pleasure and achieve- ment into life and li And does it all so capably. When you are moving, you keep your telephone in the old home until the last van has gone and you place the key in the lock for the final turn. You arrange in advance to have a telephone ng. ready at the new address so there will be no break in your contact with the world. When a young couple starts housekeeping. When there is ill- ness in the home. When some- hody goes away. When distances are great. When cmergencies On all of these occasions the telephone carns its right to family membership. arise. Day or night, any part of the telephone company’s army of skilled workers, intricate equip- ment, and millions of miles of wire is at your command. It is the Bell System’s constant en- deavor to make the telephone worth more and more to every subscriber, AMERICAN TELEPHONE FOR HIM— of better Go A score 5 to 8 strokes lower than average— A driz A full reaches a 7 to 12 yds. longer. second AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY One dozen new SILVER KINGS with built in PATENTED DISTANCE $7.80 per doz. at your pro or dealer construction lf Game— shot that 400 yd. green. comicbooks.com