Judge, 1934-12 · page 17 of 37
Judge — December 1934 — page 17: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1934-12. 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.
lf Judge You’re So Changeable! By Marion Deitrick “ JOHN, I've decided I would like to go to the theatre after all.” “Oh, yeah?” “Yes. When you called up and said you had the passes I was feeling too tired out, But I’m rested now and feel just like seeing a show. Don't you?” “Uh.” “Oh, no, of course not, when J want to go. When I was worn out you in- sisted on dragging me out. But now that I do feel like going, you've brought home an old book to bury yourself in.” “Umph.” ‘John. Now come on. You haven't taken me y place for ages. You just expect me to sit around all day and twiddle my thumbs. Yow always have interesting things to keep you busy and entertained at the off to you if T have to just sit around the fice, so it’s nothing house all day with nothing to do.” “Say, listen—I asked you if you wanted to go and you said no—” “Well, [ didn’t, th I told you, I was feeling too tired. But I'm all right now and I've changed my mind. It’s perfectly natural for me to change my mind, isn’t i “Yeah.” “Well, then, John your old book. re you want to.” now come on, put yu can read any t “Aw, for er. ing out loud. Go ahead and get reac “Well, you needn't be so disagreeable about it or I won't go.” “Fine. That’s—" Now, John, you said you would. Oh, I think you're the meanest old thing to be so perverse and changeable!” “Go on and get re: get r Go on and g . all right. I'm going to. Of my own free will, You needn't think you can bully me into—” Go on and “Mom ready yet? What? Oh—no, I'm—I'm_ having the worst time trying to find something to wear.” “Wear what you've got on and for gosh sakes come on.” “Oh, yes. Now that yor want to go, on, come on—aren’t you everybody must rush headlong and furi- ously to get you there. A very different matter from when Are you going to this show or aren’t you?” “LT told you I'm trying to find some- thing to go in. T can’t h stitch Lown is in rags an “What the heck’s the matter with that you just bought?” you know I caught my heel in the hem when we were “For Pete's sake, you could have fixed it if every tatters, can calling on— “1 wouldn’t mind it so much if he wasn’t always playing ‘Stars and Stripes Forever!” 15 comicbooks.com