Judge, 1938-06 · page 44 of 53
Judge — June 1938 — page 44: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1938-06. 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.
The Judge’s ‘‘Lost at Sea’’ Puzzle ANSWERS TO ARE YOU SURE? . pedine’s Island . cater-cornered |. consul . The Life of Emile Zola . Fustic . a Chinese vessel . Montague . 1b. 2.a., 3.d., 4.c. |. Ophir « Marriage with but one person at a time - COO-Ber . Rabelaisian fish . Neutrality Bill . apogee . two red lanterns with a white lantern between them . stocks . . bird . San Francisco . St. Dr. Don Francisco Costillo, Najera Ouaauasavanve By Ralph R. Cone, New York City SAILING ORDERS To navigate the course safely to the home port, fou must All in every space in the chart with a Teter of a word containing the number of let- ters indicated in the orders. The orders also ex- plain the direction has puzzle being Nort must follow, the top of the Each word starts with the last letter of the word previously used. For ex- ample, your first word (4 E) starts in the upper lefe space and proceeds four spaces in an Easter- ly direction. Start E—The good old days. SW—Pa and Ma. SE—No blondes, but ankle twists, W—High flying. NE—It can't be bought wholesale, NW_The besieged make this. E—Red cannonball cheese. SE rough sleet and snow stuff. s i persuaders. v your old man. $I Fillers. NE—Wet the whistle. NW—Pay them if you dance. Solution to Last Month's Puzzle Xx? E—Underling. SE—A new SW—Too many th’s for esses. un helmets need this. E—Microbean fun-fest. NE—Everybody’s got to. W-Shady lady. E—Throw lightly. W—Croak. NE—Rock for the babe. E—Australian bird. SW—Japanese grab-bag. SEA. famous fabler. SW—Owner of Castel Gandolfo, E—Poetic sundown. NE—The present. W—Easy, Nelly! SE—Mimic. W—Ewes’ husbands. NE—Dot dot dot dash dash dash dot dot dot. E—Neck artist. NW—Bring up. NE—Obliterate. W—Useful head ornaments, SW—His mother was an acrobat. SE—Dippy dame. . | Mr. “third floor, ladies’ wear, accessories!” w and far between. SE W—Bye. SW—Thread holder. SF—Laughing water fowl. E—Whisky without anything. NW-If you're on these books, you're jittery. NE—After opening, reclose tightly. W—Over the shoulder or on the tail. SE—You got a million of ‘em. SW—His yarns are long. E—Ga-ga, 'goo-goo, baby fun. BUG AVR AUD RUUERR RUNNER EEUU ANEUO RERUNS . Leviathan - full value |. May 31 . John Daniel Miller Hamilton . the National League adopted the heavier cover “dead” ball for 1938 . three cents . stethoscope . Action at Aquilla |. rodent « Lord Halifax . Ralph Greenleaf . pulverized gobacco . Secory . second Sunday in May » Lb. 2.¢, 3.2. 37. steered wild 38. Yahoo . 365 days, 5 hours, 48 minutes and 46 seconds . Tennessee (one point only for “Matri- mony”) 41. Portuguese - Gatling . plebiscite 44. dormer window . felonous (felonious) . Nectar . Alice Brady 147 49. orthography ). Library of Congress Trees? — Please! I hope that I shall never see, Another poem about a tree, A tree whose ugly form effects, A score of awful motor wrecks, A tree that must be trimmed and sprayed, To keep it sound and undecayed, And then in spite of all that care, It's apt to fall and part your hair, By hurtling in a summer squall, Through dining room or kitchen wall. A tree that’s always in the way, To house some drilling popinjay, Who bores the bark with noisy bill, When all the world is calm and still, A habitat for bugs and germs, And countless little crawling worms, That's all it is and bards who rant About its beauty should recant. A poem like this might sell for plenty; A tree’s not worth a dollar twenty. —Cnartes J. HACKETT. comicbooks.com