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Judge, 1938-09 · page 48 of 53

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The JUDGE'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE NO. 410 Submitted by Jack Luzzato, New York City Horizontal 1, These hangers are unwelcome. 6. An active agency, dry in France. 9. What makes a car like a goose, 3. Ulysses’ Boswell. 4. No matter how you look at it, it's broth, S. Where Androctes put on his act. 7. The girl who weeps at the movies. 19) Sponsored a duplicate. 20. You have a yen for 100 of these. . This is wicked. How late guests may be got rid of. 23) Cicero was all wrapped up in this, See jen cake. ch. best friend. 32. ths is a help. 35. gift, but don’t mention it. a7, Put your hand tack of your caf, 40. The home of the springbok and the impala. 41, What keeps the sauce in the pan. 42. New necktie for a rustler. 4 seventh in a list of thirty dead ones, 45. Your Park Avenue flat or your adobe hut. 47; Where to get mile ina pinch, 48. Afrikaan's idea of. tri . 49. What Moses didn’t do when the lights went out. Solution to Puzzle No. 408 . This chippie is not father’s sister. . Imputed to Dobbin. - Quick, eager. (Obs.) loud blow, with stops. . Where Brighamy flourished. }. Article in wide use. : Irregular if eaten away. ; He objects. ; Out of a lot of loose notes, he made “Bolero.” . How to get around in London. . A thirteen day stand in Texas. : What you see on the neighbor's clothesline. A set-up. . An English auto is this. Vertical . Sea-going art, gallery. Italian second story man. ; Where not to condemn dictators. . Eat out and save your wife for a —. . Touches Detroit, Half of our favorite skater. Buffalo and Cleveland. How we treat George and Abe. A state with Springs. ‘ople make it out of everything. Aire fellow from Baltimore. Hated ins tooth, admired in a man. 2) You can see if they knock now. . Tots up. 8. Dough reformer. . Anybody who won't speak to us, . Surrounded by. : Nullity your last syllable. . Where male human sacrifice still survives. ; Where the action arose. Hail. (Greeting, not sleeting.) |. A horse's pal in need. ; Where stars fell. A galoot in ‘earing distance of Bow Bells. Disencumber. This hangs in the Boston State House, Put to wor bd you by in Latin. cs om By ie at te Rosting better. More strained, . Folds up in the theatre. Maple genus. Irish colleen’s name, ost in the Lutine frigate. . The girl who wants to keep your heart beating. Stuffing with coal . Helps the rose smell as sweet... . Youngster’s evening paper. . Palestine gave him a jeadache and a bad name. + Cute little sea-going twists. Less of this will keep you cool. An Irishman or a caress. Unpopularly smart. Court Calendar (Continued from page 4) And with as much Italian as you get in a correspondence course. What more car you want? The Bridge in the Jungle, by B. Traven, Peasant folk in a Central American jungle do the dance of death to melodic and very moving writing. Watch out for Traven: he is no stammerer. The Doomsday Men, by J. B. Priestley. ‘The dishwater Dickens’ reaffirming Aristotle's dictum on tragedy by writing a screwy mystery story that is rather sickening. The Life of O. O. Mcintyre, by Charles B. Driscoll. Biography of a hick town writer who never moved out of Main Street even though he became America’s most widely read New York columnist, by the man who took up where he left off. The Man From Cook's, by Polan Banks. The history of Cook's Tours headed slap- bang for the movies and a super-Lloyd’s of London. Story of an orphan who is taken into the business as a child and rises to an important position. (P.S. He also wins the gitl). It'll knock ‘em dead. Mister & Mistress, by Edith Sheldon and Day- ton James. For believers in the single stand- ard and unbelievers in the Ten Command- ments, a few tips on the proper conduct of discreet indiscretions. Could have been better. Some Still Live, by F. J. Tinker, Jr. A Loyalist pilot in Spain explains why so many Italian warriors are sitting in slings. Women About Town, by Allis McKay. It must have given Allis a lot of exercise to go all through town to find a woman as dull as this one. Or can it be the skillful writing? MYSTERIES The Beast Must Die, by Nicholas Blake. A splendid whodunit about one of those devil diary writers plotting murder day by day. The beast does die. The Corpse That Traveled, by Arthur Rees. One that stumps Scotland Yard, the reader and the author. Being a mystic, the author doesn’t mind being without evidence. Some readers, however, might be interested in an explanation. The Cut Direct, by Alice Tilton. In danger of being arrested for murder, a number of people make whoopee while the cops wait. Fairly funny. The entire con- tents of Mrs. Reiner will be auc- tioned at Nell's Auction Room Fri- day, July 22, at 10:30 a.m. Brand new washing machine, new radio, new type- writer, rugs, all sizes, piano, living room suite, dining room suite, vacuum cleaners, &rey enamel combination stove, chairs of all descriptions, bed room sets, silverware, dishes and hundreds of other items. Reason for selling, leaving the country. BripGeport (CoNN.) Post. comicbooks.com