Ain't Angie Awful!

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Ain't Angie Awful! (1923)
by Gelett Burgess
2900966Ain't Angie Awful!1923Gelett Burgess

AIN’T ANGIE AWFUL!
GELETT BURGESS

COME WITH HIM? YOU COULDN’T HAVE MELTED HER OFF WITH AN ACETYLENE BLAST

Ain’t Angie Awful!

Being a Story of the Adventures, Blunders, Cap-
tures, Distresses, Engagements, Flirtations,
Gallantries, Hatreds, Ideals, Joys, Kisses,
Loves, Marriages, Near-Marriages, Obses-
sions, Passions, Quests, Romances,
Sweethearts, Trials, Utterances, Vex-
ations, Woes, Xasperations and
Zeal, of one Angela Bish



By GELETT BURGESS

Author of
Goofs, the Burgess Nonsense Book, The Rubaiyat of Omar
Cayenne, The Maxims of Methuselah, The Maxims
of Noah, Are You a Bromide? &c., &c.



Illustrated by Rea Irvin

DORRANCE & CO.
Publishers Philadelphia

Copyright 1918 JUDGE
Copyright 1923 DORRANCE & COMPANY

All rights reserved

Published September

MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Acknowledgment is made to Judge
for permission to use the illustrations
of Rea Irvin

ILLUSTRATIONS

  1. Come with Him? You Couldn’t Have Melted Her Off with an Acetylene Blast Frontispiece
  2. She Gave Him a Little Two-For-Five Smile 22
  3. “Why Hast Thou Brought Me Here?” 24
  4. He Flung Wide the Portal 26
  5. The Plumber, Who Cut Off Her Ears with His Tin Shears, Hardly Knew Her 36
  6. That Embrace Was a Revelation of Rapture to Angie, Who Still Had an Amateur Rating 47
  7. A Leprous Bungalow, They Found 49
  8. From a Roll of Green Cartridge Paper She Fashioned the Simple Robe in which She Fledded 53
  9. Like a Fireman Feeding a Furnace His Knife Went Up and Down 69
  10. It Was an Uneasy, Seasick Feeling That There Was Somebody Under the Bed 86
  11. Hardly a Proper Costume in which to Receive Gentlemen at 7 A.M. 88
  12. Finding That She Could Ride the Harp Safely He Set Her Right to Work 98
  13. “Somebody’s Daughter Perhaps,” They Said, “Who Knows” 101

AIN’T ANGIE AWFUL!

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published in 1923, before the cutoff of January 1, 1929.


The longest-living author of this work died in 1951, so this work is in the public domain in countries and areas where the copyright term is the author's life plus 72 years or less. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works.

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