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Judge, 1927-02-05 · page 30 of 36

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IncreaseYourPay in Cartooning $50 to Over $250 a Week Paid to Good Cartoonists! And You Can Easily Learn This Fascinating Profession Right At Home in Spare Time. Free Booklet Explains This Easy Method. Send For It Today. There isn't a more attractive or highly paid profession today than cartooning. Millions of dollars are spent every year for good cartoons by the 20,000 or more newspapers and magazines in the United States alone. Capable cartoonists earn from $50 to over $250 a week. Fontaine Fox, Briggs, Bud Fisher, Sid Smith and the other headliners make more money than the presidents of many corporations. Think of it! Quick Easy Way To Learn Cartooning Yet of all the professions cartooning is now positively one of the easiest to learn. You don't have to know a thing about drawing. Through our amazingly simple method you learn quickly to dash off side-splitting toons that may mean ease and independence for you and yours within a surprisingly short time. You learn right at home, yet vour work receives the personal attention and criticism of our successful cartooning instructors. So rapid the course that many students actually sell enough work during their training to pay for it. Mail Coupon for Free Book Learn more about the wonderful money- making opportunities in cartooning, and how this method makes it easy for you to learn. Read about our students—their success—what they say—actual reproduc tions of their work—how they 3 money while studying. Thi book may mean the turning-p life. Send for it today. It is yours without cost or obligation. Mail coupon NOW. Washington School of Cartooning Room 482-E, 1113-15th St., N. W. Washington, D. C zing little nt in your WASHINGTON SCHOOL OF CARTOO! Room 482-E, 1113-15th St., N. W. Washington, D. C. Please d _me_witho trated F BOOKLET Name (Write Name Plainly Adres: City State. If under 16 years, please state age. A new use for waxwork. High Hat (Continued from page 11) Notes” on the different spe shes in different restaurants . . mediatel progress . Which im- suggests a new kind of ner party . ample go first to the nt which is renowned for its Hors d'wurres, then carry on to the next one famous for its soup, ete... . get the idea? for ex- he Arthur Knapp of Philly sends in a little offering which is quaint no end ... the only trouble is that Judgette actually is Y here it is... Once ‘There was a comedian Judge, Jr. i Who appeared in a farce, “High Hat” And a soubrette Judgette Who did a song and dance In “High Heels” And they met And fell in love And were wed And in due time They had an offspring . any’ JF Al Smith to catch a train” ae “1 know I was traveling pretty fast, officer, but you see I'm carrying Governor And they named him | Hi-rum And he grew up to be a bootlegger! Brey Office Boy—Lady to see you, sir. Busy Employer—Tell her I'm en- gaged. “That's what sir. You were to have married her to-day.” —Tit-Bits she’s come about, Solution of Last Week’s Puzzle ODOM <p IO} comicbooks.com