Judge, 1932-02-06 · page 30 of 36
Judge — February 6, 1932 — page 30: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1932-02-06. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
earn to Dance The Corte a) <— eee ee By wy Arthur Murray America’s Foremost Dancing Instructor | | | | MAN'S PART—Begin with tight foot. AE 1. Step forward on right 2. Left foot to left side. 3. Draw right up to left 4. Step back on left, bend ‘i left knee. LADY'S PART is opposite of the man's. 1. Step back on left. 2. Right to right side 3. Left up to right. 4. Forward on left, bend left, lift right. If YouCanDo Above Step I'll Make You a Finished Dancer in Ten Days By ARTHUR MURRAY World-Famous Dancing Authority 1 don't [ Post ! ARTHUR MURRAY, Studio 7 Bast 43rd Street, New York, e that I can learn t t arse within refunded and my money will be it arrives few ce: HIGH HAT (Continued from page 25) Ah, well, I suppose it’s just that ole debbil human nature. I'm g to try to have something done it. I'm also working out an i forest that can be installed in any apartment. Or a basket that auto- ically lowers itself when the dog automatically enters. This things all around. In the meantime, all you who are about to become sud- den dog-fathers—think it over. Eye-Queues me second-hand of watch goes around its circuit at the rate of an inch a minute. The man sets out on a walk between two vi six miles apart, of a mile in 20 minutes. aman’ ages tan even gait How far has the second-hand traveled during the trip? There were two men out in a ball game. The umpire called three strikes and out on the next batter. He threw down his) club, and tho the catcher hadn't dropped the ball, ran to first base. Why? An army came toa river three miles wide. It had neither boat, plane nor raft, there was no bridge in sight, and ind only army could: swim. got across immediately, those aid from How did they man even no means of building one, ten per cent. of the | Yet it all who couldn't swim without the swimmers. it? Last week's: No. 1: How could tell if the well-digger cried out when no one heard his eries? No. Write the number six with one of the pencils, then place two pen cils before it and one pencil after it. Drape the dollar sign S61. No. 3: anyone string in’ the and there shape ¢ you have The moon, Old Pal venvnopy knows somebody who has an old hat. A Hat of Habit, to which they cling with an_ affection bordering on frenzy. But you have never seen an old hat until you have seen Chet Shafer’s. The noted econ- omist and Grand Diapason of the Guild of Former Pipe Organ Pump- ers cherishes a chapeau that has ‘em all licked. = 4 The Shafer Chapeau is limp, and loose, and floppy—it has always suf- fered from falling hatband, It re- sembles nothing so much as a wilted leaf on its last droop. It is an all-purpose hat, a hat of history. It holds « mute lesson in thrift to the jaunty boys who kneel to Knox every two or three years. I have made a study of this hat, which runs (Page 31, please) case comicbooks.com