Evening Star Newspaper, January 17, 1926, Page 105

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

THE SUNDAY STAR, WASIHINGTON, D. C.—GRAVURE SECTION—JANUARY 17, 19: THE DANCING MAN BY W. E. HILL. Copyright. 1920, Chicago Tribune Syndicate From left to right, we have with us on the dance floor tonight: The kindly young man, known as the Florence Nightingale of the ballroom, who plays angel of mercy to the wall flowers; the willowy boy with the trick dance steps and the passionate glances, and the unlucky man who is always being cut in on The young man with the intense feeling for grandeurs, who has a lot to say about Palm Beach and Pinehurst and polo. Hopes the debutante he’s dancing with won't find out he lives in the wrong part of town ; The cheerful plod- der is given to much hopping and bumping and has a defective sense of rhythm. He covers a great deal of dance floor in no time at all, and. oh, how he does love to dance! The jovial boy who simply can't be restrained from doing the Charles- ton all by himsclf in a corner. The enlen»aming boy loves to talk while tripping the so-called light fantastic. Never still a moment. He's telling her how he used to have the idea maybe she didn't like him, and then he got thinking perhaps she did, and so tonight when she didn't look at him, why. he wasn't sure what to think! The half-seas-over young man, who began celebrat- ing early in the evening, will have to be sent home soon. Tomorrow he will call up friends to find out what happened. The line of stags looking ’e: and being darn caretulr n The butter-and-egg dancing man has a goodly cut in on the ungpopuhkr ggid,_m o C o supply of liquors in the coatroom.

Other pages from this issue: