Evening Star Newspaper, January 18, 1931, Page 99

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THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C—GRAVURE SECTION-—JANUARY 18 1931 The Ladies’ Man By W. E. Hill (Copyright. 1931. by the Chicago Tribune Syndicate.) The Rough-House Boy. " The Useful Man. Bachelor girls who have reached the point where they begin to think, “Maybe it would Old Beaus who never married. because Nellie found a better match, gradually settle be nice to have a big. fierce man bend little me to his iron will" dearly love a man \}h(, into a family groove and are greatly sought after by happily married ladies whenever Y plays rough. Let such a one mousle and tousle and throttle said bachelor ;ulrl] .'n}ll the living room needs changing around. There is nothing like a bachelor beau for she will tell ":’f girl frierd that “Really, Arthur is awfully sweet underneath all that hanging pictures from a rickety stepladder. rough manner! The Impregnable Man. Every healthy girl between the ages of 18 ard 80 loves a man who lets it be known that women are the bane of his life, and they will go to any lengths short of arson and murder to capture him. His last safeguard is usually a telegram saying: “Called to Milwaukee on business. Sorry." The Gossipmonger. For girls given to day-dreaming, and who consequently miss a that goes on about them, there is nothing like a male acquaintance who never misses a trick, as they say in the haut monde. These boys have second sight where budding scandal is at hand and can scent blasted romances, wronged wives and false husbands days before anything happens at the lawyers’ beautiful dark-eyed hoys who live from hand to mouth and ain in the entourage of rich dowagers go big with serious minded girls, particularly last vear’s debutantes, who enjoy a little reforming on the side and love to say: “Only think, Basil, how terrible it will be for you when you grow old and lose your looks and women stop asking you to dinner! Promise me, Basil, that you'll go to work, even if it's selling group insurance or painting dinner cards!” The Sympathetic Man Elderly ladies with illness in the family, high or low blood pressure, or even domestic difficuities, needing sympathy from without, are partial to the youth with a highly developed facial expression who can succes:fully mirror every fleeting emotion por- trayed before his practiced eve. (This young man is registering polite agony tinged with refined sadness as he listens to a recital of how Mrs. Peabody has had a return of the old trouble, and how Aunt Laura's hives are still making her miserable.) Mother’s Boy. A yourg man who is in constant attendance on his mother excites great pity (which, of course, is' akin to love) in the heaving diaphragms of his young lady acquaintances, and right away they will, one and all, begin to wonder what can be done about getting Harris away from his ma The Timid Man. “Oh, Mr. Icepack—Fred—why haven't you cver called me Florence instead of Miss Ivin A bashful boy, afflicted with tremors of the eyelid, go_seflesh and quick breathing at the approach of a female of the species, is just the sweetest thing that ever happencd V=) L 4 SSSVSNN

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