NEW LADY LANGFORD
WORKING AS A WAITRESS
Lady Langford, tho Irish waitress whoso husband (Mr. C. W. Rowley) has just succeeded to an ancient Irish title, is sticking to her job until she learns more about her now position. "I last heard from my husband in 1925, when he wrote from a poste restanto address in Sydney, stating that he was laying the foundations of a homo and farm," said Lady Langford, in an interview with a newspaper representative in London. "If he is still continuing to do so ho ought to have the foundations of a palace by this time. Representatives of his family havo called and invited mo to luueli, but a lunch is only a lunch, and a good job is a job. I have no time to go to lunches. Apparently the family has been unable to get iv touch with, him in Australia. Iliaye not the slightest idea, where »he is at present, lie is a most sociable kind of man. Ho is sft Pin in height, and has dark' brown or dark grey eyes. He has a slight cast in one eye, but Ido not remember which." Lady Langford will continue working in the Curb Tea Rooms, in Agar street, described as "the cosiest tea rooms in London." The waitresses and the proprietor address her as Lady Langford. Asked whether she would go to Australa if her husband did not Vlesire to return to England, Lady Langford said that she had only the vaguest, ideas of what Australia was like and, consequently, had not at present even considered tho possibility. Lady Langford has marked poise, almost patrician features, and soft voice, and has slender, well-manicurod hands. Her manner is somewhat aloof.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 35, 11 February 1931, Page 13
Word Count
287NEW LADY LANGFORD Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 35, 11 February 1931, Page 13
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