HUMOUR WITH A PUNCH
More and more women are tafcing up law, we are told. But those laying it down are stjll in the majority. , 1 'The trouble with airships is the erection of suitable mooring-masts," observes a writer. Tkey must be quite a problem, those Zepp fasteners. Last week a man was found fast asleep in a telephone-box. We noticed a gontleman nodding in one for a long time the other day, but it turned out that lie was mearly arguing with his wife. The new evening dresses, says a fashion expert, will f>e of silky material and quietly coloured. Sheen, but not lieard in fact. Motoring, ocording to a psychologist ,tends to talce a man out of liimself. And it makes many pedestrians leap almost out of their skins, too. In spite of the lact that marked money was found in his poclcet, a man denied that he had robbed a till. He wouldn't even admit that he had had a hand in it These intriguing observations are but a sample of the wealth of reading matLer of all tvpcs that lil's the pages of "The New idea". '
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Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 126, 14 June 1937, Page 5
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190HUMOUR WITH A PUNCH Hawke's Bay Herald-Tribune, Issue 126, 14 June 1937, Page 5
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