Tiny Town.
"TIIE CUTEST Si LOW ON EARTH. •' The much-talked-ol Tiny Town arrive in Levin Eriduy, November 14th. Only one performance will be given—at 8 p.m. The midget community will be ready to receive visitors at their ininature city, with its tiny shops, tiny dwellings, tiny post office, tiny ponies, tiny carriages, in fact, tiny everything. The little men and women are all natives oi Europe. ' Their average height is •">;") inches, their ages from 19 to G(J. A tiny policeman, whose height is under three feet, patrols the streets. But the midget village and its little people are by no means all the attraction Tiny Town has to offer. Zeynard's famous midget circus, with its twelve iniilget ponies, its tiny strong man, its jockeys and acrobats, wirewalkers, singers and dancers provides a show that is unique in every way. The little houses, shops, carriages, l etc., have already arrived in Levin, and workmen are now putting them together. Pliny affirmed that there was once a race of little men and women who lived in houses entirely eonstructed of egg-shells. The miniature people of Tinv Town are more modernized, and live in the best Hotels, visit the opera when there is an opera to visit discuss politics, s~port, or the latest thijig in food fads, and, since each one of them converses in three or more languages, can more than hold its own in argument with the normal sized. Tiny Town is now on lis second tour of the world. Box plan at Kiug's Theatre; prices 4s, 3s and 2s.
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Horowhenua Chronicle, 13 November 1913, Page 2
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259Tiny Town. Horowhenua Chronicle, 13 November 1913, Page 2
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