TROUBLE AT THE TOWER.
She was a- good* servant, was Jennie, and Mrs. Wanderfarr never wished for better. But in the" matter of pictures Jennie was weak. There was one in particular, which showed the Loaning Tovcr of Pisa. Every day Mrs. W. hung it straight, and every morning Jennie pub it crooked. So Mrs. W. watched. ''Now, lool: here, Jennie," she said, "you've hung that picture of the tower crooked again! Just look at it!" "That's just what I say, mum," returned the domestic dolefully. "Look at it! The only way you can get that •-silly^i^wjeivS'tojrfhang^isfa^gEi^^^
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King Country Chronicle, Volume IX, Issue 735, 9 January 1915, Page 3
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97TROUBLE AT THE TOWER. King Country Chronicle, Volume IX, Issue 735, 9 January 1915, Page 3
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