The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 159,
November 3, 1920, by Various
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Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 159, November 3, 1920
Author: Various
Editor: Owen Seaman
Release Date: March 15, 2006 [EBook #17994]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI.
VOL. 159.
November 3rd, 1920.
CHARIVARIA.
"After all," asks a writer, "why shouldn't Ireland have a Parliament,
like England?" Quite frankly we do not like this idea of retaliation
while more humane methods are still unexplored.
* * *
"The miners' strike," says a music-hall journal, "has given one
song-writer the idea for a ragtime song." It is only fair to say that
Mr. SMILLIE had no idea that his innocent little manoeuvre would
lead to this.
* * *
The Admiralty does not propose to publish an official account of the
Battle of Jutland. Indeed the impression is gaining ground that this
battle will have to be cancelled.
* * *
We are asked to deny that, following upon the publication of _Mirrors
of Downing Street_, by "A Gentleman with a Duster," Lord KENYON is
about to dedicate to Sir CLAUDE CHAMPION DE CRESPIGNY a book entitled
_A Peer with a Knuckle-Duster_.
* * *
"Mr. Lloyd George seems to have had his hair 'bobbed' recently," says
a gossip-writer in a Sunday paper. Mr. HODGES still sticks to the
impression that it was really two-bobbed.
* * *
"Cigars discovered in the possession of Edward Fischer, in New York,"
says a news item, "were found to contain only tobacco." Very rarely do
we come across a case like that in England.
* * *
"Water," says a member of the L.C.C., "is being sold at a loss." But
not in our whisky, we regret to say.
* * *
What is claimed to be the largest shell ever made has been turned out
by the Hecla Works, Sheffield. It may shortly be measured for a war to
fit it.
* * *
A taxi-driver who knocked a man down in Gracechurch Street has
summoned him for usin
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