Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, April 2, 1919 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 52 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, April 2, 1919.

Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, April 2, 1919 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 52 pages of information about Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, April 2, 1919.

CHARIVARIA.

A Liverpool grocer was fined last week for overcharging for margarine, eggs, cheese, ham, bacon, cocoa, jam and suet.  Any other nation, it is pointed out, would have had a man like that at the Peace Conference.

***

The strike of wives, as proposed by a weekly paper, did not materialise.  The husbands’ threat to employ black-legs (alleged silk) appears to have proved effective.

***

A Reigate resident advertises in a daily newspaper for the recovery of a human jawbone.  It is supposed that the owner lost it during a Tube rush.

***

“London from above,” says a Daily Mail correspondent, “is gloriously, tenderly, wistfully beautiful.”  We rather gather that it is the lid of Carmelite House that gives it just that little note of wistfulness.

***

“How to Prepare Marble Beef” is the subject of a contemporary’s “Hints to Young Housekeepers,” We had always supposed that that sort of thing could be safely left to the butcher.

***

The demobilised members of a Herefordshire band have all grown too big for their uniforms.  The contra-bombardon man, we understand, also complains that his instrument is too tight round the chest.

***

“The one unselfish friend of man is the dog,” said Sir Frederick Banbury, M.P.  A less courageous man would certainly have mentioned the President of the United States.

***

A correspondent who signs himself “Selborne” writes to inform us that about 9 A.M. last Thursday he noticed a pair of labourers building within a stone’s-throw of Catford Bridge.

***

A Hendon man has just completed sixty-two years in a church choir.  Few choir-boys can boast of such a record.

***

One of the young recruits who joined the army last week in Dublin is seven feet two inches in height.  It is satisfactory to note that he is on our side.

***

It is reported that seven cuckoos have been heard in different parts of the country during the past week.  It is felt in some quarters that it may be just one cuckoo on a route march.

***

“Bacon Free Yesterday,” says a headline.  Somebody must have left the door open.

***

An American scientest claims to have discovered a harmless germ likely to defeat the “flu” microbe.  It is said that some medical men have put up a purse and that the two germs are being matched to fight a ten round contest under National Sporting Club rules.

***

Those who have said that the unemployment donation makes for prolonged holiday have just been dealt a sorry blow.  It appears that one North of England man in receipt of this pay has deliberately started work.

***

Plans for the housing of 12,000 Government clerks have just been passed.  While 12,000 may suffice for a nucleus, we cannot help thinking that once again the Government isn’t really trying.

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Project Gutenberg
Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 156, April 2, 1919 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.