Page 73 - 1947
P. 73

           From the flat of his feet to the lack of his locks,
A clockmaker, child, is a maker of clocks.
His worries are many, and of them, the worst
Is getting the TICK in his clocks to come first.
For quick are the critics to blame and to blast
Should the TOCK in a clock arrive other than last.
Indeed, pretty reader, imagine your- self
With a TOCK-TICKING clock in your hall, on your shelf:
Your senses, if any, would fray to the quick,
Oppressed by that ominous TOCKING and TICK.
As pale as the heart of a turnip, in time
You'd grow, in the spell of this con- trary rhyme.
PHONE 335R
MOTION PICTUREiS ARE ONE OF THE BEST FORMS OF EDUCATION AS WELL AS ENTERTAINMENT. THEY NOT ONLY TELL A STORY, BUT ENACT IT IN SUCH A WAY AS TO BE
COLLINGWOOD
Mercury and Lincoln Sales and Service
•
FORD P ARTS
•
CLE'ARL Y BY ALL.
The Management, Gayety Theatre.
UNDERSTOOD
•
Keith Robinson
PHONE 527J COLLINGWOOD
CLOCKWISE
By James .AJbell Wright
You'd start talking ibackward. You'd stand on your head;
Repose on the table, and eat at your bed·
With ca'p on your feet and with boots on your pate,
You'd rapidl~ sink to a terrible state, Till finally, reft of your reason, the
shock
Would leave you no less than a mad
lunatoc. -A.E.L. RIDGWAY'S JEWELLERY STORE
GENUINE
































































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