Punch, or the London Charivari, 
Volume 158, March 17, 1920 
 
The Project Gutenberg eBook, Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 
158, 
March 17, 1920, by Various, Edited by Owen Seaman 
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Title: Punch, or the London Charivari, Vol. 158, March 17, 1920 
Author: Various 
Release Date: April 13, 2005 [eBook #15615] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCH, OR 
THE LONDON CHARIVARI, VOL. 158, MARCH 17, 1920*** 
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PUNCH, OR THE LONDON CHARIVARI 
VOL. 158 
MARCH 17, 1920 
 
CHARIVARIA. 
PRINCE ALBERT JOACHIM, it appears, did not take part in the 
attack on a French officer at the Hotel Adlon, but only gave the signal. 
Always the little Hohenzollern! 
*** 
It seems that at the last moment Mr. C. B. COCHRAN broke off 
negotiations for the exclusive right to organise the CARPENTIER 
wedding. 
*** 
"Will Scotland go dry?" asks The Daily Express. Not on purpose, we 
imagine. 
*** 
A new method of stopping an omnibus by a foot-lever has been 
patented. This is much better than the old plan of shaking one's 
umbrella at them. 
***
Mr. LLOYD GEORGE, we read, makes a study of handwriting. The 
only objection that The Times has to this habit is that he positively 
refuses to notice the writing on the wall. 
*** 
It is rumoured that the Government will construct an experimental 
tunnel between England and the United States in order (1) to cement 
Anglo-American friendship, and (2) to ascertain if the Channel Tunnel 
is practicable. 
*** 
Dr. C.W. COLBY, head of the Department of History, has taken Sir 
AUCLAND GEDDES' place as Principal of McGill University. The 
report that Sir AUCKLAND will reciprocate by taking a place in 
history awaits confirmation. 
*** 
"It is quite usual nowadays," a well-known auctioneer states, "for mill 
hands to keep a few orchids." We understand that by way of a 
counter-stroke a number of noblemen are threatening to go in for 
runner ducks. 
*** 
A Rotherham couple who have just celebrated their diamond wedding 
have never tasted medicine. We ourselves have always maintained that 
the taste is an acquired one. 
*** 
A Greenland falcon has been shot in the Orkneys. The view is widely 
taken that the wretched bird, which must have known it wasn't in 
Greenland, brought the trouble on itself. 
***
An alleged anarchist arrested in Munich was identified as a poet and 
found Not Guilty--not guilty, that is to say, of being an anarchist. 
*** 
With reference to the pending retirement of Mr. ROBERT SMILLIE 
from the Presidency of the Miners' Federation, it appears that there is 
talk of arranging a farewell strike. 
*** 
The Berlin Vorwaerts states that ex-Emperor CARL has been 
discovered in Hungary under an assumed name. The Hungarian 
authorities say that unless he is claimed within three days he will be 
sold to defray expenses. 
*** 
We understand that Mr. Justice DARLING'S weekly denial of the 
reports of his retirement will in future be issued on Tuesdays, instead of 
Wednesdays, as hitherto. 
*** 
When hit by a bullet a tiger roars until dead, says a weekly paper, but a 
tigress dies quietly. Nervous people who suffer from headaches should 
therefore only shoot tigresses. 
*** 
Two out of ten houses being built at Guildford are now complete. 
Builders in other parts of the country are asking who gave the word 
"Go." 
*** 
"Marvellous to relate," says a Sunday paper, "a horse has just died at 
Ingatestone at the age of thirty-six." Surely it is more marvellous that it 
did not die before.
*** 
It is said that the Paris Peace Conference cost two million pounds. The 
latest suggestion is that, before the next war starts, tenders for a Peace 
Conference shall be asked for and the lowest estimate accepted. 
*** 
A Walsall carter has summoned a fellow-worker because during a 
quarrel he stepped on his face. It was not so much that he had stepped 
on his face, we understand, as the fact that he had loitered about on it. 
*** 
A painful mistake is reported from North London. It appears that a 
young lady who went to a fancy-dress ball as "The Silent Wife" was 
awarded the first prize for her clever impersonation of a telephone girl. 
*** 
We are glad to learn that the thoughtless tradesman who, in spite of the 
notice, "Please    
    
		
	
	
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