Radio television mirror (July-Dec 1951)

Record Details:

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ff YOU'VE S^ lN TVllNP— ^ k City as Unla"lnt^seitl* a tenement READERS' OWN VERSE Precancelled The letters that I plan each night Lr^ to get to write: g But wlufe it's nothing that I tell Wuhpnde^tWeallyjust^^,, Since any that I ever wrote ' Stayed ln the pocket of my coat. —S. H. Dewhurst &m onsense and some-sense kind is usually cau of name-ior exa-ple^ J „ P^ sheep is calJfd -^ „roup names You choose the tight fW ^ A \oX the iollo^mg anxma & ^ group oi nonndsca 2 herd (b) P.** f^d a (a) group of lions vs 3 llony lb) covey J 0 P^ a t.f2a V ^ CO ** Answers: .(,)-«t(oy«iW)^ n : is" READER'S OWN VERSE AUGUST -to start off I can freely predict, without recourse to my faithfu inendThe Old Farmer's Almanac, that we will have heat in August by day and by night. Shimmermg, fry-eggs-on-the-pavement hotness, so thick you ought to be able to cut out a hunk and put it away for next winter. That's a good way to get through the dog days-remember how you slipped and slid on the ice last winter, how your toes tingled and your nose grew rosy, and decide August isn t such a bad month, after all. Having got that off my chest, 1 ll now tak« a peek at the Almanac and see how Link's predictions stack up with those of the gents in the predicting business. What d 'you know-rain, it says here. First week, fine. But not the last two weeks; they'll be wet ones and no mistake . August also brings along with it the sneeziest of the assorted hay lever seasons, when ragweed comes to its own, and goldenrod Hits its yellow head. There'll be running noses and weeping eyes and ka-chooing and bless-youing "-Plenty ... The August flower ot-the-month, gladiola; the birthstone, peridot or sardonyx. Now I know what a sardonyx is, but what m tunket's a peridot? Time out for consultation with Mr Webster, unabridged, who says: A deep, yellowish-green variety of crysolite." Sounds pretty.