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Page 43 text:
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3.4 . 5,5 ,S sr., 'W . . , Q Y g n,-L:l.' ' ' J' xt if Q fd? 2' fav A . ,,? rv WS 5 . -ff 'iq -N -Tx Lg wi. a A ff ,, fv-fm p,f,ulfaM.., pm .gl ,nm .v Q- As. - f F Z' Q Simi my J.. suasion I managed to escape the fine. .-qi 'H I walked on down the street and noticed a poor beggar. I stopped to give him some money when he said, nwhy you are Jeanne Martinn. I said yes and found out that he was Ed New. He told me that he just cou1dn't get up the energy to become anything important so he took for his vocation begging. He said he liked to sit here and pity those poor old men going to work. I idled on further and, determined to do as much window shopping as I wanted to, I began to gaze in the beautiful store windows. I started to take the address of a lovely store when this caught my eye, nmadame A La Hines, Magazine de Parisn. I thought of Mutt the girl back home because I knew she had dreams of owning a lovely decided to go on in and if it had dress shop. I not have been for that little turned up nose I would never have rec- ognized her. She had on pearls three feet long a- round her neck, and she had on a beautiful black, satin dress. Yes this was Mutt. I asked her how she ever got this far away from home. She told me a long pitful story and I'l1 try to tell you part of it. She said that Punk, now her husband had wasted away from inactivity and that she had saved and scraped until she got enough to buy this store. She sighed and said that now she was able to sup- port both her husband and her four children, we talked on and I asked her if she knew any of ourold classmates in the city. She told seen any one but Howard Smith and prietor of a French Barber Shoppe was awfully glad to hear of him. bye saying that I would be off to me that shehadn't that he was pro- on Park Avenue. I I bade her good see Smitty. That I did, and of all the surprises in my young life this took the cake. Instead of a kinda chubby lad I saw a well-shaped, slenderized young ., ff' in . sf' 1 xp snggpgil, ,WW - 1 'Q-.. time . .anti
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Page 45 text:
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Q ,Tmq.as ws' -2 'I Q 1- -x M- . R L , vw . fKW P-tnwfxu. F gl 1 Q H ls IE, ,, 1, IE Sri I ir ,, 11 1. L :N K fl 4- N w. .H I! N ,I 1. ,- I. 5 sr I if, f. if E 1 B, 1 ,I ..,. ' - 1' . . g wilt. 2 . 'al ,XL 3 A We 3 Ap 1. I 'ftp , Q ftaamer I . li M ffk , ,L wY,.'.f-C'!hIJ,k I Q YV' s' H 24 I' I 1 , .1 V7 I MVS!-Q f ,h E. P .KQg flaw In , , il I 'i 'Y l.' 1 'Y.a..5 , -W Wx ag-ff x - ap, 'l 'x, ,. man. Across hissupper wEEf2'Qtr1k1ng black mustache. His talk---oh my---as polished as any southern gentleman's you ever heard, but as he was running a French Shoppe he kinda twirled his r's, however, I wasn't surprised at that as he was an excellent French student back in '42. He told .me he had decided that beautifying men his l1fe's am bition. By this time I'm afraid my looks were worse than ever, so I began to look for a beauty salon. I was attracted by a large sign which read some- thing like this. nWomen's Shoppe, Lose One Pound a Day and Still be Gayn also nThe Homliest Woman Made Beautifuln. This certainly seemed to be the place I was looking for. I noticed right on the edge of the sign this, Madame Vick, proprietor. I thought of Nellie Ann but I didn't really expect her. I walked on in and right there before my eyes was a lady being practically beat to death by one of those machines which are supposed to take the fat off you. This lady also had on a mud pack I was later to find out that that was Nellie.After she came out of that awful thing we talked for a- while. I got my hair fixed and left. I had just about enough of New York. So I went and got in my machine and started off.I rode until I got to the wilderness of Oklahoma. Then a terrible storm came up and I had to make a forced landing. I stayed in the machine until the storm was over then I got out to look around. I saw a little shack ing out. I walked directions. There feet long. He was We recognized each Edwards. He, for with a thin twirl of smoke com- in to see if I could get any sat an old man with beard two bare-footed and smoking a pipe other and the old man was Rip ten years, had still managed to evade all the attempts of all the lovely women. No l'Nuvn0.zo4v www-..,.. . aa Wm 'FFlllR?'5!!!
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