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TTTTTTTTTTTTTT T I ITT T T t-t T t-i "A LITTLE PATCH. . . " f'l think I ought to be called 'Lydia of the Apple Trees' now, 'cos yesterday; mother gave me a little patch of garden underneath the apple tree. It was a mass of weeds, but I soon cleared them all away, and now' instead of just thistles growing there, there are carnation slips, forget-me-nots looking rather forlorn, and two little geranium slips. So soon I hope to have quite a gay. little garden. It is just by the fence where I talk to Pollyanna. . . " "LYDIA OF THE PINES" (15) Kelburn. , # » « "A BOOK TO LOVE." "I have just finished reading a book ontitled "Angela Goes to School." It is very funny in parts, and it is about a girl —Angela Henwake —whose father is a professor. Jean Lawly is her' chum, and Angela is terribly scared of frogs. Truly it is "a-boak to love." "DISMAL DESMOND" (11). Kelburn,

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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/EP19310613.2.150.21

Bibliographic details

Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 138, 13 June 1931, Page 18

Word Count
158

Untitled Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 138, 13 June 1931, Page 18

Untitled Evening Post, Volume CXI, Issue 138, 13 June 1931, Page 18