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The Sydney Morning Herald from Sydney, New South Wales, Australia • Page 15

Location:
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Issue Date:
Page:
15
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Th Sydney Morning Her.M, July 17, 1954 18 BABBITT Herald Maga7tnp- 1 1 1 mth IVlOJJJjitil PROFILE -A U.S. Undersea 'JIf Life Can Be 'mTk I By H. G. KIPPAX, Special Representative of the "Herald," now travelling in the U.S.A. The crush at the doors to the hotel dining-room is formidable.

The heat is stifling. CONTENTEDLY we shed with that we know there are '-'our coats and with Now- TT: 1 ID TAe jeuiit "talks in grunts." Te have long been prone to regard the tea as a world where some ot tnese laoour agitators down there. Some of us heard only the other day the Attorney-" General's been watching those guys. Reds? Well, it seems some of these aeitators are from back them, for this interlude of some 90 minutes, our managerial and professional worries and our managerial the iisnes anu uuici gjns ab0U( sundown, and "in- aquarists are made in a unique and professional dignities. The comforts of Midwest East, and the Attorney-General American egalitarianism, of gre- watching them.

We don't know gariousness and deep-springing whether they're Reds but it sure youthfulness are ours looks that way We shoulder our way into the We agree that it is warm melee. We recognise each other warmer than yesterday, not so with glee. We shake each other's warm as last Sunday. We agree creatures move aDOUl Jy T. C.

ROUGHLEY, creases gradually to a steady up- way. in an eerie sUence. former Superintendent, roar harsh: be craks' ith loach is wcwVl a background of soft drumming, sort of fish. It has no gills, but THAT this is not so has H.S.W. fisheries.

Thjs continues unabated for two breathes by rising to the surface been amply demons- od eus inflic(ed to (rated, for fishes of various necessary hardship on his fSffr1 outbursts at rare passes along the intestmes to just kinds have been heard to saiors in his efforts to prevent Rachel L. Carson, in her de- behind the stomach where there make a. multitude of noises them from succumbing to the lightful book, "The Sea Around Jf a chamber lined with fine thp human ear sirens' lures bv tvini them to the Us," thus describes the trouble blood-vessels, which extract the audible to the human ear. sirens wresBy tying tnem to trie sound-detection life-giving oxygen. Finally, the The range of the human ear is, mast and filling their ears with a tuJ during the war: air is noisily ejected through the iowever, very restricted, and wax.

They probably missed a "During World War II the vent as a series, of bubbles. wtint noises, inaud- COod feed of tastv fish. hvrirnnhnnft network set lin hv hands, we slap eacn otner oacics. ine nsmng isn i wnat it usea io We shout and laugh at each be other Cold consomme; chicken, "Ted! you old rascal American fried potatoes, salad. We collect our name-plates: iello and cream (A separate "They sit there, these small town Midwest businessmen the Babbitts of to-day." mocauiv A Nf) fh spa noisy Mnn ha rirvpn iin nv 111 111c ivieuuciiiiiiciiii mc iisncr- lug ljuilcu l3luics iibv iu uiu- circular enamel saucers, largely table for the "hay-eaters" printed with our names and pro- cereal, fruit, milk).

fessions 'TED" (Edward E. We are all ages. Mainly we Schroeder, Sales Manager, Smith are businessmen, but we have a ble to us, place to live in. It would be nraanc IUCI1 BIG IU-UUY KU1UCU IU U1C ICCl MIC CllUUUbC UliCSBUCaw ed by fishes? They can shoals of iewfish bv the sounds Bay was temporarily made useless nojsy enough to us, but with the special sound and vibration- ana Jones we troop into aentisc ana a doctor, a scnoui-the barn-like dining room. master, a librarian, the news- mi instantly the slightest vibra- And then we sing "Daisy" and the natural prey of sociologists, hotel in a big city).

All of them. Pack Up Your Troubles and of anthropologists, of the "New from the National RepublicaS a lot more. We tap OUt the Yorker" humnrists frnm harlr nnH Democratic Parti rlnuin tH detecting apparatus possessed by The lunch, to be truthful, is paper editor, a farmer or two. rather poor. Still, we are there We are solid citizens.

And we rhythm ourselves, nod our heads East, living compendia of those the Hotel Welcomer's Fraternal most fishes it is to them probably bedlam for, in addition to the noises made by the fishes, there ion of the water in which they ive. A speargun fisherman will tell toil that he can hear the swish, if a fish's tail as it streaks away ilo the blue distance. Some fishes have a special ap-jaratus for producing sound. In iome it may be caused by stridu-litjon, like the sound made by a is the constant crack as the oysters snap their shells together to eject waste matter accumulated during the course of their feed tor tne talK ana tne gooa-ietiow- enjoy ourselves immensely. as we see me gooa memories lane famous compulsions of the Mid- Association, ship, not for the food.

Oni of us at the piano strikes form in the curling cigar smoke west Turn up the ad. pages in tha We eat- it quickly to get on a chord. We. get to our feet. A The gregarious compulsion, telephone book of any Midwest with the programme.

Between the- young man, round-faced, shining- The need for popularity. The tcAvn of more than 5,000, and mouthfuls there is talk but not faced, beats as he waves his hand 'T'HE chairman resolutely need for identity with other you will find a column of theuj much conversation in energetic rhythm: we sing "My 1 smashes his gong, and the people names. Perhaps more. Country, Tis of not quite shining youth, his enjoyment The search for the lost youth, They cover America, but then TB hear there is trouble standing to attention, but with a sweating from him, regretfully for the high spirits and the greatest density and intensity is ing; the snapping of the arms of nipper prawns; and countless A gurnard may snore." in the Midwest blowing up again at the kind of happy seriousness, simple fun of youth retires. other noises, the origin of which miiM thm Itnj.

Mtiip Ua Itcrlt rionra nnrl TPBch fnf i Vll intntifiatlnn nf nas not yet been determined. The gill cover may be they make when schooling. when, in the spring of Ticket. atill, they are probably prefer- for this purpose, or the this purpose, or the i some soecies of iewfish onlv sneakers at the surface began to ahle to those of trams and buses. if the management there signed the song-books as the shining or two on an annual picnic, and with community welfare work, I na speaser, arms aisimoo, a labour contract, they'd have youth shouts, "Oh you beautiful on a party t0 the city to see the of philanthropy with morality, A swings effortlessly to his per less trouble? doll come on, fellers!" We sing ball-game.

A quiz the dentist of morality with success rat'on. No, we don't all of us agree it very loudly, indeed. js balloted to name all those at And. although there is some- The farmer, he says, needs the) his table (to see how well we all thing just a little absurd about businessman. spines of some ot tne nns, or tn males are capable of making g've iorm, every evening, a Parliamentary debates and nag-may be caused by the grinding of a nojse; others, the call of the sound described as being like 'a ging wives.

ih 1 pneumatic drill tearing up pave- Ill know each other). the hundred or so ageing busi- -na me Businessman neco "Now. don't you go looking nessmen, behaving like boys let the farmer. of the female quite feeble. That, ment-' The extraneous noises mur nn coc rnvf 9 WHIR field.

Uit snmA Ma Va kiirnnknnne S' each with its own character- 'c ht 0 be completely masked the sounds of Tf YfkJ KNOW TUTS TR FF istic. They vary from croaking the passage of ships. UKJ 1 UD iVilVfVT XXXkJ XlUJIJt Illustrated by Charles Meere. lo drumming, from growling to th. wedding jewfisn scattered "Eventually it was discovered jissing, from purring to snorting.

about (1)e walers- that the sounds were the voices By "WARATAH" A trunKnsn or a ooum rtmeri- That combined efforts or nsn Known as croaicers (jew REN we talk of oaks, our wg ta)k of oakj ancamsn may gium i.ivo a uuB, scn00i 0f jewfish can be very 111 8 thoughts turn naturally to that noble as well as beautiful plant, the British oak (Quercus robur or pedun-culata), which is the glory of English forests. tgypuan trevauy may snun nojsy nas been atteste(l by Mr. T. lmo -nesapeaite Day nam tucir like a pig (the Arabs caU it Marshall, the Queensland offshore wintering grounds. As gj and a gurnard may Government ichthyologist.

soon as the noise nad been iden" more (by some it has been de- Describing his experience in tified and analysed, it was pos- icribed as crooning). the Guif of Caroentaria. Mr. sible ,0 screen it out with an elec- It has come to us charged with legend and the jewfishes, known Marshall wrote: "Jewfishes are tric so mat once more only history, and sagas have beep written around down in the mouth, Fred." some- out from school for a spree, there ney ougm io get logeineiv body calls. a dentist get is nothing laughable about the The chairman, speaking loudly jt?) social role they play or the scr- over a sprinkle of applause and The dentist grins sheepishly vices they perform.

scraping of chairs, thanks the) and successfully names all his farmer for his message companions TH1S is one of the "service" Preoccupied again, we shed The chairman hands him a 1 clubs, sometimes called our. name-Plates'. small prize amid applause, and he "knife and fork clubs" a Kiwa- oa The business of the towa clasps his hands high over his nis club, perhaps, or an Optimists' of head and waves them until the club, or a Lions' club. Perhaps My host grins at me and My chairman smashes the gong again, even a Rotary club (although don 3 We settle down for the speaker, there the high jinks play little He is a farmer and a member part). To, is if vn.f sfwnnr LnmmnS lot the local co-op.

board. He These are the people who look at S3 mops his brow purposefully and after the town's philanthropic fio fellers recoguuo tells us he will not be surprised services not but "ser- Whv did he 'belong? or hurt if some of us leave now vice" wn the work is Jjnd 0 jm, because he knows he's no speaker They send poor children tant when was a boy But nobody does leave and derpr.v.leged ch.ldrcn") to holi- fike these me a g0od Vac3 a long, rumbling clearing of his day camps; they raise funds for wouldn't have had oh throat and a modulation to a games associations; they conduct from anybody else And I lika 1 deeper rasp indicate that the safety campaigns and health cam- l0 tnjnk j-m renaying a debt light prologue is over. paigns; they look after flood vie- And it-s useflu t0 get to qOVJ WE are most of us business- ncruously alrStSS VVmen, he says, and he thinks youthful at their luncheons; but rtant Now that we will admit we don't know also pour the high spirits of VaTree man with 3 much about the farmer and the youth, its tirelessness. its enthu- rf violent farmer's problems. He wants to siasm! its soft-heartedness into mavbe wouWt the farmer has his prob- anv number of admirable acti- 1 'but he's the president lems just ike us.

of Wst retail store. Ha America as "croaKers ana eise- partjcularly plentiful in Ciulf me sounas or snips came inrougn it, nhere as "drummers," have waters. They are noisy fishes, the speakers." Early colonists named our native trees earned most renown for their dis- and are continually talking lo "oaks" after some fancied resemblances, in lurbance of the submarine peace. eacn other in a serics of Shunts Malaya the noises made by gig wood mostly, to the oak of the ancient The noise made by these fishes fisheS lead their destrUC" "Si'ky ak" has its origin in the air-bladder, lToduc'e a curious on- toKT "nut the oak of our story comes from Nbrth which is caused to vibrate by croaking or drumming noise at. Va 3 America.

It is in the same genus or close ipecial muscles attached to it. (shades of the using the the boat dlves an plant-family (Quercus) as the old" English The jewfishes have a world- air-bladder as a sound-box. When tL oi. stalwart, but there the resemblance ends. Wide distribution, and in the at anchor in the river at night a Kma ol nolse Quercus palustries or "pin oak" of northern Mediterranean their vocal efforts shoals of these large fishes would- U.S.A.

and Canada is grown primarily as )ave been described as "the fhet conHnued and the trees, others sound like frogs HI a decorative tree (of smaller dimensions) be-r launch, and their continued and cause of the rich red toning of its autumn fongs of sirens, rising sometimes persistent croaking prevented yJfl in flioh? Th foliage. inln the tones of nn nroan or 5-. Ilcuallv rifl shnt into cockchafer beetle in flight. The 101 age- tie iooks at us aggressively. And from it all they get satis- hShave like he isftha linking to the low melody of a the water dispersed the pests." captain signals the crew by 11 nas olner 85 we" among splashes, and the nets are shot them being a contour that is pleasing and a suitability for gardens which could not ac iarp; at other times the sound 1 think if I had been in Mr.

l1'' ft Mars1all's lZoaitv.l "mains boS. "whS commodate yuercus rotmr. sa wtuuii cujuyuicm. man is one ot tne most am- laxes and concedes that the far-. Most of them belong to other gent of the back-slappers) but mer doesn know much about communal organisations.

There a man in this town. us and our problems. He says are hundreds of them, all dedicat- pe0nle who matter HI this is a bad thing. Because the e(j to public service mixed with farmer, -needs businessman. a.

little social TOW does the club dec ids And the businessman needs, the Tl. fawehv? Because the business A tSS literally. Bt Why? Because the business- lodces the Elks, for m- u.j i Ks." u. uu-w I ALMOST every cool-country garden of kingother A IJude IT is widely believed that the have filfed his ears with wax. nZha'iiwav station 6 L1 irresistible songs of the sirens in as rapidly as possible." beam rauway station.

4 1 Greek mythology were ac A La Jlla' California- there Note made by loLches-small 'inIL'r Lly the melodiouschoruses of is a jewfish chorus every year fish common in Europe and Asia rfn. r.v lv stance, or me eagles. vj HIHn'f vuant lo cnntrU. hoals of jewfish. i Mt can't eat hard- Th.

ar th. nrminc .7 from May to September. It be- and introduced into Australia by jj fwn Aucy VUIUU1 caiij. frnm lh. Am.r mn vrftmn I hi.

I'tlff. I-'-" to 1 hnta snmptninff. we onlv want Blaxland, too. boasts some burning speci-' oak unlike jts the elm, does aJ e' LfJT ons the American Ke- who can contribute some-M mens which seldom pass unnoticed in the not nut on even a eood solden elow l5e "rmer doesn dig volution, the Sons of the 1812 fa somcbody starts losing fa of the year. There are numbers of them nA Te'Vsmwedon he pin Z'Z 'f' Le8i" enthusiasm-no't oming along to.

al Chatswood, in railway grounds and nearby. oal allowp me to point. out a few pniitPMPNT groups' luncheonswe generally ask hin These do no blazon as brightly as their of its fail nas. neds EQU'PMENT. of them existing to preserve the he wants ,0 Continue to be Namatjira At Home Both the businessman and the American wav of life and member oretnren or gner amuioes, mciuoing me wh.n lh.

coIolIr ebbs of f-r- (What is Amen- "It a good way for business Rv T.ATIRENCE sPlen.d,d and snaPely specimen in our autumn tney change to a drab la'. inai was always tne way ii "We knuw what nlov TURNER This specimen is growing in the Wahroonga tf oSndlomi r. we remember is we don't have After alli business has to live in I lunched with Albert Namatjira and Jug family near Alice Springs the other day. THE menu consisted of liver his paintings to his agent fi-J i cApm.ii ii, uiic uEgiuii pomrnnn tv. and we've all lot nrfid nin mi.

which have lost "'Vi'V' irden ot Ur. H. K. Arnott, Burns Koad, Scattered about were tins of with many other glowing gems of autumn. ,3 ,7 hv; 7.

old' old told me. "And we. KNOW familie. We ant clean towa food which Albert had brought mrun i. i hm.

MT. nH nrsf Ia.rmeJ- wn. was callea w.nat un-Americanism is or to buy stores. boiled kangaroo dipped The rest of his time he spent from Alice Springs, and several LZ a mbS KdT JS 1" I'iffl A' Does the club interest itself ta in salt. tUa Ui.ch Vinnf inrr anH rtmnt- nanc vanww woiu.

nw t-viia uo vuai uauillUliai lUWcllS OI1U way UL the bush and and in hunting paint- pots pans. In simpler words, they do not grow old stages of growth. A 30cwt yellow utility was happened to them; he finds a life See moral in it; he justifies the ways There are the social branches i u- ..11. nB a.U nnJ A1m .1 nrtM n.hv. AlhPrt said he nancea nearnv.

Amen saiu nc Btuuuu a siiiumuk aniu mc in a we nnaiiv rouna viperis per- of God to man of all the trade and commercial creek bed miles out in the bush, manent camp several miles out.of had bought it so that he could hio and favom tism of the brilian the Indies," he said. ncKC is anotner tree oi iasnion to-aay gg He reminds us what has been and professional associations. I but a formal one the famed Koster's hannenine to the farmers in Rus- Th pre. nr thp rpliuinim nroanisa- "You like kanearoo. uh?" said Alice Springs.

It was a ary get around the territory. Albert as we ate. creeK oeo. i anKeti oy gum A1Dert piacea a. mrge piece ui this cornDany of "red oaks" are three blue snruce fPicea nunnens riauca).

which. sl nlms whv tht Hnn'r 7.7 Alongside him was the rifle and. sneller ot a kangaroo meat in tne pot to oon. oth not ve well known but is advanced aEe of. sav.

some 60 summers hanncn in America. With ni frnm hii. u. uj rocKV outcrop. ui ui.

i rr -i oo. There are the political nc nau miui uie am- unrvriMri naintinn rmiminn ucuuijr smuii. ur icss, fiims iigut bwuv nuni giacc. too screecn ot mciiipnors ne swings church ui a icw nours oeiore. 7 ace mem yuu tan in mouniuin garuens.

ao junipersi. back on to the main theme groups. A vard distant on a hlanket A inc uusu mai was ii iiwiu Qne is Quercus cocctnca ('scarlet But that, you might say. is a long while, All hold their regular local hr painting he had just fin- wearinn a black Stet iZL HI Th.re aLmo't a and the. beauty THEY sit there, these small- social functions; all look for- town Midwest businessmen, ward to their county functions Bnea, A pik.

iiic urncm aic mc icu uuk ui nuicuta oi irec ior someining 01 inai space is reauy tt; A shy niccaninni-Albert's CL, rubra' and lurKey oaK ce- whlle- only half listening to him, smok- and their State functions best ins their cigars, inert and con- of all. to the national convention I Helping IU liUl up inai nuni int clue: r7c-0ia granaoaugnter Btaay kangaroo he had shot earlier in Too many people. He got shov- HI Husped over the shoulder of the dav. oH nH nmhed He harrilv under- HI tented: the Babbitts of to-day, (well away from home, in a big per lamous relative. His wife was barefooted.

"She st0od why they took him around LBERT brought out some of I rOKine a slirt intn th male nn chive Alhfrt SHE LIVES ON HORROR tj it. aiu on cAuiQiiiuu in mo ouuui. js jatest paintings irom in- tne tire, Albert said quietly: Around them were numerous Some of the old ladies had side the tent Their value? Well LaLbrS includinP two of made him laugh the way they he didn.t quite know. He left i aie. Big cities too noisy.

Albert's five sons, his grand- fussed around him. all to Mr. Rex Battarbee in aaugmer ana some natives wno Yes, he must have looked good Al ee Serin us. his agent. Battar- Udugllici null oumt.

native, nu -n ll to flm) ZJ. said they "helped Albert bis his white suit when be was bee did all the marketing, work- I In c-; pieneiiicu iu ins vutti v-au- mg on a commission oasis. From OUR NEW YORK OFFICE IT IS AN HOUR 'before midnight in southern California play night, Saturday night, the night for relaxation. "Do you mind if I take these off?" she said, and put the false nails in her bag. The black wig came off, too, and revealed a crop of close-cut could 200 '7" berral.

JtmnML But A hundred pimeas was about oil I -v into the bush. which Alblrtand tab wifo 1" 1." pa.d T1JNDREDS of thnns- thev would rallv around her until nroduced out "of her own nrivate blonde curls. The 17-inch waist- I We discovered -he came into sleep. home and change "back into his 8 I Wo 'S. the big Albert's earnings? wen.

money needed for food, clothes sake of his wife and relatives. Meanwhile he would stick to and eJPenses-the hush with its kanearaos. Albert Pu? awa.y h'S paintings i 'J 11 ana, uave snent the dav she is to-day the linkpin in a new chamber of horrors. line grew several inches larger as at the beach, for it is mil American cult On a recent Saturday, for tSSbiu summer and hot Thev have It is one that has the country, ample, she told her audience how leased a wickedly tignt belt. ht Ll -mm puzzled.

to make a cocktail compounded had a late supper, the child- Af.my urging, she began to ren are in bed The television Are tw a. so many jp me has been switched on. gf ad horror as a prelude and a dash of bitters. "My name. she.

said. Maila. Twisting and writhing across to a good night's sleep? And 'This will be a delightful end Ma'la Tifilli the screen comes a veil of omt- wht kind of people are they? to any she said. "In fact, nlsn Born at reisamo. inirty Sntrror'siowl? thl'horro" they sort -ot ft FWi" y'" lo! toT Axsx.

sfsrs shape of a woman. saf4 thrl, asFthey imagine them. for yollr moiher-in-law or Effe It is a gaunt, deathly-looking seves walking the "last mile" to lingering house guest." bs thl nw woman, tall, pale and apparently the gas chamber, the electric And then she signed off with i affected with an incurable melan- chair or the callows? a liionh emus and wild turkeys. He loved and 'ed ,0 nres'ae-the smell of the gums, and the "Big birthday party on July 28. taste of boiled kangaroo.

1 W1" be 53, he said. And he enjoyed walking miles "Special dish if you would like in search of something new to to join us GRILLED kan-paint. garoo." choly. Are thev the neoole who flock I'm avin to meet vou lVn" bestknow" Qh. hr hrf hlun i "i rinnisu-nmcncans.

ne gives temperance lectures and he's rt- i. u. re luntiai ui a uiuiucK.u sne guoea out ot signt alter She glided out of sight after 1 I. ln.1La-,-0..".a-m"i-,0.,sf.,L,n. inducing roHo.

her pet tarantula a newspaperman at Duluth, Min- 4n un' 7 FF is? B'SS earthly, homtying scream. a motor accident? wooden coffin on to her bare Oregon. They're divorced. craledadV MaXth? "St JjZr "r-n My husband is nX't Tl.in06" iSS. use2 Kh.

cd ion to make an appoint- to sel, programme, at the Latin harsh, repellent, mnr tn Mt thic Inns Is iAm- "Good evening I am Vam. a muiiv quarter in iNew orK ana ni one 1 am Yam- CTUAI.I.Y. Vnmriim 9 nrfV. hinat nn Rannun nnrl Uom- Vampira, as seen on television. r.

v. moacnea ior a magazine X-X ornmme dries nnt nmnnnl let father ohnst. Ha npr(ntrH pira T- j. a vuiku rin-uu iiu, nu nuue. television fan, with odd Iv dis fT.

8 W'm u.l'V VL anead And once 1 had a small part on wearing her TV makeup and her oed tastes anther ssion IV" of cerc; a Vam" the stage, in Mae West's 'Cathe- long black wig. And when the wi woman who "lonres-fIor a weekly showing of ire ba spread-eagled on a rine the Greaf. jllst a small part, traffic light is red, she grasps her begun with a woman who has horror films, most of them hoary bloodstained white cloth. in head anQ iets out'a snine-chilline made a fortune out of the with ase and often lauchahle in With it was a note alle0edlv '46 i.8.iP?.Cmili", macabre. a T.i.j i.w cai ea opooks dcanaais ana mcy sKrcnni, wdicwuhi iu mo hmuu- their Eory immatuntv such written in blood: "I'd like to the surface, Vampira Is HEt?" "i.SIL SSH'XS, a with a dance number.

'Dance of Vampira was voted recently by Wstil still merely another -1 will taH t7 the Skeletons'." the fraternities of the University onerator in the world nf Oflf.screen. Vamnira's voice is of California as "The sirl we'd: ful i i D1 i siars in tne ms sne one amingca to meet in a ,7, r. 1:1,. fj nu make-believe. When she makes show1, she herself does quiet park, shaded by giant euca- sof caressing, not the harsh, most I ke to be found dead a the commercial plugs for her lyptusl at the corner of Coldwater fra ing.

voice she uses for chills. "But many have told she the aid of a battery of account- sportsor a llsed cFar Bdeaer) are fiaHnyo'n and Bevery Drive. A Maila is much the nicer person said, "that I'm just like the ghoul Sri n-'U Classed 85 Ln Chaney. Bela Lugosi, Boris black, hearse-like limousine drove ot next door. vaudeville artist.

Karloff and Peter Lorre. up. and out wriggled Vampira in As I rose to go, she slipped on And if it had stopped at that, What is interesting is not what her skin-tight black gown. RUT 7" n.ot Wl. and HWsted all would have been well enough, she shows but how she shows it, "I can't shake she said.

XJ v've the lucrative competi- the long, clawlike nails. For there are people to whom and the fact that her overnight "My nails are too long. Do jou 'lon Vampira. Even in her off- "Wouldn't you like my ep(v graveyards are funny and suicides fame has swept like a chill and like my new shade of nail lac duty hour- the purveyor of hpr- taph?" she whispered. fVaiirBira a subject for humour.

crackling flame alons all the auer? It's haemorrhaae red Verv ror to keep her growing bears a remarkable likeness to, i HI i. .1 'i an! Hill I IT ll ll 1 1 I What Vampira probably never murky byways of modern cultism. much better than shocking pink, audience ever in mind. the famous character ril the htnehhour ice neat the camp of Albert Namatjira (right) near Alice Springs. Main item on th menu however, is how many Every Saturday night Vampira And then she laid aside the She rides around Hollywood "New 'Yorker" cartotifkl b' of them there are and how ivkllv unveilf tome choice item the hai act and became herself.

end Its environs in en open car. Charlet Addami.l kangaroo, oouea, ana appm.

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About The Sydney Morning Herald Archive

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