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Show vwvvvvvvvvvvvvvvvwvvvvwvvvvvvvvwvvwvvvvvvvvvvyvvvvvv' . ! Hamlet on Bobbed Hair f t 4. ' .;. v To cut or not to cut: that is the question: Whether it is nobler in the mind to suffer 1 The quips and jibs of braver friends or to take, Issue with one's family and by this end them. To cut, to wave; and by the permanent wave to ; End the arm ache of many hours of electric curling. 'Tis a consummation devoutly to be wished. To cut, to bob, but the shingle bob, aye, there's the rub. For a shingle bob which is lovely without a hat is Impossible with one. Yet we must give pause; Do not the advertisements show the new device, The naturally curl ey hair mounted on a velvet ribbon? ! ; Nay, Nay, Pauline, would it net be better to know that j : One's own, hair were upon one's own head, even if it j Were difficult to arrange to one's complete satisfaction : Than to wonder who owned those natural curls ere they were j : So attractively displayed for our enticement. . I J But the hats this Spring, were they not made for those To whom this question had been quickly answered and who .j. Have long since bowed 'to Fashion's decree and for, lo, these : Many months worn bobbed hair. 1 Yet, do not the adverse opinions of the family make cowards Of us all and thus all our good resolutions are sicklied over . : With the pale cast of thought how we would greet them and . t See them turn away. Soft you know, the die is cast. . r ;( We have decided, yes to cut. ' ' It With Apologies to W. S. I t . - t |