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2 6 Whe pian pa oct SENTENCES PASSED La BY THE JUDGE. 0b, HE highest steeple does not ' e ‘ vo always crown the holiest oly b sanctuary. wh Those who make not a j : : aitha pleasure of their cares will have Ba e we a their cares for their pleasures. F : seeds You may inoculate your- x * self against ninety-nine diseases and take the hundredth and die 4 Me from it. y Y , y g x . i os bal It sometimes pays to trust / . ¢ ; e - a hag tar Ly to Providence to deliver one without inoculation from rabid dogs, small-pox and enemies. One can but admire the adroitness of Fate's tactics when he observes how small a chance may produce or avert disaster. KATHRINE GROSJEAN. TROUBLE LN. MYTHOLOGY. SPAN (blowing hard) —"' Ta-raza boom de ay, ta-ra-ra boom — !"} * APLAIN, EVERY-DAY GoaT— "Oh, come off !” JUSTIFIABLE. +¢ PRISONER, you are charged with aggravated assault and battery. How do you plead, guilty or not guilty 2” “Not guilty, your hono “Do I understand that you deny having hit the plaintiff over the head with your cane, knocking him down, rolling him in the gutter, stamping on him and ill-treating him in the’ manner charged in the indictment ?" “No, your honor, I don't deny that; but I claim that I had ample provocation and that the retaliation I took was perfectly justifiable.” “Indeed! What was the provocation ?” “Why, your honor, the plaintiff has just returned from Chicago.” “Well, what‘of that? Is'that any reason why you should abuse him in that fashion?” “Not at all, your honor; but you see he began to tell , me what he had: seen at the Ace " 4 |! world’s fair.” “Is this statement true?” asked the judge, in a stern tone, turning to the plaintiff. “Yes,” was the admissioh, given in a shamefaced man- ner. “Then I do not see that CHAFFING CHICAGO. the case need go any further. New-Yorker—"'I saw a man to-day who said he Prisoner, you are discharged. _ could see just as much outside of the fair as inside.” The costs are placed on the eas CIUCACOAN—" Great cyclone! What kind of man comptainant.” New-Yorker—"A blind man.” Srna we TWO SUMMERS. | MET her in midsummer, years ago ; She was a maiden just from Vassar’s halls, I fresh from Yale, and Yale men are, you ee : 5 : f | know, y - So very sage their wisdom quite appalls. No wonder then we fell to argument On ethics, logic, and astronomy ; No wonder then so many hours we spent Disputing Hegel and biology. Tat now that we are wed our talk is just Of how to pay the rent, and then we brood O’er heavy gas bills and we look for trust From merchants for our clothing and our food. \ ‘Though different are the things we talk about ] ° ; From those in that midsummer when we met, THE MALAPROPOS 5 Concerning one thing there is naught of Newsrarek HUMorist’s WIFE — ‘Here's some- “" doubt, thing awfully funny, James, A man out in Chillicothe, 7 Ohio, had a" — NEWsPAreR HUMORIST'S WIFE —"* Oh !” Newsparen HuMORIST—" My dear, / didn’t write lJ And that is that we are disputing yet! NATHAN M. Levy, that. comicbooks.com