Transcriber’s Note
Larger versions of most illustrations may be seen by right-clicking them and selecting an option to view them separately, or by double-tapping and/or stretching them.
Additional notes will be found near the end of this ebook.
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Nonsense
for
Old
and
Young.
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Nonsense
FOR
Old and Young
By EUGENE FIELD
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Illustrated by
JOHN C. FROHN
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BOSTON
Henry A. Dickerman & Son
PUBLISHERS
MCMI
Copyright
1901,
by
Henry A.
Dickerman
& Son.
“A little nonsense
now and then,
Is relished by
the best of men.”
Oliver
❦Wendell
Holmes.
A Foreword.
❦
In compiling this volume we have endeavored
to add pictorially to the amusement
in these funny conceits from Field’s
versatile brain.
The majority of the sketches herein, appeared in the Denver Tribune, under the title of The Tribune Primer, with various sub-titles, beginning Monday, Oct. 10, 1881, and ending Monday, Dec. 19, of the same year. The entire number of these quips was about 162, of which 94 were first published in book form as The Tribune Primer, in 1881. The balance, with the exception of five which are so local in their application that they have now lost some of their fine sarcastic humor, we here present for the first time with illustrations.
In their original form the sketches were designated by Roman Numerals instead of titles and were made up of short sentences, with a liberal display of capital letters after the style of first lessons in reading for children.
The Publishers.
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9
Nonsense for Old & Young.
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One Autumn Night.
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10
11
❦
A Portrait of a Lady.
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Here we have a Lady. She was at a
Party last Night, and the
Paper spoke of her as
the Amiable and Accomplished
Wife of our Respected
Fellow Citizen. Our Respected
Fellow Citizen is now as Full as
a Tick, and his Amiable and
Accomplished Wife is Walloping him with the
Rolling Pin. The Lady seems to be more
Accomplished than Amiable.
❦
Would You?
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Is this a Picture of an Actress? No, it
is a Picture of a Boodle
Politician. Is it not Beautiful?
The left Eye is
Closed. It must be Tired. He is
Sitting on a Barrel. It must be a
Barrel of Jam. Would you like
to get your Little Hand into the
Barrel? We Would.
12
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Good James and Naughty Reginald.
Once upon a Time there was a Bad boy
whose Name was Reginald and there
was a Good boy whose Name was James.
Reginald would go Fishing when his
Mamma told him Not to, and he Cut off the
Cat’s Tail with the Bread Knife one Day, and
then told Mamma the Baby had Driven it in
with the Rolling Pin, which was a Lie. James
was always Obedient, and when his Mamma
told him not to Help an old Blind Man across
the street or Go into a Dark Room where the
Boogies were, he always Did What She said.13
That is why they Called him Good James.
Well, by and by, along Came Christmas.
Mamma said, You have been so Bad, my son
Reginald, you will not Get any Presents from
Santa Claus this Year; but you, my Son James,
will get Oodles of Presents, because you have
Been Good. Will you Believe it, Children,
that Bad boy Reginald said he didn’t Care a
Darn and he Kicked three Feet of Veneering off
the Piano just for Meanness. Poor James was
so sorry for Reginald that he cried for Half an
Hour after he Went to Bed that Night. Reginald
lay wide Awake until he saw James was Asleep
and then he Said if these people think they can
Fool me, they are Mistaken. Just then Santa
Claus came down the Chimney. He had lots of
Pretty Toys in a Sack on his Back. Reginald
shut his Eyes and Pretended to be Asleep.
Then Santa Claus Said, Reginald is Bad and I
will not Put any nice Things in his Stocking.
But as for you, James, I will Fill your Stocking
Plumb full of Toys, because You are Good. So
Santa Claus went to Work and Put, Oh! heaps
and Heaps of Goodies in James’ stocking but
not a Sign of a Thing in Reginald’s stocking.
And then he Laughed to himself and Said, I
guess Reginald will be Sorry to-morrow because
he Was so Bad. As he said this he Crawled up
the chimney and rode off in his Sleigh. Now
you can Bet your Boots Reginald was no Spring
Chicken. He just Got right Straight out of Bed
and changed all those Toys and Truck from14
James’ stocking into his own. Santa Claus will
Have to Sit up all Night, said He, when he
Expects to get away with my Baggage. The
next morning James got out of Bed and when
He had Said his Prayers he Limped over to his
Stocking, licking his chops and Carrying his
Head as High as a Bull going through a Brush
Fence. But when he found there was Nothing
in his stocking and that Reginald’s Stocking was
as Full as Papa Is when he comes home Late
from the Office, he Sat down on the Floor and
began to Wonder why on Earth he had Been
such a Good boy. Reginald spent a Happy
Christmas and James was very Miserable. After
all, Children, it Pays to be Bad, so Long as you
Combine Intellect with Crime.
❦
His Busy Day.
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This Man is very Busy. He is pushed
for Time. He looks as if
he had more on his Hands
than he could accomplish.
We feel Sorry for him.
He has an Important Engagement
to Keep, and he is Hurrying
up Matters to Meet it. He is to be Hung
at Noon to-morrow.
15
❦
The Joyful Whirligig.
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Here is a Sewing Machine. It was
Made for little Children to
play with. Put your Feet
on the Treadles and Make
the Wheels go round Fast. See
how the Thread unwinds and the
Needle bobs up and down! This
is Lots of Fun. Do not Deny baby
the privilege of Putting his Fat little Finger
under the Needle. It will Make pretty holes
in the Finger and give Baby something to
occupy his Attention for a Long time.
❦
A Fairy Tale.
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Here we have Papa’s watch. There is
a Fairy in the Watch.
Would you Like to
Hear her Sing? If
you will Drop the Watch
on the Floor, the Fairy in
the Watch will Sing the
Prettiest little Song you ever
Heard and all the Wheels
will Buzz just as Funny as can Be. When
papa Comes home and finds the Fairy has been
Singing, maybe he will Ask you to Step out
into the Woodshed with him on a Matter of
Business.
16
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An Epitaph.
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17
❦
The Hustler Hustling.
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What is that I see? That my Child,
is the News Interviewer,
I and he is now Interviewing
a Man. But where
I can see no Man.
The Man, my Child is in his
Mind.
❦
The Maid of Orleans.
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Here is a Molasses jug. It is Full of
Molasses. How
many Flies are
there in the Molasses?
That is a Hard
one to Answer. Those
flies will Look Proud spread out on Sister
Lucy’s buckwheat Cakes in the Mornings. But
Lucy will not Care. She will pick them out of
the Molasses with her Taper Fingers, and Wipe
them on the Bottom of her Chair. But if her
Beau were there she would Yell and say, Oh,
how Horrid. The strength of a Woman’s
Stomach depends Largely on the surroundings.
18
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Fancy vs. Fact.
Mabel is sitting at the Piano, and she is
Singing a Song. The Song Says he is
Waiting for Her in the Gloaming.
Mabel appears to be giving herself Dead
Away. He is Not Waiting for her In the
Gloaming at all. He has just Drawn a bobtail
Flush, and he is Wondering whether he had
Better Pull out or stand in on a Bluff. Mabel
would Touch a Responsive Chord in his Bosom
if she were to Sing take Back the Hand which
thou Gavest.
19
❦
Society as Reported.
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This is a Recherché Affair. Recherché
Affairs are sometimes
Met with in Parlors
and Ball Rooms but
more Generally in the Society
Department of Newspapers.
A Recherché Affair
is an Affair where the Society
Editor is invited to the Refreshment Table.
When the Society Editor is told his Room is
Better than his Company, the Affair is not
Recherché.
❦
A Musical Genius.
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Who is the Man? The Man is Admiral
McLean and he is Getting
Ready to Sing. Can
the Admiral Sing? Those
who have heard him Say he Can
Not. Has he ever Sung a Song
Through? Nobody can Tell.
Why can Nobody Tell? Because
every Body walks Away when he
Begins for to Sing.
20
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The Nervy Drummer.
Is this a Brass Foundry? No, it is a
Travelling Man. He carries big Trunks
all over the Country and Makes Love to
Dining room Girls. He has Been all
Over and Under Europe and Taken in all the
Great Masters. He has Scoured the Alps
clean. He can Tell more Smutty Stories than
a Politician, and he can get Bilin’ slower on
More Liquor than any Government official.
The best Way to get along with the Travelling
men is to get along Without them.
21
❦
Lunar Lore.
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The Moon is a Satellite. A Satellite is
a Sort of Associate
Editor. It revolves
around Somebody
Else and gets full on Four
Quarters. The Moon is a
great Way from the Earth.
It would Take a Street Car
16,000,000,239 years to
Make the Distance. A Snail could Make it in
half that Time. Break a piece of Glass out of
Mamma’s mirror, Smoke it over the Lamp, and
look at the Moon through it.
❦
The Senator.
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Here we have a Senator. He is a
Proud Bird. He has
been Renominated
and he is Happy.
And who is the Bird with
the Senator? It is one of
his constituents. Is he
Happy? Yes, he too is
Happy because the Senator
is Happy. But not too Happy. Just Happy
Enough.
22
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A Colonial Accident.
Major André was a British officer.
Benedict Arnold hired him for Four
Dollars a day to go as Spy into the
American Camp and hear the News.
He carried important Papers in his Boots, and,
upon being Arrested by the Americans, the
Papers were found. Then they said they would
hang him. He was sorry for what he had Done
and Said he was going to Heaven. He fell with
a Dull, Sickening Thud. They are going to
Build a Monument to him, not because he did
Wrong, but because he got Caught.
23
❦
A Natural Mistake.
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Is this an Ass? No, this is the Editor
of a paper at Central
City. Oh, what
a Mistake! No, my
Child, the Mistake was a
Natural one. You would
not Insult an Ass, would
you?
❦
Luminous Law.
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Is this a fire? No, it is not a fire. It
is the Judge of the
County Court. Why
did you think it was a
fire? Because it looked so Red.
The Judge is a Nice Man. He
writes Articles about the Governor.
You must not Mistake
Him for a Fire again. But you may Compare
him with the Warm, Sensuous glow of a Neapolitan
Sunset.
24
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“Oft in the Stilly Night.”
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❦
A Sad, Sad Story.
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The young Man is Reading a Letter
and seems Deeply Agitated.
Maybe it is a
Letter from his Sweet-Heart,
and she has Given him
the Grand Bounce. How his
Breast Heaves and how his
Heart must Throb under his
Celluloid Shirt Front. The Letter is from
His Tailor. Let us not Invade the Secrecy
of the poor Young man’s Grief.
26
❦
Fashion Notes.
Slippers should be worn High on
Bad little Boys this
Winter.
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❦
Fashionable Corns are to be Trimmed with Steel-Blue Razors this Season.
❦
Red Pepper worn on Hot Stoves continues to Create quite a Sensation in the Best Social Circles.
❦
The Chivalrous Editor.
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This is an Editorial Writer. He is
Writing a Thoughtful
Piece about the Degeneracy
of the Age.
He talks about the good old
Times when Men were Manly
and Youthful Breasts were
Pregnant with Chivalry. By
and by he Will go Home and
Lick his wife for not Cutting up enough Cord
Wood for the kitchen Fire in the Morning, and
he will Spit tobacco all over his daughter
Esther’s new silk Gown.
27
❦
Easy Mathematics.
If you are good at addition, put down a
column of figures, five figures in a row,
and the sum will represent
the age of Clara Louise
Kellogg.
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❦
Suppose a man with a bottle of whiskey were to set down the bottle and carry the whiskey, what would the result be?
❦
If one gallon of coal oil will blow up a kitchen stove, how much Kansas City gin is required to make a man feel like a barn afire?
❦
If a Pueblo bed-bug can travel seventy rods in one hour, when there is nothing ahead to encourage him, how many miles will he travel in ten minutes to meet a fat man from Cheyenne?
❦
A Mean Man.
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A Chicago Papa is so Mean he Wont
let his Little Baby have
More than One Measle
at a time.
28
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The Office Towel.
Is this a Corner Lot? No it is a Towel.
It has been serving an Apprenticeship
in a Printing Office for the past Four
Years. The horses are Dragging it
Away. A man will Take an Ax and Break the
Towel into Pieces and Boil it for Soap Grease.
Then he will sell the Towel for Tripe. If you
find a Piece of Tripe with a Monogram in one
Corner, you may Know it is the Towel.
29
❦
Scandal on Foot.
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What is that Walking along the Street?
That, my Son, is a State
Senator. Will you not Tell
About it? No, my
Son, you are too Young to hear
Scandal.
❦
The Old T. D.
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Is it a Pipe? Yes it is Papa’s Pipe
and it Has not been
Cleaned out for Four
months. It is full of
Ashes and Spit. It would
not Hurt the Pipe if you
were to Take several good
long Sucks at it.
30
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The Awful Bugaboo.
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32
❦
The National Debt.
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Here we have a Greenbacker. He
seems Troubled about
Something. He is
Troubled about the National
Debt. He is Grieving
because the Country of his
Nativity owes one Billion Dollars.
The other Man around
the Corner is a Grocery Man. He, too, is
Troubled, but he is not Worrying about the
National Debt. Oh, no. He is Worrying about
the one Dollar and Forty cents the Greenbacker
owes him.
❦
Johnny’s Alphabet.
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33
THANKSGIVING TALES
For the Profit of the Nursery Brigade.
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Tale I—Prolog.
This little Boy looks as if he had On his
Father’s clothes. Maybe he Has not
had Anything to Eat for a Month. He
is Sitting on a Stool. He is Waiting
for Something. His hands are clasped over his
Stomach. Can he be Waiting for his Thanksgiving
Dinner? What a Queer little Boy to
Wait so Patiently? If he were to Cry, he
would get his Dinner Sooner, wouldn’t he?
34
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Tale II—Succulent Soup.
In the Tureen there are two Gallons of
Soup and Eleven Cove oysters. Do not
Be Afraid. The Soup is Pretty Hot,
but it will not Burn you. If it is too
Hot, you can Spit it out on the Carpet. Do
you like Cove oysters? They are Baby oysters
Taken out of the Shell before they are Hatched.
Some People dry them and use them for Gun
Wads. They are much more Digestible than
sole leather.
35
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Tale III—Tempting Turkey.
What a Big Fat Turkey it is! It must
have eaten lots of Worms and Caterpillars
to be so Fat. It is stuffed with nice
Stuffing made of Old Crusts and spoiled
Biscuits. The Gravy looks Quite Tempting.
It does not Look like Tobacco Juice, does it?
The Innards of the Turkey have been Chopped
up and are in the Gravy. Unless the Cook was
very Careful while Chopping up the Innards,
there is a Piece of her Finger in the Gravy, too.
Will you Try some of the Turkey? Take a
Drum Stick, the Pope’s Nose, a Side Bone, the
Neck, some of the Breast and the Wishbone.
If that is not Enough, ask Mamma please Can
you have some More.
36
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Tale IV—Various Vegetables.
The vegetables smell good. Two or
three of these Onions would make you
Stronger. Suppose you Try some of
the Turnip and Squash. Pickled Beets
are also Good to Eat just before going to Bed.
The mashed Potato is healthy when There are
no Potato Bugs in it. They are very Plenty
this Year. Will you put Some Jelly on Your
Bread? How Mad it would Make your Big sister
Jennie to Tip the Jelly over in her lap.
Suppose you Try it as a Joke.
37
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Tale V—Venerable Venison.
Here we Have Some Venison. It may
Taste a trifle Venerable for it has been
hanging Up in the Shed for Several
Weeks. But Papa says it is not Fly
Blown, and Everything Goes on Thanksgiving
Day. Once the Venison was a little Deer and
lived in the Mountains. A man Caught it and
Hung it up on a Tree and cut its poor little
Throat and let it Bleed to Death. What a Bad
Man. Perhaps the Deer’s baby deers are crying
for their Mamma who will Never come.
38
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Tale VI—Peptonic Pudding.
The Hired Girl is bringing on the Pudding
and it is a Daisy. We mean the
Pudding. It is full of Plums. Make
Mamma give you a Big Piece of the
Pudding with Ever so many Plums in it. If
we Were you, we would Swallow the Plums
whole and Then they will stay By You longer.
When you have Eaten the Pudding, pick your
little Dish up and Drink the Sauce.
39
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Tale VII—Painful Pie.
There are Three Kinds of Pie—Cocoanut
Pie, Lemon Pie and Mince Pie.
They are the Only Kinds of Pie little
children should Eat. You will do Well
to Try them All. As much Pie as Possible
under the circumstances would be Proper.
The best way to Eat Pie is to Take it up in
your Fingers. This is Liable to make Pretty
little Spots on your Shirt Front. Do you suppose
by Trying Hard you could Slip a Piece of
the Lemon Pie into your Pocket to Eat after
you go to Bed to-night.
40
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Tale VIII—Fretful Fruit.
Oh, what Beautiful fruit! Apples,
Oranges, Bananas, Grapes, Pears and
Figs! Make a Grab for them or you
May not Get any. Good little children
Eat grapes, skin and all. I wonder if the Figs
have Worms in them. But never Mind: this is
no Time for Questions. Your Mamma says
Orange Juice will Stain your Frock, but it Will
Not. What Fun it would be to Squirt some
Orange Juice in the Dear Little Baby’s Eyes!
41
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Tale IX—Innocent Ice Cream.
Aha, here Comes the Ice Cream. About
two Plates apiece will be Enough for the
Children. Ice Cream is Funny Stuff.
You eat it and feel it in your Eye.
When you have Eaten all you Want, you will
Find it right Jolly to Pick the Ice Cream up in
your Fingers and Paddle it Around in your
Tumbler of Water.
42
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Tale X—Nutritious Nuts.
Here we Have the Nuts. They are good
for Children. Crack them with your
Teeth. Be sure to Drop the Shells on
the Floor for the Cat to Eat. Do not
Forget to put a Good Many in your Pocket for
the Poor Little blind Girl who Lives around the
Corner.
43
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Tale XI—Wierd and Woful.
This little Boy looks too Big for his
Clothes. He must have been Measured
when he Had the Ague. Mamma will
Have to take off His Vest with a Button
Hook to-night. What makes the Boy so
pale? He has his Hands gathered together over
his Diaphragm. Is the Boy Sick? The Boy
is Sick. Maybe he has Swallowed something
that does not Agree with Him.
44
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Tale XII—Enter the Diligent Doctor.
Who is the Man coming through the
Door? He is the Doctor. This is the
Worst Symptom of the Boy’s Illness we
have Seen yet. How can the Boy get
Well now? The Doctor asks Mamma how the
Boy is. Mamma is crying. The Doctor says
he can Fix the Boy.
45
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Tale XIII—Exit the Beautiful Boy.
The Doctor has Fixed the Boy.
46
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Tale XIV—Epilog.
Here we have a Cemetery. Can you see
the Little grave Stone over there? It
is very Cute. There must be a Boy
Planted somewhere Near it. Wouldn’t
you Like to be Planted under a Cute little Stone
like That? Unless you do Justice to your
Dinner to-day you cannot Hope for such a
Reward of Merit.
47
❦
Beautiful Hortense.
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Miss Hortense is working a Beautiful
Piece of Embroidery. It
is a Motto in Green and
Gold. It asks What is
Home without a Mother. When
Miss Hortense gets it Done, she
will Give it to her Beau, who
Tends a Dry Goods counter. You
cannot see Miss Hortense’s Mother. She is in
the Back Yard doing the Week’s Washing.
By and by she will be Bringing in Coal for the
Parlor Stove, because Miss Hortense’s beau is
Coming to-night.
❦
A Toilet Episode.
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Mamma’s Tooth-brush is on the Bureau.
Suppose we scrub
out the Sink with
it. Then Mamma
will wonder what she has
Eaten to give her such a
Bad Breath. She will Think the Tooth-brush
has been Sitting up with a Corpse.
48
❦
A Terrible Monster.
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Oh, what an awful Sight! It is the
Editor of the Colorado Springs
Gazette. He has Long, White
Teeth and there is Blood on
his gums. He is a Bad Man and he
has just Eaten a Poor Little Baby.
He is trying to get the Capital Removed.
If he gets the Capital Removed, he
will Eat a Poor Little Baby every Day. You
must Tell your Dear Papa not to vote to have
the Capital Removed.
❦
Poor Pussy.
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Here we have a Dornick and a Cat.
The Cat is Approaching the
Well. She thinks there is a
Mouse there. Suppose we
approach the well with the Dornick.
There is no Mouse as we
Can See. Perhaps the Mouse is
at the Bottom of the Well. Let
us Hitch the Dornick to the Cat
and Put Them in the Well. Then the Cat will
not Come back without the Mouse.
49
❦
A Fish Story.
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See the Fish. The Fish is a Trout and
Breathes through his Ears.
He lives in a Brook and May
be if you try you can Catch
him. Any little Boy who catches
so many measles ought to be Able
to Catch one little Fish. The
Trout Weighs four Ounces, but
you can say he weighs four Pounds. Do not
call him a Speckled Beauty or you will be Shot.
Eat him, Head, Tail, Inwards and All, and get
a little Bone in your Throat if you Can.
❦
Beware.
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50
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The Vigilant Cop.
Do not Make a Noise or you will Wake
the Policeman! He is Sitting on the
Door Step asleep. It is very Hard on
Him to Have to Sleep out of Doors these
Cold Nights. There is a Bank being Robbed
around the Corner and a Woman is being killed
in the next Block. If the Policeman Waked
up, he might Find it out and Arrest somebody.
Some people Believe this is what Policemen are
for, but the Policemen do not Think so.
51
❦
Something Doing.
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Is this a Cemetery? No, it is a Picture
of Pueblo during the
Busy Season. Do you
see the Man Patting
the Dog on the Back and
Promising him a Bone if he
will lie Down and Go to Sleep
again? This is What they
Call an Intensely Exciting Sensation in Pueblo.
The Earth is going to Live five hundred Million
years Longer, and Pueblo expects to be the
State Capital before the End of that Time.
You will not Live to see it the Capital—or, at
least, you ought to Hope Not.
❦
Poor Little Bennie.
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Bennie is Lying in the Cradle and he is
Crying because Mamma
will not give him
the Moon. What a
Naughty Mamma not to Give
her little Boy the Moon!
But Mamma does not care
how much Bennie Cries. She
has a Son, and the Moon can go to Thunder.
52
❦
Our Motor Press.
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Is this Not a Beautiful steam Press?
The Steam is Lying Down
on the Floor taking a Nap.
He came from Africa and
is Seventy years Old. The press
Prints Papers. It can Print
nine hundred papers an Hour.
It takes One hour and Forty
Minutes to Print the Edition of
the Paper. The paper has a circulation of
Thirty-seven Thousand. The Business Manager
says So.
❦
Freedom Defined.
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Why is this great and glorious country
called America? Principally
because that is
its name. Can you
bound it? No, because it is
a republic and will not
be bound.
53
❦
A Political Object Lesson.
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Do you see that Candidate over There!
He is standing still. He is a
Democratic Candidate. If he
were a Republican he Would
be Running. Democratic Candidates
are not real Candidates. They can
not Run. They do not even Walk.
When you are very Tired and Want
to rest you ought to Become a Democratic
Candidate.
❦
Honesty on the Run.
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If a poor but honest voter chases a
reformer four blocks in
ten hours, how many
blocks will he have to go
to catch him? This depends altogether
on the location of the
Bank.
54
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The Truth About the Cherry Tree.
Who was George Washington? He was
Mrs. Washington’s little Boy. One Day
he went out in the Orchard and got the
Hired Man to chop down a cherry tree.
“Who has done this Deed?” asked George’s
mother that Very Afternoon. There was Blood
in the Old Lady’s Eye. In order not to get
fired, the Hired Man gave George two marbles
and a Top to say he Did it. “Mamma,” said
George, “I cannot Tell a Lie. I Done it with
the Ax.” Whereupon his Mother complimented
him on his Truthfulness, but gave him
One in the Neck for using Bad Grammar.
55
❦
An Ode to a Cat.
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❦
Look Out! Boogies!
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Did you ever see a Bugaboo? Ask
Mamma to Blow out
the Light to-night after
you Go to Bed and Let
you See a Bugaboo? It has
a Big Voice like a Bear, and
its Claws are as long as a
Knife. It will Bite Good
Little Children and Run off
with them to the Cold Dark Woods where they
can Never see Mamma any More. If you are
Good, Beware of Bugaboos.
56
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Hot Air vs. Cold Water.
See the Wind Mill. It is a Pretty Sight.
It has Sails that go Round and Round
and Make a Noise like the Whirring of
a bird’s wings. The Wind Mill Looks
Sad. It has had Hard Luck. It used to be a
Democratic politician and Furnish Enthusiasm
for Arapahoe county Campaigns. But Wind
will not Run a Campaign and so the Wind Mill
lost its Job. And now it Stands out on a Bleak
Prairie and Hauls water out of the Cold, hard
Earth for a living. Any Kind of Honest Labor
is awful rough on a Democrat, but Having Anything
to Do with Water breaks him All Up.
57
❦
The Worried Magnate.
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Who is the old man I see? The old
man is a Railroad
Builder, and his
brow is clouded.
Why is his brow clouded?
It is clouded because this is
Monday and he cannot build
any railroad track. Why can
he not build railroad track
on Monday? Because he is pious and remembers
the Sabbath day to keep everybody he can
hire wholly—busy. He only builds on Sunday.
This is the reason he is so much respected
in saloons and other mercantile establishments.
❦
His Day of Rest.
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Is this a Sunday? Yes, it is a Sunday.
How Peaceful and Quiet
it is. But Who is the
Man! He does not Look
Peaceful. He is a reporter and he
is Swearing. What makes him
Swear? Because he has to Work
on Sunday? Oh, no! He is
Swearing because he has to Break the Fourth
Commandment. It is a sad thing to be a
Reporter.
58
❦
The Foxy Compositor.
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Has the Printer tobacco?
He has But
he will not Tell you So.
He carries it in the Leg
of his Boot and when he
wants a Chew he Sneaks down
in the Back Alley where Nobody
can See him. When he Spits
tobacco, it Sounds like a Duck
diving in the Water. The printer
is a Queer man. He is a Fickle person.
Sometimes he has Ten thousand Ems on the
string, but they are Always his Dupes. If you
are a Printer, Do not Be a Blacksmith, or you
will get Fired.
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’Tis sad—there’s an
end to all good
things.
❦
Other Field Books.
❦
Eugene Field Book | $0.60 |
Field—DeKoven Song Book | 2.00 |
Holy Cross and Other Tales | 1.25 |
House, The | 1.25 |
Little Book of Profitable Tales | 1.25 |
Little Book of Western Verse | 1.25 |
Love Affairs of Bibliomaniac | 1.25 |
Love-songs of Childhood | 1.00 |
Lullaby-land | 1.50 |
Second Book of Tales | 1.25 |
Second Book of Verse | 1.25 |
Sketch of Field, by Francis Wilson | 1.25 |
Songs and Other Verse | 1.25 |
Songs of Childhood | 1.00 |
With Trumpet and Drum | 1.00 |
Life and Letters. S. Thompson | 1.00 |
Echoes from Sabine Farm | 2.00 |
The Tribune Primer. Illustrated | .50 |
Sharps and Flats. 2 vol. | 2.50 |
A Sure Cure for the Blues
The Funniest Book in Print.
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THE TRIBUNE
PRIMER
By Eugene Field.
With original illustrations by John C. Frohn
BOSTON, MASS.
Henry A. Dickerman & Son.
Publishers 1900.
It won’t make a horse laugh because it wasn’t written for horses:—but any person who can read this book through without laughing must have an impediment in his smilax.
New copyright edition; gilt edge, bound in art cloth, printed on Bengalore book paper from English type, illustrated with ninety-four of the most comical pen and ink “skits” ever seen. Original poster cover in two colors, that will appeal to your bump of humor. Price 50 cents at your dealers, or of the publishers
Henry A. Dickerman & Son
55 Franklin Street, Boston, Mass.
N. B.—A handsome POSTER free with every copy.
A SOFT WORD
FROM
Robert J. Burdette
REGARDING
“What Happened to Wigglesworth”
❦
Abraham Lincoln once said, “God must love plain people, because he made so many of them.” Then humor must be heaven born, because it glorifies the commonplace.
Mr. Fuller’s humor has no need of the finger post of an introduction. His manner bears no stamp save that of his own personality. His characters introduce themselves as old friends, who try to surprise us by thinly disguised voices, by the change of a beard, or the innocent assumption of ignorance of our identity. The people concerning whom Mr. Fuller writes in these chronicles, he would have us believe dwell in Maine. But I knew them in Illinois; you have them in New York; they are your neighbors in California. We recognize them as old friends. Some busy years have separated us; a multitude of cares have swarmed into our lives and driven them out of our thought, and grateful are we that this apostle of humor suddenly turns the limelight of his humor upon the stage of this old work-a-day world of ours, revealing the little group of actors to our gaze saying, “Did you ever see these people before?” And our ready, happy looks of glad and instant recognition contradict our “No we never did” that goes with the extended hand of welcome greeting. Into his book, Mr. Fuller has put the laughter of our own lives. Our highest and most grateful appreciation of what he has done, will be to take the laughter of his book into our own hearts.
Robert J. Burdette.
Cairo, Egypt, February 6, 1901.
“What
Happened
to
Wigglesworth”
By W. O.
Fuller, Jr.
Handsomely bound and illustrated with several full page drawings. It will please everyone who likes good innocent humor. 12mo. Gilt Top. Price $1.50.
HENRY A. DICKERMAN & SON,
PUBLISHERS,
55 Franklin Street, Boston.
Done in
types & pulled
off the press
of
Lounsbery
Nichols &
Worth
Company
Boston