Good Stories from the Ladies' Home Journal eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 97 pages of information about Good Stories from the Ladies' Home Journal.

Good Stories from the Ladies' Home Journal eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 97 pages of information about Good Stories from the Ladies' Home Journal.

“Young ladies, I introduce to you Mr. Chase, who will in future be your teacher.  I would like you to tell him what your former teacher did each Sunday so that he can go on in the same way.  What did she always do first?”

And then a miss of sixteen said:  “Kiss us.”

Very Easily Explained

A neighbor whose place adjoined Bronson Alcott’s had a vegetable garden in which he took a great interest.  Mr. Alcott had one also, and both men were especially interested in their potato patches.  One morning, meeting by the fence, the neighbor said, “How is it, Mr. Alcott, you are never troubled with bugs, while my vines are crowded with them?”

“My friend, that is very easily explained,” replied Mr. Alcott.  “I rise very early in the morning, gather all the bugs from my vines and throw them into your yard.”

Proved His Teacher Wrong

Little Willie’s father found his youthful son holding up one of his rabbits by the ears and saying to him:  “How much is seven times seven, now?”

“Bah,” the father heard the boy say, “I knew you couldn’t.  Here’s another one.  Six times six is how much?”

“Why, Willie, what in the world are you doing with your rabbit?” asked the father.

Willie threw the rabbit down with disgust.  “I knew our teacher was lying to us,” was all he said.

“Why, how?” asked his father.

“Why, she told us this morning that rabbits were the greatest multipliers in the world.”

At the Department Store

A man with a low voice had just completed his purchases in the department store, says the “Brooklyn Eagle.”

“What is the name?” asked the clerk.

“Jepson,” replied the man.

“Chipson?”

“No, Jepson.”

“Oh, yes, Jefferson.”

“No, Jepson; J-e-p-s-o-n.”

“Jepson?”

“That’s it.  You have it.  Sixteen eighty-two——­”

“Your first name; initial, please.”

“Oh, K.”

“O.K.  Jepson.”

“Excuse me, it isn’t O. K. You did not understand me.  I said ’Oh’.”

“O.  Jepson.”

“No; rub out the O. and let the K. stand.”

The clerk iooked annoyed.  “Will you please give me your initials again?”

“I said K.”

“I beg your pardon, you said O. K. Perhaps you had better write it yourself.”

“I said ’Oh’——­”

“Just now you said K.”

“Allow me to finish what I started.  I said ‘Oh,’ because I did not understand what you were asking me.  I did not mean that it was my initial.  My name is Kirby Jepson.”

“Oh!”

“No, not O., but K. Give me the pencil, and I’ll write it down for you myself.  There, I guess it’s O. K. now.”

The Worst Death There Is BY BILL NYE

It is now the proper time for the cross-eyed woman to fool with the garden hose.  I have faced death in almost every form, and I do not know what fear is, but when a woman with one eye gazing into the zodiac and the other peering into the middle of next week, and wearing one of those floppy sunbonnets, picks up the nozzle of the garden hose and turns on the full force of the institution, I fly wildly to the Mountains of Hepsidam.

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Project Gutenberg
Good Stories from the Ladies' Home Journal from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.