The Silly Syclopedia eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about The Silly Syclopedia.

The Silly Syclopedia eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about The Silly Syclopedia.

ABBREVIATIONS USED IN THIS WORK

A.b.            At the bat. 
B.i.            Butt in. 
C.o.            Catch on. 
D.t.l.          Down the line. 
E.s.            Easy street. 
I.t.n.          In the neck. 
I.u.t.y.        It’s up to you. 
I.f.M.          I’m from Missouri. 
M.m.t.s.        Make mine the same. 
N.g.            Nice gentleman. 
O.t.l.          On the level. 
P.d.q.          Pass the butter. 
T.l.            The limit.

* * * * *

PREFACE.

Some eighteen months ago I took this brilliant bunch of brain burrs to my esteemed Publisher and with much enthusiasm invited him to spend a lot of money thereon.

The Main Stem in the Works informed me that he had his fingers on the public pulse and just as soon as that pulse began to jump and yell for something from my fiery pen he would throw the Silly Syclopedia at it.

Then he placed my Ms. in the forward turret of his steel-armored safe, gave me a fairly good cigar and began to look hard in the direction of the elevator.

Last week, while searching for some missing government bonds, my Publisher found my sadly neglected Ms. He at once reached over and grabbed the public pulse.  To his astonishment it was jumping and making signs in my direction.

In a frenzied effort to make up for lost time my publisher then yelled feverishly for a printer.

Enclosed please find the result.

In the meantime, however, I figure that I have lost $41,894.03 in royalties, $74 worth of glory and about 14 cents worth of fame—­tough, isn’t it?

I think my Publisher should be censured for going out golfing and taking his fingers off the public pulse.

Don’t you?

Noah Lott.

  Chestnut Hill
  June 12th, 1905

* * * * *

[Illustration:  “A—­A flush fool.”]

A man can drop a lot of dough trying to pick up money.

A fool and his money are soon spotted.

An accommodation liar soon learns to run like an express.

A guilty conscience needs no accuser if you catch him at it.

* * * * *

###
 A:  An adjective, commonly called the indefinite article because
     the higher the fewer.
###

* * * * *

A bas.  A French word meaning “S’cat!”

[Illustration]

A sharp.  A musical term which cannot be explained here, because the
Musical Union might get sore.

A flat.  A people coop.  Seven rooms and a landlord, with hot and cold gas and running servants.  A flat is the poor relation of an apartment.

Abroad.  A place where people go to be cured of visiting foreign lands.

Abscond.  To duck with the dough.  From The Latin word absconditto, meaning to grab the long-green and hike for the Bad Lands.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Silly Syclopedia from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.