THE JOKER'S BUDGET. SOME FUNNY THINGS TOLD BY THE HUMOROUS WRITERS. She was Very Joking: One Reason Why Tlie Dog was Left He Cam Down Mildly A Cure for Indigestion. Etc., Etc. . FULLY QUALIFIED. "I see," said the dude to the banker, "that you advertise for a young man of unquestioned integrity and good ad dress to become your private messen ger. Now my integrity is A 1, and as for my address, it is No. 67 Murray Hill. There's no better in town." , But the banker was too busy . to talk just theD, and the engagement did not take place. NOT MUCH BREAKAGE. "I suppose Miss Astorgoold's rejection of young Snipkins nearly broke .h:s heart?" . "No, it didn't break his heart, but it busted his scheme to go abroad on her money.'-.' A WEEPING MOTHER. Young Man (to editor) Here is a little rjoem of a rjathetic nature, sir. I showed it to my mother, and she actual ly cried over it. Editor (after reading the vpoem ) You say your mother cried ? . Young Man Yes sir. Editor Well, you go home and promise your mother never to write any more poetry, and I think the old lady will dry her eyes. HE FORGOT ONE COURSE. "It seems to me, Maria, that we've had nothing but veal, veal, veal for breakfast all this week," remarked Mr. Bentley. "You forgot another thing we've had, Kobert," replied the "old day, quietly, "we've had growl, growl, growl for breakfast every day too." And then Johnny Bentley was sent away from the table for laughing at "nuthin." SHE WAS JOKING. They were on their bridal tour, and she said gaily : "Now. Fred, we don't want everybody in the car to know that we are newly married, and have them all staring at us. Let us act like -real old married people. It'll be such jolly fun." . "All right," said Fred, calmly. "You just let me have that end of the seat ; its lots pleasanter than this. I'll take the pillow, too, and I guess I'll go to sleep for three or four hours. You waken me when we come to the dinner station. Spread that shawl over me, and " "Oh, I don't care who knows that we're just married," she said. "Sit where you are, dear, and hold my hand." Tid Bits. SUMMERING. He (from Cincinnati) Where shall you summer Miss De Pester ? She (from Boston) la Maine. Mr. Gooseboy. We always go there. Papa wants us to fall in New York, but I'd a good deal rather spring there. A friend of ours autumed in New York last year and she didn't like it at all. Judge. LUCID. , Teacher (to class) In the stanza what is meant by the. line 'The shades of night were falling fast?" Bright scholar The people were pul ling down the blinds. Puck. A CURE FOR INDIGESTION. "I cook me oop somedings," complain ed Mrs. Issacstein of Chatham street, "und 1 vasn't able to eat noddings. Dere was troubles mit dot dyspepsia." "Vat you do for dot ?" inquired Mrs. Durkheimer.. "Veil, I dinks I go mit a boarding house und pays by der veek. Den I sot to eat." . A LIGHTSOME HEART, "Children," said a school teacher, "always be cheerful. Whatever falls to your lot to do, do it cheerfully." "Yes indeed, dear teacher," responded a bright little scholar, "even the 'skeet ers sing when they are at work." HE WILTj BE ALIi RIGHT. Country Wife (at the ballet) Isn't it awful, John ! Countryman (drawing a long breath) Yes'es, but I'm slowly gettin' used to it. PUNISHED. "It was a severe punishment," said the father, self-reproachfully, "but it answers the purpose. It kept Johnny from running on the street." "You did n't cripple the boy, did you?" "No, I had his mother cut his hair for him. You ought to see the poor boy." Chicago Tribune. WlIiliINQ TO KISK IT. "Do you know, young man," said the old gentleman, looking keenly at him, "that in asking me for my daughter you ask me to part with something that is most dear to me?" "Yes sir," said the business-like youth, "and I expect she will be rather dear to me, too; but it will take her a long time to ran through with fifty shares of gas stock and 600 acres of Nebraska land. I'll risk it." Chicano Tribune. FOOUSH QUESTIONS. Father (whom Bobby has induced to take him) Now, Bobby, I don't quite understand this. If the man who throws the tall fails to hit the club after three trails, does that put the umpire out ? Bobby Pa, do you remember why you sent me to bed last night at 7 o'clock. . Father Why, n-no. Bobby It was for asking foolish ques ions. N. Y, Sun, HEATING. A Frenchman saw a negro sitting close by a fire which was so hot that it seemed almost a certainty to him that the man must be melted. "I zink I know vy he seet so near ze fire," said the Frenchman after looking wonderingly at the colored man. "He make himzelf into one white man." "How can he do that, please V "Ah, you see he heat himzelf to ze white heat FINANCIAL ITEM. A. Did you gain anything in your "Wall street speculations? B. Oh, yes; 1 acquired the idea that I was an ass. "Is that all? "Why, I could have told you that before you attempted to go in. HE HAD IT READY. Good-by, wifey: if I am detained by business and not able to come home to dinner I'll' send you a telegram." Wife (frigidly) You needn't take that trouble. Here it is. I took it out of your pocket a while ago. Texas Sift ings. ROTS TOGETHER. Wife (retrospectively) I can remem ber so well, John, how fond you and my first husband were of each other. You were boys together, and your friendship lasted to the end. Husband (adly) Ah, yes, poor fel low! his death has been a sad blow to me.- Harper's Baza?'. TWO OF A KIND. A man strolled into a fashionable church just before the service began. The sexton followed him up, and tapping him on the shoulder and pointing to a small cur that had followed him into the sacred edifice, said: "Dogs are not admitted." "That's not my dog," replied the vis itor. "But he follows you." "Well, so do you." The sexton growled, and removed the dog with unnecessary violence. London Graphic. TADPOLE SODA. Customer This is what I call tadpole soda. Proprietor What do you mean by that, sir?" Customer Simply that it has more head than body. CHARITABLE VIEW. Miss Lulu Japonica Rose Bouche was a hateful thing to leave you out of the dinner she gave for Sir Botten Rowe ? Miss Charity Ball Oh, don't say that I I think she is a very sensible girl ! Miss Lulu Japonica Well, I think it's very noble of you to say such nice things about her, but " Miss Charity Ball Yes, you see, she naturally wished to be the prettiest girl in the room ! Puck. A SAD FATE. "No, ma'am," said the tramp grateful ly, as he shouldered his bundle and pre pared to start on again, "I don't keer fur nuthin' more to eat, but I'd be obleeged if you'll give me two or three o' them biscuits. I don't carry, no weepins, and they've got a savage dog at that next house." Chicago Tribune. NO LAND IN SIGHT. It is said that the Bishop of London went to see ono of his parishioners, a lady with a prodigious family which had recently been increased. As he rose to leave the lady stopped him with: "But you haven't seen my last baby." "No," he quickly replied, "and I never expect to." Then, it is stated, he fled. Christian Union. IT IS POET. Instructor By the way, Mr. Straddle which is the more general term, poo t or Mr. Straddle Poet. "Can you give me a reason for it?" "I think so, sir. It is probably be cause a j)oet is born, not maid.'" Ind ianapolis Tribune. BOUND TO LOSE IT. First Man (with fan) Didn't you say the other day that the sun was losing its heat ? Second Man (with fan) Yes, all the scientists agree on that. "Well, 1 believe it now. The sun can't keep this up very long and havo any left." Texas Sif ting's. THE REASON WHr. Steve Yes, poor Blivins does look melancholy, as you say. He still suffers from the consequences of an early love affair. Maud (instantly interested) Oh, tell me, did the young lady die or prove false? Steve Neither. She married him. THE PEACH CROP. Stranger My dear sir, you seem to be suffering great mental distress. Gloomy Man You are right; I am. "What is the matter?" "I am a Delaware fruit grower, and I have every reason to fear that the peach crop this year is a success." Texas Siftings. HAD BEEN SICK. The other day a prosperous-looking granger, with money in both pockets and hayseed in his hair, got on a street car in Washington going to the Capitol, and took his seat. Next to him sat a patient man, wearing a patch over one eye. After a while the Granger, who was nearly bursting with curiosity, said to the patient man: "I say, mister, I reckon you're a Con j gressman, or su'thin of the sort, ain't ' ver?" I "No, I ain't no Congressman," the pa i tient man replied sadly. "I have been ick, and that's why I'look so bad." MUSCUL1B TT03EE5. A Pair "of Stalwart Sisters Who are Skilful Scullers. From the Cincinnati Enquirer. "Is Mf&s Mollie in, Mrs. Kane ?" The remark was addressed to bare headed woman of fifty who stood inthe yard of her modest home on tha New port bank of the Licking. "That she is," and out came a young lady of eighteen, swinging a green sun bonnet in her left hand, her face freckled and sunburnt, but whose every move ment was that of an athlete, strong, muscular and inured to hardship. "We've come over to see you and Miss Kate, your sister, do some sculling." She smiled and sat down on a bench un der a grapevine arbor. "The sculls are on your side of the river, at the boat-house, and John is away, but I guess we can manage it." With no further ado, and while the artist and reporter were examining a neat gold medal indicating that on July 19, 1886, Mollie Kane had won the lap stretch, the proud mother sat by. "How long have your daughters been sculling, Mrs. Kane ?" Letting both hands on her knees and wagging her head knowingly, "when they wanted Mollie to row in a skiff race, and I see them things they calls sheik?, I said they shouldn't. Skiffs was only fit for little children and kids; they'd row in the shells or nothing." "But how did the girls get used to boat-riding, anyhow?" "Oh I" shaking her head, "it came natural to 'em. Why, they were born right on this corner, and we've never lived further than sixty feet from the river, and they took to the water like young ducks that they did." "You are a river family, then ?" "That we all are," said Mrs. Kane with a manifest touch of motherly pride. "Why, one of my sons goes down in the diving-bell." "But weren't you worried when they were children playing about the water?" "Never a bit. I heard every day that men were being drowned down at the river, but I knew if the girls were born' to be drowned they would be, and that's all there was of it." By this time Mollie appeared in a trim-fitting black dress and said: "I'll get Kate, and we'll soon have these shells." Kate was found at the house of a married sister and the two girls were soon in a skiff rowing down the Licking in a style that made the skiff fairly dance over the water. The sun poured down its terrible rays red-hot. Strong policemen in Cincin nati were keeling over with sunstrokes, but these two girls crossed the Ohio, riding in the wake of towboats to the boat-house of Herr Schmidt, and in three-quarters of an hour by the watch were back. It took no time for the ladies to throw the skiff chains to somebody in the boat house, and how they did it no one could tell, but it was no time before both were in their seats, and, backing water, were soon out in the middle of the stream in the shells. The shells are light, water-tight affairs that upset at the slightest provocation. They weigh about fifty pounds each, and are pointed at each end. In the centre is a hole 16 inches wide by 4 feet long and a sliding seat. The girls sat a little aft of the centre and balanced the fragile craft with the oars. The oar paddles simply skim the surface. Now came the fun. They started out neck and neck. A crowd of fully two hundred gath ered on the Newport Bridge to see the two girls in a boiling sun shooting like mad down to the Licking's mouth, a quarter of a mile away. Then, grace fully turning, they came back. The shells noiselessly shot through the water. A novice could scarcely tell any differ ence between the two girls. Mollie ap peared the stouter her weight is 176, and Kate has the advantage of being lighter, as she weighs only 120 pounds. Mollie was eighteen years of age and Kate her senior by four years, being twenty-two. Their faces glowed with color. They tossed off their bonnets and their raven locks glistened in the sunlight. As they bent forward and back, their feet braced, the rise and fall of their limbs and mo tion of their muscular arms were as regular as the beats of a piece of ma chinery. Capt. I. C. F. Kinsey, of the Olivette, was standing in the forward end of his boat and looking on. "Any danger of those girls drowning, captain?" "No more than a fish." he laconically replied. It would not be a bad idea for some body to get up a sculling race and have it open for ladies; then the Misses Kane could show the public what a woman can do. - 1 SIBERIA'S FROZEN ELEPHANTS. Tons of Frozen Elephant Meat in Siberia's Refrigerator. One of the enigmas that have much exercised the ingenuity of geologists is that presented by the frozen-up mam moths of Siberia. Here are found huge animals that belong to the fossil world, and yet are not mere fossil skeletons, but whole creatures in the flesh, with hair and all intact, preserved in ice like New Zealand mutton, so fresh they may even be cooked and eaten with impunity. How came they there, seeing that, in spite of their hairy sides and back, they are herbivora that have lived in a climate where vegetation is abundant? They are, in fact, nearly allied to tropical and sub-tropical elephants; their bones, found in other places with those of other animals indicate a habitat in the temperate zones. They must somehow have been caught napping by a sudden of olimate, or,! i?r fata has sucrcrested - many speculations concerning the cause of such sudden change. Has the axis of the earth shifted? Have they been caught by mighty floods, followed by mysterious change of climate ? Or has the whole country been suddenly up heaved and suddenly depressed if Have they been entombed by "a single catas trophe or by a series? etc. The con troversy has of lata become mixed up witli thpoloirical controversv. and. as usual, this element has rather magnified the confusion ana discordance 01 Hypo thesis. Under these circumstances I per petrate the presumption of offering an original explanation which, so far as I can learn, is also new. It is this: Si beria, as a glance at a good map will show, is a vast plain intersected with very long sluggish rivers, extending over a great range of latitude. In the winter the northern regions of this great area include the very coldest part of the known world. In the summer these plains are luxuriant to an extent scarcely credible to those who have not ex perienced the torrid contradictions ot an Arctic summer, due to to the continu ance of sunshine all through the day and all the night. The southern limits of these plains are fully within the tem perate zone. The Irtish and Ienisei rivers flow from the latitude of Yenice into the Arctic Ocean. My theory is, in the presence of these data, very simple, viz.: That the mammoths of old behaved on land as the swallows of to-day behave in the air. We know that he'elephant can run, can persevere in running, provided the ground is favorable for such locomotion. What, then, was there to prevent such animal from following the sun at the rate of from, say, 100 miles per day, or 10 deg. of latitude per week, and there by following the growth of the great supplies of food that so large a beast must require ? Following the banks of one of the great Siberian rivers, the southern journey of 2,000 and odd miles would be a mere holiday trip for such monsters, and the return journey down hill still easier. But such journeys must have exposed them to occasional disasters. An early and sudden arrival of winter, a blizzard, or a flood, would in the ordinary course sometimes overwhelm the hindmost and sweep their carcases into the river. As all those rivers flow northward, these carcases drift with the first winter ice to the places where they are now found, i. e., on the banks of rivers which have been undermined by floods. Diphtheria Spread by Cats. Domestic animals have often not only been suspected but found guilty of spreading infection. In his report on the recent sustained prevalence of diph theria in Enfield, Dr. Bruce Low, ofrthe Medical Department of the Local Gov ernment Board, incidentally states that during the continuance of the epidemic cats were observed to suffer in considera ble numbers from illness, and in Decem ber, 1887, and January, 1888, there was a large mortality among those animals, so much so that the attention of the dust contractor was directed to it. He stated that never m his previous experience had he seen so many dead cats in the dust heaps. Some households, seeing their cats ill, destroyed them. . Though there were no known cases of diphtheria occurring in the practice of the veteri nary surgeon at Enfield, yet they saw many cases of "influenza" at this time among animals. The following is an illustration of the possible connection between diphtheria in children and in cats: A little boy was taken ill with what turned out ultimately to be fatal diph theria. On the first day of his illness he was sick, and the cat, which was in the room at the time, licked the vomit on the floor. In a few days (the child meanwhile having died) the animal was noticed to be ill, and her sufferings be i ng so severe and so similar to those of the dead boy, the owner destroyed her. During the early part of its illness this cat had been let out at nights in the back yard, as usual. A few days later the cat of a neighbor who lived a few doors further off was noticed to be ill. It had also been out in the backyards at night. The second animal, which, how ever, recovered, was the pet and play fellow of four little girls, who, grieved at the illness of their favorite, nursed it with great care. All four girls develop ed diphtheria, their mother being con vinced that they got it from, the cat; and, indeed, no other known source of contact with infection could be discover ed. It is easy to imagine cats catching an infectious disease like diphtheria when we remember how often milk and other unused food from the sick room is given to the cat, or by some people thrown out into the back yard for the benefit of their neighbors' cats if they have none of their own. It is a frequent occurrence to see children carrying cats in their arms, and even kissing them. It is obvious that if the cat were ill with diphtheria the children under such cir cumstances would almost inevitably con tract the disease. London Sanitary Record, A MAD RACE. 1 "Don't you think that the majority of people are a little off' "A majority ? Why, bless your heart, everybody's crazy, more or less, and has been from the beginning with the possible exception of Adam, and I rather thing there "was a hereditary taint in his blood. Boston Transcript. the fault. He I was no mortified that you should see me fall from my bicycle, Miss Maude, but I can assure you the fault rested entirely on the bicycle. She Yes, for a moment, Mr. Geelip, and than the bicycle rested entirely oa the fnult. THE SEW PHAEIoj. Just the Least Bit of . n, of Love , . Jj thSJ.' ? beta,, i cunao .4 - . - 1 pilOCMJU, iuhwq Dy a Tair rst v-l - Domes, inst rflsinn i "uain Impatiently towSd f ? ud vuuuoiM wiauow. "If any one else but Dr. Lester Ki purchased such an elegant new we might have been excused foS? taming hopes of emovino- I but that conned" old Wh7l i rather take his iminmt omj than one of us. And I have up my mind to have the the phaeton." 1 nde "Easier said than done!" obsmeJ saucy Linda Gray. . "You Wyoa a speaking of an impossibility now r! will make you a present of your wedfc 1 dress if you succeed." U T0 each Eair f J?6 fads to wear tomv ding, Bell answered gayly; and tawl Browns parlors were soon vacated me iiierry pany mat nau been the afternoon with his only daughter "How could I have been so fmiuv been Rr frwii;..v. thought impulsive Bell, as she stood In "" luuAiug uuhu me quiet street. "He cares nothing for me now, and will think me more childish than ever Vi he hears of this." But she thought how he had passed that afternoon without even glancing no at the window where she had stood, hoping at least to receive a bow. And thon he raised his hat a moment after ward to old Mrs. Lee. She was quite angry now, as she thought of his indifference, and as the new phaeton came slowly down the street again she went quickly down the marble steps, and Dr. Lester, gazin more earnestly than he knew at the dark blue dress and brown curls fluttering ia the wind, drew up before the door. 6 "Doctor," she said, looking up in the grave, handsome face, "are yoa going pver the river to-night ?" The gentleman bowed, and looked calmly down on the sweet face that flushed so brightly as she proffered her request. "There's a iadv at Uncle Will's that I want to come over to-night. "Will stop and bring her with you?" yoa ' 'Certainly. Is your cold any better ! You must keep out of the night air or I will not answer for the consequences." Bell tried to look indifferent, but the brown eyes filled with tears and her cheeks burned hotly as she thought that he would have asked the same question of all the old women in the town. She closed the door with a little more force than was necessary, and, donning her cloak and a large hood, was soon walk ing briskly in the direction of the uncle's where she had requested Dr. Lester to call for her friend. It was quite late when the doctor ar rived and gave the bell an impatient pull, and, after what seemed an age, a middle-aged lady answered it "Is Miss Brown's friend here?" he asked, taking the hand that was quickly extended. The lady's face flushed, but she an swered in the afSmative. A slight figure soon appeared, muffled in cloak and hood, and in a hoarse voice bade the gentleman good evening. Horace bowed in return and looked curiously down at the little figuie. "Are you Miss Brown's friend?" he asked, not knowing what else to say. "Yes, the best friend she ever had," came hoarsely from under the hood. "You seem to have a pold," said Hor ace, still standing in the doo playing with his whip, while his eyes rested on a long brown curl that had escaped from beneath the hideous hood. "I vould advise you to be careful and keepont oi the night air as much as possible." "Keep out of the night air, indeed! Bell's lip curled scornfully as she re ceived the advice given to the stranger, as it had been given to her a few hours before. Dr. Lester assisted her down the steps, and Bell, with a triumphant smile, assisted into the carriage. But that smile died away, and she could tare cried with anger and mortification as se found herself in an old buggy that Hor ace had used until lately, and his fatne. had used before him. . As they rode along the doctors thoughts were wandering from h.s qui" companion to the brown-haired girl had looked up so shyly when she asfcea a favor that afternoon. , He had quite forgotten the lady by C side, when a small hand was place u his arm and a sweet voice said: "Dr. Lester, I am so sorry that 1 w ceived you." - , vr He only looked down on the bn-r young face and soft brown eyes, bu: not answer. , , "Won't you forgive me?' she a pleadinglv. "The girls thought I not get a ride in the phaeton we adsau so much, and I was so silly, and pru ised them white kids if I did nots ceed " .A Tears were filling the soft voice. Dr. Lester took the trembling hand firm clasp, and said earnestly : "But if I call for you to-morrow ai "23UI 11 x can ior yuu t---, f noon, will you ride with me in the d . noon, will you ride with me in phaeton as the owner's promised mi L The answer must have tory, for the next day the VnlS before Lawyer Brown's door, ?a JTof preparing the wedding dress she Buffalo 2ieu:s. FAST TIME. It was at Saratoga and he h&& P5510 ately declared his love. a(TSn2S,m "I am wholly yours, Mr- J 5fl tho happy girfreplied V kindly leavl your card 2 Not as a guarantee of good explained, "but I am curious w your full name."