. The chief. 66. HUMOR FOREWORD. The humor editors sat in their office. liefore them lay a conglomerationof heterogeneous papers; note papers, newspapers, plain writing paper, etc. Uponthese papers were written the humorous incidents of the school, either as jokesor poems. They had beeri handed in for tlie .-Vnnuai. These worthies were ruminating about this mniiature mountain of paper,with the express purpose of selecting therefrom those jokes which were destinedto grace the pages of our illustrious Annual. Presently Putter is seen to lay his Hand of Fate upon a ])iece of bluewrapping paper. H


. The chief. 66. HUMOR FOREWORD. The humor editors sat in their office. liefore them lay a conglomerationof heterogeneous papers; note papers, newspapers, plain writing paper, etc. Uponthese papers were written the humorous incidents of the school, either as jokesor poems. They had beeri handed in for tlie .-Vnnuai. These worthies were ruminating about this mniiature mountain of paper,with the express purpose of selecting therefrom those jokes which were destinedto grace the pages of our illustrious Annual. Presently Putter is seen to lay his Hand of Fate upon a ])iece of bluewrapping paper. He read it and rerear! it. Then he knitted his brows with dis-may, for the joke was not conceivable. Now if this aint a fine example of the ignorance of the human intellect,to hanfl such a thing as that in and call it a joke. He ought to be shot. Whos guilty of that outrage? questioned his assistant. Lud Loddenkem-l)er. answered the editor in disgust. He has a sense of humor like the Sphinxof Egypt. Listen to this


Size: 1249px × 2002px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookauthorgr, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookidchief00gree1