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Show (Ine niiclit a lie and still not follow tlm truth. Tale Girli.-id Tea In arouse a hIiiIi liver - nil ill il,,i:iMii sell il. No n un has come to true greatness who has not ft It In some degree that his lite belongs to his race. Phillips Hrouks. Chilly. "Tiny say the pretty Iioston girl Is n good pick. I wonder what kind of a pick she Is?" "Ice pick, 1 Hipposo." Sco't's Rctecca In "Ivanhoe." Tho character of Kebecca, In Scott's "Ivanhoe" was taken from a beautiful Jewess, Miss Kebecca Gratz of Philadelphia, Phila-delphia, ller steadfastne-is to Juda-Imh, Juda-Imh, when related by Washington lr-vt'-g to Scott, won hl.-i admiration and caused the creation of one of his finest fin-est characters. Simple, Ratrer. lie You are the only woman I ever loved. Sho Do you expect mo to believe that? He I do. I swear It Is true. She Then I believe you. Any man who would expect a woman to believe that cannot havo been much In the company of women. Crutche or Biers. lilchard Croker, at a dinner at New York, expressed a distrust for aeroplanes. aero-planes. "There's nothing underneath them," be laid. 'If the least thing goes wrong, down they drop. "I said to a Londoner the other dny: "'How is your con getting on since he bought a flying machine?' "On crutches, like the rest of them,' the Londoner replied." |