TIME


Mrs. Hooligan was suffering from the common complaint of having more to

do than there was time to do it in. She looked up at the clock and then

slapped the iron she had lifted from the stove back on the lid with a

clatter. "Talk about toime and toide waitin' fer no man," she muttered

as she hurried into the pantry; "there's toimes they waits, an' toimes

they don't. Yistherday at this blessed minit 'twas but tin o'clock an'
/> to-day it's a quarther to twilve."





MRS. MURPHY--"Oi hear yer brother-in-law, Pat Keegan, is pretty bad

off."



MRS. CASEY--"Shure, he's good for a year yit."



MRS. MURPHY--"As long as thot?"



MRS. CASEY--"Yis; he's had four different doctors, and each one av thim

give him three months to live."--_Puck_.





A long-winded attorney was arguing a technical case before one of the

judges of the superior court in a western state. He had rambled on in

such a desultory way that it became very difficult to follow his line of

thought, and the judge had just yawned very suggestively.



With just a trace of sarcasm in his voice, the tiresome attorney

ventured to observe: "I sincerely trust that I am not unduly trespassing

on the time of this court."



"My friend," returned his honor, "there is a considerable difference

between trespassing on time and encroaching upon eternity."--_Edwin

Tarrisse_.





A traveler, finding that he had a couple of hours in Dublin, called a

cab and told the driver to drive him around for two hours. At first all

went well, but soon the driver began to whip up his horse so that they

narrowly escaped several collisions.



"What's the matter?" demanded the passenger. "Why are you driving so

recklessly? I'm in no hurry."



"Ah, g'wan wid yez," retorted the cabby. "D'ye think thot I'm goin' to

put in me whole day drivin' ye around for two hours? Gitap!"





Frank comes into the house in a sorry plight.



"Mercy on us!" exclaims his father. "How you look! You are soaked."



"Please, papa, I fell into the canal."



"What! with your new trousers on?"



"Yes, papa, I didn't have time to take them off."





A well-known Bishop, while visiting at a bride's new home for the first

time, was awakened quite early by the soft tones of a soprano voice

singing "Nearer, My God, to Thee." As the Bishop lay in bed he meditated

upon the piety which his young hostess must possess to enable her to

begin her day's work in such a beautiful frame of mind.



At breakfast he spoke to her about it, and told her how pleased he was.



"Oh," she replied, "that's the hymn I boil the eggs by; three verses for

soft and five for hard."





There was a young woman named Sue,

Who wanted to catch the 2:02;

Said the trainman, "Don't hurry

Or flurry or worry;

It's a minute or two to 2:02."





FATHER--"Mildred, if you disobey again I will surely spank you."



On father's return home that evening, Mildred once more acknowledged

that she had again disobeyed.



FATHER (firmly)--"You are going to be spanked. You may choose your own

time. When shall it be?"



MILDRED (five years old, thoughtfully)--"Yesterday."





A northerner passing a rundown looking place in the South, stopped to

chat with the farmer. He noticed the hogs running wild and explained

that in the North the farmers fattened their hogs much faster by

shutting them in and feeding them well.



"Hell!" replied the southerner, "What's time to a hog."





Dost thou love life? Then waste not time; for time is the stuff that

life is made of.--_Benjamin Franklin_.





Time fleeth on,

Youth soon is gone,

Naught earthly may abide;

Life seemeth fast,

But may not last

It runs as runs the tide.



--_Leland_.





_See also_ Scientific management.



More

;