<h3>A stitch in time saves embarrassing exposure.</h3>
<div class="block"><p><b>BABY</b></p>
<div class="imgl" style="width: 30%;">
<ANTIMG border="0" src="images/baby.png" width-obs="90%" alt="baby" /></div>
<p class="noin">From Grk. <i>babai</i>, wonderful. Parents are yet to be heard from who
don't think theirs is a "wonder."</p>
<p>A nocturnal animal to which everyone in a sleeping-car is eager to
give a wide berth.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BACHELOR</b> From Latin <i>baculus</i>, a stick, unattached. Hence, an
unattached man, which any lady may stick, stick to, or get
stuck on.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BACKBITER</b> A mosquito.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BALANCE</b> Something wanted by book-keepers and often lost by
topers. May be found in a cash-book or the kangaroo gait.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BANDIT</b> An outlaw. See <b>ALDERMAN</b>.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BARBER</b> A brilliant conversationalist, who occasionally shaves
and cuts hair. Syn. for Phonograph.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BARS</b> Things found in harbors, hotels, fences, prisons, courts
and music. (Those found in courts and in music are full of
beats).</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BARGAIN</b></p>
<div class="imgl" style="width: 30%;">
<ANTIMG border="0" src="images/bargain.png" width-obs="95%" alt="bargain" /></div>
<p class="noin">A disease common to women, caught in the Sunday papers and
developed in department stores on Mondays. Symptoms, loud
talk, pushing and shoving, a combination prize-fight and
foot-ball scrimmage. (Old spelling <i>Bark-gain</i>).</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BASEBALL</b> A game in which the young man who bravely strikes out
for himself receives no praise for it.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BAT</b> Senior partner of Bat, Ball & Co., and never found without
the rest of the firm, as it takes several high-balls to make
one short bat.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BEACH</b> A strip of sand, skirted by water; covered with
lady-killers in summer, life-savers in winter, and used as a
haven—or heaven—for Smacks the year around.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BENEDICT</b> A married male.</p>
<p><b>BENEDICTINE</b> A married female.</p>
<p><b>BENEDICTION</b> Their children.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BERTH</b> An aid to sleep, invented by Pullman. Lower preferred.</p>
<p><b>BIRTH</b> An aid to life, discovered by Woman. Higher preferred.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BICYCLE-SKIRT</b> A abbreviated garment that makes women look
shorter and men longer.</p>
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<p><b>BIGAMY</b> A form of insanity in which a man insists on paying three
board bills instead of two.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BILLIOUSNESS</b> A liver complaint often mistaken for piety.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BILL-OF-FARE</b> A list of eatables. Distinguished from Menu by
figures in the right-hand column.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BIOGRAPH</b> A stereopticon picture taken with a chill and shown
with tremors.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BIRDIE</b> A term a woman is apt to apply to a man she is playing
for a jay.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BIRTHDAY</b> Anniversary of one's birth. Observed only by men and
children.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BLUBBER</b> The useful product of a dead whale. The useless product
of a live baby.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BLUE</b> The only color we can feel. <b>INVISIBLE BLUE</b> A policeman.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BLUSH</b> A temporary erythema and calorific effulgence of the
physiognomy, aeteologized by the perceptiveness of the
sensorium, in a predicament of inequilibrity, from a sense of
shame, anger or other cause, eventuating in a paresis of the
vase-motorial, muscular filaments of the facial capillaries,
whereby, being divested of their elasticity, they become
suffused with a radiance emanating from an intimidated
praecordia.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BOARD</b> An implement for administering corporal punishment, used
by mothers and land-ladies. "The Festive Board" may be a
shingle, a hair-brush a fish-hash breakfast or a stewed prune
supper.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BOHEMIA</b> (Not on the map.) A land flowing with canned milk and
distilled honey and untroubled by consistency, convention,
conscience or cash. A land to which many are called and few
chosen.</p>
<p><b>BONE</b> One Dollar—the original price of a wife. Note, Adam, who
had to give up one bone before he got Eve.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BONNETS</b> A female head trouble, which is contracted the latter
part of Lent and breaks out on Easter.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BOODLE</b> Money, born of poor, but dishonest parents, and taken in
by the Graft family.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BORROW</b> v. t., to swap hot air for cold coin.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BOWER</b> A shady retreat, in general.</p>
<p><b>BOWERY</b> A shady retreat in New York.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BRACE</b> Security for the trousers.</p>
<p><b>BRACER</b> Security for the stomach.</p>
<p><b>BRACELET</b> Security for the pawn-broker.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BRAIN</b> The top-floor apartment in the Human Block, known as the
Cranium, and kept by the Sarah Sisters—Sarah Brum and Sarah
Belum, assisted by Medulla Oblongata. All three are nervous,
but are always confined to their cells. The Brain is done in
gray and white, and furnished with light and heat, hot or cold
water, (if desired), with regular connections to the outside
world by way of the Spinal Circuit. Usually occupied by the
Intellect Bros.,—Thoughts and Ideas—as an Intelligence
Office, but sometimes sub-let to Jag, Hang-Over & Co.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BRAND</b> Something carried on the hip, by either beast or man. Can
be found on the outside of a short, red steer, or the inside
of a long, black bottle.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BRASS BAND</b> A clever though somewhat complicated arrangement for
holding a crowd together.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BRICK</b> An admirable person made of the right sort of clay and
possessing plenty of sand. What your friends call you before
you go to the wall—but never afterward.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BRIMSTONE</b> A little bit of Hades, which finds its match on earth
and smells to heaven. Better to strike it here than in the
hereafter.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BREVITY</b> A desirable quality in the Fourth of July oration but
not in the fireworks.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BROKE</b> A word expressing the ultimate condition of one who is too
much bent on speculating.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BUM</b> A fallen tough.</p>
<p><b>BUMP</b> A tough fall.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BUNCO</b> The art of disseminating knowledge in the rural districts.</p>
<hr style="clear: both;" />
<p><b>BY-STANDER</b> One who is injured in a street fight.</p>
</div>
<br/>
<hr style="width: 33%;" />
<br/>
<h3>People who live in glass houses should dress in the dark.</h3>
<br/>
<div class="fig"><ANTIMG border="0" src="images/c.png" alt="C" /></div>
<br/><br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />