IO2 SOME SALESMEN AND OTHERS. 



SOME SALESMEN AND 

 OTHERS. 



THE typical traveling man knows hew 

 to wear good clothes, and will converse 

 upon any subject from protoplasm to the 

 rearing of children. He will " josh " a 

 baby up and down to relieve a tired 

 mother on a long journey, and is willing 

 at any time to usurp from the landscape 

 the pretty girl's attention to himself and 

 his deeds of prowess, from "delightful 

 trips " and " car load lots " to the " best 

 room in the house." 



It is not his fault if the pretty girl 

 suffers from ennui. If she will only give 

 him a fair show he will surely hit upon 

 something to make her journey pleasant. 

 He knows everybody and everything 

 worth knowing. Her name may be 

 Smith. One of his very best customers 

 an " elegant gentleman," is named Smith. 

 Or " you remind me very much of a 



