His Pension
“Speaking of the $140,000,000 paid out yearly by the government in
pensions,” said a prominent member of Hood’s brigade to the Post’s
representative, “I am told that a man in Indiana applied for a pension
last month on account of a surgical operation he had performed on him
during the war. And what do you suppose that surgical operation was?”
“Haven’t the least idea.”
“He had his retreat cut off at the battle of Gettysburg!”
The Winner
After the performance of “In Old Kentucky” Friday night three old
cronies went into a saloon with the inflexible determination of taking
a drink. After doing so, they added an amendment in the shape of
another and then tacked on an emergency clause.
When they got to feeling a little mellow they sat down at a table and
commenced lying. Not maliciously, but just ordinary, friendly lying,
about the things they had seen and done. They all tried their hand at
relating experiences, and as the sky was clear, there was no matinee
performance of the Ananias tragedy.
Finally the judge suggested the concoction of a fine large julep—a
julep that would render the use of curling irons unnecessary—and the
one who told the most improbable story should be allowed to produce
the vacuum in the straws.
The major and the judge led off with a couple of marvelous narratives
which were about a tie. The colonel moistened his lips as his eye
rested on the big glass filled with diamonds and amber, and crowned
with fragrant mint. He commenced his story:
“The incident I am about to relate is not only wonderful, but true. It
happened in this very town on Saturday afternoon. I got up rather
early Saturday morning, as I had a big day’s work ahead of me. My wife
fixed me up a rattling good cocktail when I got up and I was feeling
pretty good. When I came downstairs she handed me a five-dollar bill
that had dropped out of my pocket and said: ‘John, you must really get
a better looking housemaid. Jane is so homely, and you never did
admire her. See if you can find a real nice-looking one—and John,
dear, you are working too hard. You must really have some recreation.
Why not take Miss Muggins, your typewriter, out for a drive this
afternoon? Then you might stop at the milliner’s and tell them not to
send up that hat I ordered, and—”
“Hold on. Colonel,” said the judge. “You just drink that mint julep
right now. You needn’t go any further with your story.”
Hungry Henry’s Ruse
Hungry Henry: Madam, I am state agent for a new roller-action,
unbreakable, double-elastic suspender. Can I show you some?
Mrs. Lonestreet: No, there ain’t no man on the place.
Hungry Henry: Well, then, I am also handling something unique in the
way of a silvermounted, morocco leather, dog collar, with name
engraved free of charge. Perhaps—
Mrs. Lonestreet: ’Tain’t no use. I ain’t got a dog.
Hungry Henry: Hat’s what I wanted to know. Now fix me de best supper
you’se kin, and do it quick or it won’t be healthy fur you. See?
A Proof of Love
“If you love me as I love you”—
(Ah, sweet those words to lover’s ear,
’Twas Lois spake, in accents true,
So loving, tender, kind and dear.)
“If you love me as I love you”—
(Ah, heaven and earth were wrapped in bliss,
The wild rose listened, dissolved in dew;
The very zephyrs sought her kiss.)
“If you love me as I love you”—
(Ah, strains from Paradise her words!)
“And if I do, what then?” I asked;
While round us winged the listening birds.
“If you love me as I love you—”
She raised those fringèd eyes of jet,
And whispered low in pleading tones:
“Just fill the wood box, will you, pet?”
One Consolation
Breakfast was over and Adam had gone to his daily occupation of
pasting the names of the animals on their cages. Eve took the parrot
to one side and said: “It was this way. He made a big kick about those
biscuits not being good at breakfast.”
“And what did you say?” asked the parrot.
“I told him there was one consolation; he couldn’t say his mother ever
made any better ones.”
An Unsuccessful Experiment
There is an old colored preacher in Texas who is a great admirer of
the Rev. Sam Jones.1 Last Sunday he determined to drop his old style
of exhorting the brethren, and pitch hot shot plump into the middle of
their camp, after the manner so successfully followed by the famous
Georgia evangelist. After the opening hymn had been sung, and the
congregation led in prayer by a worthy deacon, the old preacher laid
his spectacles on his Bible, and let out straight from the shoulder.
“My dearly belubbed,” he said, “I has been preachin’ to you fo’ mo’
dan five years, and de grace ob God hab failed to percolate in yo’
obstreperous hearts. I hab nebber seen a more or’nery lot dan dis
belubbed congregation. Now dar is Sam Wadkins in de fo’th bench on de
left. Kin anybody show me a no’counter, trashier, lowdowner buck
nigger in dis community? Whar does the chicken feathers come from what
I seen in his back yard dis mawnin’? Kin Brudder Wadkins rise and
explain?”
Brother Wadkins sat in his pew with his eyes rolling and breathing
hard, but was taken by surprise and did not respond.
“And dar is Elder Hoskins, on de right. Everybody knows he’s er lying,
shiftless, beer-drinking bum. His wife supports him takin’ in washin’.
What good is de blood of de Lamb done for him? Wonder ef he thinks dat
he kin keep a lofin’ ’round in de kitchen ob de New Jerusalem?”
Elder Hoskins, goaded by these charges, rose in his seat, and said:
“Dat reminds me ob one thing. I doesn’t remember dat I hab ebber
worked on de county road fur thirty days down in Bastrop County fur
stealin’ a bale of cotton.”
“Who did? Who did?” said the parson, putting on his specs and glaring
at the elder. “Who stole dat cotton? You shet yo’ mouf, niggah, fo’ I
come down dah and bust you wide open. Den dar sets Miss Jinny Simpson.
Look at dem fine clo’es she got on. Look at dem yallar shoes, and dem
ostrick feathers, and dat silk waist and de white glubs. Whar she git
de money to buy dem clo’es? She don’t work none. De Lawd am got his
eye on dat triflin’ hussy, and He’s gwine ter fling her in de burnin’
brimstone and de squenchable pit.”
Miss Simpson arose, her ostrich plumes trembling with indignation.
“You mis’able lyin’ ol’ niggah,” she said. “You don’ pay fur none ob
my clo’es. S’pose you tells dis ’sembled congregation who was it
handed dat big bouquet and dat jib ob cider ober de fence to Liza
Jackson yisterday mawnin’ when her old man gone to work?”
“Dat’s a lie, you sneakin’, low-down spyin’ daughter ob de debble. I
wuz in my house ras’lin in pra’er fur de wicked sisters and brudders
ob dis church. I come down dah an’ smack you in de mouf ef you don’t
shet up. You is all boun’ for de fire ob destruction. You am all
nothin’ but vile sweepins ob de yearth. I see Bill Rodgers ober dar,
who am known to hab loaded dice fur playin’ craps, and he nebber pays
a cent fur what his family eats. De Lawd am shore gwine ter smote him
in de neck. De judgment ob de Spirit am gwine ter rise up an’ call him
down.”
Bill Rodgers stood up and put his thumbs in the armholes of his vest.
“I could name, sah,” he said, “a certain party who wuz run off ob
Colonel Yancy’s fahm fo’ playin’ sebben up wid marked cya’ds, ef I
choosed to.”
“Dat’s anudder lie,” said the preacher, closing his Bible and turning
up his cuffs. “Look out, Bill Rodgers, I’m comin’ down dar to you.”
The preacher got out of his pulpit and made for Bill, but Miss Simpson
got her hands in his wool first, and Sam Wadkins and Elder Hoskins
came quickly to her assistance. Then the rest of the brothers and
sisters joined in, and the flying hymn books and the sound of ripping
clothes testified to the fact that Sam Jones’s style of preaching did
not go in that particular church.
The hen egg that is largest
Was the one she never laid;
And the biggest bet in all the world
Was the one we never made.
And the biggest fight that Dallas had
Was the one that did not go;
And the finest poet in the world was the one
That didn’t write “Beautiful Snow.”
The finest country in all the world
Has never yet been explored,
And the finest artesian well in town
Has not at this time been bored.
By Easy Stages
“You’re at the wrong place,” said Cerberus. “This is the gate that
leads to the infernal regions, while it is a passport to Heaven that
you have handed me.”
“I know it,” said the departed shade wearily, “but it allows a
stopover here; you see, I’m from Galveston and I have got to make the
change gradually.”
Even Worse
Two Houston men were going home one rainy night last week, and as they
stumbled and plowed through the mud across one of the principal
streets, one of them said:
“This is hell, isn’t it?”
“Worse,” said the other. “Even hell is paved with good intentions.”
The Shock
A man with a very pale face, wearing a woolen comforter and holding a
slender stick in his hand, staggered into a Houston drug store
yesterday and leaned against the counter, holding the other hand
tightly against his breast.
The clerk got a graduating glass, and poured an ounce of spiritus
frumenti into it quickly, and handed it to him. The man drank it at a
gulp.
“Feel better?” asked the clerk.
“A little. Don’t know when I had such a shock. I can hardly stand.
Just a little more, now—”
The clerk gave him another ounce of whisky.
“My pulse has started again, I believe,” said the man. “It was
terrible, though!”
“Fell off a wagon?” asked the clerk.
“No, not exactly.”
“Slip on a banana peel?”
“I think not. I’m getting faint again, if you—”
The obliging clerk administered a third dose of the stimulant.
“Street car run over you?” he asked.
“No,” said the pale man. “I’ll tell you how it was. See that red-faced
man out there swearing and dancing on the corner?”
“Yes.”
“He did it. I don’t believe I can stand up much longer. I—thanks.”
The man tossed off the fourth reviver and began to look better.
“Shall I call a doctor?” asked the clerk.
“No, I guess not. Your kindness has revived me. I’ll tell you about
it. I have one of those toy spiders attached to a string at the end of
this stick, and I saw that red-faced man sitting on a doorstep with
his back to me, and I let the spider down over his head in front of
his nose. I didn’t know who he was, then.
“He fell over backwards and cut his ear on the foot-scraper and broke
a set of sixty-dollar false teeth. That man is my landlord and I owe
him $37 back rent, and he holds a ten-dollar mortgage on my cow, and
has already threatened to break my back. I slipped in here and he
hasn’t seen me yet. The shock to my feelings when I saw who it was,
was something awful. If you have a little more of that spirits now,
I—”
The Cynic
Junior Partner: Here’s an honest firm!
Sharp and Simpson send us a check for $50 in addition to their monthly
account, to cover difference in price of a higher grade of goods
shipped them last time by mistake.
Senior Partner: Do they give us another order?
Junior Partner: Yes! The longest they have ever made.
Senior Partner: Ship ’em COD.
“Well! how are they coming?”
“I’m getting a move on me,” said the checkerboard.
“And I’m getting a head in the world,” said the piece of sensation
news.
“I’m dead in it,” said the spoiled bivalve at the clambake.
“I think I shall get along well,” said the artesian water company.
“And my work is all being cut out for me,” said the grape seed.
Speaking of Big Winds
The man with the bronzed face and distinguished air was a great
traveler, and had just returned from a tour around the world. He sat
around the stove at the Lamlor, and four or five drummers and men
about town listened with much interest to his tales.
He was speaking of the fierce wind storms that occur in South America,
when the long grass of the pampas is interlaced and blown so flat by
the hurricanes that it is cut into strips and sold for the finest
straw matting.
He spoke also of the great intelligence of the wild cattle which, he
said, although blown about by the furious hurricanes and compelled to
drift for days before the drenching floods of the rainy season, never
lost their direction by day or night.
“How do they guide themselves?” asked the Topeka flour drummer.
“Oh, by their udders, of course,” said the traveler.
“I don’t see anything to laugh about,” said the Kansas man, “but
speaking of big winds we have something of the kind in our state.
You’ve all heard of the Kansas cyclones, but very few of you know what
they are. We have plenty of them and some are pretty hard ones, too,
but most of the stories you read about them are exaggerated. Still a
good, full-grown cyclone can carry things pretty high sometimes. About
the only thing they spend their fury upon in vain is a real estate
agent. I know a fellow, named Bob Long, who was a real estate hustler
from away back. Bob had bought up a lot of prairie land cheap, and was
trying to sell it in small tracts for farms and truck patches. One day
he took a man in his buggy out to this land and was showing it to him.
‘Just look at it,’ he said. ‘It is the finest, richest piece of ground
in Kansas. Now it’s worth more, but to start things off, and get
improvements to going, I’ll sell you 160 acres of this land at $40
per—!’
“Before Bob could say ‘acre,’ a cyclone came along, and the edge of it
took Bob up straight into the air. He went up till he was nothing but
a black speck and the man stood there and watched him till he was out
of sight.
“The man liked the land, so he bought it from Bob’s heirs, and pretty
soon a railroad cut across it, and a fine flourishing town sprang up
on the spot.
“Well, this man was standing on the sidewalk one day thinking of how
lucky he had been, and about Bob’s unfortunate fate, when he happened
to look up and saw something falling. It grew larger and larger, and
finally it turned out to be a man.
“He came tumbling down, struck the sidewalk with a sound you could
have heard four blocks away, bounded up at least ten feet, came down
on his feet and shouted ‘Front foot!’
“It was Bob Long. His beard was a little grayer and longer, but he was
all business still. He had noticed the changes that had taken place
while he was coming down, and when he finished the sentence that he
began when the cyclone took him up, he altered his language
accordingly. Bob was a hustler. Sometime after that he—”
“Never mind,” said the traveler. “Let’s go in and take something on
this one first. I claim the usual time before the next round.”
Unknown Title
An old woman who lived in Fla.
Had some neighbors who all the time ba
Tea, sugar, and soap
Till she said: “I do hope
I’ll never see folks that are ha.”
An Original Idea
There is a lady in Houston who is always having original ideas.
Now, this is a very reprehensible thing in a woman and should be
frowned down. A woman should find out what her husband thinks about
everything and regulate her thoughts to conform with his. Of course,
it would not be so bad if she would keep her independent ideas to
herself, but who ever knew a woman to do that?
This lady in particular had a way of applying her original ideas to
practical use, and her family, and even neighbors, were kept
constantly on the lookout for something startling at her hands.
One day she read in the columns of an Austin newspaper an article that
caused her at once to conceive an original idea. The article called
attention to the well-known fact that if men’s homes supplied their
wants and desires they would have no propensity to wander abroad,
seeking distraction in gilded saloons. This struck the lady as a
forcible truth, and she boldly plagiarized the idea and resolved to
put it into immediate execution as an original invention.
That night when her husband came home he noticed a curtain stretched
across one end of the sitting room, but he had so long been used to
innovations of all sorts that he was rather afraid to investigate.
It might be stated apropos to the story that the lady’s husband was
addicted to the use of beer.
He not only liked beer, but he fondly loved beer. Beer never felt the
slightest jealousy when this gentleman was out of its sight.
After supper the lady said: “Now, Robert, I have a little surprise for
you. There is no need of your going downtown tonight, as you generally
do, because I have arranged our home so that it will supply all the
pleasures that you go out to seek.”
With that she drew the curtain and Robert saw that one end of the
sitting room had been fitted up as a bar—or rather his wife’s idea of
a bar.
A couple of strips of the carpet had been taken up and sawdust strewn
on the floor. The kitchen table extended across the end of the room,
and back of this on a shelf were arranged a formidable display of
bottles, of all shapes and sizes, while the mirror of the best dresser
had been taken off and placed artistically in the center.
On a trestle stood a fresh keg of beer and his wife, who had put on a
coquettish-looking cap and apron, tripped lightly behind the bar, and
waving a beer mug coyly at him said:
“It’s an idea I had, Robert. I thought it would be much nicer to have
you spend your money at home, and at the same time have all the
amusement and pleasure that you do downtown. What will you have, sir?”
she continued, with fine, commercial politeness.
Robert leaned against the bar and pawed the floor fruitlessly three or
four times, trying to find the foot rest. He was a little stunned, as
he always was at his wife’s original ideas. Then he braced himself and
tried to conjure up a ghastly imitation of a smile.
“I’ll take a beer, please,” he said.
His wife drew the beer, laid the nickel on the shelf and leaned on the
bar, chatting familiarly on the topics of the day after the manner of
bartenders.
“You must buy plenty, now,” she said archly, “for you are the only
customer I have tonight.”
Robert felt a strong oppression of spirits, which he tried to hide.
Besides the beer, which was first rate, there was little to remind him
of the saloons where he had heretofore spent his money.
The lights, the glittering array of crystal, the rattle of dice, the
funny stories of Brown, Jones, and Robinson, the motion and color that
he found in the other places were wanting.
Robert stood still for quite a while and then an original idea struck
him.
He pulled a handful of change from his pocket and began to call for
glass after glass of beer. The lady behind the bar was beaming with
pleasure at the success of her experiment. Ordinarily she had made
quite a row, if her husband came home smelling of beer—but now, when
the profits were falling into her own hands, she made no complaint.
It is not known how many glasses she sold her husband but there was
quite a little pile of nickels and dimes on the shelf, and two or
three quarters.
Robert was leaning rather heavily against the bar, now and then
raising his foot and making a dab for the rod that was not there, but
he was saying very little. His wife ought to have known better, but
the profits rendered her indiscreet.
Presently Robert remarked in a very loud tone:
“Gozzamighty, se’ ’m up all roun’ barkeep’n puzzom on slate ’m
busted.”
His wife looked at him in surprise.
“Indeed, I will not, Robert,” she said. “You must pay me for
everything you have. I thought you understood that.”
Robert looked in the mirror as straight as he could, counted his
reflections, and then yelled loud enough to be heard a block away:
“Gosh dang it, gi’ us six glasses beer and put ’em on ice, Susie, old
girl, or I’ll clean out your joint, ’n bus’ up business. Whoopee!”
“Robert!” said his wife, in a tone implying a growing suspicion,
“you’ve been drinking!”
“Zas d——d lie!” said Robert, as he threw a beer glass through the
mirror. “Been down t’ office helpin’ friend pos’ up books ’n missed
last car. Say, now, Susie, old girl, you owe me two beers from las’
time. Give ’em to me or I’ll kick down bar.”
Robert’s wife was named Henrietta. When he made this remark she came
around to the front and struck him over the eye with a lemon squeezer.
Robert then kicked over the table, broke about half the bottles,
spilled the beer, and used language not suited for the mailable
edition.
Ten minutes later his wife had him tied with the clothes line, and
during the intervals between pounding him on the head with a potato
masher she was trying to think how to get rid of her last great
original idea.
Calculations
A gentleman with long hair and an expression indicating heavenly
resignation stepped off the twelve-thirty train at the Grand Central
Depot yesterday. He had a little bunch of temperance tracts in his
hand, and he struck a strong scent and followed it up to a red-nosed
individual who was leaning on a trunk near the baggage room.
“My friend,” said the long-haired man, “do you know that if you had
placed the price of three drinks out at compound interest at the time
of the building of Solomon’s temple, you would now have
$47,998,645.22?”
“I do,” said the red-nosed man. “I am something of a calculator
myself. I also figured out when the doctor insisted on painting my
nose with iodine to cure that boil, that the first lanternjawed,
bone-spavined, rubbernecked son-of-a-gun from the amen corner of
Meddlesome County that made any remarks about it would have to jump
seventeen feet in nine seconds or get kicked thirteen times below the
belt. You have just four seconds left.”
The long-haired man made a brilliant retreat within his allotted time,
and bore down with his temperance tracts upon a suspicious-looking
Houston man who was carrying home a bottle of mineral water wrapped in
a newspaper to his mother-in-law.
Brother, you should not have given us away. We just had to salt that
vein before we could get it in the market, and when the “salt” gave
out, and the end of the vein was reached, we hoped you wouldn’t notice
the fact. If you hadn’t mentioned it we might have gone on for years
gladdening and instructing and drawing princely salary, but now our
little spurt of our brilliancy will have to put on its pajamas and
retire between the cold sheets of oblivion. We do not blame you at all
for calling the public’s attention to the played-out lode, for it is a
terrible responsibility to guide the footsteps of innocent purchasers
who may be taken in by glittering, quartz and seductive pyrites of
iron. To have one whom we regarded as a friend jerk us backward by the
left leg when we had made such a successful sneak, and were about to
scramble over the back fence of the temple of fame makes us sad, but
we do not repine for:
“ ’Twere better to have spurted and lost
Than never to have spurted at all.”
We really intended our light to burn for years, and to have the wick
snuffed so quickly, although done in sorrowing kindness, causes us to
sputter and smoke a little as we go out.
When the true Messiah comes along and shies his valise over to the
night clerk, and turns back his cuffs ready to fill the long-felt
want; if he should ever hear the whoops of those unappreciative
critics who would crucify him, these few lines may teach him to fly to
Brenham where his papa, the great intellectual lord of the universe,
will protect him.
Solemn Thoughts
The golden crescent of the new moon hung above the market house, and
the night was cool, springlike, and perfect.
Five or six men were sitting in front of the Hutchins House, and they
had gradually shifted their chairs until they were almost in a group.
They were men from different parts of the country, some of them from
cities thousands of miles away. They had been rattled in the dice box
of chance and thrown in a temporary cluster into the hospitable gates
of the Magnolia city.
They smoked and talked, and that feeling of comradeship which seizes
men who meet in the world far from their own homes, was strong upon
them.
They told all their funny stories and compared experiences, and then a
little silence fell upon them, and while the hanging strata of blue
smoke grew thicker, their thoughts began to wander back—as the cows
stray homeward at eventide—to other scenes and faces.
“ ‘And o’er them many a flaming range of vapor buoyed the crescent bark:
And rapt through many a rosy change
The twilight melted into dark,’ ”
quoted the New York drummer. “Heigho! I wish I was at home tonight.”
“Same here,” said the little man from St. Louis. “I can just see the
kids now tumbling round on the floor and cutting up larks before Laura
puts them to bed. There’s one blessing, though, I’ll be home on
Thanksgiving.”
“I had a letter from home today,” said the white-bearded
Philadelphian, “and it made me homesick. I would give a foot of that
slushy pavement on Spruce Street for all these balmy airs and
mockingbird solos in the South. I’m going to strike a bee line for the
Quaker City in time for that fat turkey, I don’t care what my house
says.”
“Yust hear dot band playing,” said the fat gentleman. “I can almost
dink I vos back in Cincinnati ‘neber die Rhein’ mit dot schplendid
little beautiful girl from de hat factory. I dink it is dese lovely
nights vot makes us of home, sweet home, gedinken.”
“Now you’re shoutin’,” said the Chicago hardware drummer. “I wish I
was in French Pete’s restaurant on State Street with a big bottle of
beer and some chitterlings and lemon pie. I’m feelin’ kinder
sentimental myself tonight.”
“The worst part of it is,” said the man with the gold nose glasses and
green necktie, “that our dear ones are separated from us by many long
and dreary miles, and we little know what obstacles in the shape of
storm and flood and wreck lie in our way. If we could but annihilate
time and space for a brief interval there are many of us who would
clasp the forms of those we love to our hearts tonight. I, too, am a
husband and father.”
“That breeze,” said the man from New York, “feels exactly like the
ones that used to blow over the old farm in Montgomery County, and
that ‘orchard and meadow, and deep tangled wildwood,’ etc., keep
bobbing up in my memory tonight.”
“How many of us,” said the man with gold glasses, “realize the many
pitfalls that Fate digs in our path? What a slight thing may sever the
cord that binds us to life! There today, tomorrow gone forever from
the world!”
“Too true,” said the Philadelphia man, wiping his spectacles.
“And leave those we love behind,” continued the other. “The affections
of a lifetime, the love of the strongest hearts, ended in the
twinkling of an eye. One loses the clasp of hands that would detain
and drifts away into the sad, unknowable, other existence, leaving
aching hearts to mourn forever. Life seems all a tragedy.”
“Banged if you ain’t rung the bell first shot,” said the Chicago
drummer. “Our affections get busted up something worse’n killing
hogs.”
The others frowned upon the Chicago drummer, for the man with gold
glasses was about to speak again.
“We say,” he went on, “that love will live forever, and yet when we
are gone others step into our places and the wounds our loss had made
are healed. And yet there is an added pang to death that those of us
that are wise can avoid, the sting of death and the victory of the
grave can be lessened. When we know that our hours are numbered, and
when we lie with ebbing breath and there comes
‘Unto dying ears the earliest pipe
Of half awakened birds;
And unto dying eyes
The casement slowly grows a glimmering square,’
there is sweet relief in knowing that those we leave behind us are
shielded from want.
“Gentlemen, we are all far from home and you know the risks of travel.
I am representing one of the best accident insurance companies on
earth, and I want to write every one of you. I offer you the finest
death, partial disablement, loss of finger or toe, nervous shock, sick
benefit policy known to—”
But the man with gold spectacles was talking to five empty chairs, and
the moon slipped down below the roof of the market house with a
sardonic smile.
Explaining It
A member of the Texas Legislature from one of the eastern counties was
at the chrysanthemum show at Turner Hall last Thursday night, and was
making himself agreeable to one of the lady managers.
“You were in the House at the last session, I believe?” she inquired.
“Well, madam,” he said, “I was in the House, but the Senate had me for
about forty-five dollars when we adjourned.”
Her Failing
They were two Houston girls, and they were taking a spin on their
wheels. They met a fluffy girl who didn’t “bike,” out driving with a
young man in a buggy.
Of course they must say something about her—as this is a true story
and they were real, live girls—so one of them said:
“I never did like that girl.”
“Why?”
“Oh, she’s too effeminate.”
A Disagreement
“Dat Mr. Bergman, vot run de obera house, not dread me right,” said a
Houston citizen. “Ven I go dere und vant ein dicket to see dot
‘Schpider und dot Vly’ gompany de oder night, I asg him dot he let me
in mit half brice, for I was teaf py von ear, and can not but one half
of dot performance hear; und he dell me I should bay double brice, as
it vould dake me dwice as long to hear de berformance as anypody
else.”
An E for a Knee
When Pilgrim fathers landed safe
On Plymouth Rock at last,
They bowed their heads and bent a knee,
And kept a holy fast.
But now to celebrate the day
We dine—to say the least—
We add an “e” into their plan
And change their fast to feast.
The Unconquerable
A man may avoid the Nin-com-poop
By flying fast and far.
And even subdue the Scalawag
By stratagems of war.
And he even may dodge the Fly-up-the-Creek
If he’s lucky and does not fear;
And sometimes conquer the powerful chump.
Though the victory cost him dear.
And a brave man may do up the Galoot,
Though it be a terrible fight,
But no man yet has escaped from the clutch
Of the terrible Blatherskite.
An Expensive Veracity
A Houston man who attended a great many of Sam Jones’s sermons was
particularly impressed with his denunciation of prevaricators, and of
lies of all kinds, white, variegated, and black.
So strongly was he affected and in such fertile ground did the seed
sown by the great evangelist fall, that the Houston man, who had been
accustomed occasionally to evade the truth, determined one morning he
would turn over a new leaf and tell the truth in all things, big and
little. So he commenced the day by scorning to speak even a word that
did not follow the exact truth for a model.
At breakfast, his wife said:
“How are the biscuit, Henry?”
“Rather heavy,” he answered, “and about half done.”
His wife flounced out of the dining room and he ate breakfast with the
children. Ordinarily Henry would have said, “They are very fine, my
dear,” and all would have been well.
As he went out the gate, his rich old aunt, with whom he had always
been a favorite, drove up. She was curled, and stayed, and powdered to
look as young as possible.
“Oh, Henry,” she simpered. “How are Ella and the children? I would
come in but I’m looking such a fright today I’m not fit to be seen.”
“Yes,” said Henry, “you do. It’s a good thing your horse has a blind
bridle on, for if he got a sight of you he’d run away and break your
neck.”
His aunt glared furiously at him and drove away without saying a word.
Henry figured it up afterward and found that every word he said to her
cost him $8,000.
Grounds for Uneasiness
When Sousa’s Band was in Houston a week or so ago, Professor Sousa was
invited to dine with a prominent citizen who had met him while on a
visit to the North.
This gentleman, while a man of high standing and reputation, has made
quite a fortune by the closest kind of dealing. His economies in the
smallest matters are a fruitful subject of discussion in his
neighborhood, and one or two of his acquaintances have gone so far as
to call him stingy.
After dinner Professor Sousa was asked to play upon the piano, of
which instrument he is a master, and he did so, performing some lovely
Beethoven sonatas, and compositions by the best masters.
While playing a beautiful adagio movement in a minor key, the
Professor caught sight of his host casting uneasy glances out of the
window and appearing very restless and worried. Presently the Houston
gentleman came over to the piano and touched Professor Sousa on the
shoulder.
“Say,” he said, “please play something livelier. Give us a jig or a
quickstep—something fast and jolly.”
“Ah,” said the Professor, “this sad music affects your spirits then?”
“No,” said the host, “I’ve got a man in the back yard sawing wood by
the day, and he’s been keeping time to your music for the last half
hour.”
It Covers Errors
Poetic fame can be won this way:
If you happen to have not a thing to say,
And you happen to be close-pressed for time,
And you can’t for your life get a word to rhyme,
And your knowledge of English is somewhat small,
And you have no poetic turn at all,
And can’t write a hand anybody can read.
You are in a first-rate way to succeed;
For who in the world can mix things worse
Than a popular writer of dialect verse?
Recognition
The new woman came in with a firm and confident tread. She hung her
hat on a nail, stood her cane in the corner, and kissed her husband
gayly as he was mixing the biscuit for supper.
“Any luck today, dearie?” asked the man as his careworn face took on
an anxious expression.
“The best of luck,” she said with a joyous smile. “The day has come
when the world recognizes woman as man’s equal in everything. She is
no longer content to occupy a lower plane than his, and is his
competitor in all the fields of action. I obtained a position today at
fifty dollars per week for the entire season.”
“What is the position?”
“Female impersonator at the new theater.”
His Doubt
They lived in a neat little cottage on Prairie Avenue, and had been
married about a year. She was young and sentimental and he was a clerk
at fifty dollars per month. She sat rocking the cradle and looking at
a bunch of something pink and white that was lying asleep, and he was
reading the paper.
“Charlie,” she said, presently, “you must begin to realize that you
must economize and lay aside something each month for the future. You
must realize that the new addition to our home that will bring us joy
arid pleasure and make sweet music around our fireside must be
provided for. You must be ready to meet the obligations that will be
imposed upon you, and remember that another than ourselves must be
considered, and that as our hands strike the chords so shall either
harmony or discord be made, and as the notes mount higher and higher,
we shall be held to account for our trust here below. Do you realize
the responsibility?”
Charlie said “Yes,” and then went out in the woodshed and muttered to
himself: “I wonder whether she was talking about the kid, or means to
buy a piano on the installment plan.”
A Cheering Thought
A weary-looking man with dejected auburn whiskers, walked into the
police station yesterday afternoon and said to the officer in charge:
“I want to give myself up. I expect you had better handcuff me and put
me into a real dark cell where there are plenty of spiders and mice.
I’m one of the worst men you ever saw, and I waive trial. Please tell
the jailer to give me moldy bread to eat, and hydrant water with
plenty of sulphur in it.”
“What have you done?” asked the officer.
“I’m a miserable, low-down, lying, good-for-nothing, slandering,
drunken, villainous, sacrilegious galoot, and I’m not fit to die. You
might ask the jailer, also, to bring little boys in to look at me
through the bars, while I gnash my teeth and curse in demoniac rage.”
“We can’t put you in jail unless you have committed some offense.
Can’t you bring some more specific charge against yourself?”
“No, I just want to give myself up on general principles. You see, I
went to hear Sam Jones last night, and he saw me in the crowd and
diagnosed my case to a T. Up to that time I thought I was a
four-horse team with a yellow dog under the wagon, but Sam took the
negative side and won. I’m a danged old sore-eyed hound dog; I
wouldn’t mind if you kicked me a few times before you locked me up,
and sent my wife word that the old villain that has been abusin’ her
for twenty years has met his deserts.”
“Aw, come now,” said the officer, “I don’t believe you are as bad as
you think you are. You don’t know that Sam Jones was talking about you
at all. It might have been somebody else he was hitting. Brace up and
don’t let it worry you.”
“Lemme see,” said the weary-looking man reflectively. “Come to think
of it there was one of my neighbors sitting right behind me who is the
meanest man in Houston. He is a mangy pup, and no mistake. He beats
his wife and has refused to loan me three dollars five different
times. What Sam said just fits his case exactly. If I thought now—”
“That’s the way to look at it,” said the officer. “The chances are Sam
wasn’t thinking about you at all.”
“Durned if I believe he was, now I remember about that neighbor of
mine,” said the penitent, beginning to brighten up. “You don’t know
what a weight you’ve taken off my mind. I was just feeling like I was
one of the worst sinners in the world. I’ll bet any man ten dollars he
was talking right straight at that miserable, contemptible scalawag
that sat right behind me. Say, come on and let’s go out and take
somethin’, will you?”
The officer declined and the weary-looking man ran his finger down his
neck and pulled his collar up into sight and said:
“I’ll never forget your kindness, sir, in helping me out of this
worry. It has made me feel bad all day. I am going out to the
racetrack now, and take the field against the favorite for a few
plunks. Good day, I shall always remember your kindness.”
What It Was
There was something the matter with the electric lights Tuesday night,
and Houston was as dark as Egypt when Moses blew the gas out. They
were on Rusk Avenue, out on the lawn, taking advantage of the
situation, and were holding as close a session as possible.
Presently she said:
“George, I know you love me, and I am sure that nothing in the world
can change my affection for you, yet I feel that something has come
between us, and although I have hesitated long to tell you, it is
paining me very much.”
“What is it, my darling?” asked George, in an agony of suspense.
“Speak, my own, and tell me what it is that has come between you and
me?”
“I think, George” she softly sighed, “it is your watch.”
And George loosened his hold for a moment and shifted his Waterbury.
Vanity
A poet sang a song so wondrous sweet,
That toiling thousands paused and listened long;
So lofty, strong, and noble were his themes,
It seemed that strength supernal swayed his song.
He, god-like, chided poor, weak, weeping man,
And bade him dry his foolish, shameful tears.
Taught that each soul on its proud self should lean,
And from that rampart scorn all earth-born fears.
The poet groveled on a fresh-heaped mound
Raised o’er the grave of one he fondly loved,
And cursed the world, and drenched the sod with tears,
And all the flimsy mockery of his precepts proved.