Identified
A stranger walked into a Houston bank the other day and presented a
draft to the cashier for payment.
“You will have to be identified,” said the cashier, “by someone who
knows your name to be Henry B. Saunders.”
“But I don’t know anybody in Houston,” said the stranger. “Here’s a
lot of letters addressed to me, and a telegram from my firm, and a lot
of business cards. Won’t they be identification enough?”
“I am sorry,” said the cashier, “but while I have no doubt that you
are the party, our rule is to require better identification.”
The man unbuttoned his vest and showed the initial, H. B. S., on his
shirt. “Does that go?” he asked. The cashier shook his head. “You
might have Henry B. Saunders’ letters, and his papers, and also his
shirt on, without being the right man. We are forced to be very
careful.”
The stranger tore open his shirt front, and exhibited a large mustard
plaster, covering his entire chest. “There,” he shouted, “if I wasn’t
Henry B. Saunders, do you suppose I would go around wearing one of his
mustard plasters stuck all over me? Do you think I would carry my
impersonation of anybody far enough to blister myself to look like
him? Gimme tens and fives, now, I haven’t got time to fool any more.”
The cashier hesitated and then shoved out the money. After the
stranger had gone, the official rubbed his chin gently and said softly
to himself: “That plaster might be somebody else’s after all, but no
doubt it’s all right.”
The Apple
A youth held in his hand a round, red, luscious apple.
“Eat,” said the Spirit, “it is the apple of life.”
“I will have none of it,” said the Youth, and threw it far from him.
“I will have success. I will have fame, fortune, power and knowledge.”
“Come, then,” said the Spirit.
They went together up steep and rocky paths. The sun scorched, the
rain fell upon them, the mountain mists clung about them, and the snow
fell in beautiful and treacherous softness, obscuring the way as they
climbed. Time swiftly passed and the golden locks of the Youth took on
the whiteness of the snow. His form grew bent with the toil of
climbing; his hand grew weak and his voice quivering and high.
The Spirit had not changed and upon his face was the inscrutable smile
of wisdom.
They stood at last upon the topmost peak. The old man that was the
Youth said to the Spirit: “Give me the apple of Success. I have come
upon the heights where it grows and it is mine. Be quick, for there is
a strange dimness in my sight.”
The Spirit gave him an apple round and red and fair to behold.
The man bit into it and found rottenness and bitter dust.
“What is this?” he asked.
“It was the apple of Life,” said the Spirit. “It is now the apple of
Success.”
How It Started
“You had better move your chair a little further back,” said the old
resident. “I saw one of the Judkinses go into the newspaper office
just now with his gun, and there may be some shooting.”
The reporter, who was in the town gathering information for the big
edition, got his chair quickly behind a pillar of the hotel piazza,
and asked what the trouble was about.
“It’s an old feud of several years’ standing,” said the old resident,
“between the editor and the Judkins family. About every two months
they get to shooting at one another. Everybody in town knows about it.
This is the way it started. The Judkinses live in another town, and
one time a good-looking young lady of the family came here on a visit
to a Mrs. Brown. Mrs. Brown gave her a big party—a regular high-toned
affair, to get the young men acquainted with her. One young fellow
fell in love with her, and sent a little poem to our paper, the
Observer. This is the way it read:
“We love to see her wear
A gown of simple white.
Nothing but a rose in her hair
At Mrs. Brown’s that night,
The fairest of them all
She stood, with blushes red,
While bright the gaslight shone
Upon her lovely head.
“That poem, now, was what started the feud.”
“I don’t see anything wrong with the poem,” said the reporter. “It
seems a little crude, but contains nothing to give offense.”
“Well,” said the old resident, “the poem was all right as it was
written. The trouble originated in the newspaper office. The morning
after it was sent in the society editress got hold of it first. She is
an old maid and she didn’t think the second line quite proper, so she
ran her pencil through it. Then the advertising manager prowled around
through the editor’s mail as usual, and read the poem. Old Brown owed
the office $17 back subscription, and the advertising manager struck
out the fourth line. He said old Brown shouldn’t get any free
advertising in that office.
“Then the editor’s wife happened to come in to see if there was any
square, perfumed envelopes among his mail, and she read it. She was at
the Brown’s party herself, and when she read the line that proclaimed
Miss Judkins ‘The fairest of them all’ she turned up her nose and
scratched that out.
“Then the editor himself got hold of it. He is heavily interested in
our new electric light plant, and his blue pencil jumped on the line
‘While bright the gaslight shone’ in a hurry. Later on one of the
printers came in and grabbed a lot of copy, and this poem was among
it. You know what printers will do if you give them a chance, so here
is the way the poem came out in the paper:
“We loved to see her wear
Nothing but a rose in her hair.
She stood with blushes red
Upon her lovely head.
“And you see,” continued the old resident, “the Judkinses got mad.”
Red Conlin’s Eloquence
They were speaking of the power of great orators, and each one had
something to say of his especial favorite.
The drummer was for backing Bourke Cockran for oratory against the
world, the young lawyer thought the suave Ingersoll the most
persuasive pleader, and the insurance agent advanced the claims of the
magnetic W. C. P. Breckenridge.
“They all talk some,” said the old cattle man, who was puffing his
pipe and listening, “but they couldn’t hold a candle to Red Conlin,
that run cattle below Santone in ’80. Ever know Red?”
Nobody had had the honor.
“Red Conlin was a natural orator; he wasn’t overcrowded with book
learnin’, but his words come free and easy, like whisky out of a new
faucet from a full barrel. He was always in a good humor and smilin’
clear across his face, and if he asked for a hot biscuit he did it
like he was pleadin’ for his life. He was one man who had the gift of
gab, and it never failed him.
“I remember once, in Atascosa County, the hoss thieves worried us
right smart. There was a gang of ’em, and they got runnin’ off a
caballaro every week or so. Some of us got together and raised a p’int
of order and concluded to sustain it. The head of the gang was a
fellow named Mullens, and a tough cuss he was. Fight, too, and warn’t
particular when. Twenty of us saddled up and went into camp, loaded
down with six-shooters and Winchesters. That Mullens had the nerve to
try to cut off our saddle horses the first night, but we heard him,
got mounted, and went hot on his trail. There was five or six others
with Mullens.
“It was dark as thunder, and pretty soon we run one of them down. His
horse was lame, and we knew it was Mullens by his big white hat and
black beard. We didn’t hardly give him time to speak, we was so mad,
but in two minutes there was a rope ’round his neck and Mullens was
swung up at last. We waited about ten minutes till he was still, and
then some fellow strikes a match out of curiosity and screeches out:
“ ‘Gosh a’mighty, boys, we’ve strung up the wrong man!”
“And we had.
“We reopened the fellow’s case and give him a new trial, and acquitted
him, but it was too late to do him any good. He was as dead as Davy
Crockett.
“It was Sandy McNeagh, one of the quietest, straightest, and
best-respected men in the county, and what was worse, hadn’t been
married but about three months.
“ ‘Whatever are we to do?’ says I, and it sure was a case to think
about.
“ ‘We ought to be nigh Sandy’s house now,’ said one of the men, who
was tryin’ to peer around and kind of locate the scene of our
brilliant coop detaw, as they say.
“Just then we seen a light from a door that opened in the dark, and
the house wasn’t two hundred yards away, and we saw what we knew must
be Sandy’s wife in the door a-lookin’ for him.
“ ‘Somebody’s got to go and tell her,’ said I. I was kind o’ leadin’
the boys. ‘Who’ll do it?’ Nobody jumped at the proposition.
“ ‘Red Conlin’ says I, ‘you’re the man to tell her, and the only man
here what could open his mouth to the poor girl. Go, like a man, and
may the Lord teach you what to say, for d——d if I can.’
“That boy never hesitated. I saw him kind o’ wet his hand, and smooth
back his red curls in the dark, and I seen his teeth shinin’ as he
said:
“ ‘I’ll go, boys; wait for me.’
“He went and we saw the door open and let him in.
“ ‘May the Lord help that poor widder,’ we all said, ‘and d——n us for
bunglin’, murderin’ butchers what ain’t no right to call ourselves
men.’
“It was fifteen minutes, maybe, when Red came back.
“ ‘How is it’?’ we whispered, almost afraid to hear him speak.
“ ‘It’s fixed,’ says Red, ‘and the widdy and I asks ye to the weddin’
nixt Chuesday night.’
“That fellow Red Conlin could talk.”
Why He Hesitated
A man with a worn, haggard countenance that showed traces of deep
sorrow and suffering rushed excitedly up the stairs into the editorial
rooms of the Post.
The literary editor was alone in his corner and the man threw himself
into a chair nearby and said:
“Excuse me, sir, for inflicting my troubles upon you, but I must
unbosom myself to someone. I am the unhappiest of men. Two months ago,
in a quiet little town in Eastern Texas, there was a family dwelling
in the midst of peace and contentment. Hezekiah Skinner was the head
of that family, and he almost idolized his wife, who appeared to
completely return his affection. Alas, sir, she was deceiving him. Her
protestations of love were but honeyed lies, intended to beguile and
blind him. She had become infatuated with William Wagstaff, a
neighbor, who had insidiously planned to capture her affections. She
listened to Wagstaff’s pleadings and fled with him, leaving her
husband with a wrecked home and a broken heart. Can you not feel for
me, sir?”
“I do, indeed,” said the literary editor. “I can conceive the agony,
the sorrow, the deep suffering that you must have felt.”
“For two months,” continued the man, “the home of Hezekiah Skinner has
been desolate, and this woman and Wagstaff have been flying from his
wrath.”
“What do you intend to do?” asked the literary editor.
“I scarcely know. I do not care for the woman any longer, but I cannot
escape the tortures my mind is undergoing day after day.”
At this point a shrill woman’s voice was heard in the outer office,
making some inquiry of the office boy.
“Great heavens, her voice!” said the man, rising to his feet greatly
agitated. “I must get out of here. Quick! Is there no way for me to
escape? A window—a side door—anywhere before she finds me.”
The literary editor rose with indignation in his face.
“For shame, sir,” he said, “do not act so unworthy a part. Confront
your faithless wife, Mr. Skinner, and denounce her for wrecking your
life and home. Why do you hesitate to stand up for your honor and your
rights?”
“You do not understand,” said the man, his face white with fear and
apprehension, as he climbed out the window upon a shed. “I am William
Wagstaff.”
Turkish Questions
Oh, Sultan, tell us quick, we pray
What was it Pasha Said?
And have they burned the vilayet?
So many tales we’ve read.
Who was it passed the Dardanelles?
And were they counterfeit?
And why was Kharput beaten so?
Was there much dust in it?
Oh, Ottoman, to do like you
Who Hassan eye to see
The woes your country has to hear—
Armenia heart must be!
And tell us, is the Bosphorus?
Or is it still for you?
Why is it that you every day
Mustafa head or two?
Somebody Lied
Two men went into a saloon on Main Street yesterday and braced up
solemnly to the bar. One was an old man with gray whiskers, the other
was a long, lanky youth, evidently his son. Both were dressed like
farm hands and they appeared somewhat bewildered at the splendor of
the saloon.
The bartender asked them what they would have.
The old man leaned across the bar and said hoarsely and mysteriously:
“You see, mister, me an’ Lem just sold a load of tomatters and green
corn fer nineteen dollars en a half. The old woman at home figgered
we’d git just sixteen dollars and a quarter fer the truck, so me and
Lem is three twenty-five ahead. When folks makes a big strike they
most al’ays gets drunk, and es me and Lem never was drunk, we says,
we’ll git drunk and see how it feels. The feelin’s pretty bully, ain’t
it?”
“Some think so,” said the bartender, “what’ll you have?”
They both called for whisky and stood against the bar until they had
taken some five or six drinks apiece.
“Feel good, Lem?” asked the old man.
“Not a dam bit,” said the son.
“Don’t feel like shoutin’ and raisin’ Cain?”
“No.”
“Don’t feel good at all?”
“No. Feel like the devil. Feel sick, en burnin’ inside.”
“Is yer head buzzin’, Lem, and er achin’?”
“Yes, Dad, en is yer knees a kind er wobblin’, en yer eyes a
waterin’?”
“You bet, en is yer stummick er gripin’ en does yer feel like yer had
swallowed a wild cat en er litter of kittens?”
“Yes, Dad, and don’t you wish we wuz to home, whar we could lie down
in ther clover patch en kick?”
“Yes, sonny, this here is what comes of goin’ back on yer ma. Does yer
feel real bad?”
“Bad ez ther devil, Dad.”
“Look a here, mister,” said the old man to the bartender, “somebody
has lied to us about the fun in gettin’ drunk. We’re a goin’ home and
never goin’ to do it again. I’d ruther hev the blind staggers, the
itch, en the cramp colic all to onct, then ter git drunk. Come on,
sonny, en let’s hunt the waggin.”
Marvelous
There is one man we know who is about as clever a reasoner as this
country has yet produced. He has a way of thinking out a problem that
is sometimes little short of divination. One day last week his wife
told him to make some purchases, and as with all his logical powers he
is rather forgetful on ordinary subjects, she tied a string around his
finger so he would not forget his errand. About nine o’clock that
night while hurrying homeward, he suddenly felt the string on his
finger and stopped short. Then for the life of him he could not
remember for what purpose the string had been placed there.
“Let’s see,” he said. “The string was tied on my finger so I would not
forget. Therefore it is a forget-me-not. Now forget-me-not is a
flower. Ah, yes, that’s it. I was to get a sack of flour.”
The giant intellect had got in its work.
The Confession of a Murderer
He is dead and I killed him.
I gaze upon him, lying cold and still, with the crimson blood welling
from his wound, and I laugh with joy. On my hand his life blood leaped
and I hold it proudly aloft bearing it accusing stain and in my heart
there is no pity, no remorse, no softness. Seeing him lie there
crushed and pulseless is to me more than the pleasure of paradise. For
months he escaped me. With all the intense hate I bore him at times, I
felt admiration for his marvelous courage, his brazen effrontery, his
absolute ignorance of fear. Why did I kill him? Because he had with a
fixed purpose and a diabolical, persistent effrontery, conspired to
rob me of that which is as dear to me as my life. Brave as I have said
he was, he scarcely dared to cross my path openly, but with insidious
cunning had ever sought to strike me a blow in the dark.
I did not fear him, but I knew his power, and I dared not give him his
opportunity.
Many a sleepless night I have spent, planning some means to rid myself
of his devilish machinations. He even attempted to torture me by
seeking to harm her whom I love. He approached herewith the utmost
care and cunning, wearing the guise of a friend, but striving to
instill his poison into her innocent heart.
But, thank heaven, she was faithful and true and his honeyed songs and
wiles had no effect. When she would tell me of his approaches, how I
would grind my teeth and clench my hands in fury, and long for the
time when I would wreak a just vengeance upon him. The time has come.
I found him worn and helpless from cold and hunger, but there was no
pity in my heart. I struck him down and reveled with heartfelt joy
when I saw him sink down, bathed in blood, and die by my hands. I do
not fear the consequences. When I tell my tale I will be upheld by
all.
He is dead and I am satisfied.
I think he is the largest and fattest mosquito I ever saw.
“Get Off the Earth”
“Get off the earth,” says I,
“With your muddy boots and your dirty face;
Such a bother I never see,
You’re the biggest torment in the place;
Forever worryin’ an’ pesterin’ me.
“Get off the earth,” says I.
I didn’t mean that, but I was so vexed
At the boy’s disturbin’ way;
I never knew what he would do next
In his noisy, mischief-makin’ play.
“Get off the earth,” says I.
And that very night the fever came;
And now I’m cryin’ to heaven in vain
For just one more touch of them same
Lost little grimy hands again.
The Stranger’s Appeal
He was tall and angular and had a keen gray eye and a solemn face. His
dark coat was buttoned high and had something of a clerical cut. His
pepper and salt trousers almost cleared the tops of his shoes, but his
tall hat was undeniably respectable, and one would have said he was a
country preacher out for a holiday. He was driving a light wagon, and
he stopped and climbed out when he came up to where five or six men
were sitting on the post-office porch in a little country town in
Texas.
“My friends,” he said, “you all look like intelligent men, and I feel
it my duty to say a few words to you in regard to the terrible and
deplorable state of things now existing in this section of the
country. I refer to the horrible barbarities recently perpetrated in
the midst of some of the most civilized of Texas towns, when human
beings created in the image of their Maker were subjected to cruel
torture and then inhumanly burned in the public streets. Something
must be done to wipe the stigma from the fair name of your state. Do
you not agree with me?”
“Are you from Galveston, stranger?” asked one of the men.
“No, sir. I am from Massachusetts, the cradle of liberty of the
downtrodden negro, and the home of the champions of his cause. These
burnings are causing us to weep tears of blood and I am here to see if
I can not move your hearts to pity on his behalf.”
“I guess you might as well drive on,” said one of the group. “We are
going to look out for ourselves and just so long as negroes keep on
committing the crimes they have, just so long will we punish them.”
“And you will not repent of the lives you have taken by the horrible
agency of fire?”
“Nary repent.”
“And you will continue to visit upon them the horrible suffering of
being burned to death?”
“If the occasion demands it.”
“Well, then, gentlemen, since you are so determined, I want to sell
you a few gross of the cheapest matches you ever laid your eyes upon.
Step out to the wagon and see them. Warranted not to go out in a
strong wind, and to strike on anything, wood, bricks, glass, bloomers,
boot soles and iron. How many boxes will you take, gentlemen?”
The Good Boy
(Mostly in Words of One Syllable)
James was a good boy.
He w’ould not tease his cat or his dog.
He went to school.
One day as he went home he saw a lady cross the street, and some rude
boys tried to guy her.
James took the lady by the hand and led her to a safe place.
“Oh, fie!” he said to the boys. “For shame, to talk so to the nice
lady. A good, kind boy will be mild and love to help the old.”
At this the boys did rail and laugh.
“Oh, boys,” said James, “do not be rude and speak so harsh. At home, I
have a dear old grandma, and this kind lady may be one, too.”
The lady took James by the ear and said: “You contemptible little
rapscallion. I’ve a good mind to spank you until you can’t navigate.
Grandmother, indeed! I’m only twenty-nine my last birthday, and I
don’t feel a day over eighteen. Now, you clear out, or I’ll slap you
good.”
The Colonel’s Romance
They were sitting around a stove and the tobacco was passed around.
They began to grow introspective.
The talk turned upon their old homes and the changes that the cycling
years bring about. They had lived in Houston for many years, but only
one was a native Texan.
The colonel hailed from Alabama, the judge was born in the swamps of
Mississippi, the grocer first saw the light in a frozen town of Maine,
and the major proudly claimed Tennessee as his birthplace.
“Have any of you fellows been back home since you left there?” asked
the colonel.
The judge had been back twice in twenty years, the major once, the
grocer never.
“It’s a curious feeling,” said the colonel, “to go back to the old
home where you were raised, after an absence of fifteen years. It is
like seeing ghosts to be among people whom you have not seen in so
long a time. Now I went back to Crosstree, Alabama, just fifteen years
after I left there. The impression made upon me was one that never
will be obliterated.
“There was a girl in Crosstree once that I loved better than anything
in the world. One day I slipped away from everybody and went down to
the little grove where I used to walk with her. I walked along the
paths we used to tread. The oaks along the side had scarcely changed;
the little blue flowers on either hand might have been the same ones
she used to twine in her hair when she came to meet me.
“Our favorite walk had been along a line of thick laurels beyond which
ran a little stream. Everything was the same. There was no change
there to oppress my heart. Above were the same great sycamores and
poplars; there ran the same brook; my feet trod the same path they had
so often walked with her. It seemed that if I waited she would surely
come again, tripping so lightly through the gloaming with her starry
eyes, and nut-brown curls, and she loved me, too. It seemed then that
nothing could ever have parted us—no doubt, no misunderstanding, no
falsehood. But who can tell?
“I went to the end of the path. There stood the old hollow tree in
which we used to place notes to each other. What sweet words that old
tree could tell if it had known! I had fancied that during the rubs
and knocks I had received from the world my heart had grown calloused,
but such was not the case.
“I looked down into the hollow of the tree, and saw something white.
It was a folded piece of paper, yellow and stained with age. I opened
it and read it with difficulty.
“ ‘Dearest Richard: You know I will marry you if you want
me to. Come round early tonight and I will give you my
answer in a better way. Your own Nellie.’
“Gentlemen, I stood there holding that little piece of paper in my
hand like one in a dream. I had written her a note asking her to marry
me and telling her to leave her answer in the old tree. She must have
done so, and I never got it, and all those years had rolled away
since.”
The crowd was silent. The major wiped his eyes, and the judge sniffed
a little. They were middle-aged men now, but they, too, had known
love.
“And then,” said the grocer, “you left right away for Texas and never
saw her again?”
“No,” said the colonel. “When I didn’t come round that night she sent
her father after me, and we were married two months later. She and the
five kids are up at the house now. Pass the tobacco, please.”
A Narrow Escape
A meek-looking man, with one eye and a timid, shuffling gait, entered
a Houston saloon while no one was in except the bartender, and said:
“Excuse me, sir, but would you permit me to step behind the bar for
just a moment? You can keep your eye on me. There is something there I
wanted to look at.”
The bartender was not busy, and humored him through curiosity.
The meek-looking man stepped around and toward the shelf back of the
bar.
“Would you kindly remove that wine bottle and those glasses for a
moment?”
The bartender did so, and disclosed a little plowed streak on the
shelf and a small hole bored for quite a distance into the wall.
“Thanks, that’s all,” said the meek man, as he went around to the
front again.
He leaned thoughtfully on the bar and said: “I shot that hole in there
just nine years ago. I came in feeling pretty thirsty and had no
money. The bartender refused me a drink and I commenced firing. That
ball went through his ear and five bottles of champagne before it
stopped. I then yelled quite loudly, and two men broke their arms
trying to get out the door, and the bartender trembled so when he
mixed a drink for me you would have thought he was putting up a milk
shake for a girl who wanted to catch a street car.”
“Yes?” said the bartender.
“Yes, sir, I am feeling a little out of sorts today, and it always
makes me real cross and impatient when I get that way. A little gin
and bitters always helps me. It was six times, I think, that I fired,
the time I was telling you about. Straight whisky would do if the gin
is out.”
“If I had any fly paper,” said the bartender, sweetly, “I would stick
you on it and set you in the back window; but I am out, consequently,
I shall have to adopt harsher measures. I shall tie a knot in this
towel, and then count ten, and walk around the end of the bar. That
will give you time to do your shooting, and I’ll see that you let out
that same old yell that you spoke of.”
“Wait a moment,” said the meek man. “Come to think of it, my doctor
ordered me not to drink anything for six weeks. But you had a narrow
escape all the same. I think I shall go down to the next drug store
and fall in a fit on the sidewalk. That’s good for some peppermint and
aromatic spirits of ammonia, anyhow.”
A Years Supply
He was one of the city’s wealthiest men, but he made no ostentatious
display of his wealth. A little, thin, poorly clad girl stood looking
in the window of the restaurant at the good things to eat. The man
approached and touched her on the shoulder.
“What is your name, little girl?” he asked.
“Susie Tompkins, sir,” she answered, looking up at him with great,
haunting, blue eyes.
There was something in her pleading, innocent voice that stirred a
strange feeling in the millionaire’s heart. Still it may have been
indigestion.
“Have you a father?” he asked.
“Oh, no, sir, mother has only me to support.”
“Is your mother very poor?”
“Oh, yes, sir.”
“What is your mother’s name?”
“Susan, sir. Just like mine.”
“Tell me, child,” said the wealthy man, clutching her arm in an agony
of suspense. “Has your mother a wart on her nose, and does her breath
smell of onions?”
“Yes, sir.”
The millionaire covered his face with his hands for a moment, and then
said in a trembling voice:
“Little one, your mother and I once knew each other. You have her
voice, her hair, and her eyes. If it had not been for a
misunderstanding—perhaps—but that is all past now.”
The man unbuttoned his overcoat and took from his vest pocket a
package.
“Take this,” he said. “I have more than I want. It will last you and
your mother a year.”
The little girl took the package and ran home in glee.
“Oh, see, mama!” she cried. “A gentleman gave me this. He said it
would last us a whole year.”
The pale woman unrolled the package with trembling hands.
It was a nice new calendar.
Eugene Field
No gift his genius might have had
Of titles high, in church and state,
Could charm him as the one he bore,
Of children’s poet-laureate.
He smilingly pressed aside his bays
And laurel garlands that he won,
And bowed his head for baby hands
To place a daisy wreath upon.
He found his kingdom in the ways,
Of little ones he loved so well,
For them he tuned his lyre and sang.
Sweet simple songs of magic spell.
Ah! greater feat to storm the gates
Of children’s pure and cleanly hearts,
Than to subdue a warring world
By stratagems and doubtful arts.
A tribute paid by chanting choirs
And pealing organs rises high;
But soft and clear, somewhere he hears
Through all, a child’s low lullaby.
Slightly Mixed
A certain Houston racing man was married some months ago. He also is
the proud possessor of a fine two-year-old filly that has made five
and a half furlongs in 1:09 and he expects her to do better at the
next races. He has named the filly after his wife and both of them are
dear to his heart. A Post man who ran across him yesterday found him
quite willing to talk.
“Yes,” he said, “I am the happiest man in Texas. Bessie and I are
keeping house now and getting quite well settled down. That filly of
mine is going to do wonders yet. Bessie takes as much interest in her
as I do. You know I have named her for my wife. She is a thoroughbred.
I tell you it’s fine to see her trotting around at home.”
“Who, the filly?”
“No, my wife. She’s going to bet twelve dozen pairs of kid gloves on
Bessie next time she goes in. I have but one objection to her. She
goes with her head on one side and is cross-legged, and tears off her
shoes.
“Your w-w-wife?”
“No, what’s the matter with you? The filly. It pleases me very much to
have my friends inquire about Bessie. She is getting to be quite a
favorite. I had hard work to get her, too. She trots double without a
break.”
“The filly, you mean?”
“No, my wife. I took Bessie out driving with the filly yesterday.
Bessie’s a daisy. She’s a little high in one shoulder, and a trifle
stiff in one leg, but her wind is all right. What do you think of her
back?”
“Really, I—I—I never had the pleasure of meeting your wife, but I have
no doubt—”
“What are you talking about? I mean the filly. The races come off just
on the anniversary of our marriage. The races are going to be a big
thing. You know we have been married just a year. I expect Bessie to
do wonders. There’s a newcomer going to be here, that we are looking
for with much interest. You must really come out and see our first
event.”
“I—I—I really, it would be indelicate—you must really excuse me. I
never saw anything of the kind. I—I—”
“Oh, there’s nothing wrong about horse racing. It’s fine sport. So
long now. I’ve got to go and take Bessie out and sweat her a little.”
Knew What Was Needed
A gentleman from Ohio, who has come South on a hunting trip, arrived
in Houston, rather late one night last week, and on his way to a hotel
stopped in a certain saloon to get a drink. A colored man was behind
the bar temporarily and served him with what he wanted. The gentleman
had his shotgun in its case, and he laid it upon the bar while
waiting.
“Is there any game about here?” he asked, after paying for his drink.
“I guess dey is, boss,” said the colored man, looking doubtfully at
the gun on the counter, “but you jest wait a minute, boss, till I
fixes you up in better shape.”
He opened a drawer and handed the gentleman a six-shooter.
“You take dis, Boss,” he said. “Dat dar gun ob yourn am too long fur
you to get quick action in de game what we hab here. Now you jest go
up dem steps and knock free times on de doah to your left.”
Some Ancient News Notes
It will be remembered that a short while ago, some very ancient
documents and records were discovered in an old monastery on
Mt. Sinai, where they have been kept filed away by the monks among
their dusty archives. Some of them antedate the oldest writings
previously known by one hundred years. The finders claim that among
them are the original Scripture traced in Syriac language, and that
they differ in many material ways from the translation in use. We have
procured some advance sheets from the discoverers and in a few
fragments given below our readers will perceive that human nature was
pretty much the same a thousand years ago. It is evident from the
palimpsests in our possession that newspapers were not entirely
unknown even at that early date. We give some random translations from
the original manuscripts:
“Commodore Noah, one of our oldest citizens, predicts a big rain soon.
The commodore is building an up-to-date houseboat and expects to spend
about six weeks afloat with his family and his private menagerie.”
“Colonel Goliath of Gath, and the new middleweight, Mr. David, are at
their old tricks again blowing about the championship. Mr. David has
one hand in a sling, but says he will be all right when the affair is
pulled off. A little more fighting and less talking would please the
readers of the Daily Cymbal.”
“Ladies, get one of those new fig leaves at the Eden Bazaar before the
style is dropped.”
“The exposition at Shinar is going to be a grand success. Work on the
New Woman’s Building called the Tower of Babel has been stopped on
account of a misunderstanding. The lady managers have been holding
meetings in the Tower for some time.”
“See Professor Daniel and his performing lions next Sunday.”
“Colonel Job, who has been suffering from quite a siege of boils at
his residence on Avenue C, was arrested yesterday for cussing and
disturbing the neighborhood. The colonel has generally a very equable
temper, but completely lost his balance on finding that Mrs. Job had
put a large quantity of starch in his only night robe.”
“About 1,500 extra deputy clerks were put on by the county clerk
yesterday to assist in getting out summonses for witnesses in the
divorce case recently brought by Judge Solomon against the last batch
of his wives.”
A Sure Method
The editor sat in his palatially furnished sanctum bending over a mass
of manuscripts, resting his beetling brow upon his hand. It wanted but
one hour of the time of going to press and there was that editorial on
the Venezuelan question to write. A pale, intellectual youth
approached him with a rolled manuscript tied with a pink ribbon.
“It is a little thing,” said the youth, “that I dashed off in an idle
moment.”
The editor unrolled the poem and glanced down the long row of verses.
He then drew from his pocket a $20 bill and held it toward the poet. A
heavy thud was heard, and at the tinkle of an electric bell the
editor’s minions entered and carried the lifeless form of the poet
away.
“That’s three today,” muttered the great editor as he returned the
bill to his pocket. “It works better than a gun or a club and the
coroner always brings in a verdict of heart failure.”
Endnotes
-
The methods of the Rev. Sam Jones, who was the Billy Sunday of
his time, were frequently the subject of O. Henry’s satire. ↩