"I want to see Deacon Jones a minute in reference to a matter about Moses."
"Want to pay his gas-bill? What"s the last name?"
"Oh no. I mean the first Moses, the original one."
"Anything the matter with his meter?"
"You don"t understand me. I refer to the Hebrew prophet. I want to see--"
"Well, you can"t see him here. This is the gas-office. Try next door."
At the adjoining window Mr. Lamb said,
"Look here! I want to see Deacon Jones a minute about the prophet Moses, and I wish you"d tell him so."
"No, I won"t," replied the clerk. "He"s too busy to be bothered with-anything of that kind."
"But I must see him," said Peter; "I insist on seeing him. The fact of the matter is, I"ve got a bet about Moses"--"
"Don"t make any difference what you"ve got; you can"t see him."
"But I will. I want you to go and tell him I"m here, and that I wish for some information respecting Moses. I"ll have you discharged if you don"t go."
"Don"t care if you want to see him about all the children of Israel, and the Pharaohs and Nebuchadnezzars. I tell you you can"t. That settles it. Turn off your gas and quit."
Then Peter resolved to give up the deacon and try Rev. Dr. Dox. When he called at the parsonage, the doctor came down into the parlor.
Because of the doctor"s deafness there was a little misunderstanding when Peter said,
"I called, doctor, to ascertain if you could tell me who was the mother-in-law of Moses."
"Well, really," said the doctor, "there isn"t much preference. Some like one kind of roses and some like another. A very good variety of the pink rose is the Duke of Cambridge; grows large, bears early and has very fine perfume. The Hercules is also excellent, but you must manure it well and water it often."
"I didn"t ask about _roses_, but _Moses_. You make a mistake," shouted Peter.
"Oh, of course! by all means. Train them up to a stake if you want to.
The wind don"t blow them about so and they send out more shoots."
"You misunderstand me," yelled Mr. Lamb. "I asked about Moses, not roses. I want to know who was the mother-in-law of Moses."
"Oh yes; certainly. Excuse me; I thought you were inquiring about roses. The law of Moses was the foundation of the religion of the Jews. You can find it in full in the Pentateuch. It is admirable--very admirable--for the purpose for which it was ordained. We, of course, have outlived that dispensation, but it still contains many things that are useful to us, as, for instance, the--"
"Was Moses married?" shrieked Mr. Lamb.
"Married? Oh, yes; the name of his father-in-law, you know, was Jethro, and--"
"Who was his wife?"
"Why, she was the daughter of Jethro, of course. I said Jethro was his father-in-law."
"No; Jethro"s wife, I mean. I want to know to settle a bet."
"No, that wasn"t her name. "Bet" is a corruption of Elizabeth, and that name, I believe, is not found in the Old Testament. I don"t remember what the name of Moses" wife was."
"I want to know what was the name of the mother-in-law of Moses, to settle a bet."
"Young man," said the old doctor, sternly, "you are trifling with a serious subject. What do you mean by wanting Moses to settle a bet?"
Then Mr. Lamb rolled up a sheet of music that lay on the piano; and putting it to the doctor"s ear, he shouted,
"I made--a--bet--that--I--could--find--out--what--the--name--of Moses"--mother-in-law--was. Can--you--tell--me?"
"The Bible don"t say," responded the doctor; "and unless you can get a spiritualist to put you in communication with Moses, I guess you will lose."
Then Peter went around and handed over the stakes. Hereafter he will gamble on other than biblical games.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THE CAT SUCc.u.mBS]
Mr. Lamb has an inquiring mind. He is always investigating something.
He read somewhere the other day that two drops of the essential oil of tobacco placed upon the tongue of a cat would kill the animal instantly. He did not believe it, and he concluded to try the experiment to see if it was so. Old Squills, the druggist, has a cat weighing about fifteen pounds, and Mr. Lamb, taking the animal into the back room, shut the door, opened the cat"s mouth, and applied the poison. One moment later a wild, unearthly "M-e-e-e-e-ow-ow-ow!" was emitted by the cat, and, to Mr. Lamb"s intense alarm, the animal began swishing around the room with hair on end and tail in convulsive excitement, screeching like a fog-whistle. Mr. Lamb is not certain, but he considers it a fair estimate to say that the cat made the entire circuit of the room, over chairs and under tables, seventy-four times every minute, and he is willing to swear to seventy times, without counting the occasional diversions made by the brute for the purpose of s.n.a.t.c.hing at Mr. Lamb"s pantaloons and hair. Just as Mr.
Lamb had about made up his mind that the cat would conclude the gymnastic exercises by eating him, the animal dashed through the gla.s.s sash of the door into the shop, whisked two jars of licorice root and tooth-brushes off the counter, tore out the ipecac-bottle and four jugs of hair-dye, smashed a bottle of "Balm of Peru," alighted on the bonnet of a woman who was drinking soda-water, and after a few convulsions rolled over into a soap-box and died.
Mr. Lamb is now satisfied that a cat actually can be killed in the manner aforementioned, but he would be better satisfied if old Squills didn"t insist upon collecting from him the price of those drugs and the gla.s.s sash.
Last summer Peter"s brother spent a few weeks with him. He owned a "pistol cane," which he carried about with him loaded; but when he went away, he accidentally left it behind, and without explaining to Peter that it was different from ordinary canes.
So, one afternoon a few days later, Peter went out to Keyser"s farm to look at some stock, and he picked up the cane to take along with him.
When he got to Keyser"s, the latter went to the barnyard to show him an extraordinary kind of a new pig that he had developed by cross-breeding.
"Now that pig," said Keyser, "just lays over all the other pigs on the Atlantic Slope. Take him any way you please, he"s the most gorgeous pig anywheres around. Fat! Why, he"s all fat! There"s no lean in him.
He ain"t anything but a solid ma.s.s of lard. Put that pig near a fire, and in twenty minutes his naked skeleton"d be standing there in a puddle of grease. That"s a positive fact. Now, you just feel his shoulder."
Then Peter lifted up his cane and gave the pig a poke. He poked it two or three times, and he had just remarked, "That certainly is a splendid pig," when he gave it another poke, and then somehow the pistol in the cane went off and the pig rolled over and expired.
[Ill.u.s.tration: HOW THE PIG WAS KILLED]
"What in the mischief d"you do that for?" exclaimed Keyser, amazed and indignant.
"Do it for? _I_ didn"t do it! This cane must"ve been made out of an old gun-barrel with the load left in. I never had the least idea, I pledge _you_ my word, that there was anything the matter with it."
"That"s pretty thin," said Keyser; "you had a grudge agin that pig because you couldn"t scare up a pig like him, and you killed him on purpose."
"That"s perfectly ridiculous."
"Oh, maybe it is. You"ll just fork over two hundred dollars for that piece of pork, if you please."