Uncle Josh and the Fire Department
ONE day in New York, I thot I'd rite a letter home. Wall after I'd
got it all writ, I sed to the landlord of the tavern—now, whar abouts
in New York do you keep the post offis? And he sed, "what do you want
with the post offis?" So I told him I'd jist writ a letter home to
mother and Samantha Ann, and I'd like to go to the post offis and mail
it. And he told me "you don't have to go to the post offis, do you see
that little box on the post thar on the corner?" I alowed as how I did.
Wall he says, "You jist go out thar and put your letter in that box,
and it will go right to the post offis." I sed—wall now, gee whiz,
ain't that handy. Wall I went out thar, and I had a good deal of
trouble in gittin' the box open, and when I did git it open, thar wan't
any place to put my letter, thar wuz a lot of nobs and hooks
and hinges, and a lot of readin,' it sed—"pull on the hook twice and
turn the knob," or somethin, like that, I couldn't jist rightly make it
out. Wall I yanked on that hook 'till I tho't I'd pull it out by the
roots, but I couldn't git the durned thing open, then I turned on the
knob two or three times, and that didn't do any good, so I pulled on the
hook and turned on the knob at the same time, and jist then I think all
the fire bells in New York commenced to ringin' all to onct. Wall I
looked round to see whar the fire wuz, and a lot of fire ingines and
hook and ladder wagons cum a gallopin' up to whar I stood, and they had
a big sody water bottle on wheels, and it busted and squirted sody water
all over me. Wall one of them fire fellers, lookin' jist like I'd seen
them in picters in Ezra Hoskin's insurance papers, he cum up to me
madder'n a hornet, and he sed "what are you tryin' to do with that
box?" So I told him I'd jist writ a letter home, and I wuz a tryin' to
mail it. He sed "why you durned old green horn, you've called out the
hull fire department of New York City." Wall I guess you could have
knocked me down with a feather. I sed—wall you'r a purty healthy
lookin' lot of
fellers, it won't hurt ye any to go back, will it? Wall he sed, "thars
your letter box over on thother corner, now you let this box alone."
Wall they all drove away, and I went over to the other box, but I didn't
know whether to touch it or not, I didn't know but maybe I'd call out
the state legislater if I opened it. Wall while I wuz a standin' thar a
feller cum along and looked all round, and when he thot thar wan't any
body watchin' him, he opened that box and commenced takin' the letters
out. Wall I'd heered a whole lot 'bout them post offis robbers, when I
wuz post master down home at Punkin Center, so jist arrested him right
thar, I took him by the nap of the neck and flopped him right down on
the side walk, and sot on him, I hollered—
murder! perlees! and
every other thing I could think of, and a lot of constables and town
marshalls cum a runnin' up, and one of them sed "what are you holdin'
this man fer?" and I told him I'd caught him right in the act of
robbin' the United States Post Offis, and by gosh I arrested him. Wall
they all commenced a laffin', and I found out I'd arrested one of the
post masters of New York City.
I lost mother's letter and she never did git it.