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Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze | |
and PG Distributed Proofreaders | |
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Vol. I. No. 18 | |
PUNCHINELLO | |
SATURDAY, JULY 30, 1870. | |
PUBLISHED BY THE | |
PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, | |
83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK. | |
THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD, | |
By ORPHEUS C. KERR, | |
Continued in this Number. | |
[Sidenote: See 15th Page for Extra Premiums.] | |
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| BY T.S. VERDI, A.M., M.D., OF WASHINGTON, D.C. | | |
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Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the | |
PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District | |
court of the United States, for the Southern District of New York. | |
* * * * * | |
THE | |
MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD. | |
AN ADAPTATION, | |
BY ORPHEUS C. KERR. | |
CHAPTER XII. | |
A NIGHT OF IT WITH MCLAUGHLIN. | |
Judge SWEENEY, with a certain supercilious consciousness that he is | |
figuring in a novel, and that it will not do for him to thwart the | |
eccentricities of mysterious fiction by any commonplace deference to the | |
mere meteorological weaknesses of ordinary human nature, does not allow | |
the fact that late December is a rather bleak and cold time of year to | |
deter him from taking daily airings in the neighborhood of the | |
Ritualistic churchyard. Since the inscription of his epitaph on his late | |
wife upon her monument therein, the churchyard is to him a kind of | |
ponderous work of imagination with marble leaves, to which he has | |
contributed the most brilliant chapter; and when he sees any stranger | |
hovering about a part of the outer railings from whence the inscription | |
may be read, it is with all the swelling pride of an author who, having | |
procured the publication of some dreary article in a magazine, is thrown | |
into an ecstacy of vanity if he sees but one person glance at that | |
number of the periodical on a news-stand. | |
Since his first meeting with Mr. BUMSTEAD, on the evening of the | |
epitaph-reading, Judge SWEENEY has cultivated that gentleman's | |
acquaintance, and been received at his lodgings several times with | |
considerable cordiality and lemon-tea. On such occasions, Mr. BUMSTEAD, | |
in his musical capacity, has sung so closely in Judge SWEENEY'S ear as | |
to tickle him, a wild and slightly incoherent Ritualistic stave, to the | |
effect that Saint PETER'S of Rome, with pontifical dome, would by ballot | |
Infallible be; but for making Call sure, and Election secure, Saint | |
Repeater's of Rum beats the See. With finger in ear to allay the | |
tickling sensation, JUDGE SWEENEY declares that this young man smelling | |
of cloves is a person of great intellectual attainments, and understands | |
the political genius of his country well enough to make an excellent | |
Judge of Election. | |
Walking slowly near the churchyard on this particular freezing December | |
evening, with his hands behind his bank, and his eyes intent for any | |
envious husband who may be "with a rush retiring," monumentally | |
counselled, after reading the Epitaph, Judge SWEENEY suddenly comes upon | |
Father DEAN conversing with SMYTHE, the sexton, and Mr. BUMSTEAD. Bowing | |
to these three, who, like himself, seem to find real luxury in open-air | |
strolling on a bitter night in midwinter, he notices that his model, the | |
Ritual Rector, is wearing a new hat, like Cardinal's, only black, and is | |
immediately lost in wondering where he can obtain one like it short of | |
Rome. | |
"You look so much like an author, Mr. BUMSTEAD, in having no overcoat, | |
wearing your paper collar upside down, and carrying a pen behind your | |
ear," Father DEAN is saying, "that I can almost fancy you are about to | |
write a book about us. Well, Bumsteadville is just the place to furnish | |
a nice, dry, inoffensive domestic novel in the sedative vein." | |
After two or three ineffectual efforts to seize the end of it, which he | |
seems to think is an inch or two higher than its actual position, Mr. | |
BUMSTEAD finally withdraws from between his right ear and head a long | |
and neatly cut hollow straw. | |
"This is not a pen, Holy Father," he answers, after a momentary glance | |
of majestic severity at Mr. SMYTHE, who has laughed. "It is only a | |
simple instrument which I use, as a species of syphon, in certain | |
chemical experiments with sliced tropical fruit and glass-ware. In the | |
precipitation of lemon-slices into cut crystal, it is necessary for the | |
liquid medium to be exhausted gradually; and, after using this cylinder | |
of straw for the purpose about an hour ago, I must have placed it behind | |
my ear in a moment of absent-mindedness." | |
"Ah, I see," said Father DEAN, although he didn't. "But what is this, | |
Judge SWEENEY, respecting your introduction of MCLAUGHLIN to Mr. | |
BUMSTEAD, which I have heard about?" | |
"Why, your Reverence, I consider JOHN MCLAUGHLIN a Character," responds | |
the Judge, "and thought our young friend of the organ-loft might like to | |
study him." | |
"The truth is," explains Mr. BUMSTEAD, "that Judge SWEENEY put into my | |
head to do a few pauper graves with JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, some moonlight | |
night, for the mere oddity and dampness of the thing.--And I should | |
regret to believe," added Mr. BUMSTEAD, raising his voice as saw that | |
the judiciary was about to interrupt--"And I should really be loathe to | |
believe that Judge SWEENEY was not perfectly sober when he did so." | |
"Oh, yes--certainly--I remember--to be sure," exclaims the Judge, in | |
great haste; alarmed into speedy assent by the construction which he | |
perceives would be put upon a denial. "I remember it very distinctly. I | |
remember putting it into your head--by the tumblerful, if I remember | |
rightly." | |
"Profiting by your advice," continues Mr. BUMSTEAD, oblivious to the | |
last sentence, I am going out to-night, in search of the moist and | |
picturesque, with JOHN MCLAUGHLIN--" | |
"Who is here," says Father DEAN. | |
OLD MORTARITY, dinner-kettle in hand and more mortary than ever, indeed | |
seen approaching them with shuffling gait. Bowing to the Holy Father, he | |
is about to pass on, when Judge SWEENEY stops him with-- | |
"You must be very careful with your friend, BUMSTEAD, this evening, JOHN | |
MCLAUGHLIN, and see that he don't fall and break his neck." | |
"Never you worry about Mr. BUMSTEAD, Judge," growls OLD MORTARITY. "He | |
can walk further off the perpendicklar without tumbling than any | |
gentleman I ever see." | |
"Of course I can, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, checking another | |
unseemly laugh of Mr. SMYTHE'S with a dreadful frown. "I often practice | |
walking sideways, for the purpose of developing the muscles on that | |
side. The left side is always the weaker, and the hip a trifle lower, if | |
one does not counteract the difference by walking sideways | |
occasionally." | |
A great deal of unnecessary coughing, which follows this physiological | |
exposition, causes Mr. BUMSTEAD to breathe hard at them all for a | |
moment, and tread with great malignity upon Mr. SMYTHE'S nearest corn. | |
While yet the sexton is groaning, OLD MORTARITY whispers to the | |
Ritualistic organist that he will be ready for him at the appointed hour | |
to-night, and shuffles away. After which Mr. BUMSTEAD, with the I hollow | |
straw sticking out fiercely from his ear, privately offers to see Father | |
DEAN home if he feels at all dizzy; and, being courteously refused, | |
retires down the turnpike toward his own lodgings with military | |
precision of step. | |
When night falls upon the earth like a drop of ink upon the word Sun, | |
and the stars glitter like the points of so many poised gold pens all | |
ready to write the softer word Moon above the blot, the organist of St. | |
Cow's sits in his own room, where his fire keeps-up a kind of aspenish | |
twilight, and executes upon his accordeon a series of wild and mutilated | |
airs. The moistened towel which he often wears when at home is turbaned | |
upon his head, causing him to present a somewhat Turkish appearance; and | |
as, when turning a particularly complicated corner in an air, it is his | |
artistic habit to hold his tongue between his teeth, twist his head in | |
sympathy with the elaborate fingering, and involuntarily lift one foot | |
higher and higher from the floor as some skittish note frantically | |
dodges to evade him, his general musical aspect at his own hearth is | |
that of a partially Oriental gentleman, agonizingly laboring to cast | |
from him some furious animal full of strange sounds. Thus engaging in | |
desperate single combat with what, for making a ferocious fight before | |
any recognizable tune can he rescued from it, is, perhaps, the most | |
exhausting instrument known to evening amateurs and maddened | |
neighborhoods, Mr. BUMSTEAD passes three athletic hours. At the end of | |
that time, after repeatedly tripping-up its exasperated organist over | |
wrong keys in the last bar, the accordeon finally relinquishes the | |
concluding note with a dismal whine of despair, and retires in complete | |
collapse to its customary place of waiting. Then the conquering | |
performer changes his towel for a hat which would look better if it had | |
not been so often worn in bed, places an antique black bottle in one | |
pocket of his coat and a few cloves in the other; hangs an unlighted | |
lantern before him by a cord passing about his neck, and, with his | |
umbrella under his arm, goes softly down stairs and out of the house. | |
Repairing to the marble-yard and home of OLD MORTARITY, which are on the | |
outskirts of Bumsteadville, he wanders through mortar-heaps, monuments | |
brought for repair, and piles of bricks, toward a whitewashed residence | |
of small demensions with a light at the window. | |
"JOHN McLAUGHLIN, ahoy!" | |
In response, the master of the mansion promptly opens the door, and it | |
is then perceptible that his basement, parlor, spare-bedroom and attic | |
are all on one floor, and that a couple of pigs are spending the season | |
with him. Showing his visitor into this ingeniously condensed | |
establishment, he induces the pigs to retire to a corner, and then dons | |
his hat. | |
"Are you ready, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN?" | |
"Please the pigs, I am, Mr. BUMSTEAD," answers MCLAUGHLIN, taking down | |
from a hook a lantern, which, like his companion's, he hangs from his | |
neck by a cord. "My spirits is equal to any number of ghosts to-night, | |
sir, if we meet 'em." | |
"Spirits!" ejaculates the Ritualistic organist, shifting his umbrella | |
for a moment while he hurriedly draws the antique bottle from his | |
pocket. "You're nervous to-night, J. MCLAUGHLIN, and need a little of | |
the venerable JAMES AKER'S West Indian Restorative.--I'll try it first | |
to make sure that I haven't mistaken the phial." | |
He rests the elongated orifice of the diaphanous flask upon his lips for | |
a brief interval of critical inspection, and then applies it | |
thoughtfully to the mouth of OLD MORTARITY. | |
"Some more! Some more!" pleads the aged MCLAUGHLIN, when the Jamaican | |
nervine is abruptly jerked from his lips. | |
"Silence! Com on," is the stern response of the other, who, as he moves | |
from the house, and restores the crystal antiquity to its proper pocket, | |
eats a few cloves by stealth. His manner plainly shows that he is | |
offended at the quantity the old man has managed to swallow already. | |
Strange indeed is the ghastly expedition to the place of skulls, upon | |
which these two go thus by night. Not strange, perhaps, for Mr. | |
MCLAUGHLIN, whose very youth in New York, where he was an active | |
politician, found him a frequent nightly familiar of the Tombs; but | |
strange for the organist, who, although often grave in his manner, | |
sepulchral in his tones, and occasionally addicted to coughin', must be | |
curiously eccentric to wish to pass into concert that evening with the | |
dead heads. | |
Transfixed by his umbrella, which makes him look like a walking cross | |
between a pair of boots and a hat, Mr. BUMSTEAD leads the way athwart | |
the turnpike and several fields, until they have arrived at a low wall | |
skirting the foot of Gospeler's Gulch. Here they catch sight of the | |
Reverend OCTAVIUS SIMPSON and MONTGOMERY PENDRAGON walking together, | |
near the former's house, in the moonlight, and, instantaneously, Mr. | |
BUMSTEAD opens his umbrella over the head of OLD MORTARITY, and drags | |
him down beside himself under it behind the wall. | |
"Hallo! What's all this?" gasps Mr. MCLAUGHLIN, struggling affrightedly | |
in his suffocating cage of whalebone and alpaca. "What's this here old | |
lady's hoop-skirt doing on me?" | |
"Peace, wriggling dotard!" hisses BUMSTEAD, jamming the umbrella tighter | |
over him. "If they see us they'll want some of the West Indian | |
Restorative." | |
Mr. SIMPSON and MONTGOMERY have already heard a sound; for they pause | |
abruptly in their conversation, and the latter asks: "Could it have been | |
a ghost?" | |
"Ask it if it's a ghost," whispers the Gospeler, involuntarily crossing | |
himself. | |
"Are you there, Mr. G.?" quavers the raised voice of the young | |
Southerner, respectfully addressing the inquiry to the stone wall. | |
No answer. | |
"Well," mutters the Gospeler, "it couldn't have been a ghost, after all; | |
but I certainly thought I saw an umbrella. To conclude what I was | |
saying, then,--I have the confidence in you, Mr. MONTGOMERY, to believe | |
that you will attend the dinner of Reconciliation on Christmas eve, as | |
you have promised." | |
"Depend on me, sir." | |
"I shall; and have become surety for your punctuality to that excellent | |
and unselfish healer of youthful wounds, Mr. BUMSTEAD." | |
More is said after this; but the speakers have strolled to the other | |
side of the Gospeler's house, and their words cannot be distinguished | |
Mr. BUMSTEAD closes his umbrella with such suddenness and violence as to | |
nearly pull off the head of MCLAUGHLIN; drives his own hat further upon | |
his nose with a sounding blow; takes several wild swallows from his | |
antique flask; eats two cloves, and chuckles hoarsely to himself for | |
some minutes. "Here, 'JOHN MCLAUGHLIN," he says, at last "try a little | |
more West Indian Restorative, and then we'll go and do a few skeletons." | |
(_To be Continued_.) | |
* * * * * | |
What is Likely to be Raised some day, regarding the Pneumatic | |
Tunnel. | |
TUBAL. CAIN. | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration. PUNCHINELLO CORRESPONDENCE.] | |
ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. | |
In order to make this department of PUNCHINELLO as complete as possible, | |
we have secured the services of the most competent authorities in | |
literature, art, the sciences in general, history, biography, and the | |
vast vague unknown. The answers furnished by us to our correspondents | |
may therefore be relied upon as being strictly accurate. | |
_Scales_.--How old was DANIEL LAMBERT at the time of his death? | |
_Answer_.--736 lbs. | |
_Ignoramus_.--Why were the Roman _Saturnalia_ so called? | |
_Answer_.--The proper spelling of the word is _Sauternalia_. They were | |
wine feasts; and the vintage most in favor at them was Haut Sauterne. | |
_Chasseur_. Is the antelope to be classed among the goat family? | |
_Answer_.--No. MOORE calls it a "deer gazelle." | |
_Armiger_.--Is "arm's length" a recognized measure? | |
_Answer_.--Yes. It is a _Standard_ measure, as may be seen in the way | |
that journal is getting ahead of the _Sun_, which it keeps at arm's | |
length. | |
_Molar_.--Yes; burnt Cork is an excellent dentifrice. It should not | |
be applied to the teeth of children, however, as it is apt to impart an | |
Irish accent, or, in extreme cases, even a <DW64> dialect. | |
_Bookworm_.--Do two negatives always constitute an affirmative? | |
_Answer_.--That depends upon the price charged by the photographer. | |
_Sunswick_--Is it true that JAMES FISK, Jr., has purchased Baden and | |
another German Duchy? | |
_Answer_.--No: but he could have both if he wanted two. | |
_Rockland_.--Who are the suffering persons represented in DORE'S | |
remarkable picture of DANTE and VIRGIL visiting the frozen ward of the | |
_Inferno_? | |
_Answer_.--The Knickerbocker Ice Company. | |
_Solitaire_.--On what day did the Fourth of July fall in the year 1788? | |
_Answer_.--On the Fourth. | |
_James Lobbs_.--How long ago is it since desiccated soup first came | |
into use? | |
_Answer_.--At least as long ago as the days of CROMWELL, whose advice to | |
his troops was "Put your trust in Providence, and keep your chowder | |
dry." | |
_Bach_.--Is the practice of divorce a mark of civilization? | |
_Answer_--It is. In the Gorilla family, (the nearest approach to the | |
human,) divorce is not practiced, but it is in Indiana, which is usually | |
considered to be a State of Civilization. | |
* * * * * | |
PAT TO THE QUESTION. | |
Our law-makers in Congress--or rather law-cobblers, for few of them have | |
risen to the dignity of makers--are asked to repeal the _per cap_. duty | |
imposed by California on all Chinamen imported there. | |
The Californians have the authority of Congress itself, for this duty. | |
By reference to "HEYL'S Rates of Duties on Imports," page 36, art. 691, | |
under head of "Act of June 30, 1864, chap. 171," "An act to increase | |
Duties on Imports," etc., we find "on paddy one cent and a half per | |
pound." Now if a good-sized Irishman pays $2.25, why shouldn't a | |
"Celestial" pay as much in proportion to the weight of his _corpus_? | |
* * * * * | |
Contradictory. | |
It appears that, by a joint resolution of Congress, the use of "that | |
first-class humbug and fraud, the whiskey meter," has been abolished. | |
Now there are dozens of members of Congress who are not only | |
"first-class humbugs and frauds," but whiskey meters, to whom whiskey is | |
both meat and drink, and yet who ever heard of their proposing to | |
abolish themselves? | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: STAY-AT-HOME PEOPLE | |
FOLKS MAY NOT BE ABLE TO GO TO NEWPORT OR LONG BRANCH, BUT THEY CAN | |
ALWAYS CREATE A LOCAL SENSATION BY TAKING A FOOT-BATH IN THE BACK-YARD.] | |
* * * * * | |
MURPHY THE CONQUEROR | |
BY CORPORAL QUINN. | |
Come tip us your fist, then, yer sowl you; | |
Since iver I come from the wars | |
The like wasn't heerd. Fill the bowl you | |
Bowld sons of MILESIUS and MARS; | |
And dhrink to ould Ireland the turfy | |
That's shmilin' out there in the say, | |
Wid three cheers for the conqueror MURPHY. | |
Whoo! America's ours from to-day. | |
Och! SAYZAR he walloped the Briton, | |
The Tarthars leap't China's big wall, | |
ALEXANDTHUR did half the wurld sit on, | |
But niver touched Ireland at all. | |
At Clontarf ould BOBU in the surf he | |
Sint tumblin' the murdtherin' Danes-- | |
But, yer sowl, the brave conqueror MURPHY | |
Takes the shine out of all of their panes. | |
ULYSSES has made him Collecthor, | |
(Sich choppin' o' heads ne'er was seen;) | |
Sure the hayro will make me Inspecthor | |
Whin there's so many "wigs on the green." | |
And we'll be night-watchmen uproarious, | |
Wid big badges on our coats, | |
And we'll fight for TOM MURPHY the glorious, | |
Wid our fists, our guns, and our votes. | |
At the Custom House, Dutchman and Yankee | |
Are thryin' to talk wid a brogue, | |
They're all _Irish_, now--fat, lean, or lanky, | |
And green are the neckties in vogue. | |
They're thracin' themselves to some DURPHY, | |
O'NEILL, or McCANN, or O'TAAFFE, | |
I'll go bail the bowld conqueror MURPHY | |
'S too owld to be caught wid sich chaff. | |
Now Dutchmin may go to the divil, | |
And Yankees to Plymouth's ould rock, | |
We'll blast it, if they are not civil; | |
While boys of the raal ould stock | |
Will hurroo for ould Ireland the turfy. | |
Whoo! Jibralthar is taken to-day, | |
Our commandther's the conqueror MURPHY-- | |
Now a tiger and nine times hoorray! | |
* * * * * | |
COMIC ZOOLOGY. | |
Genus Culex.--The American Mosquito | |
Few American birds are better known than the mosquito. In common with | |
the woodcock, snipe, and other winged succubi, it breeds in wet places, | |
yet is always dry. Like them it can sustain life on mud juleps, but | |
prefers "cluret." It is a familiar creature, seems to regard the human | |
family as its Blood relations, and is always ready to sucker them. | |
Being a bird of Nocturnal Habits, it is particularly attracted to human | |
beings in their Night-shirts. The swallow preys upon it, but it | |
generally eludes the Bat. Although it cannot be called Noctilucous, like | |
the lightning bug, it has no objection to alight in the darkness, and | |
you often knock till you cuss in your vain attempts to prevent its | |
taking a Shine to you. | |
The mosquito differs in most respects from all the larger varieties of | |
the winged tribes, and upon the whole takes after man more than any | |
other living thing. Nevertheless, it certainly bears a noticeable | |
resemblance to some of the feathered race. Like the Nightingale, it | |
"sings darkling," and like the woodpecker, is much addicted to tapping | |
the bark of Limbs and Trunks for the purpose of obtaining grub. It may | |
be mentioned as an amiable idiosyncracy of the mosquito, that it is fond | |
of babies. If there is a child in the house, it is sure to spot the | |
playful innocent; and by means of an ingenious contrivance combining the | |
principles of the gimlet and the air-pump, it soon relieves the little | |
human bud of its superfluous juices. It is, in fact, a born surgeon, a | |
Sangrado of the Air, and rivals that celebrated Spanish Leech in its | |
fondness for phlebotomy. Some infidels, who do not subscribe to the | |
doctrine that nothing was made in vain, consider it an unmitigated | |
nuisance, but the devout and thoughtful Christian recognizes it as | |
Nature's preventive of plethora, and as it alternately breathes a Vein | |
and a song, it may be said (though we never heard the remark,) to | |
combine the _utile_ with the _dulce_. | |
All the members of the genus are slender and graceful in their shape and | |
Gnatty in their general appearance. The common mosquito is remarkable | |
for its strong attachments. It follows man with more than canine | |
fidelity, and in some cases, the dog-like pertinacity of its affection | |
can only be restrained by Muslin. It is of a roving disposition, seldom | |
remaining settled long in one locality; and is Epicurean in its | |
tastes--always living, if possible, on the fat of the land. As the | |
mosquito produces no honey, mankind in general are not as sweet upon it | |
as they are upon that bigger hum-bug, the buzzy bee; yet it is so far | |
akin to the bee, that, wherever it forages, it produces something | |
closely resembling Hives. | |
Few varieties of game are hunted more industriously than this, yet such | |
is the fecundity of the species, that the Sportsman's Club has not as | |
yet thought it necessary to petition the legislature for its protection. | |
The New Jersey Mosquito is the largest known specimen of the genus, | |
except the Southern Gallinipper, which is only a few sizes smaller than | |
the Virginia Nightingale, and raises large speckles similar to those of | |
the Thrush. Ornithologists who wish to study the habits of the mosquito | |
in its undomesticated or nomad state, may find it in angry clouds on the | |
surface of the New Jersey salt marshes at this season, in company with | |
its teetering long-billed Congener, the Sandsnipe. | |
During the last month of summer it reigns supreme in the swamps west of | |
Hoboken, the August Emperor of all the Rushes, and persons of an | |
apoplectic turn, who wish to have their surplus blood determined to the | |
surface instead of to the head, will do well to seek the hygienic insect | |
there. | |
* * * * * | |
An Apt Quotation. | |
The name "Louvre" has now been adopted by several places of | |
entertainment in New York and its suburbs. A Boston gentleman, who | |
visited seven of them a night or two since, under the escort of a | |
policeman, declares that, by a slight alteration of a line of MOORE's, | |
New York may be well described as-- | |
"A place for Louvres, and for Louvres only." | |
* * * * * | |
THE WATERING PLACES. | |
Punchinello's Vacations. | |
Mr. PUNCHINELLO puts up at the Atlantic Hotel when he goes to Cape May; | |
and if you were to ask him why, he would tell you that it was on account | |
of the admirable water-punches which JOHN McMAKIN serves up. To be sure | |
these mixtures do not agree with Mr. P., but he likes to see people | |
enjoying themselves, even if he can't do it himself. It is this | |
unselfish disposition, this love of his fellow-men, that enables him to | |
maintain that constant good humor so requisite to his calling. In fact, | |
though Mr. P. often says sharp things, he never gets angry. When, on | |
Thursday of last week, he was walking down the south side of Jackson | |
street, and a man asked him did he want to buy a bag, Mr. P. was not | |
enraged. He knew the man took him for a greenhorn, but then the man | |
himself was a Jerseyman. It is no shame to be a greenhorn to a | |
Jerseyman. Quite the reverse. Mr. P. would blush if he thought there | |
lived a "sand-Spaniard" who could not take advantage of him. So Mr. P. | |
bought the bag, and because it was made of very durable canvas, and | |
would last a great while, he paid a dollar for it. | |
He did not ask what it was for. He knew. It was to put Cape May Diamonds | |
in! He put the bag in his pocket and walked along the beach for three | |
miles. You can't walk more than three miles here, and if you hire a | |
carriage you will find that you can't ride less than that distance. | |
Which makes it bad, sometimes. However, when Mr. P. had finished his | |
three miles, he didn't want to go any further. He stopped, and gazing | |
carelessly around to see that no one noticed him, pulled out his canvas | |
bag and did shuffle a little in the sand with his feet. He might | |
find some diamonds, you know, just as likely as any of the hundreds of | |
other people, who, in other sequestered parts of the beach, were pulling | |
out other canvas bags, and shuffling in the sand with other feet. At | |
length Mr. P. shuffled himself into a very sequestered nook indeed, and | |
there he saw a man smoking. His melancholy little boy was sitting by his | |
side. Perceiving that it was only General GRANT, Mr. P. advanced with | |
his usual grace and suavity of manner. | |
"Why, Mr. President!" said he, "I thought you would be found at Long | |
Branch this season." | |
"Long--thunder!" ejaculated the General, his face as black as the ace of | |
spades, (which, by the way, is blue.) "I might go to Nova Zembla for a | |
quiet smoke, and some sneaking politician would crawl out from the ice | |
with a petition. I went fishing in Pennsylvania, and I found twenty of | |
those fellows to every trout. However, I don't mind you. Take a seat and | |
have a cigar." | |
[Illustration.] | |
Mr. P. took the seat, (which was nothing to brag of,) and a cigar, | |
(which would have been a great deal to brag of, if he had succeeded in | |
smoking it,) and, after a whiff or two, asked his companion how it was | |
that he came to send such a message to Congress about Cuba. | |
"What message?" said GRANT, absently. | |
Mr. P. explained. | |
"Oh," said GRANT, "that one! Didn't you like it? CALEB CUSHING wrote it | |
and brought it to me, and I signed it. If you had written one and | |
brought it to me, I would have signed that. 'Tisn't my fault if the | |
thing's wrong. What would you expect of a man?" | |
Mr. P. concluded that in this case it was ridiculous to expect anything | |
else, and so he changed the subject. | |
That afternoon Mr. P. bathed. | |
He went to SLOAN'S and fitted himself out in a bathing suit, and very | |
lovely he looked in it, when he emerged from the bathing house at | |
high tide. With a red tunic; green pants; and a very yellow hat, he | |
resembled a frog-legged Garibaldian, ready for the harvest. | |
When he hurried to the water's edge, he hesitated for a moment. The | |
roaring surf was so full of heads, legs, arms, back-hair, hats and feet, | |
that he feared there was no room for him. However, he espied a vacancy, | |
and plunged into the briny deep. | |
How delicious! How cool! How fresh! How salt! How splendid! | |
He struck out with his legs; he struck out with his arms; he dived with | |
his whole body. He skimmed beneath the green waters; he floated on the | |
rolling wave-tips; he trod water; he turned heels over head in the | |
emerald depths; and thus, gamboling like an Infant Triton, he passed out | |
beyond the breakers. It was very pleasant there. Being a little tired, | |
he found the change from the surging waves to the gentle chuck and flop | |
of the deep water, most delightful. Languidly, to rest himself, he threw | |
his arm over a rock just peeping above the water. But the rock gave a | |
start and a yawn. | |
It was a sleeping shark! | |
The startled fish opened his eyes to their roundest, and backed water. | |
So did Mr. P. | |
For an instant they gazed at each other in utter surprise. Then the | |
shark began slowly to sink. Mr. P. knew what that meant. The monster was | |
striving to get beneath him for the fatal snap! | |
Mr. P. sank with him! | |
With admirable presence of mind he kept exactly even with the fish. | |
[Illustration.] | |
At last they reached the bottom. | |
Mr. P. was nearly suffocated, but he determined that he would strangle | |
rather than rise first. The shark endeavored to crawl under him, but Mr. | |
P. clung to the bottom. | |
The fish then made a feint of rising, but, in an instant, Mr. P. had him | |
around the waist! | |
The affrighted shark darted to the surface, and Mr. P. inhaled at least | |
a gallon of fresh air. Never before had oxygen tasted so good! | |
On the surface the struggle was renewed, but Mr. P. always kept | |
undermost. | |
At last they rested from the contest, and lay panting on the surface of | |
the water, glaring at each other. | |
The shark, who was a master of _finesse_, swam out a little way, to | |
where the water was deeper, and then slowly sank, intending, if Mr. P. | |
followed him again to the bottom, to stay there long enough to drown the | |
unfortunate man. But Mr. P. knew a trick worth two of that. | |
_He didn't follow him at all_! He swam towards shore as fast as he | |
could, and when the shark looked around, to see if he was coming, he was | |
safe within the line of surf. | |
Need it be said that when he reached dry laud, Mr. P. became a hero with | |
the crowds who had witnessed this heroic struggle? | |
That evening, as Mr. P. sat upon the portico of his hotel, there came | |
unto him, in the moonlight, a maiden of the latest fashion. | |
"Sir," she softly murmured "are you the noble hero who overcame the | |
shark?" | |
Mr. P. looked up at her. | |
Her soft eyes were dimmed with irresponsible emotion. | |
"I am," said he. | |
The maiden stood motionless. Her whole frame was agitated by a secret | |
struggle. | |
At length she spoke. | |
"Is there a Mrs. P.?" she softly said. | |
Mr. P. arose. He grasped the back of his chair with trembling hand. His | |
manly form quivered with a secret struggle. | |
He looked upon her! | |
He gazed for a moment, with glowing, passionate eyes, upon that | |
matchless form--upon that angelic face, and then--he clasped his brows | |
in hopeless agony. Stepping back, he gave the maiden one glance of | |
wildest love, followed by another of bitterest despair; and sank | |
helpless into his chair. | |
[Illustration.] | |
The maiden leaned, pale and trembling, against a pillar; but hearing the | |
approach of intruders, she recovered herself with an effort. | |
"Farewell," she whispered. "I know! I know! There _is_ a Mrs. P.!"--and | |
she was gone. | |
Mr. P. arose and slipped out into the night, shaken by a secret | |
struggle. He laid upon the sand and kicked up his heels. | |
_There isn't any_ Mrs. P.! | |
Mr. P. does not wish to sweep his hand rudely o'er the tender chords of | |
any heart, but he wants it known that he is neither to be snapped up by | |
sharks in the sea, or by young women at watering places. | |
* * * * * | |
A DOG'S TALE. | |
Dogmatic. | |
I am only a dog, I admit; but do you suppose dogs have no feeling? I | |
guess if you were kicked out of every door-way you ran into, and driven | |
away from every meat stand or grocery you happened to smell around, you | |
would think you had feelings. | |
When I see some dogs riding in carriages, looking so grandly out of the | |
windows, or others walking along proudly by the side of their owners, I | |
have a feeling of dislike for the very thought of liberty! | |
I sometimes go with the crowd to a lecture-room, and listen to the | |
speeches about freedom and liberty, the hatred of bondage, and all that | |
sort of thing. I get my tail up, and wish I could tell them what liberty | |
really is. There is nothing worse in the world than this running around | |
loose, with no one to look after you, and no one for you to look after; | |
no one to notice you when you wag your tail, and to have no occasion for | |
so doing. You go out and you come in, and nobody cares. If you never | |
come back, no one troubles himself about you. | |
Every day I hear men reading in the papers about some lucky dogs having | |
strayed, or having been stolen, a large reward being offered for their | |
recovery: and I envy each lost dog! I wonder who would advertise for me | |
if I got lost! Alas! no one. They would not give me a bone to bring me | |
back, or to keep me from drowning myself. But every boy in the street | |
thinks he has a right to throw stones at me; and tie tin-kettles to my | |
tail; and chase me when I have had the good luck to find a bone; and to | |
set big dogs upon me to worry me when I am faint from hunger and haven't | |
much pluck; and worse than all, chase me and cry "Ki-yi," when I am | |
almost dying of thirst! | |
If you only knew how hard it is for a poor dog to make his way in the | |
world, with no one to help him to a mouthful of food, you would feel | |
sorry for us. | |
But I think we might get along better if it wasn't for the scarcity of | |
water. I hardly know a spot in the city where I can get a drink; and | |
many a time I have gone all day without a drop. | |
If I happen to hang out my tongue and droop my tail, my ears are saluted | |
with "Mad dog! Let's kill him!" You need not wonder I sometimes turn | |
round, and snap at my pursuers. I think you would snap, too, if you were | |
chased through street and lane and alley, till your blood was in a | |
perfect fever, and you hardly knew which way you were running! I have, | |
on many such occasions, actually run past a beautiful bone that lay | |
handy on the side-walk, and never stopped to smell it. | |
Oh! I wish some one would take me prisoner, and continue to own me, and | |
keep me in bondage as long as I lived! I should only be too happy to | |
give up my liberty, and settle down and be a respectable dog! | |
* * * * * | |
A Bute-Iful Idea. | |
The Marquis of Bute denies that he is going to return to the Protestant | |
fold. With reference to the rumor, the Pope stated in the Ecumenical | |
Council that "the Bute was on the right leg at last, and that he would | |
launch his thunder against him who should dare that Bute displace." | |
* * * * * | |
WHAT IS IT? | |
As the shades of night descend (in the neighborhood of Mecklenburg, | |
N.C.,) and harmless domestic animals begin to compose themselves to | |
sleep, suddenly the drowsy world is awakened by a roaring like that of a | |
lion! It proceeds from the forest, in whose bosky recesses (as the | |
Mecklenburgers suppose) some terrible creature proclaims his hunger and | |
his inclination to appease it with human flesh! All night long the | |
quaking denizens of that hamlet lie and listen to the roaring, which is | |
an effectual preventive of drowsiness, as the moment any one begins to | |
be seized with it he also begins to fancy he is about to be seized and | |
deglutinated by the horrid monster! Naturalists are positive it is not | |
the Gyascutis, but admit that a Megatherium may have lately awakened | |
from the magnetic sleep of ages, with the pangs of a mighty hunger | |
tearing his wasted viscera. | |
If our theory is correct, the good people of Mecklenburg (was it not in | |
Mecklenburg that the agitation for Independence began?) may be assured | |
that deliverance from this unreasonable Dragon is possible. We think it | |
more than likely that it is simply GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN practicing for | |
the next invasion of Great Britain. Nothing could be more harmless. One | |
Ku-Kluxian youth, armed with a double-barrelled shot-gun, four | |
bowie-knives, and a number of revolvers, could rout him instantly, and | |
even check the flow of his vociferous eloquence so suddenly as to put | |
him in imminent danger of asphyxia. | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: RETRIBUTION. | |
THE BOYS OF SAN FRANCISCO, EXASPERATED AT THE CONVERSION OF THEIR DOGS | |
INTO PIE, TIE KETTLES TO THE TAILS OF THE CHINAMEN.] | |
* * * * * | |
Giving the Cue. | |
"Is that one of your Chinese _belles_? asked Mr. PUNCHINELLO of Mr. | |
KOOPMAN-SCHOOP, as one of the newly-imported yallagals passed. | |
"Yes," replied Mr. K. "You can always tell a Chinese bell from a Chinese | |
gong by the bell-pull attached to it." | |
Mr. P. immediately presented his _chapeau_ to Mr. K. | |
* * * * * | |
HINTS FOR--THOSE WHO WILL TAKE THEM. | |
Mr. PUNCHINELLO: Your invaluable "Hints for the Family," published some | |
time since, seem destined to work a revolution in our domestic economy; | |
as the plans you propose must win the admiration of housekeepers by | |
their extreme simplicity, aside from any other motives to their | |
adoption. I have myself tested several of your methods, and find that | |
you speak from thorough and circumstantial knowledge of your subject In | |
bread-making, for instance, we find that when the cat reposes in the | |
dough, it (the dough) will not rise, though the cat does. But in the | |
clock manufacture, we fear you have divulged one of the secrets of the | |
trade. | |
Your little invention for carrying a thread should be recommended to | |
students and other isolated beings, notwithstanding their unaccountable | |
propensity to pierce other substances than the cloth. They would find | |
driving the needle through much facilitated by a skilful use of the | |
table formerly described. | |
Permit me to make a few additional suggestions. | |
Get some worsted and a pair of needles; set up from twenty to forty | |
stitches, more or less, and knit till you are tired. When finished--(the | |
knitting)--draw out the needles and bite off the thread. You will thus | |
have made an elegant lamp-mat, of the same color as the worsted, and the | |
very thing for a Christmas present to your grandmother. | |
This is a very graceful employment, and a great favorite with ladies; in | |
fact, some ladies seem so infatuated with work of that kind, that, | |
according to the new theory of the Future, a fruition of fancy-work will | |
be amongst their other blissful realizations. And so, after surveying | |
Deacon QUIRK'S spiritual potato fields, or perhaps some fresh | |
(spiritual) manifestation of Miss PHELPS'S piety and intelligence, we | |
may have the pleasure of seeing the sun and moon hung with tidies, and a | |
lamp-mat under each star. | |
Take your rejected sketches and compositions, cut them in strips two or | |
three inches wide, and as long as the paper will permit. Fold these | |
strips lengthwise as narrow as possible, and smooth the edges down flat | |
with your finger. When finished, or perhaps before, you will find you | |
have made a bunch of excellent lamp-lighters. | |
Get a suit of clothes--broadcloth is the best--and a pair of boots to | |
stand them in. Button the coat, and insert in the neck any vegetable you | |
choose, so that it be large enough, (one of the drum-head species is the | |
best,) and finish with a hat You will then find, doubtless to your | |
surprise and delight, that you have a man, or an excellent | |
substitute for one, equal, if not superior to the genuine article, | |
warranted to be always pleased with his dinner, and never, necessarily, | |
in the way. Some people may object to its lack of intelligence, as | |
compared with the original, but careful investigation has shown that the | |
difference is very slight; yet, admitting even this to be a positive | |
fault, it is amply counterbalanced by negative merits. Your | |
correspondent who writes about "The Real Estate of Woman," will be | |
relieved to find that the threatened dearth in husbands can be so | |
readily obviated. | |
Very truly, | |
ANN O. BLUE. | |
* * * * * | |
For Singers, Only. | |
What is the best wine for the voice? | |
Canary. | |
* * * * * | |
A Chop-House Aphorism. | |
Customers who fee waiters may always be sure of their Feed. | |
* * * * * | |
Washy. | |
The daily papers tell us that "Sixty-Eight Thousand persons visited the | |
public baths during last week." | |
They went in--a week lot--and came out sixty-eight thousand strong. | |
* * * * * | |
Constructive Genius. | |
"A poor woman in Utica, who owns three houses and is building another, | |
sends her children into the streets daily to beg." | |
Quite right. While the youngsters beg in the streets, let the | |
enterprising old lady go on and begin another house. | |
* * * * * | |
A Result of the Mongol. | |
Owing to the influx of Chinamen into this country, the edict against | |
allowing dogs to run at large during the Summer has been relaxed. | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: BOMBASTES BONAPARTE: | |
NOW PERFORMING AT THE THEATRE FRANCAIS. | |
"He who would these Boots displace | |
Must meet BOMBASTES face to face."] | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: THE NEW PANDORA'S BOX. | |
REPRESENTATIVE MANUFACTURER, (_springing open Chinese surprise | |
box_.)--"THERE!--WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THAT LITTLE JOKER?" | |
KNIGHT OF ST. CRISPIN.--"PSHAW! THAT'S A MEAN TRICK: WAIT TILL I OPEN | |
_MY_ BOX!"] | |
* * * * * | |
HIRAM GREEN ON THE CHINESE. | |
He write a letter to the North Adams Shoe Manufacturer.--New Occupation | |
for the "Coming Man." | |
NSBORO, NYE ONTO VARMONT, _July the 11th_, 18-_Seventy_. | |
MISTER SAMPSON: | |
Selestial sir:--I take my goose quil in hand to rite you a letter. I | |
like your stile--you soot me. I myself have been an old Statesman, | |
having served my country for 4 years as Gustise of the Peece, raisin' | |
sed offis to a higher standard than usual, as well as raisin' an | |
interestin' family of eleven healthy children. Upon the linements of | |
their countenance the features and stamp of GREEN stands out in bold | |
relief. They are all genuine Green-bax. | |
A little cloud no bigger than a man's hand made its appearance over the | |
golden streets of San Francisco. | |
It is growin' bigger, and afore we know it, will be bigger than a white | |
elefant. | |
You have ceased the dilemer by the horn which hangs suspended from the | |
dilemer's head, like the tail of a kite. | |
While you have set the Chinees peggin' away puttin' bottoms on shoes, a | |
great many are peggin' away "putin' a head onto you." | |
In the present statis of things you want to blow up your nerve, and | |
stand as firm as the rox of Jiberalter, and like BYRON exclaim: | |
"To be or not to be, there's the question;-- | |
Whether a man feels better to pay big wages for shoemakers, | |
Or to suffer the slings and arrows of everybody, | |
By hirin' Pig-tails for 1/2 price?" | |
Poleticians of the different churches don't endorse our Selestial | |
brother. But, sir, I'll venter a few dollars, that if the children of | |
the son--and dorter--leaned towards either party, he would be gobled up | |
quicker'n scat, even if he come red hot from old LUCIFER, with a pocket | |
full of free passes, for the whole nashun, to the Infernal regions. | |
That's so. A vote's a vote, if it comes from Greenland's coral strand or | |
Afric's icy mountains. I feel a good deal towards you as a nabor of | |
mine, named JOE BELCHER, once did. | |
JOE likes his tod, and can punish as much gin and tansy as a New York | |
alderman can, when drinkin' at the sity's expense. | |
JOE went to camp meetin' last week, and, I am pained to say it, JOSEF | |
got drunker than a biled owl. | |
While one of the brethern was preachin', JOE sot on a pine log tryin' to | |
make out wether the preacher was a double-headed man, or whether 2 men | |
were holdin' forth. | |
"Who'll stand up for the carpenter's Son?" sed the preacher. | |
This made JOE look around. | |
The question was again repeated. | |
Again JOE looked around for an answer. | |
Again the preacher said: "Who'll stand up for Him?" | |
JOE by this time had got onto his feet, and was steadyin' himself by | |
holdin' onto a tree, while he sung out: | |
"I say (hic!) ole feller, Ile stand up (hic!) for him, or any 'orrer man | |
who hain't got any (hic!) more fren's than he has (hic!) in this 'ere | |
crowd." | |
I feel a good deal as JOE did. Anybody who hain't got any more frends | |
than you have, Mr. SAMPSON, has my sympathy. | |
For bringin' these _hily morril_ and _refined_ Monongohelians to | |
Massachusetts is a big feather in your cap, and you will receive your | |
reward bime-bye. | |
"The wages of sin is death." | |
But the wages of a Chinyman is money in a man's pocket. They work cheap. | |
I am trying to get the Chinese substituted for canal hosses. | |
A man here by the name of SNYDER, who runs a canal Hoss to our Co., | |
talks of sendin' for a lot. | |
Won't they be bang up with their cues hitcht to a canal bote snakin' it | |
along at the rate of a mile inside of 2 hours. "G'lang! Tea leaf." | |
Then when they was restin' from their labors, by tyin' 2 of 'em together | |
by their cues, stand one opposite the other and hang close between 'em | |
to dry, on washin' day. | |
What an aristocratic thing Chiny close-line posts would be. The only | |
drawback that I know of is, that the confounded posts mite some day walk | |
off with all the close. | |
But, sir, if they served me in that manner, I would cover the ground | |
with broken crockery by smashin' their old Chiny mugs for 'em. | |
Since you've awoken to _notorosity_, I have been studdyin' out your | |
family pedigree. | |
I find your Antsisters are connected with long hair more or less, same | |
as you be with Chiny pig-tails. | |
Old SAMPSON the first's strength, like your'n of to-day, lade in his | |
long hair. | |
He could cut off more heads, and slay more Fillistians with the jaw bone | |
of a member of Congress than the President of these U.S. can by makin' a | |
new deal in the Custom house department. | |
And, sir, I reckon about these days, we are getting rather more of that | |
same kind of jaw bone than is healthy. | |
I am afrade not. | |
Mrs. SAMPSON worked like a kag of apple sass in hot weather, to find out | |
where her old man's strength was. When she found out, what did she do? | |
Why, she got a pair of sheep shears and cropped him closer'n a state | |
prison bird, and tryin' to lift a house full of fokes, it fell onto him | |
and smashed him. | |
Like LOT'S wife, she'd orter been turned into a pillow of salt, and then | |
the pillow had orter been sewed up and cast into the sea. | |
Another of the SAMPSONS wouldn't even chop off MARIAR ANTERNETTE'S head | |
until her hair had been cut off, so he could peel her top-knot off slick | |
and cleen. | |
Lookin' back at these cheerful antsisters of your'n, it's no wonder you | |
go in for long haired labor. It runs in the SAMPSON blood. | |
The public is cussin' you from DANIEL to BEEBSHEBER, because you've | |
brought a lot of modern Philistines to Massachusetts. | |
Let 'em cus. | |
That's their lay. | |
Your'n is, to bild up a fortin, if Poor-houses for white laborers to | |
live in is thicker in North Adams than goose pimples on a fever and ager | |
sufferer's form. | |
As old Grandma SAMPSON cut off her old man's long hair, so she could | |
handle him in one of them little fireside scrimmages which we married | |
fokes enjoy, so fokes would crop you, my hi toned old Joss stick. | |
But I've writ more'n I intended to. I would like to have you come and | |
make us a visit. | |
Bring along your wife, DELIAL. Tell her to bring her croshay work. | |
Mrs. GREEN is interestin' company among wimmen. | |
What MARIAR don't know about her nabors, don't happen. | |
Then her veel pot-pies and ingin puddins are just rats. | |
She can nock the spots off from any woman who wears a waterfall, gettin' | |
up a good square meal. | |
Anser soon, and don't forget to pay your own postige. | |
Hopin' you are sound on the goose and able to enjoy your _Swi lager und | |
Sweitzer_, | |
I am thine, old hoss, | |
HIRAM GREEN, Esq., | |
Lait Gustise of the Peece. | |
* * * * * | |
TREATMENT FOR POTATO BUGS. | |
Mr. CLARK JOHNSON, of Pendleton, Indiana, not at all discouraged by the | |
signal failures of many previous campaigns against the Bug, has entered | |
the (potato) field with a new weapon, viz.: a mixture of Paris Green and | |
Ashes. Applied frequently, as a Top Dressing, this gentle stimulant | |
imparts a new energy to the vine, and also to the Bug, who thus becomes | |
so vigorous, and at the same time restless, that an uncontrollable | |
impulse seizes him to visit the home of his ancestors, (Colorado.) Here, | |
as is supposed by Mr. JOHNSON, the fictitious energy that had been | |
supplied by the Mixture deserts the immigrant, who now settles down | |
contentedly, nor ever roams again. | |
As (owing to the present facilities of freighting, etc.,) the Potatoes | |
of Pendleton may eventually find the New York market, which always | |
invites the superior esculent, we would like to suggest to Mr. JOHNSON | |
that this Mixture be administered to the Bug with a spoon, and not | |
sprinkled promiscuously on the ground. We have drank Tea with a "green | |
flavor," and found it comparatively innocuous; but Potatoes with a green | |
flavor, (especially if flavored by the JOHNSONIAN method,) we should | |
consider as doubtful, to say the least. It is the general impression | |
that there is nothing Green in Paris; but your house painter knows there | |
is such a thing as Paris Green, and that it is the oxyde of copper. | |
Therefore, should one eat many of the potatoes nourished as above, we | |
should expect to see him gradually turning into a Bronze Statue--a fate | |
which, unless he were particularly Greeky and nice-looking, we should | |
wish to anticipate, if possible, in the interests of art. | |
* * * * * | |
[Illustration: MR. SWACHENBACKER, OF THE AIRY 'UN SOCIETY, CREATES A | |
SENSATION AMONG THE LADY BATHERS AT "THE BRANCH," BY APPEARING AMONG | |
THEM AS A MERMAN, WITH A REAL LOOKING-GLASS AND A FALSE TAIL.] | |
* * * * * | |
Fashionable Intelligence. | |
Two colors that once were fashionable in the Parisian _toilette_, viz.: | |
BISMARCK brown and Prussian blue, are now excluded from court circles, | |
by command of the Empress. | |
* * * * * | |
Weather or No. | |
Most remarkable in the history of mathematics are the calculations | |
published by the weather-prophet of the _Express_. Arithmetic turns pale | |
when she glances at them, and, striking her multiplication table with | |
her algebraic knuckles, demands to know why the _Express_ does not add a | |
Cube-it to its THATCHER. | |
* * * * * | |
Comparative Industry. | |
It is reported that "the journeymen lathers demand four dollars per | |
day." As a question of comparative soap, the latherers will in due time | |
strike too. The ultimatum will be-"Raise our pay or we drop the Razor." | |
* * * * * | |
"Omnibus Hoc," etc. | |
What is the difference between theft in an omnibus and the second deal | |
at cards? | |
One is a Game of the Stage, and the other is a Stage of the Game. | |
* * * * * | |
OUR AGRICULTURAL COLUMN. | |
Memorabilia of "What I Know About Farming." | |
Profound subjects should be well meditated upon. A man may write about | |
"New America," or "Spiritual Wives," or any such light and airy subject, | |
without possessing much knowledge, or indulging in much thought, but he | |
can't play such tricks upon Agriculture. She is very much like a donkey: | |
unless you are thoroughly acquainted with her playful ways, she will | |
upset you in a quagmire. Perhaps it is due to my readers that I should | |
say here that I have read a great many valuable treatises upon this | |
subject, among which may be named, "Cometh up as a Flour," "Anatomy of | |
Melon-cholly," "Sowing and Reaping," one thousand or two volumes of | |
Patent Office Reports, and three or four bushels of "Proverbial | |
Philosophy." I would also add, that I invariably remain awake on clear | |
nights, and think out the ideas set down in this column. Probably you | |
may not be able to find traces of all that labor here, but I assure you | |
that those books are more familiar to me than is my catechism. However, | |
anybody who thinks he knows more about vegetables than I do, can send me | |
a letter containing his information, and, if I don't cabbage it, I will | |
plant it carefully in the bottom of the waste paper basket. We now | |
proceed to consider. | |
PAR'S NIPS. | |
This vegetable always flourishes in a moist soil, though it generally | |
has a holy horror of _aqua pura_. Some of them are of an immense size; I | |
have seen them fill a tumbler. Producers, however, generally charge more | |
for the large ones than for the small. The size of the nip usually | |
depends upon the par. It may be that your par's nip is extremely small, | |
while JOHN SMITH'S par's nip is very large. Four fingers is, I believe, | |
considered to be the regulation size. | |
This vegetable is served up in a variety of forms. Some pars like it | |
with milk; in that case it is generally "hung up." In the winter it is | |
often called a sling or a punch; in the summer it is denominated a | |
cobbler or a jew-lip. Perhaps it would be well for those who love it, to | |
indulge in par's nip now, for some people say, that in the days of the | |
"coming man" there will be no par's nips. It must be admitted that the | |
father of a family, who indulges too freely in par's nip, is very likely | |
to run to seed, and to plant himself in such unfruitful places as the | |
gutter. If he be a young par, he may become a rake, and fork over his | |
money, and then ho! for the alms-house. | |
Numerous efforts have been made to suppress this vegetable, among which | |
may be reckoned, "Father, dear Father, come home with me now," Brother | |
GOUGH'S circus, and the parades of the F.M.T.A.B. Societies. Maine and | |
Vermont Neal together in the front rank of its opponents. In Boston they | |
tried to suppress this vegetable, but, if you followed your par to a | |
store and heard him order a cracker, you could smell par's nip. | |
Among the mild varieties of this article may be mentioned benzine, | |
camphene and kerosene; the next strongest kind is called Jersey | |
lightning; but, if you desire par's nips in their most luxuriant form, | |
go to Water street and try the species known as "rot-gut." | |
* * * * * | |
OUR PORTFOLIO. | |
Poetry is the exclusive birthright of no age of people. The dirtiest | |
Hindoo sings to his _fetish_ the songs of the Brahmin muse, with as keen | |
a relish as the most devout Christian does the hymns of Dr. WATTS. | |
Melody comes of Heaven, and is a gift vouchsafed to all generations, and | |
all kinds of men. In proof of this, let us adduce a single extract from | |
the great epic of the Hawaiian poet, POPPOOFI, entitled "Ka Nani E!" | |
Ka nani e! ka nani e! | |
Alohi puni no | |
Mai luna, a mai lalo nei, | |
A ma na mea a pau. | |
We would call the attention of our readers particularly to the sublime | |
sentiment of the second line. "Alohi puni no," sings the peerless | |
POPPOOFI, and where, in the pages of that other Oriental HOMER, the | |
Persian HAFI, can be found anything half so magnificent? There may be | |
critics bigoted enough to think that the last line destroys the effect | |
of the other three; but _we_ don't. PUNCHINELLO would much rather | |
discover the good in a thing at any time, than go a-fishing on Sundays. | |
It is not in the nature of a properly constituted human being to lay his | |
hand upon his heart and chant: | |
"Ka nani e! Ka nani e!" | |
in the presence of his mother-in-law, without feeling that life is not | |
so miserable as some people would make it out. In the words of ALEXANDER | |
SELKIRK'S man FRIDAY: "_Palmam qui meruit ferat_." | |
* * * * * | |
THE PLAYS AND SHOWS. | |
Emmet is a name which has heretofore been associated in the public mind | |
with the <DW64> Minstrel business. Certain weird barbaric melodies, which | |
defy all laws of musical composition, but which haunt one like a dream | |
of a lonely night on some wild African river, are said to have been | |
written by "OLD EMMET." Is there any such person? Has any one actually | |
seen "OLD EMMET" in the flesh, and with--say a high hat and a cotton | |
umbrella? For my part I disbelieve in the popular theory of the origin | |
of these EMMETIC melodies which stir one so strangely. They are not the | |
work of any earthly song writer, but are born of some untuned Eolian | |
harp played upon by uncertain breezes, that murmur the memory of | |
tropical groves and sigh with the sadness of exile. There is no "OLD | |
EMMET." If there is, let him be brought forward--not to be chucked out | |
of the window, as Mrs. F.'s AUNT might suggest,--but to be thanked and | |
wondered at as an inchoate OFFENBACH, who might, under other | |
circumstances, have written an American opera-bouffe, or, better still, | |
as a possible CHOPIN, who might have written a second "March Funebre" as | |
hopeless and desolate and fascinating as that of the despairing and | |
poetic Pole. (I am coming to "FRITZ" in a moment, but I won't be hurried | |
by any one.) | |
As for JOSEPH K. EMMET, he is an undoubted reality. If you don't believe | |
it, go to WALLACK'S and see him. Somebody discovered this EMMET in the | |
Pastoral privacy of the Bowery. Mr. GAYLER was made to write a play for | |
him, and EMMET, the Bowery Minstrel, straightway became Mr. JOSEPH K. | |
EMMET, the renowned impersonator of "FRITZ." He plays "FRITZ" at | |
WALLACK'S every evening, and the entertainment is something of this | |
nature. | |
ACT I.--_Scene, the outside of Castle Garden. Enter baggage-smashers, | |
emigrant-runners, aldermen, and other criminals_. | |
RUNNER. "There's a ship a' comin' up. I'll lay for the Dutchmen." | |
BOBBIT. (_A concert-saloon manager_.) "There's a ship coming up. I'll | |
lay for the Dutch girls." | |
DISSOLUTE COLONEL. "There's a ship coming up. I want you two fellows to | |
look out for a Dutchman named "FRITZ," who is onboard. He takes care of | |
a girl, KATRINA, whom I adore. Carry off FRITZ and I'll carry off the | |
girl." | |
(_Various emigrants enter and are hustled off by the runners_. FRITZ | |
_and_ KATRINA _finally appear_.) | |
FRITZ. "Ja. Das ist gut. Ach himmel; zwei bier und Limburger." | |
(_The runners seize his trunk and carry it off. The_ DISSOLUTE COLONEL | |
_hurries_ KATRINA _into a coach and carries her off_. FRITZ _is carried | |
away by his emotions. Curtain_.) | |
ACT II.--_Scene, a boarding-house parlor. Enter_ DISSOLUTE COLONEL | |
and KATRINA. | |
DISSOLUTE COLONEL. "You are in my power. Be mine, and you shall have as | |
many bonnets and things as you can wish. Refuse, and I'll send every | |
reporter in the city to interview you." | |
KATRINA. "Base villain! I despise you. Let the torturers do their | |
worst." | |
(_Enter_ FRITZ, _disguised as a member of the Sorosis_.) | |
KATRINA. "You here! Be cautious. The hash is drugged. Save me, my | |
beloved." | |
FRITZ. "Ja. Das ist nicht gut. Herr Colonel, Ich bin KATRINA'S aunt. Ich | |
habe gekommen to take her away wid me, ye owdacious spalpeen." | |
DISSOLUTE COLONEL. "Glad to see you. Take some hash, madam?" | |
FRITZ. "Ja. Das ist gut. Take some yourself, you murtherin' thafe of the | |
worruld." | |
(_The_ DISSOLUTE COLONEL _forgets that the hash is drugged. He takes it | |
and falls insensible_. FRITZ _and_ KATRINA _escape. Scene changes to | |
Judge_ DOWLING'S _court-room_.) | |
FRITZ. (_Having left off his Sorosis disguise_.) "Ja. Das is nicht gut. | |
Behold, O wise young judge, the misguided person who put my trunk in his | |
pocket and ran away with it." | |
JUDGE. "Prove your case." | |
FRITZ. "Ja. Das ist gut. Begar! I proves him _toute de suite_--what you | |
call to wunst. You see those Limburger cheese in the villain's mouth. He | |
got them out of my trunk. So you see I have him ein thief geproven." | |
JUDGE. "Your case is proved. Let the prisoner be removed." | |
FRITZ. "Ja. Das ist sehr gut. Now I'm a gwine to de saloon, where dis | |
niggah has a ningagement for to sing." | |
(_Scene changes to a concert saloon_. FRITZ _enters and goes through an | |
entire programme of <DW64> minstrelsy, to the wild delight of the | |
gallery. At last the lazy curtain slowly consents to fall_.) | |
ACT III.--The DISSOLUTE COLONEL _come to grief, and_ FRITZ _marries_ | |
KATRINA. If you want to know all about it, go to the theatre. I don't | |
intend to ruin the establishment by giving the public the whole play for | |
the ridiculous sum which is charged for this copy of PUNCHINELLO. The | |
third act is the last of the play, and when the curtain fells, the | |
audience immediately proceeds to pick EMMET to pieces. | |
BOY IN THE GALLERY. "Ain't he just tip, though? I've seen him lots o' | |
times at TONY PASTOR'S, and I allers knowed he'd be a big thing if the | |
Bowery or thishyer theatre got a hold on him." | |
YOUNG LADY. "Isn't it frightfully low? The idea of Mr. WALLACK | |
permitting this <DW64> minstrelsy in his theatre. To be sure Mr. EMMET is | |
funny; but I hate to see people funny in this place." | |
OLD GENTLEMAN. "My dear! don't be absurd. Suppose Mr. EMMET has been a | |
minstrel, is that any proof that he can't be an actor? The young fellow | |
has his faults, but they will wear off in time, and he is brimful of | |
real talent. The play isn't a model of excellence, but it was made to | |
show EMMET'S strong points, and it answers its purpose. Shall we cry | |
down a talented and promising young actor simply because he has been a | |
minstrel, and now has the audacity to play at WALLACK'S? And besides, | |
haven't we seen pantomime, and legs, and LOTTA, and DAN BRYANT at | |
WALLACK'S? You never objected to any of the illegitimacies that have | |
preceded FRITZ;--why then should you begin now? Give EMMET and GAYLER a | |
chance. At any rate they can make you laugh, which is something that | |
BOUCICAULT with his '_Lost at Sea_' did not do." | |
MATADOR. | |
* * * * * | |
A PARABLE ABOUT THE TWELFTH OF JULY. | |
In a far distant land, beyond the sea, there dwelt an Orange Lily. | |
Separated from it by a very absurd and useless ditch, a Green Shamrock | |
spread its trefoil leafage to the sun, and grew greener every day. Now, | |
in course of time, a very ill feeling sprang up between the Lily and the | |
Shamrock, on account of color, the former despising the latter because | |
it was green, and the latter hating the former because it was orange--as | |
if both colors hadn't lived together in the rainbow ever since the | |
aquatic excursion of old Mr. NOAH, without ever falling out of it or | |
with each other. In time they both crossed the sea, and took root in a | |
far-away land, where they became acquainted with a very remarkable | |
animal called the American Beaver. | |
The industry of this creature urged the Lily to toil and spin, contrary | |
to its usual habits, while the Shamrock converted its trifoliated leaves | |
into shovels, and took a contract for excavating the hemisphere. And so | |
they might have jogged on very well together, but for their stupid way | |
of showing their colors when there was no occasion for it. This greatly | |
disgusted their friend, the American Beaver, who didn't care a pinch of | |
snuff about color, (black is not a color, you know,) but who went in for | |
faithful and persistent work. One beautiful Twelfth of July, the Lily | |
arose very early in the morning, and, shaking out her orange leaves, | |
defied the Shamrock to "come on." The Shamrock came on. There was a | |
vegetable howl, and clash, and clangor in the air, and the Lily, having | |
knocked off several of the Shamrocks' greenest leaves, went to its | |
friend, the American Beaver, for comfort and support. But the American | |
Beaver, instead of countenancing the Lily, said: "Look here, Lily, I | |
guess you are about the greatest fool I ever _did_ see, except, perhaps, | |
the Shamrock. As long as you two stick to your work, instead of sticking | |
out your colors and sticking your knives into each other, I am very glad | |
to have you for neighbors, but now that you have shown yourselves to be | |
jack-asses instead of vegetables, I would not give an American Beaver | |
dam for the two of you." | |
* * * * * | |
CONDENSED CONGRESS. | |
SENATE. | |
A pleasant philosopher tells us that blessings brighten as they take | |
their flight. The flight of Congress may be regarded as a blessing. But | |
Congressmen do not brighten. PUNCHINELLO listens in vain for the swan | |
song of SUMNER, and looks longingly, without being gratified by the | |
spectacle of the oratorical funeral pyre of NYE. Almost the only gleam | |
of humor he discerns in his weekly wading through the watery and windy | |
wastes of the Congressional Globe is a comic coruscation by Mr. CAMERON. | |
Mr. McCREERY had had the abominable impudence to introduce | |
a bill relieving the disabilities of a few friends of his in Kentucky. | |
Mr. CAMERON objected upon the ground that one of these persons was named | |
SMITH, and used to be a New York Street Commissioner. Any man who had | |
been a New York Street Commissioner ought to be hanged as soon as any | |
decent pretext could be found for hanging him. (Murmurs of approbation | |
from the New York reporters.) Still this was not his main objection to | |
SMITH. The SMITH family had furnished more aid and comfort to the rebel | |
army than any other family in the South. No SMITH should, with his | |
consent, be permitted to participate in the conduct of a Government | |
which so many SMITHS had conspired to overthrow. Moreover, this was an | |
incorrigible SMITH. It was an undisputed fact that SMITH had given up a | |
lucrative office to follow his political convictions. Such a man could | |
not be viewed by Senators with any other feelings than those of horror | |
and disgust. Let them reflect what would be the effect of polluting this | |
body, as by this bill it was proposed to make it possible to do, with a | |
man so dead to all the common feelings of our nature that he would set | |
up his own conceits against the practice of his fellow-Senators, and the | |
rewards of a grateful country. This settled the fate of SMITH, but the | |
rest of Mr. McCREERY's friends, being obscure persons, were let in, in | |
spite of the "barbaric yaup" of DRAKE, who said that the next thing | |
would be a proposition to enact a similar outrage in Missouri, and | |
thereby abet the efforts of the bold bad men who were trying to get him | |
out of his seat. | |
HOUSE. | |
SCHENCK insisted upon the Tariff. He had been visited by | |
delegations from the great heart of the nation, who assured him that the | |
great heart of the nation yearned for an immediate increase of the duty | |
on various articles which competed with the articles manufactured by the | |
members of the delegation. No longer ago than yesterday a manufacturer | |
of double-back-action jack-planes had assured him that the | |
single-forward-action jack-planes poured upon our shores by the pauper | |
labor of Europe, were, so to speak, shaving off the edge of the national | |
life. A gentleman whose name was known to the uttermost parts of the | |
civilized world, who had shed new lustre upon the American name by the | |
great boon he had bestowed upon mankind in the American self-filling | |
rotary Bird of Freedom inkstand with revolving lid, had said, with the | |
tears of patriotic shame and sorrow in his eyes, that there were | |
recreant writers who preferred to purchase the Birmingham inkstand, | |
which required to be filled, did not rotate, and had no revolution to | |
its lid, at fifty cents, than to secure his own triumph of American | |
ingenuity at ten dollars. Such misguided men must be taught their duty | |
to their native land. Mr. SCHENCK moved an increase to 4,000 per cent, | |
_ad valorem_ on the foreign jack-plane, which he characterized as a Tool | |
of Tyranny, and the Birmingham inkstand. The thing was done. | |
Mr. DAWES said he was disgusted. Everybody's jobs were put through | |
except his. He threatened to go home and tell his constituents. | |
Mr. PETERS suggested that Mr. DAWES had better go out and take "suthin' | |
soothin'." (Mr. PETERS is from Maine, and his remark will probably be | |
understood there.) If he might be pardoned the liberty he would | |
recommend a little ice in it. | |
Mr. DAWES said he could do his own drinking. As for PETERS, he scorned | |
him. Moreover, PETERS was one-eyed. | |
Mr. PETERS appealed to his record to show that he had two eyes. He did | |
not understand the anger of Mr. DAWES. Of course when he suggested a | |
drink, he assumed the responsibility of paying for it. | |
Mr. DAWES said that altered the case entirely. He took pleasure in | |
withdrawing his hasty remarks, and in assuring the House that he | |
profoundly venerated PETERS, and that PETERS had two perfect eyes of | |
unusual expressiveness. | |
Mr. BINGHAM called attention to the case of Mr. PORTER, who had been | |
smitten on the nose by a vile creature whom he declined to drink with. | |
This was a blow at the national life, and he thought the punishment of | |
treason was imperatively demanded. | |
Mr. BUTLER said he had been kicked once. He assured the House that the | |
sensation was repugnant to his feelings as a man--much more as a | |
Congressman. He moved to amend by substituting slow torture. | |
It was finally resolved to put the wretch in irons and feed him on bread | |
and water. | |
* * * * * | |
A Drowsy Con. | |
When a man is sleepy, what sort of transformation does he desire? | |
He wishes he were a-bed. | |
* * * * * | |
An Anecdote of the good old Square Kind. | |
MRS. PRINGLEWOOD, having been afflicted with a chimney that smoked, sent | |
for a chimney-doctor to cure it. | |
When the cure had been thoroughly effected, says Mrs. PRINGLEWOOD to the | |
chimney-doctor: "My son, a boy of but fourteen, smokes awful; couldn't | |
you cure him as you did the chimney?" | |
"No I couldn't, marm," returned the chimney-doctor, who was a wag: "but | |
I see what you're arter, marm--you want me to teach him to draw!" | |
* * * * * | |
O Deer, Deer! | |
_Trichinoe_ are said to have been discovered in the flesh of Oregon | |
deer. If this should prove true, Oregon venison must be anything but a | |
benison; but it is more than likely that the report originated in the | |
fact that there is in the East Indies a species of the cervine family | |
known as the Hog deer. | |
* * * * * | |
Scientific Intelligence. | |
We learn from exchanges that in Missouri, where the wages of | |
working-people average five dollars _per diem_, that the Legislature | |
have decreed a Mining Bureau, and a Geological Survey of the State--the | |
remuneration of the assistant geologists to be at the rate of $1.50 _per | |
diem_. Why should these learned geologists waste their time for a | |
compensation so mean? Let them rather convert their surveying-staffs | |
into ox-goads, and turn their attention to Gee-haw-logy,--'twill pay | |
better than t'other thing. | |
* * * * * | |
Men and Manners | |
The following paragraph, cut from a newspaper, suggests a good deal: | |
"A Hindoo cabby, before mounting the box and taking the reins, always | |
first prays that his driving may be to the glory of his God." | |
Now this is precisely what the New York hackman invariably does before | |
he gathers up the reins and urges on his "galled jades." He curses his | |
horses, his passengers, and his own eyes, and thus commends his driving | |
to the glory of _his_ God, whose other name is LUCIFER. | |
+--------------------------------------------------------------+ | |
| | | |
| A. T. Stewart & Co. | | |
| Are offering | | |
| | | |
| A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT | | |
| OF THE | | |
| LATEST PARIS NOVELTIES. | | |
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| | | |
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| _Great Inducements to Purchasers_. | | |
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| IN | | |
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| Silk, Grenadine, Swiss Muslin, | | |
| Victoria Lawn, Linen | | |
| and Pique | | |
| | | |
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| | | |
| Children's Linen and Pique Garments, | | |
| In the Greatest Variety, | | |
| | | |
| Embroidered Collars, CUFFS, LACES, | | |
| Real LAMA LACE POINTS, | | |
| DRESSES &c., &c. | | |
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| 4TH AVE., 9TH AND 10TH STREETS. | | |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------+ | |
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| A. T. Steward & Co. | | |
| | | |
| Are closing out their stock of | | |
| FRENCH, ENGLISH, AND DOMESTIC | | |
| CARPETS, | | |
| | | |
| Oil Cloths, Rugs, Mats, Cocoa and Canton | | |
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| | | |
| At a Great REDUCTION IN PRICES. | | |
| | | |
| _Customers and Strangers are Respectfully_ | | |
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| INVITED TO EXAMINE, | | |
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| BROADWAY, | | |
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| 4th Avenue, 9th and 10th Streets. | | |
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+--------------------------------------------------------------+ | |
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| A. T. STEWART &CO. | | |
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| Offer the following | | |
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| Extraordinary Inducements | | |
| | | |
| IN PRICES TO PURCHASERS, | | |
| | | |
| In order to close the following portion of their Stock: | | |
| | | |
| Striped Checks, & Broche Poplinettes, | | |
| Only 50 cts. per Yard. | | |
| | | |
| Heavy Black and White Check Silks, | | |
| 75 cts. per Yard, value $1.50. | | |
| | | |
| Real Gaze de Chambrey, | | |
| 75 cts. per Yard, formerly $2. | | |
| | | |
| Striped Mongoline Silks (a Beautiful | | |
| Article for Costumes), | | |
| $1 per Yard, formerly $2 | | |
| | | |
| A LARGE QUANTITY OF | | |
| | | |
| STRIPED & CHECKED SILKS, | | |
| | | |
| This Season's Importation, $1 per Yard. | | |
| A great Variety of the | | |
| | | |
| NEW ROUBAIX SILKS, 56 INCHES WIDE, $1.25 | | |
| per Yard. | | |
| | | |
| RICH CHANGEABLE SILKS, Light Colors, 24 Inches | | |
| Wide, $1.75. | | |
| | | |
| EXTRA HEAVY PONGE SILKS, ONLY $1.60 per | | |
| Yard, formerly $2.50. | | |
| | | |
| A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF | | |
| | | |
| Plain POULTS DE SOIES, TAFFETTAS, | | |
| FAILLES, &c., &c., | | |
| | | |
| Choice Shades of Color. | | |
| | | |
| _AN IMMENSE STOCK OF_ | | |
| | | |
| BLACK SILKS, | | |
| | | |
| At Prices Lower Than Ever. | | |
| | | |
| BROADWAY, | | |
| | | |
| 4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts. | | |
| | | |
+--------------------------------------------------------------+ | |
PUNCHINELLO. | |
The first number of this Illustrated Humorous and Satirical Weekly Paper | |
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A copy of paper for one year and either of the following $3.00 chromos: | |
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A copy of paper for one year and either of the following $5.00 chromos: | |
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WHEN EVERYTHING IS TO BE CHEAP, AND THE WHITE MAN WILL STARVE.] | |
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| ILLUSTRATED HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL | | |
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| WEEKLY PAPER, | | |
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| The first number of which was issued under date of April 2. | | |
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| THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD. | | |
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| The New Burlesque Serial, | | |
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| Written expressly for PUNCHINELLO, | | |
| | | |
| BY | | |
| | | |
| ORPHEUS C. KERR, | | |
| | | |
| Commenced in No. 11. will be continued weekly throughout the | | |
| year. | | |
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| A sketch of the eminent author, written by his bosom friend, | | |
| with superb illustrations of | | |
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| 1ST. THE AUTHOR'S PALATIAL RESIDENCE AT BEGAD'S HILL, | | |
| TICKNOR'S FIELDS, NEW JERSEY. | | |
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| 2ND. THE AUTHOR AT THE DOOR OF SAID PALATIAL RESIDENCE taken | | |
| as he appears "Every Saturday." will also be found in the | | |
| same number. | | |
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End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 18, July 30, | |
1870, by Various | |
*** |