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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34, November 19,
+1870, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34, November 19, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2003 [EBook #10106]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 34 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
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+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
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+ | PATENT BINDERS FOR |
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+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+Vol. II. No. 34.
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO
+
+
+SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1870.
+
+
+PUBLISHED BY THE
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
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+ | The first volume of PUNCHINELLO--the only first-class, |
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+ | published in this country--ending with No. 26, September 24, |
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+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | FACTS FOR THE LADIES. |
+ | |
+ | I have a Wheeler & Wilson machine (No. 289), bought of Mr. |
+ | Gardner In 1853, he having used it a year. I have used it |
+ | constantly, in shirt manufacturing as well as family sewing, |
+ | sixteen years. My wife ran it four years, and earned between |
+ | $700 and $800, besides doing her housework. I have never |
+ | expended fifty cents on it for repairs. It is, to-day, in |
+ | the best of order, stitching fine linen bosoms nicely. I |
+ | started manufacturing shirts with this machine, and now have |
+ | over one hundred of them in use. I have paid at least $3,000 |
+ | for the stitching done by this old machine, and it will do |
+ | as much now as any machine I have. |
+ | |
+ | W.F. TAYLOR. |
+ | |
+ | BERLIN, N.Y. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | GEO. B. BOWLEND, |
+ | |
+ | Draughtsman & Designer, |
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+ | No. 100 Fulton Street, |
+ | |
+ | Room No. 11, NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HENRY L STEPHENS, |
+ | |
+ | ARTIST, |
+ | |
+ | No. 160 FULTON STREET, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | GEORGE WEVILL, |
+ | |
+ | WOOD ENGRAVER, |
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+ | 208 BROADWAY, |
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+ | NEW YORK. |
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+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
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+ | |
+ | The American Chemist: |
+ | |
+ | A MONTHLY JOURNAL |
+ | |
+ | OF |
+ | |
+ | Theoretical, Analytical, and Technical Chemistry |
+ | |
+ | DEVOTED ESPECIALLY TO AMERICAN INTERESTS. |
+ | |
+ | EDITED BY |
+ | |
+ | Chas. F. Chandler, Ph.D., & W.H. Chandler. |
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+ | 434 Broome Street, New York. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+Entered according to Art of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+Punchinello Publishing Company, in the Office of the Librarian of
+Congress at Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WALKING DOWN CHATHAM STREET.
+
+_Clothier._ "Step in and look at our goods, Captain. Summer stuffs at a
+discount--nice lot o' white ducks at half price."
+
+_Sportsman._ "I beat you there. I've got a nice lot o' black ducks here
+that ain't to be had at any price."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BRILLIANCY OF THE "SUN."
+
+The Moon, as is generally known, shines with a borrowed light, while the
+Sun is popularly supposed to manufacture its own gas and to arrange its
+pyrotechnics on the premises. Our N.Y. _Sun_, however, does not always
+manufacture its own beams. By far the most brilliant of the "sunbeams,"
+for instance, published in that journal of November 1st, is the quaint
+and charming little poem there headed "Sally Salter," and written
+originally for Punchinello, in the issue of which publication for Oct.
+1st it made its first appearance, under the title of "The Lovers." We
+congratulate the _Sun_ on having thus successfully lit its pipe with
+Punchinello's fire, though we think it might have been gracious enough
+to have acknowledged the favor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PEOPLE OF TASTE.
+
+The extraordinary liberality of the generous people of Connecticut has
+frequently excited apprehension in the minds of their friends, that,
+sooner or later, as the result of their spendthrift career, they must
+come to beggary. But we are glad to hear that they are making an effort
+in New Haven to reform. The grocery men there say that their customers
+taste so much before they can make up their minds to buy anything, that
+what with gratuitous slices of cheese and specimen mouthfuls of sugar
+and sample spoonfuls of molasses, the shop-keeper's profits are most
+dolefully diminished. A particularly BLUE LAW against this economical
+custom will have the effect of sobering down these brilliant Cullers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"What Answer?"
+
+Is it likely that HORACE GREELEY, or any other man, could steer this
+country through its difficulties by means of the tillers of the soil?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANY MORE CAVES?
+
+About the dreariest magazine or other reading we know of--and we get a
+deal of it, too--is that which describes the visits of enthusiastic
+persons to big caves underground, very dark, damp, dreary, ugly,
+funereal--with winding ways and huge holes, water with eyeless fish, and
+certain drippings called stalagmites and stalactites. The enthusiasts,
+who always possess that priceless treasure self-satisfaction, and a
+boundless capacity for wonder (which is always ready to exercise itself
+with anything that is big, however ugly), and the "Palaces," and
+"Halls," and "Cascades," and "Altars," and "Bridal Wreaths" they see
+there are not only finer than real ones (if you would believe them!) but
+so grand and wonderful as to be really indescribable. So we find them,
+by their turgid and stupid reports, which are all alike, and all dreary
+and silly. We have never heard of anybody who got excited over these
+pictures (except the artists themselves); and positively there is no
+flatter reading anywhere than these gushing notes about big caves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GEOMETRICAL.
+
+Why is it that we hear so much of the proper "Sphere" of woman? Here is
+that noble exile, the Princess Editha Montez, lecturing again, and her
+subject, of course, is the Spherical one. So when Mesdames Stanton,
+Dickinson, Anthony, Howe--all the lovely lecturers--discourse, they
+forget the platform which is plane, and discuss the "sphere" which is
+mysterious. Can it possibly be that it is because these amiable
+gentlewomen are always going round? Or is it because they cannot help
+reasoning in a circle? Or is there some occult relation between spheres
+and hoops? Or has the wedding-ring something to do with it? It should be
+understood, that these are questions addressed solely to male
+mathematicians; for Mr. P. is unlike John Graham, and doesn't care to
+cross-examine ladies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SECRETION EXTRAORDINARY.
+
+It is done by Mollusks. We can tell you even the precise kind--it is the
+Gasteropod kind. Not only this, we know the very devil himself that does
+it. (And you will say that "devil" is not a particle too rough a term,
+when we come to tell what it is he "secretes.") It is the _Dolium
+galea_, good friends, and we could tell you six other kinds that are
+suspected of this meanness. One of 'em is the _Pleurobranchidium_
+--which, of course, you have often heard of.
+
+Well, what do these wretched Mollusks go and secrete? We can tell
+you--we, who know everything. It is sulphuric acid! What! do they steal
+it? Oh, no; they "evolve" it--probably from the "depths of their own
+consciousness."
+
+And what do they do it for? Well, they bore with it. Give 'em a chance,
+and they'll go through _you_. The acid eats its way, and then they eat
+_their_ way. That way is not ours, exactly; but we have known human
+beings about as venomous as this creature, and with precisely the same
+tendency to pierce one. They do it with their tongues, it is true, but
+the perforation is complete.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WRONG PLACE.
+
+We are unusually astonished to find the Female Reformers holding their
+meeting in this city in Apollo Hall. It is well known that Apollo was a
+god of the male persuasion; and to have everything "mix up well," these
+philosophical dames should have a Minerva Hall or a Diana Hall of their
+own. Besides, was not Apollo the God of Harmony? Precious little of that
+same was there at this meeting; for there was the Medical Mary Walker
+trying to make a speech, while the Chairwoman put her down, causing Mary
+de Medici to cry out with shrill indignation: "Tyrant!" Bless us! we
+thought all the tyrants were we Bearded Ones.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A LETTER FROM CHICAGO.
+
+Purposely or otherwise, we are all on our way to California now--men,
+women, and children--graybeards and babies. We did Europe two or three
+years ago, so that idea is obsolete, excepting as a bridal tour; then,
+too, the more peaceably inclined, who have not seen the European
+elephant, would prefer to wait until that country is again in a state of
+quiescence. But Chicago is constantly sending out her adventure-loving
+citizens upon the Pacific road, each one of whom looks, sees, admires,
+and suddenly develops an epistolary talent hitherto undreamed of by his
+most enthusiastic friends. There's our MELISSA, for instance--she never
+used to have a pen in her hand more than once in the course of six
+months, and _now_--why, we really seem to have another SÉVIGNÉ budding
+right in our midst. She went to California, saw all the sights, and
+wondered, and admired, and _wrote_. The floods of eloquence that had so
+long been slumbering now burst forth beyond all hindrance or control.
+She stopped at Salt Lake, and called upon BRIGHAM YOUNG, and was so
+disgusted with the mighty prophet that she would not look at him. Yet,
+considering that circumstance, she described his personal appearance
+with wonderful vividness and accuracy. She indulged in the usual amount
+of stern remonstrance and indignation, that seem to be almost
+indispensable to the occasion. ALONZO asked why she called upon the
+dreadful man, and somewhat maliciously inquired if it was not for the
+express purpose of being shocked and horrified, thus affording a fine
+chance to moralize, and display the elevation of her own principles,
+and, in fact, help to fill out a good article; but MELISSA most
+vigorously denied the soft impeachment. Then she saw the sad wives,
+whose days of sunshine are gone by, and the merry ones,--who don the cap
+and bells deliberately; and for their benefit she expended just the
+proper degree of astonishment and sympathy--so fully substantiating the
+sound and praiseworthy condition of her own mind and heart.
+
+This excellent young woman also caught glimpses of the red man, and here
+was another glorious opportunity to display her literary genius--and she
+did not let the occasion slip--O no! it produced a plaintive little
+rhapsody of pity and regret, such as "Mr. Lo!" is apt to inspire in the
+hearts of the young and romantic, although if MELISSA were to find
+herself alone in a forest, with the faintest suspicion of "Mr. Lo!"
+meandering anywhere near, she would most likely apply her hand
+involuntarily to her trembling chignon, and regret as keenly as all
+_hard-hearted_ persons, that civilization has not carried out the
+process of extermination even more thoroughly than it has done. Indeed,
+she would probably wish the red gentleman at the bottom of the Red Sea,
+or in some other equally damp and discouraging situation. The
+noble-hearted braves are so much prettier to read about than to
+encounter, and the thrill occasioned by the sight of a bloody hatchet
+suspended over the intricate elaboration which we so fondly term a head,
+though more exciting perhaps, would scarcely be as delightful as that
+awakened by some perfectly safe and stirring ballad of the red man's
+wrongs.
+
+MELISSA'S ideas of refinement met with a great shock. She concluded that
+the Indians' acquaintance with soap and water must be extremely limited,
+and thought that the distribution amongst them of several boxes of
+COLGATE'S best would be a most delicate courtesy, and true missionary
+enterprise. In looking at these noble representatives of savage life,
+she was greatly puzzled to discover where the dirt ended and the Indian
+began: but philanthropy should overlook such trifles. Philanthropy
+shouldn't be squeamish.
+
+MELISSA, ecstasized over Lake Tahoe, and Yo Semité, and the Big Trees,
+and was delighted, enchanted, and enraptured in the most thorough and
+conscientious manner. She revelled amongst California grapes and pears,
+and quaffed the California wines with appropriate delight and hilarity.
+She also studied JOHN CHINAMAN in all his phases, and came to the
+conclusion that he would do. She thought it would be a seraphic
+experience to see the pride and importance of Misses BRIDGET and
+GRETCHEN taken down a little. JOHN would certainly not possess the
+voluble eloquence--of the first, nor the stolid impudence of the second,
+nor would he have, like the pretty Swede, a train of admirers a mile in
+length. Of course he would not have these advantages to recommend him.
+But then one can get along without florid oratory in the kitchen, and
+although a lady may feel highly pleased and flattered to see an unending
+procession of admirers file in and out of her drawing-rooms, still she
+has a most decided objection to seeing the same imposing spectacle in
+her kitchen. Women, will be inconsistent.
+
+MELISSA particularly admired JOHN'S manner of ironing. She thought it
+peculiar but genteel, and gentility is always desirable. There must be
+something about the climate of California that is especially inspiring
+to authors--a kind of magnetism in the atmosphere that draws out all the
+literary talent which may be lying dormant in their souls--so that any
+one desirous of becoming a writer, has only to take a trip to that
+fascinating region, and at some unexpected moment he will awake with
+rapture and delight to the blessed consciousness of having blossomed
+into a flower of genius, and, as such, will feel privileged at once to
+deluge his family, his friends, and the world in general, with the
+brilliant results of his most delightful discovery.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PROFIT OF PURITAN PRISONS.
+
+Spain has commissioned a Mr. AZCARATE, a Cuban, to visit and report upon
+our penal institutions, and the gentleman is now in the country. We
+trust he will not fail to visit the Connecticut State Prison. There he
+would unquestionably obtain numerous hints for improving the Spanish
+system of prison torture, or even that in vogue in his native land, for
+political prisoners. There he might learn how Yankee thrift, applied in
+this direction, makes the starving of convicts even a more profitable
+business than manufacturing wooden nutmegs. Perhaps not the least
+valuable information he would gain, would be the best method of goading
+obnoxious prisoners into revolt, and thus obtaining a chance for
+disposing of them, legally, by a capital conviction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN OPEN CONGRESSIONAL COUNTENANCE.
+
+It is oddly enough objected to the re-election of a certain Member of
+Congress from Massachusetts, that "he can't open his mouth." It might be
+answered that Gen. BUTLER is quite able to open his mouth wide enough
+for the whole delegation. The mouth may be opened for two purposes,
+viz., speech-making and swallowing; and it never appeared to us that
+there was any lack either of Bolting or Bellering in the House of
+Representatives. However notably Honorable Gentlemen may play the game
+either of Gab or Grab, it isn't so clear that their constituents are
+much benefited by these accomplishments. If all they want is an
+open-mouthed Member, why don't the Massachusetts men import a
+first-class crocodile, and send him to the National Menagerie in
+Washington?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPREAD OF AMERICAN PRINCIPLES.
+
+It is with a heart full of patriotic pride and gratitude that Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO observes the adoption, in his dear native Italy, of the
+manners and customs of the Land of his Adoption. At an election recently
+held in Rome, about something or some other thing, one enterprising
+Roman has been discovered who voted "yes" twenty-five times in as many
+electoral urns--thereby, it is to be presumed, earning a good deal of
+money. We have a more lively hope for charming Italy when we find even a
+single citizen exhibiting a skill which would do honor to the most
+accomplished professional voter in New York. There is something
+encouraging in finding the Sons of ST. PETER becoming, every one of
+them, Re-Peters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Commentators.
+
+The "Sun of York," mentioned in Richard III., has no reference to the
+"Sun of New York" neither was the quotation, "Who is here so base, that
+would be a bondman?" especially meant for application to "THE" ALLEN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beatific.
+
+They talk a great deal about the twenty-eight inch beet they have grown
+in California, but a policeman of this city has a beat three miles long.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "SICH A GITTIN' UP STARES."
+
+_1st festive Cuss._ "WHAT MAKES FOLKS STARE AT US SO?"
+
+_2d Festive Cuss._ "ON ACCOUNT OF OUR ELEGANT COSTOOM, I GUESS. THEY
+TAKE YOU FOR WALL STREET, AND ME FOR FIFTH AVENUE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR EYE-WITNESS AT THE ELECTIONS.
+
+We suppose that no individual has rendered more invaluable service as a
+historian than the distinguished Eye-witness of the newspapers. The
+friends of PUNCHINELLO will therefore be rejoiced to hear that this
+accurate reporter was engaged to detail for our readers the progress of
+the late elections.
+
+Some time ago, the Eye-witness set about organizing the campaign by the
+masterly and novel plan of inducing the leaders of the opposing
+political parties to nominate different men for the same office. The
+effect was electrical. Immediately on these nominations being made
+public, the people rose like one man, and began canvassing like a great
+many different and very quarrelsome men. Target companies sprang from
+the recesses of the East Side, like ghosts from the rocks in _Der
+Freischütz;_ drums and fifes resounded; cannons boomed; fireworks burst
+into flame. The Eye-witness, having thus set the universe satisfactorily
+by the ears, got into his second-story front, and contemplated the
+campaign with serene complacency from the window.
+
+He had not to wait very long for a Mass Meeting to be formed under his
+very nose, and, consequently, within range of his witnessing and
+recording Eye. This Mass Meeting was conducted by the "Intelligent"
+Party, and was announced to be speedily followed by a Multitudinous
+Assemblage of the "Enlightened" Party. These two factions, as it will
+readily be observed, and as their names indicate, are of the most widely
+varying character and scope; a fact to be further illustrated by the
+proceedings which followed.
+
+The intelligent began to assemble early in the evening, to the sound of
+guns and drums and sky-rockets. These accompaniments were intended to
+get their spirits up, but the Intelligent persistently applied
+themselves to getting spirits down; and when the rival processes had
+continued for a reasonable length of time, speakers began to appear upon
+the stands. The first man who addressed them was the Commercial
+Candidate.
+
+"Fellow-citizens," said he, "why are you here? To elect me, of course.
+(Immense cheering.) And why will you elect me? I am an honest man: I
+want no office. (Laughter and cheers.) Ah, my friends, you elect me
+because you are now paying $5.36 on every pound of Peruvian Bark and
+Egyptian Mummy which you use in every-day life, and because you know
+that when I am in, the other party will be out!" (Continued applause.)
+
+Next rose an ex-Senator, who said he had come wholly unprepared to
+speak, but, being unexpectedly called upon, had made some brief jottings
+on a visiting-card, to which he would now refer. He then spoke for one
+hour and three-quarters. At the close there was an intermission for
+carrying off the dead.
+
+JONES, the candidate for the office of Vituperator, then cleared his
+throat savagely.
+
+"My friends," he began, "BROWN, the opposing candidate, is a scamp, and
+he knows it. If any man says he isn't, _he_ is. (Loud cheers.) Do you
+ask me to prove it? Prove an axiom! (Applause.) Who but a damned rascal
+would run against me at election? I tell you it is assault and battery!
+(Sounds of approbation.) In conclusion, I will only add that Brown is an
+infernal bummer and a sneak." (Cheers.)
+
+The Intelligent then dispersed in a splendidly ferocious and
+bloody-minded condition, fully primed for the election. Shortly
+afterward the Enlightened appeared upon the scene in the following
+
+ORDER OF PROCESSION.
+
+Cordon of Police.
+Drum.
+Committee of Arrangements.
+Fife.
+Target Company.
+Drum and Fife.
+Small boys.
+Apple-women.
+Drum.
+
+The Enlightened candidate for the Vituperator was the first on the
+stand. He rushed forward and said:--
+
+"The Vituperative candidate of the Intelligent let fall in a former
+speech some subtle or carefully worded innuendoes as to my character. I
+have only to say that his speech was a tissue of falsehood. I will
+trespass upon your patience further, to add that JONES is an infernal
+bummer and a sneak. If he is not, my fellow-citizens, why then I am.
+(Indignant cries of 'That's so!') My friends, you cannot doubt this
+reasoning. The facts are then conclusive. Either he is a bummer, or I
+am. It is therefore your duty, on the 8th November, to elect me at once
+and in fact to the office of Vituperator, and prospectively to those of
+Mayor, Governor, and President of the United States." (Prolonged
+cheering.)
+
+Mr. DE MAGOG, a very giant of eloquence, a Gog as well as Magog of
+oratory, next set the enlightened agog with a speech.
+
+"Fellow-citizens! Men and Brothers! Victory or defeat! Liberty or death!
+Glorious republic! Stars and Stripes! Down with the traitor! To the
+polls! Red fire--blood and thunder"--(voice drowned in shouts of wild
+enthusiasm.)
+
+The Eye-witness, meantime, had become distracted with harassing doubts.
+Subscribing fully to the politics of PUNCHINELLO, which is the only
+paper he reads, he had hitherto announced himself as a member of the
+Right Party. Being, however, open to conviction, he had unfortunately
+permitted both parties to convict him. In this awful crisis Reason
+appeared about to totter from her throne. The Eye-witness thrust his
+head wildly from the window, and shrieked to the crowd below: "Where's
+the Right Man? I belong to the Right Party. I want to hear the Right
+Man!!"
+
+At once the mob became a sea of upturned faces. The Enlightened,
+together with a large number of the Intelligent, who had lingered on the
+scene, with one common consent lifted up their voices and groaned. The
+groan was but a premonitory thunder to a shower of sticks, stones,
+whiskey-bottles, and superannuated eggs. The Eye-witness closed the
+window with an undignified bang, and retired into the depths of his
+chamber, where he remained until after the election. Owing to a dimness
+of vision, resulting from the eggs-cruciating condition of his ocular
+organs, the occupation of the Eye-witness was from that moment gone. And
+to this fact must be attributed his inability to state, with any
+certainty, whether the Right Party has succeeded in putting the Right
+Man in the Right Place; but he rather thinks it has.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Spots on the Sun.
+
+The _Sun_ is eclipsed by the _World,_ and is far behind the _Times._ It
+cannot be considered a _Standard_ sheet, and will never personify the
+_Star_ newspaper. Receiving its _News_ with the _Mail,_ as a _Herald_ it
+is valueless. It cannot claim to be a _Journal of Commerce,_ and as a
+_Tribune_ for the people it is a failure, and it does not shine as a
+_Democrat,_ for it relies on the _Post_ for most of its intelligence.
+
+Moral.--Keep the _Sun_ out of your eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A CHEERFUL PROSPECT.
+
+_First Old Loafer_. "THE PAPERS SAYS THERE'S A CHANCE OF THE BOURBON DIE
+NASTY REIGNING IN FRANCE AGAIN."
+
+_Second ditto_. "BULLY! IF THERE'S ANYTHING I LIVE FOR ITS A HIGH OLD
+RAIN OF BOURBON. LET IT POUR!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SARSFIELD YOUNG ON FORT SUMTER.
+
+The country was indignant that Fort Sumter was not reinforced. Major
+Anderson's supplies were nearly exhausted, and he wanted twenty thousand
+men, with equipments and rations. If the Government couldn't afford the
+rations--very well: it ought at least to given him the men.
+
+I am speaking of the late rebellion, which GREELEY, HEADLEY, and others
+have written up. Although a publishing company at Hartford, Conn., own
+most of the facts of the war, which they peddle out only by
+subscription, they can give the public but little of the secret history
+of the Fort Sumter affair. That remains to be written, while WELLER and
+I remain to write it. The Ex-Secretary has gracefully left it to me to
+describe the midnight session of the Cabinet at which I chanced to be
+present.
+
+I was boarding at the White House at the time, and as President LINCOLN
+assured me it would be rather interesting, I was persuaded to attend.
+"The fact is, the crisis reminds me," said he, of a little story of a
+horse-trot in Arkansas--"
+
+"Sir," interrupted I, "it reminds me of a dozen stories, one of AEsop's
+fables, and two hundred lives of CHAUCER."
+
+He was afraid to continue.
+
+As the clock struck twelve, he called the meeting to order and remarked:
+"Gentlemen, ANDERSON is in Sumter. The question now is,--what will he do
+with it?"
+
+South Carolina was out. BUCHANAN had done nothing. Everywhere was
+distrust. (That very day they had refused, on Pennsylvania avenue, to
+trust me for a spring overcoat.) STANTON was getting his dark lantern
+ready for nightly interviews with SUMNER and WENDELL PHILLIPS in a
+vacant lot upon the outskirts of the Capitol. Universal gloom prevailed.
+
+SEWARD opened the discussion. He said it was contemplated to throw four
+thousand men into Fort Sumter. We couldn't do it. If we did, it would
+only be one of the first throes of a civil conflict, a war long and
+bloody, which he would venture to predict might be protracted even to
+the extent of ninety days. Were we prepared for that? He would like to
+hear from that pure patriot, the Secretary of War, on this point.
+
+Amid murmurs of applause, Gen. CAMERON rose to say that he was wholly
+unprepared to make a speech; but he owned a lot of condemned muskets,
+which he stood ready to dispose of to the Government at four times their
+original cost. He should advise that the Fort be covered with several
+thicknesses of Pennsylvania railroad iron. It would protect our gallant
+troops, and he was now, as he had always been, in favor of protection.
+Besides, he knew parties who could get up a ring in the way of army
+blankets.
+
+Mr. CHASE spoke rather thick and fast, but I understood him to pronounce
+in favor of that platform which would get the most votes. "If the people
+think it ought to be done, why, do it. The country needs taxation, and
+is anxious to have me President. I think I can borrow money enough in
+Wall street to pay the passage of a moderate number of men to
+Charleston, but they mustn't on any account be CHASE men. I don't want
+any of my friends killed off before the next Presidential election."
+
+"What the Administration lacks," chimed in BLAIR, "is backbone. Powder
+and ball, and blood are my sentiments. Fill all the army and navy
+offices with the BLAIR family, and secession is dead."
+
+SEWARD again: "Strengthen Pickens, and let Sumter go. Our soldiers will
+find it healthier and more commodious at Pickens. I'll have the
+_Powhatan_ sent there forthwith."
+
+Hereupon Mr. GIDEON WELLES woke up and remarked, in a strain of apology,
+that be hadn't read his commission yet, but it was his impression that
+he was the head of what was called the Navy Department. Coming from an
+inland town, he didn't exactly know whether the Secretary of State or
+himself had the ordering about of our national vessels; but he rather
+thought he would relieve his friend SEWARD of that burden. He had talked
+with several old sea-dogs. They all agreed that the success of the plan
+depended on its feasibility. Capt. Fox, a private citizen of
+Massachusetts, had been down there with a horse and buggy, and reports
+that a squad of marines could do the job up in good style.
+
+Mr. BATES was called upon, and stated that strengthening Sumter, without
+giving the Southerners four weeks' notice of our intention, would not,
+in his opinion, be unconstitutional.
+
+At this juncture Mr. FLOYD (who, having acquired the habit of attending
+BUCHANAN'S cabinet meetings, had not quite got over it) put his head in
+for a moment to suggest, that if the Black Republican Government would
+evacuate all the forts on Southern territory, remunerate his friends for
+their expenses, and execute a quit-claim deed of Washington and the
+national property to JEFF. DAVIS and other Southern leaders, the
+proposition might possibly be accepted, and trouble avoided.
+
+Mr. SEWARD rose to add only a word, and that word was "Pickens."
+
+The Secretary of the Interior observed, that as Charleston harbor wasn't
+in his department, he would say nothing.
+
+Mr. BATES urged that the people of his section were loyal to the flag;
+in fact, they not only wanted the flag but the Capitol itself, and the
+national buildings (except the monument), removed to St. Louis; if they
+couldn't get that, they might be satisfied if Fort Sumter were towed
+around there, up the Mississippi. It would certainly be a good deal
+safer there.
+
+Mr. GIDEON WELLES wanted it distinctly understood that Gen. SCOTT, Gen.
+HOLT, Capt. FOX and the _Powhatan_ could save the country if Mr. SEWARD
+would let them; otherwise he would make a minute of these deliberations,
+and if his friend Mr. YOUNG (whom he was pleased to see present) didn't
+expose it, he himself would put it in the shape of a lively sketch, and
+send it to the magazines.
+
+"Well--now," said Mr. LINCOLN, after patiently waiting, "this reminds me
+of the man in Pomeroy, Ohio, who kept what he called an 'eating saloon.'
+One morning, a tall hoosier came in and called for ham and eggs. 'Can't
+giv 'em to ye, stranger,' said the proprietor, 'but what'll ye hav'
+t'drink?--don't keep nothin' but a bar.' 'Yer don't? Then what'n thunder
+yer got that sign out thar for?' for the fellow was a little mad. 'Why
+yer see I call her a eating saloon, 'cos I reckon she eats up all the
+profits."
+
+This beautiful and appropriate anecdote, which seemed to throw a flood
+of light upon the critical State question under consideration, pleased
+every one except FLOYD, who swore it was ungenerous and unchivalric.
+Hastily withdrawing, he threatened to telegraph it verbatim to the
+insurgents; it would fire the Southern heart.
+
+SEWARD said he was going home, as he had already sent the _Powhatan_ to
+PICKENS.
+
+Mr. LINCOLN yawned, and turning to me, inquired: "Well, SARSFIELD, you
+see what a man's got to do to run this machine,--now what's your
+advice?"
+
+"Your Excellency," I replied, "there's a man in the tanning business at
+Galena, in your State. Telegraph him at once. His name is GRANT, and if
+you give him the tools to work with, he'll straighten everything out for
+you as neat as a pin."
+
+The meeting dissolved without taking heed of my suggestion, and the
+world knows the result. However, there's one thing I am proud of. I
+claim to have discovered GRANT four years before WASHBURN did. That's
+the secret why I can have any office I want under the present
+administration.
+
+SARSFIELD YOUNG.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+The popularity of opera among fashionable people in this city varies
+inversely as the intelligibility of the language in which it is sung.
+
+To illustrate! The Italian opera is fashionable, though not one in ten
+of the people composing an average audience understand a word that is
+said or sung. The French opera is less fashionable, but perhaps
+one-third of the audience can understand the less ingenious of the
+indelicate jokes. The English opera is not fashionable, but every one
+can understand every word that Miss RICHINGS or Miss HERSEE pronounces.
+These facts undoubtedly stand in the relation of cause and effect.
+Wherefore the axiom with which this column begins.
+
+To be sure, the words of an opera are a matter of very little
+consequence, the music speaking as plainly as the clearest of Saxon
+sentences. But the fashionable public knows less of music than it knows
+of languages, and would be quite capable of mistaking "_Gran Dio_" for a
+comic song, and "_Libiamo_" for a lover's lamentation, were not the
+translated libretto of _Traviata_ at hand to supply them and the critics
+of the minor papers, with the cue for the display of appropriate
+emotion. Singers, especially, understand the full force of the above
+stated axiom. Hence, those who are deficient in voice avoid the English
+stage. Miss KELLOGG, for example, never attempted English opera, because
+she knew that people who had heard ROSE HERSEE or CAROLINE RICHINGS
+would laugh at her claim to be "the greatest living Prima Donna," should
+she compete with those birds of English song. Wherefore, she wisely
+confined herself to the Italian stage, sure of pleasing a public that
+knows nothing of music, but is confident that a lady who enjoys the
+friendship of Madison avenue must be a great singer. PAREPA, on the
+contrary, turned from the Italian to the English stage,--but then PAREPA
+had a voice.
+
+How many years is it since CAROLINE RICHINGS first sung in English
+opera? It is an ungallant question, but the answer would be still more
+ungallant were it not that Miss RICHINGS is an artist; and with artists
+the crown of youth never loses the brightness of its laurel leaves. At
+any rate, she has sung long enough to compel the recognition of her
+claims to our gratitude and admiration. She is not faultless in her
+method, but she differs from other great American prime donne in the
+important particular of possessing voice enough to fill an auditorium
+larger than the average minstrel hall.
+
+At present she is filling NIBLO'S GARDEN with her voice and its
+admirers. We go to hear her. PALMER and ZIMMERMANN, clad in velvet and
+fine linen, flit gorgeously about the lobby, and are mistaken, by rural
+visitors, for JIM FISK and HORACE GREELEY--concerning whom the tradition
+prevails in rural districts that they are clothed in a style materially
+different from that affected by King Solomon at the period of his
+greatest glory. We find our seats, and mentally remarking that NIBLO'S
+is the one theatre in this city from which it would be possible to
+escape with whole bones and coat in case of fire, we await with
+contented minds the lifting of the curtain.
+
+In time the opera begins, and a select company of young men who are
+standing in the rear of the audience improve every possible opportunity
+for breaking into rapturous applause. Their zeal occasionally outruns
+their discretion, and they finally ruin the attempt of Miss RICHINGS to
+execute a florid cadenza at the end of one of her arias. An intelligent
+usher is therefore detailed to curse them into a comprehension of their
+duties, after which they applaud with a discretion which produces almost
+exactly the effect of spontaneous enthusiasm.
+
+Remarks a young lady near us, who is dressed with much wealth of
+contrasting colors:--"This isn't half so nice as the Italian opera. Miss
+RICHINGS can't dress half so nicely as Miss KELLOGG, and then you don't
+see any fashionable people here. The DAVIDS, the ABRAHAMS, the AARONS,
+the NOAHS, that handsome Mr. JACOBS, and that delightful Mr. MOSES,--all
+these elegant young men with beautiful eyes and curly hair that dress in
+velvet coats and diamond studs--there isn't one of them here. Our best
+society never goes to any opera but the real Italian opera."
+
+LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.--"But, my dear, it seems to me that your best
+society must consist chiefly of Jews--judging from the names you
+mention."
+
+YOUNG LADY.--"Well, what if it does? They are rich, are they not? What
+more could you want?"
+
+LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.--"What, indeed! But the music is just as good as
+it would be if the fashionable Israelites were here,--isn't it?"
+
+SHE.--"The music as good! Why, Charles, everybody knows that the Italian
+opera music is perfectly lovely. This is only English, you know."
+
+HE.--"It is precisely the same. Here the _Somnmabula_ is sung with
+English instead of Italian words. That doesn't alter a single note."
+
+SHE.--"You are too ridiculous! The idea of attempting to make me believe
+that this is just like the Italian Opera! Don't you suppose I knows
+anything about music?"
+
+OLD GENTLEMAN.--"I heard CAROLINE RICHINGS sing in 1808,--I think it was.
+I tell you she sings better now tan she did then, but the stupid public
+never appreciated her. I recollect saying to KEAN--not CHARLES, you
+know, but _the_ KEAN--that I knew a young lady that would be a splendid
+singer some of these days--meaning CAROLINE, of course. 'Well, sir,'
+says KEAN, 'what of it; you can't drink her, can you?' Gad! he was the
+best man for repartee I ever knew. To give you an instance; one night
+KEAN and I, and old SMITH,--you don't remember old SMITH, I presume; he
+played old men at the Boston Theatre sixty years ago; I never met a
+jollier fellow,--I remember his saying one night when JUNICS BOOTH was
+playing--let me see, what was the play; it wasn't the _Apostate_, I
+hardly think, for--"
+
+Here the orchestra mercifully strikes up, and the big drum drums the
+garrulous monologue of the veteran theatrical observer. We have another
+act of the opera, sung far better than any opera has been sung at the
+Academy for years. Pretty ROSE HERSEE--when have we had a voice as pure,
+or a manner as charming as hers?--sings in this act, and her tones so
+closely resemble those of NILSSON in their exquisite purity, that we
+wonder how she has escaped the abuse of that "independent critical
+journal," the _Season_, until we notice a middle-aged gentleman sleeping
+quietly with a copy of the _Season_ on his lap, and remember that at
+NIBLO'S GARDEN the proprietor of the independent critical journal is
+permitted to distribute his mental soothing syrup, while at STEINWAY
+HALL a rival sheet is the only admitted programme.
+
+And I say--still thinking of NILSSON--to an experienced
+theatre-goer,--"Why does WATSON abuse NILSSON?"
+
+And he answers, with the contemptuous, but obviously honest
+inquiry--"Who's WATSON?"
+
+Really appalled by the suggestion that there exists a man with soul and
+things so completely dead as not to have heard of the great WATSON, I
+change my question and ask him: "Why does the _Season_ abuse NILSSON?"
+
+HE.--"The _Season_, my young friend, is a programme paper that is
+circulated gratuitously and depends for support upon its advertizing
+patronage. A few managers permit it to be circulated in their theatres;
+the remaining managers will not admit it. Among the latter are Mr.
+WALLACK, and MAX STRAKOSCH. Consequently, the _Season_ abuses WALLACK'S
+Theatre and NILSSON'S concerts--asserting that Mr. WALLACK has a
+wretched company, and that Miss NILSSON has no voice. The _Season_ is
+also a comic paper, and its best joke is its assertion that it is an
+'independent critical journal.'"
+
+YOUNG LADY IN COLORS.--"This opera is dreadfully stupid."
+
+LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.--"But, MARY ANNE, it is one of Mozart's--the
+_Marriage of Figaro_. It is one of his most famous works."
+
+SHE.--"Then I don't like Mozart. There was an Italian who wrote an opera
+that was all about Figaro,--the _Nossy di Figaro_ was the name of it.
+Oh, it is perfectly splendid; ever so much prettier than this."
+
+HE.--"Why, my dear girl, the _Nozze di Figaro_ is the identical opera
+you are now hearing."
+
+SHE.--"There is young Mr. NATHAN ISAACS. Isn't he perfectly splendid?"
+
+HE (sighing sadly).--"Whenever you wish to go home, I am ready."
+
+SHE.--"You are real disagreeable to-night, and I'm sorry I came with
+you."
+
+RURAL PERSON.--"Well, if this is the opery, I don't mind sayin' I like
+it. Susan said I couldn't understand a word of the gibberish these opery
+folks squawked, but it's just as plain as psalm-singing. Miss RICHIN and
+that HERSY gal are just the tallest kind of singers. If we had 'em in
+our choir, the Baptist folks might shut up their meetin'-house to
+wunst."
+
+ZIMMERMANN.--"When are we going to revive the Crook--did you ask? What
+do we want to revive it for? Isn't the house full enough to-night to
+satisfy anybody?"
+
+FRIEND OF THE THEATRE--"To be sure it is. Stick to this sort of thing,
+and you'll find it will pay better in the end than any amount of legs.
+NIBLO'S is now a respectable theatre. Don't change it into an Anatomical
+Museum."
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: AFTER THE BATTLE.
+
+CARRYING OFF THE WOUNDED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PUNCHINELLO CORRESPONDENCE
+
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
+
+_A Lover of Music._ Our street musicians are growing worse and worse.
+There is a piper who infests the street in which I live, and sets my
+nerves on edge with his horrible droning. What am I to do with him?
+
+_Answer._ put him in the waste-piper basket.
+
+_Aunt Carraway._ The preparatory schools about which you inquire have
+nothing to do with the reformation of wicked parrots. If the language
+made use of by your parrot is so dreadful that the cats have left the
+house in consequence of it, we are afraid that the bird is past reform.
+Try him with rats, and you may yet be renowned as the "female
+Whittington of the period."
+
+_Rebecca Hazeldown._ It was very rude of the young man to stare at you
+through an aquarium, as you say he did. The little fishes might have
+been flirting their tails at the time, however, and it is just possible
+that he might have taken you for one of the flirts.
+
+_A Horseman._ After long observation, I am of opinion that the sudden
+collapse which so frequently occurs among omnibus and street-car horses,
+is to be attributed to the stupid but common practice of giving them
+water when they are overheated. Can you assist me in putting a stop to
+this?
+
+_Answer._ We do not see why you should apply to PUNCHINELLO in the case.
+Have we not a Croton BERGH among us?
+
+_Valetudinarian._ To furnish you with a list of all the patent medicines
+advertised is quite out of our power. Suppose you start out early every
+morning with your note-book, walk for seven or eight miles along the
+Bloomingdale Road, and make your list from the innumerable inscriptions
+on the rocks in that vicinity. Do this for a month or two, and you will
+not care much about the list when you have got it.
+
+_N.E. by S.W._ We read that DEMOSTHENES used to put pebbles in his
+mouth, and spout while thus charged, to cure himself of thickness of
+utterance. Suffering from the same defect, I have tried the same remedy,
+but without success. Can you advise me in the matter?
+
+_Answer._ The most learned commentators agree that the statement about
+DEMOSTHENES' putting pebbles in his mouth was only figurative, and
+really meant that, when about to speak in public, he used to put a brick
+in his hat. The same thing is done by many of our public speakers of the
+period--such as JOHN B. GOUGH, H. GREELEY, ANNA DICKINSON, and others.
+Try it moderately, and it may loosen your tongue.
+
+_Epicurus._ Is Worcestershire sauce really the invention of an English
+nobleman?
+
+_Answer._ Yes: he was one of the COOKS or one of the BUTLERS, we have
+forgotten which; but it is certain that he was degraded from the peerage
+for offering some of his sauce to the reigning British monarch of his
+time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Complimentary Chromatics
+
+While all France is Blue with the prospects of the siege of Paris, we
+have constant accounts of the growing ascendency of the Reds. We commend
+this to the nest scientific convention, as an evidence of the analogies
+which prevail in the physical and moral worlds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Sally for Sketchers.
+
+When an artist visits a picturesque locality, why is the proceeding like
+an undecided prize-fight?
+
+Because it results in a draw.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A RASH PROCEEDING.
+
+WAITING FOR A LIGHT.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HIRAM GREEN AND FEMALE SUFFRAGE.
+
+His Experience with the Advocates of the 10th Amendment.
+
+On the last eleckshun day, I was servin as Inspecter of Eleckshun, when
+a passil of wimmen, drest partly in men's habiliments, walkt up to the
+ballit box.
+
+They was headed by old SARY YOOMANS, who has been an old made for more'n
+1/2 Sentury.
+
+Steppin up close to the railin where votes is put in, Miss YOOMANS thus
+to me did say:--
+
+"Square GREEN, wee've come to cast the soffrige of a down-trodden race:
+Will you receive our votes?"
+
+"Not exzactly I wont, my hi toned Greshun benders," was my reply.
+
+"Do you know who we air, sir?" cride a long, leen, lank,
+rale-fence-lookin femail, whose nose looked as if sheed been sokin it in
+a bladder of black snuff.
+
+"Well! sweet wolfs in lambs clothin," said I, puttin on one of my
+shrewed expreshuns, "you look as if you was a lot of, so-called,
+strong-minded femails, who was up to snuff, but, in an endevor to
+scratch somebody bare-boned, you'd lost your footin, and tumbled
+slap-bang into a coal-hole."
+
+"We air, sir," says another ethereal-lookin hearthstun depopulater,
+"members of the Skeensboro Sore-eye-siss Society. We believe wimmens has
+got rites, which man won't let her have. We believe the ballit is
+calkilated to raise woman to her proper speer. We believe hoop-skirts
+and side-saddles will soon be numbered among the lost arts. We believe
+SOOZAN B. ANTHONY, E. CADY STANTON, WENDIL FILLIPS, or Mister BLACKWELL,
+are just as capable of bein President of this ere old Union, as the best
+man which ever wore panterloons; and we air bound hensforth and forever,
+one and onseperable, to stand up for our rites, if we can only rope in
+enuff Congressmen to hold our bonnits."
+
+Durin the a-4-said bust of elokence, about 75 wimmen was holdin ballits
+for me to take, while others were vilently swingin their gingham
+parasols over my bald head.
+
+All seemed as if they was jest bilin over to get their clutches about my
+breethin apparatus. Says I:
+
+"Go hum and be femails, and don't make sich tarnal loonatix of yourself
+any longer, gittin mixed up with the body polertick; for sures you're
+born, when woman votes sheel trail her skirts in the dust and you cant
+stop her; when she walks up to the ballit box, and undertakes to mix
+into suthin she don't know no more about, than TILTON and FULTON do
+about the golden rool, then when that air time comes I will exclaim:
+
+ "'Oh! woman; where is thy stinger.'
+ "'Oh! Sore-eye-siss! where 'bouts is thy victory?'"
+
+"What! miserable man, woodest-ist thou deny us the ballit?" screemed
+another femail, as she tore a 2-bushel waterfall from her head, and,
+wildly swingin it in the air, dirty stockins and old clothes fell into
+promiscous heeps all about her.
+
+"With all doo respect to the sects," says I, gettin madder and madder
+all the while, "you can jest bet your Sunday close I woodest."
+
+"Hard-harted old man, yool rue this day," they all cride in Koruss, and
+the hull lot commenced snivellin, as if their harts was busted.
+
+"Kind, noble, beautiful sir! we langwish to cast our suffrages," says a
+big fat woman, about the size of a lode of hay, as she shoved her ballit
+under my nose.
+
+"Madam," says I, swellin up with accumulated rage, "langwish and rip and
+tare things as much as you mindter--you cant stuff this ere ballit box
+with illegal votes as long as Ime boss of it--that's what's the
+matter--and I want you to understand I mean bizzinezs."
+
+At this they all started for the door, remarkin that I was an "old
+fool," "mouskiter," etketary &c.
+
+"When the 16th commendment passes," said sweet ELIZER HEMPIHL, who is
+too pooty to be caught in sich company, "we will call for your skalp,
+old man."
+
+"Which topnot," was my reply, "wouldent furnish hair enough for a false
+eyebrow."
+
+I see they was goin, so I said:--
+
+"My week-minded and misgided femails, hold your hosses a minnit, until
+an old statesman, who has served his country for 4 yeer as Gustise of
+the Peece, says a few remarks to you."
+
+"When woman was taken out of man's ribs, it wasent calkilated she should
+lower herself by mixin into such dirty bizziness, as you are up to
+to-day. Woman in her natural element, is jest one of the _soothinest_
+institutions in this ere land, which flows with milk-punch and
+houey-sope, and what poor miserable critters man would be without her.
+
+"Who would nuss our offspring, if it wasent for wimmen?
+
+"Who would cheer our fireside, if it wasent for wimmen?
+
+"Who would cook our vittles, if it wasent for wimmen?
+
+"And who would haul off our butes nites, when we come home tired and
+demoralized, after havin a sett-to with lager-beer and sweitzer?
+
+"Agin, I remark, if it wasent for woman in her onadulterated state,
+before she had been made a tarnal fool of by these ere despoilers of
+man's happiness, MASKALINE WIMMEN, man would be a poor shiftless koot.
+
+"Therefore, I say, go hum and resoom your abnormal condition. Get back
+into your own harniss, and don't undertake to assoom the bifurkated
+garments. It haint your forte, no more'n it is some of our public
+offishals to keep from steelin."
+
+I rattled away at 'em in this stile, ontil I beheld the last pair of
+femail bifurkaters skoot for home, when I subsided into a chair, and
+with my bandanner hankerchief wiped the perspiration from my noble brow.
+
+After Ide partially recovered my ekanimity, I agin resoomed my offishal
+duties, but I couldent help thinkin that if wimmen made such a
+confounded hullabalo about votin, as they is now doin, tryin to vote;
+them air leaders, who air goin about the country like Internal Revenoo
+offisers, seekin that they may gobble up somebody, will have a pile to
+anser for, when woman becomes a component part of the body polertick.
+
+ Owe! woman, woman, how sweet you be,
+ When you're dressed up to kill,
+ I hope the time ile never see,
+ When man's place you all fill.
+
+ Take the advice of one which knows,
+ & try to shun the evil,
+ To see a woman in man's close
+ Looks wusser nor the d---l.
+
+Which is the opinion of your humbley sarvent,
+
+HIRAM GREEN, ESQ.,
+
+_Lait Gustise of the Peece._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRESH FROM THE FLOWERY KINGDOM.
+
+The world is justly indignant at the accounts of the Chinese massacres
+of the missionaries who have perilled their lives in going so far to
+teach them Christianity. Recently, for example, a young lady teacher
+from Boston was so terribly stoned by some of the unregenerate little
+pig-tailed fiends in Canton, that she died the next day. It is dreadful
+to think how savage the instincts of the heathen are.
+
+P.S.--Since the above was set up in type, MR. PUNCHINELLO has learned
+that the Canton in which this occurrence took place is not in China, but
+is a thriving village in Norfolk county, Massachusetts, about eighteen
+miles from Boston, and that the assailants were consequently not
+pig-tailed heathen, but genuine Christian children, who, in a few years,
+will belong to the cultivated voters of Massachusetts. This action,
+consequently, was not dictated by unregenerate barbarism, but was
+intended simply as a protest (rough, we confess, but effectual, we
+trust) against these new-fangled ideas of women's rights. What business
+have women to be trying to teach? Let them stay at home, and if they
+want to know anything, ask their husbands, there; and if they are
+unmarried, let them wait until they get husbands. We must not let our
+natural gallantry interfere with our reverence and respect for the
+rights of ignorance, which will eventually vote.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A THRICE BLESSED CITY.
+
+There is a city in Illinois called St. Genevieve. By some hocus-pocus
+known to accomplished politicians, this city has had no Mayor since the
+4th of June, 1867. In the absence of definite information upon the
+subject, we take it for granted that St. Genevieve must be a most
+delightful place to live in, and specially so, because, as we are
+further informed, they have no Aldermen there either. More delightful
+still, as there is nobody authorized to assess taxes, the fortunate
+inhabitants do not pay any. Of course, if this state of primitive bliss
+could last, Mr. PUNCHINELLO would make immediate arrangements to remove
+to St. Genevieve; but the courts have ordered the citizens to elect a
+Mayor immediately, so that this little heaven upon earth will soon have
+ceased to exist.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: LETTING HIM DOWN EASY.
+
+_Aspiring Author._ "Ah! You have read my essay? I hope the verdict is
+Favorable."
+
+_Editor._ "O yes, all Right,--Acquitted on the ground of insanity."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+The French Republic dying of Gas.--Good Sense for Gambetta. TOURS,
+SIXTH WEEK OF THE REPUBLIC, 1870.
+
+Dear PUNCHINELLO:
+
+There is gloom everywhere; applications to serve in the ranks have
+diminished, and the price of pocket-handkerchiefs has increased. JULES
+FAVRE writes, under cover of confidence, to the _prefect_ here, that
+since the interview of which I gave you an account he has had a severe
+attack of gumboils, and despairs of softening the heart of BISMARCK. I
+stole the letter for the purpose of copying it, but it was stolen from
+me in turn by a nefarious emissary of the London _Times,_ who has not
+however, dared to use it. The greatest activity is manifested in the
+making of balloons. The administration labors under the delusion that
+gas and oiled silk may yet prove the Palladium of French liberty. I have
+remonstrated unavailingiy against this singular infatuation. I held up
+to the Rump Council now sitting in this city the example of VICTOR HUGO
+as a fearful warning. He came from Guernsey under a pressure of gas; he
+entered Paris with the volatile essence oozing from every hair on his
+head; he loaded the artillery of his rhetoric with gas; he blazed, away
+at the Germans with gas, and yet, unable to get rid of such afflatus
+fast enough, he exploded in the very midst of his pyrotechnics, and now
+lies high and dry on "this bank and shoal of time" like a venerable
+rhinoceros extinguished by its own snorting. I am sorry to say it, but
+the great peril of France at this moment is gas. Touching GAMBETTA. Ah!
+yes, touching GAMBETTA. You may have heard that he has issued a
+proclamation or two. There are depths in the soul of a Frenchman, where
+the inspiration of mighty words breeds like "flies in the shambles."
+Such a soul has GAMBETTA. He is all language. If you were to cut him up
+in little bits and put each atom under a microscope, you would find in
+every molecule the text of some proclamation. The genii of syntax and
+prosody are his guardian angels, and the love of "gabble" is the be-all
+and the end-all of his political existence. He loves not GARIBALDI. He
+would have done violence to his grandmother rather than consent to the
+invitation of the Italian liberator. For short, he calls him "GARRY."
+Standing in front of the Hotel de Ville, talking to a group of eager
+listeners, with his arms wildly gesticulating and his nose
+contemptuously curling towards the empyrean, he asks:
+
+"Who is this GARRY? What is he? Why is he--?"
+
+"Stop," I calmly interpollate, "profane not the high calling of the
+Italian hero with frivolous conundrums."
+
+"Jerk that monster out of my sight!" roared GAMBETTA to a _sergent de
+ville_, and pointing his long, skinny fore-finger full at me.
+
+I turned mournfully upon the crowd, and asked in a plaintive tone:--
+
+"You hear what he says. Do lunatic asylums exist in vain? Men of Tours,
+is there a 'jerkist' among you?"
+
+They must have observed that my feelings were moved, for they came
+between me and the officer, as if to protect the latter. 'Twas a kind
+movement, but useless; as I couldn't have hurt him.
+
+"Monsieur GAMBETTA," I then went on to say, "don't you think that this
+horrible epidemic of gas, that is now filling with its deleterious
+effluvia the brains and the throat of the French Government, ought to be
+stopped? Don't you think, Monsieur GAMBETTA, that you, yourself, could
+cut off your supply-pipe for a while and still have enough to light up
+with on public occasions?"
+
+I rested my right fore-finger upon one side of my nose and struck an
+attitude of interrogation while putting these questions. The Minister's
+face turned to an ashen hue, and then the blood came coursing back like
+lava to the Crater's surface, without breaking through.
+
+"Fiends seize the man, is a minister of France to be insulted in his own
+capital?"
+
+"Friend, calm yourself," I said: "Don't let the crabs run through your
+brain like that. Cool off. Take those hot coppers out of your pantaloons
+and fan yourself a little. That's what's the matter with France, to-day.
+You Frenchmen fizzle, and crack, and shoot up into the air, and
+otherwise get away with yourselves so fast, that no wonder the Germans
+can't always find you when they go for you. Take my advice. Stop running
+red-hot pokers down your backs. Drink more Vichy water and less brandy.
+Keep your sky-rockets till next year. Lock your 'language' up in the
+dictionary. Send VICTOR HUGO back to England. Tie a church steeple round
+GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN'S neck, and sink him off Toulon. Burn all your
+proclamations. Throw rhetoric to the dogs. Put a head on the government
+that ain't full of torpedoes. Present a solid front to the enemy. Simmer
+down generally, and talk reason to BISMARCK, and, on the honor of
+PUNCHINELLO, I can solemnly assure you that things won't be so
+'speckled' as they now are."
+
+Saying which, I gathered the drapery of my duster gracefully about me,
+and left.
+
+DICK TINTO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SHE THAT IS TO BE.
+
+By a Prominent Member of Sorosis.
+
+1.
+
+ --She stood! The hurrying clouds wild drove--
+ --The purpling aspect of the air...!
+ While her wild contour symbolized
+ The Unity of Hope's Despair!
+
+2.
+
+ And shall not We, when Life's short span,
+ Enveloping the Yet-To-Be--
+ Smiling candescent?--Nay?--Ah! well!
+ BE THAT OUR FUTURE DESTINY!!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS OF THE CRADLE.
+
+CANTO XI.
+
+ Little Bo-Peep has lost his sheep,
+ And don't know where to find them.
+ Let them alone and they'll come home,
+ And bring their tails behind them.
+
+The Poet having now advanced so far in his work as to make a very
+respectable collection of poems, and beginning to run short of matter,
+casts his eyes around him in search of aid, hoping to find inspiration
+in some fortuitous moment from the many little incidents that are always
+occurring, and which only observing minds would notice. For the time he
+sees nothing that would suggest even to the most sparkling intellect the
+shadow of a rhyme, and he begins to be in despair. He walks up and down
+his dingy room, thrusts his long fingers amid the raven locks that adorn
+his poetical cranium, and gently at first, then furiously, irritates the
+cuticle of his imaginative head-piece, hoping thereby to waken up his
+ideas and find a foundation upon which to erect another stone in the
+edifice of his never-fading glory.
+
+This process does not seem to be as successful as usual: the ideas
+refuse to come at his bidding, and he glares around in consternation,
+Can it be possible that he has exhausted himself; that his ideas are
+entirely run out; that the fountain is dry, and the Muse has ceased to
+smile upon him; that he must descend from his high elevation as the poet
+of the family, the hope and pride of his friends and the admiration of
+himself, and sink to the level of his earthy brothers and become one of
+them, no better and no worse? No--perish the thought! never again will
+he mingle with those rude and vulgar natures, having no thoughts or
+feelings above their creature comforts: content to live like animals,
+uninspired by the divine _afflatus_, untouched by the poetic fire. Full
+of determined energy never to yield the high position he has acquired,
+he rushes forth into the open air and takes his winding way through the
+green meadows and leafy wilds. Here, sitting on the stump of an old
+tree, he spies little Bob Peepers, weeping as if his heart would break:
+the briny tears coursing down his ruddy cheeks form little rivulets of
+salt water with high embankments of genuine soil on either side, and a
+distracted map of a war-ridden country is depicted upon his
+grief-stricken countenance. Full of compassion for the suffering, the
+tender heart of the Poet melts at the sight, and in mellifluous tones he
+asks, "What is the matter, BUB?"
+
+Sobbingly digging his fists into his eyes, and carefully wiping his
+classic nose on the sleeve of his jacket, the heart-broken mourner
+murmurs:--
+
+ "I've lost my sheep,
+ And don't know where to find them,"
+
+and bursts forth into a prolonged howl. That heart-rending cry of agony
+is too much for the gentle Poet, who, sinking upon the ground beside the
+weeper, ventures to whisper a hope that Time, or some of the neighbors,
+may bring back the lost sheep and restore happiness and tranquillity to
+the agitated bosom. The suggestion is met with incredulous scorn and
+another burst of uncontrollable sorrow, amid the pauses of which Bob
+recounts to his sympathetic friend how, "being wearied with watching the
+gambolling sheep, he laid himself down in the meadow to sleep, and never
+awoke till a blue-bottle fly, who buzzing about so tickled his eye that
+sleep fled away. Then he rose to his feet, and looked around for the
+gambolling sheep, but found, they were gone he couldn't tell where: so
+he threw himself down in the deepest despair, bemoaning his strange
+unaccountable loss, and the horrible beating he'd get from the Boss,
+when at night he went home with his sad tale of woe. He was sure he
+would never have courage to go."
+
+The sad tale so pathetically and ingenuously told melted the already
+simmering heart of the hearer, who counselled tranquillity and
+philosophy in the words
+
+ "Let them alone and they'll come home,"
+
+and jocularly added, as he saw a ray of hope lighting up the eye of the
+boy, like the first rays of the sun seen through a fog,
+
+ "And bring their tails behind them."
+
+The brilliant idea of their tails coming behind them instead of before
+them tickled the risibilities of the sympathizing friends, and for a few
+moments the woods echoed to their responsive mirth.
+
+The laugh did them good. The poet perceived instantly he had a theme
+upon which to build his verse, and hastily bidding BOB "good-by," he
+flew exultingly to his paternal abode, rushed up the garret stairs,
+seized his goose-quill, and amid the tumultuous beatings of his
+over-charged heart and throbbing brain jotted down on the instant, in
+all the enthusiasm of poetic fervor, the incident that had fallen under
+his inspired observation. Not to be too personal, and still to preserve
+the truthfulness of the history, he dropped a few letters from BOB
+PEEPER'S name, while, with a wonderful accuracy unknown to modern
+writers, he keeps to the subject of his verse, its misery, the remedy
+and result, and facetiously gives to the world the same cause for
+laughter and inspiration that he received so gratefully.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE POLITEST NATION IN THE WORLD.
+
+We had always considered JOHNNY CRAPAUD as the pink of politeness. But
+we are now satisfied that JOHNNY BULL goes ever so far ahead of him. We
+have never known that Frenchman yet, who would oblige his enemies by
+killing himself. But the recent loss of the _Captain_ shows that the
+noble Englishmen are prepared to do this by wholesale. One could wish
+our enemies no worse luck than to have a few such _Captains_ given them.
+And how lavish the expenditure! It takes no end of money to get up one
+of those big iron-plated coffins. It is certainly a dramatic,
+_auto-da-fé_ and a most obliging act, considered with reference to one's
+possible enemies. No Frenchman ever thought of such a thing. In fact,
+they go no further than positively declining to do anything bad with
+their navy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.
+
+"THERE WAS A SURPRISE PARTY AT No. 9,999 TWENTY-THIRD STREET LAST
+EVENING. UPON RETURNING FROM THE OPERA, THE PROPRIETORS FOUND THEIR
+MANSION FULL, OF GUESTS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A DRY SETTLEMENT.
+
+There is a little young village in Denver which rejoices in the name of
+Greeley. To this place came a benevolent bar-keeper, bringing a cheerful
+stock of whiskey. Down upon his grocery came the enraged Greeleyites,
+and to prevent their own stomachs from being burned, they burned the
+building. We can imagine these very particular pioneers passing a great
+variety of the most astonishing laws, with various penalties. For
+chewing tobacco--one month's imprisonment; for subscribing to The _N.Y.
+Evening Post_--death; while for the hideous misdemeanor of eating white
+bread, the offender would be left to the pangs of his own indigestion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Fact. Fancy, and Fun-ding.
+
+THE FUNDING BILL, as a step towards making the Erie Canal free, should
+commend itself to any one, since if it becomes a fact, it will, we
+fancy, prevent this noble industrial enterprise from becoming, like its
+first cousin, simply an eyrie for the vultures of finance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE LATEST STYLE.
+
+AS MEN'S CLOTHES ARE CUT HOUR-GLASS FASHION NOW, PUNCHINELLO SUGGESTS
+THE ABOVE PATTERN AS AN APPROPRIATE ONE FOR THEM.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ALARM-BELLE AT RYE.
+
+ At Rye, Westchester County, a small town
+ Built near the Sound, but of a scant renown,
+ That always to its biggest size did run
+ At summer-time, beneath a blazing sun,
+ But rested as a _town_, as if to say,
+ "I'll pay no further taxes, come what may;"--
+ The ancient cobbler, JOHN, unknown to fame
+ (So many cobblers since have borne the name),
+ Owned the great belle of all that country place,
+ His daughter, with her tongue and lovely face,
+ Who took to soothing every kind of pain,
+ Tramped through the streets, dragging a muddy train.
+ With kerchief blowed her horn both, loud and long.
+ And talked incessantly of every wrong,
+ Kept her tongue wagging, until right was done.
+ Thus did the daughter of old cobbler John.
+
+ What mighty good this BERGH of that Burgh did.
+ While her tongue lasted, she had never hid:
+ Suffice it that, as all things must decay,
+ The fleshy tongue at length was worn away;
+ She mouthed it for a while, and people dreamed
+ Of golden days before this belle had screamed.
+ Loaded and beat their horses at their ease.
+ Drove thorn with, wounded backs and broken knees,
+ Turned turtles over, and e'en tortured clams.
+ Murdered trichinć, when they boiled their hams.
+ Till one, a doctor, who was passing by,
+ Struck by the horrors going on in Rye,
+ Cut from a calf, that yet was very young.
+ And kindly gave unto the belle, a tongue.
+
+ By chance it happened that in Rye town dwelt.
+ A German grocer (and his wife, a Celt),
+ Who loved his lager and his pretzels too
+ (His wife was partial to the morning dew).
+ But, when we fell into these troublous times,
+ He cared for nothing but to save his dimes.
+
+ He had a donkey, that would sometimes go.
+ Just as the donkey chanc'd to feel, you know,
+ Which he would ride, whenever his brigade
+ Was ordered to the streets for a parade;
+ But as the times got hard, he'd loudly swear
+ The oats that donkey ate he could not spare.
+ At length he said: "I'll turn him out, py Gott!"
+ Looked at his wife and to her said, "Vy not?
+ Let him go eat upon the public ways,
+ I want him only for the training days."
+ So the poor donkey had to feed on thistles.
+ Until his hair became like unto bristles.
+
+ One afternoon, when everybody slept
+ Except the belle, out from her house she crept,
+ And met the donkey, walking on the way;
+ He smelt the calf and thought to have some play.
+ Kicked up his heels, a grating bray did utter.
+ And laid the belle a-rolling in the gutter.
+ She raised a mighty shout, she raised a squeal.
+ And loudly her persistent tongue did peal,
+ And this did seem the burden of her song:
+ "Some chap hath done a wrong, hath done a wrong!
+
+ "Meanwhile from street and lane a noisy crowd"
+ Of vagabonds and urchins, shouting loud,
+ Gathered around the poor, bedraggled squealer,
+ Until at length there came a stout Rye peeler;
+ Who forthwith told the belle her cries to cease.
+ And took her to a Justice of the Peace.
+
+ The Justice heard the story of the belle,
+ And looking wise and grave, he said: "'Tis well;
+ Bring me the old Dutchman." The grocer brought,
+ Shaking with fear, then stood before the Court.
+
+ And then' the Justice to recite began
+ The charter of the Cruelty to An-
+ Imals Society, and then he said:
+ "Pride rideth on a donkey, as I've read,
+ Until it gets a fall, and then it loses
+ Its dignity and blubbers o'er its bruises.
+ These are newspaper proverbs, but I fear
+ You don't love proverbs, as you do your beer.
+ Just take that donkey and give him an oat,
+ And don't show up until you've brushed his coat."
+
+ The grocer left disgusted, took the brute;
+ And all the people then at him did hoot.
+ The cobbler heard and almost split his knee
+ [He took it for the lapstone in his glee],
+ "Church bells," quoth he, "but ring us to the mass.
+ My belle hath gone and saved a starving ass;
+ And this shall make, when put in jingling rhyme,
+ The Belle of Rye all famous for all time."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CHEERFUL SUBJECT.
+
+According to an Ohio paper, a double child has been born to a couple
+named FINLEY, in Morrow county. It is, so to speak, a double-ender,
+being provided with a supplementary head at the point where the feet are
+usually situated. The child is a female-and a very curious amendment to
+the Sixteenth Amendment, since, should it arrive at woman's estate, it
+will, of course, be entitled to a double vote. How will it be should one
+end go Republican and the other Democratic? To send a duplex woman into
+the world seems to be a very unnecessary freak of Nature, seeing that
+there is enough of duplicity in womankind already.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Homoeopathic Politics.
+
+THE CITIZENS' ASSOCIATION, finding that their sands of life are nearly
+run out, are now advertising privately for some fresh candidates, who
+for a salary will undertake to cure the ring-worms of the body politic
+by their pimple prescription of substitution, or putting yourself in
+their place, which is a political modification of the law in
+homoeopathic medicine, _similie similibus errantur_, or in morals, "set
+a rogue to catch a rogue."
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | CLEARING OUT SALE. |
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE OFFERING |
+ | |
+ | UNPRECEDENTED BARGAINS |
+ | |
+ | IN |
+ | |
+ | CLOAKS, SACQUES, |
+ | ARABS, TALMAS, |
+ | SHAWLS AND MANTLES, |
+ | |
+ | Real Astrakhan Cloaks |
+ | at $20, $22, and $25; last year's prices, $40 |
+ | and $45. |
+ | |
+ | CLOTHS, CLOAKINGS, |
+ | VELVETEENS, |
+ | CLOAK SILK VELVETS, |
+ | MILLINERY VELVETS, &c. |
+ | |
+ | NEW GOODS JUST RECEIVED, |
+ | |
+ | AT PRICES MUCH BELOW THE COST OF THE |
+ | SAME QUALITIES SOLD LAST YEAR. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, Fourth Ave., |
+ | 9th and 10th Streets. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | OFFER |
+ | |
+ | Wide Plaid Poplins at 25c. and 30c. per |
+ | Yard, recently sold at 85c. and 45c. |
+ | |
+ | All Wool Serges at 40c. per Yard; last |
+ | year's price, $1. |
+ | |
+ | High Colored Basket Cloths, 75c. per |
+ | Yard; last year's jobbing price, $1.25. |
+ | |
+ | Double Width, all Wool Plaids, 64 inches |
+ | wide, at $1.60 per Yard; last year's |
+ | jobbing price, $2.25. |
+ | |
+ | ALSO A LARGE LOT OF |
+ | |
+ | Heavy High Colored Plaids at 20c. per |
+ | Yard. |
+ | |
+ | The above, with a great variety of other |
+ | choice styles at |
+ | |
+ | Equally Low Prices, |
+ | |
+ | ARE EXHIBITED IN THE CENTRE SECTION |
+ | ON THE 4TH AVE. SIDE. |
+ | |
+ | STRANGERS, THE RESIDENTS OF THE EASTERN |
+ | PART OF OUR CITY, AND THOSE OF OUR |
+ | NEIGHBORING CITIES, ARE RESPECTFULLY |
+ | INVITED TO EXAMINE. |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, Fourth Ave., |
+ | |
+ | 9th and 10th Streets. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO. |
+ | |
+ | The first number of this Illustrated Humorous and Satirical |
+ | Weekly Paper was issued under date of April 2, 1870. The |
+ | Press and the Public in every State and Territory of the |
+ | Union endorse it as the best paper of the kind ever |
+ | published in America. |
+ | |
+ | CONTENTS ENTIRELY ORIGINAL. |
+ | |
+ | Subscription for one year, (with $2.00 premium,) $4.00 |
+ | " " six months, (without premium,) 2.00 |
+ | " " three months, " " 1.00 |
+ | Single copies mailed free, for .10 |
+ | |
+ | We offer the following elegant premiums of L. PRANG & CO'S |
+ | CHROMOS for subscriptions as follows: |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year, and |
+ | |
+ | "The Awakening," (a Litter of Puppies.) Half chromo. |
+ | Size 8-3/8 by 11-1/8 ($2.00 picture,)--for $4.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $3.00 chromos: |
+ | |
+ | Wild Roses. 12-1/8 x 9. |
+ | Dead Game. 11-1/8 x 8-5/8. |
+ | Easter Morning. 6-3/4 x 10-1/4--for $5.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $5.00 chromos: |
+ | |
+ | Group of Chickens; |
+ | Group of Ducklings; |
+ | Group of Quails. Each 10 x 12-1/8. |
+ | The Poultry Yard. 10-1/8 x 14. |
+ | The Barefoot Boy; Wild Fruit. Each 9-3/4 x 13. |
+ | Pointer and Quail; Spaniel and Woodcock. 10 x 12--for $6.50 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $6.00 chromos: |
+ | |
+ | The Baby in Trouble; The Unconscious Sleeper; The Two |
+ | Friends. (Dog and Child.) Each 13 x 16-3/4. |
+ | Spring; Summer: Autumn; 12-7/8 x 16-1/8. |
+ | The Kid's Play Ground. 11 x 17-1/2--for $7.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $7.50 chromos |
+ | |
+ | Strawberries and Baskets. |
+ | Cherries and Baskets. |
+ | Currants. Each 13 x 18. |
+ | Horses in a Storm. 22-1/4 x 15-1/4. |
+ | Six Central Park Views. (A set.) 9-1/8 x 4-1/2--for $8.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and Six American Landscapes. |
+ | (A set.) 4-3/8 x 9, price $9.00--for $9.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $10 chromos: |
+ | |
+ | Sunset in California. (Bierstadt) 18-1/8 x 12 |
+ | Easter Morning. 14 x 21. |
+ | Corregio's Magdalen. 12-1/2 x 16-3/8. |
+ | Summer Fruit, and Autumn Fruit. (Half chromos,) |
+ | 15-1/2 x 10-1/2, (companions, price $10.00 for the two), |
+ | for $10.00 |
+ | |
+ | Remittances should be made in P.O. Orders, Drafts, or Bank |
+ | Checks on New York, or Registered letters. The paper will be |
+ | sent from the first number, (April 2d, 1870,) when not |
+ | otherwise ordered. |
+ | |
+ | Postage of paper is payable at the office where received, |
+ | twenty cents per year, or five cents per quarter, in |
+ | advance; the CHROMOS will be mailed free on receipt of |
+ | money. |
+ | |
+ | CANVASSERS WANTED, to whom liberal commissions will be |
+ | given. For special terms address the Company. |
+ | |
+ | The first ten numbers will be sent to any one desirous of |
+ | seeing the paper before subscribing, for SIXTY CENTS. A |
+ | specimen copy sent to any one desirous of canvassing or |
+ | getting up a club, on receipt of postage stamp. |
+ | |
+ | Address, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., |
+ | |
+ | P.O. Box 2783. |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, New York. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+[Illustration: WHAT WE ARE COMING TO.
+
+_Cook (negotiating for situation)._ "WELL, IT'LL BE NICISSARY FOR ME TO
+HAVE A FOTERGRAFF OF YER WIFE, AND A RICOMMINDATION FROM YER LAST
+COOK."]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "THE PRINTING HOUSE OF THE UNITED STATES" |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | "THE UNITED STATES ENVELOPE MANUFACTORY." |
+ | |
+ | GEORGE F. NESBITT & CO |
+ | |
+ | 163, 165, 167, 169 Pearl St., & 73,75,77,79 Pine St., |
+ | |
+ | New York. |
+ | |
+ | Execute all kinds of |
+ | |
+ | PRINTING, |
+ | |
+ | Furnish all kinds of |
+ | |
+ | STATIONERY, |
+ | |
+ | Make all kinds of |
+ | |
+ | BLANK BOOKS, |
+ | |
+ | Execute the finest styles of |
+ | |
+ | LITHOGRAPHY |
+ | |
+ | Make the Best and Cheapest ENVELOPES Ever offered to the |
+ | Public. |
+ | |
+ | They have made all the prepaid Envelopes for the United |
+ | States Post-Office Department for the past 16 years, and |
+ | have INVARIABLY BEEN THE LOWEST BIDDERS. Their Machinery is |
+ | the most complete, rapid and economical known in the trade. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Travelers West and South-West Should bear in mind that the |
+ | |
+ | ERIE RAILWAY IS BY FAR THE CHEAPEST, QUICKEST, AND MOST |
+ | COMFORTABLE ROUTE, |
+ | |
+ | Making Direct and Sure Connection at CINCINNATI, with all |
+ | Lines |
+ | |
+ | By Rail or River |
+ | |
+ | For NEW ORLEANS, LOUISVILLE, MEMPHIS, ST. LOUIS, VICKSBURG, |
+ | NASHVILLE, MOBILE And All Points South and South-west. |
+ | |
+ | It's DRAWINGS-ROOM and SLEEPING COACHES on all Express |
+ | Trains, running through to Cincinnati without chance, are |
+ | the most elegant and spacious used upon any Road in this |
+ | country, being fitted up in the most elaborate manner, and |
+ | having every modern improvement introduced for the comfort |
+ | of its patrons; running upon the BROAD GUAGE; revealing |
+ | scenery along the Line unequalled upon this Continent, and |
+ | rendering a trip over the ERIE, one of the delights and |
+ | pleasures of this life not to be forgotten. |
+ | |
+ | By applying at the Offices of the Erie Railway Co., Nos. |
+ | 241, 529 and 957 Broadway, 205 Chambers St.; 38 Greenwich |
+ | St.; cor. 125th St. and Third Avenue, Harlem; 338 Fulton |
+ | St., Brooklyn: Depots foot of Chambers Street, and foot of |
+ | 23d St., New York; and the Agents at the principal hotels, |
+ | travelers can obtain just the Ticket they desire, as well as |
+ | all the necessary information. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | VOL. I, ENDING SEPT. 24, |
+ | BOUND IN EXTRA CLOTH, |
+ | IS NOW READY. |
+ | PRICE $2.50. |
+ | Sent free by any Publisher on receipt of price, or by |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, |
+ | 83 Nassau Street, New York. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | THE NEW STORE OF LORD & TAYLOR, |
+ | |
+ | Cor. of Broadway & Twentieth Street, New York. |
+ | |
+ | This superb building will be devoted to retail purposes, |
+ | where every description of dry-goods, from the necessary and |
+ | convenient to the most elegant and fashionable, will attract |
+ | a multitudinous throng, and add even a new attraction to the |
+ | brilliancy of Broadway in the most delightful part of the |
+ | thoroughfare. Besides an immense trade extending to all |
+ | parts of the United States, LORD & TAYLOR deal largely in |
+ | carpets and oil-cloths, in upholstery and house furnishing |
+ | goods, and especially in trousseaux, cloaks, and ladies' |
+ | furnishing goods of all kinds, in which, perhaps, their |
+ | business is heavier than that of any other house in the |
+ | city. The furnishing of hotels and steamboats is one of |
+ | their specialties. The headquarters of their wholesale trade |
+ | is at the old Broadway and Grand street store, while their |
+ | stock of carpets and oil-cloths is mainly limited to the |
+ | Grand and Chrystie street establishment. Since the |
+ | organization of the firm, five partners have retired with |
+ | fortunes, to make room for younger men, thus affording |
+ | opportunities for others to profit by the experience and |
+ | success of the house. These changes have also had the effect |
+ | to maintain the original vigor of the firm without detaching |
+ | from the maturity of judgment that has marked its |
+ | operations. Some idea of the magnitude of the business of |
+ | the house may be inferred from the fact that the pay-roll |
+ | contains the names of more than 1,000 persons. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+GEO. W. WHEAT & CO, PRINTERS, No. 8 SPRUCE STREET.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34,
+November 19, 1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 34 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 10106-8.txt or 10106-8.zip *****
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+<html>
+<head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
+ content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of PUNCHINELLO Vol. II, No. 34.</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ * { font-family: Times;}
+ HR { width: 33%; }
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+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34, November 19,
+1870, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34, November 19, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2003 [EBook #10106]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 34 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<table width="800" border="1" align="center" cellpadding="3"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big>CONANT'S</big></big><br>
+ </span></p>
+ <p>PATENT BINDERS FOR</p>
+ <p> <big><big><b>"PUNCHINELLO",</b></big></big></p>
+ <p>to preserve the paper for binding, will be sent post-paid, on
+receipt of One Dollar,</p>
+ <p>&nbsp;by</p>
+ <p><b>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,<br>
+ </b></p>
+ <p><b>83 Nassau Street, New York City.</b></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p><big><big>We will Mail Free</big></big></p>
+ <p><small>A COVER</small><br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">Lettered &amp; Stamped,</span><br
+ style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">with New Title Page<br>
+ <br>
+ </span> <small>FOR BINDING<br>
+ <br>
+ </small> <b>FIRST VOLUME,</b></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">On Receipt of 50 Cents,</p>
+ <p><small>OR THE</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">TITLE PAGE ALONE, FREE,</p>
+ <p><small>On application to</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,</p>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">83 Nassau Street.</span> </center>
+ </td>
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HARRISON BRADFORD &amp; CO.'S</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>STEEL PENS.</big></big></big></p>
+ <p>These pens are of a finer quality, more durable, and cheaper
+than any other Pen in the market. Special attention is called to the
+following grades, as being better suited for business purposes than any
+Pen manufactured. The</p>
+ <p><b>"505," "22,"</b> and the <b>"Anti-Corrosive."</b></p>
+ <p>We recommend for bank and office use.</p>
+ <p><b>D. APPLETON &amp; CO.,</b> <b><br>
+Sole Agents for United States.</b></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table width="800" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="3"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <center> <br>
+ <br>
+ <img alt="" src="images/115.jpg"><br>
+ <h1>PUNCHINELLO</h1>
+ <h2>Vol. II. No. 34.</h2>
+ <p>SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1870.</p>
+ <br>
+ <h3>PUBLISHED BY THE</h3>
+ <br>
+ <h3>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,</h3>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <h4>83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.</h4>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><small><b>PRANG'S LATEST PUBLICATIONS:</b> "Joy of Autumn,"
+"Prairie Flowers," "Lake George," "West Point," "Beethoven," large and
+small.<br>
+ <b>PRANG'S CHROMOS</b> sold in all Art Stores throughout the
+world.<br>
+ <b>PRANG'S ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE</b> sent free on receipt of
+stamp.<br>
+ <b>L. PRANG &amp; CO.,</b> Boston.</small></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><small>See 15th page for Extra Premiums.</small></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<br>
+<table
+ style="width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ border="1" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td rowspan="6" style="width: 30%;">
+ <center>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>Bound Volume<br>
+ </big></big></big></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>No. 1.</big><br>
+ </big></big></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><br>
+ </big></big></p>
+ <p><small>The first volume of PUNCHINELLO, ending with No. 26,
+September 24, 1870,<br>
+ <br>
+ </small></p>
+ <p><b><big><big>Bound in Extra Cloth,</big></big><br>
+ </b></p>
+ <p><b><br>
+ </b></p>
+ <p><small>is now ready for delivery,</small></p>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <p><b>PRICE $2.50.</b></p>
+ <p>Sent postpaid to any part of the United States on receipt of
+price.</p>
+ <br>
+ <p>A copy of the paper for one year, from October 1st, No. 27,
+and the Bound Volume (the latter prepaid,) will be sent to any
+subscriber for $5.50.</p>
+ <br>
+ <p>Three copies for one year, and three Bound Volumes, with an
+extra copy of Bound Volume, to any person sending us three
+subscriptions for $16.50.</p>
+ <p><b>One copy of paper for one year, with a fine chromo premium,
+for------ $4.00<br>
+ <br>
+ </b></p>
+ <p><b>Single copies, mailed free .10<br>
+ <br>
+ </b></p>
+ <p>Back numbers can always be supplied, as the paper is
+electrotyped.</p>
+ <p><br>
+Book canvassers will find<br>
+this volume a</p>
+ <p><b>Very Saleable Book.</b></p>
+ <p>Orders supplied at a very liberal discount.</p>
+ <p>All remittances should be made in Post Office orders.</p>
+ <p>Canvassers wanted for the paper,</p>
+ <p>everywhere. Send for our Special Circular.</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Address,</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>Punchinello Publishing Co.,</big></p>
+ <p><big>83 NASSAU ST.,<br>
+ </big></p>
+ <p><big>N. Y.</big></p>
+ <p><big>P.O. Box No, 2783.</big></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align: center;">
+ <p><small>THE HANDSOMEST AND THE BEST.</small></p>
+ <p><big><big><big><b>Every Saturday,</b></big></big></big></p>
+ <p><b>THE GREAT ILLUSTRATED PAPER OF AMERICA.</b></p>
+ <p>Illustrated with Drawings from the Best Artists in America and
+Europe.</p>
+ <p><b>Able Editorials, Excellent Stories, Attractive
+Miscellaneous Reading.</b></p>
+ <p>BEAUTIFULLY PRINTED ON TINTED PAPER.</p>
+ <p>For Sale everywhere.</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">FIELDS, OSGOOD &amp; CO.,
+Publishers, Boston.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align: center;">
+ <p><big><big><b>FACTS FOR THE LADIES.</b></big></big></p>
+ <p>I have a Wheeler &amp; Wilson machine (No. 289), bought of Mr.
+Gardner In 1853, he having used it a year. I have used it constantly,
+in shirt manufacturing as well as family sewing, sixteen years. My wife
+ran it four years, and earned between $700 and $800, besides doing her
+housework. I have never expended fifty cents on it for repairs. It is,
+to-day, in the best of order, stitching fine linen bosoms nicely. I
+started manufacturing shirts with this machine, and now have over one
+hundred of them in use. I have paid at least $3,000 for the stitching
+done by this old machine, and it will do as much now as any machine I
+have.</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">W.F. TAYLOR.</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BERLIN, N.Y.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align: center;" rowspan="2">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small style="font-weight: normal;">APPLICATIONS
+FOR ADVERTISING IN</small><br>
+ <big><big>"PUNCHINELLO"</big></big></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small style="font-weight: normal;">SHOULD
+BE ADDRESSED TO</small><br>
+JOHN NICKINSON,</p>
+ <p>Room No. 4,</p>
+ <p><b>No. 83 Nassau Street, N.Y.</b></p>
+ </td>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><b>GEO. B. BOWLEND</b>,</p>
+ <p><big><big>Draughtsman &amp; Designer</big></big></p>
+ <p><b>No. 160 Fulton Street</b>,</p>
+ <p>Room No. 11,</p>
+ <p>NEW YORK.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><b>HENRY L. STEPHENS</b>,</big></p>
+ <p><b>ARTIST</b>,</p>
+ <p><b>No. 160 FULTON STREET</b>,</p>
+ <p>NEW YORK.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align: center; width: 30%;" rowspan="2">
+ <p><b>TO NEWS-DEALERS.</b></p>
+ <p><big><b>Punchinello's Monthly.</b></big></p>
+ <p><small>The Weekly Numbers for August,</small></p>
+ <p><b>Bound in a Handsome Cover,</b></p>
+ <p>Is now ready. Price, Fifty Cents.</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">THE TRADE</p>
+ <p>Supplied by the</p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">AMERICAN NEW</span>S COMPANY,</p>
+ <p><small>Who are now prepared to receive Orders.</small></p>
+ </td>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><b>GEORGE WEVILL,</b></p>
+ <p>WOOD ENGRAVER,</p>
+ <b>208 BROADWAY,</b><br>
+NEW YORK.<br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big style="font-weight: bold;"><big>FOLEY'S</big></big></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big style="font-weight: bold;"><big><br>
+ <big>GOLD PENS.<br>
+ <br>
+ </big></big></big> <span style="font-weight: normal;">THE BEST
+AND CHEAPEST.</span><br>
+256 BROADWAY.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big>Bowling Green Savings-Bank<br>
+ </big></p>
+ <p>33 BROADWAY,</p>
+ <p><br>
+ <b>NEW YORK</b>.</p>
+ <p>Open Every Day from<br>
+10 A.M. to 3 P.M.</p>
+ <p><small><i>Deposits of any sum, from Ten Cents<br>
+to Ten Thousand Dollars will be received</i>.</small></p>
+ <p><b>Six per Cent interest,<br>
+Free of Government Tax</b></p>
+ <p><small>INTEREST ON NEW DEPOSITS<br>
+Commences on the First of every Month.</small></p>
+ <p>HENRY SMITH, <i>President<br>
+ <br>
+ </i> REEVES E. SELMES, <i>Secretary</i>.</p>
+ <p>WALTER ROCHE,<br>
+EDWARD HOGAN,<br>
+ <i>Vice-Presidents</i>.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">The only Journal of its kind in
+America!!</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>THE AMERICAN CHEMIST:</big></p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">A MONTHLY JOURNAL</span><br>
+ <small>OF</small><br>
+ <small>THEORETICAL, ANALYTICAL AND TECHNICAL CHEMISTRY.</small></p>
+ <p><small>DEVOTED ESPECIALLY TO AMERICAN INTERESTS.</small></p>
+ <p><small>EDITED BY<br>
+Chas. F. Chandler, Ph.D., &amp; W.H. Chandler.</small></p>
+ <p><small>The Proprietors and Publishers of THE AMERICAN CHEMIST,
+having purchased the subscription list and stock of the American
+reprint of the CHEMICAL NEWS, have decided to advance the interests of
+the American Chemical Science by the publication of a Journal which
+shall be a medium of communication for all practical, thinking,
+experimenting, and manufacturing scientific men throughout the country.</small></p>
+ <p><small>The columns of THE AMERICAN CHEMIST are open for the
+reception of original articles from any part of the country, subject to
+approval of the editor. Letters of inquiry on any points of interest
+within the scope of the Journal will receive prompt attention.</small></p>
+ <p><b>THE AMERICAN CHEMIST</b></p>
+ <p>Is a Journal of especial interest to</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small>SCHOOLS AND MEN OF SCIENCE,
+TO COLLEGES, APOTHECARIES, DRUGGISTS, PHYSICIANS, ASSAYERS, DYERS,
+PHOTOGRAPHERS, MANUFACTURERS,</small></p>
+ <p>And all concerned in scientific pursuits.</p>
+ <p><b>Subscription, $5.00 per annum, in advance; 50 cts. per
+number. Specimen copies, 25 cts.</b></p>
+ <p>Address WILLIAM BALDWIN &amp; CO.,<br>
+Publishers and Proprieters<br>
+424 Broome Street, New York</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table width="800" align="center">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td> <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center>
+ <p><small>Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year
+1870, by the PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,<br>
+in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States, for
+the Southern District of New York.</small></p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/117.jpg">
+ <p><b>WALKING DOWN CHATHAM STREET.</b></p>
+ <p><i>Clothier.</i> "Step in and look at our goods, Captain.
+Summer stuffs at a discount&#8212;nice lot o' white ducks at half price."</p>
+ <p><i>Sportsman.</i> "I beat you there. I've got a nice lot o'
+black ducks here that ain't to be had at any price."</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>BRILLIANCY OF THE "SUN."</b></p>
+ <p>The Moon, as is generally known, shines with a borrowed light,
+while the Sun is popularly supposed to manufacture its own gas and to
+arrange its pyrotechnics on the premises. Our N.Y. <i>Sun</i>,
+however, does not always manufacture its own beams. By far the most
+brilliant of the "sunbeams," for instance, published in that journal of
+November 1st, is the quaint and charming little poem there headed
+"Sally Salter," and written originally for Punchinello, in the issue of
+which publication for Oct. 1st it made its first appearance, under the
+title of "The Lovers." We congratulate the <i>Sun</i> on having thus
+successfully lit its pipe with Punchinello's fire, though we think it
+might have been gracious enough to have acknowledged the favor.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A PEOPLE OF TASTE.</b></p>
+ <p>The extraordinary liberality of the generous people of
+Connecticut has frequently excited apprehension in the minds of their
+friends, that, sooner or later, as the result of their spendthrift
+career, they must come to beggary. But we are glad to hear that they
+are making an effort in New Haven to reform. The grocery men there say
+that their customers taste so much before they can make up their minds
+to buy anything, that what with gratuitous slices of cheese and
+specimen mouthfuls of sugar and sample spoonfuls of molasses, the
+shop-keeper's profits are most dolefully diminished. A particularly
+BLUE LAW against this economical custom will have the effect of
+sobering down these brilliant Cullers.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>"What Answer?"</b></p>
+ <p>Is it likely that HORACE GREELEY, or any other man, could
+steer this country through its difficulties by means of the tillers of
+the soil?</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>ANY MORE CAVES?</b></p>
+ <p>About the dreariest magazine or other reading we know of&#8212;and
+we get a deal of it, too&#8212;is that which describes the visits of
+enthusiastic persons to big caves underground, very dark, damp, dreary,
+ugly, funereal&#8212;with winding ways and huge holes, water with eyeless
+fish, and certain drippings called stalagmites and stalactites. The
+enthusiasts, who always possess that priceless treasure
+self-satisfaction, and a boundless capacity for wonder (which is always
+ready to exercise itself with anything that is big, however ugly), and
+the "Palaces," and "Halls," and "Cascades," and "Altars," and "Bridal
+Wreaths" they see there are not only finer than real ones (if you would
+believe them!) but so grand and wonderful as to be really
+indescribable. So we find them, by their turgid and stupid reports,
+which are all alike, and all dreary and silly. We have never heard of
+anybody who got excited over these pictures (except the artists
+themselves); and positively there is no flatter reading anywhere than
+these gushing notes about big caves.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>GEOMETRICAL.</b></p>
+ <p>Why is it that we hear so much of the proper "Sphere" of
+woman? Here is that noble exile, the Princess Editha Montez, lecturing
+again, and her subject, of course, is the Spherical one. So when
+Mesdames Stanton, Dickinson, Anthony, Howe&#8212;all the lovely
+lecturers&#8212;discourse, they forget the platform which is plane, and
+discuss the "sphere" which is mysterious. Can it possibly be that it is
+because these amiable gentlewomen are always going round? Or is it
+because they cannot help reasoning in a circle? Or is there some occult
+relation between spheres and hoops? Or has the wedding-ring something
+to do with it? It should be understood, that these are questions
+addressed solely to male mathematicians; for Mr. P. is unlike John
+Graham, and doesn't care to cross-examine ladies.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>SECRETION EXTRAORDINARY.</b></p>
+ <p>It is done by Mollusks. We can tell you even the precise
+kind&#8212;it is the Gasteropod kind. Not only this, we know the very devil
+himself that does it. (And you will say that "devil" is not a particle
+too rough a term, when we come to tell what it is he "secretes.") It is
+the <i>Dolium galea</i>, good friends, and we could tell you six other
+kinds that are suspected of this meanness. One of 'em is the <i>Pleurobranchidium</i>&#8212;which,
+of course, you have often heard of.</p>
+ <p>Well, what do these wretched Mollusks go and secrete? We can
+tell you&#8212;we, who know everything. It is sulphuric acid! What! do they
+steal it? Oh, no; they "evolve" it&#8212;probably from the "depths of their
+own consciousness."</p>
+ <p>And what do they do it for? Well, they bore with it. Give 'em
+a chance, and they'll go through <i>you</i>. The acid eats its way,
+and then they eat <i>their</i> way. That way is not ours, exactly; but
+we have known human beings about as venomous as this creature, and with
+precisely the same tendency to pierce one. They do it with their
+tongues, it is true, but the perforation is complete.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>THE WRONG PLACE.</b></p>
+ <p>We are unusually astonished to find the Female Reformers
+holding their meeting in this city in Apollo Hall. It is well known
+that Apollo was a god of the male persuasion; and to have everything
+"mix up well," these philosophical dames should have a Minerva Hall or
+a Diana Hall of their own. Besides, was not Apollo the God of Harmony?
+Precious little of that same was there at this meeting; for there was
+the Medical Mary Walker trying to make a speech, while the Chairwoman
+put her down, causing Mary de Medici to cry out with shrill
+indignation: "Tyrant!" Bless us! we thought all the tyrants were we
+Bearded Ones.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A LETTER FROM CHICAGO</b>.</p>
+ <p><img alt="P" align="left" src="images/118.jpg">urposely or
+otherwise, we are all on our way to California now&#8212;men, women, and
+children&#8212;graybeards and babies. We did Europe two or three years ago,
+so that idea is obsolete, excepting as a bridal tour; then, too, the
+more peaceably inclined, who have not seen the European elephant, would
+prefer to wait until that country is again in a state of quiescence.
+But Chicago is constantly sending out her adventure-loving citizens
+upon the Pacific road, each one of whom looks, sees, admires, and
+suddenly develops an epistolary talent hitherto undreamed of by his
+most enthusiastic friends. There's our MELISSA, for instance&#8212;she never
+used to have a pen in her hand more than once in the course of six
+months, and <i>now</i>&#8212;why, we really seem to have another
+S&Eacute;VIGN&Eacute; budding right in our midst. She went to
+California, saw all the sights, and wondered, and admired, and <i>wrote</i>.
+The floods of eloquence that had so long been slumbering now burst
+forth beyond all hindrance or control. She stopped at Salt Lake, and
+called upon BRIGHAM YOUNG, and was so disgusted with the mighty prophet
+that she would not look at him. Yet, considering that circumstance, she
+described his personal appearance with wonderful vividness and
+accuracy. She indulged in the usual amount of stern remonstrance and
+indignation, that seem to be almost indispensable to the occasion.
+ALONZO asked why she called upon the dreadful man, and somewhat
+maliciously inquired if it was not for the express purpose of being
+shocked and horrified, thus affording a fine chance to moralize, and
+display the elevation of her own principles, and, in fact, help to fill
+out a good article; but MELISSA most vigorously denied the soft
+impeachment. Then she saw the sad wives, whose days of sunshine are
+gone by, and the merry ones,&#8212;who don the cap and bells deliberately;
+and for their benefit she expended just the proper degree of
+astonishment and sympathy&#8212;so fully substantiating the sound and
+praiseworthy condition of her own mind and heart.</p>
+ <p>This excellent young woman also caught glimpses of the red
+man, and here was another glorious opportunity to display her literary
+genius&#8212;and she did not let the occasion slip&#8212;O no! it produced a
+plaintive little rhapsody of pity and regret, such as "Mr. Lo!" is apt
+to inspire in the hearts of the young and romantic, although if MELISSA
+were to find herself alone in a forest, with the faintest suspicion of
+"Mr. Lo!" meandering anywhere near, she would most likely apply her
+hand involuntarily to her trembling chignon, and regret as keenly as
+all <i>hard-hearted</i> persons, that civilization has not carried out
+the process of extermination even more thoroughly than it has done.
+Indeed, she would probably wish the red gentleman at the bottom of the
+Red Sea, or in some other equally damp and discouraging situation. The
+noble-hearted braves are so much prettier to read about than to
+encounter, and the thrill occasioned by the sight of a bloody hatchet
+suspended over the intricate elaboration which we so fondly term a
+head, though more exciting perhaps, would scarcely be as delightful as
+that awakened by some perfectly safe and stirring ballad of the red
+man's wrongs.</p>
+ <p>MELISSA'S ideas of refinement met with a great shock. She
+concluded that the Indians' acquaintance with soap and water must be
+extremely limited, and thought that the distribution amongst them of
+several boxes of COLGATE'S best would be a most delicate courtesy, and
+true missionary enterprise. In looking at these noble representatives
+of savage life, she was greatly puzzled to discover where the dirt
+ended and the Indian began: but philanthropy should overlook such
+trifles. Philanthropy shouldn't be squeamish.</p>
+ <p>MELISSA, ecstasized over Lake Tahoe, and Yo Semit&eacute;, and
+the Big Trees, and was delighted, enchanted, and enraptured in the most
+thorough and conscientious manner. She revelled amongst California
+grapes and pears, and quaffed the California wines with appropriate
+delight and hilarity. She also studied JOHN CHINAMAN in all his phases,
+and came to the conclusion that he would do. She thought it would be a
+seraphic experience to see the pride and importance of Misses BRIDGET
+and GRETCHEN taken down a little. JOHN would certainly not possess the
+voluble eloquence&#8212;of the first, nor the stolid impudence of the second,
+nor would he have, like the pretty Swede, a train of admirers a mile in
+length. Of course he would not have these advantages to recommend him.
+But then one can get along without florid oratory in the kitchen, and
+although a lady may feel highly pleased and flattered to see an
+unending procession of admirers file in and out of her drawing-rooms,
+still she has a most decided objection to seeing the same imposing
+spectacle in her kitchen. Women, will be inconsistent.</p>
+ <p>MELISSA particularly admired JOHN'S manner of ironing. She
+thought it peculiar but genteel, and gentility is always desirable.
+There must be something about the climate of California that is
+especially inspiring to authors&#8212;a kind of magnetism in the atmosphere
+that draws out all the literary talent which may be lying dormant in
+their souls&#8212;so that any one desirous of becoming a writer, has only to
+take a trip to that fascinating region, and at some unexpected moment
+he will awake with rapture and delight to the blessed consciousness of
+having blossomed into a flower of genius, and, as such, will feel
+privileged at once to deluge his family, his friends, and the world in
+general, with the brilliant results of his most delightful discovery.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>THE PROFIT OF PURITAN PRISONS</b>.</p>
+ <p>Spain has commissioned a Mr. AZCARATE, a Cuban, to visit and
+report upon our penal institutions, and the gentleman is now in the
+country. We trust he will not fail to visit the Connecticut State
+Prison. There he would unquestionably obtain numerous hints for
+improving the Spanish system of prison torture, or even that in vogue
+in his native land, for political prisoners. There he might learn how
+Yankee thrift, applied in this direction, makes the starving of
+convicts even a more profitable business than manufacturing wooden
+nutmegs. Perhaps not the least valuable information he would gain,
+would be the best method of goading obnoxious prisoners into revolt,
+and thus obtaining a chance for disposing of them, legally, by a
+capital conviction.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>AN OPEN CONGRESSIONAL COUNTENANCE</b>.</p>
+ <p>It is oddly enough objected to the re-election of a certain
+Member of Congress from Massachusetts, that "he can't open his mouth."
+It might be answered that Gen. BUTLER is quite able to open his mouth
+wide enough for the whole delegation. The mouth may be opened for two
+purposes, viz., speech-making and swallowing; and it never appeared to
+us that there was any lack either of Bolting or Bellering in the House
+of Representatives. However notably Honorable Gentlemen may play the
+game either of Gab or Grab, it isn't so clear that their constituents
+are much benefited by these accomplishments. If all they want is an
+open-mouthed Member, why don't the Massachusetts men import a
+first-class crocodile, and send him to the National Menagerie in
+Washington?</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>SPREAD OF AMERICAN PRINCIPLES</b>.</p>
+ <p>It is with a heart full of patriotic pride and gratitude that
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO observes the adoption, in his dear native Italy, of the
+manners and customs of the Land of his Adoption. At an election
+recently held in Rome, about something or some other thing, one
+enterprising Roman has been discovered who voted "yes" twenty-five
+times in as many electoral urns&#8212;thereby, it is to be presumed, earning
+a good deal of money. We have a more lively hope for charming Italy
+when we find even a single citizen exhibiting a skill which would do
+honor to the most accomplished professional voter in New York. There is
+something encouraging in finding the Sons of ST. PETER becoming, every
+one of them, Re-Peters.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>To Commentators</b>.</p>
+ <p>The "Sun of York," mentioned in Richard III., has no reference
+to the "Sun of New York" neither was the quotation, "Who is here so
+base, that would be a bondman?" especially meant for application to
+"THE" ALLEN.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Beatific</b>.</p>
+ <p>They talk a great deal about the twenty-eight inch beet they
+have grown in California, but a policeman of this city has a beat three
+miles long.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/119.jpg">
+ <p><b>"SICH A GITTIN' UP STARES."</b></p>
+ <p><i>1st festive Cuss.</i> "WHAT MAKES FOLKS STARE AT US SO?"</p>
+ <p><i>2d Festive Cuss.</i> "ON ACCOUNT OF OUR ELEGANT COSTOOM, I
+GUESS. THEY TAKE YOU FOR WALL STREET, AND ME FOR FIFTH AVENUE."</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>OUR EYE-WITNESS AT THE ELECTIONS.</b></p>
+ <p>We suppose that no individual has rendered more invaluable
+service as a historian than the distinguished Eye-witness of the
+newspapers. The friends of PUNCHINELLO will therefore be rejoiced to
+hear that this accurate reporter was engaged to detail for our readers
+the progress of the late elections.</p>
+ <p>Some time ago, the Eye-witness set about organizing the
+campaign by the masterly and novel plan of inducing the leaders of the
+opposing political parties to nominate different men for the same
+office. The effect was electrical. Immediately on these nominations
+being made public, the people rose like one man, and began canvassing
+like a great many different and very quarrelsome men. Target companies
+sprang from the recesses of the East Side, like ghosts from the rocks
+in <i>Der Freisch&uuml;tz;</i> drums and fifes resounded; cannons
+boomed; fireworks burst into flame. The Eye-witness, having thus set
+the universe satisfactorily by the ears, got into his second-story
+front, and contemplated the campaign with serene complacency from the
+window.</p>
+ <p>He had not to wait very long for a Mass Meeting to be formed
+under his very nose, and, consequently, within range of his witnessing
+and recording Eye. This Mass Meeting was conducted by the "Intelligent"
+Party, and was announced to be speedily followed by a Multitudinous
+Assemblage of the "Enlightened" Party. These two factions, as it will
+readily be observed, and as their names indicate, are of the most
+widely varying character and scope; a fact to be further illustrated by
+the proceedings which followed.</p>
+ <p>The intelligent began to assemble early in the evening, to the
+sound of guns and drums and sky-rockets. These accompaniments were
+intended to get their spirits up, but the Intelligent persistently
+applied themselves to getting spirits down; and when the rival
+processes had continued for a reasonable length of time, speakers began
+to appear upon the stands. The first man who addressed them was the
+Commercial Candidate.</p>
+ <p>"Fellow-citizens," said he, "why are you here? To elect me, of
+course. (Immense cheering.) And why will you elect me? I am an honest
+man: I want no office. (Laughter and cheers.) Ah, my friends, you elect
+me because you are now paying $5.36 on every pound of Peruvian Bark and
+Egyptian Mummy which you use in every-day life, and because you know
+that when I am in, the other party will be out!" (Continued applause.)</p>
+ <p>Next rose an ex-Senator, who said he had come wholly
+unprepared to speak, but, being unexpectedly called upon, had made some
+brief jottings on a visiting-card, to which he would now refer. He then
+spoke for one hour and three-quarters. At the close there was an
+intermission for carrying off the dead.</p>
+ <p>JONES, the candidate for the office of Vituperator, then
+cleared his throat savagely.</p>
+ <p>"My friends," he began, "BROWN, the opposing candidate, is a
+scamp, and he knows it. If any man says he isn't, <i>he</i> is. (Loud
+cheers.) Do you ask me to prove it? Prove an axiom! (Applause.) Who but
+a damned rascal would run against me at election? I tell you it is
+assault and battery! (Sounds of approbation.) In conclusion, I will
+only add that Brown is an infernal bummer and a sneak." (Cheers.)</p>
+ <p>The Intelligent then dispersed in a splendidly ferocious and
+bloody-minded condition, fully primed for the election. Shortly
+afterward the Enlightened appeared upon the scene in the following</p>
+ORDER OF PROCESSION.<br>
+ <br>
+Cordon of Police.<br>
+Drum.<br>
+Committee of Arrangements.<br>
+Fife.<br>
+Target Company.<br>
+Drum and Fife.<br>
+Small boys.<br>
+Apple-women.<br>
+Drum.<br>
+ <p>The Enlightened candidate for the Vituperator was the first on
+the stand. He rushed forward and said:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"The Vituperative candidate of the Intelligent let fall in a
+former speech some subtle or carefully worded innuendoes as to my
+character. I have only to say that his speech was a tissue of
+falsehood. I will trespass upon your patience further, to add that
+JONES is an infernal bummer and a sneak. If he is not, my
+fellow-citizens, why then I am. (Indignant cries of 'That's so!') My
+friends, you cannot doubt this reasoning. The facts are then
+conclusive. Either he is a bummer, or I am. It is therefore your duty,
+on the 8th November, to elect me at once and in fact to the office of
+Vituperator, and prospectively to those of Mayor, Governor, and
+President of the United States." (Prolonged cheering.)</p>
+ <p>Mr. DE MAGOG, a very giant of eloquence, a Gog as well as
+Magog of oratory, next set the enlightened agog with a speech.</p>
+ <p>"Fellow-citizens! Men and Brothers! Victory or defeat! Liberty
+or death! Glorious republic! Stars and Stripes! Down with the traitor!
+To the polls! Red fire&#8212;blood and thunder"&#8212;(voice drowned in shouts of
+wild enthusiasm.)</p>
+ <p>The Eye-witness, meantime, had become distracted with
+harassing doubts. Subscribing fully to the politics of PUNCHINELLO,
+which is the only paper he reads, he had hitherto announced himself as
+a member of the Right Party. Being, however, open to conviction, he had
+unfortunately permitted both parties to convict him. In this awful
+crisis Reason appeared about to totter from her throne. The Eye-witness
+thrust his head wildly from the window, and shrieked to the crowd
+below: "Where's the Right Man? I belong to the Right Party. I want to
+hear the Right Man!!"</p>
+ <p>At once the mob became a sea of upturned faces. The
+Enlightened, together with a large number of the Intelligent, who had
+lingered on the scene, with one common consent lifted up their voices
+and groaned. The groan was but a premonitory thunder to a shower of
+sticks, stones, whiskey-bottles, and superannuated eggs. The
+Eye-witness closed the window with an undignified bang, and retired
+into the depths of his chamber, where he remained until after the
+election. Owing to a dimness of vision, resulting from the
+eggs-cruciating condition of his ocular organs, the occupation of the
+Eye-witness was from that moment gone. And to this fact must be
+attributed his inability to state, with any certainty, whether the
+Right Party has succeeded in putting the Right Man in the Right Place;
+but he rather thinks it has.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Spots on the Sun.</b></p>
+ <p>The <i>Sun</i> is eclipsed by the <i>World,</i> and is far
+behind the <i>Times.</i> It cannot be considered a <i>Standard</i>
+sheet, and will never personify the <i>Star</i> newspaper. Receiving
+its <i>News</i> with the <i>Mail,</i> as a <i>Herald</i> it is
+valueless. It cannot claim to be a <i>Journal of Commerce,</i> and as
+a <i>Tribune</i> for the people it is a failure, and it does not shine
+as a <i>Democrat,</i> for it relies on the <i>Post</i> for most of
+its intelligence.</p>
+ <p>Moral.&#8212;Keep the <i>Sun</i> out of your eyes.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/120.jpg">
+ <p><b>A CHEERFUL PROSPECT,</b></p>
+ <p><i>First Old Loafer</i>. "THE PAPERS SAYS THERE'S A CHANCE OF
+THE BOURBON DIE NASTY REIGNING IN FRANCE AGAIN."</p>
+ <p><i>Second ditto</i>. "BULLY! IF THERE'S ANYTHING I LIVE FOR
+ITS A HIGH OLD RAIN OF BOURBON. LET IT POUR!"</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>SARSFIELD YOUNG ON FORT SUMTER.</b></p>
+ <p>The country was indignant that Fort Sumter was not reinforced.
+Major Anderson's supplies were nearly exhausted, and he wanted twenty
+thousand men, with equipments and rations. If the Government couldn't
+afford the rations&#8212;very well: it ought at least to given him the men.</p>
+ <p>I am speaking of the late rebellion, which GREELEY, HEADLEY,
+and others have written up. Although a publishing company at Hartford,
+Conn., own most of the facts of the war, which they peddle out only by
+subscription, they can give the public but little of the secret history
+of the Fort Sumter affair. That remains to be written, while WELLER and
+I remain to write it. The Ex-Secretary has gracefully left it to me to
+describe the midnight session of the Cabinet at which I chanced to be
+present.</p>
+ <p>I was boarding at the White House at the time, and as
+President LINCOLN assured me it would be rather interesting, I was
+persuaded to attend. "The fact is, the crisis reminds me," said he, of
+a little story of a horse-trot in Arkansas&#8212;"</p>
+ <p>"Sir," interrupted I, "it reminds me of a dozen stories, one
+of AEsop's fables, and two hundred lives of CHAUCER."</p>
+ <p>He was afraid to continue.</p>
+ <p>As the clock struck twelve, he called the meeting to order and
+remarked: "Gentlemen, ANDERSON is in Sumter. The question now is,&#8212;what
+will he do with it?"</p>
+ <p>South Carolina was out. BUCHANAN had done nothing. Everywhere
+was distrust. (That very day they had refused, on Pennsylvania avenue,
+to trust me for a spring overcoat.) STANTON was getting his dark
+lantern ready for nightly interviews with SUMNER and WENDELL PHILLIPS
+in a vacant lot upon the outskirts of the Capitol. Universal gloom
+prevailed.</p>
+ <p>SEWARD opened the discussion. He said it was contemplated to
+throw four thousand men into Fort Sumter. We couldn't do it. If we did,
+it would only be one of the first throes of a civil conflict, a war
+long and bloody, which he would venture to predict might be protracted
+even to the extent of ninety days. Were we prepared for that? He would
+like to hear from that pure patriot, the Secretary of War, on this
+point.</p>
+ <p>Amid murmurs of applause, Gen. CAMERON rose to say that he was
+wholly unprepared to make a speech; but he owned a lot of condemned
+muskets, which he stood ready to dispose of to the Government at four
+times their original cost. He should advise that the Fort be covered
+with several thicknesses of Pennsylvania railroad iron. It would
+protect our gallant troops, and he was now, as he had always been, in
+favor of protection. Besides, he knew parties who could get up a ring
+in the way of army blankets.</p>
+ <p>Mr. CHASE spoke rather thick and fast, but I understood him to
+pronounce in favor of that platform which would get the most votes. "If
+the people think it ought to be done, why, do it. The country needs
+taxation, and is anxious to have me President. I think I can borrow
+money enough in Wall street to pay the passage of a moderate number of
+men to Charleston, but they mustn't on any account be CHASE men. I
+don't want any of my friends killed off before the next Presidential
+election."</p>
+ <p>"What the Administration lacks," chimed in BLAIR, "is
+backbone. Powder and ball, and blood are my sentiments. Fill all the
+army and navy offices with the BLAIR family, and secession is dead."</p>
+ <p>SEWARD again: "Strengthen Pickens, and let Sumter go. Our
+soldiers will find it healthier and more commodious at Pickens. I'll
+have the <i>Powhatan</i> sent there forthwith."</p>
+ <p>Hereupon Mr. GIDEON WELLES woke up and remarked, in a strain
+of apology, that be hadn't read his commission yet, but it was his
+impression that he was the head of what was called the Navy Department.
+Coming from an inland town, he didn't exactly know whether the
+Secretary of State or himself had the ordering about of our national
+vessels; but he rather thought he would relieve his friend SEWARD of
+that burden. He had talked with several old sea-dogs. They all agreed
+that the success of the plan depended on its feasibility. Capt. Fox, a
+private citizen of Massachusetts, had been down there with a horse and
+buggy, and reports that a squad of marines could do the job up in good
+style.</p>
+ <p>Mr. BATES was called upon, and stated that strengthening
+Sumter, without giving the Southerners four weeks' notice of our
+intention, would not, in his opinion, be unconstitutional.</p>
+ <p>At this juncture Mr. FLOYD (who, having acquired the habit of
+attending BUCHANAN'S cabinet meetings, had not quite got over it) put
+his head in for a moment to suggest, that if the Black Republican
+Government would evacuate all the forts on Southern territory,
+remunerate his friends for their expenses, and execute a quit-claim
+deed of Washington and the national property to JEFF. DAVIS and other
+Southern leaders, the proposition might possibly be accepted, and
+trouble avoided.</p>
+ <p>Mr. SEWARD rose to add only a word, and that word was
+"Pickens."</p>
+ <p>The Secretary of the Interior observed, that as Charleston
+harbor wasn't in his department, he would say nothing.</p>
+ <p>Mr. BATES urged that the people of his section were loyal to
+the flag; in fact, they not only wanted the flag but the Capitol
+itself, and the national buildings (except the monument), removed to
+St. Louis; if they couldn't get that, they might be satisfied if Fort
+Sumter were towed around there, up the Mississippi. It would certainly
+be a good deal safer there.</p>
+ <p>Mr. GIDEON WELLES wanted it distinctly understood that Gen.
+SCOTT, Gen. HOLT, Capt. FOX and the <i>Powhatan</i> could save the
+country if Mr. SEWARD would let them; otherwise he would make a minute
+of these deliberations, and if his friend Mr. YOUNG (whom he was
+pleased to see present) didn't expose it, he himself would put it in
+the shape of a lively sketch, and send it to the magazines.</p>
+ <p>"Well&#8212;now," said Mr. LINCOLN, after patiently waiting, "this
+reminds me of the man in Pomeroy, Ohio, who kept what he called an
+'eating saloon.' One morning, a tall hoosier came in and called for
+ham and eggs. 'Can't giv 'em to ye, stranger,' said the proprietor,
+'but what'll ye hav' t'drink?&#8212;don't keep nothin' but a bar.' 'Yer
+don't? Then what'n thunder yer got that sign out thar for?' for the
+fellow was a little mad. 'Why yer see I call her a eating saloon, 'cos
+I reckon she eats up all the profits."</p>
+ <p>This beautiful and appropriate anecdote, which seemed to throw
+a flood of light upon the critical State question under consideration,
+pleased every one except FLOYD, who swore it was ungenerous and
+unchivalric. Hastily withdrawing, he threatened to telegraph it
+verbatim to the insurgents; it would fire the Southern heart.</p>
+ <p>SEWARD said he was going home, as he had already sent the <i>Powhatan</i>
+to PICKENS.</p>
+ <p>Mr. LINCOLN yawned, and turning to me, inquired: "Well,
+SARSFIELD, you see what a man's got to do to run this machine,&#8212;now
+what's your advice?"</p>
+ <p>"Your Excellency," I replied, "there's a man in the tanning
+business at Galena, in your State. Telegraph him at once. His name is
+GRANT, and if you give him the tools to work with, he'll straighten
+everything out for you as neat as a pin."</p>
+ <p>The meeting dissolved without taking heed of my suggestion,
+and the world knows the result. However, there's one thing I am proud
+of. I claim to have discovered GRANT four years before WASHBURN did.
+That's the secret why I can have any office I want under the present
+administration.</p>
+ <p>SARSFIELD YOUNG.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.</b></p>
+ <p><img alt="T" align="left" src="images/121.jpg">he popularity
+of opera among fashionable people in this city varies inversely as the
+intelligibility of the language in which it is sung.</p>
+ <p>To illustrate! The Italian opera is fashionable, though not
+one in ten of the people composing an average audience understand a
+word that is said or sung. The French opera is less fashionable, but
+perhaps one-third of the audience can understand the less ingenious of
+the indelicate jokes. The English opera is not fashionable, but every
+one can understand every word that Miss RICHINGS or Miss HERSEE
+pronounces. These facts undoubtedly stand in the relation of cause and
+effect. Wherefore the axiom with which this column begins.</p>
+ <p>To be sure, the words of an opera are a matter of very little
+consequence, the music speaking as plainly as the clearest of Saxon
+sentences. But the fashionable public knows less of music than it knows
+of languages, and would be quite capable of mistaking "<i>Gran Dio</i>"
+for a comic song, and "<i>Libiamo</i>" for a lover's lamentation, were
+not the translated libretto of <i>Traviata</i> at hand to supply them
+and the critics of the minor papers, with the cue for the display of
+appropriate emotion. Singers, especially, understand the full force of
+the above stated axiom. Hence, those who are deficient in voice avoid
+the English stage. Miss KELLOGG, for example, never attempted English
+opera, because she knew that people who had heard ROSE HERSEE or
+CAROLINE RICHINGS would laugh at her claim to be "the greatest living
+Prima Donna," should she compete with those birds of English song.
+Wherefore, she wisely confined herself to the Italian stage, sure of
+pleasing a public that knows nothing of music, but is confident that a
+lady who enjoys the friendship of Madison avenue must be a great
+singer. PAREPA, on the contrary, turned from the Italian to the English
+stage,&#8212;but then PAREPA had a voice.</p>
+ <p>How many years is it since CAROLINE RICHINGS first sung in
+English opera? It is an ungallant question, but the answer would be
+still more ungallant were it not that Miss RICHINGS is an artist; and
+with artists the crown of youth never loses the brightness of its
+laurel leaves. At any rate, she has sung long enough to compel the
+recognition of her claims to our gratitude and admiration. She is not
+faultless in her method, but she differs from other great American
+prime donne in the important particular of possessing voice enough to
+fill an auditorium larger than the average minstrel hall.</p>
+ <p>At present she is filling NIBLO'S GARDEN with her voice and
+its admirers. We go to hear her. PALMER and ZIMMERMANN, clad in velvet
+and fine linen, flit gorgeously about the lobby, and are mistaken, by
+rural visitors, for JIM FISK and HORACE GREELEY&#8212;concerning whom the
+tradition prevails in rural districts that they are clothed in a style
+materially different from that affected by King Solomon at the period
+of his greatest glory. We find our seats, and mentally remarking that
+NIBLO'S is the one theatre in this city from which it would be possible
+to escape with whole bones and coat in case of fire, we await with
+contented minds the lifting of the curtain.</p>
+ <p>In time the opera begins, and a select company of young men
+who are standing in the rear of the audience improve every possible
+opportunity for breaking into rapturous applause. Their zeal
+occasionally outruns their discretion, and they finally ruin the
+attempt of Miss RICHINGS to execute a florid cadenza at the end of one
+of her arias. An intelligent usher is therefore detailed to curse them
+into a comprehension of their duties, after which they applaud with a
+discretion which produces almost exactly the effect of spontaneous
+enthusiasm.</p>
+ <p>Remarks a young lady near us, who is dressed with much wealth
+of contrasting colors:&#8212;"This isn't half so nice as the Italian opera.
+Miss RICHINGS can't dress half so nicely as Miss KELLOGG, and then you
+don't see any fashionable people here. The DAVIDS, the ABRAHAMS, the
+AARONS, the NOAHS, that handsome Mr. JACOBS, and that delightful Mr.
+MOSES,&#8212;all these elegant young men with beautiful eyes and curly hair
+that dress in velvet coats and diamond studs&#8212;there isn't one of them
+here. Our best society never goes to any opera but the real Italian
+opera."</p>
+ <p>LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.&#8212;"But, my dear, it seems to me that
+your best society must consist chiefly of Jews&#8212;judging from the names
+you mention."</p>
+ <p>YOUNG LADY.&#8212;"Well, what if it does? They are rich, are they
+not? What more could you want?"</p>
+ <p>LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.&#8212;"What, indeed! But the music is just
+as good as it would be if the fashionable Israelites were here,&#8212;isn't
+it?"</p>
+ <p>SHE.&#8212;"The music as good! Why, Charles, everybody knows that
+the Italian opera music is perfectly lovely. This is only English, you
+know."</p>
+ <p>HE.&#8212;"It is precisely the same. Here the <i>Somnmabula</i> is
+sung with English instead of Italian words. That doesn't alter a single
+note."</p>
+ <p>SHE.&#8212;"You are too ridiculous! The idea of attempting to make
+me believe that this is just like the Italian Opera! Don't you suppose
+I knows anything about music?"</p>
+ <p>OLD GENTLEMAN.&#8212;"I heard CAROLINE RICHINGS sing in 1808,&#8212;I
+think it was. I tell you she sings better now tan she did then, but the
+stupid public never appreciated her. I recollect saying to KEAN&#8212;not
+CHARLES, you know, but <i>the</i> KEAN&#8212;that I knew a young lady that
+would be a splendid singer some of these days&#8212;meaning CAROLINE, of
+course. 'Well, sir,' says KEAN, 'what of it; you can't drink her, can
+you?' Gad! he was the best man for repartee I ever knew. To give you an
+instance; one night KEAN and I, and old SMITH,&#8212;you don't remember old
+SMITH, I presume; he played old men at the Boston Theatre sixty years
+ago; I never met a jollier fellow,&#8212;I remember his saying one night when
+JUNICS BOOTH was playing&#8212;let me see, what was the play; it wasn't the <i>Apostate</i>,
+I hardly think, for&#8212;"</p>
+ <p>Here the orchestra mercifully strikes up, and the big drum
+drums the garrulous monologue of the veteran theatrical observer. We
+have another act of the opera, sung far better than any opera has been
+sung at the Academy for years. Pretty ROSE HERSEE&#8212;when have we had a
+voice as pure, or a manner as charming as hers?&#8212;sings in this act, and
+her tones so closely resemble those of NILSSON in their exquisite
+purity, that we wonder how she has escaped the abuse of that
+"independent critical journal," the <i>Season</i>, until we notice a
+middle-aged gentleman sleeping quietly with a copy of the <i>Season</i>
+on his lap, and remember that at NIBLO'S GARDEN the proprietor of the
+independent critical journal is permitted to distribute his mental
+soothing syrup, while at STEINWAY HALL a rival sheet is the only
+admitted programme.</p>
+ <p>And I say&#8212;still thinking of NILSSON&#8212;to an experienced
+theatre-goer,&#8212;"Why does WATSON abuse NILSSON?"</p>
+ <p>And he answers, with the contemptuous, but obviously honest
+inquiry&#8212;"Who's WATSON?"</p>
+ <p>Really appalled by the suggestion that there exists a man with
+soul and things so completely dead as not to have heard of the great
+WATSON, I change my question and ask him: "Why does the <i>Season</i>
+abuse NILSSON?"</p>
+ <p>HE.&#8212;"The <i>Season</i>, my young friend, is a programme paper
+that is circulated gratuitously and depends for support upon its
+advertizing patronage. A few managers permit it to be circulated in
+their theatres; the remaining managers will not admit it. Among the
+latter are Mr. WALLACK, and MAX STRAKOSCH. Consequently, the <i>Season</i>
+abuses WALLACK'S Theatre and NILSSON'S concerts&#8212;asserting that Mr.
+WALLACK has a wretched company, and that Miss NILSSON has no voice. The
+ <i>Season</i> is also a comic paper, and its best joke is its
+assertion that it is an 'independent critical journal.'"</p>
+ <p>YOUNG LADY IN COLORS.&#8212;"This opera is dreadfully stupid."</p>
+ <p>LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.&#8212;"But, MARY ANNE, it is one of
+Mozart's&#8212;the <i>Marriage of Figaro</i>. It is one of his most famous
+works."</p>
+ <p>SHE.&#8212;"Then I don't like Mozart. There was an Italian who wrote
+an opera that was all about Figaro,&#8212;the <i>Nossy di Figaro</i> was the
+name of it. Oh, it is perfectly splendid; ever so much prettier than
+this."</p>
+ <p>HE.&#8212;"Why, my dear girl, the <i>Nozze di Figaro</i> is the
+identical opera you are now hearing."</p>
+ <p>SHE.&#8212;"There is young Mr. NATHAN ISAACS. Isn't he perfectly
+splendid?"</p>
+ <p>HE (sighing sadly).&#8212;"Whenever you wish to go home, I am ready."</p>
+ <p>SHE.&#8212;"You are real disagreeable to-night, and I'm sorry I came
+with you."</p>
+ <p>RURAL PERSON.&#8212;"Well, if this is the opery, I don't mind sayin'
+I like it. Susan said I couldn't understand a word of the gibberish
+these opery folks squawked, but it's just as plain as psalm-singing.
+Miss RICHIN and that HERSY gal are just the tallest kind of singers. If
+we had 'em in our choir, the Baptist folks might shut up their
+meetin'-house to wunst."</p>
+ <p>ZIMMERMANN.&#8212;"When are we going to revive the Crook&#8212;did you
+ask? What do we want to revive it for? Isn't the house full enough
+to-night to satisfy anybody?"</p>
+ <p>FRIEND OF THE THEATRE&#8212;"To be sure it is. Stick to this sort of
+thing, and you'll find it will pay better in the end than any amount of
+legs. NIBLO'S is now a respectable theatre. Don't change it into an
+Anatomical Museum."</p>
+ <p>MATADOR.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/122a.jpg">
+ <p><b>AFTER THE BATTLE.</b></p>
+ <p>CARRYING OFF THE WOUNDED.</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="PUNCHINELLO CORRESPONDENCE"
+ src="images/122b.jpg"> </center>
+ <p><b>ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.</b></p>
+ <p><i>A Lover of Music.</i> Our street musicians are growing
+worse and worse. There is a piper who infests the street in which I
+live, and sets my nerves on edge with his horrible droning. What am I
+to do with him?<br>
+ <i>Answer.</i> put him in the waste-piper basket.</p>
+ <p><i>Aunt Carraway.</i> The preparatory schools about which you
+inquire have nothing to do with the reformation of wicked parrots. If
+the language made use of by your parrot is so dreadful that the cats
+have left the house in consequence of it, we are afraid that the bird
+is past reform. Try him with rats, and you may yet be renowned as the
+"female Whittington of the period."</p>
+ <p><i>Rebecca Hazeldown.</i> It was very rude of the young man to
+stare at you through an aquarium, as you say he did. The little fishes
+might have been flirting their tails at the time, however, and it is
+just possible that he might have taken you for one of the flirts.</p>
+ <p><i>A Horseman.</i> After long observation, I am of opinion
+that the sudden collapse which so frequently occurs among omnibus and
+street-car horses, is to be attributed to the stupid but common
+practice of giving them water when they are overheated. Can you assist
+me in putting a stop to this?<br>
+ <i>Answer.</i> We do not see why you should apply to PUNCHINELLO
+in the case. Have we not a Croton BERGH among us?</p>
+ <p><i>Valetudinarian.</i> To furnish you with a list of all the
+patent medicines advertised is quite out of our power. Suppose you
+start out early every morning with your note-book, walk for seven or
+eight miles along the Bloomingdale Road, and make your list from the
+innumerable inscriptions on the rocks in that vicinity. Do this for a
+month or two, and you will not care much about the list when you have
+got it.</p>
+ <p><i>N.E. by S.W.</i> We read that DEMOSTHENES used to put
+pebbles in his mouth, and spout while thus charged, to cure himself of
+thickness of utterance. Suffering from the same defect, I have tried
+the same remedy, but without success. Can you advise me in the matter?<br>
+ <i>Answer.</i> The most learned commentators agree that the
+statement about DEMOSTHENES' putting pebbles in his mouth was only
+figurative, and really meant that, when about to speak in public, he
+used to put a brick in his hat. The same thing is done by many of our
+public speakers of the period&#8212;such as JOHN B. GOUGH, H. GREELEY, ANNA
+DICKINSON, and others. Try it moderately, and it may loosen your tongue.</p>
+ <p><i>Epicurus.</i> Is Worcestershire sauce really the invention
+of an English nobleman?<br>
+ <i>Answer.</i> Yes: he was one of the COOKS or one of the
+BUTLERS, we have forgotten which; but it is certain that he was
+degraded from the peerage for offering some of his sauce to the
+reigning British monarch of his time.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Complimentary Chromatics</b></p>
+ <p>While all France is Blue with the prospects of the siege of
+Paris, we have constant accounts of the growing ascendency of the Reds.
+We commend this to the nest scientific convention, as an evidence of
+the analogies which prevail in the physical and moral worlds.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A Sally for Sketchers.</b></p>
+ <p>When an artist visits a picturesque locality, why is the
+proceeding like an undecided prize-fight?</p>
+ <p>Because it results in a draw.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/123.jpg">
+ <p><b>A RASH PROCEEDING.</b></p>
+ <p>WAITING FOR A LIGHT.</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>HIRAM GREEN AND FEMALE SUFFRAGE.</b></p>
+ <p>His Experience with the Advocates of the 10th Amendment.</p>
+ <p>On the last eleckshun day, I was servin as Inspecter of
+Eleckshun, when a passil of wimmen, drest partly in men's habiliments,
+walkt up to the ballit box.</p>
+ <p>They was headed by old SARY YOOMANS, who has been an old made
+for more'n 1/2 Sentury.</p>
+ <p>Steppin up close to the railin where votes is put in, Miss
+YOOMANS thus to me did say:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"Square GREEN, wee've come to cast the soffrige of a
+down-trodden race: Will you receive our votes?"</p>
+ <p>"Not exzactly I wont, my hi toned Greshun benders," was my
+reply.</p>
+ <p>"Do you know who we air, sir?" cride a long, leen, lank,
+rale-fence-lookin femail, whose nose looked as if sheed been sokin it
+in a bladder of black snuff.</p>
+ <p>"Well! sweet wolfs in lambs clothin," said I, puttin on one of
+my shrewed expreshuns, "you look as if you was a lot of, so-called,
+strong-minded femails, who was up to snuff, but, in an endevor to
+scratch somebody bare-boned, you'd lost your footin, and tumbled
+slap-bang into a coal-hole."</p>
+ <p>"We air, sir," says another ethereal-lookin hearthstun
+depopulater, "members of the Skeensboro Sore-eye-siss Society. We
+believe wimmens has got rites, which man won't let her have. We believe
+the ballit is calkilated to raise woman to her proper speer. We believe
+hoop-skirts and side-saddles will soon be numbered among the lost arts.
+We believe SOOZAN B. ANTHONY, E. CADY STANTON, WENDIL FILLIPS, or
+Mister BLACKWELL, are just as capable of bein President of this ere old
+Union, as the best man which ever wore panterloons; and we air bound
+hensforth and forever, one and onseperable, to stand up for our rites,
+if we can only rope in enuff Congressmen to hold our bonnits."</p>
+ <p>Durin the a-4-said bust of elokence, about 75 wimmen was
+holdin ballits for me to take, while others were vilently swingin their
+gingham parasols over my bald head.</p>
+ <p>All seemed as if they was jest bilin over to get their
+clutches about my breethin apparatus. Says I:</p>
+ <p>"Go hum and be femails, and don't make sich tarnal loonatix of
+yourself any longer, gittin mixed up with the body polertick; for sures
+you're born, when woman votes sheel trail her skirts in the dust and
+you cant stop her; when she walks up to the ballit box, and undertakes
+to mix into suthin she don't know no more about, than TILTON and FULTON
+do about the golden rool, then when that air time comes I will exclaim:</p>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"'Oh! woman; where is thy
+stinger.'</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"'Oh! Sore-eye-siss! where 'bouts
+is thy victory?'"</span><br>
+ <p>"What! miserable man, woodest-ist thou deny us the ballit?"
+screemed another femail, as she tore a 2-bushel waterfall from her
+head, and, wildly swingin it in the air, dirty stockins and old clothes
+fell into promiscous heeps all about her.</p>
+ <p>"With all doo respect to the sects," says I, gettin madder and
+madder all the while, "you can jest bet your Sunday close I woodest."</p>
+ <p>"Hard-harted old man, yool rue this day," they all cride in
+Koruss, and the hull lot commenced snivellin, as if their harts was
+busted.</p>
+ <p>"Kind, noble, beautiful sir! we langwish to cast our
+suffrages," says a big fat woman, about the size of a lode of hay, as
+she shoved her ballit under my nose.</p>
+ <p>"Madam," says I, swellin up with accumulated rage, "langwish
+and rip and tare things as much as you mindter&#8212;you cant stuff this ere
+ballit box with illegal votes as long as Ime boss of it&#8212;that's what's
+the matter&#8212;and I want you to understand I mean bizzinezs."</p>
+ <p>At this they all started for the door, remarkin that I was an
+"old fool," "mouskiter," etketary &amp;c.</p>
+ <p>"When the 16th commendment passes," said sweet ELIZER HEMPIHL,
+who is too pooty to be caught in sich company, "we will call for your
+skalp, old man."</p>
+ <p>"Which topnot," was my reply, "wouldent furnish hair enough
+for a false eyebrow."</p>
+ <p>I see they was goin, so I said:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"My week-minded and misgided femails, hold your hosses a
+minnit, until an old statesman, who has served his country for 4 yeer
+as Gustise of the Peece, says a few remarks to you."</p>
+ <p>"When woman was taken out of man's ribs, it wasent calkilated
+she should lower herself by mixin into such dirty bizziness, as you are
+up to to-day. Woman in her natural element, is jest one of the <i>soothinest</i>
+institutions in this ere land, which flows with milk-punch and
+houey-sope, and what poor miserable critters man would be without her.</p>
+ <p>"Who would nuss our offspring, if it wasent for wimmen?</p>
+ <p>"Who would cheer our fireside, if it wasent for wimmen?</p>
+ <p>"Who would cook our vittles, if it wasent for wimmen?</p>
+ <p>"And who would haul off our butes nites, when we come home
+tired and demoralized, after havin a sett-to with lager-beer and
+sweitzer?</p>
+ <p>"Agin, I remark, if it wasent for woman in her onadulterated
+state, before she had been made a tarnal fool of by these ere
+despoilers of man's happiness, MASKALINE WIMMEN, man would be a poor
+shiftless koot.</p>
+ <p>"Therefore, I say, go hum and resoom your abnormal condition.
+Get back into your own harniss, and don't undertake to assoom the
+bifurkated garments. It haint your forte, no more'n it is some of our
+public offishals to keep from steelin."</p>
+ <p>I rattled away at 'em in this stile, ontil I beheld the last
+pair of femail bifurkaters skoot for home, when I subsided into a
+chair, and with my bandanner hankerchief wiped the perspiration from my
+noble brow.</p>
+ <p>After Ide partially recovered my ekanimity, I agin resoomed my
+offishal duties, but I couldent help thinkin that if wimmen made such a
+confounded hullabalo about votin, as they is now doin, tryin to vote;
+them air leaders, who air goin about the country like Internal Revenoo
+offisers, seekin that they may gobble up somebody, will have a pile to
+anser for, when woman becomes a component part of the body polertick.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Owe!
+woman, woman, how sweet you be,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">When you're dressed up to kill,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">I hope the time ile never see,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">When man's place you all fill.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Take the advice of one which
+knows,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">&amp; try to shun the evil,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">To see a woman in man's close</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Looks wusser nor the d---l.</span>
+ </div>
+ <p>Which is the opinion of your humbley sarvent,</p>
+ <p>HIRAM GREEN, ESQ.,</p>
+ <p><i>Lait Gustise of the Peece.</i></p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>FRESH FROM THE FLOWERY KINGDOM.</b></p>
+ <p>The world is justly indignant at the accounts of the Chinese
+massacres of the missionaries who have perilled their lives in going so
+far to teach them Christianity. Recently, for example, a young lady
+teacher from Boston was so terribly stoned by some of the unregenerate
+little pig-tailed fiends in Canton, that she died the next day. It is
+dreadful to think how savage the instincts of the heathen are.</p>
+ <p>P.S.&#8212;Since the above was set up in type, MR. PUNCHINELLO has
+learned that the Canton in which this occurrence took place is not in
+China, but is a thriving village in Norfolk county, Massachusetts,
+about eighteen miles from Boston, and that the assailants were
+consequently not pig-tailed heathen, but genuine Christian children,
+who, in a few years, will belong to the cultivated voters of
+Massachusetts. This action, consequently, was not dictated by
+unregenerate barbarism, but was intended simply as a protest (rough, we
+confess, but effectual, we trust) against these new-fangled ideas of
+women's rights. What business have women to be trying to teach? Let
+them stay at home, and if they want to know anything, ask their
+husbands, there; and if they are unmarried, let them wait until they
+get husbands. We must not let our natural gallantry interfere with our
+reverence and respect for the rights of ignorance, which will
+eventually vote.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A THRICE BLESSED CITY.</b></p>
+ <p>There is a city in Illinois called St. Genevieve. By some
+hocus-pocus known to accomplished politicians, this city has had no
+Mayor since the 4th of June, 1867. In the absence of definite
+information upon the subject, we take it for granted that St. Genevieve
+must be a most delightful place to live in, and specially so, because,
+as we are further informed, they have no Aldermen there either. More
+delightful still, as there is nobody authorized to assess taxes, the
+fortunate inhabitants do not pay any. Of course, if this state of
+primitive bliss could last, Mr. PUNCHINELLO would make immediate
+arrangements to remove to St. Genevieve; but the courts have ordered
+the citizens to elect a Mayor immediately, so that this little heaven
+upon earth will soon have ceased to exist.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/126.jpg">
+ <p><b>LETTING HIM DOWN EASY.</b></p>
+ <p><i>Aspiring Author.</i> "Ah! You have read my essay? I hope
+the verdict is Favorable."</p>
+ <p><i>Editor.</i> "O yes, all Right,&#8212;Acquitted on the ground of
+insanity."</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>OUR PORTFOLIO.</b></p>
+ <p><b>The French Republic dying of Gas.&#8212;Good Sense for Gambetta.</b></p>
+ <p>TOURS, SIXTH WEEK OF THE REPUBLIC, 1870.</p>
+ <p>Dear PUNCHINELLO:</p>
+ <p>There is gloom everywhere; applications to serve in the ranks
+have diminished, and the price of pocket-handkerchiefs has increased.
+JULES FAVRE writes, under cover of confidence, to the <i>prefect</i>
+here, that since the interview of which I gave you an account he has
+had a severe attack of gumboils, and despairs of softening the heart of
+BISMARCK. I stole the letter for the purpose of copying it, but it was
+stolen from me in turn by a nefarious emissary of the London <i>Times,</i>
+who has not however, dared to use it. The greatest activity is
+manifested in the making of balloons. The administration labors under
+the delusion that gas and oiled silk may yet prove the Palladium of
+French liberty. I have remonstrated unavailingiy against this singular
+infatuation. I held up to the Rump Council now sitting in this city the
+example of VICTOR HUGO as a fearful warning. He came from Guernsey
+under a pressure of gas; he entered Paris with the volatile essence
+oozing from every hair on his head; he loaded the artillery of his
+rhetoric with gas; he blazed, away at the Germans with gas, and yet,
+unable to get rid of such afflatus fast enough, he exploded in the very
+midst of his pyrotechnics, and now lies high and dry on "this bank and
+shoal of time" like a venerable rhinoceros extinguished by its own
+snorting. I am sorry to say it, but the great peril of France at this
+moment is gas. Touching GAMBETTA. Ah! yes, touching GAMBETTA. You may
+have heard that he has issued a proclamation or two. There are depths
+in the soul of a Frenchman, where the inspiration of mighty words
+breeds like "flies in the shambles." Such a soul has GAMBETTA. He is
+all language. If you were to cut him up in little bits and put each
+atom under a microscope, you would find in every molecule the text of
+some proclamation. The genii of syntax and prosody are his guardian
+angels, and the love of "gabble" is the be-all and the end-all of his
+political existence. He loves not GARIBALDI. He would have done
+violence to his grandmother rather than consent to the invitation of
+the Italian liberator. For short, he calls him "GARRY." Standing in
+front of the Hotel de Ville, talking to a group of eager listeners,
+with his arms wildly gesticulating and his nose contemptuously curling
+towards the empyrean, he asks:</p>
+ <p>"Who is this GARRY? What is he? Why is he&#8212;?"</p>
+ <p>"Stop," I calmly interpollate, "profane not the high calling
+of the Italian hero with frivolous conundrums."</p>
+ <p>"Jerk that monster out of my sight!" roared GAMBETTA to a <i>sergent
+de ville</i>, and pointing his long, skinny fore-finger full at me.</p>
+ <p>I turned mournfully upon the crowd, and asked in a plaintive
+tone:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"You hear what he says. Do lunatic asylums exist in vain? Men
+of Tours, is there a 'jerkist' among you?"</p>
+ <p>They must have observed that my feelings were moved, for they
+came between me and the officer, as if to protect the latter. 'Twas a
+kind movement, but useless; as I couldn't have hurt him.</p>
+ <p>"Monsieur GAMBETTA," I then went on to say, "don't you think
+that this horrible epidemic of gas, that is now filling with its
+deleterious effluvia the brains and the throat of the French
+Government, ought to be stopped? Don't you think, Monsieur GAMBETTA,
+that you, yourself, could cut off your supply-pipe for a while and
+still have enough to light up with on public occasions?"</p>
+ <p>I rested my right fore-finger upon one side of my nose and
+struck an attitude of interrogation while putting these questions. The
+Minister's face turned to an ashen hue, and then the blood came
+coursing back like lava to the Crater's surface, without breaking
+through.</p>
+ <p>"Fiends seize the man, is a minister of France to be insulted
+in his own capital?"</p>
+ <p>"Friend, calm yourself," I said: "Don't let the crabs run
+through your brain like that. Cool off. Take those hot coppers out of
+your pantaloons and fan yourself a little. That's what's the matter
+with France, to-day. You Frenchmen fizzle, and crack, and shoot up into
+the air, and otherwise get away with yourselves so fast, that no wonder
+the Germans can't always find you when they go for you. Take my advice.
+Stop running red-hot pokers down your backs. Drink more Vichy water and
+less brandy. Keep your sky-rockets till next year. Lock your 'language'
+up in the dictionary. Send VICTOR HUGO back to England. Tie a church
+steeple round GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN'S neck, and sink him off Toulon.
+Burn all your proclamations. Throw rhetoric to the dogs. Put a head on
+the government that ain't full of torpedoes. Present a solid front to
+the enemy. Simmer down generally, and talk reason to BISMARCK, and, on
+the honor of PUNCHINELLO, I can solemnly assure you that things won't
+be so 'speckled' as they now are."</p>
+ <p>Saying which, I gathered the drapery of my duster gracefully
+about me, and left.</p>
+ <p>DICK TINTO.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>THE SHE THAT IS TO BE.</b></p>
+ <p>By a Prominent Member of Sorosis.</p>
+ <p>1.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">&#8212;She
+stood! The hurrying clouds wild drove&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">&#8212;The purpling aspect of the
+air...!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">While her wild contour symbolized</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The Unity of Hope's Despair!</span>
+ </div>
+ <p>2.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And
+shall not We, when Life's short span,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Enveloping the Yet-To-Be&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Smiling candescent?&#8212;Nay?&#8212;Ah! well!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">BE THAT OUR FUTURE DESTINY!!</span>
+ </div>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>POEMS OF THE CRADLE.</b></p>
+ <p>CANTO XI.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Little
+Bo-Peep has lost his sheep,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And don't know where to find them.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Let them alone and they'll come
+home,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And bring their tails behind them.</span>
+ </div>
+ <p>The Poet having now advanced so far in his work as to make a
+very respectable collection of poems, and beginning to run short of
+matter, casts his eyes around him in search of aid, hoping to find
+inspiration in some fortuitous moment from the many little incidents
+that are always occurring, and which only observing minds would notice.
+For the time he sees nothing that would suggest even to the most
+sparkling intellect the shadow of a rhyme, and he begins to be in
+despair. He walks up and down his dingy room, thrusts his long fingers
+amid the raven locks that adorn his poetical cranium, and gently at
+first, then furiously, irritates the cuticle of his imaginative
+head-piece, hoping thereby to waken up his ideas and find a foundation
+upon which to erect another stone in the edifice of his never-fading
+glory.</p>
+ <p>This process does not seem to be as successful as usual: the
+ideas refuse to come at his bidding, and he glares around in
+consternation, Can it be possible that he has exhausted himself; that
+his ideas are entirely run out; that the fountain is dry, and the Muse
+has ceased to smile upon him; that he must descend from his high
+elevation as the poet of the family, the hope and pride of his friends
+and the admiration of himself, and sink to the level of his earthy
+brothers and become one of them, no better and no worse? No&#8212;perish the
+thought! never again will he mingle with those rude and vulgar natures,
+having no thoughts or feelings above their creature comforts: content
+to live like animals, uninspired by the divine <i>afflatus</i>,
+untouched by the poetic fire. Full of determined energy never to yield
+the high position he has acquired, he rushes forth into the open air
+and takes his winding way through the green meadows and leafy wilds.
+Here, sitting on the stump of an old tree, he spies little Bob Peepers,
+weeping as if his heart would break: the briny tears coursing down his
+ruddy cheeks form little rivulets of salt water with high embankments
+of genuine soil on either side, and a distracted map of a war-ridden
+country is depicted upon his grief-stricken countenance. Full of
+compassion for the suffering, the tender heart of the Poet melts at the
+sight, and in mellifluous tones he asks, "What is the matter, BUB?"</p>
+ <p>Sobbingly digging his fists into his eyes, and carefully
+wiping his classic nose on the sleeve of his jacket, the heart-broken
+mourner murmurs:&#8212;</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"I've
+lost my sheep,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And don't know where to find
+them,"</span> </div>
+ <p>and bursts forth into a prolonged howl. That heart-rending cry
+of agony is too much for the gentle Poet, who, sinking upon the ground
+beside the weeper, ventures to whisper a hope that Time, or some of the
+neighbors, may bring back the lost sheep and restore happiness and
+tranquillity to the agitated bosom. The suggestion is met with
+incredulous scorn and another burst of uncontrollable sorrow, amid the
+pauses of which Bob recounts to his sympathetic friend how, "being
+wearied with watching the gambolling sheep, he laid himself down in the
+meadow to sleep, and never awoke till a blue-bottle fly, who buzzing
+about so tickled his eye that sleep fled away. Then he rose to his
+feet, and looked around for the gambolling sheep, but found, they were
+gone he couldn't tell where: so he threw himself down in the deepest
+despair, bemoaning his strange unaccountable loss, and the horrible
+beating he'd get from the Boss, when at night he went home with his sad
+tale of woe. He was sure he would never have courage to go."</p>
+ <p>The sad tale so pathetically and ingenuously told melted the
+already simmering heart of the hearer, who counselled tranquillity and
+philosophy in the words</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Let
+them alone and they'll come home,"</span> </div>
+ <p>and jocularly added, as he saw a ray of hope lighting up the
+eye of the boy, like the first rays of the sun seen through a fog,</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"And
+bring their tails behind them."</span> </div>
+ <p>The brilliant idea of their tails coming behind them instead
+of before them tickled the risibilities of the sympathizing friends,
+and for a few moments the woods echoed to their responsive mirth.</p>
+ <p>The laugh did them good. The poet perceived instantly he had a
+theme upon which to build his verse, and hastily bidding BOB "good-by,"
+he flew exultingly to his paternal abode, rushed up the garret stairs,
+seized his goose-quill, and amid the tumultuous beatings of his
+over-charged heart and throbbing brain jotted down on the instant, in
+all the enthusiasm of poetic fervor, the incident that had fallen under
+his inspired observation. Not to be too personal, and still to preserve
+the truthfulness of the history, he dropped a few letters from BOB
+PEEPER'S name, while, with a wonderful accuracy unknown to modern
+writers, he keeps to the subject of his verse, its misery, the remedy
+and result, and facetiously gives to the world the same cause for
+laughter and inspiration that he received so gratefully.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>THE POLITEST NATION IN THE WORLD.</b></p>
+ <p>We had always considered JOHNNY CRAPAUD as the pink of
+politeness. But we are now satisfied that JOHNNY BULL goes ever so far
+ahead of him. We have never known that Frenchman yet, who would oblige
+his enemies by killing himself. But the recent loss of the <i>Captain</i>
+shows that the noble Englishmen are prepared to do this by wholesale.
+One could wish our enemies no worse luck than to have a few such <i>Captains</i>
+given them. And how lavish the expenditure! It takes no end of money to
+get up one of those big iron-plated coffins. It is certainly a
+dramatic, <i>auto-da-f&eacute;</i> and a most obliging act, considered
+with reference to one's possible enemies. No Frenchman ever thought of
+such a thing. In fact, they go no further than positively declining to
+do anything bad with their navy.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/127.jpg">
+ <p><b>FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.</b></p>
+ <p>"THERE WAS A SURPRISE PARTY AT No. 9,999 TWENTY-THIRD STREET
+LAST EVENING. UPON RETURNING FROM THE OPERA, THE PROPRIETORS FOUND
+THEIR MANSION FULL, OF GUESTS."</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A DRY SETTLEMENT.</b></p>
+ <p>There is a little young village in Denver which rejoices in
+the name of Greeley. To this place came a benevolent bar-keeper,
+bringing a cheerful stock of whiskey. Down upon his grocery came the
+enraged Greeleyites, and to prevent their own stomachs from being
+burned, they burned the building. We can imagine these very particular
+pioneers passing a great variety of the most astonishing laws, with
+various penalties. For chewing tobacco&#8212;one month's imprisonment; for
+subscribing to The <i>N.Y. Evening Post</i>&#8212;death; while for the
+hideous misdemeanor of eating white bread, the offender would be left
+to the pangs of his own indigestion.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Fact. Fancy, and Fun-ding.</b></p>
+ <p>THE FUNDING BILL, as a step towards making the Erie Canal
+free, should commend itself to any one, since if it becomes a fact, it
+will, we fancy, prevent this noble industrial enterprise from becoming,
+like its first cousin, simply an eyrie for the vultures of finance.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/128.jpg">
+ <p><b>THE LATEST STYLE.</b></p>
+ <p>AS MEN'S CLOTHES ARE CUT HOUR-GLASS FASHION NOW, PUNCHINELLO
+SUGGESTS THE ABOVE PATTERN AS AN APPROPRIATE ONE FOR THEM.</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>THE ALARM-BELLE AT RYE.</b></p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">At
+Rye, Westchester County, a small town</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Built near the Sound, but of a
+scant renown,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">That always to its biggest size
+did run</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">At summer-time, beneath a blazing
+sun,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But rested as a <i>town</i>, as
+if to say,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"I'll pay no further taxes, come
+what may;"&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The ancient cobbler, JOHN,
+unknown to fame</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">(So many cobblers since have
+borne the name),</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Owned the great belle of all that
+country place,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">His daughter, with her tongue and
+lovely face,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who took to soothing every kind
+of pain,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tramped through the streets,
+dragging a muddy train.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">With kerchief blowed her horn
+both, loud and long.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And talked incessantly of every
+wrong,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Kept her tongue wagging, until
+right was done.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Thus did the daughter of old
+cobbler John.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">What mighty good this BERGH of
+that Burgh did.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">While her tongue lasted, she had
+never hid:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Suffice it that, as all things
+must decay,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The fleshy tongue at length was
+worn away;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">She mouthed it for a while, and
+people dreamed</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of golden days before this belle
+had screamed.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Loaded and beat their horses at
+their ease.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Drove thorn with, wounded backs
+and broken knees,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Turned turtles over, and e'en
+tortured clams.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Murdered trichin&aelig;, when
+they boiled their hams.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Till one, a doctor, who was
+passing by,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Struck by the horrors going on in
+Rye,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cut from a calf, that yet was
+very young.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And kindly gave unto the belle, a
+tongue.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">By chance it happened that in Rye
+town dwelt.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">A German grocer (and his wife, a
+Celt),</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who loved his lager and his
+pretzels too</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">(His wife was partial to the
+morning dew).</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But, when we fell into these
+troublous times,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He cared for nothing but to save
+his dimes.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He had a donkey, that would
+sometimes go.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Just as the donkey chanc'd to
+feel, you know,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which he would ride, whenever his
+brigade</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Was ordered to the streets for a
+parade;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But as the times got hard, he'd
+loudly swear</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The oats that donkey ate he could
+not spare.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">At length he said: "I'll turn him
+out, py Gott!"</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Looked at his wife and to her
+said, "Vy not?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Let him go eat upon the public
+ways,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">I want him only for the training
+days."</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">So the poor donkey had to feed on
+thistles.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Until his hair became like unto
+bristles.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">One afternoon, when everybody
+slept</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Except the belle, out from her
+house she crept,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And met the donkey, walking on
+the way;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He smelt the calf and thought to
+have some play.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Kicked up his heels, a grating
+bray did utter.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And laid the belle a-rolling in
+the gutter.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">She raised a mighty shout, she
+raised a squeal.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And loudly her persistent tongue
+did peal,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And this did seem the burden of
+her song:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Some chap hath done a wrong,
+hath done a wrong!<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Meanwhile from street and lane a
+noisy crowd"</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Of vagabonds and urchins,
+shouting loud,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gathered around the poor,
+bedraggled squealer,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Until at length there came a
+stout Rye peeler;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who forthwith told the belle her
+cries to cease.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And took her to a Justice of the
+Peace.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The Justice heard the story of
+the belle,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And looking wise and grave, he
+said: "'Tis well;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bring me the old Dutchman." The
+grocer brought,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Shaking with fear, then stood
+before the Court.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And then' the Justice to recite
+began</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The charter of the Cruelty to An-</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Imals Society, and then he said:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Pride rideth on a donkey, as
+I've read,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Until it gets a fall, and then it
+loses</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Its dignity and blubbers o'er its
+bruises.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">These are newspaper proverbs, but
+I fear</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">You don't love proverbs, as you
+do your beer.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Just take that donkey and give
+him an oat,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And don't show up until you've
+brushed his coat."<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The grocer left disgusted, took
+the brute;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And all the people then at him
+did hoot.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The cobbler heard and almost
+split his knee</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">[He took it for the lapstone in
+his glee],</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"Church bells," quoth he, "but
+ring us to the mass.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">My belle hath gone and saved a
+starving ass;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And this shall make, when put in
+jingling rhyme,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The Belle of Rye all famous for
+all time."</span> </div>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A CHEERFUL SUBJECT.</b></p>
+ <p>According to an Ohio paper, a double child has been born to a
+couple named FINLEY, in Morrow county. It is, so to speak, a
+double-ender, being provided with a supplementary head at the point
+where the feet are usually situated. The child is a female-and a very
+curious amendment to the Sixteenth Amendment, since, should it arrive
+at woman's estate, it will, of course, be entitled to a double vote.
+How will it be should one end go Republican and the other Democratic?
+To send a duplex woman into the world seems to be a very unnecessary
+freak of Nature, seeing that there is enough of duplicity in womankind
+already.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Homoeopathic Politics.</b></p>
+ <p>THE CITIZENS' ASSOCIATION, finding that their sands of life
+are nearly run out, are now advertising privately for some fresh
+candidates, who for a salary will undertake to cure the ring-worms of
+the body politic by their pimple prescription of substitution, or
+putting yourself in their place, which is a political modification of
+the law in homoeopathic medicine, <i>similie similibus errantur</i>,
+or in morals, "set a rogue to catch a rogue."</p>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table
+ style="width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align: center; width: 30%;"> <b><big>CLEARING
+OUT SALE.</big><br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big>A.T. STEWART &amp; CO.</big></big></b><br>
+ <br>
+ <small>ARE OFFERING</small><br>
+ <br>
+UNPRECEDENTED BARGAINS<br>
+ <br>
+IN<br>
+ <br>
+CLOAKS, SACQUES,<br>
+ARABS, TALMAS,<br>
+SHAWLS AND MANTLES,<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><b>Real Astrakhan Cloaks</b></big><br>
+at $20, $22, and $25;<br>
+last year's prices, $40 and $45.<br>
+ <br>
+ <b>CLOTHS, CLOAKINGS,<br>
+VELVETEENS,<br>
+CLOAK SILK VELVETS,<br>
+MILLINERY VELVETS, &amp;c.</b><br>
+ <br>
+ <big>NEW GOODS JUST RECEIVED,</big><br>
+ <br>
+AT PRICES MUCH BELOW THE COST OF THE<br>
+SAME QUALITIES SOLD LAST YEAR.<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY, Fourth Ave.,</span><br
+ style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <br style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">9th and 10th Streets.</span><br>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align: left;" rowspan="2">
+ <div style="text-align: center;"> <big><big><big><big>PUNCHINELLO.<br>
+ <br>
+ </big></big></big></big><br>
+The first number of this Illustrated Humorous and Satirical Weekly
+Paper was issued under date of April 2, 1870. The Press and the Public
+in every State and Territory of the Union endorse it as the best paper
+of the kind ever published in America. </div>
+ <br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">CONTENTS ENTIRELY ORIGINAL.</span><br>
+ <br>
+Subscription for one year, (with $2.00 premium,) ............... $4.00<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 0.25em;">" " six months, (without
+premium,) .....................................&nbsp;&nbsp;2.00</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 0.25em;">" " three months,
+"&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;.............................................&nbsp;&nbsp;1.00</span><br>
+ <br>
+Single copies mailed free, for
+............................................... .10<br>
+ <br>
+We offer the following elegant premiums of L. PRANG &amp; CO'S<br>
+CHROMOS for subscriptions as follows:<br>
+ <br>
+A copy of paper for one year, and<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">"</span><b
+ style="font-weight: bold;">The Awakening</b><span
+ style="font-weight: bold;">,"</span></big></big> (a Litter of
+Puppies.) Half chromo.<br>
+Size 8-3/8 by 11-1/8 ($2.00 picture,) for ...................... $4.00<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+A copy of paper for one year and either of the following $3.00 chromos:<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Wild Roses.</span></big></big>
+12-1/8 x 9.<br>
+ <big><big><b>Dead Game</b>.</big></big> 11-1/8 x 8-3/8.<br>
+ <big><big><b>Easter Morning</b>.</big></big> 6-3/4 x 10-1/4&#8212;for
+..................... $5.00<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+A copy of paper for one year and either of the following $5.00 chromos:<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Group of Chickens;<br>
+Group of Ducklings;<br>
+Group of Quails</b>.</big></big><br>
+Each 10 x 12-1/8.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>The Poultry Yard</b>.</big></big> 10-1/8 x 14<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>The Barefoot Boy;<br>
+Wild Fruit</b>.</big></big> Each 9-3/4 x 13.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Pointer and Quail;<br>
+Spaniel and Woodcock</b>.</big></big> 10 x 12&#8212;for ... $6.50<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+A copy of paper for one year and either of the following $6.00 chromos:<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>The Baby in Trouble;<br>
+The Unconscious Sleeper;<br>
+The Two Friends</b>. (Dog and Child.)</big></big><br>
+Each 13 x 16-1/4.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Spring;<br>
+Summer;<br>
+Autumn;</b><br>
+ </big></big> 12-7/8 x 16-1/8.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>The Kid's Play Ground</b>.</big></big><br>
+11 x 17-1/2&#8212;for ................. $7.00<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+A copy of paper for one year and either of the following $7.50 chromos:<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Strawberries and Baskets</b>.</big></big><br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b style="font-weight: bold;">Cherries and Baskets</b><span
+ style="font-weight: bold;">.</span></big></big><br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Currants</b>.</big></big> Each 13 x 18.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Horses in a Storm</b>.</big></big> 22-1/4 x 15-1/4.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big style="font-weight: bold;"><big>Six Central Park Views. (A
+set.)</big></big><br>
+9-1/8 x 4-1/2&#8212;for ........... $8.00<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+A copy of paper for one year and<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Six American Landscapes</b>. (A set.)</big></big><br>
+4-3/8 x 9, price $9.00&#8212;for
+.............................................. $9.00<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+A copy of paper for one year and either of the<br>
+following $10 chromos:<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Sunset in California</b>.</big></big> (Bierstadt)
+18-1/2 x 12<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Easter Morning</b>.</big></big> 14 x 21.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Corregio's Magdalen</b>.</big></big> 12-1/4 x 16-3/8.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Summer Fruit, and Autumn Fruit</b>.</big></big>
+(Half chromos,)<br>
+15-1/2 x 10-1/2, (companions, price $10.00 for the two), for $10.00<br>
+ <br>
+Remittances should be made in P.O. Orders, Drafts, or Bank Checks on
+New York, or Registered letters. The paper will be sent from the first
+number, (April 2d, 1870,) when not otherwise ordered.<br>
+ <br>
+Postage of paper is payable at the office where received, twenty cents
+per year, or five cents per quarter, in advance; the CHROMOS will be <i>mailed
+free</i> on receipt of money.<br>
+ <br>
+CANVASSERS WANTED, to whom liberal commissions will be given. For
+special terms address the Company.<br>
+ <br>
+The first ten numbers will be sent to any one desirous of seeing the
+paper before subscribing, for SIXTY CENTS. A specimen copy sent to any
+one desirous of canvassing or getting up a club, on receipt of postage
+stamp.<br>
+ <br>
+Address,<br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,</span><br>
+ <br>
+P.O. Box 2783. No. 83 Nassau Street, New York.<br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center"><big><big><b>A.T. STEWART &amp; CO.</b></big></big><br>
+ <br>
+OFFER<br>
+ <br>
+ <big>Wide Plaid Poplins</big><br>
+at 25c. and 30c. per Yard,<br>
+recently sold at 85c. and 45c.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big>All Wool Serges</big><br>
+at 40c. per Yard;<br>
+last year's price, $1.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big>High Colored Basket Cloths,</big><br>
+75c. per Yard;<br>
+last year's jobbing price, $1.25.<br>
+ <br>
+ <big>Double Width, all Wool Plaids,<br>
+64 inches wide,</big><br>
+at $1.60 per Yard;<br>
+last year's jobbing price, $2.25.<br>
+ <br>
+ALSO A LARGE LOT OF<br>
+ <br>
+ <big>Heavy High Colored Plaids</big><br>
+at 20c. per Yard.<br>
+ <br>
+The above, with a great variety of other<br>
+choice styles at<br>
+ <br>
+ <big><big><b>Equally Low Prices,</b></big></big><br>
+ <br>
+ARE EXHIBITED IN THE<br>
+CENTRE SECTION<br>
+ <br>
+ON THE 4TH AVE. SIDE.<br>
+ <br>
+STRANGERS, THE RESIDENTS OF THE EASTERN PART OF OUR CITY, AND THOSE OF
+OUR NEIGHBORING CITIES,<br>
+ARE RESPECTFULLY<br>
+INVITED TO EXAMINE.<br>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY, Fourth Ave.,</span><br
+ style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <br style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">9th and 10th Streets.</span><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table width="800" align="center" border="1" cellpadding="2"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td rowspan="3" width="66%">
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/130a.jpg">
+ <p><b>WHAT WE ARE COMING TO.</b></p>
+ <p><i>Cook (negotiating for situation).</i> "WELL, IT'LL BE
+NICISSARY FOR ME TO HAVE A FOTERGRAFF OF YER WIFE, AND A RICOMMINDATION
+FROM YER LAST COOK."</p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><small><small>"THE PRINTING HOUSE OF THE UNITED STATES"</small></small><br>
+AND<br>
+ <small><small>"THE UNITED STATES ENVELOPE MANUFACTORY."</small></small></p>
+ <p><b>GEORGE F. NESBITT &amp; CO</b></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">163,165,167,169 Pearl St., &amp;
+73,75,77,79 Pine St., New-York.</p>
+ <p><small>Execute all kinds of</small><span
+ style="font-weight: bold;"><br>
+ </span> <b>PRINTING,</b><br>
+ <small>Furnish all kinds of</small><span
+ style="font-weight: bold;"><br>
+ </span> <b>STATIONERY,</b><br>
+ <small>Make all kinds of</small><span style="font-weight: bold;"><br>
+ </span> <b>BLANK BOOKS,<br>
+ </b> <small>&nbsp;Execute the finest styles of</small> <b>LITHOGRAPHY</b><br>
+ <small>Makes the Best and Cheapest<span style="font-weight: bold;"><br>
+ </span></small> <b>ENVELOPES</b><br>
+Ever offered to the Public.</p>
+ <p><small>They have made all the pre-paid Envelopes for the
+United States Post-Office Department for the past 16 years, and have
+INVARIABLY BEEN THE LOWEST BIDDERS. Their Machinery is the most
+complete, rapid and economical known in the trade.</small></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><small>Travelers West and South-West Should<br>
+bear in mind that the</small> <b><br>
+ERIE RAILWAY<br>
+ </b> <small><span style="font-weight: bold;">IS BY FAR THE
+CHEAPEST, QUICKEST, AND MOST COMFORTABLE ROUTE,</span></small></p>
+ <p>Making Direct and Sure Connection at CINCINNATI,<br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 0.25em;">with all Lines<br>
+ </span> <b>By Rail or River</b><br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">For NEW ORLEANS, LOUISVILLE,
+MEMPHIS, ST. LOUIS, VICKSBURG, NASHVILLE, MOBILE,</span> <b><br>
+And All Points South and South-west.</b></p>
+ <p><small>Its DRAWING-ROOM and SLEEPING COACHES on all Express
+Trains, running through to Cincinnati without change, are the most
+elegant and spacious used upon any Road in this country, being fitted
+up in the most elaborate manner, and having every modern improvement
+introduced for the comfort of its patrons; running upon the BROAD
+GAUGE; revealing scenery along the Line unequalled upon this Continent,
+and rendering a trip over the <b>ERIE</b>, one of the delights and
+pleasures of this life not to be forgotten.</small></p>
+ <p><small>By applying at the Offices of the Erie Railway Co.,
+Nos. 241, 529 and 957 Broadway; 205 Chambers St.; 38 Greenwich St.;
+cor. 125th St. and Third Avenue, Harlem; 338 Fulton St., Brooklyn:
+Depots foot of Chambers Street, and foot of 23d St., New York; and the
+Agents at the principal hotels, travelers can obtain just the Ticket
+they desire, as well as all the necessary information.</small></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><b>PUNCHINELLO,</b></big></p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">VOL. I, ENDING SEPT. 24,</span><br>
+BOUND IN EXTRA CLOTH,<br>
+IS NOW READY.<br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">PRICE $2.50.</span><br>
+Sent free by any Publisher on receipt of price, or by<br>
+ <big><span style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING</span></big>
+COMPANY,<br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">83 Nassau Street, New York.</span></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table
+ style="width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center"> THE NEW STORE OF LORD &amp; TAYLOR,<br>
+ <p><b>Cor. of Broadway &amp; Twentieth Street, New York.</b></p>
+ <p>This superb building will be devoted to retail purposes, <img
+ alt="" align="right" src="images/130b.jpg"> where every description of
+dry-goods, from the necessary and convenient to the most elegant and
+fashionable, will attract a multitudinous throng, and add even a new
+attraction to the brilliancy of Broadway in the most delightful part of
+the thoroughfare. Besides an immense trade extending to all parts of
+the United States, LORD &amp; TAYLOR deal largely in carpets and
+oil-cloths, in upholstery and house furnishing goods, and especially in
+trousseaux, cloaks, and ladies' furnishing goods of all kinds, in
+which, perhaps, their business is heavier than that of any other house
+in the city. The furnishing of hotels and steamboats is one of their
+specialties. The headquarters of their wholesale trade is at the old
+Broadway and Grand street store, while their stock of carpets and
+oil-cloths is mainly limited to the Grand and Chrystie street
+establishment. Since the organization of the firm, five partners have
+retired with fortunes, to make room for younger men, thus affording
+opportunities for others to profit by the experience and success of the
+house. These changes have also had the effect to maintain the original
+vigor of the firm without detaching from the maturity of judgment that
+has marked its operations. Some idea of the magnitude of the business
+of the house may be inferred from the fact that the pay-roll contains
+the names of more than 1,000 persons.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<br>
+<center>GEO. W. WHEAT & CO, PRINTERS, No. 8 SPRUCE STREET.<br></center>
+<br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34,
+November 19, 1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 34 ***
+
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@@ -0,0 +1,2508 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34, November 19,
+1870, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34, November 19, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 17, 2003 [EBook #10106]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 34 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze and PG Distributed
+Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PATENT BINDERS FOR |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO," |
+ | |
+ | to preserve the paper for binding, will be sent post-paid, |
+ | on receipt of One Dollar, by |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, |
+ | |
+ | 83 Nassau Street, New York City. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | We will Mail Free |
+ | |
+ | A COVER, |
+ | |
+ | Lettered and Stamped, with New Title-Page, |
+ | |
+ | FOR BINDING |
+ | |
+ | FIRST VOLUME, |
+ | |
+ | On Receipt of 50 Cents, |
+ | |
+ | OR THE |
+ | |
+ | TITLE-PAGE ALONE, FREE, |
+ | |
+ | On application to |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., |
+ | |
+ | 83 Nassau Street. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HARRISON, BRADFORD & CO.'S STEEL PENS. |
+ | |
+ | These Pens are of a finer quality, more durable, and cheaper |
+ | than any other Pen in the market. Special attention is |
+ | called to the following grades, as being better suited for |
+ | business purposes than any Pen manufactured. The |
+ | |
+ | "505," "22," and the "Anti-Corrosive," |
+ | |
+ | we recommend for Bank and Office use. |
+ | |
+ | D. APPLETON & CO., |
+ | |
+ | Sole Agents for the United States. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+Vol. II. No. 34.
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO
+
+
+SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1870.
+
+
+PUBLISHED BY THE
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PRANG'S LATEST PUBLICATIONS: "Joy of Autumn," "Prairie Flowers," "Lake
+George," "West Point," "Beethoven," large and small.
+
+PRANG'S CHROMOS sold in all Art Stores throughout the world.
+
+PRANG'S ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE sent free on receipt of stamp.
+
+L. PRANG & CO., Boston.
+
+
+See 15th Page for Extra Premiums.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Bound Volume No. 1. |
+ | |
+ | The first volume of PUNCHINELLO--the only first-class, |
+ | original, illustrated, humorous and satirical--weekly paper |
+ | published in this country--ending with No. 26, September 24, |
+ | 1870, |
+ | |
+ | Bound in Extra Cloth, |
+ | |
+ | is now ready for delivery, |
+ | |
+ | PRICE $2.50. |
+ | |
+ | Sent postpaid to any part of the United States on receipt of |
+ | price. |
+ | |
+ | A copy of the paper for one year, from October 1st, No. 27, |
+ | and the Bound Volume (the latter prepaid), will be sent to |
+ | any subscriber for $5.50. |
+ | |
+ | Three copies for one year, and three Bound Volumes, with an |
+ | extra copy of Bound Volume, to any person sending us three |
+ | subscriptions for $16.50. |
+ | |
+ | One copy of paper for one year, With a fine chromo premium, |
+ | for $4.00 |
+ | |
+ | Single copies, mailed free .10 |
+ | |
+ | Back numbers can always be supplied, as the paper is |
+ | electrotyped. |
+ | |
+ | Book canvassers will find this volume a |
+ | |
+ | Very Salable Book. |
+ | |
+ | Orders supplied at a very liberal discount. |
+ | |
+ | All remittances should be made in Post-Office orders. |
+ | |
+ | Canvassers wanted for the paper everywhere. Send for our |
+ | Special Circular. |
+ | |
+ | Address, |
+ | |
+ | Punchinello Publishing Co., |
+ | |
+ | 83 NASSAU ST., N.Y. |
+ | |
+ | P.O. Box No. 2783. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | THE HANDSOMEST AND THE BEST. |
+ | |
+ | Every Saturday, |
+ | |
+ | THE GREAT ILLUSTRATED PAPER OF |
+ | |
+ | AMERICA. |
+ | |
+ | Illustrated with Drawings from the Best Artists in America |
+ | and Europe. |
+ | |
+ | Able Editorials, Excellent Stories, Attractive Miscellaneous |
+ | Reading. |
+ | |
+ | BEAUTIFULLY PRINTED ON TINTED PAPER. |
+ | |
+ | For Sale everywhere. |
+ | |
+ | FIELDS, OSGOOD & CO., Publishers, Boston. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | APPLICATIONS FOR ADVERTISING IN |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO |
+ | |
+ | JOHN NICKINSON, |
+ | |
+ | ROOM NO. 4. |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, N.Y. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | TO NEWS DEALERS |
+ | |
+ | Punchinello's Monthly. |
+ | |
+ | The Weekly Numbers for October, |
+ | |
+ | Bound in a Handsome Cover, |
+ | |
+ | Is now ready. Price 40 cents. |
+ | |
+ | THE TRADE |
+ | |
+ | Published by the |
+ | |
+ | AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY, |
+ | |
+ | Who are now prepared to receive Orders. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Bowling Green Savings-Bank, |
+ | |
+ | 38 BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ | Open Every Day from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M. |
+ | |
+ | Deposits of any sum, from Ten Cents |
+ | to Ten Thousand Dollars, will be received. |
+ | |
+ | Six Per Cent. Interest, |
+ | Free of Government Tax. |
+ | |
+ | INTEREST ON NEW DEPOSITS |
+ | |
+ | Commences on the First of every Month. |
+ | |
+ | HENRY SMITH, _President._ |
+ | |
+ | REEVES E. SELMES, _Secretary._ |
+ | |
+ | WALTER ROCHE, EDWARD HOGAN, _Vice-Presidents_ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | FACTS FOR THE LADIES. |
+ | |
+ | I have a Wheeler & Wilson machine (No. 289), bought of Mr. |
+ | Gardner In 1853, he having used it a year. I have used it |
+ | constantly, in shirt manufacturing as well as family sewing, |
+ | sixteen years. My wife ran it four years, and earned between |
+ | $700 and $800, besides doing her housework. I have never |
+ | expended fifty cents on it for repairs. It is, to-day, in |
+ | the best of order, stitching fine linen bosoms nicely. I |
+ | started manufacturing shirts with this machine, and now have |
+ | over one hundred of them in use. I have paid at least $3,000 |
+ | for the stitching done by this old machine, and it will do |
+ | as much now as any machine I have. |
+ | |
+ | W.F. TAYLOR. |
+ | |
+ | BERLIN, N.Y. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | GEO. B. BOWLEND, |
+ | |
+ | Draughtsman & Designer, |
+ | |
+ | No. 100 Fulton Street, |
+ | |
+ | Room No. 11, NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HENRY L STEPHENS, |
+ | |
+ | ARTIST, |
+ | |
+ | No. 160 FULTON STREET, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | GEORGE WEVILL, |
+ | |
+ | WOOD ENGRAVER, |
+ | |
+ | 208 BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | FOLEY'S |
+ | |
+ | GOLD PENS. |
+ | |
+ | THE BEST AND CHEAPEST. |
+ | |
+ | 256 BROADWAY |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | The only Journal of its kind in America!! |
+ | |
+ | The American Chemist: |
+ | |
+ | A MONTHLY JOURNAL |
+ | |
+ | OF |
+ | |
+ | Theoretical, Analytical, and Technical Chemistry |
+ | |
+ | DEVOTED ESPECIALLY TO AMERICAN INTERESTS. |
+ | |
+ | EDITED BY |
+ | |
+ | Chas. F. Chandler, Ph.D., & W.H. Chandler. |
+ | |
+ | The columns of THE AMERICAN CHEMIST are open for the |
+ | reception of original articles from any part of the country, |
+ | subject to approval of the editor. Letters of inquiry on any |
+ | point of interest within the scope of the Journal will |
+ | receive prompt attention. |
+ | |
+ | THE AMERICAN CHEMIST |
+ | |
+ | Is a Journal of especial interest to |
+ | |
+ | SCHOOLS AND MEN OF SCIENCE, TO COLLEGES, APOTHECARIES, |
+ | DRUGGISTS, PHYSICIANS, ASSAYERS, DYERS, PHOTOGRAPHERS, |
+ | MANUFACTURERS. |
+ | |
+ | And all concerned in scientific pursuits. Subscription, |
+ | $5.00 per annum. In advance. 50 cts. per number. Specimen |
+ | copies, 25 cts. |
+ | |
+ | Address WILLIAM BALDWIN & CO., |
+ | |
+ | Publishers and Proprietors, |
+ | |
+ | 434 Broome Street, New York. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+Entered according to Art of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+Punchinello Publishing Company, in the Office of the Librarian of
+Congress at Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: WALKING DOWN CHATHAM STREET.
+
+_Clothier._ "Step in and look at our goods, Captain. Summer stuffs at a
+discount--nice lot o' white ducks at half price."
+
+_Sportsman._ "I beat you there. I've got a nice lot o' black ducks here
+that ain't to be had at any price."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BRILLIANCY OF THE "SUN."
+
+The Moon, as is generally known, shines with a borrowed light, while the
+Sun is popularly supposed to manufacture its own gas and to arrange its
+pyrotechnics on the premises. Our N.Y. _Sun_, however, does not always
+manufacture its own beams. By far the most brilliant of the "sunbeams,"
+for instance, published in that journal of November 1st, is the quaint
+and charming little poem there headed "Sally Salter," and written
+originally for Punchinello, in the issue of which publication for Oct.
+1st it made its first appearance, under the title of "The Lovers." We
+congratulate the _Sun_ on having thus successfully lit its pipe with
+Punchinello's fire, though we think it might have been gracious enough
+to have acknowledged the favor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A PEOPLE OF TASTE.
+
+The extraordinary liberality of the generous people of Connecticut has
+frequently excited apprehension in the minds of their friends, that,
+sooner or later, as the result of their spendthrift career, they must
+come to beggary. But we are glad to hear that they are making an effort
+in New Haven to reform. The grocery men there say that their customers
+taste so much before they can make up their minds to buy anything, that
+what with gratuitous slices of cheese and specimen mouthfuls of sugar
+and sample spoonfuls of molasses, the shop-keeper's profits are most
+dolefully diminished. A particularly BLUE LAW against this economical
+custom will have the effect of sobering down these brilliant Cullers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"What Answer?"
+
+Is it likely that HORACE GREELEY, or any other man, could steer this
+country through its difficulties by means of the tillers of the soil?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ANY MORE CAVES?
+
+About the dreariest magazine or other reading we know of--and we get a
+deal of it, too--is that which describes the visits of enthusiastic
+persons to big caves underground, very dark, damp, dreary, ugly,
+funereal--with winding ways and huge holes, water with eyeless fish, and
+certain drippings called stalagmites and stalactites. The enthusiasts,
+who always possess that priceless treasure self-satisfaction, and a
+boundless capacity for wonder (which is always ready to exercise itself
+with anything that is big, however ugly), and the "Palaces," and
+"Halls," and "Cascades," and "Altars," and "Bridal Wreaths" they see
+there are not only finer than real ones (if you would believe them!) but
+so grand and wonderful as to be really indescribable. So we find them,
+by their turgid and stupid reports, which are all alike, and all dreary
+and silly. We have never heard of anybody who got excited over these
+pictures (except the artists themselves); and positively there is no
+flatter reading anywhere than these gushing notes about big caves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+GEOMETRICAL.
+
+Why is it that we hear so much of the proper "Sphere" of woman? Here is
+that noble exile, the Princess Editha Montez, lecturing again, and her
+subject, of course, is the Spherical one. So when Mesdames Stanton,
+Dickinson, Anthony, Howe--all the lovely lecturers--discourse, they
+forget the platform which is plane, and discuss the "sphere" which is
+mysterious. Can it possibly be that it is because these amiable
+gentlewomen are always going round? Or is it because they cannot help
+reasoning in a circle? Or is there some occult relation between spheres
+and hoops? Or has the wedding-ring something to do with it? It should be
+understood, that these are questions addressed solely to male
+mathematicians; for Mr. P. is unlike John Graham, and doesn't care to
+cross-examine ladies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SECRETION EXTRAORDINARY.
+
+It is done by Mollusks. We can tell you even the precise kind--it is the
+Gasteropod kind. Not only this, we know the very devil himself that does
+it. (And you will say that "devil" is not a particle too rough a term,
+when we come to tell what it is he "secretes.") It is the _Dolium
+galea_, good friends, and we could tell you six other kinds that are
+suspected of this meanness. One of 'em is the _Pleurobranchidium_
+--which, of course, you have often heard of.
+
+Well, what do these wretched Mollusks go and secrete? We can tell
+you--we, who know everything. It is sulphuric acid! What! do they steal
+it? Oh, no; they "evolve" it--probably from the "depths of their own
+consciousness."
+
+And what do they do it for? Well, they bore with it. Give 'em a chance,
+and they'll go through _you_. The acid eats its way, and then they eat
+_their_ way. That way is not ours, exactly; but we have known human
+beings about as venomous as this creature, and with precisely the same
+tendency to pierce one. They do it with their tongues, it is true, but
+the perforation is complete.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE WRONG PLACE.
+
+We are unusually astonished to find the Female Reformers holding their
+meeting in this city in Apollo Hall. It is well known that Apollo was a
+god of the male persuasion; and to have everything "mix up well," these
+philosophical dames should have a Minerva Hall or a Diana Hall of their
+own. Besides, was not Apollo the God of Harmony? Precious little of that
+same was there at this meeting; for there was the Medical Mary Walker
+trying to make a speech, while the Chairwoman put her down, causing Mary
+de Medici to cry out with shrill indignation: "Tyrant!" Bless us! we
+thought all the tyrants were we Bearded Ones.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A LETTER FROM CHICAGO.
+
+Purposely or otherwise, we are all on our way to California now--men,
+women, and children--graybeards and babies. We did Europe two or three
+years ago, so that idea is obsolete, excepting as a bridal tour; then,
+too, the more peaceably inclined, who have not seen the European
+elephant, would prefer to wait until that country is again in a state of
+quiescence. But Chicago is constantly sending out her adventure-loving
+citizens upon the Pacific road, each one of whom looks, sees, admires,
+and suddenly develops an epistolary talent hitherto undreamed of by his
+most enthusiastic friends. There's our MELISSA, for instance--she never
+used to have a pen in her hand more than once in the course of six
+months, and _now_--why, we really seem to have another SEVIGNE budding
+right in our midst. She went to California, saw all the sights, and
+wondered, and admired, and _wrote_. The floods of eloquence that had so
+long been slumbering now burst forth beyond all hindrance or control.
+She stopped at Salt Lake, and called upon BRIGHAM YOUNG, and was so
+disgusted with the mighty prophet that she would not look at him. Yet,
+considering that circumstance, she described his personal appearance
+with wonderful vividness and accuracy. She indulged in the usual amount
+of stern remonstrance and indignation, that seem to be almost
+indispensable to the occasion. ALONZO asked why she called upon the
+dreadful man, and somewhat maliciously inquired if it was not for the
+express purpose of being shocked and horrified, thus affording a fine
+chance to moralize, and display the elevation of her own principles,
+and, in fact, help to fill out a good article; but MELISSA most
+vigorously denied the soft impeachment. Then she saw the sad wives,
+whose days of sunshine are gone by, and the merry ones,--who don the cap
+and bells deliberately; and for their benefit she expended just the
+proper degree of astonishment and sympathy--so fully substantiating the
+sound and praiseworthy condition of her own mind and heart.
+
+This excellent young woman also caught glimpses of the red man, and here
+was another glorious opportunity to display her literary genius--and she
+did not let the occasion slip--O no! it produced a plaintive little
+rhapsody of pity and regret, such as "Mr. Lo!" is apt to inspire in the
+hearts of the young and romantic, although if MELISSA were to find
+herself alone in a forest, with the faintest suspicion of "Mr. Lo!"
+meandering anywhere near, she would most likely apply her hand
+involuntarily to her trembling chignon, and regret as keenly as all
+_hard-hearted_ persons, that civilization has not carried out the
+process of extermination even more thoroughly than it has done. Indeed,
+she would probably wish the red gentleman at the bottom of the Red Sea,
+or in some other equally damp and discouraging situation. The
+noble-hearted braves are so much prettier to read about than to
+encounter, and the thrill occasioned by the sight of a bloody hatchet
+suspended over the intricate elaboration which we so fondly term a head,
+though more exciting perhaps, would scarcely be as delightful as that
+awakened by some perfectly safe and stirring ballad of the red man's
+wrongs.
+
+MELISSA'S ideas of refinement met with a great shock. She concluded that
+the Indians' acquaintance with soap and water must be extremely limited,
+and thought that the distribution amongst them of several boxes of
+COLGATE'S best would be a most delicate courtesy, and true missionary
+enterprise. In looking at these noble representatives of savage life,
+she was greatly puzzled to discover where the dirt ended and the Indian
+began: but philanthropy should overlook such trifles. Philanthropy
+shouldn't be squeamish.
+
+MELISSA, ecstasized over Lake Tahoe, and Yo Semite, and the Big Trees,
+and was delighted, enchanted, and enraptured in the most thorough and
+conscientious manner. She revelled amongst California grapes and pears,
+and quaffed the California wines with appropriate delight and hilarity.
+She also studied JOHN CHINAMAN in all his phases, and came to the
+conclusion that he would do. She thought it would be a seraphic
+experience to see the pride and importance of Misses BRIDGET and
+GRETCHEN taken down a little. JOHN would certainly not possess the
+voluble eloquence--of the first, nor the stolid impudence of the second,
+nor would he have, like the pretty Swede, a train of admirers a mile in
+length. Of course he would not have these advantages to recommend him.
+But then one can get along without florid oratory in the kitchen, and
+although a lady may feel highly pleased and flattered to see an unending
+procession of admirers file in and out of her drawing-rooms, still she
+has a most decided objection to seeing the same imposing spectacle in
+her kitchen. Women, will be inconsistent.
+
+MELISSA particularly admired JOHN'S manner of ironing. She thought it
+peculiar but genteel, and gentility is always desirable. There must be
+something about the climate of California that is especially inspiring
+to authors--a kind of magnetism in the atmosphere that draws out all the
+literary talent which may be lying dormant in their souls--so that any
+one desirous of becoming a writer, has only to take a trip to that
+fascinating region, and at some unexpected moment he will awake with
+rapture and delight to the blessed consciousness of having blossomed
+into a flower of genius, and, as such, will feel privileged at once to
+deluge his family, his friends, and the world in general, with the
+brilliant results of his most delightful discovery.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PROFIT OF PURITAN PRISONS.
+
+Spain has commissioned a Mr. AZCARATE, a Cuban, to visit and report upon
+our penal institutions, and the gentleman is now in the country. We
+trust he will not fail to visit the Connecticut State Prison. There he
+would unquestionably obtain numerous hints for improving the Spanish
+system of prison torture, or even that in vogue in his native land, for
+political prisoners. There he might learn how Yankee thrift, applied in
+this direction, makes the starving of convicts even a more profitable
+business than manufacturing wooden nutmegs. Perhaps not the least
+valuable information he would gain, would be the best method of goading
+obnoxious prisoners into revolt, and thus obtaining a chance for
+disposing of them, legally, by a capital conviction.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN OPEN CONGRESSIONAL COUNTENANCE.
+
+It is oddly enough objected to the re-election of a certain Member of
+Congress from Massachusetts, that "he can't open his mouth." It might be
+answered that Gen. BUTLER is quite able to open his mouth wide enough
+for the whole delegation. The mouth may be opened for two purposes,
+viz., speech-making and swallowing; and it never appeared to us that
+there was any lack either of Bolting or Bellering in the House of
+Representatives. However notably Honorable Gentlemen may play the game
+either of Gab or Grab, it isn't so clear that their constituents are
+much benefited by these accomplishments. If all they want is an
+open-mouthed Member, why don't the Massachusetts men import a
+first-class crocodile, and send him to the National Menagerie in
+Washington?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPREAD OF AMERICAN PRINCIPLES.
+
+It is with a heart full of patriotic pride and gratitude that Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO observes the adoption, in his dear native Italy, of the
+manners and customs of the Land of his Adoption. At an election recently
+held in Rome, about something or some other thing, one enterprising
+Roman has been discovered who voted "yes" twenty-five times in as many
+electoral urns--thereby, it is to be presumed, earning a good deal of
+money. We have a more lively hope for charming Italy when we find even a
+single citizen exhibiting a skill which would do honor to the most
+accomplished professional voter in New York. There is something
+encouraging in finding the Sons of ST. PETER becoming, every one of
+them, Re-Peters.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Commentators.
+
+The "Sun of York," mentioned in Richard III., has no reference to the
+"Sun of New York" neither was the quotation, "Who is here so base, that
+would be a bondman?" especially meant for application to "THE" ALLEN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beatific.
+
+They talk a great deal about the twenty-eight inch beet they have grown
+in California, but a policeman of this city has a beat three miles long.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "SICH A GITTIN' UP STARES."
+
+_1st festive Cuss._ "WHAT MAKES FOLKS STARE AT US SO?"
+
+_2d Festive Cuss._ "ON ACCOUNT OF OUR ELEGANT COSTOOM, I GUESS. THEY
+TAKE YOU FOR WALL STREET, AND ME FOR FIFTH AVENUE."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR EYE-WITNESS AT THE ELECTIONS.
+
+We suppose that no individual has rendered more invaluable service as a
+historian than the distinguished Eye-witness of the newspapers. The
+friends of PUNCHINELLO will therefore be rejoiced to hear that this
+accurate reporter was engaged to detail for our readers the progress of
+the late elections.
+
+Some time ago, the Eye-witness set about organizing the campaign by the
+masterly and novel plan of inducing the leaders of the opposing
+political parties to nominate different men for the same office. The
+effect was electrical. Immediately on these nominations being made
+public, the people rose like one man, and began canvassing like a great
+many different and very quarrelsome men. Target companies sprang from
+the recesses of the East Side, like ghosts from the rocks in _Der
+Freischuetz;_ drums and fifes resounded; cannons boomed; fireworks burst
+into flame. The Eye-witness, having thus set the universe satisfactorily
+by the ears, got into his second-story front, and contemplated the
+campaign with serene complacency from the window.
+
+He had not to wait very long for a Mass Meeting to be formed under his
+very nose, and, consequently, within range of his witnessing and
+recording Eye. This Mass Meeting was conducted by the "Intelligent"
+Party, and was announced to be speedily followed by a Multitudinous
+Assemblage of the "Enlightened" Party. These two factions, as it will
+readily be observed, and as their names indicate, are of the most widely
+varying character and scope; a fact to be further illustrated by the
+proceedings which followed.
+
+The intelligent began to assemble early in the evening, to the sound of
+guns and drums and sky-rockets. These accompaniments were intended to
+get their spirits up, but the Intelligent persistently applied
+themselves to getting spirits down; and when the rival processes had
+continued for a reasonable length of time, speakers began to appear upon
+the stands. The first man who addressed them was the Commercial
+Candidate.
+
+"Fellow-citizens," said he, "why are you here? To elect me, of course.
+(Immense cheering.) And why will you elect me? I am an honest man: I
+want no office. (Laughter and cheers.) Ah, my friends, you elect me
+because you are now paying $5.36 on every pound of Peruvian Bark and
+Egyptian Mummy which you use in every-day life, and because you know
+that when I am in, the other party will be out!" (Continued applause.)
+
+Next rose an ex-Senator, who said he had come wholly unprepared to
+speak, but, being unexpectedly called upon, had made some brief jottings
+on a visiting-card, to which he would now refer. He then spoke for one
+hour and three-quarters. At the close there was an intermission for
+carrying off the dead.
+
+JONES, the candidate for the office of Vituperator, then cleared his
+throat savagely.
+
+"My friends," he began, "BROWN, the opposing candidate, is a scamp, and
+he knows it. If any man says he isn't, _he_ is. (Loud cheers.) Do you
+ask me to prove it? Prove an axiom! (Applause.) Who but a damned rascal
+would run against me at election? I tell you it is assault and battery!
+(Sounds of approbation.) In conclusion, I will only add that Brown is an
+infernal bummer and a sneak." (Cheers.)
+
+The Intelligent then dispersed in a splendidly ferocious and
+bloody-minded condition, fully primed for the election. Shortly
+afterward the Enlightened appeared upon the scene in the following
+
+ORDER OF PROCESSION.
+
+Cordon of Police.
+Drum.
+Committee of Arrangements.
+Fife.
+Target Company.
+Drum and Fife.
+Small boys.
+Apple-women.
+Drum.
+
+The Enlightened candidate for the Vituperator was the first on the
+stand. He rushed forward and said:--
+
+"The Vituperative candidate of the Intelligent let fall in a former
+speech some subtle or carefully worded innuendoes as to my character. I
+have only to say that his speech was a tissue of falsehood. I will
+trespass upon your patience further, to add that JONES is an infernal
+bummer and a sneak. If he is not, my fellow-citizens, why then I am.
+(Indignant cries of 'That's so!') My friends, you cannot doubt this
+reasoning. The facts are then conclusive. Either he is a bummer, or I
+am. It is therefore your duty, on the 8th November, to elect me at once
+and in fact to the office of Vituperator, and prospectively to those of
+Mayor, Governor, and President of the United States." (Prolonged
+cheering.)
+
+Mr. DE MAGOG, a very giant of eloquence, a Gog as well as Magog of
+oratory, next set the enlightened agog with a speech.
+
+"Fellow-citizens! Men and Brothers! Victory or defeat! Liberty or death!
+Glorious republic! Stars and Stripes! Down with the traitor! To the
+polls! Red fire--blood and thunder"--(voice drowned in shouts of wild
+enthusiasm.)
+
+The Eye-witness, meantime, had become distracted with harassing doubts.
+Subscribing fully to the politics of PUNCHINELLO, which is the only
+paper he reads, he had hitherto announced himself as a member of the
+Right Party. Being, however, open to conviction, he had unfortunately
+permitted both parties to convict him. In this awful crisis Reason
+appeared about to totter from her throne. The Eye-witness thrust his
+head wildly from the window, and shrieked to the crowd below: "Where's
+the Right Man? I belong to the Right Party. I want to hear the Right
+Man!!"
+
+At once the mob became a sea of upturned faces. The Enlightened,
+together with a large number of the Intelligent, who had lingered on the
+scene, with one common consent lifted up their voices and groaned. The
+groan was but a premonitory thunder to a shower of sticks, stones,
+whiskey-bottles, and superannuated eggs. The Eye-witness closed the
+window with an undignified bang, and retired into the depths of his
+chamber, where he remained until after the election. Owing to a dimness
+of vision, resulting from the eggs-cruciating condition of his ocular
+organs, the occupation of the Eye-witness was from that moment gone. And
+to this fact must be attributed his inability to state, with any
+certainty, whether the Right Party has succeeded in putting the Right
+Man in the Right Place; but he rather thinks it has.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Spots on the Sun.
+
+The _Sun_ is eclipsed by the _World,_ and is far behind the _Times._ It
+cannot be considered a _Standard_ sheet, and will never personify the
+_Star_ newspaper. Receiving its _News_ with the _Mail,_ as a _Herald_ it
+is valueless. It cannot claim to be a _Journal of Commerce,_ and as a
+_Tribune_ for the people it is a failure, and it does not shine as a
+_Democrat,_ for it relies on the _Post_ for most of its intelligence.
+
+Moral.--Keep the _Sun_ out of your eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A CHEERFUL PROSPECT.
+
+_First Old Loafer_. "THE PAPERS SAYS THERE'S A CHANCE OF THE BOURBON DIE
+NASTY REIGNING IN FRANCE AGAIN."
+
+_Second ditto_. "BULLY! IF THERE'S ANYTHING I LIVE FOR ITS A HIGH OLD
+RAIN OF BOURBON. LET IT POUR!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SARSFIELD YOUNG ON FORT SUMTER.
+
+The country was indignant that Fort Sumter was not reinforced. Major
+Anderson's supplies were nearly exhausted, and he wanted twenty thousand
+men, with equipments and rations. If the Government couldn't afford the
+rations--very well: it ought at least to given him the men.
+
+I am speaking of the late rebellion, which GREELEY, HEADLEY, and others
+have written up. Although a publishing company at Hartford, Conn., own
+most of the facts of the war, which they peddle out only by
+subscription, they can give the public but little of the secret history
+of the Fort Sumter affair. That remains to be written, while WELLER and
+I remain to write it. The Ex-Secretary has gracefully left it to me to
+describe the midnight session of the Cabinet at which I chanced to be
+present.
+
+I was boarding at the White House at the time, and as President LINCOLN
+assured me it would be rather interesting, I was persuaded to attend.
+"The fact is, the crisis reminds me," said he, of a little story of a
+horse-trot in Arkansas--"
+
+"Sir," interrupted I, "it reminds me of a dozen stories, one of AEsop's
+fables, and two hundred lives of CHAUCER."
+
+He was afraid to continue.
+
+As the clock struck twelve, he called the meeting to order and remarked:
+"Gentlemen, ANDERSON is in Sumter. The question now is,--what will he do
+with it?"
+
+South Carolina was out. BUCHANAN had done nothing. Everywhere was
+distrust. (That very day they had refused, on Pennsylvania avenue, to
+trust me for a spring overcoat.) STANTON was getting his dark lantern
+ready for nightly interviews with SUMNER and WENDELL PHILLIPS in a
+vacant lot upon the outskirts of the Capitol. Universal gloom prevailed.
+
+SEWARD opened the discussion. He said it was contemplated to throw four
+thousand men into Fort Sumter. We couldn't do it. If we did, it would
+only be one of the first throes of a civil conflict, a war long and
+bloody, which he would venture to predict might be protracted even to
+the extent of ninety days. Were we prepared for that? He would like to
+hear from that pure patriot, the Secretary of War, on this point.
+
+Amid murmurs of applause, Gen. CAMERON rose to say that he was wholly
+unprepared to make a speech; but he owned a lot of condemned muskets,
+which he stood ready to dispose of to the Government at four times their
+original cost. He should advise that the Fort be covered with several
+thicknesses of Pennsylvania railroad iron. It would protect our gallant
+troops, and he was now, as he had always been, in favor of protection.
+Besides, he knew parties who could get up a ring in the way of army
+blankets.
+
+Mr. CHASE spoke rather thick and fast, but I understood him to pronounce
+in favor of that platform which would get the most votes. "If the people
+think it ought to be done, why, do it. The country needs taxation, and
+is anxious to have me President. I think I can borrow money enough in
+Wall street to pay the passage of a moderate number of men to
+Charleston, but they mustn't on any account be CHASE men. I don't want
+any of my friends killed off before the next Presidential election."
+
+"What the Administration lacks," chimed in BLAIR, "is backbone. Powder
+and ball, and blood are my sentiments. Fill all the army and navy
+offices with the BLAIR family, and secession is dead."
+
+SEWARD again: "Strengthen Pickens, and let Sumter go. Our soldiers will
+find it healthier and more commodious at Pickens. I'll have the
+_Powhatan_ sent there forthwith."
+
+Hereupon Mr. GIDEON WELLES woke up and remarked, in a strain of apology,
+that be hadn't read his commission yet, but it was his impression that
+he was the head of what was called the Navy Department. Coming from an
+inland town, he didn't exactly know whether the Secretary of State or
+himself had the ordering about of our national vessels; but he rather
+thought he would relieve his friend SEWARD of that burden. He had talked
+with several old sea-dogs. They all agreed that the success of the plan
+depended on its feasibility. Capt. Fox, a private citizen of
+Massachusetts, had been down there with a horse and buggy, and reports
+that a squad of marines could do the job up in good style.
+
+Mr. BATES was called upon, and stated that strengthening Sumter, without
+giving the Southerners four weeks' notice of our intention, would not,
+in his opinion, be unconstitutional.
+
+At this juncture Mr. FLOYD (who, having acquired the habit of attending
+BUCHANAN'S cabinet meetings, had not quite got over it) put his head in
+for a moment to suggest, that if the Black Republican Government would
+evacuate all the forts on Southern territory, remunerate his friends for
+their expenses, and execute a quit-claim deed of Washington and the
+national property to JEFF. DAVIS and other Southern leaders, the
+proposition might possibly be accepted, and trouble avoided.
+
+Mr. SEWARD rose to add only a word, and that word was "Pickens."
+
+The Secretary of the Interior observed, that as Charleston harbor wasn't
+in his department, he would say nothing.
+
+Mr. BATES urged that the people of his section were loyal to the flag;
+in fact, they not only wanted the flag but the Capitol itself, and the
+national buildings (except the monument), removed to St. Louis; if they
+couldn't get that, they might be satisfied if Fort Sumter were towed
+around there, up the Mississippi. It would certainly be a good deal
+safer there.
+
+Mr. GIDEON WELLES wanted it distinctly understood that Gen. SCOTT, Gen.
+HOLT, Capt. FOX and the _Powhatan_ could save the country if Mr. SEWARD
+would let them; otherwise he would make a minute of these deliberations,
+and if his friend Mr. YOUNG (whom he was pleased to see present) didn't
+expose it, he himself would put it in the shape of a lively sketch, and
+send it to the magazines.
+
+"Well--now," said Mr. LINCOLN, after patiently waiting, "this reminds me
+of the man in Pomeroy, Ohio, who kept what he called an 'eating saloon.'
+One morning, a tall hoosier came in and called for ham and eggs. 'Can't
+giv 'em to ye, stranger,' said the proprietor, 'but what'll ye hav'
+t'drink?--don't keep nothin' but a bar.' 'Yer don't? Then what'n thunder
+yer got that sign out thar for?' for the fellow was a little mad. 'Why
+yer see I call her a eating saloon, 'cos I reckon she eats up all the
+profits."
+
+This beautiful and appropriate anecdote, which seemed to throw a flood
+of light upon the critical State question under consideration, pleased
+every one except FLOYD, who swore it was ungenerous and unchivalric.
+Hastily withdrawing, he threatened to telegraph it verbatim to the
+insurgents; it would fire the Southern heart.
+
+SEWARD said he was going home, as he had already sent the _Powhatan_ to
+PICKENS.
+
+Mr. LINCOLN yawned, and turning to me, inquired: "Well, SARSFIELD, you
+see what a man's got to do to run this machine,--now what's your
+advice?"
+
+"Your Excellency," I replied, "there's a man in the tanning business at
+Galena, in your State. Telegraph him at once. His name is GRANT, and if
+you give him the tools to work with, he'll straighten everything out for
+you as neat as a pin."
+
+The meeting dissolved without taking heed of my suggestion, and the
+world knows the result. However, there's one thing I am proud of. I
+claim to have discovered GRANT four years before WASHBURN did. That's
+the secret why I can have any office I want under the present
+administration.
+
+SARSFIELD YOUNG.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+The popularity of opera among fashionable people in this city varies
+inversely as the intelligibility of the language in which it is sung.
+
+To illustrate! The Italian opera is fashionable, though not one in ten
+of the people composing an average audience understand a word that is
+said or sung. The French opera is less fashionable, but perhaps
+one-third of the audience can understand the less ingenious of the
+indelicate jokes. The English opera is not fashionable, but every one
+can understand every word that Miss RICHINGS or Miss HERSEE pronounces.
+These facts undoubtedly stand in the relation of cause and effect.
+Wherefore the axiom with which this column begins.
+
+To be sure, the words of an opera are a matter of very little
+consequence, the music speaking as plainly as the clearest of Saxon
+sentences. But the fashionable public knows less of music than it knows
+of languages, and would be quite capable of mistaking "_Gran Dio_" for a
+comic song, and "_Libiamo_" for a lover's lamentation, were not the
+translated libretto of _Traviata_ at hand to supply them and the critics
+of the minor papers, with the cue for the display of appropriate
+emotion. Singers, especially, understand the full force of the above
+stated axiom. Hence, those who are deficient in voice avoid the English
+stage. Miss KELLOGG, for example, never attempted English opera, because
+she knew that people who had heard ROSE HERSEE or CAROLINE RICHINGS
+would laugh at her claim to be "the greatest living Prima Donna," should
+she compete with those birds of English song. Wherefore, she wisely
+confined herself to the Italian stage, sure of pleasing a public that
+knows nothing of music, but is confident that a lady who enjoys the
+friendship of Madison avenue must be a great singer. PAREPA, on the
+contrary, turned from the Italian to the English stage,--but then PAREPA
+had a voice.
+
+How many years is it since CAROLINE RICHINGS first sung in English
+opera? It is an ungallant question, but the answer would be still more
+ungallant were it not that Miss RICHINGS is an artist; and with artists
+the crown of youth never loses the brightness of its laurel leaves. At
+any rate, she has sung long enough to compel the recognition of her
+claims to our gratitude and admiration. She is not faultless in her
+method, but she differs from other great American prime donne in the
+important particular of possessing voice enough to fill an auditorium
+larger than the average minstrel hall.
+
+At present she is filling NIBLO'S GARDEN with her voice and its
+admirers. We go to hear her. PALMER and ZIMMERMANN, clad in velvet and
+fine linen, flit gorgeously about the lobby, and are mistaken, by rural
+visitors, for JIM FISK and HORACE GREELEY--concerning whom the tradition
+prevails in rural districts that they are clothed in a style materially
+different from that affected by King Solomon at the period of his
+greatest glory. We find our seats, and mentally remarking that NIBLO'S
+is the one theatre in this city from which it would be possible to
+escape with whole bones and coat in case of fire, we await with
+contented minds the lifting of the curtain.
+
+In time the opera begins, and a select company of young men who are
+standing in the rear of the audience improve every possible opportunity
+for breaking into rapturous applause. Their zeal occasionally outruns
+their discretion, and they finally ruin the attempt of Miss RICHINGS to
+execute a florid cadenza at the end of one of her arias. An intelligent
+usher is therefore detailed to curse them into a comprehension of their
+duties, after which they applaud with a discretion which produces almost
+exactly the effect of spontaneous enthusiasm.
+
+Remarks a young lady near us, who is dressed with much wealth of
+contrasting colors:--"This isn't half so nice as the Italian opera. Miss
+RICHINGS can't dress half so nicely as Miss KELLOGG, and then you don't
+see any fashionable people here. The DAVIDS, the ABRAHAMS, the AARONS,
+the NOAHS, that handsome Mr. JACOBS, and that delightful Mr. MOSES,--all
+these elegant young men with beautiful eyes and curly hair that dress in
+velvet coats and diamond studs--there isn't one of them here. Our best
+society never goes to any opera but the real Italian opera."
+
+LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.--"But, my dear, it seems to me that your best
+society must consist chiefly of Jews--judging from the names you
+mention."
+
+YOUNG LADY.--"Well, what if it does? They are rich, are they not? What
+more could you want?"
+
+LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.--"What, indeed! But the music is just as good as
+it would be if the fashionable Israelites were here,--isn't it?"
+
+SHE.--"The music as good! Why, Charles, everybody knows that the Italian
+opera music is perfectly lovely. This is only English, you know."
+
+HE.--"It is precisely the same. Here the _Somnmabula_ is sung with
+English instead of Italian words. That doesn't alter a single note."
+
+SHE.--"You are too ridiculous! The idea of attempting to make me believe
+that this is just like the Italian Opera! Don't you suppose I knows
+anything about music?"
+
+OLD GENTLEMAN.--"I heard CAROLINE RICHINGS sing in 1808,--I think it was.
+I tell you she sings better now tan she did then, but the stupid public
+never appreciated her. I recollect saying to KEAN--not CHARLES, you
+know, but _the_ KEAN--that I knew a young lady that would be a splendid
+singer some of these days--meaning CAROLINE, of course. 'Well, sir,'
+says KEAN, 'what of it; you can't drink her, can you?' Gad! he was the
+best man for repartee I ever knew. To give you an instance; one night
+KEAN and I, and old SMITH,--you don't remember old SMITH, I presume; he
+played old men at the Boston Theatre sixty years ago; I never met a
+jollier fellow,--I remember his saying one night when JUNICS BOOTH was
+playing--let me see, what was the play; it wasn't the _Apostate_, I
+hardly think, for--"
+
+Here the orchestra mercifully strikes up, and the big drum drums the
+garrulous monologue of the veteran theatrical observer. We have another
+act of the opera, sung far better than any opera has been sung at the
+Academy for years. Pretty ROSE HERSEE--when have we had a voice as pure,
+or a manner as charming as hers?--sings in this act, and her tones so
+closely resemble those of NILSSON in their exquisite purity, that we
+wonder how she has escaped the abuse of that "independent critical
+journal," the _Season_, until we notice a middle-aged gentleman sleeping
+quietly with a copy of the _Season_ on his lap, and remember that at
+NIBLO'S GARDEN the proprietor of the independent critical journal is
+permitted to distribute his mental soothing syrup, while at STEINWAY
+HALL a rival sheet is the only admitted programme.
+
+And I say--still thinking of NILSSON--to an experienced
+theatre-goer,--"Why does WATSON abuse NILSSON?"
+
+And he answers, with the contemptuous, but obviously honest
+inquiry--"Who's WATSON?"
+
+Really appalled by the suggestion that there exists a man with soul and
+things so completely dead as not to have heard of the great WATSON, I
+change my question and ask him: "Why does the _Season_ abuse NILSSON?"
+
+HE.--"The _Season_, my young friend, is a programme paper that is
+circulated gratuitously and depends for support upon its advertizing
+patronage. A few managers permit it to be circulated in their theatres;
+the remaining managers will not admit it. Among the latter are Mr.
+WALLACK, and MAX STRAKOSCH. Consequently, the _Season_ abuses WALLACK'S
+Theatre and NILSSON'S concerts--asserting that Mr. WALLACK has a
+wretched company, and that Miss NILSSON has no voice. The _Season_ is
+also a comic paper, and its best joke is its assertion that it is an
+'independent critical journal.'"
+
+YOUNG LADY IN COLORS.--"This opera is dreadfully stupid."
+
+LIGHT-HAIRED YOUNG MAN.--"But, MARY ANNE, it is one of Mozart's--the
+_Marriage of Figaro_. It is one of his most famous works."
+
+SHE.--"Then I don't like Mozart. There was an Italian who wrote an opera
+that was all about Figaro,--the _Nossy di Figaro_ was the name of it.
+Oh, it is perfectly splendid; ever so much prettier than this."
+
+HE.--"Why, my dear girl, the _Nozze di Figaro_ is the identical opera
+you are now hearing."
+
+SHE.--"There is young Mr. NATHAN ISAACS. Isn't he perfectly splendid?"
+
+HE (sighing sadly).--"Whenever you wish to go home, I am ready."
+
+SHE.--"You are real disagreeable to-night, and I'm sorry I came with
+you."
+
+RURAL PERSON.--"Well, if this is the opery, I don't mind sayin' I like
+it. Susan said I couldn't understand a word of the gibberish these opery
+folks squawked, but it's just as plain as psalm-singing. Miss RICHIN and
+that HERSY gal are just the tallest kind of singers. If we had 'em in
+our choir, the Baptist folks might shut up their meetin'-house to
+wunst."
+
+ZIMMERMANN.--"When are we going to revive the Crook--did you ask? What
+do we want to revive it for? Isn't the house full enough to-night to
+satisfy anybody?"
+
+FRIEND OF THE THEATRE--"To be sure it is. Stick to this sort of thing,
+and you'll find it will pay better in the end than any amount of legs.
+NIBLO'S is now a respectable theatre. Don't change it into an Anatomical
+Museum."
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: AFTER THE BATTLE.
+
+CARRYING OFF THE WOUNDED.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PUNCHINELLO CORRESPONDENCE
+
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
+
+_A Lover of Music._ Our street musicians are growing worse and worse.
+There is a piper who infests the street in which I live, and sets my
+nerves on edge with his horrible droning. What am I to do with him?
+
+_Answer._ put him in the waste-piper basket.
+
+_Aunt Carraway._ The preparatory schools about which you inquire have
+nothing to do with the reformation of wicked parrots. If the language
+made use of by your parrot is so dreadful that the cats have left the
+house in consequence of it, we are afraid that the bird is past reform.
+Try him with rats, and you may yet be renowned as the "female
+Whittington of the period."
+
+_Rebecca Hazeldown._ It was very rude of the young man to stare at you
+through an aquarium, as you say he did. The little fishes might have
+been flirting their tails at the time, however, and it is just possible
+that he might have taken you for one of the flirts.
+
+_A Horseman._ After long observation, I am of opinion that the sudden
+collapse which so frequently occurs among omnibus and street-car horses,
+is to be attributed to the stupid but common practice of giving them
+water when they are overheated. Can you assist me in putting a stop to
+this?
+
+_Answer._ We do not see why you should apply to PUNCHINELLO in the case.
+Have we not a Croton BERGH among us?
+
+_Valetudinarian._ To furnish you with a list of all the patent medicines
+advertised is quite out of our power. Suppose you start out early every
+morning with your note-book, walk for seven or eight miles along the
+Bloomingdale Road, and make your list from the innumerable inscriptions
+on the rocks in that vicinity. Do this for a month or two, and you will
+not care much about the list when you have got it.
+
+_N.E. by S.W._ We read that DEMOSTHENES used to put pebbles in his
+mouth, and spout while thus charged, to cure himself of thickness of
+utterance. Suffering from the same defect, I have tried the same remedy,
+but without success. Can you advise me in the matter?
+
+_Answer._ The most learned commentators agree that the statement about
+DEMOSTHENES' putting pebbles in his mouth was only figurative, and
+really meant that, when about to speak in public, he used to put a brick
+in his hat. The same thing is done by many of our public speakers of the
+period--such as JOHN B. GOUGH, H. GREELEY, ANNA DICKINSON, and others.
+Try it moderately, and it may loosen your tongue.
+
+_Epicurus._ Is Worcestershire sauce really the invention of an English
+nobleman?
+
+_Answer._ Yes: he was one of the COOKS or one of the BUTLERS, we have
+forgotten which; but it is certain that he was degraded from the peerage
+for offering some of his sauce to the reigning British monarch of his
+time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Complimentary Chromatics
+
+While all France is Blue with the prospects of the siege of Paris, we
+have constant accounts of the growing ascendency of the Reds. We commend
+this to the nest scientific convention, as an evidence of the analogies
+which prevail in the physical and moral worlds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Sally for Sketchers.
+
+When an artist visits a picturesque locality, why is the proceeding like
+an undecided prize-fight?
+
+Because it results in a draw.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A RASH PROCEEDING.
+
+WAITING FOR A LIGHT.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HIRAM GREEN AND FEMALE SUFFRAGE.
+
+His Experience with the Advocates of the 10th Amendment.
+
+On the last eleckshun day, I was servin as Inspecter of Eleckshun, when
+a passil of wimmen, drest partly in men's habiliments, walkt up to the
+ballit box.
+
+They was headed by old SARY YOOMANS, who has been an old made for more'n
+1/2 Sentury.
+
+Steppin up close to the railin where votes is put in, Miss YOOMANS thus
+to me did say:--
+
+"Square GREEN, wee've come to cast the soffrige of a down-trodden race:
+Will you receive our votes?"
+
+"Not exzactly I wont, my hi toned Greshun benders," was my reply.
+
+"Do you know who we air, sir?" cride a long, leen, lank,
+rale-fence-lookin femail, whose nose looked as if sheed been sokin it in
+a bladder of black snuff.
+
+"Well! sweet wolfs in lambs clothin," said I, puttin on one of my
+shrewed expreshuns, "you look as if you was a lot of, so-called,
+strong-minded femails, who was up to snuff, but, in an endevor to
+scratch somebody bare-boned, you'd lost your footin, and tumbled
+slap-bang into a coal-hole."
+
+"We air, sir," says another ethereal-lookin hearthstun depopulater,
+"members of the Skeensboro Sore-eye-siss Society. We believe wimmens has
+got rites, which man won't let her have. We believe the ballit is
+calkilated to raise woman to her proper speer. We believe hoop-skirts
+and side-saddles will soon be numbered among the lost arts. We believe
+SOOZAN B. ANTHONY, E. CADY STANTON, WENDIL FILLIPS, or Mister BLACKWELL,
+are just as capable of bein President of this ere old Union, as the best
+man which ever wore panterloons; and we air bound hensforth and forever,
+one and onseperable, to stand up for our rites, if we can only rope in
+enuff Congressmen to hold our bonnits."
+
+Durin the a-4-said bust of elokence, about 75 wimmen was holdin ballits
+for me to take, while others were vilently swingin their gingham
+parasols over my bald head.
+
+All seemed as if they was jest bilin over to get their clutches about my
+breethin apparatus. Says I:
+
+"Go hum and be femails, and don't make sich tarnal loonatix of yourself
+any longer, gittin mixed up with the body polertick; for sures you're
+born, when woman votes sheel trail her skirts in the dust and you cant
+stop her; when she walks up to the ballit box, and undertakes to mix
+into suthin she don't know no more about, than TILTON and FULTON do
+about the golden rool, then when that air time comes I will exclaim:
+
+ "'Oh! woman; where is thy stinger.'
+ "'Oh! Sore-eye-siss! where 'bouts is thy victory?'"
+
+"What! miserable man, woodest-ist thou deny us the ballit?" screemed
+another femail, as she tore a 2-bushel waterfall from her head, and,
+wildly swingin it in the air, dirty stockins and old clothes fell into
+promiscous heeps all about her.
+
+"With all doo respect to the sects," says I, gettin madder and madder
+all the while, "you can jest bet your Sunday close I woodest."
+
+"Hard-harted old man, yool rue this day," they all cride in Koruss, and
+the hull lot commenced snivellin, as if their harts was busted.
+
+"Kind, noble, beautiful sir! we langwish to cast our suffrages," says a
+big fat woman, about the size of a lode of hay, as she shoved her ballit
+under my nose.
+
+"Madam," says I, swellin up with accumulated rage, "langwish and rip and
+tare things as much as you mindter--you cant stuff this ere ballit box
+with illegal votes as long as Ime boss of it--that's what's the
+matter--and I want you to understand I mean bizzinezs."
+
+At this they all started for the door, remarkin that I was an "old
+fool," "mouskiter," etketary &c.
+
+"When the 16th commendment passes," said sweet ELIZER HEMPIHL, who is
+too pooty to be caught in sich company, "we will call for your skalp,
+old man."
+
+"Which topnot," was my reply, "wouldent furnish hair enough for a false
+eyebrow."
+
+I see they was goin, so I said:--
+
+"My week-minded and misgided femails, hold your hosses a minnit, until
+an old statesman, who has served his country for 4 yeer as Gustise of
+the Peece, says a few remarks to you."
+
+"When woman was taken out of man's ribs, it wasent calkilated she should
+lower herself by mixin into such dirty bizziness, as you are up to
+to-day. Woman in her natural element, is jest one of the _soothinest_
+institutions in this ere land, which flows with milk-punch and
+houey-sope, and what poor miserable critters man would be without her.
+
+"Who would nuss our offspring, if it wasent for wimmen?
+
+"Who would cheer our fireside, if it wasent for wimmen?
+
+"Who would cook our vittles, if it wasent for wimmen?
+
+"And who would haul off our butes nites, when we come home tired and
+demoralized, after havin a sett-to with lager-beer and sweitzer?
+
+"Agin, I remark, if it wasent for woman in her onadulterated state,
+before she had been made a tarnal fool of by these ere despoilers of
+man's happiness, MASKALINE WIMMEN, man would be a poor shiftless koot.
+
+"Therefore, I say, go hum and resoom your abnormal condition. Get back
+into your own harniss, and don't undertake to assoom the bifurkated
+garments. It haint your forte, no more'n it is some of our public
+offishals to keep from steelin."
+
+I rattled away at 'em in this stile, ontil I beheld the last pair of
+femail bifurkaters skoot for home, when I subsided into a chair, and
+with my bandanner hankerchief wiped the perspiration from my noble brow.
+
+After Ide partially recovered my ekanimity, I agin resoomed my offishal
+duties, but I couldent help thinkin that if wimmen made such a
+confounded hullabalo about votin, as they is now doin, tryin to vote;
+them air leaders, who air goin about the country like Internal Revenoo
+offisers, seekin that they may gobble up somebody, will have a pile to
+anser for, when woman becomes a component part of the body polertick.
+
+ Owe! woman, woman, how sweet you be,
+ When you're dressed up to kill,
+ I hope the time ile never see,
+ When man's place you all fill.
+
+ Take the advice of one which knows,
+ & try to shun the evil,
+ To see a woman in man's close
+ Looks wusser nor the d---l.
+
+Which is the opinion of your humbley sarvent,
+
+HIRAM GREEN, ESQ.,
+
+_Lait Gustise of the Peece._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FRESH FROM THE FLOWERY KINGDOM.
+
+The world is justly indignant at the accounts of the Chinese massacres
+of the missionaries who have perilled their lives in going so far to
+teach them Christianity. Recently, for example, a young lady teacher
+from Boston was so terribly stoned by some of the unregenerate little
+pig-tailed fiends in Canton, that she died the next day. It is dreadful
+to think how savage the instincts of the heathen are.
+
+P.S.--Since the above was set up in type, MR. PUNCHINELLO has learned
+that the Canton in which this occurrence took place is not in China, but
+is a thriving village in Norfolk county, Massachusetts, about eighteen
+miles from Boston, and that the assailants were consequently not
+pig-tailed heathen, but genuine Christian children, who, in a few years,
+will belong to the cultivated voters of Massachusetts. This action,
+consequently, was not dictated by unregenerate barbarism, but was
+intended simply as a protest (rough, we confess, but effectual, we
+trust) against these new-fangled ideas of women's rights. What business
+have women to be trying to teach? Let them stay at home, and if they
+want to know anything, ask their husbands, there; and if they are
+unmarried, let them wait until they get husbands. We must not let our
+natural gallantry interfere with our reverence and respect for the
+rights of ignorance, which will eventually vote.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A THRICE BLESSED CITY.
+
+There is a city in Illinois called St. Genevieve. By some hocus-pocus
+known to accomplished politicians, this city has had no Mayor since the
+4th of June, 1867. In the absence of definite information upon the
+subject, we take it for granted that St. Genevieve must be a most
+delightful place to live in, and specially so, because, as we are
+further informed, they have no Aldermen there either. More delightful
+still, as there is nobody authorized to assess taxes, the fortunate
+inhabitants do not pay any. Of course, if this state of primitive bliss
+could last, Mr. PUNCHINELLO would make immediate arrangements to remove
+to St. Genevieve; but the courts have ordered the citizens to elect a
+Mayor immediately, so that this little heaven upon earth will soon have
+ceased to exist.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: LETTING HIM DOWN EASY.
+
+_Aspiring Author._ "Ah! You have read my essay? I hope the verdict is
+Favorable."
+
+_Editor._ "O yes, all Right,--Acquitted on the ground of insanity."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+The French Republic dying of Gas.--Good Sense for Gambetta. TOURS,
+SIXTH WEEK OF THE REPUBLIC, 1870.
+
+Dear PUNCHINELLO:
+
+There is gloom everywhere; applications to serve in the ranks have
+diminished, and the price of pocket-handkerchiefs has increased. JULES
+FAVRE writes, under cover of confidence, to the _prefect_ here, that
+since the interview of which I gave you an account he has had a severe
+attack of gumboils, and despairs of softening the heart of BISMARCK. I
+stole the letter for the purpose of copying it, but it was stolen from
+me in turn by a nefarious emissary of the London _Times,_ who has not
+however, dared to use it. The greatest activity is manifested in the
+making of balloons. The administration labors under the delusion that
+gas and oiled silk may yet prove the Palladium of French liberty. I have
+remonstrated unavailingiy against this singular infatuation. I held up
+to the Rump Council now sitting in this city the example of VICTOR HUGO
+as a fearful warning. He came from Guernsey under a pressure of gas; he
+entered Paris with the volatile essence oozing from every hair on his
+head; he loaded the artillery of his rhetoric with gas; he blazed, away
+at the Germans with gas, and yet, unable to get rid of such afflatus
+fast enough, he exploded in the very midst of his pyrotechnics, and now
+lies high and dry on "this bank and shoal of time" like a venerable
+rhinoceros extinguished by its own snorting. I am sorry to say it, but
+the great peril of France at this moment is gas. Touching GAMBETTA. Ah!
+yes, touching GAMBETTA. You may have heard that he has issued a
+proclamation or two. There are depths in the soul of a Frenchman, where
+the inspiration of mighty words breeds like "flies in the shambles."
+Such a soul has GAMBETTA. He is all language. If you were to cut him up
+in little bits and put each atom under a microscope, you would find in
+every molecule the text of some proclamation. The genii of syntax and
+prosody are his guardian angels, and the love of "gabble" is the be-all
+and the end-all of his political existence. He loves not GARIBALDI. He
+would have done violence to his grandmother rather than consent to the
+invitation of the Italian liberator. For short, he calls him "GARRY."
+Standing in front of the Hotel de Ville, talking to a group of eager
+listeners, with his arms wildly gesticulating and his nose
+contemptuously curling towards the empyrean, he asks:
+
+"Who is this GARRY? What is he? Why is he--?"
+
+"Stop," I calmly interpollate, "profane not the high calling of the
+Italian hero with frivolous conundrums."
+
+"Jerk that monster out of my sight!" roared GAMBETTA to a _sergent de
+ville_, and pointing his long, skinny fore-finger full at me.
+
+I turned mournfully upon the crowd, and asked in a plaintive tone:--
+
+"You hear what he says. Do lunatic asylums exist in vain? Men of Tours,
+is there a 'jerkist' among you?"
+
+They must have observed that my feelings were moved, for they came
+between me and the officer, as if to protect the latter. 'Twas a kind
+movement, but useless; as I couldn't have hurt him.
+
+"Monsieur GAMBETTA," I then went on to say, "don't you think that this
+horrible epidemic of gas, that is now filling with its deleterious
+effluvia the brains and the throat of the French Government, ought to be
+stopped? Don't you think, Monsieur GAMBETTA, that you, yourself, could
+cut off your supply-pipe for a while and still have enough to light up
+with on public occasions?"
+
+I rested my right fore-finger upon one side of my nose and struck an
+attitude of interrogation while putting these questions. The Minister's
+face turned to an ashen hue, and then the blood came coursing back like
+lava to the Crater's surface, without breaking through.
+
+"Fiends seize the man, is a minister of France to be insulted in his own
+capital?"
+
+"Friend, calm yourself," I said: "Don't let the crabs run through your
+brain like that. Cool off. Take those hot coppers out of your pantaloons
+and fan yourself a little. That's what's the matter with France, to-day.
+You Frenchmen fizzle, and crack, and shoot up into the air, and
+otherwise get away with yourselves so fast, that no wonder the Germans
+can't always find you when they go for you. Take my advice. Stop running
+red-hot pokers down your backs. Drink more Vichy water and less brandy.
+Keep your sky-rockets till next year. Lock your 'language' up in the
+dictionary. Send VICTOR HUGO back to England. Tie a church steeple round
+GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN'S neck, and sink him off Toulon. Burn all your
+proclamations. Throw rhetoric to the dogs. Put a head on the government
+that ain't full of torpedoes. Present a solid front to the enemy. Simmer
+down generally, and talk reason to BISMARCK, and, on the honor of
+PUNCHINELLO, I can solemnly assure you that things won't be so
+'speckled' as they now are."
+
+Saying which, I gathered the drapery of my duster gracefully about me,
+and left.
+
+DICK TINTO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SHE THAT IS TO BE.
+
+By a Prominent Member of Sorosis.
+
+1.
+
+ --She stood! The hurrying clouds wild drove--
+ --The purpling aspect of the air...!
+ While her wild contour symbolized
+ The Unity of Hope's Despair!
+
+2.
+
+ And shall not We, when Life's short span,
+ Enveloping the Yet-To-Be--
+ Smiling candescent?--Nay?--Ah! well!
+ BE THAT OUR FUTURE DESTINY!!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS OF THE CRADLE.
+
+CANTO XI.
+
+ Little Bo-Peep has lost his sheep,
+ And don't know where to find them.
+ Let them alone and they'll come home,
+ And bring their tails behind them.
+
+The Poet having now advanced so far in his work as to make a very
+respectable collection of poems, and beginning to run short of matter,
+casts his eyes around him in search of aid, hoping to find inspiration
+in some fortuitous moment from the many little incidents that are always
+occurring, and which only observing minds would notice. For the time he
+sees nothing that would suggest even to the most sparkling intellect the
+shadow of a rhyme, and he begins to be in despair. He walks up and down
+his dingy room, thrusts his long fingers amid the raven locks that adorn
+his poetical cranium, and gently at first, then furiously, irritates the
+cuticle of his imaginative head-piece, hoping thereby to waken up his
+ideas and find a foundation upon which to erect another stone in the
+edifice of his never-fading glory.
+
+This process does not seem to be as successful as usual: the ideas
+refuse to come at his bidding, and he glares around in consternation,
+Can it be possible that he has exhausted himself; that his ideas are
+entirely run out; that the fountain is dry, and the Muse has ceased to
+smile upon him; that he must descend from his high elevation as the poet
+of the family, the hope and pride of his friends and the admiration of
+himself, and sink to the level of his earthy brothers and become one of
+them, no better and no worse? No--perish the thought! never again will
+he mingle with those rude and vulgar natures, having no thoughts or
+feelings above their creature comforts: content to live like animals,
+uninspired by the divine _afflatus_, untouched by the poetic fire. Full
+of determined energy never to yield the high position he has acquired,
+he rushes forth into the open air and takes his winding way through the
+green meadows and leafy wilds. Here, sitting on the stump of an old
+tree, he spies little Bob Peepers, weeping as if his heart would break:
+the briny tears coursing down his ruddy cheeks form little rivulets of
+salt water with high embankments of genuine soil on either side, and a
+distracted map of a war-ridden country is depicted upon his
+grief-stricken countenance. Full of compassion for the suffering, the
+tender heart of the Poet melts at the sight, and in mellifluous tones he
+asks, "What is the matter, BUB?"
+
+Sobbingly digging his fists into his eyes, and carefully wiping his
+classic nose on the sleeve of his jacket, the heart-broken mourner
+murmurs:--
+
+ "I've lost my sheep,
+ And don't know where to find them,"
+
+and bursts forth into a prolonged howl. That heart-rending cry of agony
+is too much for the gentle Poet, who, sinking upon the ground beside the
+weeper, ventures to whisper a hope that Time, or some of the neighbors,
+may bring back the lost sheep and restore happiness and tranquillity to
+the agitated bosom. The suggestion is met with incredulous scorn and
+another burst of uncontrollable sorrow, amid the pauses of which Bob
+recounts to his sympathetic friend how, "being wearied with watching the
+gambolling sheep, he laid himself down in the meadow to sleep, and never
+awoke till a blue-bottle fly, who buzzing about so tickled his eye that
+sleep fled away. Then he rose to his feet, and looked around for the
+gambolling sheep, but found, they were gone he couldn't tell where: so
+he threw himself down in the deepest despair, bemoaning his strange
+unaccountable loss, and the horrible beating he'd get from the Boss,
+when at night he went home with his sad tale of woe. He was sure he
+would never have courage to go."
+
+The sad tale so pathetically and ingenuously told melted the already
+simmering heart of the hearer, who counselled tranquillity and
+philosophy in the words
+
+ "Let them alone and they'll come home,"
+
+and jocularly added, as he saw a ray of hope lighting up the eye of the
+boy, like the first rays of the sun seen through a fog,
+
+ "And bring their tails behind them."
+
+The brilliant idea of their tails coming behind them instead of before
+them tickled the risibilities of the sympathizing friends, and for a few
+moments the woods echoed to their responsive mirth.
+
+The laugh did them good. The poet perceived instantly he had a theme
+upon which to build his verse, and hastily bidding BOB "good-by," he
+flew exultingly to his paternal abode, rushed up the garret stairs,
+seized his goose-quill, and amid the tumultuous beatings of his
+over-charged heart and throbbing brain jotted down on the instant, in
+all the enthusiasm of poetic fervor, the incident that had fallen under
+his inspired observation. Not to be too personal, and still to preserve
+the truthfulness of the history, he dropped a few letters from BOB
+PEEPER'S name, while, with a wonderful accuracy unknown to modern
+writers, he keeps to the subject of his verse, its misery, the remedy
+and result, and facetiously gives to the world the same cause for
+laughter and inspiration that he received so gratefully.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE POLITEST NATION IN THE WORLD.
+
+We had always considered JOHNNY CRAPAUD as the pink of politeness. But
+we are now satisfied that JOHNNY BULL goes ever so far ahead of him. We
+have never known that Frenchman yet, who would oblige his enemies by
+killing himself. But the recent loss of the _Captain_ shows that the
+noble Englishmen are prepared to do this by wholesale. One could wish
+our enemies no worse luck than to have a few such _Captains_ given them.
+And how lavish the expenditure! It takes no end of money to get up one
+of those big iron-plated coffins. It is certainly a dramatic,
+_auto-da-fe_ and a most obliging act, considered with reference to one's
+possible enemies. No Frenchman ever thought of such a thing. In fact,
+they go no further than positively declining to do anything bad with
+their navy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FASHIONABLE INTELLIGENCE.
+
+"THERE WAS A SURPRISE PARTY AT No. 9,999 TWENTY-THIRD STREET LAST
+EVENING. UPON RETURNING FROM THE OPERA, THE PROPRIETORS FOUND THEIR
+MANSION FULL, OF GUESTS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A DRY SETTLEMENT.
+
+There is a little young village in Denver which rejoices in the name of
+Greeley. To this place came a benevolent bar-keeper, bringing a cheerful
+stock of whiskey. Down upon his grocery came the enraged Greeleyites,
+and to prevent their own stomachs from being burned, they burned the
+building. We can imagine these very particular pioneers passing a great
+variety of the most astonishing laws, with various penalties. For
+chewing tobacco--one month's imprisonment; for subscribing to The _N.Y.
+Evening Post_--death; while for the hideous misdemeanor of eating white
+bread, the offender would be left to the pangs of his own indigestion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Fact. Fancy, and Fun-ding.
+
+THE FUNDING BILL, as a step towards making the Erie Canal free, should
+commend itself to any one, since if it becomes a fact, it will, we
+fancy, prevent this noble industrial enterprise from becoming, like its
+first cousin, simply an eyrie for the vultures of finance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE LATEST STYLE.
+
+AS MEN'S CLOTHES ARE CUT HOUR-GLASS FASHION NOW, PUNCHINELLO SUGGESTS
+THE ABOVE PATTERN AS AN APPROPRIATE ONE FOR THEM.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE ALARM-BELLE AT RYE.
+
+ At Rye, Westchester County, a small town
+ Built near the Sound, but of a scant renown,
+ That always to its biggest size did run
+ At summer-time, beneath a blazing sun,
+ But rested as a _town_, as if to say,
+ "I'll pay no further taxes, come what may;"--
+ The ancient cobbler, JOHN, unknown to fame
+ (So many cobblers since have borne the name),
+ Owned the great belle of all that country place,
+ His daughter, with her tongue and lovely face,
+ Who took to soothing every kind of pain,
+ Tramped through the streets, dragging a muddy train.
+ With kerchief blowed her horn both, loud and long.
+ And talked incessantly of every wrong,
+ Kept her tongue wagging, until right was done.
+ Thus did the daughter of old cobbler John.
+
+ What mighty good this BERGH of that Burgh did.
+ While her tongue lasted, she had never hid:
+ Suffice it that, as all things must decay,
+ The fleshy tongue at length was worn away;
+ She mouthed it for a while, and people dreamed
+ Of golden days before this belle had screamed.
+ Loaded and beat their horses at their ease.
+ Drove thorn with, wounded backs and broken knees,
+ Turned turtles over, and e'en tortured clams.
+ Murdered trichinae, when they boiled their hams.
+ Till one, a doctor, who was passing by,
+ Struck by the horrors going on in Rye,
+ Cut from a calf, that yet was very young.
+ And kindly gave unto the belle, a tongue.
+
+ By chance it happened that in Rye town dwelt.
+ A German grocer (and his wife, a Celt),
+ Who loved his lager and his pretzels too
+ (His wife was partial to the morning dew).
+ But, when we fell into these troublous times,
+ He cared for nothing but to save his dimes.
+
+ He had a donkey, that would sometimes go.
+ Just as the donkey chanc'd to feel, you know,
+ Which he would ride, whenever his brigade
+ Was ordered to the streets for a parade;
+ But as the times got hard, he'd loudly swear
+ The oats that donkey ate he could not spare.
+ At length he said: "I'll turn him out, py Gott!"
+ Looked at his wife and to her said, "Vy not?
+ Let him go eat upon the public ways,
+ I want him only for the training days."
+ So the poor donkey had to feed on thistles.
+ Until his hair became like unto bristles.
+
+ One afternoon, when everybody slept
+ Except the belle, out from her house she crept,
+ And met the donkey, walking on the way;
+ He smelt the calf and thought to have some play.
+ Kicked up his heels, a grating bray did utter.
+ And laid the belle a-rolling in the gutter.
+ She raised a mighty shout, she raised a squeal.
+ And loudly her persistent tongue did peal,
+ And this did seem the burden of her song:
+ "Some chap hath done a wrong, hath done a wrong!
+
+ "Meanwhile from street and lane a noisy crowd"
+ Of vagabonds and urchins, shouting loud,
+ Gathered around the poor, bedraggled squealer,
+ Until at length there came a stout Rye peeler;
+ Who forthwith told the belle her cries to cease.
+ And took her to a Justice of the Peace.
+
+ The Justice heard the story of the belle,
+ And looking wise and grave, he said: "'Tis well;
+ Bring me the old Dutchman." The grocer brought,
+ Shaking with fear, then stood before the Court.
+
+ And then' the Justice to recite began
+ The charter of the Cruelty to An-
+ Imals Society, and then he said:
+ "Pride rideth on a donkey, as I've read,
+ Until it gets a fall, and then it loses
+ Its dignity and blubbers o'er its bruises.
+ These are newspaper proverbs, but I fear
+ You don't love proverbs, as you do your beer.
+ Just take that donkey and give him an oat,
+ And don't show up until you've brushed his coat."
+
+ The grocer left disgusted, took the brute;
+ And all the people then at him did hoot.
+ The cobbler heard and almost split his knee
+ [He took it for the lapstone in his glee],
+ "Church bells," quoth he, "but ring us to the mass.
+ My belle hath gone and saved a starving ass;
+ And this shall make, when put in jingling rhyme,
+ The Belle of Rye all famous for all time."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A CHEERFUL SUBJECT.
+
+According to an Ohio paper, a double child has been born to a couple
+named FINLEY, in Morrow county. It is, so to speak, a double-ender,
+being provided with a supplementary head at the point where the feet are
+usually situated. The child is a female-and a very curious amendment to
+the Sixteenth Amendment, since, should it arrive at woman's estate, it
+will, of course, be entitled to a double vote. How will it be should one
+end go Republican and the other Democratic? To send a duplex woman into
+the world seems to be a very unnecessary freak of Nature, seeing that
+there is enough of duplicity in womankind already.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Homoeopathic Politics.
+
+THE CITIZENS' ASSOCIATION, finding that their sands of life are nearly
+run out, are now advertising privately for some fresh candidates, who
+for a salary will undertake to cure the ring-worms of the body politic
+by their pimple prescription of substitution, or putting yourself in
+their place, which is a political modification of the law in
+homoeopathic medicine, _similie similibus errantur_, or in morals, "set
+a rogue to catch a rogue."
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | CLEARING OUT SALE. |
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE OFFERING |
+ | |
+ | UNPRECEDENTED BARGAINS |
+ | |
+ | IN |
+ | |
+ | CLOAKS, SACQUES, |
+ | ARABS, TALMAS, |
+ | SHAWLS AND MANTLES, |
+ | |
+ | Real Astrakhan Cloaks |
+ | at $20, $22, and $25; last year's prices, $40 |
+ | and $45. |
+ | |
+ | CLOTHS, CLOAKINGS, |
+ | VELVETEENS, |
+ | CLOAK SILK VELVETS, |
+ | MILLINERY VELVETS, &c. |
+ | |
+ | NEW GOODS JUST RECEIVED, |
+ | |
+ | AT PRICES MUCH BELOW THE COST OF THE |
+ | SAME QUALITIES SOLD LAST YEAR. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, Fourth Ave., |
+ | 9th and 10th Streets. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | OFFER |
+ | |
+ | Wide Plaid Poplins at 25c. and 30c. per |
+ | Yard, recently sold at 85c. and 45c. |
+ | |
+ | All Wool Serges at 40c. per Yard; last |
+ | year's price, $1. |
+ | |
+ | High Colored Basket Cloths, 75c. per |
+ | Yard; last year's jobbing price, $1.25. |
+ | |
+ | Double Width, all Wool Plaids, 64 inches |
+ | wide, at $1.60 per Yard; last year's |
+ | jobbing price, $2.25. |
+ | |
+ | ALSO A LARGE LOT OF |
+ | |
+ | Heavy High Colored Plaids at 20c. per |
+ | Yard. |
+ | |
+ | The above, with a great variety of other |
+ | choice styles at |
+ | |
+ | Equally Low Prices, |
+ | |
+ | ARE EXHIBITED IN THE CENTRE SECTION |
+ | ON THE 4TH AVE. SIDE. |
+ | |
+ | STRANGERS, THE RESIDENTS OF THE EASTERN |
+ | PART OF OUR CITY, AND THOSE OF OUR |
+ | NEIGHBORING CITIES, ARE RESPECTFULLY |
+ | INVITED TO EXAMINE. |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, Fourth Ave., |
+ | |
+ | 9th and 10th Streets. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO. |
+ | |
+ | The first number of this Illustrated Humorous and Satirical |
+ | Weekly Paper was issued under date of April 2, 1870. The |
+ | Press and the Public in every State and Territory of the |
+ | Union endorse it as the best paper of the kind ever |
+ | published in America. |
+ | |
+ | CONTENTS ENTIRELY ORIGINAL. |
+ | |
+ | Subscription for one year, (with $2.00 premium,) $4.00 |
+ | " " six months, (without premium,) 2.00 |
+ | " " three months, " " 1.00 |
+ | Single copies mailed free, for .10 |
+ | |
+ | We offer the following elegant premiums of L. PRANG & CO'S |
+ | CHROMOS for subscriptions as follows: |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year, and |
+ | |
+ | "The Awakening," (a Litter of Puppies.) Half chromo. |
+ | Size 8-3/8 by 11-1/8 ($2.00 picture,)--for $4.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $3.00 chromos: |
+ | |
+ | Wild Roses. 12-1/8 x 9. |
+ | Dead Game. 11-1/8 x 8-5/8. |
+ | Easter Morning. 6-3/4 x 10-1/4--for $5.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $5.00 chromos: |
+ | |
+ | Group of Chickens; |
+ | Group of Ducklings; |
+ | Group of Quails. Each 10 x 12-1/8. |
+ | The Poultry Yard. 10-1/8 x 14. |
+ | The Barefoot Boy; Wild Fruit. Each 9-3/4 x 13. |
+ | Pointer and Quail; Spaniel and Woodcock. 10 x 12--for $6.50 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $6.00 chromos: |
+ | |
+ | The Baby in Trouble; The Unconscious Sleeper; The Two |
+ | Friends. (Dog and Child.) Each 13 x 16-3/4. |
+ | Spring; Summer: Autumn; 12-7/8 x 16-1/8. |
+ | The Kid's Play Ground. 11 x 17-1/2--for $7.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $7.50 chromos |
+ | |
+ | Strawberries and Baskets. |
+ | Cherries and Baskets. |
+ | Currants. Each 13 x 18. |
+ | Horses in a Storm. 22-1/4 x 15-1/4. |
+ | Six Central Park Views. (A set.) 9-1/8 x 4-1/2--for $8.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and Six American Landscapes. |
+ | (A set.) 4-3/8 x 9, price $9.00--for $9.00 |
+ | |
+ | A copy of paper for one year and either of the |
+ | following $10 chromos: |
+ | |
+ | Sunset in California. (Bierstadt) 18-1/8 x 12 |
+ | Easter Morning. 14 x 21. |
+ | Corregio's Magdalen. 12-1/2 x 16-3/8. |
+ | Summer Fruit, and Autumn Fruit. (Half chromos,) |
+ | 15-1/2 x 10-1/2, (companions, price $10.00 for the two), |
+ | for $10.00 |
+ | |
+ | Remittances should be made in P.O. Orders, Drafts, or Bank |
+ | Checks on New York, or Registered letters. The paper will be |
+ | sent from the first number, (April 2d, 1870,) when not |
+ | otherwise ordered. |
+ | |
+ | Postage of paper is payable at the office where received, |
+ | twenty cents per year, or five cents per quarter, in |
+ | advance; the CHROMOS will be mailed free on receipt of |
+ | money. |
+ | |
+ | CANVASSERS WANTED, to whom liberal commissions will be |
+ | given. For special terms address the Company. |
+ | |
+ | The first ten numbers will be sent to any one desirous of |
+ | seeing the paper before subscribing, for SIXTY CENTS. A |
+ | specimen copy sent to any one desirous of canvassing or |
+ | getting up a club, on receipt of postage stamp. |
+ | |
+ | Address, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., |
+ | |
+ | P.O. Box 2783. |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, New York. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+[Illustration: WHAT WE ARE COMING TO.
+
+_Cook (negotiating for situation)._ "WELL, IT'LL BE NICISSARY FOR ME TO
+HAVE A FOTERGRAFF OF YER WIFE, AND A RICOMMINDATION FROM YER LAST
+COOK."]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "THE PRINTING HOUSE OF THE UNITED STATES" |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | "THE UNITED STATES ENVELOPE MANUFACTORY." |
+ | |
+ | GEORGE F. NESBITT & CO |
+ | |
+ | 163, 165, 167, 169 Pearl St., & 73,75,77,79 Pine St., |
+ | |
+ | New York. |
+ | |
+ | Execute all kinds of |
+ | |
+ | PRINTING, |
+ | |
+ | Furnish all kinds of |
+ | |
+ | STATIONERY, |
+ | |
+ | Make all kinds of |
+ | |
+ | BLANK BOOKS, |
+ | |
+ | Execute the finest styles of |
+ | |
+ | LITHOGRAPHY |
+ | |
+ | Make the Best and Cheapest ENVELOPES Ever offered to the |
+ | Public. |
+ | |
+ | They have made all the prepaid Envelopes for the United |
+ | States Post-Office Department for the past 16 years, and |
+ | have INVARIABLY BEEN THE LOWEST BIDDERS. Their Machinery is |
+ | the most complete, rapid and economical known in the trade. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Travelers West and South-West Should bear in mind that the |
+ | |
+ | ERIE RAILWAY IS BY FAR THE CHEAPEST, QUICKEST, AND MOST |
+ | COMFORTABLE ROUTE, |
+ | |
+ | Making Direct and Sure Connection at CINCINNATI, with all |
+ | Lines |
+ | |
+ | By Rail or River |
+ | |
+ | For NEW ORLEANS, LOUISVILLE, MEMPHIS, ST. LOUIS, VICKSBURG, |
+ | NASHVILLE, MOBILE And All Points South and South-west. |
+ | |
+ | It's DRAWINGS-ROOM and SLEEPING COACHES on all Express |
+ | Trains, running through to Cincinnati without chance, are |
+ | the most elegant and spacious used upon any Road in this |
+ | country, being fitted up in the most elaborate manner, and |
+ | having every modern improvement introduced for the comfort |
+ | of its patrons; running upon the BROAD GUAGE; revealing |
+ | scenery along the Line unequalled upon this Continent, and |
+ | rendering a trip over the ERIE, one of the delights and |
+ | pleasures of this life not to be forgotten. |
+ | |
+ | By applying at the Offices of the Erie Railway Co., Nos. |
+ | 241, 529 and 957 Broadway, 205 Chambers St.; 38 Greenwich |
+ | St.; cor. 125th St. and Third Avenue, Harlem; 338 Fulton |
+ | St., Brooklyn: Depots foot of Chambers Street, and foot of |
+ | 23d St., New York; and the Agents at the principal hotels, |
+ | travelers can obtain just the Ticket they desire, as well as |
+ | all the necessary information. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | VOL. I, ENDING SEPT. 24, |
+ | BOUND IN EXTRA CLOTH, |
+ | IS NOW READY. |
+ | PRICE $2.50. |
+ | Sent free by any Publisher on receipt of price, or by |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, |
+ | 83 Nassau Street, New York. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | THE NEW STORE OF LORD & TAYLOR, |
+ | |
+ | Cor. of Broadway & Twentieth Street, New York. |
+ | |
+ | This superb building will be devoted to retail purposes, |
+ | where every description of dry-goods, from the necessary and |
+ | convenient to the most elegant and fashionable, will attract |
+ | a multitudinous throng, and add even a new attraction to the |
+ | brilliancy of Broadway in the most delightful part of the |
+ | thoroughfare. Besides an immense trade extending to all |
+ | parts of the United States, LORD & TAYLOR deal largely in |
+ | carpets and oil-cloths, in upholstery and house furnishing |
+ | goods, and especially in trousseaux, cloaks, and ladies' |
+ | furnishing goods of all kinds, in which, perhaps, their |
+ | business is heavier than that of any other house in the |
+ | city. The furnishing of hotels and steamboats is one of |
+ | their specialties. The headquarters of their wholesale trade |
+ | is at the old Broadway and Grand street store, while their |
+ | stock of carpets and oil-cloths is mainly limited to the |
+ | Grand and Chrystie street establishment. Since the |
+ | organization of the firm, five partners have retired with |
+ | fortunes, to make room for younger men, thus affording |
+ | opportunities for others to profit by the experience and |
+ | success of the house. These changes have also had the effect |
+ | to maintain the original vigor of the firm without detaching |
+ | from the maturity of judgment that has marked its |
+ | operations. Some idea of the magnitude of the business of |
+ | the house may be inferred from the fact that the pay-roll |
+ | contains the names of more than 1,000 persons. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+GEO. W. WHEAT & CO, PRINTERS, No. 8 SPRUCE STREET.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. II., No. 34,
+November 19, 1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 34 ***
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