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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10544 ***
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | TIFFANY & CO., |
+ | |
+ | UNION SQUARE, |
+ | |
+ | Offer a large and choice stock of |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' WATCHES, |
+ | |
+ | Of all sizes and every variety of Casing, with Movements |
+ | of the finest quality. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 United States. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+Vol. II. No. 37.
+
+
+SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1870.
+
+
+PUBLISHED BY THE
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
+
+
+PRANG'S LATEST PUBLICATIONS: "Joy of Autumn," "Prairie Flowers,"
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+
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+
+L. PRANG & CO., Boston.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Sidenote: 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. |
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+ | for $4.00 |
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+ | Single copies, mailed free .10 |
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+ | Back numbers can always be supplied, as the paper is |
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+ | Book canvassers will find this volume a |
+ | |
+ | Very Salable Book. |
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+ | All remittances should be made in Post-Office orders. |
+ | |
+ | Canvassers wanted for the paper everywhere. Send for our |
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+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
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+ | NEW YORK |
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+ | HENRY SMITH, _President._ |
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+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 500 VOLUMES IN ONE: |
+ | |
+ | AGENTS WANTED |
+ | |
+ | FOR |
+ | |
+ | The Library of Poetry and Song. |
+ | |
+ | _Being Choice Selections from the Best Poets,_ |
+ | |
+ | ENGLISH, SCOTCH, IRISH, AND AMERICAN, |
+ | |
+ | With an Introduction by |
+ | |
+ | WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. |
+ | |
+ | This volume is the handsomest and cheapest subscription book |
+ | extant, and contains in itself more to give it enduring fame |
+ | and make it universally popular than any book ever |
+ | published. It is something in it, of _the best_, for every |
+ | one--for the old, the middle aged, and the young. It has |
+ | intellectual food for every taste and for every mood and |
+ | phase of human feeling, from the merriest humor up, through |
+ | all the gradations of feeling, to the most touching and |
+ | tender pathos. Excepting the Bible, this will be the book |
+ | most loved, and the most frequently referred to in the |
+ | family. |
+ | |
+ | The whole work, page by page, poem by poem, has passed under |
+ | the educated criticism and scholarly eye of WILLIAM CULLEN |
+ | BRYANT, a man reverenced among men, a poet great among |
+ | poets. |
+ | |
+ | _This is a Library of over_ 500 _Volumes in one book_, whose |
+ | contents, of no ephemeral nature or interest, will never |
+ | grow old or stale. It can be, and will be, read and re-read |
+ | with pleasure as long as its leaves hold together. Over 800 |
+ | pages beautifully printed, choicely illustrated, handsomely |
+ | bound. Sold only through Agents, by subscription. |
+ | |
+ | Teachers, Clergymen, active Men, intelligent Women, can all |
+ | secure good pay with light work by taking an agency for this |
+ | book. Terms very liberal. |
+ | |
+ | Send for Circular containing full particulars to |
+ | |
+ | J.B. FORD & CO., 39 Park Row, N.Y. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Office of the Librarian of
+Congress at Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAN AND WIVES.
+
+A TRAVESTY.
+
+By MOSE SKINNER.
+
+CHAPTER FOURTH.
+
+THE HALF-WAY HOUSE
+
+The first person to discover that ANN BRUMMET had left the house, was
+Mrs. LADLE, Now, ever since the Hon. MICHAEL had asked ANN to go to the
+circus, Mrs. LADLE had hated her. But when he took ANN to the
+Agricultural Fair, and bought her a tin-type album and a box of initial
+note-paper, Mrs. LADLE was simply raving. Whether she herself was
+viewing the Hon. MICHAEL with an eye matrimonial, and was jealous of
+ANN, must remain an open question. At any rate, she was the first to
+start the scandal about ANN and JEFFRY, and lost no time in conveying it
+to the ears of the Hon. MICHAEL, with profuse embellishments. At the
+croquet party the Hon. MICHAEL had been particularly sweet on ANN, his
+ardor finding vent in such demonstrations as throwing kisses at her
+slyly, holding up printed lozenges for her inspection, or tossing sticks
+at her and dodging behind a tree. And when Mrs. LADLE went to ANN'S room
+next day, for a good square scold, she found her out.
+
+Now Mrs. LADLE was a mother-in-law, and consequently a pretty old fowl
+in ferreting out things of this sort. She determined to discover the why
+and wherefore of ANN'S departure. If she could confront the Hon. MICHAEL
+with proofs of ANN'S indiscretion, it would be the loudest kind of
+feather in her cap.
+
+She examined everybody in the house, and everybody that went by the
+house, but without the smallest result. She was out in the front yard
+waiting for a fresh victim, when she saw HERSEY DEATHBURY coming up the
+road. She signed to her to come in.
+
+She came in.
+
+HERSEY DEATHBURY was an extraordinary woman. A woman of genius, sir.
+What if her make-up _was_ limited? What if, when she was born, nature
+_was_ economizing, and gave her only one eye, and she was lame and
+hump-backed, and hadn't got any eyebrows and wore a wig; what of that?
+It's to her credit, _I_ say. You saw her just as she was. No airs
+_there_. And in this lay the great charm of H. DEATHBURY'S character.
+Looking at her closely, you would see a fixed and stony eye and a
+chronic scowl, and you would say: "Disposition a little morose; some man
+has soured on her." Looking at her more closely, you would see under her
+right arm a common blackboard, such as is used in schools, and over her
+shoulder a canvas bag containing lumps of chalk, and you would say: "A
+little eccentric; likes to write on the blackboard instead of talking.
+Would make a nice wife. Looks, on the whole, like a country schoolma'am,
+whom the boys have stoned out of town, with the fixtures of the
+school-house tied to her." But she has talents. What is she, an
+authoress? "Yes, she is." But, like other authoresses, she isn't
+appreciated, and has returned to her legitimate occupation, the
+Wash-Tub; but still doth she itch for fame, and so, between times, she
+writes verbose essays on Female Suffrage, composed during the process
+known as "wringing." And when there's a Woman's Rights Convention in
+that locality, she sits on the platform, and applauds all the Red-Hot
+Resolutions with that trenchant female weapon, the umbrella, in one
+hand, and an antediluvian reticule the other. In the words of the Hon.
+MICHAEL: "She is not only a leading _Re_former, sir, but a great
+_Plat_former." And Mrs. LADLE will tell you that, as a washer, she is
+superb. She "does up things" in a manner simply celestial.
+
+Mrs. LADLE told her first to shut the door.
+
+"Have you seen ANN BRUMMET to-day?" she said.
+
+HERSEY nodded.
+
+"Where?" was the eager inquiry.
+
+HERSEY DEATHBURY placed her blackboard against the wall, unslung her
+chalk, and wrote in very large letters:--
+
+"I C hur a-Goin on The rode 2 forneys Kragg."
+
+"Ah!" ejaculated Mrs. LADLE joyfully, "traced at last." And she ran to
+tell the Hon. MICHAEL all about it.
+
+ * * *
+
+The Half-Way House at Forney's Crag was a hoary-headed old vagabond of a
+house, that had passed the heyday of its youth long before that great
+encyclopaedia, the oldest inhabitant, emitted his first infantile
+squawk. Each successive season caused it to lean a little more and the
+most casual observer must perceive that it couldn't by any possibility
+become much leaner without pining entirely away.
+
+Nevertheless, it had been the only hotel that Spunkville could boast,
+all within a short period of this writing. Like most Western hotels, it
+had been ably supported by a large floating population, known as "New
+York Drummers," and many a time had its old walls re-echoed with their
+guileless hilarity and moral tales; and, if the ancient and time-honored
+spittoon in the bar-room could speak, it could relate wonderful stories
+concerning the Sample Gentry; relating, perhaps, to a Spunkville
+merchant, who, having retreated precipitately down his cellar stairs
+several tunes during the day, to avoid "them confounded drummers, with
+their everlasting samples," was, while plodding his lonely way homeward,
+seized upon by these commercial freebooters, conveyed forthwith to the
+Half-Way House, and there deluged with such a perfect torrent of
+brow-beating eloquence as to reduce him to an imbecile state, in which
+condition he would willingly order large bills of goods, a custom still
+somewhat in vogue, and known as "commanding trade."
+
+At other times, it was refreshing to see a drummer emerge from a week's
+carousal, take a drink of plain soda, and write a long letter to his
+employers concerning the extreme dulness of trade.
+
+But since the new hotel had been built the Half-Way House had waned, and
+its quiet was only invaded by an occasional straggling traveller or a
+runaway couple, and its walls resounded with nothing more clamorous than
+the orgies of a Sunday-school picnic.
+
+It is, however, with the Ladies' Parlor only (that wretched abode of
+female discomfort in all country hotels) that we have to do.
+
+The furniture of the room consisted of the articles usually found in a
+_boudoir_ of this kind, to wit: a straight-backed sofa, much worn; the
+inevitable and horrid straw carpeting; that old Satanic piano, that
+never was in tune; an antique and rheumatic table, and three wheezy old
+chairs. The only present attempts at ornament were two in number. The
+first was a large engraving of the Presidents of the United States,
+which had formerly done duty in the bar-room, where the villagers were
+wont to gaze upon it in an awe-struck manner, being impressed with a
+vague idea that it was CHRISTY'S Minstrels. The second was a living
+statue, none other than ANN BRUMMET waiting for JEFFRY MAULBOY.
+
+"Half-past three, and not come yet," said she. "Look out, JEFFRY
+MAULBOY, for if you _do_ go back on me"--
+
+She paused, for she saw a man coming towards the house.
+
+"Well, if that ain't ARCHIBALD BLINKSOP," she added, "I'm regularly
+sold. What can _he_ want _here_?"
+
+Yes, it was ARCHIBALD sure enough, biting his finger-nails and breathing
+very short, while he cast furtive glances at the windows.
+
+He went slowly up the steps and into the entry just as Mrs. BACKUP, the
+landlady of the House, came out of her sitting-room.
+
+Now, Mrs. BACKUP was one of your eminently respectable females, who are
+always loaded to the muzzle with Beautiful Moral Essays, which they try
+to cram down everybody's throat, but never practise themselves. She
+formerly kept a boarding-house in the city, where, at table regularly
+after soup, she would regale those present with long dissertations on
+the shocking immorality of the present day, varying the monotony,
+perhaps, by allusions to the boarders who had just left. "Mr. SIMPSON
+was a pleasant-spoken young man as I want to see, and as good as the
+bank, but I'm afraid he _was_ agettin' dissipated;" or, "Mr. FIELDING
+was quiet and mannerly, and never found fault with his vittles, but he
+had _one_ DREAD_ful_ habit;" and then she would sigh heavily. And when
+little Miss PINKHAM, who occupied the second floor back (and who, being
+a schoolma'am, was naturally debarred from the other sex), indulged in
+the smallest possible flirtation with the good-looking young man
+opposite, Mrs. BACKUP'S sharp eye not only saw her, but Mrs. BACKUP'S
+sharp tongue took occasion to berate her severely on a Sunday morning
+(for then the boarders are all in), at the top of the first landing (for
+then the boarders could all hear her). "I _am_ saprised, Miss PINKHAM.
+Why, when I see that young man asittin' at his winder, and a blowin'
+beans. Yes, a blowin' beans, Miss PINKHAM, through a horrible tin
+pop-gun at _your'n_, and a winkin' vicious, and you a enjoyin' on it,
+Miss PINKHAM, I sot down; yes, I sot right down, and I shuddered. 'Sich
+doin's in _my_ house,' says I, 'I am totilly congealed.'" When all the
+time, mind you, the virtuous Mrs. BACKUP was a woman who would bear any
+amount of watching, having already caused three husbands to frantically
+emigrate to parts unknown.
+
+Seeing that ARCHIBALD hesitated, she said:--
+
+"Well, young man, what's wanted?"
+
+"I--I--want to see ANN BRUMMET," said ARCHIBALD.
+
+"Oh, you _do_, do you?" rejoined Mrs. BACKUP, regally; "and _who_, may I
+ask, is ANN BRUMMET?"
+
+"A young lady that I was--a--to meet here," replied ARCHIBALD, timidly.
+
+Mrs. BACKUP immediately organized a virtuous tableau, and glared at him
+majestically.
+
+"A young lady you was to _meet_ here. _In_-deed. And do you think, young
+man, that _my_ house is a place where young chaps can go a-roystorin'
+and a-gallivinatin' about, and a meetin' young women?"
+
+"But I don't want to go oysterin'," said ARCHIBALD, "and I don't know
+how to galvinate. I only want to tell her something."
+
+"Oh, to _tell_ her something, is it? Well, I'd have _no_ objections,
+young man, if you _said_ she was your wife. _Then_ you'd have a right,
+but not now, for my cha-_rac_ter is precious to me, young man."
+
+"But she ain't my wife," said ARCHIBALD; "I only--kind of know her, you
+see."
+
+"Drat the man," said Mrs. BACKUP to herself; "he's a born fool that
+can't take a hint like that. TEDDY!" she cried to a seedy-looking,
+pimply man, who was sucking a forlorn-looking pipe on the back-door
+step, "you're wanted." She whispered a few words in his ear, and went
+up-stairs.
+
+TEDDY MCSLUSH was the General Utility man of the Half-Way House. Born
+down East, of an Irish father and Scotch mother, he was eminently
+calculated to live by his wits. His natural talents were numerous and
+sparkling. He could tell more lies without notes than any man in the
+State, or make a beautiful prayer, all in the way of business. When a
+runaway couple were married at the Half-Way House, he would not only
+give the bride away in a voice broken by emotion, but he would bless the
+bridegroom with tears in his eyes, and he would do all this at the
+lowest market price. And every Sunday he dressed in a black suit and
+sung in the choir, and patted the little children on the head, and was
+generally respected.
+
+He approached ARCHIBALD, and poked him in the ribs, facetiously.
+
+"Ah!" he ejaculated; "and it's a cryin' shame, so it is, that a fine lad
+like yerself should be took with sich a complaint. It's modeshty what
+ails ye, man. And wasn't it Mester JOHN SHAKESPEER himself, him as writ
+the illegant versis, Lord luv his ashis, as says to me only jist afore
+his breath soured on him, 'TEDDY,' says he, wid much feelin', 'TEDDY,
+modeshty is a fine thing in a woman,' says he, 'but it's death to a man.
+Promise me now,' says he, 'for I feel as this clay is a coolin'
+fast--promise me, TEDDY, as you'll never hev nothink to do with it--no,
+not never, my boy.' I promised him, and Hevins knows as I've kep' my
+word. But, Lord alive, I'm a keepin' you all the time from yer own dear
+wife, as is a dyin' to see you--and a sweet dear it is."
+
+He ushered ARCHIBALD into the Ladies' Parlor, closed the door, and
+applied his ear to the key-hole, with an air of the most respectful
+attention.
+
+According to TEDDY'S way of thinking, ANN was not hankering for
+ARCHIBALD'S society.
+
+"What do you want _here_?" said she, sharply.
+
+"Oh, don't speak cross to me, Miss BRUMMET," said he, looking timidly
+around. Then he put his finger on his lip, and shook his head
+energetically.
+
+"I know all about it, you see," said he; "JEFF told me. Oh my! wasn't I
+struck up, though? But I'll never tell. _He_ couldn't come, you see. His
+mother sent for him, and--"
+
+"You lie," she broke in fiercely; "it's a put up job between you two.
+But it won't do; do you _hear_? It _won't do_."
+
+"Oh, don't look at me _that_ way," said ARCHIBALD, backing toward the
+door; "I want to go home."
+
+"I'd like to see you go home," she replied, placing her back against the
+door. "You must think I'm a fool, to let you off as easy as that. You've
+got to sit up with me this evening, anyhow."
+
+"But what would folks say?" stammered ARCHIBALD. "Oh, think of my
+reputation, Miss BRUMMET, and let me go."
+
+"Your reputation!" she sneered. "Humbug! Men don't have any reputation,
+except when they steal a woman's. Come," she added, in a more
+conciliatory tone, "we'll have some supper, and then we'll have a game
+of euchre."
+
+"Euchre! Oh, don't ask me to play euchre," said he; "I'm so mixed up,
+Miss BRUMMET, I couldn't tell the King of Ten-spots from the Ace of
+Jacks. Oh, won't BELINDA grab hold of my hair when she hears of this!"
+
+"Yes, she'll pull it till she makes her ARCHIE-_bald_," said ANN,
+laughing.
+
+ARCHIBALD sat down, and looked at her in a supplicating manner.
+
+"I'll do anything you say," said he, "if you please won't get off any
+more puns. It's awful. I knew a fellow once who had it chronic. He
+doubled every word that he could lay his tongue to. When he was going to
+a party, he'd take the dictionary and pick out a lot of words that could
+be twisted, and set 'em down and study on 'em, so he could be ready with
+a lot of puns, and when he got 'em off folks would laugh, but all the
+time they'd wish he'd died young. And that's the way he'd go on. He
+finally drove his mother into a consumption, and at her funeral, instead
+of taking on as he ought to, he only just looked at the body, and said,
+'Well, that's the worst _coffin-fit_ the old lady ever had.' And then he
+turned round and began to get off puns on the mourners. Wasn't it
+dreadful?--But what's that?"
+
+Somebody was knocking at the door.
+
+"What's wanted?" said ANN.
+
+"It's your minister as has come, mum," said TEDDY, from the outside.
+"What word shall I give him?"
+
+"Tell him I shan't want him," said ANN.
+
+In a few minutes TEDDY came back.
+
+"He says, mum, as he won't go without marryin' somebody, or a gittin'
+his pay anyway, for it's a nice buryin' job as he's lost by comin'."
+
+"But," said ANN, "I can't--" She hesitated, and seemed to form a sudden
+resolution. "Tell him," she continued, "tell him--"
+
+(To be continued.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BIOGRAPHICAL.
+
+
+ There was an agriculturist, philosopher, and editor,
+ Who thought the world his debtor and himself, of course, its creditor;
+ A man he was of wonderful vitup'rative fertility,
+ Though seeming an embodiment of mildness and docility,
+ This ancient agriculturist, philosopher, and editor.
+
+ The clothes he wore were shocking to the citizen æsthetical,
+ Assuredly they would not pass in circles which were critical,
+ So venerable were they, and so distant from propriety,
+ So utterly unsuited to respectable society,
+ Which numbers in its membership some citizens æsthetical.
+
+ He kept a model farm for every sort of wild experiment.
+ Which was to all the neighborhood a source of constant worriment;
+ For every one who passed that way pretended to be eager to
+ Discover pumpkin vines that ran across the fields a league or two,
+ So queer was the effect of each preposterous experiment.
+
+ He had a dreadful passion, which was not at all professional,
+ For going for an office, either local or congressional.
+ But though often nominated, yet the people wouldn't ratify,
+ Because they thought, quite properly, it would be wrong to gratify
+ The all-consuming passion that was not at all professional.
+
+ Among the many hobbies which he cantered on incessantly
+ Was one he called Protection, and he rode it quite unpleasantly;
+ For if any one dissented from his notions injudiciously,
+ He went for him immediately, ferociously and viciously,
+ Did this absurd equestrian who cantered on incessantly.
+
+ With which remarks the author of this brief, veracious history
+ Concludes his observations on the incarnated mystery
+ Known as an agriculturist, philosopher, and editor,
+ Who thought the world his debtor, and himself, of course, its creditor,
+ And who will surely figure on the oddest page in history.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FITTEST PLACE FOR A "PRESERVER" OF THE PEACE. A "Jam" on Broadway.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. HELMBOLD TO J.G. BENNETT, Jr. "Boo-shoo! fly."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A BRIGHT IDEA.
+
+_Customer_. "WAITER, BRING ME SOME FROZEN CLAMS."
+
+_Waiter (lately caught)_. "YES, SIR; WILL YOU HAVE 'EM ROASTED OR
+BILED?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WORDS AND THEIR USES.
+
+Nothing, except counting your stamps, can be more pleasant and exciting
+than tracing out the origin of words by the aid of a second-hand
+dictionary. It's the next funniest thing to grubbing after stumps in a
+ten-acre lot. Dentists make capital philologists--: they are so much
+accustomed to digging for roots. It's rather dull work to shovel around
+in the Anglo-Saxon stratum, but, as soon as you strike the Sanscrit,
+then you're off, and if you don't find big nuggets, it's because--well,
+it's because there are none there. Sometimes you dig down to about the
+time when NOAH went on his little sailing excursion, and strike what
+seems to be a first-class sockdolager of root, but what is the use?
+Unfortunately the philology business is overdone; it's chock full of
+first-class broken down pedagogues and unsuccessful ink-slingers, and,
+as soon as you offer a curious specimen in the way of roots, they write
+a book to prove that the root don't exist, or, if it does, that it
+should not.
+
+However, there is an advantage in knowing the roots of words, and the
+use to which they were put in former years. Everybody, you know, is very
+anxious to read CHAUCER and SPENSER. Now, after you have studied this
+subject about forty-two years, you will be able to read CHAUCER with the
+aid of an old English dictionary and an Anglo-Saxon grammar.
+
+Many so-called philologists, who have preceded me, have ignorantly
+derived words from improper sources. Thus, the compound word, shoofly,
+has been traced by some to the Irish word _shoe_, meaning a
+hoof-covering, and the French word _fly_, meaning an insect, when it is
+apparent to even the casual observer that it comes from the Guinea word
+_shoo_, meaning get out, and the English word _fly_, meaning a tripe
+destroyer. I propose, therefore, to show you the origin of a few words,
+in order that you may use them properly, and in order that you may
+subscribe freely for my book on this subject, which will shortly be
+placed before an admiring public.
+
+_Theatres_. When the players were servants of the king, they were
+compelled to be proficient in reading, riting, rithmetic, rhyming,
+riddling, reciting, rehearsing, and romping. These accomplishments were
+grouped together and called _the 8 r's_, which name naturally enough was
+soon applied to the play-houses. This example shows how simple the whole
+subject is, and how easily the philology business could he run by a
+child six years of age.
+
+_Country_. The origin of this word is, to say the least, odd. City
+people were accustomed to visit the rural districts at about the time
+when rye was ripe, and they were generally amused by the farmer's
+pereginations around his rye. Farmers always count rye-stacks in the
+morning, in order to discover whether any of them have been lifted
+during the night. When, upon their return to the City, the visitors were
+asked where they had been, they facetiously replied, "To count rye."
+This soon became a favorite expression; the "e" was dropped for euphony,
+and the rural districts were called country.
+
+_Spittoon_.--This word comes from the Greek word _spit_, meaning to
+slobber, and the Scotch word, _tune_, meaning the noise made by the
+bag-pipes. As the saliva struck the receptacle it made a noise
+delightful to the ears of the smoker, and resembling the note of the
+national instrument of Scotland. Hence the receptacle was called the
+spittoon.
+
+_Politics_.--Quack philologists, who evidently were insane, have gone
+back to the classics for the root of this word, when it is well known
+that immediately after the termination of the Revolution, when the
+Government of this country was about to be settled, the word came into
+existence. A woman, called POLLY, kept a corner grocery in New York, and
+all the fellows who wanted offices were accustomed to go to POLLY'S for
+their beer, because she trusted. Here they usually divulged their ideas
+of the manner in which the Government machine should be run. When asked
+why they went to that store, they always answered, "POLLY ticks."
+Outsiders, when asked what was going on in POLLY's store, always
+answered with a wise look, "POLLY ticks." The words soon spread, and
+talking about the Government was facetiously called POLLY ticks. The
+expression was finally used in earnest, and, by euphoric changes,
+reached its present shape.
+
+_Cheese-it_.--This compound word has by some silly person been traced to
+the Saxon _cyse_, meaning condensed cow, and the Celtic _it_, meaning
+it. Now every way-faring man, even though _non compos mentis_, knows
+that when he is invited to come in and cut a cheese, come in and take a
+drop of whiskey is meant. This word, then, is derived from the Sanscrit
+_cheese_, meaning drop, and the English _it_, meaning whatever you may
+happen to be saying, and the whole expression may be properly translated
+"drop that yarn."
+
+I might go on straight through the Dictionary, but I refrain, desiring
+only to show you what a light and entertaining subject philology is, and
+what quantities of fun you can get out of it on winter evenings.
+
+If any one should desire to pursue this subject further, let him go
+through CHAUCER, SPENSER, SHAKSPEARE, and MILTON with a fine-tooth comb
+and a pair of spectacles, looking for roots, and then try my book on
+"Words and their Uses." He had better not attack the latter work on an
+empty stomach. An empty head will be more appropriate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Mendicant Mission.
+
+Two fresh rumors about that unfortunate English Mission are afloat. One
+is that it has been tendered to the Hon. HENRY T. BLOW; the other is
+that the--well, no, not exactly Hon.--DAN. SICKLES is to be transferred
+from Madrid to the Court of St. JAMES. 'Tis much the same thing. If BLOW
+is appointed, it's BLOW; and if SICKLES is appointed, it's Blow, too.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Military Intelligence.
+
+The Fifth Regiment N.G.S.N.Y., composed altogether of Germans, have
+adopted the Prussian helmet with a spike on top. This is appropriate, as
+most Germans are linguists, and like to "spike the French."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Where to Commence the Civil Service Reform.
+
+In our Hotels and Restaurants.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+Regarding me thoughtfully for a moment, MARGARET asks, "What is an 'old
+comedy?'"
+
+I say to her, "An old comedy is to the comedy of to-day, precisely what
+an old beau, padded, painted, simpering with false teeth, and leering
+with rhumy eyes, is to a handsome, gallant young fellow, such as Mr.
+LESTER WALLACK impersonates in _Ours_ or _School_."
+
+To which she replies, "What are roomy eyes, dear?" (Being her fourth
+cousin by marriage, I am a sort of maiden aunt to her,--whence this
+respectful familiarity.) "Eyes in which there is room for the honest
+glances that never show themselves?'"
+
+I sternly remark that "nice girls never pun."
+
+"Yes," she replies; "punning, like beer and other vices, is the peculiar
+prerogative of men, I suppose. But you need not be afraid. I read
+PUNCHINELLO sometimes, and it is a terrible warning to people who are
+tempted to pun. I could give you frightful instances of the appalling
+depth to which the men who make puns in PUNCHINELLO occasionally sink."
+
+I hastily close the discussion by inviting her to come to WALLACK'S and
+see an old comedy. So we find ourselves on the following evening in the
+only theatre in the country where that rather important adjunct of a
+theatre--a company--is to be found,
+
+There are quantities of elegant dresses in the house,--the ladies having
+an idea that an old comedy is one of those things which every
+fashionable person ought to see. There are also numbers of nice young
+men, who, being the burning and shining lights of fashionable society
+(after their day's work behind the counter is ended), come to be bored
+by the old comedy, with a heroism which proves how immeasurably superior
+to the influences of tape and calico are their youthful souls. By the
+by, it is one of the unavoidable _désagréments_ of New York society that
+the wearer of the elegant dress is often conscious that her partner in
+the waltz knows precisely how many yards of material compose her skirt,
+and exactly how much it cost per yard, for the excellent reason that he
+himself measured it with his professional yard-stick, and cut it with
+his private scissors. This, however, is a subject that belongs not to
+old comedy, but to the extremely modern comedy of New York society. The
+two resemble each other only so far as they are fashionable and dull.
+
+But to our WALLACKIAN old comedy. The curtain rises upon the veteran
+GILBERT and the handsome ROCKWELL. They converse in the following style:
+
+GILBERT.--"Well, you young dog, ha! ha! So you have decided to make your
+old uncle happy by marrying my neighbor's daughter. Gad! I remember my
+own wedding-day. Well, well; we won't talk about that now, but hark ye,
+you young villain, if you don't marry the girl, I cut you off with a
+shilling."
+
+ROCKWELL.--"My dear uncle, I can have no greater pleasure than to fulfil
+your wishes. But suppose our adorable young neighbor has the
+ill-breeding to refuse me."
+
+GILBERT.--"Refuse you! Refuse my nephew? Gad! I'd like to see THOMAS
+OLDBOY permit his daughter to refuse my nephew! I'd--d--e, I'd--"
+(chokes and stamps with rage.)
+
+Further on we meet with Miss OLDBOY and her mother,--the latter a stout
+old lady, addicted to smelling salts and yellow silks.
+
+LYDIA OLDBOY.--"To-day I am expecting the arrival of young WILDOATS, who
+comes to pay his addresses to me. I wonder if he is like that dear,
+delightful THADDEUS OF WARSAW."
+
+Mrs. OLDBOY.--"Now, Miss, remember that your honored father insists upon
+this match. I expect you to be a dutiful daughter, and accede to his
+wishes. Here comes the young man himself."
+
+ROCKWELL.--"My. dear Mrs. OLDBOY, I am charmed to see you. You are
+looking positively younger than your ravishingly beautiful daughter.
+Fair LYDIA, I come to lay my heart at your feet. 'Tis the wish of my
+uncle and your honored father that we should unite our respective
+houses. Let me touch that exquisite hand. Unseal those ruby lips and
+tell me that I am the happiest of men."
+
+Here the UNCLE and OLDBOY enter. They chuckle, and poke one another in
+the ribs, remarking "Gad" and "Zounds" at intervals. They bless the
+young couple, and order up some of the old Madeira. The curtain falls as
+OLDBOY gives the health of the young people, with the wish that they may
+have a dozen children, and a cellar never without plenty of this
+splendid old Madeira,--"that your father, bottled, Miss LYDIA, the year
+our gracious sovereign came to the throne."
+
+This is a fair sample of the old comedy. The oaths are of course
+omitted, out of deference to the tender susceptibilities of the editor
+of PUNCHINELLO. So are the indecencies, which are the spice of the old
+comedy, but which cannot be written in a respectable journal, and are
+almost too gross and brutal for the _Sun_. Take from an old comedy its
+oaths and its grossness, and nothing is left but a residuum of
+boisterous inanity. The condensed old comedy which has just been laid
+before the readers of PUNCHINELLO, is as inane and vapid as anything
+that WALLACK'S theatre has shown us in the past month. Do you find it
+dull? For my part, I don't hesitate to say that the "Essence of Old
+Virginny," as furnished by the venerable poet, Mr. DANIEL BRYANT, is
+vastly more amusing than the Essence of Old Comedy.
+
+All of which I say, in my most impressive manner, to MARGARET as we
+struggle through the crowded lobby. But she irreverently disputes my
+assertions, and asks, "How is it that everybody admires these comedies
+if they are so wretched as you say they are? Is your judgment better
+than that of anybody else?"
+
+There being nothing to say, if I mean to maintain my ground, except that
+my judgment is the only infallible critical judgment in this city or
+elsewhere, I promptly and unblushingly say so. But MARGARET tells me I
+am "a goose"--(I think I have mentioned that she is my aunt, and hence
+allows herself these pleasing freedoms of speech)--and says that I shall
+take her to see the old comedies every night, until I am willing to say
+that I like them.
+
+Who is there that, in view of this threat, will not drop the tear of
+sensibility, so neatly alluded to by Mr. STERNE, in sympathy with the
+prospective sufferings of
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UNIVERSITY-MANIA.
+
+MY DEAR P.:--I have made some curious observations of this disease,
+which lead to startling conclusions.
+
+It is a malady peculiar to the United States, being an eruption
+resulting from indigestion of unripe knowledge, together with excess of
+vanity in individual blood.
+
+Universities spring up among us like mushrooms, in a night. The seed of
+knowledge is sown broadcast over our land. In fact, in this particular
+we may be said to be very seedy, indeed.
+
+For my part I have no objection to Universities--when they _are_
+Universities. But, at the rate at which we are now progressing, we shall
+soon have "every man his own University." It will become the fashion to
+keep a University in the back-yard. And then, you know, the institution
+must have its own particular organ, you know. Every man, and every
+member of his family, shall print his or her _Free Press_, and
+independence of opinion shall reign.
+
+ Glorious country! Glorious free speech!
+ With WALT WHITMAN, we may well exclaim:
+ O the BROWN University!
+ O the splendid University of SMITH!
+ O CORNELL, his University!
+
+ _&c. ad infinitum._
+
+As for me, dear NELLO, I am in the front rank of civilization. I have
+accepted the Chair of Cane-bottom in a Grub-Street garret, and rejoice
+in a barrel-organ, which plays with great freedom of speech.
+
+Yours pedagoguically,
+
+JEREMY DOGWOOD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A. Sop for Ireland.
+
+It is stated that Queen VICTORIA has ordered from a Dublin manufacturer
+an extensive assortment of Balbriggan hosiery for the wedding outfit of
+the Princess LOUISE. There is a stroke of policy in this. In firemen's
+phrase it may be called laying on the "hose" to quench disloyalty.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT. The Marine Hospital.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TRIALS OF A WITNESS.
+
+MR. PUNCHINELLO:--As all people seem to come to you with their troubles
+and grievances, I hope you will not refuse to listen to my woes. And
+whether they are woes or not, I leave you to judge for yourself.
+
+At the beginning of last week I made my first appearance in any
+court-room, in the character of a witness, in the case of VALENTINE
+vs. ORSON; in which the point in dispute was the ownership of a tract
+of land in Wyoming Territory. I knew something in regard to the sale of
+these lands, and was fully prepared to testify to the extent of my
+knowledge in the premises; but judge of my utter surprise and horror on
+being obliged to go through such an ordeal as the following extracts
+from my examination will indicate.
+
+The counsel for the plaintiff commenced by asking me if I was a married
+man, and when I had answered that. I was, he said:--
+
+"Is your wife a believer in the principles of the Woman's Rights party?"
+
+I could not, for the life of me, see what this had to do with the land
+in Wyoming, but I answered, that I was happy to say she was not.
+
+The examination then proceeded as follows:--
+
+_Q._ You are happy, then, in your matrimonial relations? _A._ Yes--(and
+remembering the oath) reasonably so.
+
+_Q._ Is your wife pretty? _A._ (Witness remembering at once his oath and
+his wife's presence in court) She is pretty pretty.
+
+_Q._ What are her defects? _A._ (Witness remembering only his wife's
+presence.) I have never been able to discover them.
+
+_Q._ Do you wear flannel? _A._ Yes, in winter.
+
+_Q._ Can you testify, upon your oath, that you do not wear flannel in
+summer? _A._ I can.
+
+_Q._ Now be careful in your answer. What do you wear in the spring and
+fall? _A._ I--I wear my common clothes.
+
+_Q._ With flannel, or without flannel? _A._ Sometimes with, and
+sometimes without.
+
+_Q._ No evasion; you must tell the Court exactly when you wear flannel,
+and when you do not.
+
+A series of questions on this subject brought out the fact that I wore
+flannel when the weather was cold, or cool; and did not wear it when it
+was mild, or warm.
+
+_Q._ Have you a lightning-rod on your house? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ How much did it cost you to have it put up? _A._ It has not cost me
+anything yet--I owe for it.
+
+_Q._ Is that all you owe for? _A._ No, I have other debts.
+
+_Q._ Have you any money with you now? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ How much? _A._ (Counting contents of porte-monnaie.) Sixty-two
+cents.
+
+_Q._ Where did you get that? _A._ (With embarrassment.) I borrowed it.
+
+_Q._ Were you present when defendant first offered his land for sale to
+the plaintiff? _A._ (Brightening up.) I was.
+
+_Q._ Do you burn gas or kerosene in your house? _A._ Gas.
+
+_Q._ How many burners? _A._ Ten, I think.
+
+_Q._ Are you willing to assert, upon your solemn oath, that there are
+only ten? _A._ (Witness counting on his fingers.) I am.
+
+_Q._ Do you wear studs or buttons on your shirt fronts? _A._ Studs.
+
+_Q._ Gold, or pearl? _A._ Mother-of-pearl, as a general thing, but
+sometimes I wear one gold one at the top.
+
+_Q._ Were all your studs of mother-of-pearl, at the time when you first
+heard this transaction mentioned between the parties? _A._ They were.
+
+_Q._ Do you ever wear your gold stud in the middle of your bosom? _A._
+No, sir, I always wear it at the top.
+
+_Q._ Do you ever wear it at the bottom? Can you swear it was not at the
+bottom on the day of the transaction referred to? _A._ I distinctly
+remember that I did not wear it at all that day.
+
+_Q._ Did you wear it that night? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Q._ Can you swear that after you went to bed you did not wear it? _A._
+I can.
+
+_Q._ Have you ever been vaccinated? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ On which arm? _A._ The left.
+
+_Q._ At the of the first mention of this land to the plaintiff, who were
+present? _A._ (Witness speaking with hopeful vivacity, as if he hoped
+they were now coming to the merits of the case.) The plaintiff, the
+defendant, and myself.
+
+_Q._ Do you use the Old Dominion coffee-pot in your house? _A._
+(Dejectedly.) No, sir.
+
+_Q._ What kind of a coffee pot do you use? _A._ A common tin one.
+
+_Q._ You are willing to swear it is tin? _A._ I am.
+
+_Q._ Has your wife any sisters? _A._ She has two; ANNA and JANE.
+
+_Q._ Are they married _A._ They are.
+
+_Q._ Are either of them prettier than your wife? _A._ (Quickly.) No,
+sir.
+
+_Q._ Have you any children? _A._ Two.
+
+_Q._ Have they had the measles? _A._ They have.
+
+_Q._ Has any other person in your household had the measles? _A._ I have
+had them, and my wife has had them.
+
+_Q._ How do you know your wife has had them? _A._ She told me so.
+
+_Q._ Then you did not see her have them? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Q._ We want no hearsay evidence here; how can you swear that she has
+had them when you did not see her have them? _A._ She told me so, and I
+believed her.
+
+_Q._ Did she take an oath that she had had them? _A._ No sir.
+
+_Q._ Then, sir, you are trifling with the Court. Do you understand the
+obligations of an oath? _A._ I do.
+
+_Q._ Beware, then, that you are not committed for perjury. Is your
+gas-metre ever frozen? _A._ Yes, sir.
+
+_Q._ What do you use when the gas will not burn? _A._ Candles.
+
+_Q._ How many to the pound? _A._ Nine.
+
+_Q._ How do you know there are nine to the pound? _A._ They are sold as
+nines.
+
+_Q._ Then you never weighed them yourself? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Counsel_, to the _Court_. May it please your Honor, this is the second
+time that this witness has positively testified, under solemn oath, to
+important points of which he has no certain knowledge. I ask the Court
+for protection for myself and my client.
+
+Here a long discussion took place between the lawyers and the Judge, and
+at the end of it the case was postponed for four months. I suppose it is
+expected that I will then re-ascend the witness-stand; but I have
+determined that when I enter a court-room again I shall appear as a
+criminal. These fellows have much the easiest times, and they run so
+little risk, nowadays, that their position is far preferable to that of
+the unfortunate witnesses.
+
+J. BADGER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Singular Fatuity.
+
+The reason why so few persons emigrate to this country from Poland, is
+the general belief prevailing there that we have throughout the Union a
+heavy Pole tax.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE A.B.C. OF NEW YORK SOCIALISM. ANDREWS, BRISBANE, AND CLAFLIN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THRILLING MELODRAMA.
+
+Scene: Lord DE VERE'S Manor: The Blue Chamber.
+
+_Lord De Vere._ "BUT ONE COURSE, LADY CLAUDE, IS LEFT TO RETRIEVE OUR
+FALLEN FORTUNES. WITH THESE DEAD CATS WE'LL FLY TO MICHIGAN AND START A
+MINERAL SPRING. THE MICHIGANDERS ARE WILD ABOUT THEIR SPRINGS, AND WITH
+THIS MATERIAL OURS CANNOT BUT BE A SUCCESS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ONE OF OUR SOCIAL HUMBUGS.
+
+_Old Gent (figuring up probable receipts of his silver wedding, close at
+hand)_. "I'VE HIRED A SPLENDID TEA-SERVICE FOR BROWN TO PRESENT TO US;
+IT WILL MAKE QUITE A SENSATION, AND I'VE GOT IT CHEAP FOR THE EVENING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS OF THE POLICE.
+
+I, MARY SMITH.
+
+ O gallant p'licemen, list to me,
+ I'll sing a mournful ditty
+ About a poor young serving-gal,
+ What lived in this here city.
+
+ She had a name, and SMITH it was
+ (The rest of it was MARY);
+ Her constant duty, at daybreak,
+ Was sweeping out the arey.
+
+ One evening she went to a jig
+ (Her missus was attending
+ A private hop), when there befel
+ What truly was heart-rending.
+
+ She wore her missus' gayest clothes,
+ Her muslin dress all fluty,
+ Her waterfall and tag-rags all,
+ Which well became her beauty.
+
+ But missus found poor MARY out,
+ And in a p'liceman took her,
+ And walked her up before the Judge,
+ On charge of being a hooker.
+
+ The missus swore the girl a thief
+ Her property as lifted,
+ Which proved beyond all doubt would be
+ When things came to be sifted.
+
+ The girl said she'd been to a jig;
+ Then out spoke Judge MCCARTY,
+ "You must not wear the fixings of
+ A party to a party."
+
+ They sent her up for sixteen months,--
+ Oh! drop a tear to MARY,
+ Whose missus ne'er shall see her more
+ A-sweeping out the arey.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sic Transit.
+
+Life being in any event a transitory affair, and especially so in New
+York, where, every one lives some miles from his business, our means of
+transit are of interest to every one. However well the owners of those
+at present in use may insist that they are, yet the public feels they
+should be better, and Mr. PUNCHINELLO, having the interest of his
+fellow-citizens at heart, most earnestly hopes that the undertakers of
+the last new scheme will not so mistake the meaning of this term as to
+suppose that their business with it is simply to bury it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Discounting a Bill.
+
+The Germans are disposed to glorify their king, and look upon him as the
+Great WILLIAM; but when they commence to calculate the cost of his
+glory, in men slaughtered, homes desolated, women beggared, industries
+destroyed, taxes increased, and liberty chained, it is more than
+probable that they will become disgusted with their Little BILL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query
+
+Can Russia's designs upon Turkey, at this season of the year, be
+attributed to her admiration and imitation of New England Thanksgiving
+customs?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Maniac's Mutterings.
+
+PUNCHINELLO'S special Lunatic gives it as his opinion, that a
+continuance of a horse-flesh diet in Paris must go far towards
+disturbing the Parisian Equine-imity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Old Saw Sharpened.
+
+Some one has applied the old Latin motto, _"Horas non numero nisi
+serenas,"_ to Mr. GREELEY, by making it read, "HORACE is of no account
+except when serene," which, by the by, he never is.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query for Naturalists.
+
+How can a person who stands four feet in his boots be called biped?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DENTS-LY FILLED. Government offices.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: KING WILLIAM OF PRUSSIA WAITING FOR HIS ALLY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HIRAM GREEN ON MARK TWAIN'S BABY.
+
+The "Lait Gustice" congratulates the newly organized Papa.
+
+SKEENSBORO, NYE ONTO VARMONT.
+
+Friend TWAIN--Allow an old statesman, which has served his country for 4
+yeers as Gustise of the Peece, rite a congratulotery letter to you on
+your success as a boy raisest. Altho your name is MARK TWAIN, I notiss
+that on this occashon you dident Mark but One.
+
+I am a little older in years and _Parentelism_ than you are, and am able
+to call myself the seenyer pardner in a firm who are the sole
+proprieters of eleven offspring and 2 grand-children.
+
+Raisin children is a bizziniss which haint every mans best holt, and as
+long as you've got into the bizziness, excoose me for givin you a little
+wisdom, which you as a parent must swaller without makin up a face.
+
+If your child, in its infantile days, is given to squallin nites, obtain
+a beverige, called soothin sirup, and just before you pull off your
+butes nites, give the little cuss about 3 tablespoons full, and he will
+sleep so sound that you can use him for a piller. Should he kick &
+squall, and refuse to take it, lay him down onto the floor, set on him,
+then takin hold of his nose, pour the stuff down his throte, and you've
+got him, ekal to Jo JEFFERSON'S Rip Van Winkle 20 yeers snooze.
+
+To amoose him--If your wife is too bizzy durin the day, doin the cookin,
+washin, &c. 4th, to amoose the child, give him an ink bottle, and set
+him down on the parler carpet. If he has any idee of geografy, when you
+come home nites you will find a good helthy map of the black sea, which
+Rooshy will insist on bein added to your war map.
+
+Another way of amusin him, is to give him a raiser, and let him play
+learn to shave. If he should cut his nose off, it would make the little
+_shaver smart_.
+
+If you expect to bring your boy up to hold offis,' let him cultivate
+cheek. This is done by tyin his grandmother in her rockin cheer, and
+lettin him pelt the old lady with snow balls in the winter time. In the
+summer time get him a bow and arrer, and let him see how neer he come to
+the venerable lady's nose without breakin her spectorcals. If this don't
+make him cheeky enuff to hold offis, let him pour a lot of benzine onto
+his little cuzzin, then push her onto a red hot cole stove. If he can do
+this and think it a joak, he will do for a cabinet offiser.
+
+If he tries to jump over parental authority, fill him with shot, same as
+_your_ man did his jumpin frog, only pour it into him with a mustick.
+
+If you've got any regard for our nashnal caracter, don't let your son
+rite comic copy for the noosepapers, after which, be so rash as to rite
+a book, and have English crickets set up their darn singin, when they
+catch your little _innocent abroad_.
+
+JOHN BULL don't tickle easy, remember that. I actually believe you
+couldent stir him with a hul bag full of laffin gas.
+
+As your boy has entered the Lecture field, I shouldent be surprised if
+he got up quite a _breeze_ on the roast-rum. In fact, when he opens his
+mouth before an audience, look out for _squalls_.
+
+When your offspring is big enuff to enjoy chastisin, remember the "good
+little boy," and examine your son's garments to see if the lad has been
+roostin onto any nitro-gleserine cans, lest the parental hand, when
+brought in contact with the youth's _habeas corpus_, mite necessitate the
+sweepin up of father and son's scattered remnants.
+
+Let your son reed the works on good morril men's lives.
+
+By the time he gets old enuff to read, I will have my life out in
+pamphlet form, and you can draw onto me for a copy. Beware of works of
+fiction. Don't let your boy have a great deal to do with such readin as
+HOYLE on Games, TOM PAINE on Infidelity, nor HORRIS GREELY on farmin.
+Such works are bringin more ruin onto the country, than the numerous
+jewrys of twelve talented men, who allow murderers to come the loonatic
+dodge over 'em.
+
+I don't believe in spoilin the rod and sparin the child, but I think it
+is well enuff to keep a rod hung up in the barn, where your child can
+occasionally look at it, to see what he will come to, if he undertakes
+to kick over the traces.
+
+Children are a good deal like wimmen. If you don't set _your_ foot down
+when you first get married your wimmen will raise _their_ foot up, and
+afore you realize any pain, your gentle form will be histed out into the
+street.
+
+With boys you must begin talkin _turkey_, when they are young _goblins_,
+ef you don't, when they get old enuff, they will "strike for their
+sires," and _gobble_ up the old man's scalp.
+
+Teach your son to honor his pa and ma, and decline the English mission,
+when it comes his turn.
+
+Between you and I, aspirants for the honor of bordin with St. JIMMY are
+on the _decline_, Pitty it haint a gin-cocktail. I shouldent be
+surprised, if some big criminal was sentenced to go there yet, which
+minds me of a konundrum. Why is the English mission like lager beer?
+
+Give 'er up?
+
+Because it ruins any _minister's_ reputation, who goes for it.
+
+Hopin that when you shovel off your mortil coil, that your mantle may
+not pass out of the family, and as time flies on with greased wings, you
+may make the family name _sound_ by bein able to Mark Twain in your
+family record, I drop the goose feather.
+
+Ewers, parentally,
+
+HIRAM GREEN, ESQ.,
+
+Lait Gustise of the Peece.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A SURE WAY OF DOING IT.
+
+Seekers after notoriety must often be at their wits' end for some new
+sensation with which to advertise themselves. Mr. TWAIN, for instance,
+having gone through Fenianism and France, seems to have collapsed for
+the present; and here now comes Mr. WEMYSS JOBSON, who subsided into
+oblivion years ago, but has just emerged again into the light of _The
+Sun_. The efforts of both these gentlemen to keep themselves prominently
+before the public, however, are very inadequate and feeble. They should
+suffer more and be stronger. Let TRAIN do a bold stroke of business by
+declaring himself the perpetrator of the latest mysterious murder, and
+it might be the making of the exhumed JOBSON to revive a fossilized
+memory, and confess himself to be the criminal who delivered the fatal
+blow to the late Mr. WILLIAM PATTERSON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+True to his Colors.
+
+A Bostonian visiting New York, not long since, and reading in the papers
+that there was to be a celebration of Mass in an up-town church, decided
+to remain over Sunday for it, thinking, Bostonially, that Mass meant
+Massachusetts and nothing else.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUITABLE INSCRIPTION FOR A BOATMAN'S RACE-PRIZE. "The noblest
+Row-man of them all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A NEW LEAF IN THE FAMILY HISTORY.
+
+_Jack._ "NOW, I'LL BE PAPA, GOING TO FIX THE FURNACE."
+
+_Sallie_. "OH, YES!--AND I'LL BE THE NEW NURSE, AND YOU MUST KISS ME
+BEHIND THE CELLAR DOOR!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: BEHIND THE TIMES.
+
+EXPLANATORY OF MR. JOHN BULL'S VIEWS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS OF THE CRADLE.
+
+CANTO XIII.
+
+ When I was a bachelor I lived by myself;
+ All the bread and cheese I had, I laid upon the shelf.
+ But the rats and the mice they made such a strife,
+ I was forced to go to London to buy myself a wife.
+ The roads were so bad, and the lanes were so narrow,
+ I had to bring my wife home in a wheelbarrow.
+ The wheelbarrow broke. My wife had a fall;
+ Deuce take the wheelbarrow, my wife, and all.
+
+The above lines were written when the author was quite advanced in
+years; when he had solved, in his humble way, the great problem of life,
+and discovered the futility of mundane things generally, and t
+undesirableness of an unsuccessful or unfortunate existence; when he
+could look back through a long vista of years, and see the follies of
+his youth and the mistakes of his manhood. It should have been placed at
+the end of his book, with only the word Finis after it; but somehow,
+either by mistake of the author or of the publisher, it was placed among
+the records of the simple events of the village, and thus loses half its
+force. However, let the history, placed as it is, be a warning to rash
+young men who contemplate matrimony; and let them give heed to it, lest
+they also have cause to repent of their doings and exclaim with the
+poet:--
+
+ "The deuce take it."
+
+Observe how pathetic and touching his reminiscence of his lost youth and
+the priceless boon of liberty. He commences in a quiet descriptive way,
+leaving one at a loss to know whether it is to be a joyful lyric a dirge
+he intends singing.
+
+ "When I was a bachelor I lived by myself;
+ All the bread and cheese I had I laid upon the shelf."
+
+Here we have him alone, at peace with himself and the world; happy in
+the contemplation of his beloved muse; jotting down, now and then, the
+brilliant ideas that flash through his teeming brain; and munching in
+solitude his homely meal of bread and cheese. In telling us he laid his
+bread and cheese upon the shelf, he at once shows he had left his
+parental abode, and the ministering and watchful care of his maternal
+parent.
+
+There must, of course, have been a cause for such a step. Some reason
+why the gentle being should have been wrought up to that pitch, when he
+daringly throws off all restraint, and steps into the world to act and
+think for himself. It may have been the want of sympathy that drove him
+to the act. They were plain folks, and didn't appreciate his peculiar
+turn of mind, and so only laughed at him, and ridiculed his pretensions.
+That there was a quarrel there is no manner of doubt, and it was
+probably caused by the mortifying act of his mother in fainting when he
+read her the poetry he had written at her request. That, in itself, was
+enough to break all ties between them. She was horrified and overwhelmed
+with dismay that a child of hers could be guilty of such atrocious
+rhymes; and he, in turn, was disgusted that a mother of his should be so
+unappreciative and earthly. And so, by mutual consent, they separated.
+
+That accounts for his bachelor habit of laying his bread and cheese on
+the shelf that he might have it handy, and not forget where he had
+placed it. But as
+
+ "The rats and mice made such a strife,"
+
+he found that would never do. Something else must be thought of; and
+being an inventive genius, he tried putting it in his trunk, but it
+scented his Sunday jacket and trousers, and the girls all turned up
+their noses at the odd perfume. So, driven to extremity, he in an evil
+hour decided, as many another has since done, that the remedy for his
+ills was matrimony, and that it was not well for man to live alone.
+
+A Prophet is without honor in his own country, and so ofttimes is a
+Poet. To his bashful supplication of "Wilt thou?" the young maidens if
+his village unhesitatingly refused to wilt, and thus it was that
+circumstances forced him
+
+ "To go to London to buy himself a wife."
+
+How fortunate that he should give us, inadvertently as it were, the
+information so necessary to the unlucky young men of this later day, the
+best place to go shopping for wives! No man after reading the above need
+say "he doesn't marry because he cannot, as no one will have him." He
+need not stop for that hereafter, but just go to London, pick out one to
+suit, pay the price, and bag the article. It can all be done in a day,
+and save time wonderfully.
+
+He bought his wife--a cheap one undoubtedly--and gave his promise to
+pay; then started homeward, feeling his importance as a married man, and
+chuckling over the idea of the astonishment and dismay of the rats and
+mice when he should set his wife after them, and thereby deprive them of
+their daily rations. But while musing thus, he discovers his wile shows
+signs of fatigue, as
+
+ "The roads were bad, and the lanes were narrow,"
+
+and not wishing to have her exhausted before commencing business, he
+gallantly determined to give her a ride, well knowing she would need all
+her strength for the battle he intended she should win.
+
+So borrowing a wheelbarrow of a trusting neighbor, he seated her
+therein, and amid great rejoicing at his extraordinary "luck" he set
+forward. But now comes the sad part of the story:
+
+ "The wheelbarrow broke--my wife had a fall."
+
+And what a fall was there, my countrymen! Words are inadequate. The
+scene was indescribable, and we leave a blank that each may picture it
+to suit themselves.
+
+After the excitement occasioned by the catastrophe was somewhat abated,
+he picked up the pieces and tried to put the wheelbarrow together again.
+But it was too far gone; it was un-put-togetherable, and so he, more in
+sorrow than anger, stood gazing at the wreck, while his wife, being a
+woman, could not resist the impulse to cry exultingly, "I told you so; I
+knew it." That on top of all the rest of his trouble was a little too
+much; and after fumbling over the pieces a while, "I told you so"
+ringing in his ears, he completely lost his temper, and vented his
+passion in the words:--
+
+ "The deuce take the wheelbarrow."--
+
+and then in a low voice, cautiously turning his head aside, he added:--
+
+ "My wife and all."
+
+Together they trudged homeward. Fearful misgivings as to the wisdom of
+his step came swooping down upon him, and he almost wished he had not
+tried to mend matters, but had patiently borne with the rats, when
+suddenly--the vision of a _cat_ swept athwart his mind, and he groaned
+aloud in bitterness of spirit.
+
+Not even the ever after clean hearth-stone, with the dead bodies of his
+enemies, the rats, piled thereon, could make him forget that one moment
+of agonizing consciousness, when he realized for the first time that he
+had burdened himself with a wife when a cat would have answered as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HURLY-BURLY.
+
+ No wonder that the folks turn pale
+ And preachers talk of doom,
+ Since by each telegram and mail
+ Come words of awful gloom:
+
+ Explosions of N. glycerine;
+ Expulsion of the Pope;
+ Earthquakes along the Eastern line
+ And THE PACIFIC SLOPE.
+
+ Surely the world is upside down,
+ Its framework out of joint;
+ At coming change all things of town
+ And country seem to point:
+
+ The very sea some day may try
+ To climb the mountain side,
+ And hill-folks yet be staggered by
+ THE MOANING OF THE TIED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+By Diligence from Paris to Versailles--Fastest Time on Record--Happy
+Travelling Companions--Mud, Misery, and Malignity--Life on the Road.
+
+
+NEAR ST. CLOUD, NINTH WEEK OF THE REPUBLIC, 1870.
+
+It would have done you good to see us getting over that muddy, jagged,
+rutty old turnpike that leads off from the south of the Bois de Boulogne
+toward St. Cloud and Versailles. Since writing my last, I had been to
+Paris _par ballon monté,_ and was now returning in the _diligence_ that
+took five American ladies and a couple of war correspondents, all
+friends of WASHBURNE, away from the temptation of eating horse-flesh in
+the beleaguered city, to such edibles as the rapacity of the German
+appetite had left undevoured in the neighborhood of the old "stamping
+grounds" of Louis XVI. We were not a jolly party. It rained in torrents,
+and our little driver perched upon the box in front smoked the most
+infernal tobacco I ever smelt. Moreover, the horses were not lively
+steeds. They were rather safe than otherwise, and not given to running
+away. Although the driver addressed himself to their flanks, between
+each puff of smoke, with a pointed stick, they didn't rear and plunge so
+as to frighten the ladies, and that was a point gained, albeit we had
+leisure to count the pickets in the fences as we dragged toward our
+destination. One of our lady passengers came from Connecticut, and she
+talked with a nutmeg dialect that made her garrulity oftentimes quite
+spicy. We two sat back to back, and when the vehicle lurched heavily her
+chignon took me "amidships" (if I may be permitted the expression) with
+a concussion that felt like the impact of a muffled ball from a
+six-pound field howitzer. "Goodness gracious, dew git eout of the way
+and give me some room, man!" she would exclaim as our wagon plunged into
+a three-foot "gore" and the coachee plied his pointed ramrod with
+increased vigor to the attenuated haunches of the insensible beasts.
+
+"My dear madam, you will perceive that I cannot 'git' any further
+without climbing upon the back of my companion in front." Lord knows I
+would have given a hundred francs to be out of her reach; but we had
+been all ticketed and labelled through under the same "pass," and there
+was no such thing as dissolving partnership _now._
+
+"Ugh!" she muttered, putting her handkerchief to her nose, "and that
+horrid smoke too!" But the imperturbable director of our flight took no
+heed, and drew away at his clay idol with unabated satisfaction. 'Twas
+thus we jogged on for five weary hours, "OLD CONNECTICUT" charging head
+foremost at my spinal column with a frequency and momentum that made me
+believe, finally, she did it on purpose. Three miles out from St. Cloud
+we found the road completely blocked up with artillery wagons, and saw
+large masses of troops moving through the fields on either side. It
+still rained incessantly, and the forlornness of the situation was no
+wise relieved by the distant booming of guns, and the sucking sound of
+the wheels in the mud.
+
+"Oh, my!" sail a thin, squeaky voice on the back seat. "I believe they
+are coming this way. Do let us get out, SARAH. I would rather die on the
+road than be murdered in such a sepulchre as this."
+
+She referred to a battalion of the Landwehr that had just denied into
+the road, not a hundred yards in front of us.
+
+"Stop your sniffling back there!" peevishly exclaimed "OLD CONNECTICUT."
+"It would serve you right if they bayonetted you;" and she added
+emphasis to her expostulation by planting her chignon between my
+shoulder-blades with terrific force.
+
+I felt at once that either my back or my gallantry would have to give
+way; so I took a bond of fate, and sacrificed the latter on the spot.
+
+"That'll do--that'll do," I remonstrated. "No more of that; if you want
+to knock the brains out of that haystack on the back of your head, why,
+knock away; but spare my bones, if you please."
+
+I looked around, and she looked around with such suddenness as to bring
+her nose in contact with the brim of my hat, and force the tears from
+her eyes. She started to her feet, and I verily believe would not have
+postponed hostilities a moment, had not the door of the _diligence_ just
+then been opened, and a Prussian officer demanded to see our papers. I
+paraded the "documents," and he said they were "good;" but he also said
+that we must make up our minds to halt here until the following morning,
+as there was a movement of the troops, and no vehicles would be
+permitted to pass this point.
+
+_Gaudeamus!_ I could have sworn, but my wrath sailed away when I saw
+what a volcano was working in the bosom of "OLD CONNECTICUT." She didn't
+strike the officer, or utter a single complaint in his hearing, but sat
+down as if she had been a spile driven through the top of the coach, and
+let the vinegar run out of her eyes in pure impotency of speechless
+rage.
+
+"SARAH'S" companion on the back seat broke forth afresh, and again
+wanted to know as to the probability of our being charged upon and put
+to the sword. I couldn't hear "SARAH'S" answers to these harrowing
+questions, but it seemed to me as if she were trying to throttle her
+timid friend into a perfect sense of security. Whatever she did had the
+desired effect, and I heard no more from the "back seat."
+
+It was nightfall ere the several members of our little colony composed
+themselves to await in such tranquillity as they could command, the
+ordeal of sleeping, sitting bolt upright in a French _diligence,_ upon a
+dark, tempestuous night, and surrounded on all sides by the dreadful
+presence of "red-handed war." The last thing I remember ere the drowsy
+god "MURPHY" sent his fairies to weave their cobwebs about my eyelids,
+was "OLD CONNECTICUT." She didn't look like the battering-ram that she
+was. She had taken that chignon for a pillow, and fastened it to the
+back of the seat. Her head was thrown back; her chin had fallen, and at
+the extreme tip of her thin red nose a solitary tear glistened like a
+dew-drop on a beet. Once, about midnight, she awoke me by her snoring,
+but I gave the old gal's chignon a hitch, and it was all right again.
+
+Yours, somniferously,
+
+DICK TINTO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THOSE COUNTRY COUSINS AGAIN.
+
+_Celia (just arrived from the country)._ "JUST THINK, JANE, COUSIN JOHN
+IS TO BE MY ESCORT TO THE FRENCH BAZAAR AND THE NILSSON CONCERTS, AND
+BOOTH'S AND WALLACE'S, AND THE OPERA BOUFFÉ, AND LOTS OF OTHER
+FIRST-CLASS SHOWS!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FACTS ABOUT THE ENGLISH MISSION.
+
+It is not true that I ever accepted the English Mission; and if any man
+says I did, I now deliberately brand him as a Liar and Villain.
+
+I am not going to deny that the place was offered me, but I do
+unhesitatingly, say that I never absolutely consented to take it.
+
+Gen. GRANT may have construed my note on the subject as an unqualified
+acceptance, but that was owing entirely to his devouring desire to get
+the thing off his hands, and not to any ambiguity in my language.
+
+"No, Mr. PRESIDENT," I said in the note, "far be it from me to stand
+between my friend, Mr. GREELEY, and the gratification of his noble
+desire to wear military things at receptions abroad. Moreover your
+Excellency, I would not for the world deprive our cousins and other
+relations in England of an opportunity to cultivate the grand old art of
+swearing under the instruction of so eminent a professor as HORACE."
+
+This is the sort of language I used, and I don't see how any man except
+Gen. GRANT could get hold of it the wrong way.
+
+Of course I had some reasons besides those stated in my note for
+declining the Mission, but I did not want to hurt the President's
+feelings by going over the whole ground.
+
+It was not unknown to me that the situation had been offered to about
+five thousand persons before it came round to my turn, or that the
+English Mission had fallen into a general decline. I knew all about that
+just as well as Gen. GRANT, but it would not have done any good to
+parade my knowledge on the subject.
+
+There was the Hon. THOS. JENKINS who refused to take it, because his
+wife had a prejudice against Bulls ever since she was scared by one that
+chased her five miles for no other reason than that she was what might
+be called a red woman--well-read in the exciting house-wife literature
+of the day. JENKINS positively declined.
+
+Then it was offered to Col. CANNONAYDE, who declined it because his
+mother-in-law declared that she would go along too, if he went, and he
+thought it would be better not to let her have a change of air, as she
+was in a fair way to wind up pretty soon by remaining near those swamps.
+CANNONAYDE wanted the place kept open till after the funeral, but this
+was not granted.
+
+The next offer was made to Gen. BRAYLEIGH; but _he_ refused it on the
+ground that he had made arrangements for going into the coal trade, and
+he could not be sure of holding the place more than a few weeks. Anyway,
+he thought it would not pay to give up the coalition he had entered into
+with another party. In fact, old BRAYLEIGH treated the whole matter very
+coldly.
+
+It was next tendered to the Hon. THEOPHILUS SKINNER, but peremptorily
+declined because SKINNER'S district had become Democratic since he was
+elected, and he knew that if he resigned an infamous cannibal copperhead
+would be sent to Congress in his stead. SKINNER consulted all the
+leaders of his party, and they unanimously agreed that it would be
+better to let every court in Europe be without an American
+representative than risk the loss of that district.
+
+Everybody knows why the Rev. Dr. BANGWELL, of Chicago, did not accept
+it. The Doctor expected his divorce case to come on in a few days, and
+could not neglect that; and besides, he had made all the arrangements
+for his other marriage, and sent out the invitations. If the President
+had just made some inquiries before appointing Dr. BANGWELL, he could
+have found out that the Doctor's engagements would not permit him to
+leave Chicago on any account.
+
+The offer that was made to Col. KAMPSTUHL was declined solely because
+the Colonel had an old score to settle with Gen. GRANT for something in
+the way of a court-martial that happened near Tricksburg. He swore that
+he would get square with the author of that business sometime, and when
+the mission was offered to him (by accident, for Gen GRANT had forgotten
+all about the court-martial), he got up a sepulchral voice, and said,
+"Ha, ha! R-e-e-e-vendge at last!" and then wrote a bitter letter to
+Washington on the subject.
+
+After that it was peddled all round the country in a promiscuous way,
+and offered in succession to a blacksmith who used to shoe horses for
+Gen. GRANT, a conductor who refused to take fare from a well-known
+Presidential excursion party, a dealer in hides who had conferred some
+high obligations when a certain official was in the tanning business, a
+grocery-keeper, a family shoemaker, a manufacturer of matches, and such
+a multitude of people, in fact, that it finally got to be looked upon as
+the greatest missionary undertaking of modern times.
+
+The only really prominent man that the place was not tendered to is
+GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN; but I wouldn't say that it won't get around to him
+somewhere in Asia before the circle is completed.
+
+All these things were very well known to me before the office was placed
+at my disposal, but I did not care to wound the fine sensibilities of
+the President by saying anything about them in my note.
+
+My reason for declining in favor of Mr. GREELEY has been stated--I put
+the whole matter frankly to Gen. GRANT--but I can't say whether the
+suggestion I offered has been acted upon or not. The only thing I am
+certain about on this point is, that if the offer should be made to
+HORACE, it won't get around to GEORGE FRANCIS afterwards.
+
+There has been so much talk about this business, that I have considered
+it a sacred duty to state the facts and let some floods of light shine
+upon the whole thing. The duty is now conscientiously, discharged.
+
+DARBY DODD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Truth In a Nut-shell
+
+CHANCELLOR CROSBY, in his inaugural address, has, we may say, bored
+right to the root of the whole vexed question of education, and
+extracted it, as will be seen from this extract: "It need hardly be
+urged," says the new Chancellor, and we hope, all the discontented will
+take the full force of the remark, "It need hardly be urged that the
+didaskalos should be didaktitos, and yet perhaps emphasis on so plain a
+truth may be sometimes necessary." Let us thank the Chancellor for
+forever removing this necessity.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | Have made very large additions to their stock of |
+ | |
+ | CLOAK VELVETS, VELVETEENS, PLUSHES, ASTRAKHANS, MILLINERY |
+ | and TRIMMING VELVETS, Etc. |
+ | |
+ | THE MOST CELEBRATED |
+ | |
+ | CLOAK VELVETS. |
+ | |
+ | CONFINED STYLES, |
+ | |
+ | AT |
+ | |
+ | UNPRECEDENTED BARGAINS, |
+ | |
+ | CONSEQUENT ON PURCHASES MADE IN |
+ | |
+ | LYONS AND OTHER CENTRES |
+ | |
+ | OF MANUFACTURE, AT PANIC PRICES. |
+ | |
+ | For the convenience of Customers, the above are exhibited in |
+ | the Section of the main floor next to the corner of Tenth |
+ | street, |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, 4th Avenue, 9th and 10th Streets. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE EXHIBITING |
+ | |
+ | An Important Purchase of |
+ | |
+ | Rich Plain Silks, |
+ | |
+ | 27 INCHES WIDE, KNOWN AS |
+ | |
+ | UNWATERED MOIRE ANTIQUE, |
+ | |
+ | REPRESENTING IN VALUE |
+ | |
+ | $100,000, |
+ | |
+ | AT $4 AND $4.50 PER YARD, |
+ | |
+ | THE SAME HAVING BEEN SOLD AT $6 AND $6.50 |
+ | PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | SPECIAL ATTENTION IS INVITED TO THESE |
+ | GOODS FOR HOLIDAY PRESENTS. |
+ | |
+ | A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF |
+ | BLACK AND WHITE |
+ | STRIPED SILKS, |
+ | AT 75c. PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | Plain Japanese Silks, |
+ | HIGH COLORS, |
+ | AT 75c. PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | Three Cases Fancy Silks, |
+ | IN VARIOUS STYLES-FRESH GOODS, |
+ | $1 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | Five Cases Dress Silks, |
+ | NICE QUALITY, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | A LARGE QUANTITY OF |
+ | BONNET BLACK SILKS, |
+ | AT $3.75 AND $3 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | REAL IRISH POPLINS, NEW, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | A FULL LINE OF |
+ | IRISH TARTAN POPLINS, |
+ | IN TWENTY-FIVE DIFFERENT CLANS. |
+ | |
+ | AMERICAN BLACK SILKS, |
+ | GUARANTEED TO WEAR WELL, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | FORMING IN ALL RESPECTS THE MOST |
+ | ATTRACTIVE STOCK THEY HAVE |
+ | EVER OFFERED. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, Fourth Ave., |
+ | |
+ | 9th and 10th Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. 6-3/5 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 12-1/8 x 16-1/2. |
+ | |
+ | 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 16-1/8 |
+ | |
+ | Summer Fruit, and Autumn Fruit. (Half chromes.) |
+ | 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: THE PROPOSAL.
+
+_Ambitious Foreigner._ "AH! MEECE BULLION, BECAUSE I AM POOR YOU SCORN
+MY HAND; BUT REMEMBER HOW ZE POET HE TELL YOU ZE MAN'S ZE GOLD."
+
+_Miss B._ "GO DOWN TO PAR, THEN--_I_ HAVE NOTHING MORE TO SAY ON THE
+SUBJECT."]
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "THE PRINTING HOUSE OF THE UNITED STATES" AND "THE UNITED |
+ | STATES ENVELOPE MANUFACTORY." |
+ | |
+ | GEORGE F. NESBITT & CO |
+ | |
+ | 163,165,167,169 Pearl St., & 73,75,77,73 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 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, |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | 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 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO. |
+ | |
+ | With a large and varied experience in the management |
+ | and publication of a paper of the class herewith submitted, |
+ | and with the still more positive advantage of an Ample |
+ | Capital to justify the undertaking, the |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO. |
+ | |
+ | OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the new |
+ | |
+ | Illustrated Humorous and Satirical |
+ | |
+ | WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which was issued under |
+ | date of April 2. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs or suggestive |
+ | ideas or sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications cannot be returned, unless |
+ | postage stamps are enclosed. |
+ | |
+ | TERMS: |
+ | |
+ | One copy, per year, in advance $4 00 |
+ | Single copies 10 |
+ | A specimen copy will be mailed free upon the receipt |
+ | of ten cents. |
+ | One copy, with the Riverside Magazine, or any other |
+ | magazine or paper, price $2.50, for 5 50 |
+ | One copy, with any magazine or paper, price $4, for 7 00 |
+ | |
+ | All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed to |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, |
+ | |
+ | P.O. Box 2783. NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PROFESSOR JAMES DE MILLE, |
+ | |
+ | Author of |
+ | |
+ | "THE DODGE CLUB ABROAD" |
+ | |
+ | AND OTHER HUMOROUS WORKS, |
+ | |
+ | Will Commence a New Serial |
+ | |
+ | IN THE NUMBER OF |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | JANUARY; 7th, 1871, |
+ | |
+ | Written expressly for this Paper. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A CHRISTMAS STORY, |
+ | |
+ | "Written expressly for this Paper, |
+ | |
+ | By FRANK R. STOCKTON, |
+ | |
+ | Author of "Ting-a-ling," etc., etc., |
+ | |
+ | WILL BE COMMENCED IN No. 38, FOR DECEMBER 17TH, AND |
+ | CONCLUDED IN THREE NUMBERS. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Volume 2, No. 37,
+December 10, 1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10544 ***
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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
+ content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of PUNCHINELLO Vol. II, No. 37.</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
+ * { font-family: Times;}
+ HR { width: 33%; }
+ // -->
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10544 ***</div>
+
+<table width="800" border="1" align="center" cellpadding="3"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>TIFFANY &amp; CO.,</big></big></big></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>UNION SQUARE,<br>
+ </big></p>
+ <p>Offer a large and choice stock of</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;"> <big>LADIES'
+WATCHES,</big></p>
+ <p>Of all sizes and every variety of Casing, with Movements of
+the finest quality.</p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p><big><big>We will Mail Free</big></big></p>
+ <p><small>A COVER</small><br>
+ <b>Lettered &amp; Stamped,</b><br style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <b>with New Title Page<br>
+ <br>
+ </b> <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>
+ <b>83 Nassau Street.</b> </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/163.jpg"><br>
+ <h1>PUNCHINELLO</h1>
+ <h2>Vol. II. No. 37.</h2>
+ <p>SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 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., Boston.</b></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;"
+ align="center" border="1" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td rowspan="4" 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>
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+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>MAN AND WIVES.</b></p>
+ <p>A TRAVESTY.</p>
+ <p><b>By MOSE SKINNER.</b></p>
+ <p>CHAPTER FOURTH.</p>
+ <p>THE HALF-WAY HOUSE</p>
+ <p><img alt="T" align="left" src="images/165.jpg">he first person
+to discover that ANN BRUMMET had left the house, was Mrs. LADLE, Now,
+ever since the Hon. MICHAEL had asked ANN to go to the circus, Mrs.
+LADLE had hated her. But when he took ANN to the Agricultural Fair, and
+bought her a tin-type album and a box of initial note-paper, Mrs. LADLE
+was simply raving. Whether she herself was viewing the Hon. MICHAEL
+with an eye matrimonial, and was jealous of ANN, must remain an open
+question. At any rate, she was the first to start the scandal about ANN
+and JEFFRY, and lost no time in conveying it to the ears of the Hon.
+MICHAEL, with profuse embellishments. At the croquet party the Hon.
+MICHAEL had been particularly sweet on ANN, his ardor finding vent in
+such demonstrations as throwing kisses at her slyly, holding up printed
+lozenges for her inspection, or tossing sticks at her and dodging
+behind a tree. And when Mrs. LADLE went to ANN'S room next day, for a
+good square scold, she found her out.</p>
+ <p>Now Mrs. LADLE was a mother-in-law, and consequently a pretty
+old fowl in ferreting out things of this sort. She determined to
+discover the why and wherefore of ANN'S departure. If she could
+confront the Hon. MICHAEL with proofs of ANN'S indiscretion, it would
+be the loudest kind of feather in her cap.</p>
+ <p>She examined everybody in the house, and everybody that went
+by the house, but without the smallest result. She was out in the front
+yard waiting for a fresh victim, when she saw HERSEY DEATHBURY coming
+up the road. She signed to her to come in.</p>
+ <p>She came in.</p>
+ <p>HERSEY DEATHBURY was an extraordinary woman. A woman of
+genius, sir. What if her make-up <i>was</i> limited? What if, when she
+was born, nature <i>was</i> economizing, and gave her only one eye,
+and she was lame and hump-backed, and hadn't got any eyebrows and wore
+a wig; what of that? It's to her credit, <i>I</i> say. You saw her
+just as she was. No airs <i>there</i>. And in this lay the great charm
+of H. DEATHBURY'S character. Looking at her closely, you would see a
+fixed and stony eye and a chronic scowl, and you would say:
+"Disposition a little morose; some man has soured on her." Looking at
+her more closely, you would see under her right arm a common
+blackboard, such as is used in schools, and over her shoulder a canvas
+bag containing lumps of chalk, and you would say: "A little eccentric;
+likes to write on the blackboard instead of talking. Would make a nice
+wife. Looks, on the whole, like a country schoolma'am, whom the boys
+have stoned out of town, with the fixtures of the school-house tied to
+her." But she has talents. What is she, an authoress? "Yes, she is."
+But, like other authoresses, she isn't appreciated, and has returned to
+her legitimate occupation, the Wash-Tub; but still doth she itch for
+fame, and so, between times, she writes verbose essays on Female
+Suffrage, composed during the process known as "wringing." And when
+there's a Woman's Rights Convention in that locality, she sits on the
+platform, and applauds all the Red-Hot Resolutions with that trenchant
+female weapon, the umbrella, in one hand, and an antediluvian reticule
+the other. In the words of the Hon. MICHAEL: "She is not only a leading
+ <i>Re</i>former, sir, but a great <i>Plat</i>former." And Mrs.
+LADLE will tell you that, as a washer, she is superb. She "does up
+things" in a manner simply celestial.</p>
+ <p>Mrs. LADLE told her first to shut the door.</p>
+ <p>"Have you seen ANN BRUMMET to-day?" she said.</p>
+ <p>HERSEY nodded.</p>
+ <p>"Where?" was the eager inquiry.</p>
+ <p>HERSEY DEATHBURY placed her blackboard against the wall,
+unslung her chalk, and wrote in very large letters:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"I C hur a-Goin on The rode 2 forneys Kragg."</p>
+ <p>"Ah!" ejaculated Mrs. LADLE joyfully, "traced at last." And
+she ran to tell the Hon. MICHAEL all about it.</p>
+ <div style="text-align: center;"> <span
+ style="margin-left: 1.75em;">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; *</span> </div>
+ <p>The Half-Way House at Forney's Crag was a hoary-headed old
+vagabond of a house, that had passed the heyday of its youth long
+before that great encyclopaedia, the oldest inhabitant, emitted his
+first infantile squawk. Each successive season caused it to lean a
+little more and the most casual observer must perceive that it couldn't
+by any possibility become much leaner without pining entirely away.</p>
+ <p>Nevertheless, it had been the only hotel that Spunkville could
+boast, all within a short period of this writing. Like most Western
+hotels, it had been ably supported by a large floating population,
+known as "New York Drummers," and many a time had its old walls
+re-echoed with their guileless hilarity and moral tales; and, if the
+ancient and time-honored spittoon in the bar-room could speak, it could
+relate wonderful stories concerning the Sample Gentry; relating,
+perhaps, to a Spunkville merchant, who, having retreated precipitately
+down his cellar stairs several tunes during the day, to avoid "them
+confounded drummers, with their everlasting samples," was, while
+plodding his lonely way homeward, seized upon by these commercial
+freebooters, conveyed forthwith to the Half-Way House, and there
+deluged with such a perfect torrent of brow-beating eloquence as to
+reduce him to an imbecile state, in which condition he would willingly
+order large bills of goods, a custom still somewhat in vogue, and known
+as "commanding trade."</p>
+ <p>At other times, it was refreshing to see a drummer emerge from
+a week's carousal, take a drink of plain soda, and write a long letter
+to his employers concerning the extreme dulness of trade.</p>
+ <p>But since the new hotel had been built the Half-Way House had
+waned, and its quiet was only invaded by an occasional straggling
+traveller or a runaway couple, and its walls resounded with nothing
+more clamorous than the orgies of a Sunday-school picnic.</p>
+ <p>It is, however, with the Ladies' Parlor only (that wretched
+abode of female discomfort in all country hotels) that we have to do.</p>
+ <p>The furniture of the room consisted of the articles usually
+found in a <i>boudoir</i> of this kind, to wit: a straight-backed
+sofa, much worn; the inevitable and horrid straw carpeting; that old
+Satanic piano, that never was in tune; an antique and rheumatic table,
+and three wheezy old chairs. The only present attempts at ornament were
+two in number. The first was a large engraving of the Presidents of the
+United States, which had formerly done duty in the bar-room, where the
+villagers were wont to gaze upon it in an awe-struck manner, being
+impressed with a vague idea that it was CHRISTY'S Minstrels. The second
+was a living statue, none other than ANN BRUMMET waiting for JEFFRY
+MAULBOY.</p>
+ <p>"Half-past three, and not come yet," said she. "Look out,
+JEFFRY MAULBOY, for if you <i>do</i> go back on me"----</p>
+ <p>She paused, for she saw a man coming towards the house.</p>
+ <p>"Well, if that ain't ARCHIBALD BLINKSOP," she added, "I'm
+regularly sold. What can <i>he</i> want <i>here</i>?"</p>
+ <p>Yes, it was ARCHIBALD sure enough, biting his finger-nails and
+breathing very short, while he cast furtive glances at the windows.</p>
+ <p>He went slowly up the steps and into the entry just as Mrs.
+BACKUP, the landlady of the House, came out of her sitting-room.</p>
+ <p>Now, Mrs. BACKUP was one of your eminently respectable
+females, who are always loaded to the muzzle with Beautiful Moral
+Essays, which they try to cram down everybody's throat, but never
+practise themselves. She formerly kept a boarding-house in the city,
+where, at table regularly after soup, she would regale those present
+with long dissertations on the shocking immorality of the present day,
+varying the monotony, perhaps, by allusions to the boarders who had
+just left. "Mr. SIMPSON was a pleasant-spoken young man as I want to
+see, and as good as the bank, but I'm afraid he <i>was</i> agettin'
+dissipated;" or, "Mr. FIELDING was quiet and mannerly, and never found
+fault with his vittles, but he had <i>one</i> DREAD<i>ful</i> habit;"
+and then she would sigh heavily. And when little Miss PINKHAM, who
+occupied the second floor back (and who, being a schoolma'am, was
+naturally debarred from the other sex), indulged in the smallest
+possible flirtation with the good-looking young man opposite, Mrs.
+BACKUP'S sharp eye not only saw her, but Mrs. BACKUP'S sharp tongue
+took occasion to berate her severely on a Sunday morning (for then the
+boarders are all in), at the top of the first landing (for then the
+boarders could all hear her). "I <i>am</i> saprised, Miss PINKHAM.
+Why, when I see that young man asittin' at his winder, and a blowin'
+beans. Yes, a blowin' beans, Miss PINKHAM, through a horrible tin
+pop-gun at <i>your'n</i>, and a winkin' vicious, and you a enjoyin' on
+it, Miss PINKHAM, I sot down; yes, I sot right down, and I shuddered.
+'Sich doin's in <i>my</i> house,' says I, 'I am totilly congealed.'" When all
+the time, mind you, the virtuous Mrs. BACKUP was a woman who would bear
+any amount of watching, having already caused three husbands to
+frantically emigrate to parts unknown.</p>
+ <p>Seeing that ARCHIBALD hesitated, she said:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"Well, young man, what's wanted?"</p>
+ <p>"I&#8212;I&#8212;want to see ANN BRUMMET," said ARCHIBALD.</p>
+ <p>"Oh, you <i>do</i>, do you?" rejoined Mrs. BACKUP, regally;
+"and <i>who</i>, may I ask, is ANN BRUMMET?"</p>
+ <p>"A young lady that I was&#8212;a&#8212;to meet here," replied ARCHIBALD,
+timidly.</p>
+ <p>Mrs. BACKUP immediately organized a virtuous tableau, and
+glared at him majestically.</p>
+ <p>"A young lady you was to <i>meet</i> here. <i>In</i>-deed.
+And do you think, young man, that <i>my</i> house is a place where
+young chaps can go a-roystorin' and a-gallivinatin' about, and a
+meetin' young women?"</p>
+ <p>"But I don't want to go oysterin'," said ARCHIBALD, "and I
+don't know how to galvinate. I only want to tell her something."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, to <i>tell</i> her something, is it? Well, I'd have <i>no</i>
+objections, young man, if you <i>said</i> she was your wife. <i>Then</i>
+you'd have a right, but not now, for my cha-<i>rac</i>ter is precious
+to me, young man."</p>
+ <p>"But she ain't my wife," said ARCHIBALD; "I only&#8212;kind of know
+her, you see."</p>
+ <p>"Drat the man," said Mrs. BACKUP to herself; "he's a born fool
+that can't take a hint like that. TEDDY!" she cried to a seedy-looking,
+pimply man, who was sucking a forlorn-looking pipe on the back-door
+step, "you're wanted." She whispered a few words in his ear, and went
+up-stairs.</p>
+ <p>TEDDY MCSLUSH was the General Utility man of the Half-Way
+House. Born down East, of an Irish father and Scotch mother, he was
+eminently calculated to live by his wits. His natural talents were
+numerous and sparkling. He could tell more lies without notes than any
+man in the State, or make a beautiful prayer, all in the way of
+business. When a runaway couple were married at the Half-Way House, he
+would not only give the bride away in a voice broken by emotion, but he
+would bless the bridegroom with tears in his eyes, and he would do all
+this at the lowest market price. And every Sunday he dressed in a black
+suit and sung in the choir, and patted the little children on the head,
+and was generally respected.</p>
+ <p>He approached ARCHIBALD, and poked him in the ribs, facetiously.</p>
+ <p>"Ah!" he ejaculated; "and it's a cryin' shame, so it is, that
+a fine lad like yerself should be took with sich a complaint. It's
+modeshty what ails ye, man. And wasn't it Mester JOHN SHAKESPEER
+himself, him as writ the illegant versis, Lord luv his ashis, as says
+to me only jist afore his breath soured on him, 'TEDDY,' says he, wid
+much feelin', 'TEDDY, modeshty is a fine thing in a woman,' says he,
+'but it's death to a man. Promise me now,' says he, 'for I feel as this
+clay is a coolin' fast&#8212;promise me, TEDDY, as you'll never hev nothink
+to do with it&#8212;no, not never, my boy.' I promised him, and Hevins knows
+as I've kep' my word. But, Lord alive, I'm a keepin' you all the time
+from yer own dear wife, as is a dyin' to see you&#8212;and a sweet dear it
+is."</p>
+ <p>He ushered ARCHIBALD into the Ladies' Parlor, closed the door,
+and applied his ear to the key-hole, with an air of the most respectful
+attention.</p>
+ <p>According to TEDDY'S way of thinking, ANN was not hankering
+for ARCHIBALD'S society.</p>
+ <p>"What do you want <i>here</i>?" said she, sharply.</p>
+ <p>"Oh, don't speak cross to me, Miss BRUMMET," said he, looking
+timidly around. Then he put his finger on his lip, and shook his head
+energetically.</p>
+ <p>"I know all about it, you see," said he; "JEFF told me. Oh my!
+wasn't I struck up, though? But I'll never tell. <i>He</i> couldn't
+come, you see. His mother sent for him, and----"</p>
+ <p>"You lie," she broke in fiercely; "it's a put up job between
+you two. But it won't do; do you <i>hear</i>? It <i>won't do</i>."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, don't look at me <i>that</i> way," said ARCHIBALD,
+backing toward the door; "I want to go home."</p>
+ <p>"I'd like to see you go home," she replied, placing her back
+against the door. "You must think I'm a fool, to let you off as easy as
+that. You've got to sit up with me this evening, anyhow."</p>
+ <p>"But what would folks say?" stammered ARCHIBALD. "Oh, think of
+my reputation, Miss BRUMMET, and let me go."</p>
+ <p>"Your reputation!" she sneered. "Humbug! Men don't have any
+reputation, except when they steal a woman's. Come," she added, in a
+more conciliatory tone, "we'll have some supper, and then we'll have a
+game of euchre."</p>
+ <p>"Euchre! Oh, don't ask me to play euchre," said he; "I'm so
+mixed up, Miss BRUMMET, I couldn't tell the King of Ten-spots from the
+Ace of Jacks. Oh, won't BELINDA grab hold of my hair when she hears of
+this!"</p>
+ <p>"Yes, she'll pull it till she makes her ARCHIE-<i>bald</i>,"
+said ANN, laughing.</p>
+ <p>ARCHIBALD sat down, and looked at her in a supplicating manner.</p>
+ <p>"I'll do anything you say," said he, "if you please won't get
+off any more puns. It's awful. I knew a fellow once who had it chronic.
+He doubled every word that he could lay his tongue to. When he was
+going to a party, he'd take the dictionary and pick out a lot of words
+that could be twisted, and set 'em down and study on 'em, so he could
+be ready with a lot of puns, and when he got 'em off folks would laugh,
+but all the time they'd wish he'd died young. And that's the way he'd
+go on. He finally drove his mother into a consumption, and at her
+funeral, instead of taking on as he ought to, he only just looked at
+the body, and said, 'Well, that's the worst <i>coffin-fit</i> the old
+lady ever had.' And then he turned round and began to get off puns on
+the mourners. Wasn't it dreadful?&#8212;But what's that?"</p>
+ <p>Somebody was knocking at the door.</p>
+ <p>"What's wanted?" said ANN.</p>
+ <p>"It's your minister as has come, mum," said TEDDY, from the
+outside. "What word shall I give him?"</p>
+ <p>"Tell him I shan't want him," said ANN.</p>
+ <p>In a few minutes TEDDY came back.</p>
+ <p>"He says, mum, as he won't go without marryin' somebody, or a
+gittin' his pay anyway, for it's a nice buryin' job as he's lost by
+comin'."</p>
+ <p>"But," said ANN, "I can't&#8212;" She hesitated, and seemed to form
+a sudden resolution. "Tell him," she continued, "tell him&#8212;"</p>
+ <p>(To be continued.)</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>BIOGRAPHICAL.</b></p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">There
+was an agriculturist, philosopher, and editor,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who thought the world his debtor
+and himself, of course, its creditor;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">A man he was of wonderful
+vitup'rative fertility,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Though seeming an embodiment of
+mildness and docility,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">This ancient agriculturist,
+philosopher, and editor.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The clothes he wore were shocking
+to the citizen &aelig;sthetical,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Assuredly they would not pass in
+circles which were critical,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">So venerable were they, and so
+distant from propriety,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">So utterly unsuited to
+respectable society,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which numbers in its membership
+some citizens &aelig;sthetical.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He kept a model farm for every
+sort of wild experiment.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which was to all the neighborhood
+a source of constant worriment;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">For every one who passed that way
+pretended to be eager to</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Discover pumpkin vines that ran
+across the fields a league or two,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">So queer was the effect of each
+preposterous experiment.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He had a dreadful passion, which
+was not at all professional,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">For going for an office, either
+local or congressional.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But though often nominated, yet
+the people wouldn't ratify,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Because they thought, quite
+properly, it would be wrong to gratify</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The all-consuming passion that
+was not at all professional.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Among the many hobbies which he
+cantered on incessantly</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Was one he called Protection, and
+he rode it quite unpleasantly;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">For if any one dissented from his
+notions injudiciously,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He went for him immediately,
+ferociously and viciously,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Did this absurd equestrian who
+cantered on incessantly.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">With which remarks the author of
+this brief, veracious history</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Concludes his observations on the
+incarnated mystery</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Known as an agriculturist,
+philosopher, and editor,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who thought the world his debtor,
+and himself, of course, its creditor,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And who will surely figure on the
+oddest page in history.</span> </div>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">THE FITTEST PLACE FOR A
+"PRESERVER" OF THE PEACE.</span> A "Jam" on Broadway.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">DR. HELMBOLD TO J.G. BENNETT,
+Jr.</span> "Boo-shoo! fly."</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/167.jpg"><br>
+ <p><b>A BRIGHT IDEA</b>.</p>
+ <p><i>Customer</i>. "WAITER, BRING ME SOME FROZEN CLAMS."</p>
+ <p><i>Waiter (lately caught)</i>. "YES, SIR; WILL YOU HAVE 'EM
+ROASTED OR BILED?"</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>WORDS AND THEIR USES</b>.</p>
+ <p>Nothing, except counting your stamps, can be more pleasant and
+exciting than tracing out the origin of words by the aid of a
+second-hand dictionary. It's the next funniest thing to grubbing after
+stumps in a ten-acre lot. Dentists make capital philologists&#8212;: they are
+so much accustomed to digging for roots. It's rather dull work to
+shovel around in the Anglo-Saxon stratum, but, as soon as you strike
+the Sanscrit, then you're off, and if you don't find big nuggets, it's
+because&#8212;well, it's because there are none there. Sometimes you dig down
+to about the time when NOAH went on his little sailing excursion, and
+strike what seems to be a first-class sockdolager of root, but what is
+the use? Unfortunately the philology business is overdone; it's chock
+full of first-class broken down pedagogues and unsuccessful
+ink-slingers, and, as soon as you offer a curious specimen in the way
+of roots, they write a book to prove that the root don't exist, or, if
+it does, that it should not.</p>
+ <p>However, there is an advantage in knowing the roots of words,
+and the use to which they were put in former years. Everybody, you
+know, is very anxious to read CHAUCER and SPENSER. Now, after you have
+studied this subject about forty-two years, you will be able to read
+CHAUCER with the aid of an old English dictionary and an Anglo-Saxon
+grammar.</p>
+ <p>Many so-called philologists, who have preceded me, have
+ignorantly derived words from improper sources. Thus, the compound
+word, shoofly, has been traced by some to the Irish word <i>shoe</i>,
+meaning a hoof-covering, and the French word <i>fly</i>, meaning an
+insect, when it is apparent to even the casual observer that it comes
+from the Guinea word <i>shoo</i>, meaning get out, and the English
+word <i>fly</i>, meaning a tripe destroyer. I propose, therefore, to
+show you the origin of a few words, in order that you may use them
+properly, and in order that you may subscribe freely for my book on
+this subject, which will shortly be placed before an admiring public.</p>
+ <p><i>Theatres</i>. When the players were servants of the king,
+they were compelled to be proficient in reading, riting, rithmetic,
+rhyming, riddling, reciting, rehearsing, and romping. These
+accomplishments were grouped together and called <i>the 8 r's</i>,
+which name naturally enough was soon applied to the play-houses. This
+example shows how simple the whole subject is, and how easily the
+philology business could he run by a child six years of age.</p>
+ <p><i>Country</i>. The origin of this word is, to say the least,
+odd. City people were accustomed to visit the rural districts at about
+the time when rye was ripe, and they were generally amused by the
+farmer's pereginations around his rye. Farmers always count rye-stacks
+in the morning, in order to discover whether any of them have been
+lifted during the night. When, upon their return to the City, the
+visitors were asked where they had been, they facetiously replied, "To
+count rye." This soon became a favorite expression; the "e" was dropped
+for euphony, and the rural districts were called country.</p>
+ <p><i>Spittoon</i>.&#8212;This word comes from the Greek word <i>spit</i>,
+meaning to slobber, and the Scotch word, <i>tune</i>, meaning the
+noise made by the bag-pipes. As the saliva struck the receptacle it
+made a noise delightful to the ears of the smoker, and resembling the
+note of the national instrument of Scotland. Hence the receptacle was
+called the spittoon.</p>
+ <p><i>Politics</i>.&#8212;Quack philologists, who evidently were
+insane, have gone back to the classics for the root of this word, when
+it is well known that immediately after the termination of the
+Revolution, when the Government of this country was about to be
+settled, the word came into existence. A woman, called POLLY, kept a
+corner grocery in New York, and all the fellows who wanted offices were
+accustomed to go to POLLY'S for their beer, because she trusted. Here
+they usually divulged their ideas of the manner in which the Government
+machine should be run. When asked why they went to that store, they
+always answered, "POLLY ticks." Outsiders, when asked what was going on
+in POLLY's store, always answered with a wise look, "POLLY ticks." The
+words soon spread, and talking about the Government was facetiously
+called POLLY ticks. The expression was finally used in earnest, and, by
+euphoric changes, reached its present shape.</p>
+ <p><i>Cheese-it</i>.&#8212;This compound word has by some silly person
+been traced to the Saxon <i>cyse</i>, meaning condensed cow, and the
+Celtic <i>it</i>, meaning it. Now every way-faring man, even though <i>non
+compos mentis</i>, knows that when he is invited to come in and cut a
+cheese, come in and take a drop of whiskey is meant. This word, then,
+is derived from the Sanscrit <i>cheese</i>, meaning drop, and the
+English <i>it</i>, meaning whatever you may happen to be saying, and
+the whole expression may be properly translated "drop that yarn."</p>
+ <p>I might go on straight through the Dictionary, but I refrain,
+desiring only to show you what a light and entertaining subject
+philology is, and what quantities of fun you can get out of it on
+winter evenings.</p>
+ <p>If any one should desire to pursue this subject further, let
+him go through CHAUCER, SPENSER, SHAKSPEARE, and MILTON with a
+fine-tooth comb and a pair of spectacles, looking for roots, and then
+try my book on "Words and their Uses." He had better not attack the
+latter work on an empty stomach. An empty head will be more appropriate.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>The Mendicant Mission</b>.</p>
+ <p>Two fresh rumors about that unfortunate English Mission are
+afloat. One is that it has been tendered to the Hon. HENRY T. BLOW; the
+other is that the&#8212;well, no, not exactly Hon.&#8212;DAN. SICKLES is to be
+transferred from Madrid to the Court of St. JAMES. 'Tis much the same
+thing. If BLOW is appointed, it's BLOW; and if SICKLES is appointed,
+it's Blow, too.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Military Intelligence</b>.</p>
+ <p>The Fifth Regiment N.G.S.N.Y., composed altogether of Germans,
+have adopted the Prussian helmet with a spike on top. This is
+appropriate, as most Germans are linguists, and like to "spike the
+French."</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Where to Commence the Civil Service Reform</b>.</p>
+ <p>In our Hotels and Restaurants.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.</b></p>
+ <p><img alt="R" align="left" src="images/168.jpg">egarding me
+thoughtfully for a moment, MARGARET asks, "What is an 'old comedy?'"</p>
+ <p>I say to her, "An old comedy is to the comedy of to-day,
+precisely what an old beau, padded, painted, simpering with false
+teeth, and leering with rhumy eyes, is to a handsome, gallant young
+fellow, such as Mr. LESTER WALLACK impersonates in <i>Ours</i> or <i>School</i>."</p>
+ <p>To which she replies, "What are roomy eyes, dear?" (Being her
+fourth cousin by marriage, I am a sort of maiden aunt to her,&#8212;whence
+this respectful familiarity.) "Eyes in which there is room for the
+honest glances that never show themselves?'"</p>
+ <p>I sternly remark that "nice girls never pun."</p>
+ <p>"Yes," she replies; "punning, like beer and other vices, is
+the peculiar prerogative of men, I suppose. But you need not be afraid.
+I read PUNCHINELLO sometimes, and it is a terrible warning to people
+who are tempted to pun. I could give you frightful instances of the
+appalling depth to which the men who make puns in PUNCHINELLO
+occasionally sink."</p>
+ <p>I hastily close the discussion by inviting her to come to
+WALLACK'S and see an old comedy. So we find ourselves on the following
+evening in the only theatre in the country where that rather important
+adjunct of a theatre&#8212;a company&#8212;is to be found,</p>
+ <p>There are quantities of elegant dresses in the house,&#8212;the
+ladies having an idea that an old comedy is one of those things which
+every fashionable person ought to see. There are also numbers of nice
+young men, who, being the burning and shining lights of fashionable
+society (after their day's work behind the counter is ended), come to
+be bored by the old comedy, with a heroism which proves how
+immeasurably superior to the influences of tape and calico are their
+youthful souls. By the by, it is one of the unavoidable <i>d&eacute;sagr&eacute;ments</i>
+of New York society that the wearer of the elegant dress is often
+conscious that her partner in the waltz knows precisely how many yards
+of material compose her skirt, and exactly how much it cost per yard,
+for the excellent reason that he himself measured it with his
+professional yard-stick, and cut it with his private scissors. This,
+however, is a subject that belongs not to old comedy, but to the
+extremely modern comedy of New York society. The two resemble each
+other only so far as they are fashionable and dull.</p>
+ <p>But to our WALLACKIAN old comedy. The curtain rises upon the
+veteran GILBERT and the handsome ROCKWELL. They converse in the
+following style:</p>
+ <p>GILBERT.&#8212;"Well, you young dog, ha! ha! So you have decided to
+make your old uncle happy by marrying my neighbor's daughter. Gad! I
+remember my own wedding-day. Well, well; we won't talk about that now,
+but hark ye, you young villain, if you don't marry the girl, I cut you
+off with a shilling."</p>
+ <p>ROCKWELL.&#8212;"My dear uncle, I can have no greater pleasure than
+to fulfil your wishes. But suppose our adorable young neighbor has the
+ill-breeding to refuse me."</p>
+ <p>GILBERT.&#8212;"Refuse you! Refuse my nephew? Gad! I'd like to see
+THOMAS OLDBOY permit his daughter to refuse my nephew! I'd&#8212;d&#8212;e, I'd&#8212;"
+(chokes and stamps with rage.)</p>
+ <p>Further on we meet with Miss OLDBOY and her mother,&#8212;the latter
+a stout old lady, addicted to smelling salts and yellow silks.</p>
+ <p>LYDIA OLDBOY.&#8212;"To-day I am expecting the arrival of young
+WILDOATS, who comes to pay his addresses to me. I wonder if he is like
+that dear, delightful THADDEUS OF WARSAW."</p>
+ <p>Mrs. OLDBOY.&#8212;"Now, Miss, remember that your honored father
+insists upon this match. I expect you to be a dutiful daughter, and
+accede to his wishes. Here comes the young man himself."</p>
+ <p>ROCKWELL.&#8212;"My. dear Mrs. OLDBOY, I am charmed to see you. You
+are looking positively younger than your ravishingly beautiful
+daughter. Fair LYDIA, I come to lay my heart at your feet. 'Tis the
+wish of my uncle and your honored father that we should unite our
+respective houses. Let me touch that exquisite hand. Unseal those ruby
+lips and tell me that I am the happiest of men."</p>
+ <p>Here the UNCLE and OLDBOY enter. They chuckle, and poke one
+another in the ribs, remarking "Gad" and "Zounds" at intervals. They
+bless the young couple, and order up some of the old Madeira. The
+curtain falls as OLDBOY gives the health of the young people, with the
+wish that they may have a dozen children, and a cellar never without
+plenty of this splendid old Madeira,&#8212;"that your father, bottled, Miss
+LYDIA, the year our gracious sovereign came to the throne."</p>
+ <p>This is a fair sample of the old comedy. The oaths are of
+course omitted, out of deference to the tender susceptibilities of the
+editor of PUNCHINELLO. So are the indecencies, which are the spice of
+the old comedy, but which cannot be written in a respectable journal,
+and are almost too gross and brutal for the <i>Sun</i>. Take from an
+old comedy its oaths and its grossness, and nothing is left but a
+residuum of boisterous inanity. The condensed old comedy which has just
+been laid before the readers of PUNCHINELLO, is as inane and vapid as
+anything that WALLACK'S theatre has shown us in the past month. Do you
+find it dull? For my part, I don't hesitate to say that the "Essence of
+Old Virginny," as furnished by the venerable poet, Mr. DANIEL BRYANT,
+is vastly more amusing than the Essence of Old Comedy.</p>
+ <p>All of which I say, in my most impressive manner, to MARGARET
+as we struggle through the crowded lobby. But she irreverently disputes
+my assertions, and asks, "How is it that everybody admires these
+comedies if they are so wretched as you say they are? Is your judgment
+better than that of anybody else?"</p>
+ <p>There being nothing to say, if I mean to maintain my ground,
+except that my judgment is the only infallible critical judgment in
+this city or elsewhere, I promptly and unblushingly say so. But
+MARGARET tells me I am "a goose"&#8212;(I think I have mentioned that she is
+my aunt, and hence allows herself these pleasing freedoms of
+speech)&#8212;and says that I shall take her to see the old comedies every
+night, until I am willing to say that I like them.</p>
+ <p>Who is there that, in view of this threat, will not drop the
+tear of sensibility, so neatly alluded to by Mr. STERNE, in sympathy
+with the prospective sufferings of</p>
+ <p>MATADOR.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>UNIVERSITY-MANIA.</b></p>
+ <p>MY DEAR P.:&#8212;I have made some curious observations of this
+disease, which lead to startling conclusions.</p>
+ <p>It is a malady peculiar to the United States, being an
+eruption resulting from indigestion of unripe knowledge, together with
+excess of vanity in individual blood.</p>
+ <p>Universities spring up among us like mushrooms, in a night.
+The seed of knowledge is sown broadcast over our land. In fact, in this
+particular we may be said to be very seedy, indeed.</p>
+ <p>For my part I have no objection to Universities&#8212;when they <i>are</i>
+Universities. But, at the rate at which we are now progressing, we
+shall soon have "every man his own University." It will become the
+fashion to keep a University in the back-yard. And then, you know, the
+institution must have its own particular organ, you know. Every man,
+and every member of his family, shall print his or her <i>Free Press</i>,
+and independence of opinion shall reign.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Glorious
+country! Glorious free speech!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">With WALT WHITMAN, we may well
+exclaim:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O the BROWN University!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O the splendid University of
+SMITH!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O CORNELL, his University!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>&amp;c. ad infinitum.</i></span>
+ </div>
+ <p>As for me, dear NELLO, I am in the front rank of civilization.
+I have accepted the Chair of Cane-bottom in a Grub-Street garret, and
+rejoice in a barrel-organ, which plays with great freedom of speech.</p>
+ <p>Yours pedagoguically,</p>
+ <p>JEREMY DOGWOOD.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A. Sop for Ireland.</b></p>
+ <p>It is stated that Queen VICTORIA has ordered from a Dublin
+manufacturer an extensive assortment of Balbriggan hosiery for the
+wedding outfit of the Princess LOUISE. There is a stroke of policy in
+this. In firemen's phrase it may be called laying on the "hose" to
+quench disloyalty.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT.</span>
+The Marine Hospital.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>TRIALS OF A WITNESS.</b></p>
+ <p>MR. PUNCHINELLO:&#8212;As all people seem to come to you with their
+troubles and grievances, I hope you will not refuse to listen to my
+woes. And whether they are woes or not, I leave you to judge for
+yourself.</p>
+ <p>At the beginning of last week I made my first appearance in
+any court-room, in the character of a witness, in the case of VALENTINE
+ <i>vs.</i> ORSON; in which the point in dispute was the ownership
+of a tract of land in Wyoming Territory. I knew something in regard to
+the sale of these lands, and was fully prepared to testify to the
+extent of my knowledge in the premises; but judge of my utter surprise
+and horror on being obliged to go through such an ordeal as the
+following extracts from my examination will indicate.</p>
+ <p>The counsel for the plaintiff commenced by asking me if I was
+a married man, and when I had answered that. I was, he said:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"Is your wife a believer in the principles of the Woman's
+Rights party?"</p>
+ <p>I could not, for the life of me, see what this had to do with
+the land in Wyoming, but I answered, that I was happy to say she was
+not.</p>
+ <p>The examination then proceeded as follows:&#8212;</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> You are happy, then, in your matrimonial relations? <i>A.</i>
+Yes&#8212;(and remembering the oath) reasonably so.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Is your wife pretty? <i>A.</i> (Witness remembering
+at once his oath and his wife's presence in court) She is pretty pretty.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> What are her defects? <i>A.</i> (Witness
+remembering only his wife's presence.) I have never been able to
+discover them.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you wear flannel? <i>A.</i> Yes, in winter.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Can you testify, upon your oath, that you do not
+wear flannel in summer? <i>A.</i> I can.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Now be careful in your answer. What do you wear in
+the spring and fall? <i>A.</i> I&#8212;I wear my common clothes.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> With flannel, or without flannel? <i>A.</i>
+Sometimes with, and sometimes without.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> No evasion; you must tell the Court exactly when you
+wear flannel, and when you do not.</p>
+ <p>A series of questions on this subject brought out the fact
+that I wore flannel when the weather was cold, or cool; and did not
+wear it when it was mild, or warm.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have you a lightning-rod on your house? <i>A.</i> I
+have.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How much did it cost you to have it put up? <i>A.</i>
+It has not cost me anything yet&#8212;I owe for it.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Is that all you owe for? <i>A.</i> No, I have other
+debts.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have you any money with you now? <i>A.</i> I have.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How much? <i>A.</i> (Counting contents of
+porte-monnaie.) Sixty-two cents.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Where did you get that? <i>A.</i> (With
+embarrassment.) I borrowed it.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Were you present when defendant first offered his
+land for sale to the plaintiff? <i>A.</i> (Brightening up.) I was.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you burn gas or kerosene in your house? <i>A.</i>
+Gas.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How many burners? <i>A.</i> Ten, I think.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Are you willing to assert, upon your solemn oath,
+that there are only ten? <i>A.</i> (Witness counting on his fingers.)
+I am.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you wear studs or buttons on your shirt fronts? <i>A.</i>
+Studs.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Gold, or pearl? <i>A.</i> Mother-of-pearl, as a
+general thing, but sometimes I wear one gold one at the top.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Were all your studs of mother-of-pearl, at the time
+when you first heard this transaction mentioned between the parties? <i>A.</i>
+They were.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you ever wear your gold stud in the middle of
+your bosom? <i>A.</i> No, sir, I always wear it at the top.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you ever wear it at the bottom? Can you swear it
+was not at the bottom on the day of the transaction referred to? <i>A.</i>
+I distinctly remember that I did not wear it at all that day.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Did you wear it that night? <i>A.</i> No, sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Can you swear that after you went to bed you did not
+wear it? <i>A.</i> I can.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have you ever been vaccinated? <i>A.</i> I have.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> On which arm? <i>A.</i> The left.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> At the of the first mention of this land to the
+plaintiff, who were present? <i>A.</i> (Witness speaking with hopeful
+vivacity, as if he hoped they were now coming to the merits of the
+case.) The plaintiff, the defendant, and myself.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you use the Old Dominion coffee-pot in your
+house? <i>A.</i> (Dejectedly.) No, sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> What kind of a coffee pot do you use? <i>A.</i> A
+common tin one.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> You are willing to swear it is tin? <i>A.</i> I am.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Has your wife any sisters? <i>A.</i> She has two;
+ANNA and JANE.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Are they married <i>A.</i> They are.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Are either of them prettier than your wife? <i>A.</i>
+(Quickly.) No, sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have you any children? <i>A.</i> Two.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have they had the measles? <i>A.</i> They have.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Has any other person in your household had the
+measles? <i>A.</i> I have had them, and my wife has had them.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How do you know your wife has had them? <i>A.</i>
+She told me so.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Then you did not see her have them? <i>A.</i> No,
+sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> We want no hearsay evidence here; how can you swear
+that she has had them when you did not see her have them? <i>A.</i>
+She told me so, and I believed her.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Did she take an oath that she had had them? <i>A.</i>
+No sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Then, sir, you are trifling with the Court. Do you
+understand the obligations of an oath? <i>A.</i> I do.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Beware, then, that you are not committed for
+perjury. Is your gas-metre ever frozen? <i>A.</i> Yes, sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> What do you use when the gas will not burn? <i>A.</i>
+Candles.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How many to the pound? <i>A.</i> Nine.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How do you know there are nine to the pound? <i>A.</i>
+They are sold as nines.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Then you never weighed them yourself? <i>A.</i> No,
+sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Counsel</i>, to the <i>Court</i>. May it please your
+Honor, this is the second time that this witness has positively
+testified, under solemn oath, to important points of which he has no
+certain knowledge. I ask the Court for protection for myself and my
+client.</p>
+ <p>Here a long discussion took place between the lawyers and the
+Judge, and at the end of it the case was postponed for four months. I
+suppose it is expected that I will then re-ascend the witness-stand;
+but I have determined that when I enter a court-room again I shall
+appear as a criminal. These fellows have much the easiest times, and
+they run so little risk, nowadays, that their position is far
+preferable to that of the unfortunate witnesses.</p>
+ <p>J. BADGER.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Singular Fatuity.</b></p>
+ <p>The reason why so few persons emigrate to this country from
+Poland, is the general belief prevailing there that we have throughout
+the Union a heavy Pole tax.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">THE A.B.C. OF NEW YORK
+SOCIALISM.</span> ANDREWS, BRISBANE, AND CLAFLIN.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/169.jpg"><br>
+ <p><b>THRILLING MELODRAMA.</b></p>
+ <p>Scene: Lord DE VERE'S Manor: The Blue Chamber.</p>
+ <p><i>Lord De Vere.</i> "BUT ONE COURSE, LADY CLAUDE, IS LEFT TO
+RETRIEVE OUR FALLEN FORTUNES. WITH THESE DEAD CATS WE'LL FLY TO
+MICHIGAN AND START A MINERAL SPRING. THE MICHIGANDERS ARE WILD ABOUT
+THEIR SPRINGS, AND WITH THIS MATERIAL OURS CANNOT BUT BE A SUCCESS."</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/170.jpg"><br>
+ <p><b>ONE OF OUR SOCIAL HUMBUGS.</b></p>
+ <p><i>Old Gent (figuring up probable receipts of his silver
+wedding, close at hand)</i>. "I'VE HIRED A SPLENDID TEA-SERVICE FOR
+BROWN TO PRESENT TO US; IT WILL MAKE QUITE A SENSATION, AND I'VE GOT IT
+CHEAP FOR THE EVENING."</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>POEMS OF THE POLICE.</b></p>
+ <p>I. MARY SMITH.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O
+gallant p'licemen, list to me,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">I'll sing a mournful ditty</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">About a poor young serving-gal,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">What lived in this here city.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">She had a name, and SMITH it was</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">(The rest of it was MARY);</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Her constant duty, at daybreak,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Was sweeping out the arey.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">One evening she went to a jig</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">(Her missus was attending</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">A private hop), when there befel</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">What truly was heart-rending.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">She wore her missus' gayest
+clothes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Her muslin dress all fluty,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Her waterfall and tag-rags all,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Which well became her beauty.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But missus found poor MARY out,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And in a p'liceman took her,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And walked her up before the
+Judge,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">On charge of being a hooker.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The missus swore the girl a thief</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Her property as lifted,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which proved beyond all doubt
+would be</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">When things came to be sifted.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The girl said she'd been to a jig;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Then out spoke Judge MCCARTY,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"You must not wear the fixings of</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">A party to a party."<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">They sent her up for sixteen
+months,&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Oh! drop a tear to MARY,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Whose missus ne'er shall see her
+more</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">A-sweeping out the arey.</span>
+ </div>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Sic Transit.</b></p>
+ <p>Life being in any event a transitory affair, and especially so
+in New York, where, every one lives some miles from his business, our
+means of transit are of interest to every one. However well the owners
+of those at present in use may insist that they are, yet the public
+feels they should be better, and Mr. PUNCHINELLO, having the interest
+of his fellow-citizens at heart, most earnestly hopes that the
+undertakers of the last new scheme will not so mistake the meaning of
+this term as to suppose that their business with it is simply to bury
+it.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Discounting a Bill.</b></p>
+ <p>The Germans are disposed to glorify their king, and look upon
+him as the Great WILLIAM; but when they commence to calculate the cost
+of his glory, in men slaughtered, homes desolated, women beggared,
+industries destroyed, taxes increased, and liberty chained, it is more
+than probable that they will become disgusted with their Little BILL.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Query</b></p>
+ <p>Can Russia's designs upon Turkey, at this season of the year,
+be attributed to her admiration and imitation of New England
+Thanksgiving customs?</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A Maniac's Mutterings.</b></p>
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO'S special Lunatic gives it as his opinion, that a
+continuance of a horse-flesh diet in Paris must go far towards
+disturbing the Parisian Equine-imity.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>An Old Saw Sharpened.</b></p>
+ <p>Some one has applied the old Latin motto, <i>"Horas non
+numero nisi serenas,"</i> to Mr. GREELEY, by making it read, "HORACE is
+of no account except when serene," which, by the by, he never is.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Query for Naturalists.</b></p>
+ <p>How can a person who stands four feet in his boots be called
+biped?</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">DENTS-LY FILLED.</span>
+Government offices.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/171.jpg">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">KING WILLIAM OF PRUSSIA WAITING FOR
+HIS ALLY.</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HIRAM GREEN ON MARK TWAIN'S BABY.</p>
+ <p>The "Lait Gustice" congratulates the newly organized Papa.</p>
+ <p>SKEENSBORO, NYE ONTO VARMONT.</p>
+ <p>Friend TWAIN&#8212;Allow an old statesman, which has served his
+country for 4 yeers as Gustise of the Peece, rite a congratulotery
+letter to you on your success as a boy raisest. Altho your name is MARK
+TWAIN, I notiss that on this occashon you dident Mark but One.</p>
+ <p>I am a little older in years and <i>Parentelism</i> than you
+are, and am able to call myself the seenyer pardner in a firm who are
+the sole proprieters of eleven offspring and 2 grand-children.</p>
+ <p>Raisin children is a bizziniss which haint every mans best
+holt, and as long as you've got into the bizziness, excoose me for
+givin you a little wisdom, which you as a parent must swaller without
+makin up a face.</p>
+ <p>If your child, in its infantile days, is given to squallin
+nites, obtain a beverige, called soothin sirup, and just before you
+pull off your butes nites, give the little cuss about 3 tablespoons
+full, and he will sleep so sound that you can use him for a piller.
+Should he kick &amp; squall, and refuse to take it, lay him down onto
+the floor, set on him, then takin hold of his nose, pour the stuff down
+his throte, and you've got him, ekal to Jo JEFFERSON'S Rip Van Winkle
+20 yeers snooze.</p>
+ <p>To amoose him&#8212;If your wife is too bizzy durin the day, doin
+the cookin, washin, &amp;c. 4th, to amoose the child, give him an ink
+bottle, and set him down on the parler carpet. If he has any idee of
+geografy, when you come home nites you will find a good helthy map of
+the black sea, which Rooshy will insist on bein added to your war map.</p>
+ <p>Another way of amusin him, is to give him a raiser, and let
+him play learn to shave. If he should cut his nose off, it would make
+the little <i>shaver smart</i>.</p>
+ <p>If you expect to bring your boy up to hold offis,' let him
+cultivate cheek. This is done by tyin his grandmother in her rockin
+cheer, and lettin him pelt the old lady with snow balls in the winter
+time. In the summer time get him a bow and arrer, and let him see how
+neer he come to the venerable lady's nose without breakin her
+spectorcals. If this don't make him cheeky enuff to hold offis, let him
+pour a lot of benzine onto his little cuzzin, then push her onto a red
+hot cole stove. If he can do this and think it a joak, he will do for a
+cabinet offiser.</p>
+ <p>If he tries to jump over parental authority, fill him with
+shot, same as <i>your</i> man did his jumpin frog, only pour it into
+him with a mustick.</p>
+ <p>If you've got any regard for our nashnal caracter, don't let
+your son rite comic copy for the noosepapers, after which, be so rash
+as to rite a book, and have English crickets set up their darn singin,
+when they catch your little <i>innocent abroad</i>.</p>
+ <p>JOHN BULL don't tickle easy, remember that. I actually believe
+you couldent stir him with a hul bag full of laffin gas.</p>
+ <p>As your boy has entered the Lecture field, I shouldent be
+surprised if he got up quite a <i>breeze</i> on the roast-rum. In
+fact, when he opens his mouth before an audience, look out for <i>squalls</i>.</p>
+ <p>When your offspring is big enuff to enjoy chastisin, remember
+the "good little boy," and examine your son's garments to see if the
+lad has been roostin onto any nitro-gleserine cans, lest the parental
+hand, when brought in contact with the youth's <i>habeas corpus</i>, mite
+necessitate the sweepin up of father and son's scattered remnants.</p>
+ <p>Let your son reed the works on good morril men's lives.</p>
+ <p>By the time he gets old enuff to read, I will have my life out
+in pamphlet form, and you can draw onto me for a copy. Beware of works
+of fiction. Don't let your boy have a great deal to do with such readin
+as HOYLE on Games, TOM PAINE on Infidelity, nor HORRIS GREELY on
+farmin. Such works are bringin more ruin onto the country, than the
+numerous jewrys of twelve talented men, who allow murderers to come the
+loonatic dodge over 'em.</p>
+ <p>I don't believe in spoilin the rod and sparin the child, but I
+think it is well enuff to keep a rod hung up in the barn, where your
+child can occasionally look at it, to see what he will come to, if he
+undertakes to kick over the traces.</p>
+ <p>Children are a good deal like wimmen. If you don't set <i>your</i>
+foot down when you first get married your wimmen will raise <i>their</i>
+foot up, and afore you realize any pain, your gentle form will be
+histed out into the street.</p>
+ <p>With boys you must begin talkin <i>turkey</i>, when they are
+young <i>goblins</i>, ef you don't, when they get old enuff, they will
+"strike for their sires," and <i>gobble</i> up the old man's scalp.</p>
+ <p>Teach your son to honor his pa and ma, and decline the English
+mission, when it comes his turn.</p>
+ <p>Between you and I, aspirants for the honor of bordin with St.
+JIMMY are on the <i>decline</i>, Pitty it haint a gin-cocktail. I
+shouldent be surprised, if some big criminal was sentenced to go there
+yet, which minds me of a konundrum. Why is the English mission like
+lager beer?</p>
+ <p>Give 'er up?</p>
+ <p>Because it ruins any <i>minister's</i> reputation, who goes
+for it.</p>
+ <p>Hopin that when you shovel off your mortil coil, that your
+mantle may not pass out of the family, and as time flies on with
+greased wings, you may make the family name <i>sound</i> by bein able
+to Mark Twain in your family record, I drop the goose feather.</p>
+ <p>Ewers, parentally,</p>
+ <p>HIRAM GREEN, ESQ.,</p>
+ <p>Lait Gustise of the Peece.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A SURE WAY OF DOING IT.</b></p>
+ <p>Seekers after notoriety must often be at their wits' end for
+some new sensation with which to advertise themselves. Mr. TWAIN, for
+instance, having gone through Fenianism and France, seems to have
+collapsed for the present; and here now comes Mr. WEMYSS JOBSON, who
+subsided into oblivion years ago, but has just emerged again into the
+light of <i>The Sun</i>. The efforts of both these gentlemen to keep
+themselves prominently before the public, however, are very inadequate
+and feeble. They should suffer more and be stronger. Let TRAIN do a
+bold stroke of business by declaring himself the perpetrator of the
+latest mysterious murder, and it might be the making of the exhumed
+JOBSON to revive a fossilized memory, and confess himself to be the
+criminal who delivered the fatal blow to the late Mr. WILLIAM PATTERSON.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>True to his Colors.</b></p>
+ <p>A Bostonian visiting New York, not long since, and reading in
+the papers that there was to be a celebration of Mass in an up-town
+church, decided to remain over Sunday for it, thinking, Bostonially,
+that Mass meant Massachusetts and nothing else.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>SUITABLE INSCRIPTION FOR A BOATMAN'S RACE-PRIZE.</b> "The
+noblest Row-man of them all."</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/173.jpg">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">A NEW LEAF IN THE FAMILY HISTORY.</p>
+ <p><i>Jack.</i> "NOW, I'LL BE PAPA, GOING TO FIX THE FURNACE."</p>
+ <p><i>Sallie</i>. "OH, YES!&#8212;AND I'LL BE THE NEW NURSE, AND YOU
+MUST KISS ME BEHIND THE CELLAR DOOR!"</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/174.jpg">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BEHIND THE TIMES.</p>
+ <p>EXPLANATORY OF MR. JOHN BULL'S VIEWS.</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">POEMS OF THE CRADLE.</p>
+ <p>CANTO XIII.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">When
+I was a bachelor I lived by myself;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">All the bread and cheese I had, I
+laid upon the shelf.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But the rats and the mice they
+made such a strife,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">I was forced to go to London to
+buy myself a wife.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The roads were so bad, and the
+lanes were so narrow,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">I had to bring my wife home in a
+wheelbarrow.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The wheelbarrow broke. My wife
+had a fall;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Deuce take the wheelbarrow, my
+wife, and all.</span> </div>
+ <p>The above lines were written when the author was quite
+advanced in years; when he had solved, in his humble way, the great
+problem of life, and discovered the futility of mundane things
+generally, and t undesirableness of an unsuccessful or unfortunate
+existence; when he could look back through a long vista of years, and
+see the follies of his youth and the mistakes of his manhood. It should
+have been placed at the end of his book, with only the word Finis after
+it; but somehow, either by mistake of the author or of the publisher,
+it was placed among the records of the simple events of the village,
+and thus loses half its force. However, let the history, placed as it
+is, be a warning to rash young men who contemplate matrimony; and let
+them give heed to it, lest they also have cause to repent of their
+doings and exclaim with the poet:&#8212;</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+deuce take it."</span> </div>
+ <p>Observe how pathetic and touching his reminiscence of his lost
+youth and the priceless boon of liberty. He commences in a quiet
+descriptive way, leaving one at a loss to know whether it is to be a
+joyful lyric a dirge he intends singing.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"When
+I was a bachelor I lived by myself;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">All the bread and cheese I had I
+laid upon the shelf."</span> </div>
+ <p>Here we have him alone, at peace with himself and the world;
+happy in the contemplation of his beloved muse; jotting down, now and
+then, the brilliant ideas that flash through his teeming brain; and
+munching in solitude his homely meal of bread and cheese. In telling us
+he laid his bread and cheese upon the shelf, he at once shows he had
+left his parental abode, and the ministering and watchful care of his
+maternal parent.</p>
+ <p>There must, of course, have been a cause for such a step. Some
+reason why the gentle being should have been wrought up to that pitch,
+when he daringly throws off all restraint, and steps into the world to
+act and think for himself. It may have been the want of sympathy that
+drove him to the act. They were plain folks, and didn't appreciate his
+peculiar turn of mind, and so only laughed at him, and ridiculed his
+pretensions. That there was a quarrel there is no manner of doubt, and
+it was probably caused by the mortifying act of his mother in fainting
+when he read her the poetry he had written at her request. That, in
+itself, was enough to break all ties between them. She was horrified
+and overwhelmed with dismay that a child of hers could be guilty of
+such atrocious rhymes; and he, in turn, was disgusted that a mother of
+his should be so unappreciative and earthly. And so, by mutual consent,
+they separated.</p>
+ <p>That accounts for his bachelor habit of laying his bread and
+cheese on the shelf that he might have it handy, and not forget where
+he had placed it. But as</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+rats and mice made such a strife,"</span> </div>
+ <p>he found that would never do. Something else must be thought
+of; and being an inventive genius, he tried putting it in his trunk,
+but it scented his Sunday jacket and trousers, and the girls all turned
+up their noses at the odd perfume. So, driven to extremity, he in an
+evil hour decided, as many another has since done, that the remedy for
+his ills was matrimony, and that it was not well for man to live alone.</p>
+ <p>A Prophet is without honor in his own country, and so ofttimes
+is a Poet. To his bashful supplication of "Wilt thou?" the young
+maidens if his village unhesitatingly refused to wilt, and thus it was
+that circumstances forced him</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"To
+go to London to buy himself a wife."</span> </div>
+ <p>How fortunate that he should give us, inadvertently as it
+were, the information so necessary to the unlucky young men of this
+later day, the best place to go shopping for wives! No man after
+reading the above need say "he doesn't marry because he cannot, as no
+one will have him." He need not stop for that hereafter, but just go to
+London, pick out one to suit, pay the price, and bag the article. It
+can all be done in a day, and save time wonderfully.</p>
+ <p>He bought his wife&#8212;a cheap one undoubtedly&#8212;and gave his
+promise to pay; then started homeward, feeling his importance as a
+married man, and chuckling over the idea of the astonishment and dismay
+of the rats and mice when he should set his wife after them, and
+thereby deprive them of their daily rations. But while musing thus, he
+discovers his wile shows signs of fatigue, as</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+roads were bad, and the lanes were narrow,"</span> </div>
+ <p>and not wishing to have her exhausted before commencing
+business, he gallantly determined to give her a ride, well knowing she
+would need all her strength for the battle he intended she should win.</p>
+ <p>So borrowing a wheelbarrow of a trusting neighbor, he seated
+her therein, and amid great rejoicing at his extraordinary "luck" he
+set forward. But now comes the sad part of the story:</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+wheelbarrow broke&#8212;my wife had a fall."</span> </div>
+ <p>And what a fall was there, my countrymen! Words are
+inadequate. The scene was indescribable, and we leave a blank that each
+may picture it to suit themselves.</p>
+ <p>After the excitement occasioned by the catastrophe was
+somewhat abated, he picked up the pieces and tried to put the
+wheelbarrow together again. But it was too far gone; it was
+un-put-togetherable, and so he, more in sorrow than anger, stood gazing
+at the wreck, while his wife, being a woman, could not resist the
+impulse to cry exultingly, "I told you so; I knew it." That on top of
+all the rest of his trouble was a little too much; and after fumbling
+over the pieces a while, "I told you so" ringing in his ears, he
+completely lost his temper, and vented his passion in the words:&#8212;</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+deuce take the wheelbarrow."----</span> </div>
+ <p>and then in a low voice, cautiously turning his head aside, he
+added:&#8212;</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"My
+wife and all."</span> </div>
+ <p>Together they trudged homeward. Fearful misgivings as to the
+wisdom of his step came swooping down upon him, and he almost wished he
+had not tried to mend matters, but had patiently borne with the rats,
+when suddenly&#8212;the vision of a <i>cat</i> swept athwart his mind, and
+he groaned aloud in bitterness of spirit.</p>
+ <p>Not even the ever after clean hearth-stone, with the dead
+bodies of his enemies, the rats, piled thereon, could make him forget
+that one moment of agonizing consciousness, when he realized for the
+first time that he had burdened himself with a wife when a cat would
+have answered as well.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HURLY-BURLY.</p>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">No wonder that the folks turn pale</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And preachers talk of doom,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Since by each telegram and mail</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Come words of awful gloom:<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Explosions of N. glycerine;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Expulsion of the Pope;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Earthquakes along the Eastern line</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And</span><br>
+ <img alt="" src="images/175a.jpg">
+ <p style="margin-left: 1.5em; font-weight: bold;">THE PACIFIC SLOPE.</p><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Surely the world is upside down,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Its framework out of joint;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">At coming change all things of town</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And country seem to point:<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The very sea some day may try</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To climb the mountain side,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And hill-folks yet be staggered by</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <img alt="" src="images/175b.jpg">
+ <p style="margin-left: 1.5em; font-weight: bold;">THE MOANING OF THE TIED.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>OUR PORTFOLIO.</b></p>
+ <p>By Diligence from Paris to Versailles&#8212;Fastest Time on
+Record&#8212;Happy Travelling Companions&#8212;Mud, Misery, and Malignity&#8212;Life on
+the Road.</p>
+ <br>
+ <p>NEAR ST. CLOUD, NINTH WEEK OF THE REPUBLIC, 1870.</p>
+ <p>It would have done you good to see us getting over that muddy,
+jagged, rutty old turnpike that leads off from the south of the Bois de
+Boulogne toward St. Cloud and Versailles. Since writing my last, I had
+been to Paris <i>par ballon mont&eacute;,</i> and was now returning in
+the <i>diligence</i> that took five American ladies and a couple of
+war correspondents, all friends of WASHBURNE, away from the temptation
+of eating horse-flesh in the beleaguered city, to such edibles as the
+rapacity of the German appetite had left undevoured in the neighborhood
+of the old "stamping grounds" of Louis XVI. We were not a jolly party.
+It rained in torrents, and our little driver perched upon the box in
+front smoked the most infernal tobacco I ever smelt. Moreover, the
+horses were not lively steeds. They were rather safe than otherwise,
+and not given to running away. Although the driver addressed himself to
+their flanks, between each puff of smoke, with a pointed stick, they
+didn't rear and plunge so as to frighten the ladies, and that was a
+point gained, albeit we had leisure to count the pickets in the fences
+as we dragged toward our destination. One of our lady passengers came
+from Connecticut, and she talked with a nutmeg dialect that made her
+garrulity oftentimes quite spicy. We two sat back to back, and when the
+vehicle lurched heavily her chignon took me "amidships" (if I may be
+permitted the expression) with a concussion that felt like the impact
+of a muffled ball from a six-pound field howitzer. "Goodness gracious,
+dew git eout of the way and give me some room, man!" she would exclaim
+as our wagon plunged into a three-foot "gore" and the coachee plied his
+pointed ramrod with increased vigor to the attenuated haunches of the
+insensible beasts.</p>
+ <p>"My dear madam, you will perceive that I cannot 'git' any
+further without climbing upon the back of my companion in front." Lord
+knows I would have given a hundred francs to be out of her reach; but
+we had been all ticketed and labelled through under the same "pass,"
+and there was no such thing as dissolving partnership <i>now.</i></p>
+ <p>"Ugh!" she muttered, putting her handkerchief to her nose,
+"and that horrid smoke too!" But the imperturbable director of our
+flight took no heed, and drew away at his clay idol with unabated
+satisfaction. 'Twas thus we jogged on for five weary hours, "OLD
+CONNECTICUT" charging head foremost at my spinal column with a
+frequency and momentum that made me believe, finally, she did it on
+purpose. Three miles out from St. Cloud we found the road completely
+blocked up with artillery wagons, and saw large masses of troops moving
+through the fields on either side. It still rained incessantly, and the
+forlornness of the situation was no wise relieved by the distant
+booming of guns, and the sucking sound of the wheels in the mud.</p>
+ <p>"Oh, my!" sail a thin, squeaky voice on the back seat. "I
+believe they are coming this way. Do let us get out, SARAH. I would
+rather die on the road than be murdered in such a sepulchre as this."</p>
+ <p>She referred to a battalion of the Landwehr that had just
+denied into the road, not a hundred yards in front of us.</p>
+ <p>"Stop your sniffling back there!" peevishly exclaimed "OLD
+CONNECTICUT." "It would serve you right if they bayonetted you;" and
+she added emphasis to her expostulation by planting her chignon between
+my shoulder-blades with terrific force.</p>
+ <p>I felt at once that either my back or my gallantry would have
+to give way; so I took a bond of fate, and sacrificed the latter on the
+spot.</p>
+ <p>"That'll do&#8212;that'll do," I remonstrated. "No more of that; if
+you want to knock the brains out of that haystack on the back of your
+head, why, knock away; but spare my bones, if you please."</p>
+ <p>I looked around, and she looked around with such suddenness as
+to bring her nose in contact with the brim of my hat, and force the
+tears from her eyes. She started to her feet, and I verily believe
+would not have postponed hostilities a moment, had not the door of the <i>diligence</i>
+just then been opened, and a Prussian officer demanded to see our
+papers. I paraded the "documents," and he said they were "good;" but he
+also said that we must make up our minds to halt here until the
+following morning, as there was a movement of the troops, and no
+vehicles would be permitted to pass this point.</p>
+ <p><i>Gaudeamus!</i> I could have sworn, but my wrath sailed away
+when I saw what a volcano was working in the bosom of "OLD
+CONNECTICUT." She didn't strike the officer, or utter a single
+complaint in his hearing, but sat down as if she had been a spile
+driven through the top of the coach, and let the vinegar run out of her
+eyes in pure impotency of speechless rage.</p>
+ <p>"SARAH'S" companion on the back seat broke forth afresh, and
+again wanted to know as to the probability of our being charged upon
+and put to the sword. I couldn't hear "SARAH'S" answers to these
+harrowing questions, but it seemed to me as if she were trying to
+throttle her timid friend into a perfect sense of security. Whatever
+she did had the desired effect, and I heard no more from the "back
+seat."</p>
+ <p>It was nightfall ere the several members of our little colony
+composed themselves to await in such tranquillity as they could
+command, the ordeal of sleeping, sitting bolt upright in a French <i>diligence,</i>
+upon a dark, tempestuous night, and surrounded on all sides by the
+dreadful presence of "red-handed war." The last thing I remember ere
+the drowsy god "MURPHY" sent his fairies to weave their cobwebs about
+my eyelids, was "OLD CONNECTICUT." She didn't look like the
+battering-ram that she was. She had taken that chignon for a pillow,
+and fastened it to the back of the seat. Her head was thrown back; her
+chin had fallen, and at the extreme tip of her thin red nose a solitary
+tear glistened like a dew-drop on a beet. Once, about midnight, she
+awoke me by her snoring, but I gave the old gal's chignon a hitch, and
+it was all right again.</p>
+ <p>Yours, somniferously,</p>
+ <p>DICK TINTO.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/176.jpg">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">THOSE COUNTRY COUSINS AGAIN.</p>
+ <p><i>Celia (just arrived from the country).</i> "JUST THINK,
+JANE, COUSIN JOHN IS TO BE MY ESCORT TO THE FRENCH BAZAAR AND THE
+NILSSON CONCERTS, AND BOOTH'S AND WALLACE'S, AND THE OPERA
+BOUFF&Eacute;, AND LOTS OF OTHER FIRST-CLASS SHOWS!"</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>FACTS ABOUT THE ENGLISH MISSION.</b></p>
+ <p>It is not true that I ever accepted the English Mission; and
+if any man says I did, I now deliberately brand him as a Liar and
+Villain.</p>
+ <p>I am not going to deny that the place was offered me, but I do
+unhesitatingly, say that I never absolutely consented to take it.</p>
+ <p>Gen. GRANT may have construed my note on the subject as an
+unqualified acceptance, but that was owing entirely to his devouring
+desire to get the thing off his hands, and not to any ambiguity in my
+language.</p>
+ <p>"No, Mr. PRESIDENT," I said in the note, "far be it from me to
+stand between my friend, Mr. GREELEY, and the gratification of his
+noble desire to wear military things at receptions abroad. Moreover
+your Excellency, I would not for the world deprive our cousins and
+other relations in England of an opportunity to cultivate the grand old
+art of swearing under the instruction of so eminent a professor as
+HORACE."</p>
+ <p>This is the sort of language I used, and I don't see how any
+man except Gen. GRANT could get hold of it the wrong way.</p>
+ <p>Of course I had some reasons besides those stated in my note
+for declining the Mission, but I did not want to hurt the President's
+feelings by going over the whole ground.</p>
+ <p>It was not unknown to me that the situation had been offered
+to about five thousand persons before it came round to my turn, or that
+the English Mission had fallen into a general decline. I knew all about
+that just as well as Gen. GRANT, but it would not have done any good to
+parade my knowledge on the subject.</p>
+ <p>There was the Hon. THOS. JENKINS who refused to take it,
+because his wife had a prejudice against Bulls ever since she was
+scared by one that chased her five miles for no other reason than that
+she was what might be called a red woman&#8212;well-read in the exciting
+house-wife literature of the day. JENKINS positively declined.</p>
+ <p>Then it was offered to Col. CANNONAYDE, who declined it
+because his mother-in-law declared that she would go along too, if he
+went, and he thought it would be better not to let her have a change of
+air, as she was in a fair way to wind up pretty soon by remaining near
+those swamps. CANNONAYDE wanted the place kept open till after the
+funeral, but this was not granted.</p>
+ <p>The next offer was made to Gen. BRAYLEIGH; but <i>he</i>
+refused it on the ground that he had made arrangements for going into
+the coal trade, and he could not be sure of holding the place more than
+a few weeks. Anyway, he thought it would not pay to give up the
+coalition he had entered into with another party. In fact, old
+BRAYLEIGH treated the whole matter very coldly.</p>
+ <p>It was next tendered to the Hon. THEOPHILUS SKINNER, but
+peremptorily declined because SKINNER'S district had become Democratic
+since he was elected, and he knew that if he resigned an infamous
+cannibal copperhead would be sent to Congress in his stead. SKINNER
+consulted all the leaders of his party, and they unanimously agreed
+that it would be better to let every court in Europe be without an
+American representative than risk the loss of that district.</p>
+ <p>Everybody knows why the Rev. Dr. BANGWELL, of Chicago, did not
+accept it. The Doctor expected his divorce case to come on in a few
+days, and could not neglect that; and besides, he had made all the
+arrangements for his other marriage, and sent out the invitations. If
+the President had just made some inquiries before appointing Dr.
+BANGWELL, he could have found out that the Doctor's engagements would
+not permit him to leave Chicago on any account.</p>
+ <p>The offer that was made to Col. KAMPSTUHL was declined solely
+because the Colonel had an old score to settle with Gen. GRANT for
+something in the way of a court-martial that happened near Tricksburg.
+He swore that he would get square with the author of that business
+sometime, and when the mission was offered to him (by accident, for Gen
+GRANT had forgotten all about the court-martial), he got up a
+sepulchral voice, and said, "Ha, ha! R-e-e-e-vendge at last!" and then
+wrote a bitter letter to Washington on the subject.</p>
+ <p>After that it was peddled all round the country in a
+promiscuous way, and offered in succession to a blacksmith who used to
+shoe horses for Gen. GRANT, a conductor who refused to take fare from a
+well-known Presidential excursion party, a dealer in hides who had
+conferred some high obligations when a certain official was in the
+tanning business, a grocery-keeper, a family shoemaker, a manufacturer
+of matches, and such a multitude of people, in fact, that it finally
+got to be looked upon as the greatest missionary undertaking of modern
+times.</p>
+ <p>The only really prominent man that the place was not tendered
+to is GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN; but I wouldn't say that it won't get around
+to him somewhere in Asia before the circle is completed.</p>
+ <p>All these things were very well known to me before the office
+was placed at my disposal, but I did not care to wound the fine
+sensibilities of the President by saying anything about them in my note.</p>
+ <p>My reason for declining in favor of Mr. GREELEY has been
+stated&#8212;I put the whole matter frankly to Gen. GRANT&#8212;but I can't say
+whether the suggestion I offered has been acted upon or not. The only
+thing I am certain about on this point is, that if the offer should be
+made to HORACE, it won't get around to GEORGE FRANCIS afterwards.</p>
+ <p>There has been so much talk about this business, that I have
+considered it a sacred duty to state the facts and let some floods of
+light shine upon the whole thing. The duty is now conscientiously,
+discharged.</p>
+ <p>DARBY DODD.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>The Truth In a Nut-shell</b></p>
+ <p>CHANCELLOR CROSBY, in his inaugural address, has, we may say,
+bored right to the root of the whole vexed question of education, and
+extracted it, as will be seen from this extract: "It need hardly be
+urged," says the new Chancellor, and we hope, all the discontented will
+take the full force of the remark, "It need hardly be urged that the
+didaskalos should be didaktitos, and yet perhaps emphasis on so plain a
+truth may be sometimes necessary." Let us thank the Chancellor for
+forever removing this necessity.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table
+ style="width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ align="center" border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align: center; width: 30%;">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>A.T. STEWART &amp; CO.</big></p>
+ <p>Have made very large additions to their stock of</p>
+ <p>CLOAK VELVETS, VELVETEENS,<br>
+PLUSHES,<br>
+ASTRAKHANS,<br>
+MILLINERY and<br>
+TRIMMING VELVETS, Etc.</p>
+ <p>THE MOST CELEBRATED</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>CLOAK VELVETS.</big></p>
+ <p>CONFINED STYLES,</p>
+ <p>AT</p>
+ <p>UNPRECEDENTED BARGAINS,</p>
+ <p>CONSEQUENT ON PURCHASES MADE IN</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">LYONS AND OTHER CENTRES</p>
+ <p>OF MANUFACTURE, AT PANIC PRICES.</p>
+ <p>For the convenience of Customers, the above are exhibited in
+the Section of the main floor next to the corner of Tenth street,</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY, 4th Avenue, 9th and 10th
+Streets.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td rowspan="2" style="text-align: left;">
+ <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>
+ <b>CONTENTS ENTIRELY ORIGINAL.</b><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><b>"The Awakening,"</b></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><b>Wild Roses.</b></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>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>
+ <b>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,</b><br>
+ <br>
+P.O. Box 2783. No. 83 Nassau Street, New York.<br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>A.T. STEWART &amp; CO.</big></p>
+ <p>ARE EXHIBITING</p>
+ <p>An Important Purchase of</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>Rich Plain Silks,</big></p>
+ <p>27 INCHES WIDE, KNOWN AS</p>
+ <p>UNWATERED MOIRE ANTIQUE,</p>
+ <p>REPRESENTING IN VALUE</p>
+ <p>$100,000,</p>
+ <p>AT $4 AND $4.50 PER YARD,</p>
+ <p>THE SAME HAVING BEEN SOLD AT $6 AND $6.50 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p>SPECIAL ATTENTION IS INVITED TO THESE GOODS FOR HOLIDAY
+PRESENTS.</p>
+ <p>A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF BLACK AND WHITE<br>
+ <b>STRIPED SILKS,</b><br>
+AT 75c. PER YARD.</p>
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Plain Japanese Silks,<br>
+&nbsp;</span></big>HIGH COLORS,<br>
+AT 75c. PER YARD.</p>
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Three Cases Fancy Silks,</span></big><br>
+IN VARIOUS STYLES-FRESH GOODS, $1 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Five Cases Dress Silks,</span></big><br>
+NICE QUALITY, $2 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p>A LARGE QUANTITY OF <span style="font-weight: bold;">BONNET
+BLACK SILKS,<br>
+ </span> AT $3.75 AND $3 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">REAL IRISH POPLINS, NEW,</span><br>
+$2 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p>A FULL LINE OF<br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">IRISH TARTAN POPLINS,</span><br>
+IN TWENTY-FIVE DIFFERENT CLANS.</p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">AMERICAN BLACK SILKS,</span>
+GUARANTEED TO WEAR WELL,<br>2$ PER YARD.</p>
+
+ <p>FORMING IN ALL RESPECTS THE MOST ATTRACTIVE STOCK THEY HAVE
+EVER OFFERED.</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY, Fourth Ave.,</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">9th and 10th Sts.</p>
+ </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/178.jpg">
+ <p><b>THE PROPOSAL.</b></p>
+ <p><i>Ambitious Foreigner.</i> "AH! MEECE BULLION, BECAUSE I AM
+POOR YOU SCORN MY HAND; BUT REMEMBER HOW ZE POET HE TELL YOU ZE MAN'S
+ZE GOLD."</p>
+ <p><i>Miss B.</i> "GO DOWN TO PAR, THEN&#8212;<i>I</i> HAVE NOTHING
+MORE TO SAY ON THE SUBJECT."</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><br>
+ <b>BLANK BOOKS,<br>
+ </b> <small>&nbsp;Execute the finest styles of</small> <b>LITHOGRAPHY</b><br>
+ <small>Makes the Best and Cheapest<br>
+ </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><b>IS BY FAR THE CHEAPEST, QUICKEST, AND MOST
+COMFORTABLE ROUTE,</b></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>
+ <b>For NEW ORLEANS, LOUISVILLE, MEMPHIS, ST. LOUIS, VICKSBURG,
+NASHVILLE, MOBILE,<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><b>PUNCHINELLO,</b><br>
+ <small>VOL. I, ENDING SEPT. 24,<br>
+BOUND IN EXTRA CLOTH,<br>
+IS NOW READY.</small></p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">PRICE $2.50.</span><br>
+ <small>Sent free by any Publisher on receipt of price, or by</small><br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,</span><br>
+83 Nassau Street, New York.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table
+ style="width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ align="center" border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td rowspan="2" width="30%" align="center">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"> <big><big>PUNCHINELLO.</big></big></p>
+ <p><small>With a large and varied experience in the management
+and publication of a paper of the class herewith submitted, and with
+the still more positive advantage of an Ample Capital to justify the
+undertaking, the</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.</p>
+ <p><small>OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK</small></p>
+ <p><small>Presents to the public for approval, the new</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small>Illustrated Humorous and
+Satirical</small></p>
+ <p><small>WEEKLY PAPER,</small></p>
+ <p><big><big>PUNCHINELLO,</big></big></p>
+ <p><small>The first number of which was issued under date of
+April 2.</small></p>
+ <p>ORIGINAL ARTICLES</p>
+ <p><small>Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs or
+suggestive ideas or sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the
+day, are always acceptable and will be paid for liberally.</small></p>
+ <p><small>Rejected communications cannot be returned, unless
+postage stamps are enclosed.</small></p>
+ <p>TERMS:</p>
+ <p><small>One copy, per year, in advance $4 00 Single copies 10 A
+specimen copy will be <i>mailed free</i> upon the receipt of ten cents. One
+copy, with the Riverside Magazine, or any other magazine or paper,
+price $2.50, for 5 50 One copy, with any magazine or paper, price $4,
+for 7 00</small></p>
+ <p><small>All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed
+to</small><br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,</span></p>
+ <p>No. 83 Nassau Street,</p>
+ <p>P.O. Box 2783. NEW YORK.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align: center;">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>PROFESSOR JAMES DE
+MILLE,</big></big></big></p>
+ <p>Author of</p>
+ <p><big>"THE DODGE CLUB ABROAD"</big><br>
+ <small>AND OTHER HUMOROUS WORKS,</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Will Commence a New Serial</p>
+ <p>IN THE NUMBER OF</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"> <big><big><big><big>"PUNCHINELLO"</big></big></big></big></p>
+ <p>FOR</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>January 7th, 1871,</big></p>
+ <p><big>Written expressly for this paper.</big></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><big><big><b>A CHRISTMAS STORY,</b></big></big></big></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>Written expressly for this
+Paper,</big></p>
+ <p>By FRANK R. STOCKTON,</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Author of "Ting-a-ling," etc., etc.,</p>
+ <p>WILL BE COMMENCED IN No. 38, FOR DECEMBER 17TH,<br>
+AND CONCLUDED IN THREE NUMBERS.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10544 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
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+++ b/README.md
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #10544 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/10544)
diff --git a/old/10544-8.txt b/old/10544-8.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Volume 2, No. 37, December 10,
+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, Volume 2, No. 37, December 10, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 30, 2003 [EBook #10544]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 37 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | TIFFANY & CO., |
+ | |
+ | UNION SQUARE, |
+ | |
+ | Offer a large and choice stock of |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' WATCHES, |
+ | |
+ | Of all sizes and every variety of Casing, with Movements |
+ | of the finest quality. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 United States. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+Vol. II. No. 37.
+
+
+SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 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.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Sidenote: 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | APPLICATIONS FOR ADVERTISING IN |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO |
+ | |
+ | JOHN NICKINSON, |
+ | |
+ | ROOM No. 4, |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, N.Y. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK |
+ | |
+ | DAILY DEMOCRAT, |
+ | |
+ | _AN EVENING PAPER._ |
+ | |
+ | JAMES H. LAMBERT, |
+ | |
+ | EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. |
+ | |
+ | All the news fifteen hours in advance of Morning Papers. |
+ | |
+ | PRICE TWO CENTS. |
+ | |
+ | Subscription price by mail, $6.00. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | TO NEWS-DEALERS. |
+ | |
+ | Punchinello's Monthly. |
+ | |
+ | The Weekly Numbers for October |
+ | |
+ | Bound in a Handsome Cover, |
+ | |
+ | Is now ready. Price 40 cents. |
+ | |
+ | THE TRADE |
+ | |
+ | Supplied by the |
+ | |
+ | AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY, |
+ | |
+ | Who are now prepared to receive orders. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Bowling Green Savings-Bank, |
+ | |
+ | 33 BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ | Open Every Day from 10 A.M. to 8 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 500 VOLUMES IN ONE: |
+ | |
+ | AGENTS WANTED |
+ | |
+ | FOR |
+ | |
+ | The Library of Poetry and Song. |
+ | |
+ | _Being Choice Selections from the Best Poets,_ |
+ | |
+ | ENGLISH, SCOTCH, IRISH, AND AMERICAN, |
+ | |
+ | With an Introduction by |
+ | |
+ | WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. |
+ | |
+ | This volume is the handsomest and cheapest subscription book |
+ | extant, and contains in itself more to give it enduring fame |
+ | and make it universally popular than any book ever |
+ | published. It is something in it, of _the best_, for every |
+ | one--for the old, the middle aged, and the young. It has |
+ | intellectual food for every taste and for every mood and |
+ | phase of human feeling, from the merriest humor up, through |
+ | all the gradations of feeling, to the most touching and |
+ | tender pathos. Excepting the Bible, this will be the book |
+ | most loved, and the most frequently referred to in the |
+ | family. |
+ | |
+ | The whole work, page by page, poem by poem, has passed under |
+ | the educated criticism and scholarly eye of WILLIAM CULLEN |
+ | BRYANT, a man reverenced among men, a poet great among |
+ | poets. |
+ | |
+ | _This is a Library of over_ 500 _Volumes in one book_, whose |
+ | contents, of no ephemeral nature or interest, will never |
+ | grow old or stale. It can be, and will be, read and re-read |
+ | with pleasure as long as its leaves hold together. Over 800 |
+ | pages beautifully printed, choicely illustrated, handsomely |
+ | bound. Sold only through Agents, by subscription. |
+ | |
+ | Teachers, Clergymen, active Men, intelligent Women, can all |
+ | secure good pay with light work by taking an agency for this |
+ | book. Terms very liberal. |
+ | |
+ | Send for Circular containing full particulars to |
+ | |
+ | J.B. FORD & CO., 39 Park Row, N.Y. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. |
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+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Office of the Librarian of
+Congress at Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAN AND WIVES.
+
+A TRAVESTY.
+
+By MOSE SKINNER.
+
+CHAPTER FOURTH.
+
+THE HALF-WAY HOUSE
+
+The first person to discover that ANN BRUMMET had left the house, was
+Mrs. LADLE, Now, ever since the Hon. MICHAEL had asked ANN to go to the
+circus, Mrs. LADLE had hated her. But when he took ANN to the
+Agricultural Fair, and bought her a tin-type album and a box of initial
+note-paper, Mrs. LADLE was simply raving. Whether she herself was
+viewing the Hon. MICHAEL with an eye matrimonial, and was jealous of
+ANN, must remain an open question. At any rate, she was the first to
+start the scandal about ANN and JEFFRY, and lost no time in conveying it
+to the ears of the Hon. MICHAEL, with profuse embellishments. At the
+croquet party the Hon. MICHAEL had been particularly sweet on ANN, his
+ardor finding vent in such demonstrations as throwing kisses at her
+slyly, holding up printed lozenges for her inspection, or tossing sticks
+at her and dodging behind a tree. And when Mrs. LADLE went to ANN'S room
+next day, for a good square scold, she found her out.
+
+Now Mrs. LADLE was a mother-in-law, and consequently a pretty old fowl
+in ferreting out things of this sort. She determined to discover the why
+and wherefore of ANN'S departure. If she could confront the Hon. MICHAEL
+with proofs of ANN'S indiscretion, it would be the loudest kind of
+feather in her cap.
+
+She examined everybody in the house, and everybody that went by the
+house, but without the smallest result. She was out in the front yard
+waiting for a fresh victim, when she saw HERSEY DEATHBURY coming up the
+road. She signed to her to come in.
+
+She came in.
+
+HERSEY DEATHBURY was an extraordinary woman. A woman of genius, sir.
+What if her make-up _was_ limited? What if, when she was born, nature
+_was_ economizing, and gave her only one eye, and she was lame and
+hump-backed, and hadn't got any eyebrows and wore a wig; what of that?
+It's to her credit, _I_ say. You saw her just as she was. No airs
+_there_. And in this lay the great charm of H. DEATHBURY'S character.
+Looking at her closely, you would see a fixed and stony eye and a
+chronic scowl, and you would say: "Disposition a little morose; some man
+has soured on her." Looking at her more closely, you would see under her
+right arm a common blackboard, such as is used in schools, and over her
+shoulder a canvas bag containing lumps of chalk, and you would say: "A
+little eccentric; likes to write on the blackboard instead of talking.
+Would make a nice wife. Looks, on the whole, like a country schoolma'am,
+whom the boys have stoned out of town, with the fixtures of the
+school-house tied to her." But she has talents. What is she, an
+authoress? "Yes, she is." But, like other authoresses, she isn't
+appreciated, and has returned to her legitimate occupation, the
+Wash-Tub; but still doth she itch for fame, and so, between times, she
+writes verbose essays on Female Suffrage, composed during the process
+known as "wringing." And when there's a Woman's Rights Convention in
+that locality, she sits on the platform, and applauds all the Red-Hot
+Resolutions with that trenchant female weapon, the umbrella, in one
+hand, and an antediluvian reticule the other. In the words of the Hon.
+MICHAEL: "She is not only a leading _Re_former, sir, but a great
+_Plat_former." And Mrs. LADLE will tell you that, as a washer, she is
+superb. She "does up things" in a manner simply celestial.
+
+Mrs. LADLE told her first to shut the door.
+
+"Have you seen ANN BRUMMET to-day?" she said.
+
+HERSEY nodded.
+
+"Where?" was the eager inquiry.
+
+HERSEY DEATHBURY placed her blackboard against the wall, unslung her
+chalk, and wrote in very large letters:--
+
+"I C hur a-Goin on The rode 2 forneys Kragg."
+
+"Ah!" ejaculated Mrs. LADLE joyfully, "traced at last." And she ran to
+tell the Hon. MICHAEL all about it.
+
+ * * *
+
+The Half-Way House at Forney's Crag was a hoary-headed old vagabond of a
+house, that had passed the heyday of its youth long before that great
+encyclopaedia, the oldest inhabitant, emitted his first infantile
+squawk. Each successive season caused it to lean a little more and the
+most casual observer must perceive that it couldn't by any possibility
+become much leaner without pining entirely away.
+
+Nevertheless, it had been the only hotel that Spunkville could boast,
+all within a short period of this writing. Like most Western hotels, it
+had been ably supported by a large floating population, known as "New
+York Drummers," and many a time had its old walls re-echoed with their
+guileless hilarity and moral tales; and, if the ancient and time-honored
+spittoon in the bar-room could speak, it could relate wonderful stories
+concerning the Sample Gentry; relating, perhaps, to a Spunkville
+merchant, who, having retreated precipitately down his cellar stairs
+several tunes during the day, to avoid "them confounded drummers, with
+their everlasting samples," was, while plodding his lonely way homeward,
+seized upon by these commercial freebooters, conveyed forthwith to the
+Half-Way House, and there deluged with such a perfect torrent of
+brow-beating eloquence as to reduce him to an imbecile state, in which
+condition he would willingly order large bills of goods, a custom still
+somewhat in vogue, and known as "commanding trade."
+
+At other times, it was refreshing to see a drummer emerge from a week's
+carousal, take a drink of plain soda, and write a long letter to his
+employers concerning the extreme dulness of trade.
+
+But since the new hotel had been built the Half-Way House had waned, and
+its quiet was only invaded by an occasional straggling traveller or a
+runaway couple, and its walls resounded with nothing more clamorous than
+the orgies of a Sunday-school picnic.
+
+It is, however, with the Ladies' Parlor only (that wretched abode of
+female discomfort in all country hotels) that we have to do.
+
+The furniture of the room consisted of the articles usually found in a
+_boudoir_ of this kind, to wit: a straight-backed sofa, much worn; the
+inevitable and horrid straw carpeting; that old Satanic piano, that
+never was in tune; an antique and rheumatic table, and three wheezy old
+chairs. The only present attempts at ornament were two in number. The
+first was a large engraving of the Presidents of the United States,
+which had formerly done duty in the bar-room, where the villagers were
+wont to gaze upon it in an awe-struck manner, being impressed with a
+vague idea that it was CHRISTY'S Minstrels. The second was a living
+statue, none other than ANN BRUMMET waiting for JEFFRY MAULBOY.
+
+"Half-past three, and not come yet," said she. "Look out, JEFFRY
+MAULBOY, for if you _do_ go back on me"--
+
+She paused, for she saw a man coming towards the house.
+
+"Well, if that ain't ARCHIBALD BLINKSOP," she added, "I'm regularly
+sold. What can _he_ want _here_?"
+
+Yes, it was ARCHIBALD sure enough, biting his finger-nails and breathing
+very short, while he cast furtive glances at the windows.
+
+He went slowly up the steps and into the entry just as Mrs. BACKUP, the
+landlady of the House, came out of her sitting-room.
+
+Now, Mrs. BACKUP was one of your eminently respectable females, who are
+always loaded to the muzzle with Beautiful Moral Essays, which they try
+to cram down everybody's throat, but never practise themselves. She
+formerly kept a boarding-house in the city, where, at table regularly
+after soup, she would regale those present with long dissertations on
+the shocking immorality of the present day, varying the monotony,
+perhaps, by allusions to the boarders who had just left. "Mr. SIMPSON
+was a pleasant-spoken young man as I want to see, and as good as the
+bank, but I'm afraid he _was_ agettin' dissipated;" or, "Mr. FIELDING
+was quiet and mannerly, and never found fault with his vittles, but he
+had _one_ DREAD_ful_ habit;" and then she would sigh heavily. And when
+little Miss PINKHAM, who occupied the second floor back (and who, being
+a schoolma'am, was naturally debarred from the other sex), indulged in
+the smallest possible flirtation with the good-looking young man
+opposite, Mrs. BACKUP'S sharp eye not only saw her, but Mrs. BACKUP'S
+sharp tongue took occasion to berate her severely on a Sunday morning
+(for then the boarders are all in), at the top of the first landing (for
+then the boarders could all hear her). "I _am_ saprised, Miss PINKHAM.
+Why, when I see that young man asittin' at his winder, and a blowin'
+beans. Yes, a blowin' beans, Miss PINKHAM, through a horrible tin
+pop-gun at _your'n_, and a winkin' vicious, and you a enjoyin' on it,
+Miss PINKHAM, I sot down; yes, I sot right down, and I shuddered. 'Sich
+doin's in _my_ house,' says I, 'I am totilly congealed.'" When all the
+time, mind you, the virtuous Mrs. BACKUP was a woman who would bear any
+amount of watching, having already caused three husbands to frantically
+emigrate to parts unknown.
+
+Seeing that ARCHIBALD hesitated, she said:--
+
+"Well, young man, what's wanted?"
+
+"I--I--want to see ANN BRUMMET," said ARCHIBALD.
+
+"Oh, you _do_, do you?" rejoined Mrs. BACKUP, regally; "and _who_, may I
+ask, is ANN BRUMMET?"
+
+"A young lady that I was--a--to meet here," replied ARCHIBALD, timidly.
+
+Mrs. BACKUP immediately organized a virtuous tableau, and glared at him
+majestically.
+
+"A young lady you was to _meet_ here. _In_-deed. And do you think, young
+man, that _my_ house is a place where young chaps can go a-roystorin'
+and a-gallivinatin' about, and a meetin' young women?"
+
+"But I don't want to go oysterin'," said ARCHIBALD, "and I don't know
+how to galvinate. I only want to tell her something."
+
+"Oh, to _tell_ her something, is it? Well, I'd have _no_ objections,
+young man, if you _said_ she was your wife. _Then_ you'd have a right,
+but not now, for my cha-_rac_ter is precious to me, young man."
+
+"But she ain't my wife," said ARCHIBALD; "I only--kind of know her, you
+see."
+
+"Drat the man," said Mrs. BACKUP to herself; "he's a born fool that
+can't take a hint like that. TEDDY!" she cried to a seedy-looking,
+pimply man, who was sucking a forlorn-looking pipe on the back-door
+step, "you're wanted." She whispered a few words in his ear, and went
+up-stairs.
+
+TEDDY MCSLUSH was the General Utility man of the Half-Way House. Born
+down East, of an Irish father and Scotch mother, he was eminently
+calculated to live by his wits. His natural talents were numerous and
+sparkling. He could tell more lies without notes than any man in the
+State, or make a beautiful prayer, all in the way of business. When a
+runaway couple were married at the Half-Way House, he would not only
+give the bride away in a voice broken by emotion, but he would bless the
+bridegroom with tears in his eyes, and he would do all this at the
+lowest market price. And every Sunday he dressed in a black suit and
+sung in the choir, and patted the little children on the head, and was
+generally respected.
+
+He approached ARCHIBALD, and poked him in the ribs, facetiously.
+
+"Ah!" he ejaculated; "and it's a cryin' shame, so it is, that a fine lad
+like yerself should be took with sich a complaint. It's modeshty what
+ails ye, man. And wasn't it Mester JOHN SHAKESPEER himself, him as writ
+the illegant versis, Lord luv his ashis, as says to me only jist afore
+his breath soured on him, 'TEDDY,' says he, wid much feelin', 'TEDDY,
+modeshty is a fine thing in a woman,' says he, 'but it's death to a man.
+Promise me now,' says he, 'for I feel as this clay is a coolin'
+fast--promise me, TEDDY, as you'll never hev nothink to do with it--no,
+not never, my boy.' I promised him, and Hevins knows as I've kep' my
+word. But, Lord alive, I'm a keepin' you all the time from yer own dear
+wife, as is a dyin' to see you--and a sweet dear it is."
+
+He ushered ARCHIBALD into the Ladies' Parlor, closed the door, and
+applied his ear to the key-hole, with an air of the most respectful
+attention.
+
+According to TEDDY'S way of thinking, ANN was not hankering for
+ARCHIBALD'S society.
+
+"What do you want _here_?" said she, sharply.
+
+"Oh, don't speak cross to me, Miss BRUMMET," said he, looking timidly
+around. Then he put his finger on his lip, and shook his head
+energetically.
+
+"I know all about it, you see," said he; "JEFF told me. Oh my! wasn't I
+struck up, though? But I'll never tell. _He_ couldn't come, you see. His
+mother sent for him, and--"
+
+"You lie," she broke in fiercely; "it's a put up job between you two.
+But it won't do; do you _hear_? It _won't do_."
+
+"Oh, don't look at me _that_ way," said ARCHIBALD, backing toward the
+door; "I want to go home."
+
+"I'd like to see you go home," she replied, placing her back against the
+door. "You must think I'm a fool, to let you off as easy as that. You've
+got to sit up with me this evening, anyhow."
+
+"But what would folks say?" stammered ARCHIBALD. "Oh, think of my
+reputation, Miss BRUMMET, and let me go."
+
+"Your reputation!" she sneered. "Humbug! Men don't have any reputation,
+except when they steal a woman's. Come," she added, in a more
+conciliatory tone, "we'll have some supper, and then we'll have a game
+of euchre."
+
+"Euchre! Oh, don't ask me to play euchre," said he; "I'm so mixed up,
+Miss BRUMMET, I couldn't tell the King of Ten-spots from the Ace of
+Jacks. Oh, won't BELINDA grab hold of my hair when she hears of this!"
+
+"Yes, she'll pull it till she makes her ARCHIE-_bald_," said ANN,
+laughing.
+
+ARCHIBALD sat down, and looked at her in a supplicating manner.
+
+"I'll do anything you say," said he, "if you please won't get off any
+more puns. It's awful. I knew a fellow once who had it chronic. He
+doubled every word that he could lay his tongue to. When he was going to
+a party, he'd take the dictionary and pick out a lot of words that could
+be twisted, and set 'em down and study on 'em, so he could be ready with
+a lot of puns, and when he got 'em off folks would laugh, but all the
+time they'd wish he'd died young. And that's the way he'd go on. He
+finally drove his mother into a consumption, and at her funeral, instead
+of taking on as he ought to, he only just looked at the body, and said,
+'Well, that's the worst _coffin-fit_ the old lady ever had.' And then he
+turned round and began to get off puns on the mourners. Wasn't it
+dreadful?--But what's that?"
+
+Somebody was knocking at the door.
+
+"What's wanted?" said ANN.
+
+"It's your minister as has come, mum," said TEDDY, from the outside.
+"What word shall I give him?"
+
+"Tell him I shan't want him," said ANN.
+
+In a few minutes TEDDY came back.
+
+"He says, mum, as he won't go without marryin' somebody, or a gittin'
+his pay anyway, for it's a nice buryin' job as he's lost by comin'."
+
+"But," said ANN, "I can't--" She hesitated, and seemed to form a sudden
+resolution. "Tell him," she continued, "tell him--"
+
+(To be continued.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BIOGRAPHICAL.
+
+
+ There was an agriculturist, philosopher, and editor,
+ Who thought the world his debtor and himself, of course, its creditor;
+ A man he was of wonderful vitup'rative fertility,
+ Though seeming an embodiment of mildness and docility,
+ This ancient agriculturist, philosopher, and editor.
+
+ The clothes he wore were shocking to the citizen æsthetical,
+ Assuredly they would not pass in circles which were critical,
+ So venerable were they, and so distant from propriety,
+ So utterly unsuited to respectable society,
+ Which numbers in its membership some citizens æsthetical.
+
+ He kept a model farm for every sort of wild experiment.
+ Which was to all the neighborhood a source of constant worriment;
+ For every one who passed that way pretended to be eager to
+ Discover pumpkin vines that ran across the fields a league or two,
+ So queer was the effect of each preposterous experiment.
+
+ He had a dreadful passion, which was not at all professional,
+ For going for an office, either local or congressional.
+ But though often nominated, yet the people wouldn't ratify,
+ Because they thought, quite properly, it would be wrong to gratify
+ The all-consuming passion that was not at all professional.
+
+ Among the many hobbies which he cantered on incessantly
+ Was one he called Protection, and he rode it quite unpleasantly;
+ For if any one dissented from his notions injudiciously,
+ He went for him immediately, ferociously and viciously,
+ Did this absurd equestrian who cantered on incessantly.
+
+ With which remarks the author of this brief, veracious history
+ Concludes his observations on the incarnated mystery
+ Known as an agriculturist, philosopher, and editor,
+ Who thought the world his debtor, and himself, of course, its creditor,
+ And who will surely figure on the oddest page in history.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FITTEST PLACE FOR A "PRESERVER" OF THE PEACE. A "Jam" on Broadway.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. HELMBOLD TO J.G. BENNETT, Jr. "Boo-shoo! fly."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A BRIGHT IDEA.
+
+_Customer_. "WAITER, BRING ME SOME FROZEN CLAMS."
+
+_Waiter (lately caught)_. "YES, SIR; WILL YOU HAVE 'EM ROASTED OR
+BILED?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WORDS AND THEIR USES.
+
+Nothing, except counting your stamps, can be more pleasant and exciting
+than tracing out the origin of words by the aid of a second-hand
+dictionary. It's the next funniest thing to grubbing after stumps in a
+ten-acre lot. Dentists make capital philologists--: they are so much
+accustomed to digging for roots. It's rather dull work to shovel around
+in the Anglo-Saxon stratum, but, as soon as you strike the Sanscrit,
+then you're off, and if you don't find big nuggets, it's because--well,
+it's because there are none there. Sometimes you dig down to about the
+time when NOAH went on his little sailing excursion, and strike what
+seems to be a first-class sockdolager of root, but what is the use?
+Unfortunately the philology business is overdone; it's chock full of
+first-class broken down pedagogues and unsuccessful ink-slingers, and,
+as soon as you offer a curious specimen in the way of roots, they write
+a book to prove that the root don't exist, or, if it does, that it
+should not.
+
+However, there is an advantage in knowing the roots of words, and the
+use to which they were put in former years. Everybody, you know, is very
+anxious to read CHAUCER and SPENSER. Now, after you have studied this
+subject about forty-two years, you will be able to read CHAUCER with the
+aid of an old English dictionary and an Anglo-Saxon grammar.
+
+Many so-called philologists, who have preceded me, have ignorantly
+derived words from improper sources. Thus, the compound word, shoofly,
+has been traced by some to the Irish word _shoe_, meaning a
+hoof-covering, and the French word _fly_, meaning an insect, when it is
+apparent to even the casual observer that it comes from the Guinea word
+_shoo_, meaning get out, and the English word _fly_, meaning a tripe
+destroyer. I propose, therefore, to show you the origin of a few words,
+in order that you may use them properly, and in order that you may
+subscribe freely for my book on this subject, which will shortly be
+placed before an admiring public.
+
+_Theatres_. When the players were servants of the king, they were
+compelled to be proficient in reading, riting, rithmetic, rhyming,
+riddling, reciting, rehearsing, and romping. These accomplishments were
+grouped together and called _the 8 r's_, which name naturally enough was
+soon applied to the play-houses. This example shows how simple the whole
+subject is, and how easily the philology business could he run by a
+child six years of age.
+
+_Country_. The origin of this word is, to say the least, odd. City
+people were accustomed to visit the rural districts at about the time
+when rye was ripe, and they were generally amused by the farmer's
+pereginations around his rye. Farmers always count rye-stacks in the
+morning, in order to discover whether any of them have been lifted
+during the night. When, upon their return to the City, the visitors were
+asked where they had been, they facetiously replied, "To count rye."
+This soon became a favorite expression; the "e" was dropped for euphony,
+and the rural districts were called country.
+
+_Spittoon_.--This word comes from the Greek word _spit_, meaning to
+slobber, and the Scotch word, _tune_, meaning the noise made by the
+bag-pipes. As the saliva struck the receptacle it made a noise
+delightful to the ears of the smoker, and resembling the note of the
+national instrument of Scotland. Hence the receptacle was called the
+spittoon.
+
+_Politics_.--Quack philologists, who evidently were insane, have gone
+back to the classics for the root of this word, when it is well known
+that immediately after the termination of the Revolution, when the
+Government of this country was about to be settled, the word came into
+existence. A woman, called POLLY, kept a corner grocery in New York, and
+all the fellows who wanted offices were accustomed to go to POLLY'S for
+their beer, because she trusted. Here they usually divulged their ideas
+of the manner in which the Government machine should be run. When asked
+why they went to that store, they always answered, "POLLY ticks."
+Outsiders, when asked what was going on in POLLY's store, always
+answered with a wise look, "POLLY ticks." The words soon spread, and
+talking about the Government was facetiously called POLLY ticks. The
+expression was finally used in earnest, and, by euphoric changes,
+reached its present shape.
+
+_Cheese-it_.--This compound word has by some silly person been traced to
+the Saxon _cyse_, meaning condensed cow, and the Celtic _it_, meaning
+it. Now every way-faring man, even though _non compos mentis_, knows
+that when he is invited to come in and cut a cheese, come in and take a
+drop of whiskey is meant. This word, then, is derived from the Sanscrit
+_cheese_, meaning drop, and the English _it_, meaning whatever you may
+happen to be saying, and the whole expression may be properly translated
+"drop that yarn."
+
+I might go on straight through the Dictionary, but I refrain, desiring
+only to show you what a light and entertaining subject philology is, and
+what quantities of fun you can get out of it on winter evenings.
+
+If any one should desire to pursue this subject further, let him go
+through CHAUCER, SPENSER, SHAKSPEARE, and MILTON with a fine-tooth comb
+and a pair of spectacles, looking for roots, and then try my book on
+"Words and their Uses." He had better not attack the latter work on an
+empty stomach. An empty head will be more appropriate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Mendicant Mission.
+
+Two fresh rumors about that unfortunate English Mission are afloat. One
+is that it has been tendered to the Hon. HENRY T. BLOW; the other is
+that the--well, no, not exactly Hon.--DAN. SICKLES is to be transferred
+from Madrid to the Court of St. JAMES. 'Tis much the same thing. If BLOW
+is appointed, it's BLOW; and if SICKLES is appointed, it's Blow, too.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Military Intelligence.
+
+The Fifth Regiment N.G.S.N.Y., composed altogether of Germans, have
+adopted the Prussian helmet with a spike on top. This is appropriate, as
+most Germans are linguists, and like to "spike the French."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Where to Commence the Civil Service Reform.
+
+In our Hotels and Restaurants.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+Regarding me thoughtfully for a moment, MARGARET asks, "What is an 'old
+comedy?'"
+
+I say to her, "An old comedy is to the comedy of to-day, precisely what
+an old beau, padded, painted, simpering with false teeth, and leering
+with rhumy eyes, is to a handsome, gallant young fellow, such as Mr.
+LESTER WALLACK impersonates in _Ours_ or _School_."
+
+To which she replies, "What are roomy eyes, dear?" (Being her fourth
+cousin by marriage, I am a sort of maiden aunt to her,--whence this
+respectful familiarity.) "Eyes in which there is room for the honest
+glances that never show themselves?'"
+
+I sternly remark that "nice girls never pun."
+
+"Yes," she replies; "punning, like beer and other vices, is the peculiar
+prerogative of men, I suppose. But you need not be afraid. I read
+PUNCHINELLO sometimes, and it is a terrible warning to people who are
+tempted to pun. I could give you frightful instances of the appalling
+depth to which the men who make puns in PUNCHINELLO occasionally sink."
+
+I hastily close the discussion by inviting her to come to WALLACK'S and
+see an old comedy. So we find ourselves on the following evening in the
+only theatre in the country where that rather important adjunct of a
+theatre--a company--is to be found,
+
+There are quantities of elegant dresses in the house,--the ladies having
+an idea that an old comedy is one of those things which every
+fashionable person ought to see. There are also numbers of nice young
+men, who, being the burning and shining lights of fashionable society
+(after their day's work behind the counter is ended), come to be bored
+by the old comedy, with a heroism which proves how immeasurably superior
+to the influences of tape and calico are their youthful souls. By the
+by, it is one of the unavoidable _désagréments_ of New York society that
+the wearer of the elegant dress is often conscious that her partner in
+the waltz knows precisely how many yards of material compose her skirt,
+and exactly how much it cost per yard, for the excellent reason that he
+himself measured it with his professional yard-stick, and cut it with
+his private scissors. This, however, is a subject that belongs not to
+old comedy, but to the extremely modern comedy of New York society. The
+two resemble each other only so far as they are fashionable and dull.
+
+But to our WALLACKIAN old comedy. The curtain rises upon the veteran
+GILBERT and the handsome ROCKWELL. They converse in the following style:
+
+GILBERT.--"Well, you young dog, ha! ha! So you have decided to make your
+old uncle happy by marrying my neighbor's daughter. Gad! I remember my
+own wedding-day. Well, well; we won't talk about that now, but hark ye,
+you young villain, if you don't marry the girl, I cut you off with a
+shilling."
+
+ROCKWELL.--"My dear uncle, I can have no greater pleasure than to fulfil
+your wishes. But suppose our adorable young neighbor has the
+ill-breeding to refuse me."
+
+GILBERT.--"Refuse you! Refuse my nephew? Gad! I'd like to see THOMAS
+OLDBOY permit his daughter to refuse my nephew! I'd--d--e, I'd--"
+(chokes and stamps with rage.)
+
+Further on we meet with Miss OLDBOY and her mother,--the latter a stout
+old lady, addicted to smelling salts and yellow silks.
+
+LYDIA OLDBOY.--"To-day I am expecting the arrival of young WILDOATS, who
+comes to pay his addresses to me. I wonder if he is like that dear,
+delightful THADDEUS OF WARSAW."
+
+Mrs. OLDBOY.--"Now, Miss, remember that your honored father insists upon
+this match. I expect you to be a dutiful daughter, and accede to his
+wishes. Here comes the young man himself."
+
+ROCKWELL.--"My. dear Mrs. OLDBOY, I am charmed to see you. You are
+looking positively younger than your ravishingly beautiful daughter.
+Fair LYDIA, I come to lay my heart at your feet. 'Tis the wish of my
+uncle and your honored father that we should unite our respective
+houses. Let me touch that exquisite hand. Unseal those ruby lips and
+tell me that I am the happiest of men."
+
+Here the UNCLE and OLDBOY enter. They chuckle, and poke one another in
+the ribs, remarking "Gad" and "Zounds" at intervals. They bless the
+young couple, and order up some of the old Madeira. The curtain falls as
+OLDBOY gives the health of the young people, with the wish that they may
+have a dozen children, and a cellar never without plenty of this
+splendid old Madeira,--"that your father, bottled, Miss LYDIA, the year
+our gracious sovereign came to the throne."
+
+This is a fair sample of the old comedy. The oaths are of course
+omitted, out of deference to the tender susceptibilities of the editor
+of PUNCHINELLO. So are the indecencies, which are the spice of the old
+comedy, but which cannot be written in a respectable journal, and are
+almost too gross and brutal for the _Sun_. Take from an old comedy its
+oaths and its grossness, and nothing is left but a residuum of
+boisterous inanity. The condensed old comedy which has just been laid
+before the readers of PUNCHINELLO, is as inane and vapid as anything
+that WALLACK'S theatre has shown us in the past month. Do you find it
+dull? For my part, I don't hesitate to say that the "Essence of Old
+Virginny," as furnished by the venerable poet, Mr. DANIEL BRYANT, is
+vastly more amusing than the Essence of Old Comedy.
+
+All of which I say, in my most impressive manner, to MARGARET as we
+struggle through the crowded lobby. But she irreverently disputes my
+assertions, and asks, "How is it that everybody admires these comedies
+if they are so wretched as you say they are? Is your judgment better
+than that of anybody else?"
+
+There being nothing to say, if I mean to maintain my ground, except that
+my judgment is the only infallible critical judgment in this city or
+elsewhere, I promptly and unblushingly say so. But MARGARET tells me I
+am "a goose"--(I think I have mentioned that she is my aunt, and hence
+allows herself these pleasing freedoms of speech)--and says that I shall
+take her to see the old comedies every night, until I am willing to say
+that I like them.
+
+Who is there that, in view of this threat, will not drop the tear of
+sensibility, so neatly alluded to by Mr. STERNE, in sympathy with the
+prospective sufferings of
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UNIVERSITY-MANIA.
+
+MY DEAR P.:--I have made some curious observations of this disease,
+which lead to startling conclusions.
+
+It is a malady peculiar to the United States, being an eruption
+resulting from indigestion of unripe knowledge, together with excess of
+vanity in individual blood.
+
+Universities spring up among us like mushrooms, in a night. The seed of
+knowledge is sown broadcast over our land. In fact, in this particular
+we may be said to be very seedy, indeed.
+
+For my part I have no objection to Universities--when they _are_
+Universities. But, at the rate at which we are now progressing, we shall
+soon have "every man his own University." It will become the fashion to
+keep a University in the back-yard. And then, you know, the institution
+must have its own particular organ, you know. Every man, and every
+member of his family, shall print his or her _Free Press_, and
+independence of opinion shall reign.
+
+ Glorious country! Glorious free speech!
+ With WALT WHITMAN, we may well exclaim:
+ O the BROWN University!
+ O the splendid University of SMITH!
+ O CORNELL, his University!
+
+ _&c. ad infinitum._
+
+As for me, dear NELLO, I am in the front rank of civilization. I have
+accepted the Chair of Cane-bottom in a Grub-Street garret, and rejoice
+in a barrel-organ, which plays with great freedom of speech.
+
+Yours pedagoguically,
+
+JEREMY DOGWOOD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A. Sop for Ireland.
+
+It is stated that Queen VICTORIA has ordered from a Dublin manufacturer
+an extensive assortment of Balbriggan hosiery for the wedding outfit of
+the Princess LOUISE. There is a stroke of policy in this. In firemen's
+phrase it may be called laying on the "hose" to quench disloyalty.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT. The Marine Hospital.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TRIALS OF A WITNESS.
+
+MR. PUNCHINELLO:--As all people seem to come to you with their troubles
+and grievances, I hope you will not refuse to listen to my woes. And
+whether they are woes or not, I leave you to judge for yourself.
+
+At the beginning of last week I made my first appearance in any
+court-room, in the character of a witness, in the case of VALENTINE
+vs. ORSON; in which the point in dispute was the ownership of a tract
+of land in Wyoming Territory. I knew something in regard to the sale of
+these lands, and was fully prepared to testify to the extent of my
+knowledge in the premises; but judge of my utter surprise and horror on
+being obliged to go through such an ordeal as the following extracts
+from my examination will indicate.
+
+The counsel for the plaintiff commenced by asking me if I was a married
+man, and when I had answered that. I was, he said:--
+
+"Is your wife a believer in the principles of the Woman's Rights party?"
+
+I could not, for the life of me, see what this had to do with the land
+in Wyoming, but I answered, that I was happy to say she was not.
+
+The examination then proceeded as follows:--
+
+_Q._ You are happy, then, in your matrimonial relations? _A._ Yes--(and
+remembering the oath) reasonably so.
+
+_Q._ Is your wife pretty? _A._ (Witness remembering at once his oath and
+his wife's presence in court) She is pretty pretty.
+
+_Q._ What are her defects? _A._ (Witness remembering only his wife's
+presence.) I have never been able to discover them.
+
+_Q._ Do you wear flannel? _A._ Yes, in winter.
+
+_Q._ Can you testify, upon your oath, that you do not wear flannel in
+summer? _A._ I can.
+
+_Q._ Now be careful in your answer. What do you wear in the spring and
+fall? _A._ I--I wear my common clothes.
+
+_Q._ With flannel, or without flannel? _A._ Sometimes with, and
+sometimes without.
+
+_Q._ No evasion; you must tell the Court exactly when you wear flannel,
+and when you do not.
+
+A series of questions on this subject brought out the fact that I wore
+flannel when the weather was cold, or cool; and did not wear it when it
+was mild, or warm.
+
+_Q._ Have you a lightning-rod on your house? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ How much did it cost you to have it put up? _A._ It has not cost me
+anything yet--I owe for it.
+
+_Q._ Is that all you owe for? _A._ No, I have other debts.
+
+_Q._ Have you any money with you now? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ How much? _A._ (Counting contents of porte-monnaie.) Sixty-two
+cents.
+
+_Q._ Where did you get that? _A._ (With embarrassment.) I borrowed it.
+
+_Q._ Were you present when defendant first offered his land for sale to
+the plaintiff? _A._ (Brightening up.) I was.
+
+_Q._ Do you burn gas or kerosene in your house? _A._ Gas.
+
+_Q._ How many burners? _A._ Ten, I think.
+
+_Q._ Are you willing to assert, upon your solemn oath, that there are
+only ten? _A._ (Witness counting on his fingers.) I am.
+
+_Q._ Do you wear studs or buttons on your shirt fronts? _A._ Studs.
+
+_Q._ Gold, or pearl? _A._ Mother-of-pearl, as a general thing, but
+sometimes I wear one gold one at the top.
+
+_Q._ Were all your studs of mother-of-pearl, at the time when you first
+heard this transaction mentioned between the parties? _A._ They were.
+
+_Q._ Do you ever wear your gold stud in the middle of your bosom? _A._
+No, sir, I always wear it at the top.
+
+_Q._ Do you ever wear it at the bottom? Can you swear it was not at the
+bottom on the day of the transaction referred to? _A._ I distinctly
+remember that I did not wear it at all that day.
+
+_Q._ Did you wear it that night? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Q._ Can you swear that after you went to bed you did not wear it? _A._
+I can.
+
+_Q._ Have you ever been vaccinated? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ On which arm? _A._ The left.
+
+_Q._ At the of the first mention of this land to the plaintiff, who were
+present? _A._ (Witness speaking with hopeful vivacity, as if he hoped
+they were now coming to the merits of the case.) The plaintiff, the
+defendant, and myself.
+
+_Q._ Do you use the Old Dominion coffee-pot in your house? _A._
+(Dejectedly.) No, sir.
+
+_Q._ What kind of a coffee pot do you use? _A._ A common tin one.
+
+_Q._ You are willing to swear it is tin? _A._ I am.
+
+_Q._ Has your wife any sisters? _A._ She has two; ANNA and JANE.
+
+_Q._ Are they married _A._ They are.
+
+_Q._ Are either of them prettier than your wife? _A._ (Quickly.) No,
+sir.
+
+_Q._ Have you any children? _A._ Two.
+
+_Q._ Have they had the measles? _A._ They have.
+
+_Q._ Has any other person in your household had the measles? _A._ I have
+had them, and my wife has had them.
+
+_Q._ How do you know your wife has had them? _A._ She told me so.
+
+_Q._ Then you did not see her have them? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Q._ We want no hearsay evidence here; how can you swear that she has
+had them when you did not see her have them? _A._ She told me so, and I
+believed her.
+
+_Q._ Did she take an oath that she had had them? _A._ No sir.
+
+_Q._ Then, sir, you are trifling with the Court. Do you understand the
+obligations of an oath? _A._ I do.
+
+_Q._ Beware, then, that you are not committed for perjury. Is your
+gas-metre ever frozen? _A._ Yes, sir.
+
+_Q._ What do you use when the gas will not burn? _A._ Candles.
+
+_Q._ How many to the pound? _A._ Nine.
+
+_Q._ How do you know there are nine to the pound? _A._ They are sold as
+nines.
+
+_Q._ Then you never weighed them yourself? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Counsel_, to the _Court_. May it please your Honor, this is the second
+time that this witness has positively testified, under solemn oath, to
+important points of which he has no certain knowledge. I ask the Court
+for protection for myself and my client.
+
+Here a long discussion took place between the lawyers and the Judge, and
+at the end of it the case was postponed for four months. I suppose it is
+expected that I will then re-ascend the witness-stand; but I have
+determined that when I enter a court-room again I shall appear as a
+criminal. These fellows have much the easiest times, and they run so
+little risk, nowadays, that their position is far preferable to that of
+the unfortunate witnesses.
+
+J. BADGER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Singular Fatuity.
+
+The reason why so few persons emigrate to this country from Poland, is
+the general belief prevailing there that we have throughout the Union a
+heavy Pole tax.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE A.B.C. OF NEW YORK SOCIALISM. ANDREWS, BRISBANE, AND CLAFLIN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THRILLING MELODRAMA.
+
+Scene: Lord DE VERE'S Manor: The Blue Chamber.
+
+_Lord De Vere._ "BUT ONE COURSE, LADY CLAUDE, IS LEFT TO RETRIEVE OUR
+FALLEN FORTUNES. WITH THESE DEAD CATS WE'LL FLY TO MICHIGAN AND START A
+MINERAL SPRING. THE MICHIGANDERS ARE WILD ABOUT THEIR SPRINGS, AND WITH
+THIS MATERIAL OURS CANNOT BUT BE A SUCCESS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ONE OF OUR SOCIAL HUMBUGS.
+
+_Old Gent (figuring up probable receipts of his silver wedding, close at
+hand)_. "I'VE HIRED A SPLENDID TEA-SERVICE FOR BROWN TO PRESENT TO US;
+IT WILL MAKE QUITE A SENSATION, AND I'VE GOT IT CHEAP FOR THE EVENING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS OF THE POLICE.
+
+I, MARY SMITH.
+
+ O gallant p'licemen, list to me,
+ I'll sing a mournful ditty
+ About a poor young serving-gal,
+ What lived in this here city.
+
+ She had a name, and SMITH it was
+ (The rest of it was MARY);
+ Her constant duty, at daybreak,
+ Was sweeping out the arey.
+
+ One evening she went to a jig
+ (Her missus was attending
+ A private hop), when there befel
+ What truly was heart-rending.
+
+ She wore her missus' gayest clothes,
+ Her muslin dress all fluty,
+ Her waterfall and tag-rags all,
+ Which well became her beauty.
+
+ But missus found poor MARY out,
+ And in a p'liceman took her,
+ And walked her up before the Judge,
+ On charge of being a hooker.
+
+ The missus swore the girl a thief
+ Her property as lifted,
+ Which proved beyond all doubt would be
+ When things came to be sifted.
+
+ The girl said she'd been to a jig;
+ Then out spoke Judge MCCARTY,
+ "You must not wear the fixings of
+ A party to a party."
+
+ They sent her up for sixteen months,--
+ Oh! drop a tear to MARY,
+ Whose missus ne'er shall see her more
+ A-sweeping out the arey.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sic Transit.
+
+Life being in any event a transitory affair, and especially so in New
+York, where, every one lives some miles from his business, our means of
+transit are of interest to every one. However well the owners of those
+at present in use may insist that they are, yet the public feels they
+should be better, and Mr. PUNCHINELLO, having the interest of his
+fellow-citizens at heart, most earnestly hopes that the undertakers of
+the last new scheme will not so mistake the meaning of this term as to
+suppose that their business with it is simply to bury it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Discounting a Bill.
+
+The Germans are disposed to glorify their king, and look upon him as the
+Great WILLIAM; but when they commence to calculate the cost of his
+glory, in men slaughtered, homes desolated, women beggared, industries
+destroyed, taxes increased, and liberty chained, it is more than
+probable that they will become disgusted with their Little BILL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query
+
+Can Russia's designs upon Turkey, at this season of the year, be
+attributed to her admiration and imitation of New England Thanksgiving
+customs?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Maniac's Mutterings.
+
+PUNCHINELLO'S special Lunatic gives it as his opinion, that a
+continuance of a horse-flesh diet in Paris must go far towards
+disturbing the Parisian Equine-imity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Old Saw Sharpened.
+
+Some one has applied the old Latin motto, _"Horas non numero nisi
+serenas,"_ to Mr. GREELEY, by making it read, "HORACE is of no account
+except when serene," which, by the by, he never is.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query for Naturalists.
+
+How can a person who stands four feet in his boots be called biped?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DENTS-LY FILLED. Government offices.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: KING WILLIAM OF PRUSSIA WAITING FOR HIS ALLY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HIRAM GREEN ON MARK TWAIN'S BABY.
+
+The "Lait Gustice" congratulates the newly organized Papa.
+
+SKEENSBORO, NYE ONTO VARMONT.
+
+Friend TWAIN--Allow an old statesman, which has served his country for 4
+yeers as Gustise of the Peece, rite a congratulotery letter to you on
+your success as a boy raisest. Altho your name is MARK TWAIN, I notiss
+that on this occashon you dident Mark but One.
+
+I am a little older in years and _Parentelism_ than you are, and am able
+to call myself the seenyer pardner in a firm who are the sole
+proprieters of eleven offspring and 2 grand-children.
+
+Raisin children is a bizziniss which haint every mans best holt, and as
+long as you've got into the bizziness, excoose me for givin you a little
+wisdom, which you as a parent must swaller without makin up a face.
+
+If your child, in its infantile days, is given to squallin nites, obtain
+a beverige, called soothin sirup, and just before you pull off your
+butes nites, give the little cuss about 3 tablespoons full, and he will
+sleep so sound that you can use him for a piller. Should he kick &
+squall, and refuse to take it, lay him down onto the floor, set on him,
+then takin hold of his nose, pour the stuff down his throte, and you've
+got him, ekal to Jo JEFFERSON'S Rip Van Winkle 20 yeers snooze.
+
+To amoose him--If your wife is too bizzy durin the day, doin the cookin,
+washin, &c. 4th, to amoose the child, give him an ink bottle, and set
+him down on the parler carpet. If he has any idee of geografy, when you
+come home nites you will find a good helthy map of the black sea, which
+Rooshy will insist on bein added to your war map.
+
+Another way of amusin him, is to give him a raiser, and let him play
+learn to shave. If he should cut his nose off, it would make the little
+_shaver smart_.
+
+If you expect to bring your boy up to hold offis,' let him cultivate
+cheek. This is done by tyin his grandmother in her rockin cheer, and
+lettin him pelt the old lady with snow balls in the winter time. In the
+summer time get him a bow and arrer, and let him see how neer he come to
+the venerable lady's nose without breakin her spectorcals. If this don't
+make him cheeky enuff to hold offis, let him pour a lot of benzine onto
+his little cuzzin, then push her onto a red hot cole stove. If he can do
+this and think it a joak, he will do for a cabinet offiser.
+
+If he tries to jump over parental authority, fill him with shot, same as
+_your_ man did his jumpin frog, only pour it into him with a mustick.
+
+If you've got any regard for our nashnal caracter, don't let your son
+rite comic copy for the noosepapers, after which, be so rash as to rite
+a book, and have English crickets set up their darn singin, when they
+catch your little _innocent abroad_.
+
+JOHN BULL don't tickle easy, remember that. I actually believe you
+couldent stir him with a hul bag full of laffin gas.
+
+As your boy has entered the Lecture field, I shouldent be surprised if
+he got up quite a _breeze_ on the roast-rum. In fact, when he opens his
+mouth before an audience, look out for _squalls_.
+
+When your offspring is big enuff to enjoy chastisin, remember the "good
+little boy," and examine your son's garments to see if the lad has been
+roostin onto any nitro-gleserine cans, lest the parental hand, when
+brought in contact with the youth's _habeas corpus_, mite necessitate the
+sweepin up of father and son's scattered remnants.
+
+Let your son reed the works on good morril men's lives.
+
+By the time he gets old enuff to read, I will have my life out in
+pamphlet form, and you can draw onto me for a copy. Beware of works of
+fiction. Don't let your boy have a great deal to do with such readin as
+HOYLE on Games, TOM PAINE on Infidelity, nor HORRIS GREELY on farmin.
+Such works are bringin more ruin onto the country, than the numerous
+jewrys of twelve talented men, who allow murderers to come the loonatic
+dodge over 'em.
+
+I don't believe in spoilin the rod and sparin the child, but I think it
+is well enuff to keep a rod hung up in the barn, where your child can
+occasionally look at it, to see what he will come to, if he undertakes
+to kick over the traces.
+
+Children are a good deal like wimmen. If you don't set _your_ foot down
+when you first get married your wimmen will raise _their_ foot up, and
+afore you realize any pain, your gentle form will be histed out into the
+street.
+
+With boys you must begin talkin _turkey_, when they are young _goblins_,
+ef you don't, when they get old enuff, they will "strike for their
+sires," and _gobble_ up the old man's scalp.
+
+Teach your son to honor his pa and ma, and decline the English mission,
+when it comes his turn.
+
+Between you and I, aspirants for the honor of bordin with St. JIMMY are
+on the _decline_, Pitty it haint a gin-cocktail. I shouldent be
+surprised, if some big criminal was sentenced to go there yet, which
+minds me of a konundrum. Why is the English mission like lager beer?
+
+Give 'er up?
+
+Because it ruins any _minister's_ reputation, who goes for it.
+
+Hopin that when you shovel off your mortil coil, that your mantle may
+not pass out of the family, and as time flies on with greased wings, you
+may make the family name _sound_ by bein able to Mark Twain in your
+family record, I drop the goose feather.
+
+Ewers, parentally,
+
+HIRAM GREEN, ESQ.,
+
+Lait Gustise of the Peece.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A SURE WAY OF DOING IT.
+
+Seekers after notoriety must often be at their wits' end for some new
+sensation with which to advertise themselves. Mr. TWAIN, for instance,
+having gone through Fenianism and France, seems to have collapsed for
+the present; and here now comes Mr. WEMYSS JOBSON, who subsided into
+oblivion years ago, but has just emerged again into the light of _The
+Sun_. The efforts of both these gentlemen to keep themselves prominently
+before the public, however, are very inadequate and feeble. They should
+suffer more and be stronger. Let TRAIN do a bold stroke of business by
+declaring himself the perpetrator of the latest mysterious murder, and
+it might be the making of the exhumed JOBSON to revive a fossilized
+memory, and confess himself to be the criminal who delivered the fatal
+blow to the late Mr. WILLIAM PATTERSON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+True to his Colors.
+
+A Bostonian visiting New York, not long since, and reading in the papers
+that there was to be a celebration of Mass in an up-town church, decided
+to remain over Sunday for it, thinking, Bostonially, that Mass meant
+Massachusetts and nothing else.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUITABLE INSCRIPTION FOR A BOATMAN'S RACE-PRIZE. "The noblest
+Row-man of them all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A NEW LEAF IN THE FAMILY HISTORY.
+
+_Jack._ "NOW, I'LL BE PAPA, GOING TO FIX THE FURNACE."
+
+_Sallie_. "OH, YES!--AND I'LL BE THE NEW NURSE, AND YOU MUST KISS ME
+BEHIND THE CELLAR DOOR!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: BEHIND THE TIMES.
+
+EXPLANATORY OF MR. JOHN BULL'S VIEWS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS OF THE CRADLE.
+
+CANTO XIII.
+
+ When I was a bachelor I lived by myself;
+ All the bread and cheese I had, I laid upon the shelf.
+ But the rats and the mice they made such a strife,
+ I was forced to go to London to buy myself a wife.
+ The roads were so bad, and the lanes were so narrow,
+ I had to bring my wife home in a wheelbarrow.
+ The wheelbarrow broke. My wife had a fall;
+ Deuce take the wheelbarrow, my wife, and all.
+
+The above lines were written when the author was quite advanced in
+years; when he had solved, in his humble way, the great problem of life,
+and discovered the futility of mundane things generally, and t
+undesirableness of an unsuccessful or unfortunate existence; when he
+could look back through a long vista of years, and see the follies of
+his youth and the mistakes of his manhood. It should have been placed at
+the end of his book, with only the word Finis after it; but somehow,
+either by mistake of the author or of the publisher, it was placed among
+the records of the simple events of the village, and thus loses half its
+force. However, let the history, placed as it is, be a warning to rash
+young men who contemplate matrimony; and let them give heed to it, lest
+they also have cause to repent of their doings and exclaim with the
+poet:--
+
+ "The deuce take it."
+
+Observe how pathetic and touching his reminiscence of his lost youth and
+the priceless boon of liberty. He commences in a quiet descriptive way,
+leaving one at a loss to know whether it is to be a joyful lyric a dirge
+he intends singing.
+
+ "When I was a bachelor I lived by myself;
+ All the bread and cheese I had I laid upon the shelf."
+
+Here we have him alone, at peace with himself and the world; happy in
+the contemplation of his beloved muse; jotting down, now and then, the
+brilliant ideas that flash through his teeming brain; and munching in
+solitude his homely meal of bread and cheese. In telling us he laid his
+bread and cheese upon the shelf, he at once shows he had left his
+parental abode, and the ministering and watchful care of his maternal
+parent.
+
+There must, of course, have been a cause for such a step. Some reason
+why the gentle being should have been wrought up to that pitch, when he
+daringly throws off all restraint, and steps into the world to act and
+think for himself. It may have been the want of sympathy that drove him
+to the act. They were plain folks, and didn't appreciate his peculiar
+turn of mind, and so only laughed at him, and ridiculed his pretensions.
+That there was a quarrel there is no manner of doubt, and it was
+probably caused by the mortifying act of his mother in fainting when he
+read her the poetry he had written at her request. That, in itself, was
+enough to break all ties between them. She was horrified and overwhelmed
+with dismay that a child of hers could be guilty of such atrocious
+rhymes; and he, in turn, was disgusted that a mother of his should be so
+unappreciative and earthly. And so, by mutual consent, they separated.
+
+That accounts for his bachelor habit of laying his bread and cheese on
+the shelf that he might have it handy, and not forget where he had
+placed it. But as
+
+ "The rats and mice made such a strife,"
+
+he found that would never do. Something else must be thought of; and
+being an inventive genius, he tried putting it in his trunk, but it
+scented his Sunday jacket and trousers, and the girls all turned up
+their noses at the odd perfume. So, driven to extremity, he in an evil
+hour decided, as many another has since done, that the remedy for his
+ills was matrimony, and that it was not well for man to live alone.
+
+A Prophet is without honor in his own country, and so ofttimes is a
+Poet. To his bashful supplication of "Wilt thou?" the young maidens if
+his village unhesitatingly refused to wilt, and thus it was that
+circumstances forced him
+
+ "To go to London to buy himself a wife."
+
+How fortunate that he should give us, inadvertently as it were, the
+information so necessary to the unlucky young men of this later day, the
+best place to go shopping for wives! No man after reading the above need
+say "he doesn't marry because he cannot, as no one will have him." He
+need not stop for that hereafter, but just go to London, pick out one to
+suit, pay the price, and bag the article. It can all be done in a day,
+and save time wonderfully.
+
+He bought his wife--a cheap one undoubtedly--and gave his promise to
+pay; then started homeward, feeling his importance as a married man, and
+chuckling over the idea of the astonishment and dismay of the rats and
+mice when he should set his wife after them, and thereby deprive them of
+their daily rations. But while musing thus, he discovers his wile shows
+signs of fatigue, as
+
+ "The roads were bad, and the lanes were narrow,"
+
+and not wishing to have her exhausted before commencing business, he
+gallantly determined to give her a ride, well knowing she would need all
+her strength for the battle he intended she should win.
+
+So borrowing a wheelbarrow of a trusting neighbor, he seated her
+therein, and amid great rejoicing at his extraordinary "luck" he set
+forward. But now comes the sad part of the story:
+
+ "The wheelbarrow broke--my wife had a fall."
+
+And what a fall was there, my countrymen! Words are inadequate. The
+scene was indescribable, and we leave a blank that each may picture it
+to suit themselves.
+
+After the excitement occasioned by the catastrophe was somewhat abated,
+he picked up the pieces and tried to put the wheelbarrow together again.
+But it was too far gone; it was un-put-togetherable, and so he, more in
+sorrow than anger, stood gazing at the wreck, while his wife, being a
+woman, could not resist the impulse to cry exultingly, "I told you so; I
+knew it." That on top of all the rest of his trouble was a little too
+much; and after fumbling over the pieces a while, "I told you so"
+ringing in his ears, he completely lost his temper, and vented his
+passion in the words:--
+
+ "The deuce take the wheelbarrow."--
+
+and then in a low voice, cautiously turning his head aside, he added:--
+
+ "My wife and all."
+
+Together they trudged homeward. Fearful misgivings as to the wisdom of
+his step came swooping down upon him, and he almost wished he had not
+tried to mend matters, but had patiently borne with the rats, when
+suddenly--the vision of a _cat_ swept athwart his mind, and he groaned
+aloud in bitterness of spirit.
+
+Not even the ever after clean hearth-stone, with the dead bodies of his
+enemies, the rats, piled thereon, could make him forget that one moment
+of agonizing consciousness, when he realized for the first time that he
+had burdened himself with a wife when a cat would have answered as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HURLY-BURLY.
+
+ No wonder that the folks turn pale
+ And preachers talk of doom,
+ Since by each telegram and mail
+ Come words of awful gloom:
+
+ Explosions of N. glycerine;
+ Expulsion of the Pope;
+ Earthquakes along the Eastern line
+ And THE PACIFIC SLOPE.
+
+ Surely the world is upside down,
+ Its framework out of joint;
+ At coming change all things of town
+ And country seem to point:
+
+ The very sea some day may try
+ To climb the mountain side,
+ And hill-folks yet be staggered by
+ THE MOANING OF THE TIED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+By Diligence from Paris to Versailles--Fastest Time on Record--Happy
+Travelling Companions--Mud, Misery, and Malignity--Life on the Road.
+
+
+NEAR ST. CLOUD, NINTH WEEK OF THE REPUBLIC, 1870.
+
+It would have done you good to see us getting over that muddy, jagged,
+rutty old turnpike that leads off from the south of the Bois de Boulogne
+toward St. Cloud and Versailles. Since writing my last, I had been to
+Paris _par ballon monté,_ and was now returning in the _diligence_ that
+took five American ladies and a couple of war correspondents, all
+friends of WASHBURNE, away from the temptation of eating horse-flesh in
+the beleaguered city, to such edibles as the rapacity of the German
+appetite had left undevoured in the neighborhood of the old "stamping
+grounds" of Louis XVI. We were not a jolly party. It rained in torrents,
+and our little driver perched upon the box in front smoked the most
+infernal tobacco I ever smelt. Moreover, the horses were not lively
+steeds. They were rather safe than otherwise, and not given to running
+away. Although the driver addressed himself to their flanks, between
+each puff of smoke, with a pointed stick, they didn't rear and plunge so
+as to frighten the ladies, and that was a point gained, albeit we had
+leisure to count the pickets in the fences as we dragged toward our
+destination. One of our lady passengers came from Connecticut, and she
+talked with a nutmeg dialect that made her garrulity oftentimes quite
+spicy. We two sat back to back, and when the vehicle lurched heavily her
+chignon took me "amidships" (if I may be permitted the expression) with
+a concussion that felt like the impact of a muffled ball from a
+six-pound field howitzer. "Goodness gracious, dew git eout of the way
+and give me some room, man!" she would exclaim as our wagon plunged into
+a three-foot "gore" and the coachee plied his pointed ramrod with
+increased vigor to the attenuated haunches of the insensible beasts.
+
+"My dear madam, you will perceive that I cannot 'git' any further
+without climbing upon the back of my companion in front." Lord knows I
+would have given a hundred francs to be out of her reach; but we had
+been all ticketed and labelled through under the same "pass," and there
+was no such thing as dissolving partnership _now._
+
+"Ugh!" she muttered, putting her handkerchief to her nose, "and that
+horrid smoke too!" But the imperturbable director of our flight took no
+heed, and drew away at his clay idol with unabated satisfaction. 'Twas
+thus we jogged on for five weary hours, "OLD CONNECTICUT" charging head
+foremost at my spinal column with a frequency and momentum that made me
+believe, finally, she did it on purpose. Three miles out from St. Cloud
+we found the road completely blocked up with artillery wagons, and saw
+large masses of troops moving through the fields on either side. It
+still rained incessantly, and the forlornness of the situation was no
+wise relieved by the distant booming of guns, and the sucking sound of
+the wheels in the mud.
+
+"Oh, my!" sail a thin, squeaky voice on the back seat. "I believe they
+are coming this way. Do let us get out, SARAH. I would rather die on the
+road than be murdered in such a sepulchre as this."
+
+She referred to a battalion of the Landwehr that had just denied into
+the road, not a hundred yards in front of us.
+
+"Stop your sniffling back there!" peevishly exclaimed "OLD CONNECTICUT."
+"It would serve you right if they bayonetted you;" and she added
+emphasis to her expostulation by planting her chignon between my
+shoulder-blades with terrific force.
+
+I felt at once that either my back or my gallantry would have to give
+way; so I took a bond of fate, and sacrificed the latter on the spot.
+
+"That'll do--that'll do," I remonstrated. "No more of that; if you want
+to knock the brains out of that haystack on the back of your head, why,
+knock away; but spare my bones, if you please."
+
+I looked around, and she looked around with such suddenness as to bring
+her nose in contact with the brim of my hat, and force the tears from
+her eyes. She started to her feet, and I verily believe would not have
+postponed hostilities a moment, had not the door of the _diligence_ just
+then been opened, and a Prussian officer demanded to see our papers. I
+paraded the "documents," and he said they were "good;" but he also said
+that we must make up our minds to halt here until the following morning,
+as there was a movement of the troops, and no vehicles would be
+permitted to pass this point.
+
+_Gaudeamus!_ I could have sworn, but my wrath sailed away when I saw
+what a volcano was working in the bosom of "OLD CONNECTICUT." She didn't
+strike the officer, or utter a single complaint in his hearing, but sat
+down as if she had been a spile driven through the top of the coach, and
+let the vinegar run out of her eyes in pure impotency of speechless
+rage.
+
+"SARAH'S" companion on the back seat broke forth afresh, and again
+wanted to know as to the probability of our being charged upon and put
+to the sword. I couldn't hear "SARAH'S" answers to these harrowing
+questions, but it seemed to me as if she were trying to throttle her
+timid friend into a perfect sense of security. Whatever she did had the
+desired effect, and I heard no more from the "back seat."
+
+It was nightfall ere the several members of our little colony composed
+themselves to await in such tranquillity as they could command, the
+ordeal of sleeping, sitting bolt upright in a French _diligence,_ upon a
+dark, tempestuous night, and surrounded on all sides by the dreadful
+presence of "red-handed war." The last thing I remember ere the drowsy
+god "MURPHY" sent his fairies to weave their cobwebs about my eyelids,
+was "OLD CONNECTICUT." She didn't look like the battering-ram that she
+was. She had taken that chignon for a pillow, and fastened it to the
+back of the seat. Her head was thrown back; her chin had fallen, and at
+the extreme tip of her thin red nose a solitary tear glistened like a
+dew-drop on a beet. Once, about midnight, she awoke me by her snoring,
+but I gave the old gal's chignon a hitch, and it was all right again.
+
+Yours, somniferously,
+
+DICK TINTO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THOSE COUNTRY COUSINS AGAIN.
+
+_Celia (just arrived from the country)._ "JUST THINK, JANE, COUSIN JOHN
+IS TO BE MY ESCORT TO THE FRENCH BAZAAR AND THE NILSSON CONCERTS, AND
+BOOTH'S AND WALLACE'S, AND THE OPERA BOUFFÉ, AND LOTS OF OTHER
+FIRST-CLASS SHOWS!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FACTS ABOUT THE ENGLISH MISSION.
+
+It is not true that I ever accepted the English Mission; and if any man
+says I did, I now deliberately brand him as a Liar and Villain.
+
+I am not going to deny that the place was offered me, but I do
+unhesitatingly, say that I never absolutely consented to take it.
+
+Gen. GRANT may have construed my note on the subject as an unqualified
+acceptance, but that was owing entirely to his devouring desire to get
+the thing off his hands, and not to any ambiguity in my language.
+
+"No, Mr. PRESIDENT," I said in the note, "far be it from me to stand
+between my friend, Mr. GREELEY, and the gratification of his noble
+desire to wear military things at receptions abroad. Moreover your
+Excellency, I would not for the world deprive our cousins and other
+relations in England of an opportunity to cultivate the grand old art of
+swearing under the instruction of so eminent a professor as HORACE."
+
+This is the sort of language I used, and I don't see how any man except
+Gen. GRANT could get hold of it the wrong way.
+
+Of course I had some reasons besides those stated in my note for
+declining the Mission, but I did not want to hurt the President's
+feelings by going over the whole ground.
+
+It was not unknown to me that the situation had been offered to about
+five thousand persons before it came round to my turn, or that the
+English Mission had fallen into a general decline. I knew all about that
+just as well as Gen. GRANT, but it would not have done any good to
+parade my knowledge on the subject.
+
+There was the Hon. THOS. JENKINS who refused to take it, because his
+wife had a prejudice against Bulls ever since she was scared by one that
+chased her five miles for no other reason than that she was what might
+be called a red woman--well-read in the exciting house-wife literature
+of the day. JENKINS positively declined.
+
+Then it was offered to Col. CANNONAYDE, who declined it because his
+mother-in-law declared that she would go along too, if he went, and he
+thought it would be better not to let her have a change of air, as she
+was in a fair way to wind up pretty soon by remaining near those swamps.
+CANNONAYDE wanted the place kept open till after the funeral, but this
+was not granted.
+
+The next offer was made to Gen. BRAYLEIGH; but _he_ refused it on the
+ground that he had made arrangements for going into the coal trade, and
+he could not be sure of holding the place more than a few weeks. Anyway,
+he thought it would not pay to give up the coalition he had entered into
+with another party. In fact, old BRAYLEIGH treated the whole matter very
+coldly.
+
+It was next tendered to the Hon. THEOPHILUS SKINNER, but peremptorily
+declined because SKINNER'S district had become Democratic since he was
+elected, and he knew that if he resigned an infamous cannibal copperhead
+would be sent to Congress in his stead. SKINNER consulted all the
+leaders of his party, and they unanimously agreed that it would be
+better to let every court in Europe be without an American
+representative than risk the loss of that district.
+
+Everybody knows why the Rev. Dr. BANGWELL, of Chicago, did not accept
+it. The Doctor expected his divorce case to come on in a few days, and
+could not neglect that; and besides, he had made all the arrangements
+for his other marriage, and sent out the invitations. If the President
+had just made some inquiries before appointing Dr. BANGWELL, he could
+have found out that the Doctor's engagements would not permit him to
+leave Chicago on any account.
+
+The offer that was made to Col. KAMPSTUHL was declined solely because
+the Colonel had an old score to settle with Gen. GRANT for something in
+the way of a court-martial that happened near Tricksburg. He swore that
+he would get square with the author of that business sometime, and when
+the mission was offered to him (by accident, for Gen GRANT had forgotten
+all about the court-martial), he got up a sepulchral voice, and said,
+"Ha, ha! R-e-e-e-vendge at last!" and then wrote a bitter letter to
+Washington on the subject.
+
+After that it was peddled all round the country in a promiscuous way,
+and offered in succession to a blacksmith who used to shoe horses for
+Gen. GRANT, a conductor who refused to take fare from a well-known
+Presidential excursion party, a dealer in hides who had conferred some
+high obligations when a certain official was in the tanning business, a
+grocery-keeper, a family shoemaker, a manufacturer of matches, and such
+a multitude of people, in fact, that it finally got to be looked upon as
+the greatest missionary undertaking of modern times.
+
+The only really prominent man that the place was not tendered to is
+GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN; but I wouldn't say that it won't get around to him
+somewhere in Asia before the circle is completed.
+
+All these things were very well known to me before the office was placed
+at my disposal, but I did not care to wound the fine sensibilities of
+the President by saying anything about them in my note.
+
+My reason for declining in favor of Mr. GREELEY has been stated--I put
+the whole matter frankly to Gen. GRANT--but I can't say whether the
+suggestion I offered has been acted upon or not. The only thing I am
+certain about on this point is, that if the offer should be made to
+HORACE, it won't get around to GEORGE FRANCIS afterwards.
+
+There has been so much talk about this business, that I have considered
+it a sacred duty to state the facts and let some floods of light shine
+upon the whole thing. The duty is now conscientiously, discharged.
+
+DARBY DODD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Truth In a Nut-shell
+
+CHANCELLOR CROSBY, in his inaugural address, has, we may say, bored
+right to the root of the whole vexed question of education, and
+extracted it, as will be seen from this extract: "It need hardly be
+urged," says the new Chancellor, and we hope, all the discontented will
+take the full force of the remark, "It need hardly be urged that the
+didaskalos should be didaktitos, and yet perhaps emphasis on so plain a
+truth may be sometimes necessary." Let us thank the Chancellor for
+forever removing this necessity.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | Have made very large additions to their stock of |
+ | |
+ | CLOAK VELVETS, VELVETEENS, PLUSHES, ASTRAKHANS, MILLINERY |
+ | and TRIMMING VELVETS, Etc. |
+ | |
+ | THE MOST CELEBRATED |
+ | |
+ | CLOAK VELVETS. |
+ | |
+ | CONFINED STYLES, |
+ | |
+ | AT |
+ | |
+ | UNPRECEDENTED BARGAINS, |
+ | |
+ | CONSEQUENT ON PURCHASES MADE IN |
+ | |
+ | LYONS AND OTHER CENTRES |
+ | |
+ | OF MANUFACTURE, AT PANIC PRICES. |
+ | |
+ | For the convenience of Customers, the above are exhibited in |
+ | the Section of the main floor next to the corner of Tenth |
+ | street, |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, 4th Avenue, 9th and 10th Streets. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE EXHIBITING |
+ | |
+ | An Important Purchase of |
+ | |
+ | Rich Plain Silks, |
+ | |
+ | 27 INCHES WIDE, KNOWN AS |
+ | |
+ | UNWATERED MOIRE ANTIQUE, |
+ | |
+ | REPRESENTING IN VALUE |
+ | |
+ | $100,000, |
+ | |
+ | AT $4 AND $4.50 PER YARD, |
+ | |
+ | THE SAME HAVING BEEN SOLD AT $6 AND $6.50 |
+ | PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | SPECIAL ATTENTION IS INVITED TO THESE |
+ | GOODS FOR HOLIDAY PRESENTS. |
+ | |
+ | A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF |
+ | BLACK AND WHITE |
+ | STRIPED SILKS, |
+ | AT 75c. PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | Plain Japanese Silks, |
+ | HIGH COLORS, |
+ | AT 75c. PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | Three Cases Fancy Silks, |
+ | IN VARIOUS STYLES-FRESH GOODS, |
+ | $1 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | Five Cases Dress Silks, |
+ | NICE QUALITY, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | A LARGE QUANTITY OF |
+ | BONNET BLACK SILKS, |
+ | AT $3.75 AND $3 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | REAL IRISH POPLINS, NEW, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | A FULL LINE OF |
+ | IRISH TARTAN POPLINS, |
+ | IN TWENTY-FIVE DIFFERENT CLANS. |
+ | |
+ | AMERICAN BLACK SILKS, |
+ | GUARANTEED TO WEAR WELL, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | FORMING IN ALL RESPECTS THE MOST |
+ | ATTRACTIVE STOCK THEY HAVE |
+ | EVER OFFERED. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, Fourth Ave., |
+ | |
+ | 9th and 10th Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO. |
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+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
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+[Illustration: THE PROPOSAL.
+
+_Ambitious Foreigner._ "AH! MEECE BULLION, BECAUSE I AM POOR YOU SCORN
+MY HAND; BUT REMEMBER HOW ZE POET HE TELL YOU ZE MAN'S ZE GOLD."
+
+_Miss B._ "GO DOWN TO PAR, THEN--_I_ HAVE NOTHING MORE TO SAY ON THE
+SUBJECT."]
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "THE PRINTING HOUSE OF THE UNITED STATES" AND "THE UNITED |
+ | STATES ENVELOPE MANUFACTORY." |
+ | |
+ | GEORGE F. NESBITT & CO |
+ | |
+ | 163,165,167,169 Pearl St., & 73,75,77,73 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 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, |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | 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 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO. |
+ | |
+ | With a large and varied experience in the management |
+ | and publication of a paper of the class herewith submitted, |
+ | and with the still more positive advantage of an Ample |
+ | Capital to justify the undertaking, the |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO. |
+ | |
+ | OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the new |
+ | |
+ | Illustrated Humorous and Satirical |
+ | |
+ | WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which was issued under |
+ | date of April 2. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs or suggestive |
+ | ideas or sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications cannot be returned, unless |
+ | postage stamps are enclosed. |
+ | |
+ | TERMS: |
+ | |
+ | One copy, per year, in advance $4 00 |
+ | Single copies 10 |
+ | A specimen copy will be mailed free upon the receipt |
+ | of ten cents. |
+ | One copy, with the Riverside Magazine, or any other |
+ | magazine or paper, price $2.50, for 5 50 |
+ | One copy, with any magazine or paper, price $4, for 7 00 |
+ | |
+ | All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed to |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, |
+ | |
+ | P.O. Box 2783. NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PROFESSOR JAMES DE MILLE, |
+ | |
+ | Author of |
+ | |
+ | "THE DODGE CLUB ABROAD" |
+ | |
+ | AND OTHER HUMOROUS WORKS, |
+ | |
+ | Will Commence a New Serial |
+ | |
+ | IN THE NUMBER OF |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | JANUARY; 7th, 1871, |
+ | |
+ | Written expressly for this Paper. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A CHRISTMAS STORY, |
+ | |
+ | "Written expressly for this Paper, |
+ | |
+ | By FRANK R. STOCKTON, |
+ | |
+ | Author of "Ting-a-ling," etc., etc., |
+ | |
+ | WILL BE COMMENCED IN No. 38, FOR DECEMBER 17TH, AND |
+ | CONCLUDED IN THREE NUMBERS. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Volume 2, No. 37,
+December 10, 1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 37 ***
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+<head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
+ content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of PUNCHINELLO Vol. II, No. 37.</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Volume 2, No. 37, December 10,
+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, Volume 2, No. 37, December 10, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 30, 2003 [EBook #10544]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 37 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<table width="800" border="1" align="center" cellpadding="3"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>TIFFANY &amp; CO.,</big></big></big></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>UNION SQUARE,<br>
+ </big></p>
+ <p>Offer a large and choice stock of</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;"> <big>LADIES'
+WATCHES,</big></p>
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+the finest quality.</p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
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+ <center>
+ <p><big><big>We will Mail Free</big></big></p>
+ <p><small>A COVER</small><br>
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+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,</p>
+ <b>83 Nassau Street.</b> </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/163.jpg"><br>
+ <h1>PUNCHINELLO</h1>
+ <h2>Vol. II. No. 37.</h2>
+ <p>SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 1870.</p>
+ <br>
+ <h3>PUBLISHED BY THE</h3>
+ <br>
+ <h3>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,</h3>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <h4>83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.</h4>
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+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
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+ <p><small><b>PRANG'S LATEST PUBLICATIONS:</b> "Joy of Autumn,"
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+world.<br>
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+stamp,<br>
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+ </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;"
+ align="center" border="1" cellpadding="3" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td rowspan="4" 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>
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+for $4.00<br>
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+ <p>Back numbers can always be supplied, as the paper is
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+ </td>
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+ <p><big><b>FACTS FOR THE LADIES.</b></big></p>
+ <p><small>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.</small></p>
+ <p>W.F. TAYLOR.</p>
+ <p>BERLIN, N.Y.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
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+ <p><small>ENGLISH, SCOTCH, IRISH, AND AMERICAN.</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><span style="font-weight: normal;">With
+an Introduction by</span><br>
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+ <p><small>This volume is the handsomest and cheapest subscription
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+ </td>
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+ </td>
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+ <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><b>A MONTHLY JOURNAL</b><br>
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+ <p><small>DEVOTED ESPECIALLY TO AMERICAN INTERESTS.</small></p>
+ <p><small>EDITED BY<br>
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+ <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
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+ <p><small>The columns of THE AMERICAN CHEMIST are open for the
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+ </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>
+ <p><b>MAN AND WIVES.</b></p>
+ <p>A TRAVESTY.</p>
+ <p><b>By MOSE SKINNER.</b></p>
+ <p>CHAPTER FOURTH.</p>
+ <p>THE HALF-WAY HOUSE</p>
+ <p><img alt="T" align="left" src="images/165.jpg">he first person
+to discover that ANN BRUMMET had left the house, was Mrs. LADLE, Now,
+ever since the Hon. MICHAEL had asked ANN to go to the circus, Mrs.
+LADLE had hated her. But when he took ANN to the Agricultural Fair, and
+bought her a tin-type album and a box of initial note-paper, Mrs. LADLE
+was simply raving. Whether she herself was viewing the Hon. MICHAEL
+with an eye matrimonial, and was jealous of ANN, must remain an open
+question. At any rate, she was the first to start the scandal about ANN
+and JEFFRY, and lost no time in conveying it to the ears of the Hon.
+MICHAEL, with profuse embellishments. At the croquet party the Hon.
+MICHAEL had been particularly sweet on ANN, his ardor finding vent in
+such demonstrations as throwing kisses at her slyly, holding up printed
+lozenges for her inspection, or tossing sticks at her and dodging
+behind a tree. And when Mrs. LADLE went to ANN'S room next day, for a
+good square scold, she found her out.</p>
+ <p>Now Mrs. LADLE was a mother-in-law, and consequently a pretty
+old fowl in ferreting out things of this sort. She determined to
+discover the why and wherefore of ANN'S departure. If she could
+confront the Hon. MICHAEL with proofs of ANN'S indiscretion, it would
+be the loudest kind of feather in her cap.</p>
+ <p>She examined everybody in the house, and everybody that went
+by the house, but without the smallest result. She was out in the front
+yard waiting for a fresh victim, when she saw HERSEY DEATHBURY coming
+up the road. She signed to her to come in.</p>
+ <p>She came in.</p>
+ <p>HERSEY DEATHBURY was an extraordinary woman. A woman of
+genius, sir. What if her make-up <i>was</i> limited? What if, when she
+was born, nature <i>was</i> economizing, and gave her only one eye,
+and she was lame and hump-backed, and hadn't got any eyebrows and wore
+a wig; what of that? It's to her credit, <i>I</i> say. You saw her
+just as she was. No airs <i>there</i>. And in this lay the great charm
+of H. DEATHBURY'S character. Looking at her closely, you would see a
+fixed and stony eye and a chronic scowl, and you would say:
+"Disposition a little morose; some man has soured on her." Looking at
+her more closely, you would see under her right arm a common
+blackboard, such as is used in schools, and over her shoulder a canvas
+bag containing lumps of chalk, and you would say: "A little eccentric;
+likes to write on the blackboard instead of talking. Would make a nice
+wife. Looks, on the whole, like a country schoolma'am, whom the boys
+have stoned out of town, with the fixtures of the school-house tied to
+her." But she has talents. What is she, an authoress? "Yes, she is."
+But, like other authoresses, she isn't appreciated, and has returned to
+her legitimate occupation, the Wash-Tub; but still doth she itch for
+fame, and so, between times, she writes verbose essays on Female
+Suffrage, composed during the process known as "wringing." And when
+there's a Woman's Rights Convention in that locality, she sits on the
+platform, and applauds all the Red-Hot Resolutions with that trenchant
+female weapon, the umbrella, in one hand, and an antediluvian reticule
+the other. In the words of the Hon. MICHAEL: "She is not only a leading
+ <i>Re</i>former, sir, but a great <i>Plat</i>former." And Mrs.
+LADLE will tell you that, as a washer, she is superb. She "does up
+things" in a manner simply celestial.</p>
+ <p>Mrs. LADLE told her first to shut the door.</p>
+ <p>"Have you seen ANN BRUMMET to-day?" she said.</p>
+ <p>HERSEY nodded.</p>
+ <p>"Where?" was the eager inquiry.</p>
+ <p>HERSEY DEATHBURY placed her blackboard against the wall,
+unslung her chalk, and wrote in very large letters:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"I C hur a-Goin on The rode 2 forneys Kragg."</p>
+ <p>"Ah!" ejaculated Mrs. LADLE joyfully, "traced at last." And
+she ran to tell the Hon. MICHAEL all about it.</p>
+ <div style="text-align: center;"> <span
+ style="margin-left: 1.75em;">*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;
+*&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; *</span> </div>
+ <p>The Half-Way House at Forney's Crag was a hoary-headed old
+vagabond of a house, that had passed the heyday of its youth long
+before that great encyclopaedia, the oldest inhabitant, emitted his
+first infantile squawk. Each successive season caused it to lean a
+little more and the most casual observer must perceive that it couldn't
+by any possibility become much leaner without pining entirely away.</p>
+ <p>Nevertheless, it had been the only hotel that Spunkville could
+boast, all within a short period of this writing. Like most Western
+hotels, it had been ably supported by a large floating population,
+known as "New York Drummers," and many a time had its old walls
+re-echoed with their guileless hilarity and moral tales; and, if the
+ancient and time-honored spittoon in the bar-room could speak, it could
+relate wonderful stories concerning the Sample Gentry; relating,
+perhaps, to a Spunkville merchant, who, having retreated precipitately
+down his cellar stairs several tunes during the day, to avoid "them
+confounded drummers, with their everlasting samples," was, while
+plodding his lonely way homeward, seized upon by these commercial
+freebooters, conveyed forthwith to the Half-Way House, and there
+deluged with such a perfect torrent of brow-beating eloquence as to
+reduce him to an imbecile state, in which condition he would willingly
+order large bills of goods, a custom still somewhat in vogue, and known
+as "commanding trade."</p>
+ <p>At other times, it was refreshing to see a drummer emerge from
+a week's carousal, take a drink of plain soda, and write a long letter
+to his employers concerning the extreme dulness of trade.</p>
+ <p>But since the new hotel had been built the Half-Way House had
+waned, and its quiet was only invaded by an occasional straggling
+traveller or a runaway couple, and its walls resounded with nothing
+more clamorous than the orgies of a Sunday-school picnic.</p>
+ <p>It is, however, with the Ladies' Parlor only (that wretched
+abode of female discomfort in all country hotels) that we have to do.</p>
+ <p>The furniture of the room consisted of the articles usually
+found in a <i>boudoir</i> of this kind, to wit: a straight-backed
+sofa, much worn; the inevitable and horrid straw carpeting; that old
+Satanic piano, that never was in tune; an antique and rheumatic table,
+and three wheezy old chairs. The only present attempts at ornament were
+two in number. The first was a large engraving of the Presidents of the
+United States, which had formerly done duty in the bar-room, where the
+villagers were wont to gaze upon it in an awe-struck manner, being
+impressed with a vague idea that it was CHRISTY'S Minstrels. The second
+was a living statue, none other than ANN BRUMMET waiting for JEFFRY
+MAULBOY.</p>
+ <p>"Half-past three, and not come yet," said she. "Look out,
+JEFFRY MAULBOY, for if you <i>do</i> go back on me"----</p>
+ <p>She paused, for she saw a man coming towards the house.</p>
+ <p>"Well, if that ain't ARCHIBALD BLINKSOP," she added, "I'm
+regularly sold. What can <i>he</i> want <i>here</i>?"</p>
+ <p>Yes, it was ARCHIBALD sure enough, biting his finger-nails and
+breathing very short, while he cast furtive glances at the windows.</p>
+ <p>He went slowly up the steps and into the entry just as Mrs.
+BACKUP, the landlady of the House, came out of her sitting-room.</p>
+ <p>Now, Mrs. BACKUP was one of your eminently respectable
+females, who are always loaded to the muzzle with Beautiful Moral
+Essays, which they try to cram down everybody's throat, but never
+practise themselves. She formerly kept a boarding-house in the city,
+where, at table regularly after soup, she would regale those present
+with long dissertations on the shocking immorality of the present day,
+varying the monotony, perhaps, by allusions to the boarders who had
+just left. "Mr. SIMPSON was a pleasant-spoken young man as I want to
+see, and as good as the bank, but I'm afraid he <i>was</i> agettin'
+dissipated;" or, "Mr. FIELDING was quiet and mannerly, and never found
+fault with his vittles, but he had <i>one</i> DREAD<i>ful</i> habit;"
+and then she would sigh heavily. And when little Miss PINKHAM, who
+occupied the second floor back (and who, being a schoolma'am, was
+naturally debarred from the other sex), indulged in the smallest
+possible flirtation with the good-looking young man opposite, Mrs.
+BACKUP'S sharp eye not only saw her, but Mrs. BACKUP'S sharp tongue
+took occasion to berate her severely on a Sunday morning (for then the
+boarders are all in), at the top of the first landing (for then the
+boarders could all hear her). "I <i>am</i> saprised, Miss PINKHAM.
+Why, when I see that young man asittin' at his winder, and a blowin'
+beans. Yes, a blowin' beans, Miss PINKHAM, through a horrible tin
+pop-gun at <i>your'n</i>, and a winkin' vicious, and you a enjoyin' on
+it, Miss PINKHAM, I sot down; yes, I sot right down, and I shuddered.
+'Sich doin's in <i>my</i> house,' says I, 'I am totilly congealed.'" When all
+the time, mind you, the virtuous Mrs. BACKUP was a woman who would bear
+any amount of watching, having already caused three husbands to
+frantically emigrate to parts unknown.</p>
+ <p>Seeing that ARCHIBALD hesitated, she said:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"Well, young man, what's wanted?"</p>
+ <p>"I&#8212;I&#8212;want to see ANN BRUMMET," said ARCHIBALD.</p>
+ <p>"Oh, you <i>do</i>, do you?" rejoined Mrs. BACKUP, regally;
+"and <i>who</i>, may I ask, is ANN BRUMMET?"</p>
+ <p>"A young lady that I was&#8212;a&#8212;to meet here," replied ARCHIBALD,
+timidly.</p>
+ <p>Mrs. BACKUP immediately organized a virtuous tableau, and
+glared at him majestically.</p>
+ <p>"A young lady you was to <i>meet</i> here. <i>In</i>-deed.
+And do you think, young man, that <i>my</i> house is a place where
+young chaps can go a-roystorin' and a-gallivinatin' about, and a
+meetin' young women?"</p>
+ <p>"But I don't want to go oysterin'," said ARCHIBALD, "and I
+don't know how to galvinate. I only want to tell her something."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, to <i>tell</i> her something, is it? Well, I'd have <i>no</i>
+objections, young man, if you <i>said</i> she was your wife. <i>Then</i>
+you'd have a right, but not now, for my cha-<i>rac</i>ter is precious
+to me, young man."</p>
+ <p>"But she ain't my wife," said ARCHIBALD; "I only&#8212;kind of know
+her, you see."</p>
+ <p>"Drat the man," said Mrs. BACKUP to herself; "he's a born fool
+that can't take a hint like that. TEDDY!" she cried to a seedy-looking,
+pimply man, who was sucking a forlorn-looking pipe on the back-door
+step, "you're wanted." She whispered a few words in his ear, and went
+up-stairs.</p>
+ <p>TEDDY MCSLUSH was the General Utility man of the Half-Way
+House. Born down East, of an Irish father and Scotch mother, he was
+eminently calculated to live by his wits. His natural talents were
+numerous and sparkling. He could tell more lies without notes than any
+man in the State, or make a beautiful prayer, all in the way of
+business. When a runaway couple were married at the Half-Way House, he
+would not only give the bride away in a voice broken by emotion, but he
+would bless the bridegroom with tears in his eyes, and he would do all
+this at the lowest market price. And every Sunday he dressed in a black
+suit and sung in the choir, and patted the little children on the head,
+and was generally respected.</p>
+ <p>He approached ARCHIBALD, and poked him in the ribs, facetiously.</p>
+ <p>"Ah!" he ejaculated; "and it's a cryin' shame, so it is, that
+a fine lad like yerself should be took with sich a complaint. It's
+modeshty what ails ye, man. And wasn't it Mester JOHN SHAKESPEER
+himself, him as writ the illegant versis, Lord luv his ashis, as says
+to me only jist afore his breath soured on him, 'TEDDY,' says he, wid
+much feelin', 'TEDDY, modeshty is a fine thing in a woman,' says he,
+'but it's death to a man. Promise me now,' says he, 'for I feel as this
+clay is a coolin' fast&#8212;promise me, TEDDY, as you'll never hev nothink
+to do with it&#8212;no, not never, my boy.' I promised him, and Hevins knows
+as I've kep' my word. But, Lord alive, I'm a keepin' you all the time
+from yer own dear wife, as is a dyin' to see you&#8212;and a sweet dear it
+is."</p>
+ <p>He ushered ARCHIBALD into the Ladies' Parlor, closed the door,
+and applied his ear to the key-hole, with an air of the most respectful
+attention.</p>
+ <p>According to TEDDY'S way of thinking, ANN was not hankering
+for ARCHIBALD'S society.</p>
+ <p>"What do you want <i>here</i>?" said she, sharply.</p>
+ <p>"Oh, don't speak cross to me, Miss BRUMMET," said he, looking
+timidly around. Then he put his finger on his lip, and shook his head
+energetically.</p>
+ <p>"I know all about it, you see," said he; "JEFF told me. Oh my!
+wasn't I struck up, though? But I'll never tell. <i>He</i> couldn't
+come, you see. His mother sent for him, and----"</p>
+ <p>"You lie," she broke in fiercely; "it's a put up job between
+you two. But it won't do; do you <i>hear</i>? It <i>won't do</i>."</p>
+ <p>"Oh, don't look at me <i>that</i> way," said ARCHIBALD,
+backing toward the door; "I want to go home."</p>
+ <p>"I'd like to see you go home," she replied, placing her back
+against the door. "You must think I'm a fool, to let you off as easy as
+that. You've got to sit up with me this evening, anyhow."</p>
+ <p>"But what would folks say?" stammered ARCHIBALD. "Oh, think of
+my reputation, Miss BRUMMET, and let me go."</p>
+ <p>"Your reputation!" she sneered. "Humbug! Men don't have any
+reputation, except when they steal a woman's. Come," she added, in a
+more conciliatory tone, "we'll have some supper, and then we'll have a
+game of euchre."</p>
+ <p>"Euchre! Oh, don't ask me to play euchre," said he; "I'm so
+mixed up, Miss BRUMMET, I couldn't tell the King of Ten-spots from the
+Ace of Jacks. Oh, won't BELINDA grab hold of my hair when she hears of
+this!"</p>
+ <p>"Yes, she'll pull it till she makes her ARCHIE-<i>bald</i>,"
+said ANN, laughing.</p>
+ <p>ARCHIBALD sat down, and looked at her in a supplicating manner.</p>
+ <p>"I'll do anything you say," said he, "if you please won't get
+off any more puns. It's awful. I knew a fellow once who had it chronic.
+He doubled every word that he could lay his tongue to. When he was
+going to a party, he'd take the dictionary and pick out a lot of words
+that could be twisted, and set 'em down and study on 'em, so he could
+be ready with a lot of puns, and when he got 'em off folks would laugh,
+but all the time they'd wish he'd died young. And that's the way he'd
+go on. He finally drove his mother into a consumption, and at her
+funeral, instead of taking on as he ought to, he only just looked at
+the body, and said, 'Well, that's the worst <i>coffin-fit</i> the old
+lady ever had.' And then he turned round and began to get off puns on
+the mourners. Wasn't it dreadful?&#8212;But what's that?"</p>
+ <p>Somebody was knocking at the door.</p>
+ <p>"What's wanted?" said ANN.</p>
+ <p>"It's your minister as has come, mum," said TEDDY, from the
+outside. "What word shall I give him?"</p>
+ <p>"Tell him I shan't want him," said ANN.</p>
+ <p>In a few minutes TEDDY came back.</p>
+ <p>"He says, mum, as he won't go without marryin' somebody, or a
+gittin' his pay anyway, for it's a nice buryin' job as he's lost by
+comin'."</p>
+ <p>"But," said ANN, "I can't&#8212;" She hesitated, and seemed to form
+a sudden resolution. "Tell him," she continued, "tell him&#8212;"</p>
+ <p>(To be continued.)</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>BIOGRAPHICAL.</b></p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">There
+was an agriculturist, philosopher, and editor,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who thought the world his debtor
+and himself, of course, its creditor;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">A man he was of wonderful
+vitup'rative fertility,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Though seeming an embodiment of
+mildness and docility,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">This ancient agriculturist,
+philosopher, and editor.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The clothes he wore were shocking
+to the citizen &aelig;sthetical,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Assuredly they would not pass in
+circles which were critical,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">So venerable were they, and so
+distant from propriety,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">So utterly unsuited to
+respectable society,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which numbers in its membership
+some citizens &aelig;sthetical.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He kept a model farm for every
+sort of wild experiment.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which was to all the neighborhood
+a source of constant worriment;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">For every one who passed that way
+pretended to be eager to</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Discover pumpkin vines that ran
+across the fields a league or two,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">So queer was the effect of each
+preposterous experiment.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He had a dreadful passion, which
+was not at all professional,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">For going for an office, either
+local or congressional.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But though often nominated, yet
+the people wouldn't ratify,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Because they thought, quite
+properly, it would be wrong to gratify</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The all-consuming passion that
+was not at all professional.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Among the many hobbies which he
+cantered on incessantly</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Was one he called Protection, and
+he rode it quite unpleasantly;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">For if any one dissented from his
+notions injudiciously,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">He went for him immediately,
+ferociously and viciously,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Did this absurd equestrian who
+cantered on incessantly.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">With which remarks the author of
+this brief, veracious history</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Concludes his observations on the
+incarnated mystery</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Known as an agriculturist,
+philosopher, and editor,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Who thought the world his debtor,
+and himself, of course, its creditor,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And who will surely figure on the
+oddest page in history.</span> </div>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">THE FITTEST PLACE FOR A
+"PRESERVER" OF THE PEACE.</span> A "Jam" on Broadway.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">DR. HELMBOLD TO J.G. BENNETT,
+Jr.</span> "Boo-shoo! fly."</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/167.jpg"><br>
+ <p><b>A BRIGHT IDEA</b>.</p>
+ <p><i>Customer</i>. "WAITER, BRING ME SOME FROZEN CLAMS."</p>
+ <p><i>Waiter (lately caught)</i>. "YES, SIR; WILL YOU HAVE 'EM
+ROASTED OR BILED?"</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>WORDS AND THEIR USES</b>.</p>
+ <p>Nothing, except counting your stamps, can be more pleasant and
+exciting than tracing out the origin of words by the aid of a
+second-hand dictionary. It's the next funniest thing to grubbing after
+stumps in a ten-acre lot. Dentists make capital philologists&#8212;: they are
+so much accustomed to digging for roots. It's rather dull work to
+shovel around in the Anglo-Saxon stratum, but, as soon as you strike
+the Sanscrit, then you're off, and if you don't find big nuggets, it's
+because&#8212;well, it's because there are none there. Sometimes you dig down
+to about the time when NOAH went on his little sailing excursion, and
+strike what seems to be a first-class sockdolager of root, but what is
+the use? Unfortunately the philology business is overdone; it's chock
+full of first-class broken down pedagogues and unsuccessful
+ink-slingers, and, as soon as you offer a curious specimen in the way
+of roots, they write a book to prove that the root don't exist, or, if
+it does, that it should not.</p>
+ <p>However, there is an advantage in knowing the roots of words,
+and the use to which they were put in former years. Everybody, you
+know, is very anxious to read CHAUCER and SPENSER. Now, after you have
+studied this subject about forty-two years, you will be able to read
+CHAUCER with the aid of an old English dictionary and an Anglo-Saxon
+grammar.</p>
+ <p>Many so-called philologists, who have preceded me, have
+ignorantly derived words from improper sources. Thus, the compound
+word, shoofly, has been traced by some to the Irish word <i>shoe</i>,
+meaning a hoof-covering, and the French word <i>fly</i>, meaning an
+insect, when it is apparent to even the casual observer that it comes
+from the Guinea word <i>shoo</i>, meaning get out, and the English
+word <i>fly</i>, meaning a tripe destroyer. I propose, therefore, to
+show you the origin of a few words, in order that you may use them
+properly, and in order that you may subscribe freely for my book on
+this subject, which will shortly be placed before an admiring public.</p>
+ <p><i>Theatres</i>. When the players were servants of the king,
+they were compelled to be proficient in reading, riting, rithmetic,
+rhyming, riddling, reciting, rehearsing, and romping. These
+accomplishments were grouped together and called <i>the 8 r's</i>,
+which name naturally enough was soon applied to the play-houses. This
+example shows how simple the whole subject is, and how easily the
+philology business could he run by a child six years of age.</p>
+ <p><i>Country</i>. The origin of this word is, to say the least,
+odd. City people were accustomed to visit the rural districts at about
+the time when rye was ripe, and they were generally amused by the
+farmer's pereginations around his rye. Farmers always count rye-stacks
+in the morning, in order to discover whether any of them have been
+lifted during the night. When, upon their return to the City, the
+visitors were asked where they had been, they facetiously replied, "To
+count rye." This soon became a favorite expression; the "e" was dropped
+for euphony, and the rural districts were called country.</p>
+ <p><i>Spittoon</i>.&#8212;This word comes from the Greek word <i>spit</i>,
+meaning to slobber, and the Scotch word, <i>tune</i>, meaning the
+noise made by the bag-pipes. As the saliva struck the receptacle it
+made a noise delightful to the ears of the smoker, and resembling the
+note of the national instrument of Scotland. Hence the receptacle was
+called the spittoon.</p>
+ <p><i>Politics</i>.&#8212;Quack philologists, who evidently were
+insane, have gone back to the classics for the root of this word, when
+it is well known that immediately after the termination of the
+Revolution, when the Government of this country was about to be
+settled, the word came into existence. A woman, called POLLY, kept a
+corner grocery in New York, and all the fellows who wanted offices were
+accustomed to go to POLLY'S for their beer, because she trusted. Here
+they usually divulged their ideas of the manner in which the Government
+machine should be run. When asked why they went to that store, they
+always answered, "POLLY ticks." Outsiders, when asked what was going on
+in POLLY's store, always answered with a wise look, "POLLY ticks." The
+words soon spread, and talking about the Government was facetiously
+called POLLY ticks. The expression was finally used in earnest, and, by
+euphoric changes, reached its present shape.</p>
+ <p><i>Cheese-it</i>.&#8212;This compound word has by some silly person
+been traced to the Saxon <i>cyse</i>, meaning condensed cow, and the
+Celtic <i>it</i>, meaning it. Now every way-faring man, even though <i>non
+compos mentis</i>, knows that when he is invited to come in and cut a
+cheese, come in and take a drop of whiskey is meant. This word, then,
+is derived from the Sanscrit <i>cheese</i>, meaning drop, and the
+English <i>it</i>, meaning whatever you may happen to be saying, and
+the whole expression may be properly translated "drop that yarn."</p>
+ <p>I might go on straight through the Dictionary, but I refrain,
+desiring only to show you what a light and entertaining subject
+philology is, and what quantities of fun you can get out of it on
+winter evenings.</p>
+ <p>If any one should desire to pursue this subject further, let
+him go through CHAUCER, SPENSER, SHAKSPEARE, and MILTON with a
+fine-tooth comb and a pair of spectacles, looking for roots, and then
+try my book on "Words and their Uses." He had better not attack the
+latter work on an empty stomach. An empty head will be more appropriate.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>The Mendicant Mission</b>.</p>
+ <p>Two fresh rumors about that unfortunate English Mission are
+afloat. One is that it has been tendered to the Hon. HENRY T. BLOW; the
+other is that the&#8212;well, no, not exactly Hon.&#8212;DAN. SICKLES is to be
+transferred from Madrid to the Court of St. JAMES. 'Tis much the same
+thing. If BLOW is appointed, it's BLOW; and if SICKLES is appointed,
+it's Blow, too.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Military Intelligence</b>.</p>
+ <p>The Fifth Regiment N.G.S.N.Y., composed altogether of Germans,
+have adopted the Prussian helmet with a spike on top. This is
+appropriate, as most Germans are linguists, and like to "spike the
+French."</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Where to Commence the Civil Service Reform</b>.</p>
+ <p>In our Hotels and Restaurants.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.</b></p>
+ <p><img alt="R" align="left" src="images/168.jpg">egarding me
+thoughtfully for a moment, MARGARET asks, "What is an 'old comedy?'"</p>
+ <p>I say to her, "An old comedy is to the comedy of to-day,
+precisely what an old beau, padded, painted, simpering with false
+teeth, and leering with rhumy eyes, is to a handsome, gallant young
+fellow, such as Mr. LESTER WALLACK impersonates in <i>Ours</i> or <i>School</i>."</p>
+ <p>To which she replies, "What are roomy eyes, dear?" (Being her
+fourth cousin by marriage, I am a sort of maiden aunt to her,&#8212;whence
+this respectful familiarity.) "Eyes in which there is room for the
+honest glances that never show themselves?'"</p>
+ <p>I sternly remark that "nice girls never pun."</p>
+ <p>"Yes," she replies; "punning, like beer and other vices, is
+the peculiar prerogative of men, I suppose. But you need not be afraid.
+I read PUNCHINELLO sometimes, and it is a terrible warning to people
+who are tempted to pun. I could give you frightful instances of the
+appalling depth to which the men who make puns in PUNCHINELLO
+occasionally sink."</p>
+ <p>I hastily close the discussion by inviting her to come to
+WALLACK'S and see an old comedy. So we find ourselves on the following
+evening in the only theatre in the country where that rather important
+adjunct of a theatre&#8212;a company&#8212;is to be found,</p>
+ <p>There are quantities of elegant dresses in the house,&#8212;the
+ladies having an idea that an old comedy is one of those things which
+every fashionable person ought to see. There are also numbers of nice
+young men, who, being the burning and shining lights of fashionable
+society (after their day's work behind the counter is ended), come to
+be bored by the old comedy, with a heroism which proves how
+immeasurably superior to the influences of tape and calico are their
+youthful souls. By the by, it is one of the unavoidable <i>d&eacute;sagr&eacute;ments</i>
+of New York society that the wearer of the elegant dress is often
+conscious that her partner in the waltz knows precisely how many yards
+of material compose her skirt, and exactly how much it cost per yard,
+for the excellent reason that he himself measured it with his
+professional yard-stick, and cut it with his private scissors. This,
+however, is a subject that belongs not to old comedy, but to the
+extremely modern comedy of New York society. The two resemble each
+other only so far as they are fashionable and dull.</p>
+ <p>But to our WALLACKIAN old comedy. The curtain rises upon the
+veteran GILBERT and the handsome ROCKWELL. They converse in the
+following style:</p>
+ <p>GILBERT.&#8212;"Well, you young dog, ha! ha! So you have decided to
+make your old uncle happy by marrying my neighbor's daughter. Gad! I
+remember my own wedding-day. Well, well; we won't talk about that now,
+but hark ye, you young villain, if you don't marry the girl, I cut you
+off with a shilling."</p>
+ <p>ROCKWELL.&#8212;"My dear uncle, I can have no greater pleasure than
+to fulfil your wishes. But suppose our adorable young neighbor has the
+ill-breeding to refuse me."</p>
+ <p>GILBERT.&#8212;"Refuse you! Refuse my nephew? Gad! I'd like to see
+THOMAS OLDBOY permit his daughter to refuse my nephew! I'd&#8212;d&#8212;e, I'd&#8212;"
+(chokes and stamps with rage.)</p>
+ <p>Further on we meet with Miss OLDBOY and her mother,&#8212;the latter
+a stout old lady, addicted to smelling salts and yellow silks.</p>
+ <p>LYDIA OLDBOY.&#8212;"To-day I am expecting the arrival of young
+WILDOATS, who comes to pay his addresses to me. I wonder if he is like
+that dear, delightful THADDEUS OF WARSAW."</p>
+ <p>Mrs. OLDBOY.&#8212;"Now, Miss, remember that your honored father
+insists upon this match. I expect you to be a dutiful daughter, and
+accede to his wishes. Here comes the young man himself."</p>
+ <p>ROCKWELL.&#8212;"My. dear Mrs. OLDBOY, I am charmed to see you. You
+are looking positively younger than your ravishingly beautiful
+daughter. Fair LYDIA, I come to lay my heart at your feet. 'Tis the
+wish of my uncle and your honored father that we should unite our
+respective houses. Let me touch that exquisite hand. Unseal those ruby
+lips and tell me that I am the happiest of men."</p>
+ <p>Here the UNCLE and OLDBOY enter. They chuckle, and poke one
+another in the ribs, remarking "Gad" and "Zounds" at intervals. They
+bless the young couple, and order up some of the old Madeira. The
+curtain falls as OLDBOY gives the health of the young people, with the
+wish that they may have a dozen children, and a cellar never without
+plenty of this splendid old Madeira,&#8212;"that your father, bottled, Miss
+LYDIA, the year our gracious sovereign came to the throne."</p>
+ <p>This is a fair sample of the old comedy. The oaths are of
+course omitted, out of deference to the tender susceptibilities of the
+editor of PUNCHINELLO. So are the indecencies, which are the spice of
+the old comedy, but which cannot be written in a respectable journal,
+and are almost too gross and brutal for the <i>Sun</i>. Take from an
+old comedy its oaths and its grossness, and nothing is left but a
+residuum of boisterous inanity. The condensed old comedy which has just
+been laid before the readers of PUNCHINELLO, is as inane and vapid as
+anything that WALLACK'S theatre has shown us in the past month. Do you
+find it dull? For my part, I don't hesitate to say that the "Essence of
+Old Virginny," as furnished by the venerable poet, Mr. DANIEL BRYANT,
+is vastly more amusing than the Essence of Old Comedy.</p>
+ <p>All of which I say, in my most impressive manner, to MARGARET
+as we struggle through the crowded lobby. But she irreverently disputes
+my assertions, and asks, "How is it that everybody admires these
+comedies if they are so wretched as you say they are? Is your judgment
+better than that of anybody else?"</p>
+ <p>There being nothing to say, if I mean to maintain my ground,
+except that my judgment is the only infallible critical judgment in
+this city or elsewhere, I promptly and unblushingly say so. But
+MARGARET tells me I am "a goose"&#8212;(I think I have mentioned that she is
+my aunt, and hence allows herself these pleasing freedoms of
+speech)&#8212;and says that I shall take her to see the old comedies every
+night, until I am willing to say that I like them.</p>
+ <p>Who is there that, in view of this threat, will not drop the
+tear of sensibility, so neatly alluded to by Mr. STERNE, in sympathy
+with the prospective sufferings of</p>
+ <p>MATADOR.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>UNIVERSITY-MANIA.</b></p>
+ <p>MY DEAR P.:&#8212;I have made some curious observations of this
+disease, which lead to startling conclusions.</p>
+ <p>It is a malady peculiar to the United States, being an
+eruption resulting from indigestion of unripe knowledge, together with
+excess of vanity in individual blood.</p>
+ <p>Universities spring up among us like mushrooms, in a night.
+The seed of knowledge is sown broadcast over our land. In fact, in this
+particular we may be said to be very seedy, indeed.</p>
+ <p>For my part I have no objection to Universities&#8212;when they <i>are</i>
+Universities. But, at the rate at which we are now progressing, we
+shall soon have "every man his own University." It will become the
+fashion to keep a University in the back-yard. And then, you know, the
+institution must have its own particular organ, you know. Every man,
+and every member of his family, shall print his or her <i>Free Press</i>,
+and independence of opinion shall reign.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Glorious
+country! Glorious free speech!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">With WALT WHITMAN, we may well
+exclaim:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O the BROWN University!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O the splendid University of
+SMITH!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O CORNELL, his University!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;"><i>&amp;c. ad infinitum.</i></span>
+ </div>
+ <p>As for me, dear NELLO, I am in the front rank of civilization.
+I have accepted the Chair of Cane-bottom in a Grub-Street garret, and
+rejoice in a barrel-organ, which plays with great freedom of speech.</p>
+ <p>Yours pedagoguically,</p>
+ <p>JEREMY DOGWOOD.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A. Sop for Ireland.</b></p>
+ <p>It is stated that Queen VICTORIA has ordered from a Dublin
+manufacturer an extensive assortment of Balbriggan hosiery for the
+wedding outfit of the Princess LOUISE. There is a stroke of policy in
+this. In firemen's phrase it may be called laying on the "hose" to
+quench disloyalty.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT.</span>
+The Marine Hospital.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>TRIALS OF A WITNESS.</b></p>
+ <p>MR. PUNCHINELLO:&#8212;As all people seem to come to you with their
+troubles and grievances, I hope you will not refuse to listen to my
+woes. And whether they are woes or not, I leave you to judge for
+yourself.</p>
+ <p>At the beginning of last week I made my first appearance in
+any court-room, in the character of a witness, in the case of VALENTINE
+ <i>vs.</i> ORSON; in which the point in dispute was the ownership
+of a tract of land in Wyoming Territory. I knew something in regard to
+the sale of these lands, and was fully prepared to testify to the
+extent of my knowledge in the premises; but judge of my utter surprise
+and horror on being obliged to go through such an ordeal as the
+following extracts from my examination will indicate.</p>
+ <p>The counsel for the plaintiff commenced by asking me if I was
+a married man, and when I had answered that. I was, he said:&#8212;</p>
+ <p>"Is your wife a believer in the principles of the Woman's
+Rights party?"</p>
+ <p>I could not, for the life of me, see what this had to do with
+the land in Wyoming, but I answered, that I was happy to say she was
+not.</p>
+ <p>The examination then proceeded as follows:&#8212;</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> You are happy, then, in your matrimonial relations? <i>A.</i>
+Yes&#8212;(and remembering the oath) reasonably so.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Is your wife pretty? <i>A.</i> (Witness remembering
+at once his oath and his wife's presence in court) She is pretty pretty.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> What are her defects? <i>A.</i> (Witness
+remembering only his wife's presence.) I have never been able to
+discover them.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you wear flannel? <i>A.</i> Yes, in winter.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Can you testify, upon your oath, that you do not
+wear flannel in summer? <i>A.</i> I can.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Now be careful in your answer. What do you wear in
+the spring and fall? <i>A.</i> I&#8212;I wear my common clothes.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> With flannel, or without flannel? <i>A.</i>
+Sometimes with, and sometimes without.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> No evasion; you must tell the Court exactly when you
+wear flannel, and when you do not.</p>
+ <p>A series of questions on this subject brought out the fact
+that I wore flannel when the weather was cold, or cool; and did not
+wear it when it was mild, or warm.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have you a lightning-rod on your house? <i>A.</i> I
+have.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How much did it cost you to have it put up? <i>A.</i>
+It has not cost me anything yet&#8212;I owe for it.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Is that all you owe for? <i>A.</i> No, I have other
+debts.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have you any money with you now? <i>A.</i> I have.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How much? <i>A.</i> (Counting contents of
+porte-monnaie.) Sixty-two cents.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Where did you get that? <i>A.</i> (With
+embarrassment.) I borrowed it.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Were you present when defendant first offered his
+land for sale to the plaintiff? <i>A.</i> (Brightening up.) I was.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you burn gas or kerosene in your house? <i>A.</i>
+Gas.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How many burners? <i>A.</i> Ten, I think.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Are you willing to assert, upon your solemn oath,
+that there are only ten? <i>A.</i> (Witness counting on his fingers.)
+I am.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you wear studs or buttons on your shirt fronts? <i>A.</i>
+Studs.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Gold, or pearl? <i>A.</i> Mother-of-pearl, as a
+general thing, but sometimes I wear one gold one at the top.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Were all your studs of mother-of-pearl, at the time
+when you first heard this transaction mentioned between the parties? <i>A.</i>
+They were.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you ever wear your gold stud in the middle of
+your bosom? <i>A.</i> No, sir, I always wear it at the top.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you ever wear it at the bottom? Can you swear it
+was not at the bottom on the day of the transaction referred to? <i>A.</i>
+I distinctly remember that I did not wear it at all that day.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Did you wear it that night? <i>A.</i> No, sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Can you swear that after you went to bed you did not
+wear it? <i>A.</i> I can.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have you ever been vaccinated? <i>A.</i> I have.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> On which arm? <i>A.</i> The left.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> At the of the first mention of this land to the
+plaintiff, who were present? <i>A.</i> (Witness speaking with hopeful
+vivacity, as if he hoped they were now coming to the merits of the
+case.) The plaintiff, the defendant, and myself.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Do you use the Old Dominion coffee-pot in your
+house? <i>A.</i> (Dejectedly.) No, sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> What kind of a coffee pot do you use? <i>A.</i> A
+common tin one.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> You are willing to swear it is tin? <i>A.</i> I am.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Has your wife any sisters? <i>A.</i> She has two;
+ANNA and JANE.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Are they married <i>A.</i> They are.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Are either of them prettier than your wife? <i>A.</i>
+(Quickly.) No, sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have you any children? <i>A.</i> Two.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Have they had the measles? <i>A.</i> They have.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Has any other person in your household had the
+measles? <i>A.</i> I have had them, and my wife has had them.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How do you know your wife has had them? <i>A.</i>
+She told me so.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Then you did not see her have them? <i>A.</i> No,
+sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> We want no hearsay evidence here; how can you swear
+that she has had them when you did not see her have them? <i>A.</i>
+She told me so, and I believed her.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Did she take an oath that she had had them? <i>A.</i>
+No sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Then, sir, you are trifling with the Court. Do you
+understand the obligations of an oath? <i>A.</i> I do.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Beware, then, that you are not committed for
+perjury. Is your gas-metre ever frozen? <i>A.</i> Yes, sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> What do you use when the gas will not burn? <i>A.</i>
+Candles.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How many to the pound? <i>A.</i> Nine.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> How do you know there are nine to the pound? <i>A.</i>
+They are sold as nines.</p>
+ <p><i>Q.</i> Then you never weighed them yourself? <i>A.</i> No,
+sir.</p>
+ <p><i>Counsel</i>, to the <i>Court</i>. May it please your
+Honor, this is the second time that this witness has positively
+testified, under solemn oath, to important points of which he has no
+certain knowledge. I ask the Court for protection for myself and my
+client.</p>
+ <p>Here a long discussion took place between the lawyers and the
+Judge, and at the end of it the case was postponed for four months. I
+suppose it is expected that I will then re-ascend the witness-stand;
+but I have determined that when I enter a court-room again I shall
+appear as a criminal. These fellows have much the easiest times, and
+they run so little risk, nowadays, that their position is far
+preferable to that of the unfortunate witnesses.</p>
+ <p>J. BADGER.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Singular Fatuity.</b></p>
+ <p>The reason why so few persons emigrate to this country from
+Poland, is the general belief prevailing there that we have throughout
+the Union a heavy Pole tax.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">THE A.B.C. OF NEW YORK
+SOCIALISM.</span> ANDREWS, BRISBANE, AND CLAFLIN.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/169.jpg"><br>
+ <p><b>THRILLING MELODRAMA.</b></p>
+ <p>Scene: Lord DE VERE'S Manor: The Blue Chamber.</p>
+ <p><i>Lord De Vere.</i> "BUT ONE COURSE, LADY CLAUDE, IS LEFT TO
+RETRIEVE OUR FALLEN FORTUNES. WITH THESE DEAD CATS WE'LL FLY TO
+MICHIGAN AND START A MINERAL SPRING. THE MICHIGANDERS ARE WILD ABOUT
+THEIR SPRINGS, AND WITH THIS MATERIAL OURS CANNOT BUT BE A SUCCESS."</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/170.jpg"><br>
+ <p><b>ONE OF OUR SOCIAL HUMBUGS.</b></p>
+ <p><i>Old Gent (figuring up probable receipts of his silver
+wedding, close at hand)</i>. "I'VE HIRED A SPLENDID TEA-SERVICE FOR
+BROWN TO PRESENT TO US; IT WILL MAKE QUITE A SENSATION, AND I'VE GOT IT
+CHEAP FOR THE EVENING."</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>POEMS OF THE POLICE.</b></p>
+ <p>I. MARY SMITH.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O
+gallant p'licemen, list to me,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">I'll sing a mournful ditty</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">About a poor young serving-gal,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">What lived in this here city.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">She had a name, and SMITH it was</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">(The rest of it was MARY);</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Her constant duty, at daybreak,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Was sweeping out the arey.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">One evening she went to a jig</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">(Her missus was attending</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">A private hop), when there befel</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">What truly was heart-rending.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">She wore her missus' gayest
+clothes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Her muslin dress all fluty,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Her waterfall and tag-rags all,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Which well became her beauty.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But missus found poor MARY out,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And in a p'liceman took her,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And walked her up before the
+Judge,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">On charge of being a hooker.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The missus swore the girl a thief</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Her property as lifted,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Which proved beyond all doubt
+would be</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">When things came to be sifted.<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The girl said she'd been to a jig;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Then out spoke Judge MCCARTY,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"You must not wear the fixings of</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">A party to a party."<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">They sent her up for sixteen
+months,&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Oh! drop a tear to MARY,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Whose missus ne'er shall see her
+more</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">A-sweeping out the arey.</span>
+ </div>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Sic Transit.</b></p>
+ <p>Life being in any event a transitory affair, and especially so
+in New York, where, every one lives some miles from his business, our
+means of transit are of interest to every one. However well the owners
+of those at present in use may insist that they are, yet the public
+feels they should be better, and Mr. PUNCHINELLO, having the interest
+of his fellow-citizens at heart, most earnestly hopes that the
+undertakers of the last new scheme will not so mistake the meaning of
+this term as to suppose that their business with it is simply to bury
+it.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Discounting a Bill.</b></p>
+ <p>The Germans are disposed to glorify their king, and look upon
+him as the Great WILLIAM; but when they commence to calculate the cost
+of his glory, in men slaughtered, homes desolated, women beggared,
+industries destroyed, taxes increased, and liberty chained, it is more
+than probable that they will become disgusted with their Little BILL.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Query</b></p>
+ <p>Can Russia's designs upon Turkey, at this season of the year,
+be attributed to her admiration and imitation of New England
+Thanksgiving customs?</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A Maniac's Mutterings.</b></p>
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO'S special Lunatic gives it as his opinion, that a
+continuance of a horse-flesh diet in Paris must go far towards
+disturbing the Parisian Equine-imity.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>An Old Saw Sharpened.</b></p>
+ <p>Some one has applied the old Latin motto, <i>"Horas non
+numero nisi serenas,"</i> to Mr. GREELEY, by making it read, "HORACE is
+of no account except when serene," which, by the by, he never is.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>Query for Naturalists.</b></p>
+ <p>How can a person who stands four feet in his boots be called
+biped?</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">DENTS-LY FILLED.</span>
+Government offices.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/171.jpg">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">KING WILLIAM OF PRUSSIA WAITING FOR
+HIS ALLY.</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HIRAM GREEN ON MARK TWAIN'S BABY.</p>
+ <p>The "Lait Gustice" congratulates the newly organized Papa.</p>
+ <p>SKEENSBORO, NYE ONTO VARMONT.</p>
+ <p>Friend TWAIN&#8212;Allow an old statesman, which has served his
+country for 4 yeers as Gustise of the Peece, rite a congratulotery
+letter to you on your success as a boy raisest. Altho your name is MARK
+TWAIN, I notiss that on this occashon you dident Mark but One.</p>
+ <p>I am a little older in years and <i>Parentelism</i> than you
+are, and am able to call myself the seenyer pardner in a firm who are
+the sole proprieters of eleven offspring and 2 grand-children.</p>
+ <p>Raisin children is a bizziniss which haint every mans best
+holt, and as long as you've got into the bizziness, excoose me for
+givin you a little wisdom, which you as a parent must swaller without
+makin up a face.</p>
+ <p>If your child, in its infantile days, is given to squallin
+nites, obtain a beverige, called soothin sirup, and just before you
+pull off your butes nites, give the little cuss about 3 tablespoons
+full, and he will sleep so sound that you can use him for a piller.
+Should he kick &amp; squall, and refuse to take it, lay him down onto
+the floor, set on him, then takin hold of his nose, pour the stuff down
+his throte, and you've got him, ekal to Jo JEFFERSON'S Rip Van Winkle
+20 yeers snooze.</p>
+ <p>To amoose him&#8212;If your wife is too bizzy durin the day, doin
+the cookin, washin, &amp;c. 4th, to amoose the child, give him an ink
+bottle, and set him down on the parler carpet. If he has any idee of
+geografy, when you come home nites you will find a good helthy map of
+the black sea, which Rooshy will insist on bein added to your war map.</p>
+ <p>Another way of amusin him, is to give him a raiser, and let
+him play learn to shave. If he should cut his nose off, it would make
+the little <i>shaver smart</i>.</p>
+ <p>If you expect to bring your boy up to hold offis,' let him
+cultivate cheek. This is done by tyin his grandmother in her rockin
+cheer, and lettin him pelt the old lady with snow balls in the winter
+time. In the summer time get him a bow and arrer, and let him see how
+neer he come to the venerable lady's nose without breakin her
+spectorcals. If this don't make him cheeky enuff to hold offis, let him
+pour a lot of benzine onto his little cuzzin, then push her onto a red
+hot cole stove. If he can do this and think it a joak, he will do for a
+cabinet offiser.</p>
+ <p>If he tries to jump over parental authority, fill him with
+shot, same as <i>your</i> man did his jumpin frog, only pour it into
+him with a mustick.</p>
+ <p>If you've got any regard for our nashnal caracter, don't let
+your son rite comic copy for the noosepapers, after which, be so rash
+as to rite a book, and have English crickets set up their darn singin,
+when they catch your little <i>innocent abroad</i>.</p>
+ <p>JOHN BULL don't tickle easy, remember that. I actually believe
+you couldent stir him with a hul bag full of laffin gas.</p>
+ <p>As your boy has entered the Lecture field, I shouldent be
+surprised if he got up quite a <i>breeze</i> on the roast-rum. In
+fact, when he opens his mouth before an audience, look out for <i>squalls</i>.</p>
+ <p>When your offspring is big enuff to enjoy chastisin, remember
+the "good little boy," and examine your son's garments to see if the
+lad has been roostin onto any nitro-gleserine cans, lest the parental
+hand, when brought in contact with the youth's <i>habeas corpus</i>, mite
+necessitate the sweepin up of father and son's scattered remnants.</p>
+ <p>Let your son reed the works on good morril men's lives.</p>
+ <p>By the time he gets old enuff to read, I will have my life out
+in pamphlet form, and you can draw onto me for a copy. Beware of works
+of fiction. Don't let your boy have a great deal to do with such readin
+as HOYLE on Games, TOM PAINE on Infidelity, nor HORRIS GREELY on
+farmin. Such works are bringin more ruin onto the country, than the
+numerous jewrys of twelve talented men, who allow murderers to come the
+loonatic dodge over 'em.</p>
+ <p>I don't believe in spoilin the rod and sparin the child, but I
+think it is well enuff to keep a rod hung up in the barn, where your
+child can occasionally look at it, to see what he will come to, if he
+undertakes to kick over the traces.</p>
+ <p>Children are a good deal like wimmen. If you don't set <i>your</i>
+foot down when you first get married your wimmen will raise <i>their</i>
+foot up, and afore you realize any pain, your gentle form will be
+histed out into the street.</p>
+ <p>With boys you must begin talkin <i>turkey</i>, when they are
+young <i>goblins</i>, ef you don't, when they get old enuff, they will
+"strike for their sires," and <i>gobble</i> up the old man's scalp.</p>
+ <p>Teach your son to honor his pa and ma, and decline the English
+mission, when it comes his turn.</p>
+ <p>Between you and I, aspirants for the honor of bordin with St.
+JIMMY are on the <i>decline</i>, Pitty it haint a gin-cocktail. I
+shouldent be surprised, if some big criminal was sentenced to go there
+yet, which minds me of a konundrum. Why is the English mission like
+lager beer?</p>
+ <p>Give 'er up?</p>
+ <p>Because it ruins any <i>minister's</i> reputation, who goes
+for it.</p>
+ <p>Hopin that when you shovel off your mortil coil, that your
+mantle may not pass out of the family, and as time flies on with
+greased wings, you may make the family name <i>sound</i> by bein able
+to Mark Twain in your family record, I drop the goose feather.</p>
+ <p>Ewers, parentally,</p>
+ <p>HIRAM GREEN, ESQ.,</p>
+ <p>Lait Gustise of the Peece.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>A SURE WAY OF DOING IT.</b></p>
+ <p>Seekers after notoriety must often be at their wits' end for
+some new sensation with which to advertise themselves. Mr. TWAIN, for
+instance, having gone through Fenianism and France, seems to have
+collapsed for the present; and here now comes Mr. WEMYSS JOBSON, who
+subsided into oblivion years ago, but has just emerged again into the
+light of <i>The Sun</i>. The efforts of both these gentlemen to keep
+themselves prominently before the public, however, are very inadequate
+and feeble. They should suffer more and be stronger. Let TRAIN do a
+bold stroke of business by declaring himself the perpetrator of the
+latest mysterious murder, and it might be the making of the exhumed
+JOBSON to revive a fossilized memory, and confess himself to be the
+criminal who delivered the fatal blow to the late Mr. WILLIAM PATTERSON.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>True to his Colors.</b></p>
+ <p>A Bostonian visiting New York, not long since, and reading in
+the papers that there was to be a celebration of Mass in an up-town
+church, decided to remain over Sunday for it, thinking, Bostonially,
+that Mass meant Massachusetts and nothing else.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>SUITABLE INSCRIPTION FOR A BOATMAN'S RACE-PRIZE.</b> "The
+noblest Row-man of them all."</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/173.jpg">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">A NEW LEAF IN THE FAMILY HISTORY.</p>
+ <p><i>Jack.</i> "NOW, I'LL BE PAPA, GOING TO FIX THE FURNACE."</p>
+ <p><i>Sallie</i>. "OH, YES!&#8212;AND I'LL BE THE NEW NURSE, AND YOU
+MUST KISS ME BEHIND THE CELLAR DOOR!"</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/174.jpg">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BEHIND THE TIMES.</p>
+ <p>EXPLANATORY OF MR. JOHN BULL'S VIEWS.</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">POEMS OF THE CRADLE.</p>
+ <p>CANTO XIII.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">When
+I was a bachelor I lived by myself;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">All the bread and cheese I had, I
+laid upon the shelf.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">But the rats and the mice they
+made such a strife,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">I was forced to go to London to
+buy myself a wife.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The roads were so bad, and the
+lanes were so narrow,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">I had to bring my wife home in a
+wheelbarrow.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The wheelbarrow broke. My wife
+had a fall;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Deuce take the wheelbarrow, my
+wife, and all.</span> </div>
+ <p>The above lines were written when the author was quite
+advanced in years; when he had solved, in his humble way, the great
+problem of life, and discovered the futility of mundane things
+generally, and t undesirableness of an unsuccessful or unfortunate
+existence; when he could look back through a long vista of years, and
+see the follies of his youth and the mistakes of his manhood. It should
+have been placed at the end of his book, with only the word Finis after
+it; but somehow, either by mistake of the author or of the publisher,
+it was placed among the records of the simple events of the village,
+and thus loses half its force. However, let the history, placed as it
+is, be a warning to rash young men who contemplate matrimony; and let
+them give heed to it, lest they also have cause to repent of their
+doings and exclaim with the poet:&#8212;</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+deuce take it."</span> </div>
+ <p>Observe how pathetic and touching his reminiscence of his lost
+youth and the priceless boon of liberty. He commences in a quiet
+descriptive way, leaving one at a loss to know whether it is to be a
+joyful lyric a dirge he intends singing.</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"When
+I was a bachelor I lived by myself;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">All the bread and cheese I had I
+laid upon the shelf."</span> </div>
+ <p>Here we have him alone, at peace with himself and the world;
+happy in the contemplation of his beloved muse; jotting down, now and
+then, the brilliant ideas that flash through his teeming brain; and
+munching in solitude his homely meal of bread and cheese. In telling us
+he laid his bread and cheese upon the shelf, he at once shows he had
+left his parental abode, and the ministering and watchful care of his
+maternal parent.</p>
+ <p>There must, of course, have been a cause for such a step. Some
+reason why the gentle being should have been wrought up to that pitch,
+when he daringly throws off all restraint, and steps into the world to
+act and think for himself. It may have been the want of sympathy that
+drove him to the act. They were plain folks, and didn't appreciate his
+peculiar turn of mind, and so only laughed at him, and ridiculed his
+pretensions. That there was a quarrel there is no manner of doubt, and
+it was probably caused by the mortifying act of his mother in fainting
+when he read her the poetry he had written at her request. That, in
+itself, was enough to break all ties between them. She was horrified
+and overwhelmed with dismay that a child of hers could be guilty of
+such atrocious rhymes; and he, in turn, was disgusted that a mother of
+his should be so unappreciative and earthly. And so, by mutual consent,
+they separated.</p>
+ <p>That accounts for his bachelor habit of laying his bread and
+cheese on the shelf that he might have it handy, and not forget where
+he had placed it. But as</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+rats and mice made such a strife,"</span> </div>
+ <p>he found that would never do. Something else must be thought
+of; and being an inventive genius, he tried putting it in his trunk,
+but it scented his Sunday jacket and trousers, and the girls all turned
+up their noses at the odd perfume. So, driven to extremity, he in an
+evil hour decided, as many another has since done, that the remedy for
+his ills was matrimony, and that it was not well for man to live alone.</p>
+ <p>A Prophet is without honor in his own country, and so ofttimes
+is a Poet. To his bashful supplication of "Wilt thou?" the young
+maidens if his village unhesitatingly refused to wilt, and thus it was
+that circumstances forced him</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"To
+go to London to buy himself a wife."</span> </div>
+ <p>How fortunate that he should give us, inadvertently as it
+were, the information so necessary to the unlucky young men of this
+later day, the best place to go shopping for wives! No man after
+reading the above need say "he doesn't marry because he cannot, as no
+one will have him." He need not stop for that hereafter, but just go to
+London, pick out one to suit, pay the price, and bag the article. It
+can all be done in a day, and save time wonderfully.</p>
+ <p>He bought his wife&#8212;a cheap one undoubtedly&#8212;and gave his
+promise to pay; then started homeward, feeling his importance as a
+married man, and chuckling over the idea of the astonishment and dismay
+of the rats and mice when he should set his wife after them, and
+thereby deprive them of their daily rations. But while musing thus, he
+discovers his wile shows signs of fatigue, as</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+roads were bad, and the lanes were narrow,"</span> </div>
+ <p>and not wishing to have her exhausted before commencing
+business, he gallantly determined to give her a ride, well knowing she
+would need all her strength for the battle he intended she should win.</p>
+ <p>So borrowing a wheelbarrow of a trusting neighbor, he seated
+her therein, and amid great rejoicing at his extraordinary "luck" he
+set forward. But now comes the sad part of the story:</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+wheelbarrow broke&#8212;my wife had a fall."</span> </div>
+ <p>And what a fall was there, my countrymen! Words are
+inadequate. The scene was indescribable, and we leave a blank that each
+may picture it to suit themselves.</p>
+ <p>After the excitement occasioned by the catastrophe was
+somewhat abated, he picked up the pieces and tried to put the
+wheelbarrow together again. But it was too far gone; it was
+un-put-togetherable, and so he, more in sorrow than anger, stood gazing
+at the wreck, while his wife, being a woman, could not resist the
+impulse to cry exultingly, "I told you so; I knew it." That on top of
+all the rest of his trouble was a little too much; and after fumbling
+over the pieces a while, "I told you so" ringing in his ears, he
+completely lost his temper, and vented his passion in the words:&#8212;</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"The
+deuce take the wheelbarrow."----</span> </div>
+ <p>and then in a low voice, cautiously turning his head aside, he
+added:&#8212;</p>
+ <div style="margin-left: 40px;"> <span style="margin-left: 1em;">"My
+wife and all."</span> </div>
+ <p>Together they trudged homeward. Fearful misgivings as to the
+wisdom of his step came swooping down upon him, and he almost wished he
+had not tried to mend matters, but had patiently borne with the rats,
+when suddenly&#8212;the vision of a <i>cat</i> swept athwart his mind, and
+he groaned aloud in bitterness of spirit.</p>
+ <p>Not even the ever after clean hearth-stone, with the dead
+bodies of his enemies, the rats, piled thereon, could make him forget
+that one moment of agonizing consciousness, when he realized for the
+first time that he had burdened himself with a wife when a cat would
+have answered as well.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HURLY-BURLY.</p>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">No wonder that the folks turn pale</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And preachers talk of doom,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Since by each telegram and mail</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Come words of awful gloom:<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Explosions of N. glycerine;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Expulsion of the Pope;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Earthquakes along the Eastern line</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And</span><br>
+ <img alt="" src="images/175a.jpg">
+ <p style="margin-left: 1.5em; font-weight: bold;">THE PACIFIC SLOPE.</p><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Surely the world is upside down,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Its framework out of joint;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">At coming change all things of town</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And country seem to point:<br>
+ <br>
+ </span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">The very sea some day may try</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To climb the mountain side,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And hill-folks yet be staggered by</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <img alt="" src="images/175b.jpg">
+ <p style="margin-left: 1.5em; font-weight: bold;">THE MOANING OF THE TIED.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>OUR PORTFOLIO.</b></p>
+ <p>By Diligence from Paris to Versailles&#8212;Fastest Time on
+Record&#8212;Happy Travelling Companions&#8212;Mud, Misery, and Malignity&#8212;Life on
+the Road.</p>
+ <br>
+ <p>NEAR ST. CLOUD, NINTH WEEK OF THE REPUBLIC, 1870.</p>
+ <p>It would have done you good to see us getting over that muddy,
+jagged, rutty old turnpike that leads off from the south of the Bois de
+Boulogne toward St. Cloud and Versailles. Since writing my last, I had
+been to Paris <i>par ballon mont&eacute;,</i> and was now returning in
+the <i>diligence</i> that took five American ladies and a couple of
+war correspondents, all friends of WASHBURNE, away from the temptation
+of eating horse-flesh in the beleaguered city, to such edibles as the
+rapacity of the German appetite had left undevoured in the neighborhood
+of the old "stamping grounds" of Louis XVI. We were not a jolly party.
+It rained in torrents, and our little driver perched upon the box in
+front smoked the most infernal tobacco I ever smelt. Moreover, the
+horses were not lively steeds. They were rather safe than otherwise,
+and not given to running away. Although the driver addressed himself to
+their flanks, between each puff of smoke, with a pointed stick, they
+didn't rear and plunge so as to frighten the ladies, and that was a
+point gained, albeit we had leisure to count the pickets in the fences
+as we dragged toward our destination. One of our lady passengers came
+from Connecticut, and she talked with a nutmeg dialect that made her
+garrulity oftentimes quite spicy. We two sat back to back, and when the
+vehicle lurched heavily her chignon took me "amidships" (if I may be
+permitted the expression) with a concussion that felt like the impact
+of a muffled ball from a six-pound field howitzer. "Goodness gracious,
+dew git eout of the way and give me some room, man!" she would exclaim
+as our wagon plunged into a three-foot "gore" and the coachee plied his
+pointed ramrod with increased vigor to the attenuated haunches of the
+insensible beasts.</p>
+ <p>"My dear madam, you will perceive that I cannot 'git' any
+further without climbing upon the back of my companion in front." Lord
+knows I would have given a hundred francs to be out of her reach; but
+we had been all ticketed and labelled through under the same "pass,"
+and there was no such thing as dissolving partnership <i>now.</i></p>
+ <p>"Ugh!" she muttered, putting her handkerchief to her nose,
+"and that horrid smoke too!" But the imperturbable director of our
+flight took no heed, and drew away at his clay idol with unabated
+satisfaction. 'Twas thus we jogged on for five weary hours, "OLD
+CONNECTICUT" charging head foremost at my spinal column with a
+frequency and momentum that made me believe, finally, she did it on
+purpose. Three miles out from St. Cloud we found the road completely
+blocked up with artillery wagons, and saw large masses of troops moving
+through the fields on either side. It still rained incessantly, and the
+forlornness of the situation was no wise relieved by the distant
+booming of guns, and the sucking sound of the wheels in the mud.</p>
+ <p>"Oh, my!" sail a thin, squeaky voice on the back seat. "I
+believe they are coming this way. Do let us get out, SARAH. I would
+rather die on the road than be murdered in such a sepulchre as this."</p>
+ <p>She referred to a battalion of the Landwehr that had just
+denied into the road, not a hundred yards in front of us.</p>
+ <p>"Stop your sniffling back there!" peevishly exclaimed "OLD
+CONNECTICUT." "It would serve you right if they bayonetted you;" and
+she added emphasis to her expostulation by planting her chignon between
+my shoulder-blades with terrific force.</p>
+ <p>I felt at once that either my back or my gallantry would have
+to give way; so I took a bond of fate, and sacrificed the latter on the
+spot.</p>
+ <p>"That'll do&#8212;that'll do," I remonstrated. "No more of that; if
+you want to knock the brains out of that haystack on the back of your
+head, why, knock away; but spare my bones, if you please."</p>
+ <p>I looked around, and she looked around with such suddenness as
+to bring her nose in contact with the brim of my hat, and force the
+tears from her eyes. She started to her feet, and I verily believe
+would not have postponed hostilities a moment, had not the door of the <i>diligence</i>
+just then been opened, and a Prussian officer demanded to see our
+papers. I paraded the "documents," and he said they were "good;" but he
+also said that we must make up our minds to halt here until the
+following morning, as there was a movement of the troops, and no
+vehicles would be permitted to pass this point.</p>
+ <p><i>Gaudeamus!</i> I could have sworn, but my wrath sailed away
+when I saw what a volcano was working in the bosom of "OLD
+CONNECTICUT." She didn't strike the officer, or utter a single
+complaint in his hearing, but sat down as if she had been a spile
+driven through the top of the coach, and let the vinegar run out of her
+eyes in pure impotency of speechless rage.</p>
+ <p>"SARAH'S" companion on the back seat broke forth afresh, and
+again wanted to know as to the probability of our being charged upon
+and put to the sword. I couldn't hear "SARAH'S" answers to these
+harrowing questions, but it seemed to me as if she were trying to
+throttle her timid friend into a perfect sense of security. Whatever
+she did had the desired effect, and I heard no more from the "back
+seat."</p>
+ <p>It was nightfall ere the several members of our little colony
+composed themselves to await in such tranquillity as they could
+command, the ordeal of sleeping, sitting bolt upright in a French <i>diligence,</i>
+upon a dark, tempestuous night, and surrounded on all sides by the
+dreadful presence of "red-handed war." The last thing I remember ere
+the drowsy god "MURPHY" sent his fairies to weave their cobwebs about
+my eyelids, was "OLD CONNECTICUT." She didn't look like the
+battering-ram that she was. She had taken that chignon for a pillow,
+and fastened it to the back of the seat. Her head was thrown back; her
+chin had fallen, and at the extreme tip of her thin red nose a solitary
+tear glistened like a dew-drop on a beet. Once, about midnight, she
+awoke me by her snoring, but I gave the old gal's chignon a hitch, and
+it was all right again.</p>
+ <p>Yours, somniferously,</p>
+ <p>DICK TINTO.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <center> <img alt="" src="images/176.jpg">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">THOSE COUNTRY COUSINS AGAIN.</p>
+ <p><i>Celia (just arrived from the country).</i> "JUST THINK,
+JANE, COUSIN JOHN IS TO BE MY ESCORT TO THE FRENCH BAZAAR AND THE
+NILSSON CONCERTS, AND BOOTH'S AND WALLACE'S, AND THE OPERA
+BOUFF&Eacute;, AND LOTS OF OTHER FIRST-CLASS SHOWS!"</p>
+ </center>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>FACTS ABOUT THE ENGLISH MISSION.</b></p>
+ <p>It is not true that I ever accepted the English Mission; and
+if any man says I did, I now deliberately brand him as a Liar and
+Villain.</p>
+ <p>I am not going to deny that the place was offered me, but I do
+unhesitatingly, say that I never absolutely consented to take it.</p>
+ <p>Gen. GRANT may have construed my note on the subject as an
+unqualified acceptance, but that was owing entirely to his devouring
+desire to get the thing off his hands, and not to any ambiguity in my
+language.</p>
+ <p>"No, Mr. PRESIDENT," I said in the note, "far be it from me to
+stand between my friend, Mr. GREELEY, and the gratification of his
+noble desire to wear military things at receptions abroad. Moreover
+your Excellency, I would not for the world deprive our cousins and
+other relations in England of an opportunity to cultivate the grand old
+art of swearing under the instruction of so eminent a professor as
+HORACE."</p>
+ <p>This is the sort of language I used, and I don't see how any
+man except Gen. GRANT could get hold of it the wrong way.</p>
+ <p>Of course I had some reasons besides those stated in my note
+for declining the Mission, but I did not want to hurt the President's
+feelings by going over the whole ground.</p>
+ <p>It was not unknown to me that the situation had been offered
+to about five thousand persons before it came round to my turn, or that
+the English Mission had fallen into a general decline. I knew all about
+that just as well as Gen. GRANT, but it would not have done any good to
+parade my knowledge on the subject.</p>
+ <p>There was the Hon. THOS. JENKINS who refused to take it,
+because his wife had a prejudice against Bulls ever since she was
+scared by one that chased her five miles for no other reason than that
+she was what might be called a red woman&#8212;well-read in the exciting
+house-wife literature of the day. JENKINS positively declined.</p>
+ <p>Then it was offered to Col. CANNONAYDE, who declined it
+because his mother-in-law declared that she would go along too, if he
+went, and he thought it would be better not to let her have a change of
+air, as she was in a fair way to wind up pretty soon by remaining near
+those swamps. CANNONAYDE wanted the place kept open till after the
+funeral, but this was not granted.</p>
+ <p>The next offer was made to Gen. BRAYLEIGH; but <i>he</i>
+refused it on the ground that he had made arrangements for going into
+the coal trade, and he could not be sure of holding the place more than
+a few weeks. Anyway, he thought it would not pay to give up the
+coalition he had entered into with another party. In fact, old
+BRAYLEIGH treated the whole matter very coldly.</p>
+ <p>It was next tendered to the Hon. THEOPHILUS SKINNER, but
+peremptorily declined because SKINNER'S district had become Democratic
+since he was elected, and he knew that if he resigned an infamous
+cannibal copperhead would be sent to Congress in his stead. SKINNER
+consulted all the leaders of his party, and they unanimously agreed
+that it would be better to let every court in Europe be without an
+American representative than risk the loss of that district.</p>
+ <p>Everybody knows why the Rev. Dr. BANGWELL, of Chicago, did not
+accept it. The Doctor expected his divorce case to come on in a few
+days, and could not neglect that; and besides, he had made all the
+arrangements for his other marriage, and sent out the invitations. If
+the President had just made some inquiries before appointing Dr.
+BANGWELL, he could have found out that the Doctor's engagements would
+not permit him to leave Chicago on any account.</p>
+ <p>The offer that was made to Col. KAMPSTUHL was declined solely
+because the Colonel had an old score to settle with Gen. GRANT for
+something in the way of a court-martial that happened near Tricksburg.
+He swore that he would get square with the author of that business
+sometime, and when the mission was offered to him (by accident, for Gen
+GRANT had forgotten all about the court-martial), he got up a
+sepulchral voice, and said, "Ha, ha! R-e-e-e-vendge at last!" and then
+wrote a bitter letter to Washington on the subject.</p>
+ <p>After that it was peddled all round the country in a
+promiscuous way, and offered in succession to a blacksmith who used to
+shoe horses for Gen. GRANT, a conductor who refused to take fare from a
+well-known Presidential excursion party, a dealer in hides who had
+conferred some high obligations when a certain official was in the
+tanning business, a grocery-keeper, a family shoemaker, a manufacturer
+of matches, and such a multitude of people, in fact, that it finally
+got to be looked upon as the greatest missionary undertaking of modern
+times.</p>
+ <p>The only really prominent man that the place was not tendered
+to is GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN; but I wouldn't say that it won't get around
+to him somewhere in Asia before the circle is completed.</p>
+ <p>All these things were very well known to me before the office
+was placed at my disposal, but I did not care to wound the fine
+sensibilities of the President by saying anything about them in my note.</p>
+ <p>My reason for declining in favor of Mr. GREELEY has been
+stated&#8212;I put the whole matter frankly to Gen. GRANT&#8212;but I can't say
+whether the suggestion I offered has been acted upon or not. The only
+thing I am certain about on this point is, that if the offer should be
+made to HORACE, it won't get around to GEORGE FRANCIS afterwards.</p>
+ <p>There has been so much talk about this business, that I have
+considered it a sacred duty to state the facts and let some floods of
+light shine upon the whole thing. The duty is now conscientiously,
+discharged.</p>
+ <p>DARBY DODD.</p>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ <p><b>The Truth In a Nut-shell</b></p>
+ <p>CHANCELLOR CROSBY, in his inaugural address, has, we may say,
+bored right to the root of the whole vexed question of education, and
+extracted it, as will be seen from this extract: "It need hardly be
+urged," says the new Chancellor, and we hope, all the discontented will
+take the full force of the remark, "It need hardly be urged that the
+didaskalos should be didaktitos, and yet perhaps emphasis on so plain a
+truth may be sometimes necessary." Let us thank the Chancellor for
+forever removing this necessity.</p>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;"> <br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table
+ style="width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ align="center" border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align: center; width: 30%;">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>A.T. STEWART &amp; CO.</big></p>
+ <p>Have made very large additions to their stock of</p>
+ <p>CLOAK VELVETS, VELVETEENS,<br>
+PLUSHES,<br>
+ASTRAKHANS,<br>
+MILLINERY and<br>
+TRIMMING VELVETS, Etc.</p>
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+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>CLOAK VELVETS.</big></p>
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+ <p>AT</p>
+ <p>UNPRECEDENTED BARGAINS,</p>
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+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">LYONS AND OTHER CENTRES</p>
+ <p>OF MANUFACTURE, AT PANIC PRICES.</p>
+ <p>For the convenience of Customers, the above are exhibited in
+the Section of the main floor next to the corner of Tenth street,</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY, 4th Avenue, 9th and 10th
+Streets.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td rowspan="2" style="text-align: left;">
+ <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>
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+.................................................. 10<br>
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+ <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>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>
+ <b>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,</b><br>
+ <br>
+P.O. Box 2783. No. 83 Nassau Street, New York.<br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>A.T. STEWART &amp; CO.</big></p>
+ <p>ARE EXHIBITING</p>
+ <p>An Important Purchase of</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>Rich Plain Silks,</big></p>
+ <p>27 INCHES WIDE, KNOWN AS</p>
+ <p>UNWATERED MOIRE ANTIQUE,</p>
+ <p>REPRESENTING IN VALUE</p>
+ <p>$100,000,</p>
+ <p>AT $4 AND $4.50 PER YARD,</p>
+ <p>THE SAME HAVING BEEN SOLD AT $6 AND $6.50 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p>SPECIAL ATTENTION IS INVITED TO THESE GOODS FOR HOLIDAY
+PRESENTS.</p>
+ <p>A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF BLACK AND WHITE<br>
+ <b>STRIPED SILKS,</b><br>
+AT 75c. PER YARD.</p>
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Plain Japanese Silks,<br>
+&nbsp;</span></big>HIGH COLORS,<br>
+AT 75c. PER YARD.</p>
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Three Cases Fancy Silks,</span></big><br>
+IN VARIOUS STYLES-FRESH GOODS, $1 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Five Cases Dress Silks,</span></big><br>
+NICE QUALITY, $2 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p>A LARGE QUANTITY OF <span style="font-weight: bold;">BONNET
+BLACK SILKS,<br>
+ </span> AT $3.75 AND $3 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">REAL IRISH POPLINS, NEW,</span><br>
+$2 PER YARD.</p>
+ <p>A FULL LINE OF<br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">IRISH TARTAN POPLINS,</span><br>
+IN TWENTY-FIVE DIFFERENT CLANS.</p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">AMERICAN BLACK SILKS,</span>
+GUARANTEED TO WEAR WELL,<br>2$ PER YARD.</p>
+
+ <p>FORMING IN ALL RESPECTS THE MOST ATTRACTIVE STOCK THEY HAVE
+EVER OFFERED.</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY, Fourth Ave.,</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">9th and 10th Sts.</p>
+ </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/178.jpg">
+ <p><b>THE PROPOSAL.</b></p>
+ <p><i>Ambitious Foreigner.</i> "AH! MEECE BULLION, BECAUSE I AM
+POOR YOU SCORN MY HAND; BUT REMEMBER HOW ZE POET HE TELL YOU ZE MAN'S
+ZE GOLD."</p>
+ <p><i>Miss B.</i> "GO DOWN TO PAR, THEN&#8212;<i>I</i> HAVE NOTHING
+MORE TO SAY ON THE SUBJECT."</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><br>
+ <b>BLANK BOOKS,<br>
+ </b> <small>&nbsp;Execute the finest styles of</small> <b>LITHOGRAPHY</b><br>
+ <small>Makes the Best and Cheapest<br>
+ </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><b>IS BY FAR THE CHEAPEST, QUICKEST, AND MOST
+COMFORTABLE ROUTE,</b></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>
+ <b>For NEW ORLEANS, LOUISVILLE, MEMPHIS, ST. LOUIS, VICKSBURG,
+NASHVILLE, MOBILE,<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><b>PUNCHINELLO,</b><br>
+ <small>VOL. I, ENDING SEPT. 24,<br>
+BOUND IN EXTRA CLOTH,<br>
+IS NOW READY.</small></p>
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">PRICE $2.50.</span><br>
+ <small>Sent free by any Publisher on receipt of price, or by</small><br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,</span><br>
+83 Nassau Street, New York.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<table
+ style="width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ align="center" border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td rowspan="2" width="30%" align="center">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"> <big><big>PUNCHINELLO.</big></big></p>
+ <p><small>With a large and varied experience in the management
+and publication of a paper of the class herewith submitted, and with
+the still more positive advantage of an Ample Capital to justify the
+undertaking, the</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.</p>
+ <p><small>OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK</small></p>
+ <p><small>Presents to the public for approval, the new</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small>Illustrated Humorous and
+Satirical</small></p>
+ <p><small>WEEKLY PAPER,</small></p>
+ <p><big><big>PUNCHINELLO,</big></big></p>
+ <p><small>The first number of which was issued under date of
+April 2.</small></p>
+ <p>ORIGINAL ARTICLES</p>
+ <p><small>Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs or
+suggestive ideas or sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the
+day, are always acceptable and will be paid for liberally.</small></p>
+ <p><small>Rejected communications cannot be returned, unless
+postage stamps are enclosed.</small></p>
+ <p>TERMS:</p>
+ <p><small>One copy, per year, in advance $4 00 Single copies 10 A
+specimen copy will be <i>mailed free</i> upon the receipt of ten cents. One
+copy, with the Riverside Magazine, or any other magazine or paper,
+price $2.50, for 5 50 One copy, with any magazine or paper, price $4,
+for 7 00</small></p>
+ <p><small>All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed
+to</small><br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,</span></p>
+ <p>No. 83 Nassau Street,</p>
+ <p>P.O. Box 2783. NEW YORK.</p>
+ </td>
+ <td style="text-align: center;">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>PROFESSOR JAMES DE
+MILLE,</big></big></big></p>
+ <p>Author of</p>
+ <p><big>"THE DODGE CLUB ABROAD"</big><br>
+ <small>AND OTHER HUMOROUS WORKS,</small></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Will Commence a New Serial</p>
+ <p>IN THE NUMBER OF</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"> <big><big><big><big>"PUNCHINELLO"</big></big></big></big></p>
+ <p>FOR</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>January 7th, 1871,</big></p>
+ <p><big>Written expressly for this paper.</big></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><big><big><b>A CHRISTMAS STORY,</b></big></big></big></p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>Written expressly for this
+Paper,</big></p>
+ <p>By FRANK R. STOCKTON,</p>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Author of "Ting-a-ling," etc., etc.,</p>
+ <p>WILL BE COMMENCED IN No. 38, FOR DECEMBER 17TH,<br>
+AND CONCLUDED IN THREE NUMBERS.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+</table>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Volume 2, No. 37,
+December 10, 1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 37 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 10544-h.htm or 10544-h.zip *****
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@@ -0,0 +1,2704 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Volume 2, No. 37, December 10,
+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, Volume 2, No. 37, December 10, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 30, 2003 [EBook #10544]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 37 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze and
+the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | TIFFANY & CO., |
+ | |
+ | UNION SQUARE, |
+ | |
+ | Offer a large and choice stock of |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' WATCHES, |
+ | |
+ | Of all sizes and every variety of Casing, with Movements |
+ | of the finest quality. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 United States. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+Vol. II. No. 37.
+
+
+SATURDAY, DECEMBER 10, 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.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Sidenote: 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | APPLICATIONS FOR ADVERTISING IN |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO |
+ | |
+ | JOHN NICKINSON, |
+ | |
+ | ROOM No. 4, |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, N.Y. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK |
+ | |
+ | DAILY DEMOCRAT, |
+ | |
+ | _AN EVENING PAPER._ |
+ | |
+ | JAMES H. LAMBERT, |
+ | |
+ | EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. |
+ | |
+ | All the news fifteen hours in advance of Morning Papers. |
+ | |
+ | PRICE TWO CENTS. |
+ | |
+ | Subscription price by mail, $6.00. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | TO NEWS-DEALERS. |
+ | |
+ | Punchinello's Monthly. |
+ | |
+ | The Weekly Numbers for October |
+ | |
+ | Bound in a Handsome Cover, |
+ | |
+ | Is now ready. Price 40 cents. |
+ | |
+ | THE TRADE |
+ | |
+ | Supplied by the |
+ | |
+ | AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY, |
+ | |
+ | Who are now prepared to receive orders. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Bowling Green Savings-Bank, |
+ | |
+ | 33 BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ | Open Every Day from 10 A.M. to 8 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 500 VOLUMES IN ONE: |
+ | |
+ | AGENTS WANTED |
+ | |
+ | FOR |
+ | |
+ | The Library of Poetry and Song. |
+ | |
+ | _Being Choice Selections from the Best Poets,_ |
+ | |
+ | ENGLISH, SCOTCH, IRISH, AND AMERICAN, |
+ | |
+ | With an Introduction by |
+ | |
+ | WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT. |
+ | |
+ | This volume is the handsomest and cheapest subscription book |
+ | extant, and contains in itself more to give it enduring fame |
+ | and make it universally popular than any book ever |
+ | published. It is something in it, of _the best_, for every |
+ | one--for the old, the middle aged, and the young. It has |
+ | intellectual food for every taste and for every mood and |
+ | phase of human feeling, from the merriest humor up, through |
+ | all the gradations of feeling, to the most touching and |
+ | tender pathos. Excepting the Bible, this will be the book |
+ | most loved, and the most frequently referred to in the |
+ | family. |
+ | |
+ | The whole work, page by page, poem by poem, has passed under |
+ | the educated criticism and scholarly eye of WILLIAM CULLEN |
+ | BRYANT, a man reverenced among men, a poet great among |
+ | poets. |
+ | |
+ | _This is a Library of over_ 500 _Volumes in one book_, whose |
+ | contents, of no ephemeral nature or interest, will never |
+ | grow old or stale. It can be, and will be, read and re-read |
+ | with pleasure as long as its leaves hold together. Over 800 |
+ | pages beautifully printed, choicely illustrated, handsomely |
+ | bound. Sold only through Agents, by subscription. |
+ | |
+ | Teachers, Clergymen, active Men, intelligent Women, can all |
+ | secure good pay with light work by taking an agency for this |
+ | book. Terms very liberal. |
+ | |
+ | Send for Circular containing full particulars to |
+ | |
+ | J.B. FORD & CO., 39 Park Row, N.Y. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Office of the Librarian of
+Congress at Washington.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+MAN AND WIVES.
+
+A TRAVESTY.
+
+By MOSE SKINNER.
+
+CHAPTER FOURTH.
+
+THE HALF-WAY HOUSE
+
+The first person to discover that ANN BRUMMET had left the house, was
+Mrs. LADLE, Now, ever since the Hon. MICHAEL had asked ANN to go to the
+circus, Mrs. LADLE had hated her. But when he took ANN to the
+Agricultural Fair, and bought her a tin-type album and a box of initial
+note-paper, Mrs. LADLE was simply raving. Whether she herself was
+viewing the Hon. MICHAEL with an eye matrimonial, and was jealous of
+ANN, must remain an open question. At any rate, she was the first to
+start the scandal about ANN and JEFFRY, and lost no time in conveying it
+to the ears of the Hon. MICHAEL, with profuse embellishments. At the
+croquet party the Hon. MICHAEL had been particularly sweet on ANN, his
+ardor finding vent in such demonstrations as throwing kisses at her
+slyly, holding up printed lozenges for her inspection, or tossing sticks
+at her and dodging behind a tree. And when Mrs. LADLE went to ANN'S room
+next day, for a good square scold, she found her out.
+
+Now Mrs. LADLE was a mother-in-law, and consequently a pretty old fowl
+in ferreting out things of this sort. She determined to discover the why
+and wherefore of ANN'S departure. If she could confront the Hon. MICHAEL
+with proofs of ANN'S indiscretion, it would be the loudest kind of
+feather in her cap.
+
+She examined everybody in the house, and everybody that went by the
+house, but without the smallest result. She was out in the front yard
+waiting for a fresh victim, when she saw HERSEY DEATHBURY coming up the
+road. She signed to her to come in.
+
+She came in.
+
+HERSEY DEATHBURY was an extraordinary woman. A woman of genius, sir.
+What if her make-up _was_ limited? What if, when she was born, nature
+_was_ economizing, and gave her only one eye, and she was lame and
+hump-backed, and hadn't got any eyebrows and wore a wig; what of that?
+It's to her credit, _I_ say. You saw her just as she was. No airs
+_there_. And in this lay the great charm of H. DEATHBURY'S character.
+Looking at her closely, you would see a fixed and stony eye and a
+chronic scowl, and you would say: "Disposition a little morose; some man
+has soured on her." Looking at her more closely, you would see under her
+right arm a common blackboard, such as is used in schools, and over her
+shoulder a canvas bag containing lumps of chalk, and you would say: "A
+little eccentric; likes to write on the blackboard instead of talking.
+Would make a nice wife. Looks, on the whole, like a country schoolma'am,
+whom the boys have stoned out of town, with the fixtures of the
+school-house tied to her." But she has talents. What is she, an
+authoress? "Yes, she is." But, like other authoresses, she isn't
+appreciated, and has returned to her legitimate occupation, the
+Wash-Tub; but still doth she itch for fame, and so, between times, she
+writes verbose essays on Female Suffrage, composed during the process
+known as "wringing." And when there's a Woman's Rights Convention in
+that locality, she sits on the platform, and applauds all the Red-Hot
+Resolutions with that trenchant female weapon, the umbrella, in one
+hand, and an antediluvian reticule the other. In the words of the Hon.
+MICHAEL: "She is not only a leading _Re_former, sir, but a great
+_Plat_former." And Mrs. LADLE will tell you that, as a washer, she is
+superb. She "does up things" in a manner simply celestial.
+
+Mrs. LADLE told her first to shut the door.
+
+"Have you seen ANN BRUMMET to-day?" she said.
+
+HERSEY nodded.
+
+"Where?" was the eager inquiry.
+
+HERSEY DEATHBURY placed her blackboard against the wall, unslung her
+chalk, and wrote in very large letters:--
+
+"I C hur a-Goin on The rode 2 forneys Kragg."
+
+"Ah!" ejaculated Mrs. LADLE joyfully, "traced at last." And she ran to
+tell the Hon. MICHAEL all about it.
+
+ * * *
+
+The Half-Way House at Forney's Crag was a hoary-headed old vagabond of a
+house, that had passed the heyday of its youth long before that great
+encyclopaedia, the oldest inhabitant, emitted his first infantile
+squawk. Each successive season caused it to lean a little more and the
+most casual observer must perceive that it couldn't by any possibility
+become much leaner without pining entirely away.
+
+Nevertheless, it had been the only hotel that Spunkville could boast,
+all within a short period of this writing. Like most Western hotels, it
+had been ably supported by a large floating population, known as "New
+York Drummers," and many a time had its old walls re-echoed with their
+guileless hilarity and moral tales; and, if the ancient and time-honored
+spittoon in the bar-room could speak, it could relate wonderful stories
+concerning the Sample Gentry; relating, perhaps, to a Spunkville
+merchant, who, having retreated precipitately down his cellar stairs
+several tunes during the day, to avoid "them confounded drummers, with
+their everlasting samples," was, while plodding his lonely way homeward,
+seized upon by these commercial freebooters, conveyed forthwith to the
+Half-Way House, and there deluged with such a perfect torrent of
+brow-beating eloquence as to reduce him to an imbecile state, in which
+condition he would willingly order large bills of goods, a custom still
+somewhat in vogue, and known as "commanding trade."
+
+At other times, it was refreshing to see a drummer emerge from a week's
+carousal, take a drink of plain soda, and write a long letter to his
+employers concerning the extreme dulness of trade.
+
+But since the new hotel had been built the Half-Way House had waned, and
+its quiet was only invaded by an occasional straggling traveller or a
+runaway couple, and its walls resounded with nothing more clamorous than
+the orgies of a Sunday-school picnic.
+
+It is, however, with the Ladies' Parlor only (that wretched abode of
+female discomfort in all country hotels) that we have to do.
+
+The furniture of the room consisted of the articles usually found in a
+_boudoir_ of this kind, to wit: a straight-backed sofa, much worn; the
+inevitable and horrid straw carpeting; that old Satanic piano, that
+never was in tune; an antique and rheumatic table, and three wheezy old
+chairs. The only present attempts at ornament were two in number. The
+first was a large engraving of the Presidents of the United States,
+which had formerly done duty in the bar-room, where the villagers were
+wont to gaze upon it in an awe-struck manner, being impressed with a
+vague idea that it was CHRISTY'S Minstrels. The second was a living
+statue, none other than ANN BRUMMET waiting for JEFFRY MAULBOY.
+
+"Half-past three, and not come yet," said she. "Look out, JEFFRY
+MAULBOY, for if you _do_ go back on me"--
+
+She paused, for she saw a man coming towards the house.
+
+"Well, if that ain't ARCHIBALD BLINKSOP," she added, "I'm regularly
+sold. What can _he_ want _here_?"
+
+Yes, it was ARCHIBALD sure enough, biting his finger-nails and breathing
+very short, while he cast furtive glances at the windows.
+
+He went slowly up the steps and into the entry just as Mrs. BACKUP, the
+landlady of the House, came out of her sitting-room.
+
+Now, Mrs. BACKUP was one of your eminently respectable females, who are
+always loaded to the muzzle with Beautiful Moral Essays, which they try
+to cram down everybody's throat, but never practise themselves. She
+formerly kept a boarding-house in the city, where, at table regularly
+after soup, she would regale those present with long dissertations on
+the shocking immorality of the present day, varying the monotony,
+perhaps, by allusions to the boarders who had just left. "Mr. SIMPSON
+was a pleasant-spoken young man as I want to see, and as good as the
+bank, but I'm afraid he _was_ agettin' dissipated;" or, "Mr. FIELDING
+was quiet and mannerly, and never found fault with his vittles, but he
+had _one_ DREAD_ful_ habit;" and then she would sigh heavily. And when
+little Miss PINKHAM, who occupied the second floor back (and who, being
+a schoolma'am, was naturally debarred from the other sex), indulged in
+the smallest possible flirtation with the good-looking young man
+opposite, Mrs. BACKUP'S sharp eye not only saw her, but Mrs. BACKUP'S
+sharp tongue took occasion to berate her severely on a Sunday morning
+(for then the boarders are all in), at the top of the first landing (for
+then the boarders could all hear her). "I _am_ saprised, Miss PINKHAM.
+Why, when I see that young man asittin' at his winder, and a blowin'
+beans. Yes, a blowin' beans, Miss PINKHAM, through a horrible tin
+pop-gun at _your'n_, and a winkin' vicious, and you a enjoyin' on it,
+Miss PINKHAM, I sot down; yes, I sot right down, and I shuddered. 'Sich
+doin's in _my_ house,' says I, 'I am totilly congealed.'" When all the
+time, mind you, the virtuous Mrs. BACKUP was a woman who would bear any
+amount of watching, having already caused three husbands to frantically
+emigrate to parts unknown.
+
+Seeing that ARCHIBALD hesitated, she said:--
+
+"Well, young man, what's wanted?"
+
+"I--I--want to see ANN BRUMMET," said ARCHIBALD.
+
+"Oh, you _do_, do you?" rejoined Mrs. BACKUP, regally; "and _who_, may I
+ask, is ANN BRUMMET?"
+
+"A young lady that I was--a--to meet here," replied ARCHIBALD, timidly.
+
+Mrs. BACKUP immediately organized a virtuous tableau, and glared at him
+majestically.
+
+"A young lady you was to _meet_ here. _In_-deed. And do you think, young
+man, that _my_ house is a place where young chaps can go a-roystorin'
+and a-gallivinatin' about, and a meetin' young women?"
+
+"But I don't want to go oysterin'," said ARCHIBALD, "and I don't know
+how to galvinate. I only want to tell her something."
+
+"Oh, to _tell_ her something, is it? Well, I'd have _no_ objections,
+young man, if you _said_ she was your wife. _Then_ you'd have a right,
+but not now, for my cha-_rac_ter is precious to me, young man."
+
+"But she ain't my wife," said ARCHIBALD; "I only--kind of know her, you
+see."
+
+"Drat the man," said Mrs. BACKUP to herself; "he's a born fool that
+can't take a hint like that. TEDDY!" she cried to a seedy-looking,
+pimply man, who was sucking a forlorn-looking pipe on the back-door
+step, "you're wanted." She whispered a few words in his ear, and went
+up-stairs.
+
+TEDDY MCSLUSH was the General Utility man of the Half-Way House. Born
+down East, of an Irish father and Scotch mother, he was eminently
+calculated to live by his wits. His natural talents were numerous and
+sparkling. He could tell more lies without notes than any man in the
+State, or make a beautiful prayer, all in the way of business. When a
+runaway couple were married at the Half-Way House, he would not only
+give the bride away in a voice broken by emotion, but he would bless the
+bridegroom with tears in his eyes, and he would do all this at the
+lowest market price. And every Sunday he dressed in a black suit and
+sung in the choir, and patted the little children on the head, and was
+generally respected.
+
+He approached ARCHIBALD, and poked him in the ribs, facetiously.
+
+"Ah!" he ejaculated; "and it's a cryin' shame, so it is, that a fine lad
+like yerself should be took with sich a complaint. It's modeshty what
+ails ye, man. And wasn't it Mester JOHN SHAKESPEER himself, him as writ
+the illegant versis, Lord luv his ashis, as says to me only jist afore
+his breath soured on him, 'TEDDY,' says he, wid much feelin', 'TEDDY,
+modeshty is a fine thing in a woman,' says he, 'but it's death to a man.
+Promise me now,' says he, 'for I feel as this clay is a coolin'
+fast--promise me, TEDDY, as you'll never hev nothink to do with it--no,
+not never, my boy.' I promised him, and Hevins knows as I've kep' my
+word. But, Lord alive, I'm a keepin' you all the time from yer own dear
+wife, as is a dyin' to see you--and a sweet dear it is."
+
+He ushered ARCHIBALD into the Ladies' Parlor, closed the door, and
+applied his ear to the key-hole, with an air of the most respectful
+attention.
+
+According to TEDDY'S way of thinking, ANN was not hankering for
+ARCHIBALD'S society.
+
+"What do you want _here_?" said she, sharply.
+
+"Oh, don't speak cross to me, Miss BRUMMET," said he, looking timidly
+around. Then he put his finger on his lip, and shook his head
+energetically.
+
+"I know all about it, you see," said he; "JEFF told me. Oh my! wasn't I
+struck up, though? But I'll never tell. _He_ couldn't come, you see. His
+mother sent for him, and--"
+
+"You lie," she broke in fiercely; "it's a put up job between you two.
+But it won't do; do you _hear_? It _won't do_."
+
+"Oh, don't look at me _that_ way," said ARCHIBALD, backing toward the
+door; "I want to go home."
+
+"I'd like to see you go home," she replied, placing her back against the
+door. "You must think I'm a fool, to let you off as easy as that. You've
+got to sit up with me this evening, anyhow."
+
+"But what would folks say?" stammered ARCHIBALD. "Oh, think of my
+reputation, Miss BRUMMET, and let me go."
+
+"Your reputation!" she sneered. "Humbug! Men don't have any reputation,
+except when they steal a woman's. Come," she added, in a more
+conciliatory tone, "we'll have some supper, and then we'll have a game
+of euchre."
+
+"Euchre! Oh, don't ask me to play euchre," said he; "I'm so mixed up,
+Miss BRUMMET, I couldn't tell the King of Ten-spots from the Ace of
+Jacks. Oh, won't BELINDA grab hold of my hair when she hears of this!"
+
+"Yes, she'll pull it till she makes her ARCHIE-_bald_," said ANN,
+laughing.
+
+ARCHIBALD sat down, and looked at her in a supplicating manner.
+
+"I'll do anything you say," said he, "if you please won't get off any
+more puns. It's awful. I knew a fellow once who had it chronic. He
+doubled every word that he could lay his tongue to. When he was going to
+a party, he'd take the dictionary and pick out a lot of words that could
+be twisted, and set 'em down and study on 'em, so he could be ready with
+a lot of puns, and when he got 'em off folks would laugh, but all the
+time they'd wish he'd died young. And that's the way he'd go on. He
+finally drove his mother into a consumption, and at her funeral, instead
+of taking on as he ought to, he only just looked at the body, and said,
+'Well, that's the worst _coffin-fit_ the old lady ever had.' And then he
+turned round and began to get off puns on the mourners. Wasn't it
+dreadful?--But what's that?"
+
+Somebody was knocking at the door.
+
+"What's wanted?" said ANN.
+
+"It's your minister as has come, mum," said TEDDY, from the outside.
+"What word shall I give him?"
+
+"Tell him I shan't want him," said ANN.
+
+In a few minutes TEDDY came back.
+
+"He says, mum, as he won't go without marryin' somebody, or a gittin'
+his pay anyway, for it's a nice buryin' job as he's lost by comin'."
+
+"But," said ANN, "I can't--" She hesitated, and seemed to form a sudden
+resolution. "Tell him," she continued, "tell him--"
+
+(To be continued.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BIOGRAPHICAL.
+
+
+ There was an agriculturist, philosopher, and editor,
+ Who thought the world his debtor and himself, of course, its creditor;
+ A man he was of wonderful vitup'rative fertility,
+ Though seeming an embodiment of mildness and docility,
+ This ancient agriculturist, philosopher, and editor.
+
+ The clothes he wore were shocking to the citizen aesthetical,
+ Assuredly they would not pass in circles which were critical,
+ So venerable were they, and so distant from propriety,
+ So utterly unsuited to respectable society,
+ Which numbers in its membership some citizens aesthetical.
+
+ He kept a model farm for every sort of wild experiment.
+ Which was to all the neighborhood a source of constant worriment;
+ For every one who passed that way pretended to be eager to
+ Discover pumpkin vines that ran across the fields a league or two,
+ So queer was the effect of each preposterous experiment.
+
+ He had a dreadful passion, which was not at all professional,
+ For going for an office, either local or congressional.
+ But though often nominated, yet the people wouldn't ratify,
+ Because they thought, quite properly, it would be wrong to gratify
+ The all-consuming passion that was not at all professional.
+
+ Among the many hobbies which he cantered on incessantly
+ Was one he called Protection, and he rode it quite unpleasantly;
+ For if any one dissented from his notions injudiciously,
+ He went for him immediately, ferociously and viciously,
+ Did this absurd equestrian who cantered on incessantly.
+
+ With which remarks the author of this brief, veracious history
+ Concludes his observations on the incarnated mystery
+ Known as an agriculturist, philosopher, and editor,
+ Who thought the world his debtor, and himself, of course, its creditor,
+ And who will surely figure on the oddest page in history.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE FITTEST PLACE FOR A "PRESERVER" OF THE PEACE. A "Jam" on Broadway.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DR. HELMBOLD TO J.G. BENNETT, Jr. "Boo-shoo! fly."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A BRIGHT IDEA.
+
+_Customer_. "WAITER, BRING ME SOME FROZEN CLAMS."
+
+_Waiter (lately caught)_. "YES, SIR; WILL YOU HAVE 'EM ROASTED OR
+BILED?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+WORDS AND THEIR USES.
+
+Nothing, except counting your stamps, can be more pleasant and exciting
+than tracing out the origin of words by the aid of a second-hand
+dictionary. It's the next funniest thing to grubbing after stumps in a
+ten-acre lot. Dentists make capital philologists--: they are so much
+accustomed to digging for roots. It's rather dull work to shovel around
+in the Anglo-Saxon stratum, but, as soon as you strike the Sanscrit,
+then you're off, and if you don't find big nuggets, it's because--well,
+it's because there are none there. Sometimes you dig down to about the
+time when NOAH went on his little sailing excursion, and strike what
+seems to be a first-class sockdolager of root, but what is the use?
+Unfortunately the philology business is overdone; it's chock full of
+first-class broken down pedagogues and unsuccessful ink-slingers, and,
+as soon as you offer a curious specimen in the way of roots, they write
+a book to prove that the root don't exist, or, if it does, that it
+should not.
+
+However, there is an advantage in knowing the roots of words, and the
+use to which they were put in former years. Everybody, you know, is very
+anxious to read CHAUCER and SPENSER. Now, after you have studied this
+subject about forty-two years, you will be able to read CHAUCER with the
+aid of an old English dictionary and an Anglo-Saxon grammar.
+
+Many so-called philologists, who have preceded me, have ignorantly
+derived words from improper sources. Thus, the compound word, shoofly,
+has been traced by some to the Irish word _shoe_, meaning a
+hoof-covering, and the French word _fly_, meaning an insect, when it is
+apparent to even the casual observer that it comes from the Guinea word
+_shoo_, meaning get out, and the English word _fly_, meaning a tripe
+destroyer. I propose, therefore, to show you the origin of a few words,
+in order that you may use them properly, and in order that you may
+subscribe freely for my book on this subject, which will shortly be
+placed before an admiring public.
+
+_Theatres_. When the players were servants of the king, they were
+compelled to be proficient in reading, riting, rithmetic, rhyming,
+riddling, reciting, rehearsing, and romping. These accomplishments were
+grouped together and called _the 8 r's_, which name naturally enough was
+soon applied to the play-houses. This example shows how simple the whole
+subject is, and how easily the philology business could he run by a
+child six years of age.
+
+_Country_. The origin of this word is, to say the least, odd. City
+people were accustomed to visit the rural districts at about the time
+when rye was ripe, and they were generally amused by the farmer's
+pereginations around his rye. Farmers always count rye-stacks in the
+morning, in order to discover whether any of them have been lifted
+during the night. When, upon their return to the City, the visitors were
+asked where they had been, they facetiously replied, "To count rye."
+This soon became a favorite expression; the "e" was dropped for euphony,
+and the rural districts were called country.
+
+_Spittoon_.--This word comes from the Greek word _spit_, meaning to
+slobber, and the Scotch word, _tune_, meaning the noise made by the
+bag-pipes. As the saliva struck the receptacle it made a noise
+delightful to the ears of the smoker, and resembling the note of the
+national instrument of Scotland. Hence the receptacle was called the
+spittoon.
+
+_Politics_.--Quack philologists, who evidently were insane, have gone
+back to the classics for the root of this word, when it is well known
+that immediately after the termination of the Revolution, when the
+Government of this country was about to be settled, the word came into
+existence. A woman, called POLLY, kept a corner grocery in New York, and
+all the fellows who wanted offices were accustomed to go to POLLY'S for
+their beer, because she trusted. Here they usually divulged their ideas
+of the manner in which the Government machine should be run. When asked
+why they went to that store, they always answered, "POLLY ticks."
+Outsiders, when asked what was going on in POLLY's store, always
+answered with a wise look, "POLLY ticks." The words soon spread, and
+talking about the Government was facetiously called POLLY ticks. The
+expression was finally used in earnest, and, by euphoric changes,
+reached its present shape.
+
+_Cheese-it_.--This compound word has by some silly person been traced to
+the Saxon _cyse_, meaning condensed cow, and the Celtic _it_, meaning
+it. Now every way-faring man, even though _non compos mentis_, knows
+that when he is invited to come in and cut a cheese, come in and take a
+drop of whiskey is meant. This word, then, is derived from the Sanscrit
+_cheese_, meaning drop, and the English _it_, meaning whatever you may
+happen to be saying, and the whole expression may be properly translated
+"drop that yarn."
+
+I might go on straight through the Dictionary, but I refrain, desiring
+only to show you what a light and entertaining subject philology is, and
+what quantities of fun you can get out of it on winter evenings.
+
+If any one should desire to pursue this subject further, let him go
+through CHAUCER, SPENSER, SHAKSPEARE, and MILTON with a fine-tooth comb
+and a pair of spectacles, looking for roots, and then try my book on
+"Words and their Uses." He had better not attack the latter work on an
+empty stomach. An empty head will be more appropriate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Mendicant Mission.
+
+Two fresh rumors about that unfortunate English Mission are afloat. One
+is that it has been tendered to the Hon. HENRY T. BLOW; the other is
+that the--well, no, not exactly Hon.--DAN. SICKLES is to be transferred
+from Madrid to the Court of St. JAMES. 'Tis much the same thing. If BLOW
+is appointed, it's BLOW; and if SICKLES is appointed, it's Blow, too.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Military Intelligence.
+
+The Fifth Regiment N.G.S.N.Y., composed altogether of Germans, have
+adopted the Prussian helmet with a spike on top. This is appropriate, as
+most Germans are linguists, and like to "spike the French."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Where to Commence the Civil Service Reform.
+
+In our Hotels and Restaurants.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+Regarding me thoughtfully for a moment, MARGARET asks, "What is an 'old
+comedy?'"
+
+I say to her, "An old comedy is to the comedy of to-day, precisely what
+an old beau, padded, painted, simpering with false teeth, and leering
+with rhumy eyes, is to a handsome, gallant young fellow, such as Mr.
+LESTER WALLACK impersonates in _Ours_ or _School_."
+
+To which she replies, "What are roomy eyes, dear?" (Being her fourth
+cousin by marriage, I am a sort of maiden aunt to her,--whence this
+respectful familiarity.) "Eyes in which there is room for the honest
+glances that never show themselves?'"
+
+I sternly remark that "nice girls never pun."
+
+"Yes," she replies; "punning, like beer and other vices, is the peculiar
+prerogative of men, I suppose. But you need not be afraid. I read
+PUNCHINELLO sometimes, and it is a terrible warning to people who are
+tempted to pun. I could give you frightful instances of the appalling
+depth to which the men who make puns in PUNCHINELLO occasionally sink."
+
+I hastily close the discussion by inviting her to come to WALLACK'S and
+see an old comedy. So we find ourselves on the following evening in the
+only theatre in the country where that rather important adjunct of a
+theatre--a company--is to be found,
+
+There are quantities of elegant dresses in the house,--the ladies having
+an idea that an old comedy is one of those things which every
+fashionable person ought to see. There are also numbers of nice young
+men, who, being the burning and shining lights of fashionable society
+(after their day's work behind the counter is ended), come to be bored
+by the old comedy, with a heroism which proves how immeasurably superior
+to the influences of tape and calico are their youthful souls. By the
+by, it is one of the unavoidable _desagrements_ of New York society that
+the wearer of the elegant dress is often conscious that her partner in
+the waltz knows precisely how many yards of material compose her skirt,
+and exactly how much it cost per yard, for the excellent reason that he
+himself measured it with his professional yard-stick, and cut it with
+his private scissors. This, however, is a subject that belongs not to
+old comedy, but to the extremely modern comedy of New York society. The
+two resemble each other only so far as they are fashionable and dull.
+
+But to our WALLACKIAN old comedy. The curtain rises upon the veteran
+GILBERT and the handsome ROCKWELL. They converse in the following style:
+
+GILBERT.--"Well, you young dog, ha! ha! So you have decided to make your
+old uncle happy by marrying my neighbor's daughter. Gad! I remember my
+own wedding-day. Well, well; we won't talk about that now, but hark ye,
+you young villain, if you don't marry the girl, I cut you off with a
+shilling."
+
+ROCKWELL.--"My dear uncle, I can have no greater pleasure than to fulfil
+your wishes. But suppose our adorable young neighbor has the
+ill-breeding to refuse me."
+
+GILBERT.--"Refuse you! Refuse my nephew? Gad! I'd like to see THOMAS
+OLDBOY permit his daughter to refuse my nephew! I'd--d--e, I'd--"
+(chokes and stamps with rage.)
+
+Further on we meet with Miss OLDBOY and her mother,--the latter a stout
+old lady, addicted to smelling salts and yellow silks.
+
+LYDIA OLDBOY.--"To-day I am expecting the arrival of young WILDOATS, who
+comes to pay his addresses to me. I wonder if he is like that dear,
+delightful THADDEUS OF WARSAW."
+
+Mrs. OLDBOY.--"Now, Miss, remember that your honored father insists upon
+this match. I expect you to be a dutiful daughter, and accede to his
+wishes. Here comes the young man himself."
+
+ROCKWELL.--"My. dear Mrs. OLDBOY, I am charmed to see you. You are
+looking positively younger than your ravishingly beautiful daughter.
+Fair LYDIA, I come to lay my heart at your feet. 'Tis the wish of my
+uncle and your honored father that we should unite our respective
+houses. Let me touch that exquisite hand. Unseal those ruby lips and
+tell me that I am the happiest of men."
+
+Here the UNCLE and OLDBOY enter. They chuckle, and poke one another in
+the ribs, remarking "Gad" and "Zounds" at intervals. They bless the
+young couple, and order up some of the old Madeira. The curtain falls as
+OLDBOY gives the health of the young people, with the wish that they may
+have a dozen children, and a cellar never without plenty of this
+splendid old Madeira,--"that your father, bottled, Miss LYDIA, the year
+our gracious sovereign came to the throne."
+
+This is a fair sample of the old comedy. The oaths are of course
+omitted, out of deference to the tender susceptibilities of the editor
+of PUNCHINELLO. So are the indecencies, which are the spice of the old
+comedy, but which cannot be written in a respectable journal, and are
+almost too gross and brutal for the _Sun_. Take from an old comedy its
+oaths and its grossness, and nothing is left but a residuum of
+boisterous inanity. The condensed old comedy which has just been laid
+before the readers of PUNCHINELLO, is as inane and vapid as anything
+that WALLACK'S theatre has shown us in the past month. Do you find it
+dull? For my part, I don't hesitate to say that the "Essence of Old
+Virginny," as furnished by the venerable poet, Mr. DANIEL BRYANT, is
+vastly more amusing than the Essence of Old Comedy.
+
+All of which I say, in my most impressive manner, to MARGARET as we
+struggle through the crowded lobby. But she irreverently disputes my
+assertions, and asks, "How is it that everybody admires these comedies
+if they are so wretched as you say they are? Is your judgment better
+than that of anybody else?"
+
+There being nothing to say, if I mean to maintain my ground, except that
+my judgment is the only infallible critical judgment in this city or
+elsewhere, I promptly and unblushingly say so. But MARGARET tells me I
+am "a goose"--(I think I have mentioned that she is my aunt, and hence
+allows herself these pleasing freedoms of speech)--and says that I shall
+take her to see the old comedies every night, until I am willing to say
+that I like them.
+
+Who is there that, in view of this threat, will not drop the tear of
+sensibility, so neatly alluded to by Mr. STERNE, in sympathy with the
+prospective sufferings of
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+UNIVERSITY-MANIA.
+
+MY DEAR P.:--I have made some curious observations of this disease,
+which lead to startling conclusions.
+
+It is a malady peculiar to the United States, being an eruption
+resulting from indigestion of unripe knowledge, together with excess of
+vanity in individual blood.
+
+Universities spring up among us like mushrooms, in a night. The seed of
+knowledge is sown broadcast over our land. In fact, in this particular
+we may be said to be very seedy, indeed.
+
+For my part I have no objection to Universities--when they _are_
+Universities. But, at the rate at which we are now progressing, we shall
+soon have "every man his own University." It will become the fashion to
+keep a University in the back-yard. And then, you know, the institution
+must have its own particular organ, you know. Every man, and every
+member of his family, shall print his or her _Free Press_, and
+independence of opinion shall reign.
+
+ Glorious country! Glorious free speech!
+ With WALT WHITMAN, we may well exclaim:
+ O the BROWN University!
+ O the splendid University of SMITH!
+ O CORNELL, his University!
+
+ _&c. ad infinitum._
+
+As for me, dear NELLO, I am in the front rank of civilization. I have
+accepted the Chair of Cane-bottom in a Grub-Street garret, and rejoice
+in a barrel-organ, which plays with great freedom of speech.
+
+Yours pedagoguically,
+
+JEREMY DOGWOOD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A. Sop for Ireland.
+
+It is stated that Queen VICTORIA has ordered from a Dublin manufacturer
+an extensive assortment of Balbriggan hosiery for the wedding outfit of
+the Princess LOUISE. There is a stroke of policy in this. In firemen's
+phrase it may be called laying on the "hose" to quench disloyalty.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE HOUSE THAT JACK BUILT. The Marine Hospital.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TRIALS OF A WITNESS.
+
+MR. PUNCHINELLO:--As all people seem to come to you with their troubles
+and grievances, I hope you will not refuse to listen to my woes. And
+whether they are woes or not, I leave you to judge for yourself.
+
+At the beginning of last week I made my first appearance in any
+court-room, in the character of a witness, in the case of VALENTINE
+vs. ORSON; in which the point in dispute was the ownership of a tract
+of land in Wyoming Territory. I knew something in regard to the sale of
+these lands, and was fully prepared to testify to the extent of my
+knowledge in the premises; but judge of my utter surprise and horror on
+being obliged to go through such an ordeal as the following extracts
+from my examination will indicate.
+
+The counsel for the plaintiff commenced by asking me if I was a married
+man, and when I had answered that. I was, he said:--
+
+"Is your wife a believer in the principles of the Woman's Rights party?"
+
+I could not, for the life of me, see what this had to do with the land
+in Wyoming, but I answered, that I was happy to say she was not.
+
+The examination then proceeded as follows:--
+
+_Q._ You are happy, then, in your matrimonial relations? _A._ Yes--(and
+remembering the oath) reasonably so.
+
+_Q._ Is your wife pretty? _A._ (Witness remembering at once his oath and
+his wife's presence in court) She is pretty pretty.
+
+_Q._ What are her defects? _A._ (Witness remembering only his wife's
+presence.) I have never been able to discover them.
+
+_Q._ Do you wear flannel? _A._ Yes, in winter.
+
+_Q._ Can you testify, upon your oath, that you do not wear flannel in
+summer? _A._ I can.
+
+_Q._ Now be careful in your answer. What do you wear in the spring and
+fall? _A._ I--I wear my common clothes.
+
+_Q._ With flannel, or without flannel? _A._ Sometimes with, and
+sometimes without.
+
+_Q._ No evasion; you must tell the Court exactly when you wear flannel,
+and when you do not.
+
+A series of questions on this subject brought out the fact that I wore
+flannel when the weather was cold, or cool; and did not wear it when it
+was mild, or warm.
+
+_Q._ Have you a lightning-rod on your house? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ How much did it cost you to have it put up? _A._ It has not cost me
+anything yet--I owe for it.
+
+_Q._ Is that all you owe for? _A._ No, I have other debts.
+
+_Q._ Have you any money with you now? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ How much? _A._ (Counting contents of porte-monnaie.) Sixty-two
+cents.
+
+_Q._ Where did you get that? _A._ (With embarrassment.) I borrowed it.
+
+_Q._ Were you present when defendant first offered his land for sale to
+the plaintiff? _A._ (Brightening up.) I was.
+
+_Q._ Do you burn gas or kerosene in your house? _A._ Gas.
+
+_Q._ How many burners? _A._ Ten, I think.
+
+_Q._ Are you willing to assert, upon your solemn oath, that there are
+only ten? _A._ (Witness counting on his fingers.) I am.
+
+_Q._ Do you wear studs or buttons on your shirt fronts? _A._ Studs.
+
+_Q._ Gold, or pearl? _A._ Mother-of-pearl, as a general thing, but
+sometimes I wear one gold one at the top.
+
+_Q._ Were all your studs of mother-of-pearl, at the time when you first
+heard this transaction mentioned between the parties? _A._ They were.
+
+_Q._ Do you ever wear your gold stud in the middle of your bosom? _A._
+No, sir, I always wear it at the top.
+
+_Q._ Do you ever wear it at the bottom? Can you swear it was not at the
+bottom on the day of the transaction referred to? _A._ I distinctly
+remember that I did not wear it at all that day.
+
+_Q._ Did you wear it that night? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Q._ Can you swear that after you went to bed you did not wear it? _A._
+I can.
+
+_Q._ Have you ever been vaccinated? _A._ I have.
+
+_Q._ On which arm? _A._ The left.
+
+_Q._ At the of the first mention of this land to the plaintiff, who were
+present? _A._ (Witness speaking with hopeful vivacity, as if he hoped
+they were now coming to the merits of the case.) The plaintiff, the
+defendant, and myself.
+
+_Q._ Do you use the Old Dominion coffee-pot in your house? _A._
+(Dejectedly.) No, sir.
+
+_Q._ What kind of a coffee pot do you use? _A._ A common tin one.
+
+_Q._ You are willing to swear it is tin? _A._ I am.
+
+_Q._ Has your wife any sisters? _A._ She has two; ANNA and JANE.
+
+_Q._ Are they married _A._ They are.
+
+_Q._ Are either of them prettier than your wife? _A._ (Quickly.) No,
+sir.
+
+_Q._ Have you any children? _A._ Two.
+
+_Q._ Have they had the measles? _A._ They have.
+
+_Q._ Has any other person in your household had the measles? _A._ I have
+had them, and my wife has had them.
+
+_Q._ How do you know your wife has had them? _A._ She told me so.
+
+_Q._ Then you did not see her have them? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Q._ We want no hearsay evidence here; how can you swear that she has
+had them when you did not see her have them? _A._ She told me so, and I
+believed her.
+
+_Q._ Did she take an oath that she had had them? _A._ No sir.
+
+_Q._ Then, sir, you are trifling with the Court. Do you understand the
+obligations of an oath? _A._ I do.
+
+_Q._ Beware, then, that you are not committed for perjury. Is your
+gas-metre ever frozen? _A._ Yes, sir.
+
+_Q._ What do you use when the gas will not burn? _A._ Candles.
+
+_Q._ How many to the pound? _A._ Nine.
+
+_Q._ How do you know there are nine to the pound? _A._ They are sold as
+nines.
+
+_Q._ Then you never weighed them yourself? _A._ No, sir.
+
+_Counsel_, to the _Court_. May it please your Honor, this is the second
+time that this witness has positively testified, under solemn oath, to
+important points of which he has no certain knowledge. I ask the Court
+for protection for myself and my client.
+
+Here a long discussion took place between the lawyers and the Judge, and
+at the end of it the case was postponed for four months. I suppose it is
+expected that I will then re-ascend the witness-stand; but I have
+determined that when I enter a court-room again I shall appear as a
+criminal. These fellows have much the easiest times, and they run so
+little risk, nowadays, that their position is far preferable to that of
+the unfortunate witnesses.
+
+J. BADGER.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Singular Fatuity.
+
+The reason why so few persons emigrate to this country from Poland, is
+the general belief prevailing there that we have throughout the Union a
+heavy Pole tax.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE A.B.C. OF NEW YORK SOCIALISM. ANDREWS, BRISBANE, AND CLAFLIN.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THRILLING MELODRAMA.
+
+Scene: Lord DE VERE'S Manor: The Blue Chamber.
+
+_Lord De Vere._ "BUT ONE COURSE, LADY CLAUDE, IS LEFT TO RETRIEVE OUR
+FALLEN FORTUNES. WITH THESE DEAD CATS WE'LL FLY TO MICHIGAN AND START A
+MINERAL SPRING. THE MICHIGANDERS ARE WILD ABOUT THEIR SPRINGS, AND WITH
+THIS MATERIAL OURS CANNOT BUT BE A SUCCESS."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ONE OF OUR SOCIAL HUMBUGS.
+
+_Old Gent (figuring up probable receipts of his silver wedding, close at
+hand)_. "I'VE HIRED A SPLENDID TEA-SERVICE FOR BROWN TO PRESENT TO US;
+IT WILL MAKE QUITE A SENSATION, AND I'VE GOT IT CHEAP FOR THE EVENING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS OF THE POLICE.
+
+I, MARY SMITH.
+
+ O gallant p'licemen, list to me,
+ I'll sing a mournful ditty
+ About a poor young serving-gal,
+ What lived in this here city.
+
+ She had a name, and SMITH it was
+ (The rest of it was MARY);
+ Her constant duty, at daybreak,
+ Was sweeping out the arey.
+
+ One evening she went to a jig
+ (Her missus was attending
+ A private hop), when there befel
+ What truly was heart-rending.
+
+ She wore her missus' gayest clothes,
+ Her muslin dress all fluty,
+ Her waterfall and tag-rags all,
+ Which well became her beauty.
+
+ But missus found poor MARY out,
+ And in a p'liceman took her,
+ And walked her up before the Judge,
+ On charge of being a hooker.
+
+ The missus swore the girl a thief
+ Her property as lifted,
+ Which proved beyond all doubt would be
+ When things came to be sifted.
+
+ The girl said she'd been to a jig;
+ Then out spoke Judge MCCARTY,
+ "You must not wear the fixings of
+ A party to a party."
+
+ They sent her up for sixteen months,--
+ Oh! drop a tear to MARY,
+ Whose missus ne'er shall see her more
+ A-sweeping out the arey.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sic Transit.
+
+Life being in any event a transitory affair, and especially so in New
+York, where, every one lives some miles from his business, our means of
+transit are of interest to every one. However well the owners of those
+at present in use may insist that they are, yet the public feels they
+should be better, and Mr. PUNCHINELLO, having the interest of his
+fellow-citizens at heart, most earnestly hopes that the undertakers of
+the last new scheme will not so mistake the meaning of this term as to
+suppose that their business with it is simply to bury it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Discounting a Bill.
+
+The Germans are disposed to glorify their king, and look upon him as the
+Great WILLIAM; but when they commence to calculate the cost of his
+glory, in men slaughtered, homes desolated, women beggared, industries
+destroyed, taxes increased, and liberty chained, it is more than
+probable that they will become disgusted with their Little BILL.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query
+
+Can Russia's designs upon Turkey, at this season of the year, be
+attributed to her admiration and imitation of New England Thanksgiving
+customs?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Maniac's Mutterings.
+
+PUNCHINELLO'S special Lunatic gives it as his opinion, that a
+continuance of a horse-flesh diet in Paris must go far towards
+disturbing the Parisian Equine-imity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Old Saw Sharpened.
+
+Some one has applied the old Latin motto, _"Horas non numero nisi
+serenas,"_ to Mr. GREELEY, by making it read, "HORACE is of no account
+except when serene," which, by the by, he never is.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query for Naturalists.
+
+How can a person who stands four feet in his boots be called biped?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+DENTS-LY FILLED. Government offices.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: KING WILLIAM OF PRUSSIA WAITING FOR HIS ALLY.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HIRAM GREEN ON MARK TWAIN'S BABY.
+
+The "Lait Gustice" congratulates the newly organized Papa.
+
+SKEENSBORO, NYE ONTO VARMONT.
+
+Friend TWAIN--Allow an old statesman, which has served his country for 4
+yeers as Gustise of the Peece, rite a congratulotery letter to you on
+your success as a boy raisest. Altho your name is MARK TWAIN, I notiss
+that on this occashon you dident Mark but One.
+
+I am a little older in years and _Parentelism_ than you are, and am able
+to call myself the seenyer pardner in a firm who are the sole
+proprieters of eleven offspring and 2 grand-children.
+
+Raisin children is a bizziniss which haint every mans best holt, and as
+long as you've got into the bizziness, excoose me for givin you a little
+wisdom, which you as a parent must swaller without makin up a face.
+
+If your child, in its infantile days, is given to squallin nites, obtain
+a beverige, called soothin sirup, and just before you pull off your
+butes nites, give the little cuss about 3 tablespoons full, and he will
+sleep so sound that you can use him for a piller. Should he kick &
+squall, and refuse to take it, lay him down onto the floor, set on him,
+then takin hold of his nose, pour the stuff down his throte, and you've
+got him, ekal to Jo JEFFERSON'S Rip Van Winkle 20 yeers snooze.
+
+To amoose him--If your wife is too bizzy durin the day, doin the cookin,
+washin, &c. 4th, to amoose the child, give him an ink bottle, and set
+him down on the parler carpet. If he has any idee of geografy, when you
+come home nites you will find a good helthy map of the black sea, which
+Rooshy will insist on bein added to your war map.
+
+Another way of amusin him, is to give him a raiser, and let him play
+learn to shave. If he should cut his nose off, it would make the little
+_shaver smart_.
+
+If you expect to bring your boy up to hold offis,' let him cultivate
+cheek. This is done by tyin his grandmother in her rockin cheer, and
+lettin him pelt the old lady with snow balls in the winter time. In the
+summer time get him a bow and arrer, and let him see how neer he come to
+the venerable lady's nose without breakin her spectorcals. If this don't
+make him cheeky enuff to hold offis, let him pour a lot of benzine onto
+his little cuzzin, then push her onto a red hot cole stove. If he can do
+this and think it a joak, he will do for a cabinet offiser.
+
+If he tries to jump over parental authority, fill him with shot, same as
+_your_ man did his jumpin frog, only pour it into him with a mustick.
+
+If you've got any regard for our nashnal caracter, don't let your son
+rite comic copy for the noosepapers, after which, be so rash as to rite
+a book, and have English crickets set up their darn singin, when they
+catch your little _innocent abroad_.
+
+JOHN BULL don't tickle easy, remember that. I actually believe you
+couldent stir him with a hul bag full of laffin gas.
+
+As your boy has entered the Lecture field, I shouldent be surprised if
+he got up quite a _breeze_ on the roast-rum. In fact, when he opens his
+mouth before an audience, look out for _squalls_.
+
+When your offspring is big enuff to enjoy chastisin, remember the "good
+little boy," and examine your son's garments to see if the lad has been
+roostin onto any nitro-gleserine cans, lest the parental hand, when
+brought in contact with the youth's _habeas corpus_, mite necessitate the
+sweepin up of father and son's scattered remnants.
+
+Let your son reed the works on good morril men's lives.
+
+By the time he gets old enuff to read, I will have my life out in
+pamphlet form, and you can draw onto me for a copy. Beware of works of
+fiction. Don't let your boy have a great deal to do with such readin as
+HOYLE on Games, TOM PAINE on Infidelity, nor HORRIS GREELY on farmin.
+Such works are bringin more ruin onto the country, than the numerous
+jewrys of twelve talented men, who allow murderers to come the loonatic
+dodge over 'em.
+
+I don't believe in spoilin the rod and sparin the child, but I think it
+is well enuff to keep a rod hung up in the barn, where your child can
+occasionally look at it, to see what he will come to, if he undertakes
+to kick over the traces.
+
+Children are a good deal like wimmen. If you don't set _your_ foot down
+when you first get married your wimmen will raise _their_ foot up, and
+afore you realize any pain, your gentle form will be histed out into the
+street.
+
+With boys you must begin talkin _turkey_, when they are young _goblins_,
+ef you don't, when they get old enuff, they will "strike for their
+sires," and _gobble_ up the old man's scalp.
+
+Teach your son to honor his pa and ma, and decline the English mission,
+when it comes his turn.
+
+Between you and I, aspirants for the honor of bordin with St. JIMMY are
+on the _decline_, Pitty it haint a gin-cocktail. I shouldent be
+surprised, if some big criminal was sentenced to go there yet, which
+minds me of a konundrum. Why is the English mission like lager beer?
+
+Give 'er up?
+
+Because it ruins any _minister's_ reputation, who goes for it.
+
+Hopin that when you shovel off your mortil coil, that your mantle may
+not pass out of the family, and as time flies on with greased wings, you
+may make the family name _sound_ by bein able to Mark Twain in your
+family record, I drop the goose feather.
+
+Ewers, parentally,
+
+HIRAM GREEN, ESQ.,
+
+Lait Gustise of the Peece.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A SURE WAY OF DOING IT.
+
+Seekers after notoriety must often be at their wits' end for some new
+sensation with which to advertise themselves. Mr. TWAIN, for instance,
+having gone through Fenianism and France, seems to have collapsed for
+the present; and here now comes Mr. WEMYSS JOBSON, who subsided into
+oblivion years ago, but has just emerged again into the light of _The
+Sun_. The efforts of both these gentlemen to keep themselves prominently
+before the public, however, are very inadequate and feeble. They should
+suffer more and be stronger. Let TRAIN do a bold stroke of business by
+declaring himself the perpetrator of the latest mysterious murder, and
+it might be the making of the exhumed JOBSON to revive a fossilized
+memory, and confess himself to be the criminal who delivered the fatal
+blow to the late Mr. WILLIAM PATTERSON.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+True to his Colors.
+
+A Bostonian visiting New York, not long since, and reading in the papers
+that there was to be a celebration of Mass in an up-town church, decided
+to remain over Sunday for it, thinking, Bostonially, that Mass meant
+Massachusetts and nothing else.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SUITABLE INSCRIPTION FOR A BOATMAN'S RACE-PRIZE. "The noblest
+Row-man of them all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A NEW LEAF IN THE FAMILY HISTORY.
+
+_Jack._ "NOW, I'LL BE PAPA, GOING TO FIX THE FURNACE."
+
+_Sallie_. "OH, YES!--AND I'LL BE THE NEW NURSE, AND YOU MUST KISS ME
+BEHIND THE CELLAR DOOR!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: BEHIND THE TIMES.
+
+EXPLANATORY OF MR. JOHN BULL'S VIEWS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+POEMS OF THE CRADLE.
+
+CANTO XIII.
+
+ When I was a bachelor I lived by myself;
+ All the bread and cheese I had, I laid upon the shelf.
+ But the rats and the mice they made such a strife,
+ I was forced to go to London to buy myself a wife.
+ The roads were so bad, and the lanes were so narrow,
+ I had to bring my wife home in a wheelbarrow.
+ The wheelbarrow broke. My wife had a fall;
+ Deuce take the wheelbarrow, my wife, and all.
+
+The above lines were written when the author was quite advanced in
+years; when he had solved, in his humble way, the great problem of life,
+and discovered the futility of mundane things generally, and t
+undesirableness of an unsuccessful or unfortunate existence; when he
+could look back through a long vista of years, and see the follies of
+his youth and the mistakes of his manhood. It should have been placed at
+the end of his book, with only the word Finis after it; but somehow,
+either by mistake of the author or of the publisher, it was placed among
+the records of the simple events of the village, and thus loses half its
+force. However, let the history, placed as it is, be a warning to rash
+young men who contemplate matrimony; and let them give heed to it, lest
+they also have cause to repent of their doings and exclaim with the
+poet:--
+
+ "The deuce take it."
+
+Observe how pathetic and touching his reminiscence of his lost youth and
+the priceless boon of liberty. He commences in a quiet descriptive way,
+leaving one at a loss to know whether it is to be a joyful lyric a dirge
+he intends singing.
+
+ "When I was a bachelor I lived by myself;
+ All the bread and cheese I had I laid upon the shelf."
+
+Here we have him alone, at peace with himself and the world; happy in
+the contemplation of his beloved muse; jotting down, now and then, the
+brilliant ideas that flash through his teeming brain; and munching in
+solitude his homely meal of bread and cheese. In telling us he laid his
+bread and cheese upon the shelf, he at once shows he had left his
+parental abode, and the ministering and watchful care of his maternal
+parent.
+
+There must, of course, have been a cause for such a step. Some reason
+why the gentle being should have been wrought up to that pitch, when he
+daringly throws off all restraint, and steps into the world to act and
+think for himself. It may have been the want of sympathy that drove him
+to the act. They were plain folks, and didn't appreciate his peculiar
+turn of mind, and so only laughed at him, and ridiculed his pretensions.
+That there was a quarrel there is no manner of doubt, and it was
+probably caused by the mortifying act of his mother in fainting when he
+read her the poetry he had written at her request. That, in itself, was
+enough to break all ties between them. She was horrified and overwhelmed
+with dismay that a child of hers could be guilty of such atrocious
+rhymes; and he, in turn, was disgusted that a mother of his should be so
+unappreciative and earthly. And so, by mutual consent, they separated.
+
+That accounts for his bachelor habit of laying his bread and cheese on
+the shelf that he might have it handy, and not forget where he had
+placed it. But as
+
+ "The rats and mice made such a strife,"
+
+he found that would never do. Something else must be thought of; and
+being an inventive genius, he tried putting it in his trunk, but it
+scented his Sunday jacket and trousers, and the girls all turned up
+their noses at the odd perfume. So, driven to extremity, he in an evil
+hour decided, as many another has since done, that the remedy for his
+ills was matrimony, and that it was not well for man to live alone.
+
+A Prophet is without honor in his own country, and so ofttimes is a
+Poet. To his bashful supplication of "Wilt thou?" the young maidens if
+his village unhesitatingly refused to wilt, and thus it was that
+circumstances forced him
+
+ "To go to London to buy himself a wife."
+
+How fortunate that he should give us, inadvertently as it were, the
+information so necessary to the unlucky young men of this later day, the
+best place to go shopping for wives! No man after reading the above need
+say "he doesn't marry because he cannot, as no one will have him." He
+need not stop for that hereafter, but just go to London, pick out one to
+suit, pay the price, and bag the article. It can all be done in a day,
+and save time wonderfully.
+
+He bought his wife--a cheap one undoubtedly--and gave his promise to
+pay; then started homeward, feeling his importance as a married man, and
+chuckling over the idea of the astonishment and dismay of the rats and
+mice when he should set his wife after them, and thereby deprive them of
+their daily rations. But while musing thus, he discovers his wile shows
+signs of fatigue, as
+
+ "The roads were bad, and the lanes were narrow,"
+
+and not wishing to have her exhausted before commencing business, he
+gallantly determined to give her a ride, well knowing she would need all
+her strength for the battle he intended she should win.
+
+So borrowing a wheelbarrow of a trusting neighbor, he seated her
+therein, and amid great rejoicing at his extraordinary "luck" he set
+forward. But now comes the sad part of the story:
+
+ "The wheelbarrow broke--my wife had a fall."
+
+And what a fall was there, my countrymen! Words are inadequate. The
+scene was indescribable, and we leave a blank that each may picture it
+to suit themselves.
+
+After the excitement occasioned by the catastrophe was somewhat abated,
+he picked up the pieces and tried to put the wheelbarrow together again.
+But it was too far gone; it was un-put-togetherable, and so he, more in
+sorrow than anger, stood gazing at the wreck, while his wife, being a
+woman, could not resist the impulse to cry exultingly, "I told you so; I
+knew it." That on top of all the rest of his trouble was a little too
+much; and after fumbling over the pieces a while, "I told you so"
+ringing in his ears, he completely lost his temper, and vented his
+passion in the words:--
+
+ "The deuce take the wheelbarrow."--
+
+and then in a low voice, cautiously turning his head aside, he added:--
+
+ "My wife and all."
+
+Together they trudged homeward. Fearful misgivings as to the wisdom of
+his step came swooping down upon him, and he almost wished he had not
+tried to mend matters, but had patiently borne with the rats, when
+suddenly--the vision of a _cat_ swept athwart his mind, and he groaned
+aloud in bitterness of spirit.
+
+Not even the ever after clean hearth-stone, with the dead bodies of his
+enemies, the rats, piled thereon, could make him forget that one moment
+of agonizing consciousness, when he realized for the first time that he
+had burdened himself with a wife when a cat would have answered as well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HURLY-BURLY.
+
+ No wonder that the folks turn pale
+ And preachers talk of doom,
+ Since by each telegram and mail
+ Come words of awful gloom:
+
+ Explosions of N. glycerine;
+ Expulsion of the Pope;
+ Earthquakes along the Eastern line
+ And THE PACIFIC SLOPE.
+
+ Surely the world is upside down,
+ Its framework out of joint;
+ At coming change all things of town
+ And country seem to point:
+
+ The very sea some day may try
+ To climb the mountain side,
+ And hill-folks yet be staggered by
+ THE MOANING OF THE TIED.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+By Diligence from Paris to Versailles--Fastest Time on Record--Happy
+Travelling Companions--Mud, Misery, and Malignity--Life on the Road.
+
+
+NEAR ST. CLOUD, NINTH WEEK OF THE REPUBLIC, 1870.
+
+It would have done you good to see us getting over that muddy, jagged,
+rutty old turnpike that leads off from the south of the Bois de Boulogne
+toward St. Cloud and Versailles. Since writing my last, I had been to
+Paris _par ballon monte,_ and was now returning in the _diligence_ that
+took five American ladies and a couple of war correspondents, all
+friends of WASHBURNE, away from the temptation of eating horse-flesh in
+the beleaguered city, to such edibles as the rapacity of the German
+appetite had left undevoured in the neighborhood of the old "stamping
+grounds" of Louis XVI. We were not a jolly party. It rained in torrents,
+and our little driver perched upon the box in front smoked the most
+infernal tobacco I ever smelt. Moreover, the horses were not lively
+steeds. They were rather safe than otherwise, and not given to running
+away. Although the driver addressed himself to their flanks, between
+each puff of smoke, with a pointed stick, they didn't rear and plunge so
+as to frighten the ladies, and that was a point gained, albeit we had
+leisure to count the pickets in the fences as we dragged toward our
+destination. One of our lady passengers came from Connecticut, and she
+talked with a nutmeg dialect that made her garrulity oftentimes quite
+spicy. We two sat back to back, and when the vehicle lurched heavily her
+chignon took me "amidships" (if I may be permitted the expression) with
+a concussion that felt like the impact of a muffled ball from a
+six-pound field howitzer. "Goodness gracious, dew git eout of the way
+and give me some room, man!" she would exclaim as our wagon plunged into
+a three-foot "gore" and the coachee plied his pointed ramrod with
+increased vigor to the attenuated haunches of the insensible beasts.
+
+"My dear madam, you will perceive that I cannot 'git' any further
+without climbing upon the back of my companion in front." Lord knows I
+would have given a hundred francs to be out of her reach; but we had
+been all ticketed and labelled through under the same "pass," and there
+was no such thing as dissolving partnership _now._
+
+"Ugh!" she muttered, putting her handkerchief to her nose, "and that
+horrid smoke too!" But the imperturbable director of our flight took no
+heed, and drew away at his clay idol with unabated satisfaction. 'Twas
+thus we jogged on for five weary hours, "OLD CONNECTICUT" charging head
+foremost at my spinal column with a frequency and momentum that made me
+believe, finally, she did it on purpose. Three miles out from St. Cloud
+we found the road completely blocked up with artillery wagons, and saw
+large masses of troops moving through the fields on either side. It
+still rained incessantly, and the forlornness of the situation was no
+wise relieved by the distant booming of guns, and the sucking sound of
+the wheels in the mud.
+
+"Oh, my!" sail a thin, squeaky voice on the back seat. "I believe they
+are coming this way. Do let us get out, SARAH. I would rather die on the
+road than be murdered in such a sepulchre as this."
+
+She referred to a battalion of the Landwehr that had just denied into
+the road, not a hundred yards in front of us.
+
+"Stop your sniffling back there!" peevishly exclaimed "OLD CONNECTICUT."
+"It would serve you right if they bayonetted you;" and she added
+emphasis to her expostulation by planting her chignon between my
+shoulder-blades with terrific force.
+
+I felt at once that either my back or my gallantry would have to give
+way; so I took a bond of fate, and sacrificed the latter on the spot.
+
+"That'll do--that'll do," I remonstrated. "No more of that; if you want
+to knock the brains out of that haystack on the back of your head, why,
+knock away; but spare my bones, if you please."
+
+I looked around, and she looked around with such suddenness as to bring
+her nose in contact with the brim of my hat, and force the tears from
+her eyes. She started to her feet, and I verily believe would not have
+postponed hostilities a moment, had not the door of the _diligence_ just
+then been opened, and a Prussian officer demanded to see our papers. I
+paraded the "documents," and he said they were "good;" but he also said
+that we must make up our minds to halt here until the following morning,
+as there was a movement of the troops, and no vehicles would be
+permitted to pass this point.
+
+_Gaudeamus!_ I could have sworn, but my wrath sailed away when I saw
+what a volcano was working in the bosom of "OLD CONNECTICUT." She didn't
+strike the officer, or utter a single complaint in his hearing, but sat
+down as if she had been a spile driven through the top of the coach, and
+let the vinegar run out of her eyes in pure impotency of speechless
+rage.
+
+"SARAH'S" companion on the back seat broke forth afresh, and again
+wanted to know as to the probability of our being charged upon and put
+to the sword. I couldn't hear "SARAH'S" answers to these harrowing
+questions, but it seemed to me as if she were trying to throttle her
+timid friend into a perfect sense of security. Whatever she did had the
+desired effect, and I heard no more from the "back seat."
+
+It was nightfall ere the several members of our little colony composed
+themselves to await in such tranquillity as they could command, the
+ordeal of sleeping, sitting bolt upright in a French _diligence,_ upon a
+dark, tempestuous night, and surrounded on all sides by the dreadful
+presence of "red-handed war." The last thing I remember ere the drowsy
+god "MURPHY" sent his fairies to weave their cobwebs about my eyelids,
+was "OLD CONNECTICUT." She didn't look like the battering-ram that she
+was. She had taken that chignon for a pillow, and fastened it to the
+back of the seat. Her head was thrown back; her chin had fallen, and at
+the extreme tip of her thin red nose a solitary tear glistened like a
+dew-drop on a beet. Once, about midnight, she awoke me by her snoring,
+but I gave the old gal's chignon a hitch, and it was all right again.
+
+Yours, somniferously,
+
+DICK TINTO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THOSE COUNTRY COUSINS AGAIN.
+
+_Celia (just arrived from the country)._ "JUST THINK, JANE, COUSIN JOHN
+IS TO BE MY ESCORT TO THE FRENCH BAZAAR AND THE NILSSON CONCERTS, AND
+BOOTH'S AND WALLACE'S, AND THE OPERA BOUFFE, AND LOTS OF OTHER
+FIRST-CLASS SHOWS!"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FACTS ABOUT THE ENGLISH MISSION.
+
+It is not true that I ever accepted the English Mission; and if any man
+says I did, I now deliberately brand him as a Liar and Villain.
+
+I am not going to deny that the place was offered me, but I do
+unhesitatingly, say that I never absolutely consented to take it.
+
+Gen. GRANT may have construed my note on the subject as an unqualified
+acceptance, but that was owing entirely to his devouring desire to get
+the thing off his hands, and not to any ambiguity in my language.
+
+"No, Mr. PRESIDENT," I said in the note, "far be it from me to stand
+between my friend, Mr. GREELEY, and the gratification of his noble
+desire to wear military things at receptions abroad. Moreover your
+Excellency, I would not for the world deprive our cousins and other
+relations in England of an opportunity to cultivate the grand old art of
+swearing under the instruction of so eminent a professor as HORACE."
+
+This is the sort of language I used, and I don't see how any man except
+Gen. GRANT could get hold of it the wrong way.
+
+Of course I had some reasons besides those stated in my note for
+declining the Mission, but I did not want to hurt the President's
+feelings by going over the whole ground.
+
+It was not unknown to me that the situation had been offered to about
+five thousand persons before it came round to my turn, or that the
+English Mission had fallen into a general decline. I knew all about that
+just as well as Gen. GRANT, but it would not have done any good to
+parade my knowledge on the subject.
+
+There was the Hon. THOS. JENKINS who refused to take it, because his
+wife had a prejudice against Bulls ever since she was scared by one that
+chased her five miles for no other reason than that she was what might
+be called a red woman--well-read in the exciting house-wife literature
+of the day. JENKINS positively declined.
+
+Then it was offered to Col. CANNONAYDE, who declined it because his
+mother-in-law declared that she would go along too, if he went, and he
+thought it would be better not to let her have a change of air, as she
+was in a fair way to wind up pretty soon by remaining near those swamps.
+CANNONAYDE wanted the place kept open till after the funeral, but this
+was not granted.
+
+The next offer was made to Gen. BRAYLEIGH; but _he_ refused it on the
+ground that he had made arrangements for going into the coal trade, and
+he could not be sure of holding the place more than a few weeks. Anyway,
+he thought it would not pay to give up the coalition he had entered into
+with another party. In fact, old BRAYLEIGH treated the whole matter very
+coldly.
+
+It was next tendered to the Hon. THEOPHILUS SKINNER, but peremptorily
+declined because SKINNER'S district had become Democratic since he was
+elected, and he knew that if he resigned an infamous cannibal copperhead
+would be sent to Congress in his stead. SKINNER consulted all the
+leaders of his party, and they unanimously agreed that it would be
+better to let every court in Europe be without an American
+representative than risk the loss of that district.
+
+Everybody knows why the Rev. Dr. BANGWELL, of Chicago, did not accept
+it. The Doctor expected his divorce case to come on in a few days, and
+could not neglect that; and besides, he had made all the arrangements
+for his other marriage, and sent out the invitations. If the President
+had just made some inquiries before appointing Dr. BANGWELL, he could
+have found out that the Doctor's engagements would not permit him to
+leave Chicago on any account.
+
+The offer that was made to Col. KAMPSTUHL was declined solely because
+the Colonel had an old score to settle with Gen. GRANT for something in
+the way of a court-martial that happened near Tricksburg. He swore that
+he would get square with the author of that business sometime, and when
+the mission was offered to him (by accident, for Gen GRANT had forgotten
+all about the court-martial), he got up a sepulchral voice, and said,
+"Ha, ha! R-e-e-e-vendge at last!" and then wrote a bitter letter to
+Washington on the subject.
+
+After that it was peddled all round the country in a promiscuous way,
+and offered in succession to a blacksmith who used to shoe horses for
+Gen. GRANT, a conductor who refused to take fare from a well-known
+Presidential excursion party, a dealer in hides who had conferred some
+high obligations when a certain official was in the tanning business, a
+grocery-keeper, a family shoemaker, a manufacturer of matches, and such
+a multitude of people, in fact, that it finally got to be looked upon as
+the greatest missionary undertaking of modern times.
+
+The only really prominent man that the place was not tendered to is
+GEORGE FRANCIS TRAIN; but I wouldn't say that it won't get around to him
+somewhere in Asia before the circle is completed.
+
+All these things were very well known to me before the office was placed
+at my disposal, but I did not care to wound the fine sensibilities of
+the President by saying anything about them in my note.
+
+My reason for declining in favor of Mr. GREELEY has been stated--I put
+the whole matter frankly to Gen. GRANT--but I can't say whether the
+suggestion I offered has been acted upon or not. The only thing I am
+certain about on this point is, that if the offer should be made to
+HORACE, it won't get around to GEORGE FRANCIS afterwards.
+
+There has been so much talk about this business, that I have considered
+it a sacred duty to state the facts and let some floods of light shine
+upon the whole thing. The duty is now conscientiously, discharged.
+
+DARBY DODD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Truth In a Nut-shell
+
+CHANCELLOR CROSBY, in his inaugural address, has, we may say, bored
+right to the root of the whole vexed question of education, and
+extracted it, as will be seen from this extract: "It need hardly be
+urged," says the new Chancellor, and we hope, all the discontented will
+take the full force of the remark, "It need hardly be urged that the
+didaskalos should be didaktitos, and yet perhaps emphasis on so plain a
+truth may be sometimes necessary." Let us thank the Chancellor for
+forever removing this necessity.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
+ | OF MANUFACTURE, AT PANIC PRICES. |
+ | |
+ | For the convenience of Customers, the above are exhibited in |
+ | the Section of the main floor next to the corner of Tenth |
+ | street, |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, 4th Avenue, 9th and 10th Streets. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A.T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE EXHIBITING |
+ | |
+ | An Important Purchase of |
+ | |
+ | Rich Plain Silks, |
+ | |
+ | 27 INCHES WIDE, KNOWN AS |
+ | |
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+ | |
+ | REPRESENTING IN VALUE |
+ | |
+ | $100,000, |
+ | |
+ | AT $4 AND $4.50 PER YARD, |
+ | |
+ | THE SAME HAVING BEEN SOLD AT $6 AND $6.50 |
+ | PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | SPECIAL ATTENTION IS INVITED TO THESE |
+ | GOODS FOR HOLIDAY PRESENTS. |
+ | |
+ | A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF |
+ | BLACK AND WHITE |
+ | STRIPED SILKS, |
+ | AT 75c. PER YARD. |
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+ | Plain Japanese Silks, |
+ | HIGH COLORS, |
+ | AT 75c. PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | Three Cases Fancy Silks, |
+ | IN VARIOUS STYLES-FRESH GOODS, |
+ | $1 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | Five Cases Dress Silks, |
+ | NICE QUALITY, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | A LARGE QUANTITY OF |
+ | BONNET BLACK SILKS, |
+ | AT $3.75 AND $3 PER YARD. |
+ | |
+ | REAL IRISH POPLINS, NEW, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
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+ | IRISH TARTAN POPLINS, |
+ | IN TWENTY-FIVE DIFFERENT CLANS. |
+ | |
+ | AMERICAN BLACK SILKS, |
+ | GUARANTEED TO WEAR WELL, |
+ | $2 PER YARD. |
+ | |
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+ | EVER OFFERED. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, Fourth Ave., |
+ | |
+ | 9th and 10th Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO. |
+ | |
+ | The first number of this Illustrated Humorous and Satirical |
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+ | |
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+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+[Illustration: THE PROPOSAL.
+
+_Ambitious Foreigner._ "AH! MEECE BULLION, BECAUSE I AM POOR YOU SCORN
+MY HAND; BUT REMEMBER HOW ZE POET HE TELL YOU ZE MAN'S ZE GOLD."
+
+_Miss B._ "GO DOWN TO PAR, THEN--_I_ HAVE NOTHING MORE TO SAY ON THE
+SUBJECT."]
+
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+ | |
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+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
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+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO. |
+ | |
+ | OF THE CITY OF NEW YORK |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the new |
+ | |
+ | Illustrated Humorous and Satirical |
+ | |
+ | WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which was issued under |
+ | date of April 2. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs or suggestive |
+ | ideas or sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications cannot be returned, unless |
+ | postage stamps are enclosed. |
+ | |
+ | TERMS: |
+ | |
+ | One copy, per year, in advance $4 00 |
+ | Single copies 10 |
+ | A specimen copy will be mailed free upon the receipt |
+ | of ten cents. |
+ | One copy, with the Riverside Magazine, or any other |
+ | magazine or paper, price $2.50, for 5 50 |
+ | One copy, with any magazine or paper, price $4, for 7 00 |
+ | |
+ | All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed to |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, |
+ | |
+ | P.O. Box 2783. NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PROFESSOR JAMES DE MILLE, |
+ | |
+ | Author of |
+ | |
+ | "THE DODGE CLUB ABROAD" |
+ | |
+ | AND OTHER HUMOROUS WORKS, |
+ | |
+ | Will Commence a New Serial |
+ | |
+ | IN THE NUMBER OF |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | JANUARY; 7th, 1871, |
+ | |
+ | Written expressly for this Paper. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A CHRISTMAS STORY, |
+ | |
+ | "Written expressly for this Paper, |
+ | |
+ | By FRANK R. STOCKTON, |
+ | |
+ | Author of "Ting-a-ling," etc., etc., |
+ | |
+ | WILL BE COMMENCED IN No. 38, FOR DECEMBER 17TH, AND |
+ | CONCLUDED IN THREE NUMBERS. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Volume 2, No. 37,
+December 10, 1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO 37 ***
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