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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18, 1870, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Posting Date: October 29, 2011 [EBook #9636]
+Release Date: January, 2006
+First Posted: October 12, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, JUNE 18, 1870 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, David
+Widger and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONANT'S
+
+PATENT BINDERS
+
+FOR
+
+"PUNCHINELLO,"
+
+to preserve the paper for binding, will be sent postpaid, on receipt of
+One Dollar, by
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,
+
+83 Nassau Street, New York City.
+
+TO NEWS-DEALERS.
+
+Punchinello's Monthly.
+
+The Weekly Numbers for May,
+
+Bound in a Handsome Cover,
+
+Is now ready. Price Fifty Cents.
+
+THE TRADE
+
+Supplied by the
+
+AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY,
+
+Who are now prepared to receive Orders.
+
+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. I
+
+No. 12.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1870.
+
+PUBLISHED BY THE
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD,
+
+By ORPHEUS C. KERR.,
+
+Continued in this Number:
+
+[Along side of page: See 15th Page for Extra Premiums.] PUNCHINELLO.
+
+JUNE 18, 1870.
+
+APPLICATIONS FOR ADVERTISING IN "PUNCHINELLO" SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO J.
+NICKINSON, ROOM No. 4, No. 83 Nassau Street.
+
+
+
+DIBBLEEANIA, AND Japonica Juice, FOR THE HAIR.
+
+The most effective Soothing and Stimulating Compounds ever offered to
+the public for the
+
+Removal of Scurf, Dandruff, &c.
+
+For consultation, apply at WILLIAM DIBBLEE'S, Ladies' Hair Dresser and
+Wig Maker.
+
+854 BROADWAY, N.Y. City.
+
+
+
+FURNITURE.
+
+E. W. HUTCHINGS & SON, MANUFACTURERES OF Rich and Plain Furniture AND
+DECORATIONS, Nos. 99 and 101 Fourth Avenue, Formerly 475 Broadway, (Near
+A.T. Stewart & Co.'s.) NEW YORK.
+
+Where a general assortment can be had at moderate prices.
+
+_Wood Mantels, Pier and Mantel Frames and Wainscoting made to order from
+designs_
+
+
+
+PHELAN & COLLENDER, MANUFACTURERS OF Standard American Billiard Tables,
+WAREROOMS AND OFFICE, 738 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+NEW YORK CITIZEN and ROUND TABLE,
+
+A Literary, Political, and Sporting paper, with the best writers in each
+department. Published Saturday.
+
+PRICE, TEN CENTS.
+
+32 Beekman Street
+
+
+
+WEVILL & HAMMAR, Wood Engravers, 208 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+Thomas J. Rayner & Co., 29 Liberty Street, New York, MANUFACTURERS OF
+THE FINEST CIGARS _Made in the United States._
+
+All sizes and styles. Prices very moderate. Samples sent to any
+responsible house. Also importers of the "FUSBOS" BRAND, Equal in
+quality to the best of the Havana market, and from ten to twenty per
+cent cheaper.
+
+_Restaurant, Bar, Hotel, and Saloon trade will save money by calling at_
+
+No. 29 LIBERTY STREET.
+
+
+
+ERIE RAILWAY.
+
+TRAINS LEAVE DEPOTS Foot of Chambers Street AND Foot of Twenty-Third
+Street, AS FOLLOWS:
+
+Through Express Trains leave Chambers Street at 8 A.M., 10 A.M., 5:30
+P.M., and 7:00 P.M., (daily); leave 23d Street at 7:45 A.M., 9:45 A.M.,
+and 5:15 and 6:45 P.M. (daily.). New and improved Drawing-Room Coaches
+will accompany the 10:00 A.M. train through to Buffalo, connecting at
+Hornellsville with magnificent Sleeping Coaches running through to
+Cleveland and Galion. Sleeping Coaches will accompany the 8:00 A.M.
+train from Susquehanna to Buffalo, the 5:30 P.M. train from New York to
+Buffalo, and the 7:00 P.M. train from New York to Rochester, Buffalo and
+Cincinnati. An Emigrant train leaves daily at 7:30 P.M.
+
+For Port Jervis and Way, 11:30 A.M., and 4:30 P.M., (Twenty-third
+Street, 11:15 A.M. and 4:15 P.M.)
+
+For Middletown and Way, at 3:30 P.M., (Twenty-third Street, 3:15 P.M.);
+and, Sundays only, 8:30 A.M. (Twenty-third Street, 8:15 P.M.)
+
+For Greycourt and Way, at 8:30 A.M., (Twenty-third Street, 8:15 A.M.)
+
+For Newburgh and Way, at 8:00 A.M., 3:30 and 4:30 P.M. (Twenty-third
+Street 7:45 A.M., 3:15 and 4:15 P.M.)
+
+For Suffern and Way, 5:00 P.M. and 6:00 P.M (Twenty-third Street, 4:45
+and 5:45 P.M.) Theatre Train, 11:30 P.M. (Twenty-third Street, 11
+P.M.)
+
+For Paterson and Way, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 6:45, 10:15 and
+11:45 A.M.; 1:45, 3:45, 5:15 and 6:45 P.M. From Chambers Street Depot
+at 6:45, 10:15 A.M.; 12 M.; 1:45, 4:00, 5:15, and 6:45 P.M.
+
+For Hackensack and Hillsdale, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 8:45
+and 11:45 A.M.; [*]7:l5 3:45, [*]5:15, 5:45, and [*]6:45 P.M. From
+Chambers Street Depot, at 9:00 A.M.; 12:00 M.; [*]2:l5, 4:00 [*]5:15,
+6:00, and [*]6:45P.M.
+
+For Piermont, Monsey and Way, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 8:45
+A.M; 12:45, [**]3:15 4:15, 4:45 and [**]6:l5 P.M., and, Saturdays only,
+[**]12 midnight. From Chambers Street Depot, at 9:00 A.M.; 1:00, [**]3:30,
+4:15 5:00 and [**]6:30 P.M. Saturdays, only, [**]12:00 midnight.
+
+Tickets for passage and for apartments in Drawing-Room and Sleeping
+Coaches can be obtained, and orders for the Checking and Transfer of
+Baggage may be left at the
+
+COMPANY'S OFFICES:
+
+241, 529, and 957 Broadway. 205 Chambers Street. Cor. 125th Street
+& Third Ave., Harlem. 338 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. Depots, foot of
+Chambers Street and foot of Twenty-third Street, New York. 3 Exchange
+Place. Long Dock Depot, Jersey City, And of the Agents at the principal
+Hotels.
+
+WM. R. BARR, _General Passenger Agent._
+
+L.D. RUCKER, _General Superintendent._
+
+May 20, 1870
+
+[Footnote *: Daily.]
+
+[Footnote *: For Hackensack only.]
+
+[Footnote **: For Piermont only.]
+
+
+
+Mercantile Library, Clinton Hall, Astor Place, NEW YORK.
+
+This is now the largest Circulating Library in America, the number of
+volumes on its shelves being 114,000. About 1000 volumes are added each
+month; and very large purchases are made of all new and popular works.
+
+Books are delivered at members' residences for five cents each delivery.
+
+TERMS OF MEMBERSHIP:
+
+TO CLERKS, - $1 INITIATION, $3 ANNUAL DUES. TO OTHERS, - - - -$5 A YEAR.
+
+Subscriptions Taken for Six Months.
+
+BRANCH OFFICES AT No. 76 Cedar St., New York, AND AT Yonkers, Norwalk,
+Stamford, and Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+HORSEMEN, ATTENTION!
+
+Farmers, Farmers' Clubs, Drivers, Riders, Grooms, Livery Stable Keepers,
+Owners, Professional Horsemen.
+
+The whole press, sporting papers, secular and religious journals, unite
+in saying that HIRAM WOODRUFF'S work on
+
+"The Trotting Horse of America"
+
+Is "THE MOST PRACTICAL AND INSTRUCTIVE BOOK EVER PUBLISHED CONCERNING
+THE HORSE." And the best known professionals, Hoagland, Mace, Pfifer,
+etc, endorse it with equal heartiness.
+
+Ask your Bookseller for it,
+
+Or enclose the price, $2.25, and it will be mailed to you postpaid.
+
+J.B. FORD & CO., Publishers, 39 Park Row, New York.
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY SPEAR PRINTER - LITHOGRAPHER STATIONER & BLANK BOOK
+MANUFACTURER 82 WALL ST NEW YORK]
+
+
+
+$2 to ALBANY and TROY.
+
+The Day Line Steamboats C Vibbard and Daniel Drew, commencing May 31,
+will leave Vestry st. Pier at 8.45, and Thirty-fourth st. at 9 a.m.,
+landing at Yonkers, (Nyack, and Tarrytown by ferry-boat), Cozzens, West
+Point, Cornwall, Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, Rhinebeck, Bristol, Catskill,
+Hudson, and New Baltimore. A special train of broad-gauge cars
+in connection with the day boats will leave on arrival at Albany
+(commencing June 20) for Sharon Springs. Fare $4.25 from New York and
+for Cherry Valley. The Steamboat Seneca will transfer passengers from
+Albany to Troy.
+
+
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.
+
+AN ADAPTATION.
+
+BY ORPHEUS C. KERR.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ALMS-HOUSE.
+
+For the purpose of preventing an inconvenient rush of literary
+tuft-hunters and sight-seers thither next summer, a fictitious name must
+be bestowed upon the town of the Ritualistic church. Let it stand in
+these pages as Bumsteadville. Possibly it was not known to the Romans,
+the Saxons, nor the Normans by that name, if by any name at all; but
+a name more or less weird and full of damp syllables can be of little
+moment to a place not owned by any advertising Suburban-Residence
+benefactors.
+
+A disagreeable and healthy suburb, Bumsteadville, with a strange odor of
+dried bones from its ancient pauper burial-ground, and many quaint
+old ruins in the shapes of elderly men engaged as contributors to the
+monthly magazines of the day. Antiquity pervades Bumsteadville; nothing
+is new; the very Rye is old; also the Jamaica, Santa Cruz, and a number
+of the native maids. A drowsy place, with all its changes lying far
+behind it; or, at least, the sun-browned mendicants passing through say
+they never saw a place offering so little present change.
+
+In the midst of Bumsteadville stands the Alms-House; a building of an
+antic order of architecture; still known by its original title to the
+paynobility and indigentry of the surrounding country, several of
+whose ancestors abode there in the days before voting was a certain
+livelihood; although now bearing a door-plate inscribed, "Macassar
+Female College, Miss CAROWTHERS." Whether any of the country editors,
+projectors of American Comic papers, and other inmates of the edifice in
+times of yore, ever come back in spirit to be astonished by the manner
+in which modern serious and humorous print can be made productive of
+anything but penury by publishing True Stories of Lord BYRON and the
+autobiographies of detached wives, maybe of interest to philosophers,
+but is of no account to Miss CAROWTHERS. Every day, during school-hours,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS, in spectacles and high-necked alpaca, preside over
+her Young Ladies of Fashion, with an austerity and elderliness
+before which every mental image of Man, even as the most poetical of
+abstractions, withers and dies. Every night, after the young ladies have
+retired, does Miss CAROWTHERS put on a freshening aspect, don a more
+youthful low-necked dress--
+
+ As though a rose
+ Should leave its clothes
+ And be a bud again,--
+
+and become a sprightlier Miss CAROWTHERS. Every night, at the same hour,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS discuss with her First Assistant, Mrs. PILLSBURY,
+the Inalienable Bights of Women; always making certain casual reference
+to a gentleman in the dim past, whom she was obliged to sue for breach
+of promise, and to whom, for that reason, Miss CAROWTHERS airily refers,
+with a toleration bred of the lapse of time, as "Breachy Mr. BLODGETT."
+
+The pet pupil of the Alms-House is FLORA POTTS, of course called the
+Flowerpot; for whom a husband has been chosen by the will and bequest of
+her departed papa, and at whom none of the other Macassar young ladies
+can look without wondering how it must feel. On the afternoon after the
+day of the dinner at the boarding-house, the Macassar front-door bell
+rings, and Mr. EDWIN DROOD is announced as waiting to see Miss FLORA.
+Having first rubbed her lips and cheeks, alternately, with her fingers,
+to make them red; held her hands above her head to turn back the
+circulation and make them white; and added a little lead-penciling to
+her eyebrows to make them black; the Flowerpot trips innocently down
+to the parlor, and stops short at some distance from the visitor in a
+curious sort of angular deflection from the perpendicular.
+
+"O, you absurd creature!" she says, placing a finger in her mouth and
+slightly wriggling at him. "To go and have to be married to me whether
+we want to or not! It's perfectly disgusting."
+
+"Our parents _did_ rather come a little load on us," says EDWIN DROOD,
+not rendered enthusiastic by his reception.
+
+"Can't we get a _habeas corpus_, or some other ridiculous thing, and ask
+some perfectly absurd Judge to serve an injunction on somebody?" she
+asks, with pretty earnestness. "Don't, Eddy--do-o-n't." "Don't what,
+FLORA?" "Don't try to kiss me, please." "Why not, FLORA?" "Because I'm
+enameled." "Well, I do think," says EDWIN DROOD, "that you put on the
+Grecian Bend rather heavily with me. Perhaps I'd better go."
+
+"I wouldn't be so exquisitely hateful, Eddy. I got the gum-drops last
+night, and they were perfectly splendid."
+
+"Well, that's a comfort, at any rate," says her affianced, dimly
+conscious of a dawning civility in her last remark. "If it's really
+possible for you to walk on those high heels of yours, FLORA, let's try
+a promenade out-doors."
+
+Here Miss CAROWTHERS glides into the room to look for her scissors, is
+reminded by the scene before her of Breachy Mr. BLODGETT; whispers,
+"Don't trifle with her young affections, Mr. DROOD, unless you want to
+be sued, besides being interviewed by all the papers;" and glides out
+again with a sigh.
+
+FLORA then puts upon her head a fig-leaf trimmed with lace and ribbon,
+and gets her hoop and stick from behind the hall-door. EDWIN DROOD takes
+from one of his pockets an india-rubber ball, to practice fly-catches
+with as he walks; and driving the hoop and throwing and catching the
+ball, the two go down the ancient turnpike of Bumsteadville together.
+
+"Oh, please, EDDY, scrape yourself close to the fences, so that the
+girls can't see you out of the windows," pleads FLORA. "It's so utterly
+absurd to be walking with one that one's got to marry whether one likes
+it or not; and you do look so perfectly ridiculous in that short coat,
+and all your other things so tight."
+
+He gloomily scrapes against the fences, dropping his ball and catching
+it on the rebound at every step. "Which way shall we go?" "Up by the
+store, EDDY, dear."
+
+They go to the all-sorts country store in question, where EDWIN DROOD
+buys her some sassafras bull's-eye candy, and then they turn toward home
+again.
+
+"Now be a good-tempered EDDY," she says, trundling her hoop beside him,
+"and pretend that you aren't going to be my husband." "Not if I can help
+it," he says, catching the ball almost spitefully. "Then you're going to
+have somebody else?" "You make my head ache, so you do," whispers EDWIN
+DROOD. "I don't want to marry anybody at all!"
+
+She tickles him under the arm with her hoop-stick, and turns eyes that
+are all serious upon his. "I wish, EDDY, that we could be perfectly
+absurd friends to each other, instead of utterly ridiculous engaged
+people. It's exquisitely awful, you know, to have a husband picked out
+for you by dead folks, and I'm so sick about it sometimes that I hardly
+have the heart to fix my back-hair. Let each of us forbear, and stop
+teasing the other."
+
+Greatly pleased by this perfectly intelligent and forgiving arrangement,
+EDWIN DROOD says: "You're right, FLORA, Teasing is played out;" and
+drives his ball into a perfect frenzy of bounces.
+
+They have arrived near the Ritualistic church, through the windows of
+which come the organ-notes of one practising within. Something familiar
+in the grand air rolling out to them causes EDWIN DROOD to repeat,
+abstractedly, "I feel--I feel--I feel---"
+
+FLORA, simultaneously affected in the same way, unconsciously
+murmurs,---"I feel like a morning star."
+
+They then join hands, under the same irresistible spell, and take
+dancing steps, humming, in unison, "Shoo, fly! don't bodder me."
+
+"That's JACK BUMSTEAD'S playing," whispers EDWIN DROOD; "and he must be
+breathing this way, too, for I can smell the cloves."
+
+"O, take me home," cries FLORA, suddenly throwing her hoop over the
+young man's neck, and dragging him violently after her. "I think cloves
+are perfectly disgusting."
+
+At the door of the Alms-House the pretty Flowerpot blows a kiss to
+EDWIN, and goes in. He makes one trial of his ball against the door, and
+goes off. She is an in-fant, he Js an off-'un.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+MR. SWEENEY.
+
+Accepting the New American Cyclopædia as a fair standard of
+stupidity--although the prejudice, perhaps, may arise rather from the
+irascibility of the few using it as a reference, than from the calm
+judgment of the many employing it to fill-out a showy book-case--then
+the newest and most American Cyclopædist in Bumsteadville is Judge
+SWEENEY.
+
+[Footnote: Mr. SAPBEA, the original of this character In Mr. DICKENS'
+romance, is an auctioneer. The present Adapter can think of no nearer
+American equivalent, in the way of a person at once resident in a suburb
+and who sells to the highest bidder, than a supposable member of the New
+York judiciary.]
+
+It is Judge SWEENEY'S pleasure to found himself upon Father DEAN, whom
+he greatly resembles in the intellectual details of much forehead,
+stomach, and shirt-collar. When upon the bench in the city, even,
+granting an injunction in favor of some railroad company in which he
+owns a little stock, he frequently intones his accompanying remarks
+with an ecclesiastical solemnity eminently calculated to suppress every
+possible tendency to levity in the assembled lawyers; and his discharge
+from arrest of any foreign gentleman brought before him for illegal
+voting, has often been found strikingly similar in sound to a pastoral
+Benediction.
+
+That Judge SWEENEY has many admirers, is proved by the immense local
+majority electing him to judicial eminence; and that the admiration is
+mutual is likewise proved by his subsequent appreciative dismissal of
+certain frivolous complaints against a majority of that majority
+for trifling misapprehensions of the Registry law. He is a portly,
+double-chinned man of about fifty, with a moral cough, eye-glasses
+making even his red nose seem ministerial, and little gold ballot-boxes,
+locomotives, and five-dollar pieces, hanging as "charms" from the chain
+of his Repeater.
+
+Judge SWEENEY'S villa is on the turnpike, opposite the Alms-House, with
+doors and shutters giving in whichever direction they are opened; and he
+is sitting near a table, with a sheet of paper in his hand, and a bowl
+of warm lemon tea before him, when his servant-girl announces "Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."
+
+"Happy to see you, sir, in my house, for the first time," is Judge
+SWEENEY'S hospitable greeting.
+
+"You honor me, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, whose eyes are set, as though he
+were in some kind of a fit, and who shakes hands excessively. "You are
+a good man, sir. How do you do, sir? Shake hands again, sir. I am very
+well, sir, I thank you. Your hand, sir. I'll stand by you, sir--though I
+never spoke t' you b'fore in my life. Let us shake hands, sir."
+
+But instead of waiting for this last shake, Mr. BUMSTEAD abruptly turns
+away to the nearest chair, deposits his hat in the very middle of the
+seat with great care, and recklessly sits down upon it.
+
+The lemon tea in the bowl upon the table is a fruity compound,
+consisting of two very thin slices of lemon, which are maintained in
+horizontal positions, for the free action of the air upon their upper
+surfaces, by a pint of whiskey procured for that purpose. About half a
+pint of hot water has been added to help soften the rind of the lemon,
+and a portion of sugar to correct its acidity.
+
+With a wave of the hand toward this tropical preserve, Judge SWEENEY
+says: "You have a reputation, sir, as a man of taste. Try some lemon
+tea."
+
+Energetically, if not frantically, his guest holds out a tumbler to be
+filled, immediately after which he insists upon shaking hands again.
+"You're a man of insight, sir," he says, working Judge SWEENEY back and
+forth in his chair. "I _am_ a man of taste, sir, and you know the world,
+sir."
+
+"The _World_?" says Judge SWEENEY, complacently. "If you mean the
+religious female daily paper of that name, I certainly do know it. I
+used to take it for my late wife when she was trying to learn Latin."
+
+"I mean the terrestrial globe, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, irritably.
+"The great spherical foundation, sir, upon which Boston has since been
+built."
+
+"Ah, I see," says Judge SWEENEY, genially, "I believe, though, that I
+know that world, also, pretty well; for, if I have not exactly been to
+foreign countries, foreign countries have come to me. They have come to
+me on--hem!--business, and I have improved my opportunities. A man comes
+to me from a vessel, and I say 'Cork,' and give him Naturalization
+Certificates for himself and his friends. Another comes, and I say
+'Dublin;' another, and I say 'Belfast.' If I want to travel still
+further, I take them all together and say 'the Polls.'"
+
+"You'll do to travel, sir," responds Mr. BUMSTEAD, abstractedly helping
+himself to some more lemon tea; "but I thought we were to talk about the
+late Mrs. SWEENEY."
+
+"We were, sir," says Judge SWEENEY, abstractedly removing the bowl to a
+sideboard on his farther side. "My late wife, young man, as you may be
+aware, was a Miss HAGGERTY, and was imbued with homage to Shape. It was
+rumored, sir, that she admired me for my Manly Shape. When I offered to
+make her my bride, the only words she could articulate were, "O, my!
+_I_?"--meaning that she could scarcely believe that I really meant
+_her_. After which she fell into strong hysterics. We were married,
+despite certain objections on the score of temperance by that corrupt
+Radical, her father. From looking up to me too much she contracted an
+affection of the spine, and died about nine months ago. Now, sir, be
+good enough to run your eye over this Epitaph, which I have composed for
+the monument now erecting to her memory."
+
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, rousing from a doze for the purpose, fixes glassy eyes
+upon the slip of paper held out to him, and reads as follows:
+
+ MARY ANN,
+
+ Unlitigating and Unliterary Wife of
+
+ HIS HONOR, JUDGE SWEENEY.
+
+ In the darkest hours of
+
+ Her Husband's fortunes
+
+ She was never once tempted to Write for
+
+ THE TRIBUNE, THE INDEPENDENT, or THE RIVERSIDE MAGAZINE:
+
+ Nor did even a disappointment about a
+
+ new bonnet ever induce her to
+
+ threaten her husband with
+
+ AN INDIANA DIVORCE.
+
+ STRANGER, PAUSE,
+
+ and consider if thou canst say
+
+ the same about
+
+ THINE OWN WIFE!
+
+ If not,
+
+ WITH A RUSH RETIRE.
+
+
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, affected to tears, interspersed with nods, by his reading,
+has barely time to mutter that such a wife was too good to live long in
+these days, when the servant announces that "MCLAUGHLIN has come, sir."
+
+JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, who now enters, is a stone-cutter and mason, much
+employed in patching dilapidated graves and cutting inscriptions,
+and popularly known in Bumsteadville, on account of the dried mortar
+perpetually hanging about him, as "Old Mortarity." He is a ricketty man,
+with a chronic disease called bar-roomatism, and so very grave-yardy in
+his very '_Hic_' that one almost expects a _jacet_ to follow it as a
+matter of course.
+
+"JOHN MCLAUGHLIN," says Judge SWEENEY, handing him the paper with the
+Epitaph, "there is the inscription for the stone."
+
+"I guess I can get it all on, sir," says MCLAUGHLIN. "Your servant, Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."
+
+"Ah, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how are you?" says Mr. BUMSTEAD, his hand with the
+tumbler vaguely wandering toward where the bowl formerly stood. "By the
+way, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how came you to be called 'Old Mortarity'? It
+has a drunken sound, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, like one of Sir WALTER SCOTT'S
+characters disguised in liquor."
+
+"Never you mind about that," says MCLAUGHLIN. "I carry the keys of the
+Bumsteadville[1] churchyard vaults, and can tell to an atom, by a tap
+of my trowel, how fast a skeleton is dropping to dust in the pauper
+burial-ground. That's more than they can do who call me names." With
+which ghastly speech JOHN MCLAUGHLIN retires unceremoniously from the
+room.
+
+Judge SWEENEY now attempts a game of backgammon with the man of taste,
+but becomes discouraged after Mr. BUMSTEAD has landed the dice in his
+vest-opening three times running and fallen heavily asleep in the middle
+of a move. An ensuing potato salad is made equally discouraging by
+Mr. BUMSTEAD'S persistent attempts to cut up his handkerchief in it.
+Finally, Mr. BUMSTEAD[2] wildly finds his way to his feet, is plunged
+into profound gloom at discovering the condition of his hat, attempts to
+leave the room by each of the windows and closets in succession, and at
+last goes tempestuously through the door by accident.
+
+[_To be Continued._]
+
+
+
+
+Wanted for the Lecture-Room.
+
+Beloit, in Wisconsin, boasts a wife who has not spoken to her husband
+for fifteen years. Fifteen long years! Happy man!--happy woman! No
+insanity, no divorce, no murder, but Silence. Why isn't this wondrous
+woman brought to the platform, Miss ANTHONY?
+
+[Footnote 1: Certain fancied points of resemblance having led some
+persons to suppose that Bumsteadville means Rochester, the Adapter is
+impelled to declare that such is _not_ the case.]
+
+[Footnote 2: In compliance with the modern demand for fine realistic
+accuracy in art, the Adapter, previous to making his delineation of Mr.
+BUMSTEAD public, submitted it to the judgment of a physician having
+a large practice amongst younger journalists and Members of the
+Legislature. This authority, after due critical inspection,
+pronounced it psychologically correct as a study of monomania a potu.]
+
+
+[Illustration: _Piscator (to his progeny.)_ "NOW, GEORGE WASHINGTON, YOU
+TAKE A GOOD GRIP OF THIS YERE EEL, AND DON'T MUSS YOUR CLOTHES, OR YER
+MUDDER 'LL NEBER LET YOU GO FISHIN' AG'IN, SARTIN."]
+
+
+
+
+THE JOYS OF SUMMER.
+
+ I've Had my annual dream
+ Of boats and fishing, Congress-water, cream,
+ Strawberry-shortcake, lager-bier, iced punch,
+ And lobster-salad lunch.
+
+ It came about midday,
+ Toward the latter part of "flowering May"--
+ When nothing's fit to eat, or drink, or wear,
+ And nothing suits but air.
+
+ Let Summer come! said I;
+ Let _something_ happen quick, or I shall die!
+ I want to change my diet, clothes,--my skin,--
+ _Myself_, if not a sin!
+
+ (_One_ thing, I would remark,
+ I didn't dream of: that was Central Park.)
+ All these (the Park included) I have had;
+ Of course you think I'm glad.
+
+ No, I can't say I am.
+ Your summer, I must tell you, is a sham!
+ I _might_, perhaps, have some poetic flights,
+ If I could sleep o' nights!
+
+ But who on earth _can_ sleep
+ When the thermometer's so awful steep?
+ The night, if anything, (at least _our_ way,)
+ Is hotter than the day!
+
+ And then--my stars!--_oh_, then!
+ When sleep would kindly visit weary men,
+ The dread mosquito stings away his rest.
+ Ah-h-h! _curse_ that pest!
+
+ But breakfast comes,--so soon
+ You almost wish they'd put it off till noon!
+ Five minutes' sleep--no appetite--no force:
+ You're jolly, now, of course!
+
+ You sip your breakfast tea--
+ If with your qualmy stomach 'twill agree,
+ Or your weak coffee,--weighing, with dismay,
+ The prospects of the day.
+
+ Hot! you may well say Hot,
+ When Blistering would hit it to a dot!
+ The cheerful round is brilliantly begun--
+ And everything "well done."
+
+
+
+
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
+
+_Down East_.--"The Earthly Paradise" is published in Boston. The scene
+of the poem is laid elsewhere.
+
+_Miner_.--"Pan in Wall Street" was written by E.C. STEDMAN. The pan
+spoken of is not suitable for miners' use.
+
+_Autograph Collector_ says that he has seen in the papers such
+statements as the following: "LOWELL'S Under the Willows," "WHITTIER'S
+Among the Hills," "PUMPELLY'S Across America and Asia." A.C. wants the
+post-office address of either or all of tho gentlemen named. We are
+unable to give the information desired.
+
+_Constant Reader_.--What is the meaning of the word "Herc"?
+
+_Answer_.--It is the popular name of one of our Assurance Companies,
+only known to its intimate friends. The other name is the "_Hercules_."
+
+_Erie_.--You have been misinformed. Mr. FISK neither appeared as an
+Admiral, nor as one of the "Twelve Temptations," at the Reception of the
+Ninth Regiment.
+
+_Inquirer_.--The free translation of the legend, "_Ratione aut vi_," on
+the Ninth Regiment Badge, is "Strong in rations."
+
+_Wall Street_ asks, "Who are interested in PUNCHINELLO?" Though the
+question is not very business-like, we reply, "Every one;" and we are
+receiving fresh acquisitions daily.
+
+_Bergh_.--Was the English nightingale ever introduced into this country?
+
+_Answer_.--We cannot say. You had better go to FLORENCE for information
+on the subject.
+
+_R.G. White_.--It was a happy thought of yours to apply to PUNCHINELLO
+for information regarding Shaksperean readings. To your first question,
+"Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a gourmand?" we reply: undoubtedly he
+was. By adopting what is obviously the correct reading of the
+passage--"Shadows to-night," etc., it will be seen that "DICKON" was
+occasionally a sufferer from heavy suppers:
+
+ ----"Shad-roes to-night
+ Have struck more terror to the soul of RICHARD."
+
+Then, to your second query, "Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a cannibal?"
+our answer is: Certainly he was. Following the above quotation we have
+the line, "Than can the substance," etc. The proper reading is:
+
+ "Then Can the substance of ten thousand soldiers."
+
+Famine was staring RICHARD'S army in the face, so that nothing could
+be more natural and proper than that he should have issued orders to
+butcher ten thousand of his lower soldiers, and have their meat canned
+for the subsistence of his "Upper Ten!"
+
+_Knife_.--You have been misinformed. General BUTLER was not a
+participator in the Battle of Five Forks, though more than that number
+of Spoons has been laid to his charge.
+
+_Anxious Parent_.--Probably the publication to which you refer is the
+one entitled "Freedom of the Mind in Willing," not "Freedom of the Will
+in Minding." It is not written for the encouragement of recalcitrant
+boys.
+
+_Confectioner_, (San Francisco.)--Mr. BEECHER, who wrote the article on
+candy, in the _Ledger_, lives in Brooklyn, a town of some importance not
+far from this city.
+
+
+
+
+The Nose and the Rose.
+
+The pink-lined parasols now in fashion were devised by some thoughtful
+improver of woman, to enhance beauty by imparting a roseate hue to the
+complexion. Unfortunately, however, the reflection from the pink
+silk does not always reach the face at the right angle. Sometimes it
+concentrates altogether upon the most prominent feature of the face, and
+then "Red in the Nose is She" becomes applicable to the bearer of the
+parasol. _Couleur de rose_ is an expression for all that is lovely and
+serene, but the rose must not be worn on the nose.
+
+
+
+
+Going him one Better.
+
+The only difference between the Colossus of Rhodes and King HENRY VIII
+was that while Colossus was only a _won_der, King H. was a _Tu_dor.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+R. J. H. M'VICKER has for some years past conducted a Chicago theatre,
+of which he has been lessee, manager, and stock company. The Chicago
+people have liked M'VICKER'S Theatre, because it has occasionally
+treated them to the novel sensation of a comparatively moral
+performance. Occasional morality deftly inserted in the midst of a
+season of seductive legs, produces the same effect upon a Chicago
+audience that a naughty _opera bouffe_ does upon the New York lovers
+of the legitimate drama. In either case there is the charm of foreign
+novelty; a charm, however, which soon loses its attraction. _Opera
+bouffe_ in New York, and the moral drama in Chicago, can enjoy but a
+temporary success. The former city will always return to its love of
+standard comedies and SHAKSPEAREAN tragedies, and the latter will sooner
+or later clamor for its accustomed legs and its favorite dramas of
+bigamy and divorce.
+
+Mr. M'VICKER, having read of the MCFARLAND trial, immediately conceived
+the happy idea that the time had come when a Chicago actor would please
+a New York audience. Ha therefore flew to this city, by way of the
+Mississippi river and the New Orleans and Havana steamships, and last
+week made a debut at BOOTH'S Theatre. With an astuteness which reflects
+great credit upon his ability as a manager, he astonished the audience,
+which had assembled to be shocked by a genuine Chicago performance,
+by playing a part which fairly bristles with unnecessarily obtrusive
+morality. Thus did he present a double attraction. A Chicago actor would
+have been sure, in any case, of the support of the Free Love Press; but
+a moral Chicago actor is a surprise which appeals irresistibly to the
+love of novelty which exists in the theatre-going breast. The play
+in which he made his first appearance here, is entitled "Taking the
+Chances," and is from the pen of Mr. CHARLES GAYLER, to whom Dr. WATTS
+so beautifully referred in those touching verses:
+
+ "Gayler, the Troubadour,
+ Touched his guitar,"
+
+--and further language to a like effect. Mr. M'VICKER sustained the
+character of "PETER POMEROY," one of those oppressive rural Yankees
+whose mission seems to be to drive young men into the paths of vice, by
+representing virtue as inextricably associated with home-spun garments,
+and the manners of an uneducated bull in an unprotected china shop. The
+following version of the play will be recognized as literally exact, by
+all who have not seen the original.
+
+
+
+
+Taking the Chances.
+
+ACT I.
+
+MR. POMEROY, _a Preposterous Uncle, who regards his nephew_, PETER, _as
+a desirable person._ "My dear PETER will he here in a few moments. His
+presence will be a real blessing."
+
+MRS. POMEROY. "I am sorry to hear it. He breaks furniture and things,
+and I don't like him."
+
+_Enter_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE, _who make unnecessary remarks, and obviously
+exist only to meet_ PETER. _Finally_ PETER _enters, in butternut
+clothing and a condition of chronic moral perfection._
+
+PETER. "Jewhillikins! Haow de du, Unkil? Haow are ye, Aunt DEB? Haow is
+everybody? Our pigs and chickens and garden-sass is all doin' well."
+--_Falls on a chair._
+
+PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE. "Dear, noble, manly fellow."
+
+EVERYBODY ELSE. "Unbearable brute."
+
+_Enter_ BLANCHE POMEROY. "Do I see my dear cousin? I am glad to see you,
+but please don't tear all of my dress to pieces."
+
+PETER. "_Jewhillikins!_" "You used to not to mind abaout havin' your
+frock torn when you was up at Graniteville. But I s'pose society has
+sp'iled you."
+
+_Enter_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN, _and whispers to_ BLANCHE--"To-night you must
+fly with me. We have not a moment to lose."
+
+PETER. "_Jewhillikins!_ That is the chap that deserted his wife in
+Graniteville? I'll fix him."
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "What do I see? A virtuous rustic? Confusion! Can he
+suspect me?"
+
+PETER _devotes himself to the virtuous task of insulting every person in
+the room, thereby proving how much superior a cow-boy from New Hampshire
+is to the wretched resident of the city, whom fate has made a base
+and villainous gentleman. The_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN _goes through with
+a complicated fit of St. Vitus's Dance, by way of preserving a cool
+exterior, and thus allaying the suspicions of_ PETER. _Various_ TEDIOUS
+PEOPLE _enter and converse tediously with the_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. _After
+a time the stage-carpenters suddenly decide to lower the curtain, and
+thus put an end to an act that might otherwise go on forever._
+
+
+ACT II.
+
+_Enter_ PETER. "Jewhillikins! This is a nice garden. What pesky villains
+all these people must be, considerin' that they wear good clothes and
+don't break the furnitoor. There's that chap that deserted his wife.
+I'll fix him."--_Hides himself in an arbor._
+
+_Enter_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.--"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? In
+order to avert suspicion, I will confide everything to the friendly
+air."--_Relates his past life and future plans, at the top of his lungs,
+and then returns to the house._
+
+_Enter_ PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE, _and various_ TEDIOUS PEOPLE, _who all want
+to marry_ BLANCHE. _They converse tediously and go away again. Applause!
+Enter_ BLANCHE _and_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.--"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? BLANCHE, we
+must fly to-night. Not a moment is to be lost."
+
+_Re-enter_ PETER. "Jewhillikins! BLANCHE, I want to talk a spell with
+yon."--To PLAUSTBLE VILLAIN "Go into the haouse, will you?"--_He goes_.
+
+BLANCHE, "What do you want, PETER? Why do you tear my dress, and scratch
+your head so persistently?"
+
+PETER. "Jewhillikins! That feller you love is a scoundrel. I'll prove
+it. Will you believe it after it's proved?"
+
+BLANCHE, (_With a fine sense of what is truly womanly_.) "Of course I
+won't believe it. I despise proofs and arguments."
+
+_Enter_ TEDIOUS PEOPLE _and_ IREELEVANT PEOPLE. _They converse more
+tediously and irrelevantly than before. At last the carpenters, who have
+been out for beer, return and drop the curtain._
+
+
+ACT III.
+
+_Enter_ PETER, _in the clothes of an ordinary Christian. He practices a
+frightful dance, and remarks at intervals,_ "Jewhillikins."
+
+_Enter_ BLANCHE _and_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. _The latter notices_ PETER,
+_with convulsive alarm._
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "Confusion! Can he suspect me? BLANCHE, we must fly
+at once. There is not a moment to lose."
+
+_Enter_ EVERYBODY. _A quadrille is formed._ PETER _dances and falls
+over everybody else. The quadrille ends._ PETER _rises and remarks,
+"Jewhillikins." He goes out and returns, bringing the_ PLAUSIBLE
+VILLAIN'S _wife with him. The_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN _repents._ BLANCHE
+_consents to marry_ PETER. _Various preposterous engagements are entered
+into by the_ TEDIOUS _and the_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. _And at last the play
+is over._
+
+
+
+COMIC MAN _among the audience._ "Why should M'VICKER think a man a
+scoundrel, who deserts his wife and tries to marry another? Don't he
+come from Chicago?"
+
+2D COMIC MAN.--"Don't SHERIDAN," (who plays the PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN,)
+"look as if he wished he were 'twenty miles away' when PETER denounces
+him?"
+
+And the bystanders smile weakly, as though they had heard a good joke on
+SHERIDAN, and retire slowly toward their homes, evidently exhausted by
+the oppressive virtue of the intolerable Yankee boor, whom M'VICKER
+plays so well that the respectable portion of the audience is almost
+inclined to overlook the wretchedness of the part in admiration of the
+skill of the actor.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+
+
+
+Cue-rious Rumor.
+
+That the Sound steamers are to be furnished with billiard tables for
+the amusement of passengers between New York and Boston. This report,
+however, is flatly contradicted, and we have neither charity nor chalk
+for the man who would make a statement so groundless. GEORGE FRANCIS,
+THE UBIQUITOUS.
+
+Amidst all the chances and changes of this chequered, and, in some
+respects, lugubrious life, Mr. PUNCHINELLO has the perennial consolation
+of one friendship, which promises to be immortal, and over which time
+and space hold no sway. Need we say that we are alluding to the tender
+emotions which crowd our bosom whenever we hear of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN! And lest our love for him should grow colder, this considerate
+gentleman allows us to hear from him almost daily. To be sure he is like
+some great antediluvian grasshopper, and seems capable of spanning this
+almost boundless continent at a leap. He is in Maine in the morning--he
+is making a speech in Minnesota when the evening shades prevail; but
+wherever he is, the roll of his eloquence reaches us, and however busy
+he may be, he is never too busy to write letters to tho newspapers. The
+great man comes very near to solving the problem heretofore considered
+insoluble, of being in two places at once. Two, did we say? Absurd!
+Three, four, five, half a dozen! What a man! Jumping here! Leaping
+there! Skipping North! Vaulting South! Skimming (like a CAMILLA in
+pantaloons) over the plains of the West! Then, as if by magic, whirling
+himself to the East! A man, did we say? Bah! GEORGE FRANCIS is clearly
+one of the immortals.
+
+Clearly! JUPITER used to be rather lavish of electricity, but he did but
+a small retail business in it, compared with our dear GEORGE FRANCIS,
+the demi-god, who, when he is not talking with sublime garrulity, is
+telegraphing without regard to expense. Evidently it has dawned upon the
+mind (if he has any,) of this extraordinary being, that the world, in
+none of its quarters, can get along without him, and that the newspaper
+which does not mention his name must be stale, flat, and unprofitable.
+Wherefore he takes order that every newspaper shall print the wonderful
+name as often as possible. Whether he be laughed at, sneered at, sworn
+at, the virtue of the mere mention remains the same.
+
+The last we heard from GEORGE FRANCIS, he was, (to use his own choice
+language,) "away up here on the Chippewa," beseeching the lumber men,
+with all the charm of his inimitable eloquence, to vote him into the
+Presidential chair. "I am waking up these boys for 1872," writes the
+valuable phenomenon. Unto "millers, rafters, choppers, and jammers,"
+this Fountain of Oratory has gushed forth his "four hundred and
+twenty-first consecutive Presidential lecture." Imagine a possible scene
+upon a raft! GEORGE FRANCIS, mounted upon a whiskey-barrel, is making
+all the air resonant with rhetoric. The "rafters" are swearing!
+The "choppers" are cursing! The "jammers" are most reprehensibly
+blaspheming! The enormous mass floats onward, and "TRAIN!" the floods,
+"TRAIN!" the forests, "TRAIN!" the overarching skies resound! No
+miserable hall, no narrow street, no "pent-up Utica" contracts the
+power of this miraculous elocutionist--his auditorium seems to be a
+hemisphere--his audience all mankind! ORPHEUS singing moved rocks
+and trees. Great GEORGE spouting subdues all the inhabitants of the
+wilderness. Timid deer trip to the shore to listen; ferocious bears,
+catching the echo, shed tears of penitence; all creatures of the roaring
+kind acknowledge themselves surpassed and silenced; the whispering pines
+whisper all the more softly, as if ashamed of their own verbal weakness.
+All speeches, even the speeches of a TRAIN, must come to an end; and
+having ended, the floating DEMOSTHENES sits down to write to the
+newspapers, that he has just been delivered of his four-hundred-and-
+twenty-second, and is as well as could be expected.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO has, in his day, been considered talkative; but he
+feels, as he listens to GEORGE FRANCIS, that he is himself a marvel of
+taciturnity--that in the noble art of sounding his own trumpet he is
+a mere child--that as a contributor to the public amusement he is in
+danger of falling into paltry insignificance. Alas! he is not the
+marvellous mountebank which he has heretofore considered himself to be;
+and the nonsense upon which he so prided himself, in comparison with
+the nonsense of GEORGE FRANCIS, sinks into the most melancholy and
+insufferable wisdom. He looks forward to the future with a fear lest he
+may descend to the depths of serious and slow solemnity. When he has
+arrived at that deplorable stage of decay, he wishes it to be understood
+that his drum and trumpet are at the service of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN.
+
+
+[Illustration: A YOUNG STIR AMONG THE DAILIES.
+
+_Editor Dana._ "I WISH THAT FELLOW WOULD TAKE HIS BANNER OUT OF MY WAY.
+IT ECLIPSES MY SPECIAL NEWS."]
+
+
+
+
+ASSOCIATED PRESS TELEGRAMS.
+
+It is well known that there is a leak in the Associated Press Office. In
+point of fact there always is a leak. Why any one should think it worth
+while to steal the Associated Press cable dispatches is a mystery,
+when they could be manufactured in any newspaper office with much less
+trouble. The following dispatches are a fair sample of the ordinary
+cable news which is sent to the Association. "We need hardly say that
+they were not stolen from Mr. SIMONTON, but we will say, as we
+have already said, that there is a leak. A word to the wise is
+sufficient--though, of course, by the expression, 'the wise,' we do not
+mean any reference to the London agent of the Associated Press."
+
+
+LONDON, June 6. The _Times_ of to-day has a paragraph on the big trees
+of California.
+
+MR. SMALLEY denies that he ever wore a hat resembling that of GUSTAVE
+FLOURENS.
+
+A boy has been arrested for picking pockets in Oxford Street.
+
+JOHN SMITH, proprietor of a coffee and cake saloon in Ratcliffe Highway,
+has gone into bankruptcy.
+
+It is believed that if the Tories should oust the present cabinet, they
+would come into power.
+
+PARIS, June 7. There are rumors as to the health of the Emperor
+NAPOLEON.
+
+Yesterday a man is said to have cried, "_Vive la Republique!_" in his
+back-yard.
+
+ROME, June, 8. The Ecumenical Council is still in session.
+
+There are more strangers in Rome than there have been at times when the
+number was less.
+
+ALEXANDRIA, June 8. Several vessels have passed through the Suez Canal
+since its completion.
+
+The Suez Canal is by some regarded as a success. Others think it a
+failure.
+
+CALCUTTA, June 6. A native was killed by a tiger near Bundelcund
+eighteen months ago.
+
+YOKOHAMA, June 6. The P. & O. Steamer Bombay has run down and sunk the
+U.S. Sloop Oneida.
+
+ST. PETERSBURGH, June 7. Some discontent was caused by the emancipation
+of the serfs.
+
+BERLIN, June 8. BISMARCK has notified the Upper House that no
+exemplification of the categorical plebiscitum will be favorably
+entertained or rejected.
+
+In view of these important dispatches, PUNCHINELLO respectfully suggests
+to Mr. SIMONTON, that instead of trying to put an end to the stealing of
+his news, he put a peremptory end to the London agent of the Associated
+Press. Otherwise the agent will soon put an end to the Association. One
+or the other event must take place, and it is only a question of time
+which shall occur first. [Illustration: PONTOON FOR PARTIES. A NEW
+INVENTION, TO ENABLE GENTLEMEN TO CROSS THE FLOWING TRAINS OF LADIES IN
+FASHIONABLE DRAWING-ROOMS.]
+
+
+
+
+COMIC ZOOLOGY.
+
+The Boa Constrictor.
+
+Oriental tourists claim to have met with specimens of this reptile one
+hundred feet in length, but as travellers are proverbially prone to
+stretch their tales, narrative of this character must not be too readily
+swallowed. He is found in India, all along the course of the Hooghly,
+and is hugely superior in strength and size to all the other reptiles of
+Asia. His habitat is usually up a tree, where he lies in ambush, and
+he forages, and has for ages, on the nobler quadrupeds; seldom letting
+himself down to make a "picked-up dinner" on the lower animals.
+Sometimes, however, when tormented with an "all-gone sensation" in the
+pit of his stomach, he descends to dine on a high-caste Brahmin and to
+sup on a Gentoo.
+
+The skin of the Boa has a silky sheen, like that of the finest Rep, and,
+when taking a nap in the sun, his Damascened appearance may remind the
+pious spectator of a scene damned by the intrusion of a similar reptile
+several thousand years ago.
+
+The Boa Constrictor is not a fascinating snake--far from it. He relies
+on his muscles and not on his charms, for support. His appetite is
+vigorous, and the manner in which he disposes of his tid-bits, such
+as the larger carnivora, may be described as glutenous. Much has been
+written of the creature, but a glance at his enormous volume will give a
+truer idea of him than anything that has ever issued from the press.
+He serves the body of an animal, before devouring it, as mercenary
+politicians serve the body politic--crushing it with many Rings. By the
+keepers of menageries he is often called the Boa _Constructor_, but the
+name more aptly applies to the Furrier who simulates his shape on a
+small scale; the creature having no mechanical skill whatever.
+
+Occasionally, from some branch that overhangs a _Nullah_, he will drop
+down on the thirsty eland or hartbeest, rendering resistance a Nullity;
+but his favorite game is fighting the tiger, at which, unlike the human
+species, he always wins when in the vein for that kind of sport. All the
+beasts of the jungle fear him--the wolf feeling no disposition to seek
+his folds, and the leopard frequently changing his spots to avoid him.
+Whatever his quarry may be, its sands are soon run out.
+
+The Boa, like other gourmands, is fond of gourmand-ease. After having
+put a victim through the mill and bolted him for a meal, the monster may
+be discovered (or he may not) on some knoll in the forest, indulging in
+somnolency. He can then be assailed with safety, but as his breath is a
+horrible fetor, a spice (of caution) should be used in approaching him.
+The windward side is best. As he lies limber, smelling like Limburger,
+a hatchet will be found a first-chop weapon of assault. The Hindoos,
+however, generally double him up with Creeses. Cutting off the
+creature's tail, just behind the jaws, is a pretty sure way to
+ex-terminate him. There are on record several instances of Boas having
+been despatched in this way by Ruthless adventurers.
+
+The reptile abounds in Ceylon, and is considered a delicacy by the
+Cingalese, but the civilized stomach would probably find Double Ease in
+letting it alone. _Cotelette de Constrictor_, however pleasant to the
+Pagan palate, would scarcely go down with a Christian.
+
+High old stories of the Boa have been obtained by travellers, from the
+Asiatics. They resemble those of the fabled dragon and hippogriff, and
+as they generally relate to the ravaging of whole districts by the
+voracious monster, a heap o' grief is connected with some of them. The
+gum-game, however, is much in vogue in India, and most of these snake
+stories may be characterized as India Rubbish.
+
+The great Boa is a native of Southern Africa as well as of Asia, and is
+much dreaded by all the Dutch Boers. The creature is reported to have
+been seen in crossing the interior deserts, but this is believed to be
+a fiction invented in the Caravans. In Congo there is a small species a
+few sizes larger than the Conger eel, while in the section of country
+visited by CUMMING the Boa is the biggest serpent Going.
+
+There are stupendous snakes in the islands of the Indian Archipelago,
+and a Yankee skipper who lived a year among the natives informs us that
+he "once saw some arter a boa in Sumatra." The skipper, however, is a
+small joker, and always ready to Sacrifice Truth on the Alter Ego of a
+miserable pun. A vile habit this, but one that it is to be feared will
+never be abandoned.
+
+The skin of the Boa is rarely embroidered with purple and gold, but,
+like many a priestly hypocrite, he hides under the livery of heaven the
+instincts of the Devil. And so we dismiss him.
+
+
+
+
+BITTER SARCASM
+
+Canadians pronounce the sacred word "Sunburst" "Shunburst."
+
+
+[Illustration: THE WEDDING RING, AS SOKOSIS WOULD LIKE TO SEE IT WORN.]
+
+
+[ILLUSTRATION Description: Woman in Victorian dress with a small,
+free-running dog on her left holding a leash in her right hand which
+connects to a top-hatted man's nose ring. A sign behind them reads
+"Socuety for the prevention of cruelty to husbands $500 fine"] [blank
+page] [Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+Ind-Hearted Mr. CHANDLER had a proposition "which would restore American
+commerce to its former footing." It was simply to annex San Domingo,
+Cuba, and Canada. He repudiated with scorn and disgust the insinuation
+that he proposed to pay anything for them. That was foreign to his
+nature. He meant merely to take them. By this means they would not only
+restore American commerce--he din't profess to know exactly how--but
+they would inflict a deadly blow upon haughty England. At this point Mr.
+CHANDLER became incoherent, the only intelligible remark which reached
+the reporters, being that he could "lick" Queen VICTORIA single-handed.
+
+Mr. SUMNER remarked that a war with England would be costly.
+
+Mr. CHANDLER declined to accept any suggestion from a man who went to
+diplomatic dinners, and consorted with Englishmen. He had been told that
+at these dinners, to which he was proud to say he had never gone, and to
+which, while the custom of issuing invitations prevailed, he never
+would go, Mr. SUMNER ate with his fork. Such a man could not be a true
+American.
+
+Mr. MORRILL introduced a bill to increase the mileage of members.
+Notoriously, he observed, the mileage of members was scandalously small.
+He knew that the self-sacrificing nature of the senators would delight
+to pay this tribute to the fidelity of themselves, and the equally
+deserving public servants of the other house. Passed with acclamations.
+
+A resolution was introduced to appropriate a few millions towards the
+discovery of the North Pole.
+
+Mr. SAULSBURY said--Whazyoose?
+
+Mr. SUMNER explained that it would be a good thing for science.
+
+Mr. COLE explained that it would be an enormous thing for fishermen.
+
+Mr. YATES explained that it would be a vast thing for "cobblers."
+
+Mr. SAULSBURY said--Ah, B'gthing on Ice.
+
+Mr. MORRILL moved to extend the Capitol grounds to the next lot.
+
+Mr. YATES moved to extend them to Chicago.
+
+Mr. MORTON moved to extend them to Indianapolis.
+
+Mr. CHANDLER wildly shrieked Detroit.
+
+Mr. SUMNER faintly murmured Boston.
+
+
+
+HOUSE.
+
+Somebody introduced a bill to pension the soldiers of 1812. Somebody
+else wanted to amend it by providing that no soldier of 1812 who aided
+and comforted the recent rebellion should get any pension.
+
+Even Mr. BUTLER showed gleams of good feeling. He said that the lot of
+these men was hard. They were liable to be brought out upon platforms
+every Fourth of July, and obliged to sit and blink under patriotic
+eloquence for hours. It was their dreadful lot subsequently to eat
+public dinners in country taverns, which brought their gray hairs down
+in sorrow and indigestion to the grave. The notion of these senile and
+patriotic duffers aiding and comforting the rebellion was preposterous.
+Their eyes purged thick amber and plum-tree gum, and they had no notion
+of doing anything but drawing their pensions, and getting three meals a
+day, with a horrible fourth on the glorious Fourth.
+
+Mr. LOGAN said this position was outrageous. He knew that some of these
+hoary wretches in his own district were so fully in sympathy with the
+rebellion as actually to refuse to vote for him, when carriages were
+sent to convey them to the polls. Such men ought not to receive a
+dollar.
+
+Mr. BUTLER not only reaffirmed his previous statements, but reintroduced
+his resolution to annex Dominica.
+
+Mr. KELLEY desired to abolish the income tax. He said that some of his
+most influential constituents disliked it. They would not pay. To lie
+they were ashamed. If a sufficient tariff were put upon pig-iron there
+would be no need of providing for this petty Tacks.
+
+Mr. BUTLER was in favor of the abolition of the tax. It had never seen
+anything but a tax on paper, and it was not worth a paper of tacks.
+But he considered the most feasible method of reducing it was to annex
+Dominica, and he introduced a resolution to that effect. As his friend
+KELLEY had suggested, if they did not remove the tax, their constituents
+would remove them. He did not consider it practicable, however, to bring
+a movement to abolish the tacks on the carpet until Dominica should be
+ours.
+
+
+
+
+FURTHER OF MYTHOLOGY.
+
+DIANA. This goddess was generally admitted to be the most intellectual
+and disagreeable of the whole divine Sisterhood. Among the Greeks the
+popular estimate of her character was shown by the name of "Artful
+Miss"--afterwards corrupted to ARTEMIS--which they gave to her. She was
+an eminently strong-minded goddess, and insisted upon her right to adopt
+the habits of the other sex. Among them was the practice of hunting, of
+which she was passionately fond. Indeed, it was from her devotion to the
+pleasures of the chase that she obtained the epithet of the "Chased"
+DIANA--wild boars, and such like ungallant brutes, sometimes annoying
+her by refusing to be chased themselves, and by chasing her instead.
+There are those who pretend to think that "chaste," instead of "chased,"
+was really the original epithet, and that it was given to her as a
+recognition of the aggressive and malignant virtue which distinguishes
+most strong-minded women who are old and yet unmarried. The obvious
+absurdity of this theory will, however, be evident to any one who
+remembers her little flirtation with ENDYMION, whom she cruelly led from
+the paths of innocence, only to abandon him on the hills of Latmos,
+where he contracted the chills and fever by fruitlessly watching for her
+at night in the open field. A characteristic piece of ill-temper was her
+treatment of young ACTÆON. The latter, who was a respectable, though
+rather reckless young man, was once walking along the beach, when he
+suddenly came upon DIANA and several female friends in the act of taking
+the surf. Envious to behold the extremes of boniness, which then, as
+now, doubtless characterized the strong-minded females, he concealed
+himself in a neighboring bathing-house, and brought his opera-glass
+to bear on the group. He was, however, discovered, and DIANA and her
+friends were so indignant at being seen without their false teeth and
+false "fronts," that the former deliberately set her dogs on him, who
+tore him into imperceptible fragments so small that no coroner could
+possibly find enough of him in order to hold an inquest. Of course
+ACTÆON'S conduct cannot be defended, but then his punishment was
+altogether too severe. There is every reason to suppose that DIANA
+wanted some one to accidentally notice her proficiency in swimming, else
+why should she have chosen a place of popular resort for her bath? And
+then the simple nudity in which she was surprised was not nearly as
+suggestive as the peculiar costumes in which our fashionable ladies
+now-a-days enter the surf in the presence of admiring crowds. However,
+ideas change with successive ages, and what we now consider perfectly
+proper would probably have brought any quantity of blushes to the cheek
+of the young person of Athens or Rome. Among the Olympians DIANA was a
+common scold, and made herself as disagreeable to the goddesses as to
+the gods. Since she ceased to be openly worshipped she has been in a
+measure forgotten among men, but the strong-minded women still regard
+her with love and reverence, and it is understood that her statue,
+together with a painting representing her in the act of setting the
+dogs on ACTÆON, are among the most prominent decorations of the Sorosis
+Club-room and the _Revolution_ office.
+
+
+
+Historical
+
+Coney Island is celebrated for the saltness of its waters and the
+leathery qualities of its clams. This island is said to have been so
+named on account of its resemblance in shape to an inverted cone, but
+the attrition of the ocean has materially changed the conic base.
+Researches in the direction of the apex have not been made recently.
+
+
+
+Patentee Wanted.
+
+The heavy hebdomadals complain that the style of the communications sent
+them is too diffuse. The "talented" contributor is adjured to condense.
+There is an apparatus, we believe, for condensing the article called
+milk, but who will devise a machine for condensing the milk-and-water
+article? A fortune awaits the genius of the inventor.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLY GRAIL AND OTHER POEMS.
+
+(This Is one of the other Poems.)
+
+BY A HALF-RED DENIZEN OF THE WEST.
+
+Part XI.
+
+PELLEAS then, when all the flies were gone, Sat faithful on his horse,
+upon the lawn That skirts the castle moat; and thought the dame, For
+want of pluck, could never give him blame. He sat a week. She grew so
+blazing mad, She raved, and called three other knights she had; And
+cried, "That fool will drive me wild, I fear! Go bind his hands, and
+walk him Spanish here." And when the idiot heard her, he did grin And
+smirk, and let them walk him Spanish in. Then, railing vile, that he
+might take offence, She, sneering, asked him would he ne'er go hence;
+
+[Illustration]
+
+And cursed him till her face grew crimson red. Like cats of Cheshire
+then he grinned, and said:
+
+
+"Sent by thy train and thee to Coventry, I hung with grooms and porters
+on the bridge; Watched by thy three tall squires. And there I shaped An
+ancient willow's sapling into this."
+
+And handed her a whistle. "Kick him out!" She yelled; and the knights,
+laughing, took the lout, And thrust him from the gate. A week from this,
+Looking without, she saw his simple phiz; And cried "Go kill him! Stick
+him like a pig! You three can do it, if he is so big!" Unwilling, yet
+the knights went out to try, And light-of-love GAWAIN came riding by.
+"What ho!" he cried, "I'm in, if that fight's free; So here I come-ye
+knavish cowards three!" "For me," PELLEAS cried, "the fight she means,"
+And charging, knocked them into smithereens. Now called she other
+knights, and cried out, "Once Again go bind and bring me here that
+dunce!" And when he heard, he let himself be bound,
+
+And o'er the bridge they kicked him like a hound. When she had sneered
+her sneeriest, then she said, "Turn him out bound!" He lifted up his
+head,
+
+ "You ask me why, tho' ill at ease
+ Within this region I subsist?"
+
+ "I did," she said, "but pray desist
+ From further quoting, if you please."
+
+When forth PELLEAS came, his hands all tied, The brave GAWAIN, he
+bounded to his side, And loosed his bonds and said, "Look here, good
+friend, This sort of thing had better have an end. Just you go home, and
+take a Turkish bath, And I will cure this lady of her wrath. Give me
+your horse and shield. Take mine, I'll say I've killed you, stiffly
+dead, in mortal fray. Then she will straight repent; your death will
+rue, And while her heart is soft, I'll send for you."
+
+This nincum-fubby-diddle-boodle, he Went home, and did not GAWATN'S
+laughter see! He waited till the moon, after three days, Gave promise of
+large lights on woods and ways, And then he hastened to ETTABBE'S gate.
+He found it open, and he did not wait to be announced, but hastened,
+full of hope, To where her tent stood on the garden slope. He knew she
+slept the roses all among, And as he softly stepped, he softly sung:
+
+ "I am coming, my own, my sweet!
+ Were it ever so airy a tread,
+ Thy heart would hear me and beat,
+ Were it earth in an earthly bed.
+ Thy dust would hear me and beat,
+ Hads't thou lain for a century dead,
+ Would start and tremble under my feet--
+
+And just then he saw GAWAIN'S head! With one wild bound toward the
+dark'ning skies, From out the garden gates he madly flies. But soon his
+mind it alters. Slipping back, His tune he changes--trying this new
+ tack:"Howe'er it be, it seems to me
+ 'Tis only noble to be good;
+ Kind hearts are more than coronets,
+ And simple faith, than Norman blood.
+
+ O lady! You may veer and veer,
+ A great enchantress you may be,
+ But there'll be that across your throat,
+ Which you would scarcely care to see."
+
+Then he, while sleep of senses them bereft, Soft thrust his lance
+through both their necks--and left. The cold touch in her throat she
+felt, and woke. She knew the lance, and to GAWAIN she spoke. "Liar!" she
+said. "That man you have not slain. Let's both clear out! He may come
+back again!"
+
+(_To be Continued._)
+
+
+
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+That most gay, gallant and airy body of horsemen known as the "Brooklyn
+Dutch Light Cavalry," are much indebted to the projectors of the
+Knightly meeting which took place recently at Prospect Park, for an
+opportunity to display those equestrian graces which a few cross-grained
+critics have been disposed to deny them. The general public never had
+any doubts upon the subject, but it is well enough to silence those who
+took much credit to themselves in detecting faults where others could
+not discover them. The result shows how completely such mendacity can be
+exposed. Of the numerous prizes awarded, two-thirds fell to the members
+of Brooklyn's Teutonic Cavalry. They were especially admired for the
+firmness with which they kept their saddles, under circumstances enough
+to unhorse a Centaur. We noted, particularly, one cavalier, known in
+the lists as the Knight of RUDESHEIMER. He keeps a pork store in Fulton
+Avenue, and turned a Fairbanks Scale, but two days before the tourney,
+at 275 lbs. This gallant rode a very sprightly steed, which struggled
+under the double calamity of being slightly spavined and quite blind in
+the left eye. One of the effects of the latter misfortune was to keep
+the animal constantly in the belief that somebody meditated foul play
+upon its unguarded flank, and at the slightest stir in the crowd it
+would wheel violently around, to the great consternation its rider,
+and the evident alarm of contiguous Knights. PUNCHINELLO, who was very
+conspicuous in the throng, and was mounted upon a highly mettled Ukraine
+steed, observed the cavorting of the Knight of RUDESHEIMER, and cantered
+gaily towards him. In attempting to pass, his spur touched the side of
+the blind steed,--which kicked at PUNCHINELLO'S fiery Ukraine in a very
+ungracious manner. Our animal would take a kick from no other animal
+calmly, and so, without waiting to weigh consequences, it gave
+RUDESHEIMER'S Rosinante a severe "chuck" in the ribs with its hind feet.
+In an instant horse and rider were spinning around like a top. A space
+was immediately cleared, and the crowd awaited in breathless silence
+the fate of the Knight. His swayings were fearful, until PUNCHINELLO,
+anticipating an apoplectic fit from such a terrific revolution, dashed
+in, and seizing the frightened steed by the bridle, brought him to
+bay. The Knight's face was livid with rage and, instead of thanking
+PUNCHINELLO, he roared at the pitch of his voice.
+
+"Dunder und blitzen! Du bist ein tam phool. Vat for you not sees I ish
+tied to mein saddle?"
+
+The pride of horsemanship could go no further, and so PUNCHINELLO left.
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE RED CLOUD.
+
+[Supposed to have been uttered on the occasion of a conference of
+Savages at Washington with a view to the settlement of our Indian
+difficulties.]
+
+ How! Call all my chiefs together--
+ Makpialutah, Red Cloud wants 'em:
+ Shunkalutah, him the Red Dog;
+ Brave Bear, Montaohetekah;
+ Setting Bear, Maktohutakah;
+ Rock Bear, Live Bear, Long Bear, Short Bear,
+ Little Bear, Yellow Bear, and Bear Skin,
+ Keyalutah, Red Fly--Shoo Fly!
+ Dahsanowee, White Cow Rattler,
+ Pahgee, Shunkmonetoohakah,
+ Shatonsapah, Maktohashena,
+ Kokepah, Ocklehelutah,
+ Newakohnkechaksaheuntah,
+ Whoop! haloo! Yahoo! Halooooooooo!
+
+ (Sudden rush of warriors on all sides with war-whoop, flourish of
+ tomahawks, and inexplicable dumb show.]
+
+ Ugh! What now would have the White Man?
+ Sell he swindle, rum, fire-water,
+ We will sell him Fear in plenty.
+ What would have Great Cloud, our father,
+ He the Smoke-nose, he the Big Fish?
+ They not cheat us, we not murder.
+ Pale-faces like the leaves of forests:
+ Many squaws with paint and feathers--
+ None like Makochawyuntaker,
+ The World-looker, wife of Black Hawk.
+ Much skull, but few scalp in Congress.
+ Talk much--very great tongue-warriors.
+ Tomahawk could end the tongue-fight.
+ Hrumph! I like not these pale-faces,
+ Makpialutah mourns for battle,
+ Red Cloud thirsts for blood of Pawnees,
+ Red Cloud cries for scalp of white men,
+ Red Cloud angers the Great Spirit,
+ Red Cloud trembles for the War Dance!
+ Ugh! Hrumph! How! Whoop, whoop, haloooooo!
+
+[The Conference of Chiefs, after an uproar of shrill and guttural
+sounds, break: up with the favorite can-can of the Sioux.]
+
+
+
+
+A Pleasant Prospect.
+
+The Massachusetts editors, who are shortly to meet in convention at
+Boston, are threatened with three distressing courtesies, viz: a concert
+on the Big Organ, a visit to the School Ship, and a banquet in Fanuil
+Hall. They have our sincerest condolences.
+
+
+[Illustration: TREPIDATION.
+
+FRANK PAYS A VISIT OF CONDOLENCE TO HIS FRIEND, WHO IS ILL WITH
+RELAPSING FEVER.]
+
+[Illustration: FUMIGATION.
+
+THEN HE THINKS HIS HAIR SHOULD BE FUMIGATED, AND SUBSEQUENTLY HE HAS TO
+BE EXTINGUISHED.] [Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. (NOT BY HOGARTH.)
+_Clergyman_. "Do You TAKE THIS MAN TO LOVE, HONOR, AND AGREE WITH
+UNTIL--YOU SEE ANOTHER MAN YOU LIKE BETTER?"]
+
+
+
+
+MY COUP D'ETAT.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO: For sometime--I would not like to say how long--the
+undersigned has been a candidate for the office of Whiskey Inspector for
+the Judasville district of his State. I have had powerful backing from
+the scrap-iron members of Congress from my section, but their efforts
+and my own have long seemed of little avail. The other day, however,
+I saw in the papers the account of the _coup d'etat_ of the DUKE OF
+SALDANHA, in Portugal. An idea immediately entered my brain. These
+_effète_ monarchies, these governments of the past, on which "the rust
+of ages," as VICTOR HUGO remarks, "lies like a bloody snow of bygone
+vassalage," have yet sufficient vitality to teach a lesson to the young
+and vigorous governments of the West. At any rate this old duke taught
+me a lesson, and I did my best to hurry off and say it. It was evident
+that if I wanted to be Whiskey Inspector of Judasville, (and I am
+justified in saying that no man in the district possesses more peculiar
+qualifications for the post,) that something in the SALDANHA style
+must be done. The time had passed for petitions and lobbying. I went
+immediately to the commander of the Judasville Rifles, and enlisted his
+sympathies in my cause. He willingly placed his company at my service,
+but whether this was due to my offer to pay the board-bills and car-fare
+of the organization while it was under my orders, or to my eloquent
+statement of my case, I have not yet had an opportunity to discover. The
+men who, from the very commencement of the undertaking, had constituted
+themselves the inspectors of my whiskey, were in high good spirits, and,
+in a body, numbering some forty-six, we arrived in Washington, on a
+bright morning, about a week ago. It would not do, on an occasion like
+this, to delay matters. Accordingly I marched my troops directly to the
+White House. The man in charge of the door took my men for a visiting
+target company, and told me, whom he supposed was the member from their
+district, that I must marshal my friends out on the green, and he would
+notify the Private Secretary. I made no answer to this, but ordered
+the troops to charge bayonets, and we entered the White House at a
+double-quick. I led the way directly to GRANT'S study, and stationing my
+men in the doorway, I entered. He was within, cutting up an "old soger"
+to smoke in his pipe. After shaking bands with him, I sat down and
+inquired if that was a _regalia _he was cutting up.
+
+"No," said he. "This is the HANCOCK brand."
+
+"Oh!" said I.
+
+"Well?" said he, looking somewhat inquisitively at the soldiers, who
+crowded into the doorway, and almost filled the entry beyond.
+
+"Mr. President," said I, rising and clearing my throat, "I do not wish
+to occupy much time in the present business--especially as I have to pay
+the hotel bills of these brave veterans until it is finished. Therefore
+I will come directly to the point. I desire, immediately, the
+appointment of Whiskey Inspector for the Judasville district. I have
+been an applicant for said position quite long enough, and I demand that
+you make out my commission this morning."
+
+"And suppose I don't?" says GRANT.
+
+"In that case," said I,--"in that case--well, in that case, _there_ are
+my companions in arms, the brave supporters of my cause!" and I pointed
+proudly to the Judasville Rifles.
+
+"Well," said GRANT, puffing away at the HANCOCK remnants, "what do you
+propose to do with them--besides paying their hotel bills, I mean?"
+
+"To do?" said I, "to do?"--and now, to tell the truth, I experienced an
+immediate disadvantage of not having formed a plan of my campaign. But
+it would not do to hesitate.
+
+"To do?" I repeated, speaking louder this time. "I shall march
+upon--well, upon each of the public buildings in turn, and I shall take
+them and hold them."
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"Well," said I, "then, of course, you will see the impossibility of
+carrying my strongholds without a fearful slaughter, and to prevent
+the consequent effusion of blood, you will despatch a courier to me,
+requesting my presence in your council-room."
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"I will come," I answered.
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"You will give me the Whiskey Inspectorship," I answered.
+
+GRANT glanced at me, and then at the body of troops by which I was
+supported. Indomitable resolution sat upon every lineament of my
+countenance, and resolute determination showed itself in the faces of my
+brave men. Already, from afar, they sniffed the delicious perfumes of
+the rewards of victory. (It is needless to particularize the alcoholic
+promises I had made them in case of success.)
+
+GRANT rang a little bell--I think he bought it second-hand, when SEWARD
+sold out to go travelling--and an obstrusive attendant entered by a back
+door.
+
+Then, to this obtrusive attendant said the President; "James, step
+over to the War Department and tell SHERMAN to send me the Eighth and
+Eleventh Brigades of Cavalry; the Seventy-first and Fortieth Regiments
+of Artillery; the Twenty-second, Forty-fourth, and Eighty-eighth
+regiments of infantry, and two companies of sappers and miners."
+
+JAMES departed.
+
+I stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. PRESIDENT," said I, "in order to prevent the effusion of blood,
+might it not be as well to settle our little business at once?"
+
+GRANT smiled.
+
+HODGINS, the captain of the Judasville Rifles, now came up to me and
+touched me on the arm.
+
+"To prevent the effusion of blood," said he, "we are going home."
+
+And they went!
+
+My subsequent adventures, Mr. PUNCHINELLO, I cannot relate, for my paper
+is full, and the fellow who has charge of this cell has refused to get
+me any more, unless I give him more money, which I haven't got.
+
+But of one thing my mind is certain, and that is that this country has
+not yet arrived at that high grade of official refinement and tenderness
+which Portugal has reached.
+
+COODYTAW. [Advertisement] A.T. STEWART & CO.
+
+Have LARGELY REPLENISHED all their Popular Stocks of
+
+Silks, Dress Goods, Laces,
+
+EMBROIDERIES,
+
+Printed Jaconets, Organdies, Percales, Ladies and Gentlemen's Furnishing
+Goods, &c.,
+
+AND WILL OPEN TEN CASES OF
+
+Extra Fine Printed Cambrics
+
+At l8c. per Yard; Recent Price, 25c.
+
+BROADWAY,
+
+4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+MOURNING GOODS.
+
+STOCK COMPLETE,
+
+With every variety suitable for the Season.
+
+Iron Grenadine Bareges Just Received.
+
+A. T. STEWART & CO.,
+
+Broadway, 4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+A. T. STEWART & Co.
+
+Request attention to their
+
+EXTENSIVE AND ELEGANT ASSORTMENT OF
+
+Every Description of
+
+READY MADE GOODS
+
+For Ladies and Children.
+
+SUITABLE FOB SUMMER WEAR.
+
+BROADWAY,
+
+4th Avenue, 9th and 10th Streets.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+A. T. STEWART & CO.
+
+Have made LARGE ADDITIONS to their
+
+Popular Stocks of
+
+Ladies' and Children's Dresses.
+
+UNDERWEAR, IN EVERY VARIETY.
+
+INFANTS' WARDROBES.
+
+Millinery, Sacks, Silk Cloaks, Embroidered
+
+Breakfast Jackets, &c., &c.
+
+BROADWAY,
+
+4th Ave., 9th and 10th Streets.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+THE
+
+MERCHANTS'
+
+Life Insurance Company
+
+OF NEW YORK
+
+Office, 257 BROADWAY.
+
+ORGANIZED UNDER THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK.
+
+Issues all Kinds of Life and Endowment Policies on the Mutual System,
+free from restriction on travel and occupation, which permit residence
+anywhere without extra charge. Premiums may be paid annually,
+semi-annually, or quarterly in cash.
+
+All Policies are non-forfeitable, and participate in the profits of the
+Company. Dividends are made annually, on the Contribution plan.
+
+Pamphlets containing Rates of Premium, and information on the subject of
+Life Insurance, may be obtained at the office of the Company, or of any
+of its Agents.
+
+Parties desiring to represent this Company in the capacity of Agents
+will please address the New York Office.
+
+WILLIAM T. PHIPPS,
+
+_President_.
+
+A. D. HOLLY, _Secretary_. HENRY HILTON, _Counsel_.
+
+O. S. PAINE, M. D. _Medical Examiner_. C. H. KING, M. D. _Asst. Med.
+Ex._
+
+Each Agent in direct communication with the New York Office.
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+SPECIAL
+
+PUNCHINELLO PREMIUMS.
+
+BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH
+
+L. PRANG & CO.,
+
+we offer the following Elegant Premiums for new Subscribers to
+PUNCHINELLO:
+
+"Awakening." (A Litter of Puppies.) Half Chromo, size, 8 3-8 by 11 1-8,
+price $2.00, and a copy of PUNCHINELLO for one year, for $4.00.
+
+"Wild Roses." Chromo, 12 1-8 by 9, price $3.00, or any other $3.00
+Chromo, and a copy of the paper for one year, for $5.00.
+
+"The Baby in Trouble." Chromo, 13 by 16 l-4, price $6.00, or any other
+at $6.00, or any two Chromos at $3.00, and a copy of the paper for one
+year for $7.00.
+
+"Sunset,--California Scenery." after A. Bierstadt, 18 1-8 by 12, price
+$10.00, or any other $10.00 Chromo, and a copy of the paper for one year
+for $10.00. Or the four Chromos, and four copies of the paper for one
+year in one order, for clubs of FOUR, for $25.00.
+
+Remittances should be made in P. 0. 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.
+
+Now is the time to subscribe, as these Premiums will be offered for a
+limited time only. On receipt of a postage-stamp, we will send a copy of
+No. 1 to any one desiring to get up a club.
+
+Address,
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,
+
+P. O. Box 2783. No. 83 Nassau Street, New York. [Illustration: THE
+SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT AGAIN.
+
+Bar-room Lobbyist.--"I TELL YOU, NO, SIR; THIS SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT IS
+A DELUSION AND A SNARE. WHAT IN THUNDER IS TO BECOME OF US, WHEN WOMEN
+COME INTO THE LOBBY BUSINESS? "]
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+"The Printing House of the United States."
+
+GEO. F. NESBITT & CO.,
+
+General JOB PRINTERS,
+
+BLANK BOOK Manufacturers, STATIONERS, Wholesale and Retail, LITHOGRAPHIC
+Engravers and Printers, COPPER-PLATE Engravers and Printers, CARD
+Manufacturers, ENVELOPE Manufacturers, FINE CUT and COLOR Printers.
+
+163, 165, 167, and 160 PEARL ST., 73, 75, 77, and 79 PINE ST., New York.
+
+ADVANTAGES: All on the same premesis, and under immediate supervision of
+the proprietor.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+Bowling Green Savings Bank
+
+33 BROADWAY,
+
+NEW YORK.
+
+Open Every Day from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M.
+
+Deposits of any sum, from Ten Cents to Ten Thousand Dollars, will be
+received.
+
+Six per Cent interest, Free of Government Tax.
+
+INTEREST ON NEW DEPOSITS
+
+Commences on the First of every Month.
+
+HENRY SMITH, _President_ REEVES K. SELMES, _Secretary._
+
+WALTER ROCHE, } EDWARD HOGAN, } _Vice-Presidents_
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+SARATOGA "A" SPRING WATER.
+
+A POSITIVE CURE FOR HEADACHE!--A GREAT REMEDY FOR INDIGESTION AND
+DYSPEPSIA.--Keeps the blood cool and regulates the stomach. Persons
+subject to headache can insure themselves freedom from this malady by
+drinking it liberally in the morning before breakfast.
+
+Sold by JOHN F. HENRY, at the U. S. Family Medical Depot, 8 College
+Place, New York.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close resemblance to Oil
+Paintings. Sold in all Art and Bookstores throughout the world. PRANG'S
+LATEST CHROMOS: "Flowers of Hope," "Flowers of Memory." Illustrated
+Catalogues sent free on receipt of stamp.
+
+L. PRANG & CO., Boston.
+
+
+
+The New Summer Game.
+
+RING-TOSS!
+
+"Better than Croquet, and Cheaper."
+
+This NEW GAME affords an attractive out-door sport, and furnishes a
+degree and kind of physical exercise that improves and develops the
+general health and strength. It may be learned in a few minutes; may be
+played by any number of persons; is compactly arranged in a handsome
+case of moderate size, that may be easily carried from place to place;
+will pack nicely in your trunk for a summer jaunt, and is sold for less
+than any other out-door Game. Already the demand for it has exceeded all
+expectation, and the prospect is that its popularity will be universal.
+Says one of our customers: "IN INTEREST IT IS SUPERIOR TO CROQUET, AND
+CANNOT FAIL TO BE LIKED BY EVERY ONE."
+
+Price of Ring-Toss, Complete, with Book of Directions, $3.50.
+
+Securely packed, and sent by express to any address.
+
+For Sale, Wholesale and Retail, at
+
+HORSMAN'S Emporium of Croquet, Base Ball, Cricket, Archery, &c., &c.
+
+100 William St., New York.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.
+
+The New Burlesque Serial, Written expressly for PUNCHINELLO, by ORPHEUS
+C. KERR,
+
+Commenced in last number, will be continued weekly throughout the year.
+
+A sketch of the eminent author, written by his bosom friend, with superb
+illustrations of
+
+1ST. THE AUTHOR'S PALATIAL RESIDENCE AT BEGAD'S HILL, TICKNOR'S FIELDS,
+NEW JERSEY.
+
+2D. THE AUTHOR AT THE DOOR OF SAID PALATIAL RESIDENCE, taken as he
+appears "Every Saturday," will also be found in No. 11.
+
+Single Copies, for Sale by all newsmen, (or mailed from this office,
+free,) Ten Cents.
+
+Subscription for One Year, one copy, with $2 Chromo Premium, $4.
+
+Those desirous of receiving the paper containing this new serial,
+which promises to be the best ever written by ORPHEUS C. KERB, should
+subscribe now, to insure its regular receipt weekly.
+
+We will send the first Ten Numbers of PUNCHINELLO to any one who wishes
+to see them, in view of subscribing, on the receipt of SIXTY CENTS.
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+P.O. Box2783 83 Nassau St., New York.
+
+
+
+Geo. W. WHEAT, PRINTER, No. 8 SPRUCE STREKT.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18,
+1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, JUNE 18, 1870 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 9636-8.txt or 9636-8.zip *****
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+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN">
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+<title>Punchinello, Volume 1, No 12</title>
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+
+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18, 1870, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Posting Date: October 29, 2011 [EBook #9636]
+Release Date: January, 2006
+First Posted: October 12, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, JUNE 18, 1870 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, David
+Widger and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<h1>Punchinello, Vol.1, No. 12 , June 18,1870</h1>
+
+
+<center>
+<img alt="titlepage.jpg (283K)" src="images/titlepage.jpg" height="1138" width="763">
+</center>
+<br><br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="002.jpg (275K)" src="images/002.jpg" height="1123" width="779">
+</center>
+<br><br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.</h2>
+
+<h4>AN ADAPTATION.</h4>
+
+<h3>BY ORPHEUS C. KERR.</h3>
+
+<p>
+CHAPTER III.</p>
+
+<p>THE ALMS-HOUSE.</p>
+
+<p>For the purpose of preventing an inconvenient rush of literary
+tuft-hunters and sight-seers thither next summer, a fictitious name must
+be bestowed upon the town of the Ritualistic church. Let it stand in
+these pages as Bumsteadville. Possibly it was not known to the Romans,
+the Saxons, nor the Normans by that name, if by any name at all; but
+a name more or less weird and full of damp syllables can be of little
+moment to a place not owned by any advertising Suburban-Residence
+benefactors.</p>
+
+<p>A disagreeable and healthy suburb, Bumsteadville, with a strange odor of
+dried bones from its ancient pauper burial-ground, and many quaint
+old ruins in the shapes of elderly men engaged as contributors to the
+monthly magazines of the day. Antiquity pervades Bumsteadville; nothing
+is new; the very Rye is old; also the Jamaica, Santa Cruz, and a number
+of the native maids. A drowsy place, with all its changes lying far
+behind it; or, at least, the sun-browned mendicants passing through say
+they never saw a place offering so little present change.</p>
+
+<p>In the midst of Bumsteadville stands the Alms-House; a building of an
+antic order of architecture; still known by its original title to the
+paynobility and indigentry of the surrounding country, several of
+whose ancestors abode there in the days before voting was a certain
+livelihood; although now bearing a door-plate inscribed, "Macassar
+Female College, Miss CAROWTHERS." Whether any of the country editors,
+projectors of American Comic papers, and other inmates of the edifice in
+times of yore, ever come back in spirit to be astonished by the manner
+in which modern serious and humorous print can be made productive of
+anything but penury by publishing True Stories of Lord BYRON and the
+autobiographies of detached wives, maybe of interest to philosophers,
+but is of no account to Miss CAROWTHERS. Every day, during school-hours,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS, in spectacles and high-necked alpaca, preside over
+her Young Ladies of Fashion, with an austerity and elderliness
+before which every mental image of Man, even as the most poetical of
+abstractions, withers and dies. Every night, after the young ladies have
+retired, does Miss CAROWTHERS put on a freshening aspect, don a more
+youthful low-necked dress&mdash;</p>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<p> As though a rose<br>
+ Should leave its clothes<br>
+ And be a bud again,&mdash;</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p>and become a sprightlier Miss CAROWTHERS. Every night, at the same hour,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS discuss with her First Assistant, Mrs. PILLSBURY,
+the Inalienable Bights of Women; always making certain casual reference
+to a gentleman in the dim past, whom she was obliged to sue for breach
+of promise, and to whom, for that reason, Miss CAROWTHERS airily refers,
+with a toleration bred of the lapse of time, as "Breachy Mr. BLODGETT."</p>
+
+<p>The pet pupil of the Alms-House is FLORA POTTS, of course called the
+Flowerpot; for whom a husband has been chosen by the will and bequest of
+her departed papa, and at whom none of the other Macassar young ladies
+can look without wondering how it must feel. On the afternoon after the
+day of the dinner at the boarding-house, the Macassar front-door bell
+rings, and Mr. EDWIN DROOD is announced as waiting to see Miss FLORA.
+Having first rubbed her lips and cheeks, alternately, with her fingers,
+to make them red; held her hands above her head to turn back the
+circulation and make them white; and added a little lead-penciling to
+her eyebrows to make them black; the Flowerpot trips innocently down
+to the parlor, and stops short at some distance from the visitor in a
+curious sort of angular deflection from the perpendicular.</p>
+
+<p>"O, you absurd creature!" she says, placing a finger in her mouth and
+slightly wriggling at him. "To go and have to be married to me whether
+we want to or not! It's perfectly disgusting."</p>
+
+<p>"Our parents <i>did</i> rather come a little load on us," says EDWIN DROOD,
+not rendered enthusiastic by his reception.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't we get a <i>habeas corpus</i>, or some other ridiculous thing, and ask
+some perfectly absurd Judge to serve an injunction on somebody?" she
+asks, with pretty earnestness. "Don't, Eddy&mdash;do-o-n't." "Don't what,
+FLORA?" "Don't try to kiss me, please." "Why not, FLORA?" "Because I'm
+enameled." "Well, I do think," says EDWIN DROOD, "that you put on the
+Grecian Bend rather heavily with me. Perhaps I'd better go."</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't be so exquisitely hateful, Eddy. I got the gum-drops last
+night, and they were perfectly splendid."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's a comfort, at any rate," says her affianced, dimly
+conscious of a dawning civility in her last remark. "If it's really
+possible for you to walk on those high heels of yours, FLORA, let's try
+a promenade out-doors."</p>
+
+<p>Here Miss CAROWTHERS glides into the room to look for her scissors, is
+reminded by the scene before her of Breachy Mr. BLODGETT; whispers,
+"Don't trifle with her young affections, Mr. DROOD, unless you want to
+be sued, besides being interviewed by all the papers;" and glides out
+again with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>FLORA then puts upon her head a fig-leaf trimmed with lace and ribbon,
+and gets her hoop and stick from behind the hall-door. EDWIN DROOD takes
+from one of his pockets an india-rubber ball, to practice fly-catches
+with as he walks; and driving the hoop and throwing and catching the
+ball, the two go down the ancient turnpike of Bumsteadville together.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, please, EDDY, scrape yourself close to the fences, so that the
+girls can't see you out of the windows," pleads FLORA. "It's so utterly
+absurd to be walking with one that one's got to marry whether one likes
+it or not; and you do look so perfectly ridiculous in that short coat,
+and all your other things so tight."</p>
+
+<p>He gloomily scrapes against the fences, dropping his ball and catching
+it on the rebound at every step. "Which way shall we go?" "Up by the
+store, EDDY, dear."</p>
+
+<p>They go to the all-sorts country store in question, where EDWIN DROOD
+buys her some sassafras bull's-eye candy, and then they turn toward home
+again.</p>
+
+<p>"Now be a good-tempered EDDY," she says, trundling her hoop beside him,
+"and pretend that you aren't going to be my husband." "Not if I can help
+it," he says, catching the ball almost spitefully. "Then you're going to
+have somebody else?" "You make my head ache, so you do," whispers EDWIN
+DROOD. "I don't want to marry anybody at all!"</p>
+
+<p>She tickles him under the arm with her hoop-stick, and turns eyes that
+are all serious upon his. "I wish, EDDY, that we could be perfectly
+absurd friends to each other, instead of utterly ridiculous engaged
+people. It's exquisitely awful, you know, to have a husband picked out
+for you by dead folks, and I'm so sick about it sometimes that I hardly
+have the heart to fix my back-hair. Let each of us forbear, and stop
+teasing the other."</p>
+
+<p>Greatly pleased by this perfectly intelligent and forgiving arrangement,
+EDWIN DROOD says: "You're right, FLORA, Teasing is played out;" and
+drives his ball into a perfect frenzy of bounces.</p>
+
+<p>They have arrived near the Ritualistic church, through the windows of
+which come the organ-notes of one practising within. Something familiar
+in the grand air rolling out to them causes EDWIN DROOD to repeat,
+abstractedly, "I feel&mdash;I feel&mdash;I feel&mdash;-"</p>
+
+<p>FLORA, simultaneously affected in the same way, unconsciously
+murmurs,&mdash;-"I feel like a morning star."</p>
+
+<p>They then join hands, under the same irresistible spell, and take
+dancing steps, humming, in unison, "Shoo, fly! don't bodder me."</p>
+
+<p>"That's JACK BUMSTEAD'S playing," whispers EDWIN DROOD; "and he must be
+breathing this way, too, for I can smell the cloves."</p>
+
+<p>"O, take me home," cries FLORA, suddenly throwing her hoop over the
+young man's neck, and dragging him violently after her. "I think cloves
+are perfectly disgusting."</p>
+
+<p>At the door of the Alms-House the pretty Flowerpot blows a kiss to
+EDWIN, and goes in. He makes one trial of his ball against the door, and
+goes off. She is an in-fant, he Js an off-'un.</p>
+
+<br><<br><br>
+
+<p>CHAPTER IV.</p>
+
+<p>MR. SWEENEY.</p>
+
+<p>Accepting the New American Cyclopædia as a fair standard of
+stupidity&mdash;although the prejudice, perhaps, may arise rather from the
+irascibility of the few using it as a reference, than from the calm
+judgment of the many employing it to fill-out a showy book-case&mdash;then
+the newest and most American Cyclopædist in Bumsteadville is Judge
+SWEENEY.</p>
+
+<p>[Footnote: Mr. SAPBEA, the original of this character In Mr. DICKENS'
+romance, is an auctioneer. The present Adapter can think of no nearer
+American equivalent, in the way of a person at once resident in a suburb
+and who sells to the highest bidder, than a supposable member of the New
+York judiciary.]</p>
+
+<p>It is Judge SWEENEY'S pleasure to found himself upon Father DEAN, whom
+he greatly resembles in the intellectual details of much forehead,
+stomach, and shirt-collar. When upon the bench in the city, even,
+granting an injunction in favor of some railroad company in which he
+owns a little stock, he frequently intones his accompanying remarks
+with an ecclesiastical solemnity eminently calculated to suppress every
+possible tendency to levity in the assembled lawyers; and his discharge
+from arrest of any foreign gentleman brought before him for illegal
+voting, has often been found strikingly similar in sound to a pastoral
+Benediction.</p>
+
+<p>That Judge SWEENEY has many admirers, is proved by the immense local
+majority electing him to judicial eminence; and that the admiration is
+mutual is likewise proved by his subsequent appreciative dismissal of
+certain frivolous complaints against a majority of that majority
+for trifling misapprehensions of the Registry law. He is a portly,
+double-chinned man of about fifty, with a moral cough, eye-glasses
+making even his red nose seem ministerial, and little gold ballot-boxes,
+locomotives, and five-dollar pieces, hanging as "charms" from the chain
+of his Repeater.</p>
+
+<p>Judge SWEENEY'S villa is on the turnpike, opposite the Alms-House, with
+doors and shutters giving in whichever direction they are opened; and he
+is sitting near a table, with a sheet of paper in his hand, and a bowl
+of warm lemon tea before him, when his servant-girl announces "Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."</p>
+
+<p>"Happy to see you, sir, in my house, for the first time," is Judge
+SWEENEY'S hospitable greeting.</p>
+
+<p>"You honor me, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, whose eyes are set, as though he
+were in some kind of a fit, and who shakes hands excessively. "You are
+a good man, sir. How do you do, sir? Shake hands again, sir. I am very
+well, sir, I thank you. Your hand, sir. I'll stand by you, sir&mdash;though I
+never spoke t' you b'fore in my life. Let us shake hands, sir."</p>
+
+<p>But instead of waiting for this last shake, Mr. BUMSTEAD abruptly turns
+away to the nearest chair, deposits his hat in the very middle of the
+seat with great care, and recklessly sits down upon it.</p>
+
+<p>The lemon tea in the bowl upon the table is a fruity compound,
+consisting of two very thin slices of lemon, which are maintained in
+horizontal positions, for the free action of the air upon their upper
+surfaces, by a pint of whiskey procured for that purpose. About half a
+pint of hot water has been added to help soften the rind of the lemon,
+and a portion of sugar to correct its acidity.</p>
+
+<p>With a wave of the hand toward this tropical preserve, Judge SWEENEY
+says: "You have a reputation, sir, as a man of taste. Try some lemon
+tea."</p>
+
+<p>Energetically, if not frantically, his guest holds out a tumbler to be
+filled, immediately after which he insists upon shaking hands again.
+"You're a man of insight, sir," he says, working Judge SWEENEY back and
+forth in his chair. "I <i>am</i> a man of taste, sir, and you know the world,
+sir."</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>World</i>?" says Judge SWEENEY, complacently. "If you mean the
+religious female daily paper of that name, I certainly do know it. I
+used to take it for my late wife when she was trying to learn Latin."</p>
+
+<p>"I mean the terrestrial globe, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, irritably.
+"The great spherical foundation, sir, upon which Boston has since been
+built."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I see," says Judge SWEENEY, genially, "I believe, though, that I
+know that world, also, pretty well; for, if I have not exactly been to
+foreign countries, foreign countries have come to me. They have come to
+me on&mdash;hem!&mdash;business, and I have improved my opportunities. A man comes
+to me from a vessel, and I say 'Cork,' and give him Naturalization
+Certificates for himself and his friends. Another comes, and I say
+'Dublin;' another, and I say 'Belfast.' If I want to travel still
+further, I take them all together and say 'the Polls.'"</p>
+
+<p>"You'll do to travel, sir," responds Mr. BUMSTEAD, abstractedly helping
+himself to some more lemon tea; "but I thought we were to talk about the
+late Mrs. SWEENEY."</p>
+
+<p>"We were, sir," says Judge SWEENEY, abstractedly removing the bowl to a
+sideboard on his farther side. "My late wife, young man, as you may be
+aware, was a Miss HAGGERTY, and was imbued with homage to Shape. It was
+rumored, sir, that she admired me for my Manly Shape. When I offered to
+make her my bride, the only words she could articulate were, "O, my!
+<i>I</i>?"&mdash;meaning that she could scarcely believe that I really meant
+<i>her</i>. After which she fell into strong hysterics. We were married,
+despite certain objections on the score of temperance by that corrupt
+Radical, her father. From looking up to me too much she contracted an
+affection of the spine, and died about nine months ago. Now, sir, be
+good enough to run your eye over this Epitaph, which I have composed for
+the monument now erecting to her memory."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. BUMSTEAD, rousing from a doze for the purpose, fixes glassy eyes
+upon the slip of paper held out to him, and reads as follows:</p>
+
+<p> MARY ANN,</p>
+
+<p> Unlitigating and Unliterary Wife of</p>
+
+<p> HIS HONOR, JUDGE SWEENEY.</p>
+
+<p> In the darkest hours of</p>
+
+<p> Her Husband's fortunes</p>
+
+<p> She was never once tempted to Write for</p>
+
+<p> THE TRIBUNE, THE INDEPENDENT, or THE RIVERSIDE MAGAZINE:</p>
+
+<p> Nor did even a disappointment about a</p>
+
+<p> new bonnet ever induce her to</p>
+
+<p> threaten her husband with</p>
+
+<p> AN INDIANA DIVORCE.</p>
+
+<p> STRANGER, PAUSE,</p>
+
+<p> and consider if thou canst say</p>
+
+<p> the same about</p>
+
+<p> THINE OWN WIFE!</p>
+
+<p> If not,</p>
+
+<p> WITH A RUSH RETIRE.</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, affected to tears, interspersed with nods, by his reading,
+has barely time to mutter that such a wife was too good to live long in
+these days, when the servant announces that "MCLAUGHLIN has come, sir."</p>
+
+<p>JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, who now enters, is a stone-cutter and mason, much
+employed in patching dilapidated graves and cutting inscriptions,
+and popularly known in Bumsteadville, on account of the dried mortar
+perpetually hanging about him, as "Old Mortarity." He is a ricketty man,
+with a chronic disease called bar-roomatism, and so very grave-yardy in
+his very '<i>Hic</i>' that one almost expects a <i>jacet</i> to follow it as a
+matter of course.</p>
+
+<p>"JOHN MCLAUGHLIN," says Judge SWEENEY, handing him the paper with the
+Epitaph, "there is the inscription for the stone."</p>
+
+<p>"I guess I can get it all on, sir," says MCLAUGHLIN. "Your servant, Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how are you?" says Mr. BUMSTEAD, his hand with the
+tumbler vaguely wandering toward where the bowl formerly stood. "By the
+way, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how came you to be called 'Old Mortarity'? It
+has a drunken sound, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, like one of Sir WALTER SCOTT'S
+characters disguised in liquor."</p>
+
+<p>"Never you mind about that," says MCLAUGHLIN. "I carry the keys of the
+Bumsteadville[1] churchyard vaults, and can tell to an atom, by a tap
+of my trowel, how fast a skeleton is dropping to dust in the pauper
+burial-ground. That's more than they can do who call me names." With
+which ghastly speech JOHN MCLAUGHLIN retires unceremoniously from the
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Judge SWEENEY now attempts a game of backgammon with the man of taste,
+but becomes discouraged after Mr. BUMSTEAD has landed the dice in his
+vest-opening three times running and fallen heavily asleep in the middle
+of a move. An ensuing potato salad is made equally discouraging by
+Mr. BUMSTEAD'S persistent attempts to cut up his handkerchief in it.
+Finally, Mr. BUMSTEAD[2] wildly finds his way to his feet, is plunged
+into profound gloom at discovering the condition of his hat, attempts to
+leave the room by each of the windows and closets in succession, and at
+last goes tempestuously through the door by accident.</p>
+
+<p>[<i>To be Continued.</i>]</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>
+Wanted for the Lecture-Room.</h3>
+
+<p>Beloit, in Wisconsin, boasts a wife who has not spoken to her husband
+for fifteen years. Fifteen long years! Happy man!&mdash;happy woman! No
+insanity, no divorce, no murder, but Silence. Why isn't this wondrous
+woman brought to the platform, Miss ANTHONY?</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<p>[Footnote 1: Certain fancied points of resemblance having led some
+persons to suppose that Bumsteadville means Rochester, the Adapter is
+impelled to declare that such is <i>not</i> the case.]</p>
+
+<p>[Footnote 2: In compliance with the modern demand for fine realistic
+accuracy in art, the Adapter, previous to making his delineation of Mr.
+BUMSTEAD public, submitted it to the judgment of a physician having
+a large practice amongst younger journalists and Members of the
+Legislature. This authority, after due critical inspection,
+pronounced it psychologically correct as a study of monomania a potu.]</p>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<center>
+<img alt="003.jpg (189K)" src="images/003.jpg" height="807" width="644">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+<center><h2>
+THE JOYS OF SUMMER.</h2></center>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+
+
+<p> I've Had my annual dream<br>
+ Of boats and fishing, Congress-water, cream,<br>
+ Strawberry-shortcake, lager-bier, iced punch,<br>
+ And lobster-salad lunch.</p>
+
+<p> It came about midday,<br>
+ Toward the latter part of "flowering May"&mdash;<br>
+ When nothing's fit to eat, or drink, or wear,<br>
+ And nothing suits but air.</p>
+
+<p> Let Summer come! said I;<br>
+ Let <i>something</i> happen quick, or I shall die!<br>
+ I want to change my diet, clothes,&mdash;my skin,&mdash;<br>
+ <i>Myself</i>, if not a sin!</p>
+
+<p> (<i>One</i> thing, I would remark,<br>
+ I didn't dream of: that was Central Park.)<br>
+ All these (the Park included) I have had;<br>
+ Of course you think I'm glad.</p>
+
+<p> No, I can't say I am.<br>
+ Your summer, I must tell you, is a sham!<br>
+ I <i>might</i>, perhaps, have some poetic flights,<br>
+ If I could sleep o' nights!</p>
+
+<p> But who on earth <i>can</i> sleep<br>
+ When the thermometer's so awful steep?<br>
+ The night, if anything, (at least <i>our</i> way,)<br>
+ Is hotter than the day!</p>
+
+<p> And then&mdash;my stars!&mdash;<i>oh</i>, then!<br>
+ When sleep would kindly visit weary men,<br>
+ The dread mosquito stings away his rest.<br>
+ Ah-h-h! <i>curse</i> that pest!</p>
+
+<p> But breakfast comes,&mdash;so soon<br>
+ You almost wish they'd put it off till noon!<br>
+ Five minutes' sleep&mdash;no appetite&mdash;no force:<br>
+ You're jolly, now, of course!</p>
+
+<p> You sip your breakfast tea&mdash;<br>
+ If with your qualmy stomach 'twill agree,<br>
+ Or your weak coffee,&mdash;weighing, with dismay,<br>
+ The prospects of the day.</p>
+
+<p> Hot! you may well say Hot,<br>
+ When Blistering would hit it to a dot!<br>
+ The cheerful round is brilliantly begun&mdash;<br>
+ And everything "well done."</p>
+
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.</h2>
+
+<p><i>Down East</i>.&mdash;"The Earthly Paradise" is published in Boston. The scene
+of the poem is laid elsewhere.</p>
+
+<p><i>Miner</i>.&mdash;"Pan in Wall Street" was written by E.C. STEDMAN. The pan
+spoken of is not suitable for miners' use.</p>
+
+<p><i>Autograph Collector</i> says that he has seen in the papers such
+statements as the following: "LOWELL'S Under the Willows," "WHITTIER'S
+Among the Hills," "PUMPELLY'S Across America and Asia." A.C. wants the
+post-office address of either or all of tho gentlemen named. We are
+unable to give the information desired.</p>
+
+<p><i>Constant Reader</i>.&mdash;What is the meaning of the word "Herc"?</p>
+
+<p><i>Answer</i>.&mdash;It is the popular name of one of our Assurance Companies,
+only known to its intimate friends. The other name is the "<i>Hercules</i>."</p>
+
+<p><i>Erie</i>.&mdash;You have been misinformed. Mr. FISK neither appeared as an
+Admiral, nor as one of the "Twelve Temptations," at the Reception of the
+Ninth Regiment.</p>
+
+<p><i>Inquirer</i>.&mdash;The free translation of the legend, "<i>Ratione aut vi</i>," on
+the Ninth Regiment Badge, is "Strong in rations."</p>
+
+<p><i>Wall Street</i> asks, "Who are interested in PUNCHINELLO?" Though the
+question is not very business-like, we reply, "Every one;" and we are
+receiving fresh acquisitions daily.</p>
+
+<p><i>Bergh</i>.&mdash;Was the English nightingale ever introduced into this country?</p>
+
+<p><i>Answer</i>.&mdash;We cannot say. You had better go to FLORENCE for information
+on the subject.</p>
+
+<p><i>R.G. White</i>.&mdash;It was a happy thought of yours to apply to PUNCHINELLO
+for information regarding Shaksperean readings. To your first question,
+"Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a gourmand?" we reply: undoubtedly he
+was. By adopting what is obviously the correct reading of the
+passage&mdash;"Shadows to-night," etc., it will be seen that "DICKON" was
+occasionally a sufferer from heavy suppers:</p>
+
+<p> &mdash;&mdash;"Shad-roes to-night
+ Have struck more terror to the soul of RICHARD."</p>
+
+<p>Then, to your second query, "Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a cannibal?"
+our answer is: Certainly he was. Following the above quotation we have
+the line, "Than can the substance," etc. The proper reading is:</p>
+
+<p> "Then Can the substance of ten thousand soldiers."</p>
+
+<p>Famine was staring RICHARD'S army in the face, so that nothing could
+be more natural and proper than that he should have issued orders to
+butcher ten thousand of his lower soldiers, and have their meat canned
+for the subsistence of his "Upper Ten!"</p>
+
+<p><i>Knife</i>.&mdash;You have been misinformed. General BUTLER was not a
+participator in the Battle of Five Forks, though more than that number
+of Spoons has been laid to his charge.</p>
+
+<p><i>Anxious Parent</i>.&mdash;Probably the publication to which you refer is the
+one entitled "Freedom of the Mind in Willing," not "Freedom of the Will
+in Minding." It is not written for the encouragement of recalcitrant
+boys.</p>
+
+<p><i>Confectioner</i>, (San Francisco.)&mdash;Mr. BEECHER, who wrote the article on
+candy, in the <i>Ledger</i>, lives in Brooklyn, a town of some importance not
+far from this city.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>
+The Nose and the Rose.</h3>
+
+<p>The pink-lined parasols now in fashion were devised by some thoughtful
+improver of woman, to enhance beauty by imparting a roseate hue to the
+complexion. Unfortunately, however, the reflection from the pink
+silk does not always reach the face at the right angle. Sometimes it
+concentrates altogether upon the most prominent feature of the face, and
+then "Red in the Nose is She" becomes applicable to the bearer of the
+parasol. <i>Couleur de rose</i> is an expression for all that is lovely and
+serene, but the rose must not be worn on the nose.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>
+Going him one Better.</h3>
+
+<p>The only difference between the Colossus of Rhodes and King HENRY VIII
+was that while Colossus was only a <i>won</i>der, King H. was a <i>Tu</i>dor.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.</h2>
+
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<img alt="004.jpg (50K)" src="images/004.jpg" height="451" width="310">
+
+</td><td>
+<p>R. J. H. M'VICKER has for some years past conducted a Chicago theatre,
+of which he has been lessee, manager, and stock company. The Chicago
+people have liked M'VICKER'S Theatre, because it has occasionally
+treated them to the novel sensation of a comparatively moral
+performance. Occasional morality deftly inserted in the midst of a
+season of seductive legs, produces the same effect upon a Chicago
+audience that a naughty <i>opera bouffe</i> does upon the New York lovers
+of the legitimate drama. In either case there is the charm of foreign
+novelty; a charm, however, which soon loses its attraction. <i>Opera
+bouffe</i> in New York, and the moral drama in Chicago, can enjoy but a
+temporary success. The former city will always return to its love of
+standard comedies and SHAKSPEAREAN tragedies, and the latter will sooner
+or later clamor for its accustomed legs and its favorite dramas of
+bigamy and divorce.</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p>Mr. M'VICKER, having read of the MCFARLAND trial, immediately conceived
+the happy idea that the time had come when a Chicago actor would please
+a New York audience. Ha therefore flew to this city, by way of the
+Mississippi river and the New Orleans and Havana steamships, and last
+week made a debut at BOOTH'S Theatre. With an astuteness which reflects
+great credit upon his ability as a manager, he astonished the audience,
+which had assembled to be shocked by a genuine Chicago performance,
+by playing a part which fairly bristles with unnecessarily obtrusive
+morality. Thus did he present a double attraction. A Chicago actor would
+have been sure, in any case, of the support of the Free Love Press; but
+a moral Chicago actor is a surprise which appeals irresistibly to the
+love of novelty which exists in the theatre-going breast. The play
+in which he made his first appearance here, is entitled "Taking the
+Chances," and is from the pen of Mr. CHARLES GAYLER, to whom Dr. WATTS
+so beautifully referred in those touching verses:</p>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<p> "Gayler, the Troubadour,<br>
+ Touched his guitar,"</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p>&mdash;and further language to a like effect. Mr. M'VICKER sustained the
+character of "PETER POMEROY," one of those oppressive rural Yankees
+whose mission seems to be to drive young men into the paths of vice, by
+representing virtue as inextricably associated with home-spun garments,
+and the manners of an uneducated bull in an unprotected china shop. The
+following version of the play will be recognized as literally exact, by
+all who have not seen the original.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+Taking the Chances.</h2>
+
+<p>ACT I.</p>
+
+<p>MR. POMEROY, <i>a Preposterous Uncle, who regards his nephew</i>, PETER, <i>as
+a desirable person.</i> "My dear PETER will he here in a few moments. His
+presence will be a real blessing."</p>
+
+<p>MRS. POMEROY. "I am sorry to hear it. He breaks furniture and things,
+and I don't like him."</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> IRRELEVANT PEOPLE, <i>who make unnecessary remarks, and obviously
+exist only to meet</i> PETER. <i>Finally</i> PETER <i>enters, in butternut
+clothing and a condition of chronic moral perfection.</i></p>
+
+<p>PETER. "Jewhillikins! Haow de du, Unkil? Haow are ye, Aunt DEB? Haow is
+everybody? Our pigs and chickens and garden-sass is all doin' well."
+&mdash;<i>Falls on a chair.</i></p>
+
+<p>PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE. "Dear, noble, manly fellow."</p>
+
+<p>EVERYBODY ELSE. "Unbearable brute."</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> BLANCHE POMEROY. "Do I see my dear cousin? I am glad to see you,
+but please don't tear all of my dress to pieces."</p>
+
+<p>PETER. "<i>Jewhillikins!</i>" "You used to not to mind abaout havin' your
+frock torn when you was up at Graniteville. But I s'pose society has
+sp'iled you."</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN, <i>and whispers to</i> BLANCHE&mdash;"To-night you must
+fly with me. We have not a moment to lose."</p>
+
+<p>PETER. "<i>Jewhillikins!</i> That is the chap that deserted his wife in
+Graniteville? I'll fix him."</p>
+
+<p>PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "What do I see? A virtuous rustic? Confusion! Can he
+suspect me?"</p>
+
+<p>PETER <i>devotes himself to the virtuous task of insulting every person in
+the room, thereby proving how much superior a cow-boy from New Hampshire
+is to the wretched resident of the city, whom fate has made a base
+and villainous gentleman. The</i> PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN <i>goes through with
+a complicated fit of St. Vitus's Dance, by way of preserving a cool
+exterior, and thus allaying the suspicions of</i> PETER. <i>Various</i> TEDIOUS
+PEOPLE <i>enter and converse tediously with the</i> IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. <i>After
+a time the stage-carpenters suddenly decide to lower the curtain, and
+thus put an end to an act that might otherwise go on forever.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+ACT II.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> PETER. "Jewhillikins! This is a nice garden. What pesky villains
+all these people must be, considerin' that they wear good clothes and
+don't break the furnitoor. There's that chap that deserted his wife.
+I'll fix him."&mdash;<i>Hides himself in an arbor.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.&mdash;"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? In
+order to avert suspicion, I will confide everything to the friendly
+air."&mdash;<i>Relates his past life and future plans, at the top of his lungs,
+and then returns to the house.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE, <i>and various</i> TEDIOUS PEOPLE, <i>who all want
+to marry</i> BLANCHE. <i>They converse tediously and go away again. Applause!
+Enter</i> BLANCHE <i>and</i> PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.</p>
+
+<p>PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.&mdash;"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? BLANCHE, we
+must fly to-night. Not a moment is to be lost."</p>
+
+<p><i>Re-enter</i> PETER. "Jewhillikins! BLANCHE, I want to talk a spell with
+yon."&mdash;To PLAUSTBLE VILLAIN "Go into the haouse, will you?"&mdash;<i>He goes</i>.</p>
+
+<p>BLANCHE, "What do you want, PETER? Why do you tear my dress, and scratch
+your head so persistently?"</p>
+
+<p>PETER. "Jewhillikins! That feller you love is a scoundrel. I'll prove
+it. Will you believe it after it's proved?"</p>
+
+<p>BLANCHE, (<i>With a fine sense of what is truly womanly</i>.) "Of course I
+won't believe it. I despise proofs and arguments."</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> TEDIOUS PEOPLE <i>and</i> IREELEVANT PEOPLE. <i>They converse more
+tediously and irrelevantly than before. At last the carpenters, who have
+been out for beer, return and drop the curtain.</i></p>
+
+<p>
+ACT III.</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> PETER, <i>in the clothes of an ordinary Christian. He practices a
+frightful dance, and remarks at intervals,</i> "Jewhillikins."</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> BLANCHE <i>and</i> PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. <i>The latter notices</i> PETER,
+<i>with convulsive alarm.</i></p>
+
+<p>PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "Confusion! Can he suspect me? BLANCHE, we must fly
+at once. There is not a moment to lose."</p>
+
+<p><i>Enter</i> EVERYBODY. <i>A quadrille is formed.</i> PETER <i>dances and falls
+over everybody else. The quadrille ends.</i> PETER <i>rises and remarks,
+"Jewhillikins." He goes out and returns, bringing the</i> PLAUSIBLE
+VILLAIN'S <i>wife with him. The</i> PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN <i>repents.</i> BLANCHE
+<i>consents to marry</i> PETER. <i>Various preposterous engagements are entered
+into by the</i> TEDIOUS <i>and the</i> IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. <i>And at last the play
+is over.</i></p>
+
+<p>COMIC MAN <i>among the audience.</i> "Why should M'VICKER think a man a
+scoundrel, who deserts his wife and tries to marry another? Don't he
+come from Chicago?"</p>
+
+<p>2D COMIC MAN.&mdash;"Don't SHERIDAN," (who plays the PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN,)
+"look as if he wished he were 'twenty miles away' when PETER denounces
+him?"</p>
+
+<p>And the bystanders smile weakly, as though they had heard a good joke on
+SHERIDAN, and retire slowly toward their homes, evidently exhausted by
+the oppressive virtue of the intolerable Yankee boor, whom M'VICKER
+plays so well that the respectable portion of the audience is almost
+inclined to overlook the wretchedness of the part in admiration of the
+skill of the actor.</p>
+
+<p>MATADOR.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>
+Cue-rious Rumor.</h3>
+
+<p>That the Sound steamers are to be furnished with billiard tables for
+the amusement of passengers between New York and Boston. This report,
+however, is flatly contradicted, and we have neither charity nor chalk
+for the man who would make a statement so groundless.<br>
+GEORGE FRANCIS, THE UBIQUITOUS.</p>
+
+<p>Amidst all the chances and changes of this chequered, and, in some
+respects, lugubrious life, Mr. PUNCHINELLO has the perennial consolation
+of one friendship, which promises to be immortal, and over which time
+and space hold no sway. Need we say that we are alluding to the tender
+emotions which crowd our bosom whenever we hear of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN! And lest our love for him should grow colder, this considerate
+gentleman allows us to hear from him almost daily. To be sure he is like
+some great antediluvian grasshopper, and seems capable of spanning this
+almost boundless continent at a leap. He is in Maine in the morning&mdash;he
+is making a speech in Minnesota when the evening shades prevail; but
+wherever he is, the roll of his eloquence reaches us, and however busy
+he may be, he is never too busy to write letters to tho newspapers. The
+great man comes very near to solving the problem heretofore considered
+insoluble, of being in two places at once. Two, did we say? Absurd!
+Three, four, five, half a dozen! What a man! Jumping here! Leaping
+there! Skipping North! Vaulting South! Skimming (like a CAMILLA in
+pantaloons) over the plains of the West! Then, as if by magic, whirling
+himself to the East! A man, did we say? Bah! GEORGE FRANCIS is clearly
+one of the immortals.</p>
+
+<p>Clearly! JUPITER used to be rather lavish of electricity, but he did but
+a small retail business in it, compared with our dear GEORGE FRANCIS,
+the demi-god, who, when he is not talking with sublime garrulity, is
+telegraphing without regard to expense. Evidently it has dawned upon the
+mind (if he has any,) of this extraordinary being, that the world, in
+none of its quarters, can get along without him, and that the newspaper
+which does not mention his name must be stale, flat, and unprofitable.
+Wherefore he takes order that every newspaper shall print the wonderful
+name as often as possible. Whether he be laughed at, sneered at, sworn
+at, the virtue of the mere mention remains the same.</p>
+
+<p>The last we heard from GEORGE FRANCIS, he was, (to use his own choice
+language,) "away up here on the Chippewa," beseeching the lumber men,
+with all the charm of his inimitable eloquence, to vote him into the
+Presidential chair. "I am waking up these boys for 1872," writes the
+valuable phenomenon. Unto "millers, rafters, choppers, and jammers,"
+this Fountain of Oratory has gushed forth his "four hundred and
+twenty-first consecutive Presidential lecture." Imagine a possible scene
+upon a raft! GEORGE FRANCIS, mounted upon a whiskey-barrel, is making
+all the air resonant with rhetoric. The "rafters" are swearing!
+The "choppers" are cursing! The "jammers" are most reprehensibly
+blaspheming! The enormous mass floats onward, and "TRAIN!" the floods,
+"TRAIN!" the forests, "TRAIN!" the overarching skies resound! No
+miserable hall, no narrow street, no "pent-up Utica" contracts the
+power of this miraculous elocutionist&mdash;his auditorium seems to be a
+hemisphere&mdash;his audience all mankind! ORPHEUS singing moved rocks
+and trees. Great GEORGE spouting subdues all the inhabitants of the
+wilderness. Timid deer trip to the shore to listen; ferocious bears,
+catching the echo, shed tears of penitence; all creatures of the roaring
+kind acknowledge themselves surpassed and silenced; the whispering pines
+whisper all the more softly, as if ashamed of their own verbal weakness.
+All speeches, even the speeches of a TRAIN, must come to an end; and
+having ended, the floating DEMOSTHENES sits down to write to the
+newspapers, that he has just been delivered of his four-hundred-and-
+twenty-second, and is as well as could be expected.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. PUNCHINELLO has, in his day, been considered talkative; but he
+feels, as he listens to GEORGE FRANCIS, that he is himself a marvel of
+taciturnity&mdash;that in the noble art of sounding his own trumpet he is
+a mere child&mdash;that as a contributor to the public amusement he is in
+danger of falling into paltry insignificance. Alas! he is not the
+marvellous mountebank which he has heretofore considered himself to be;
+and the nonsense upon which he so prided himself, in comparison with
+the nonsense of GEORGE FRANCIS, sinks into the most melancholy and
+insufferable wisdom. He looks forward to the future with a fear lest he
+may descend to the depths of serious and slow solemnity. When he has
+arrived at that deplorable stage of decay, he wishes it to be understood
+that his drum and trumpet are at the service of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN.</p>
+
+<br><br><br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="005.jpg (115K)" src="images/005.jpg" height="674" width="518">
+</center>
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+ASSOCIATED PRESS TELEGRAMS.</h2>
+
+<p>It is well known that there is a leak in the Associated Press Office. In
+point of fact there always is a leak. Why any one should think it worth
+while to steal the Associated Press cable dispatches is a mystery,
+when they could be manufactured in any newspaper office with much less
+trouble. The following dispatches are a fair sample of the ordinary
+cable news which is sent to the Association. "We need hardly say that
+they were not stolen from Mr. SIMONTON, but we will say, as we
+have already said, that there is a leak. A word to the wise is
+sufficient&mdash;though, of course, by the expression, 'the wise,' we do not
+mean any reference to the London agent of the Associated Press."</p>
+
+<p>
+LONDON, June 6. The <i>Times</i> of to-day has a paragraph on the big trees
+of California.</p>
+
+<p>MR. SMALLEY denies that he ever wore a hat resembling that of GUSTAVE
+FLOURENS.</p>
+
+<p>A boy has been arrested for picking pockets in Oxford Street.</p>
+
+<p>JOHN SMITH, proprietor of a coffee and cake saloon in Ratcliffe Highway,
+has gone into bankruptcy.</p>
+
+<p>It is believed that if the Tories should oust the present cabinet, they
+would come into power.</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>PARIS, June 7. There are rumors as to the health of the Emperor
+NAPOLEON.</p>
+
+<p>Yesterday a man is said to have cried, "<i>Vive la Republique!</i>" in his
+back-yard.</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>ROME, June, 8. The Ecumenical Council is still in session.</p>
+
+<p>There are more strangers in Rome than there have been at times when the
+number was less.</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>ALEXANDRIA, June 8. Several vessels have passed through the Suez Canal
+since its completion.</p>
+
+<p>The Suez Canal is by some regarded as a success. Others think it a
+failure.</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>CALCUTTA, June 6. A native was killed by a tiger near Bundelcund
+eighteen months ago.</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>YOKOHAMA, June 6. The P. &amp; O. Steamer Bombay has run down and sunk the
+U.S. Sloop Oneida.</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>ST. PETERSBURGH, June 7. Some discontent was caused by the emancipation
+of the serfs.</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>BERLIN, June 8. BISMARCK has notified the Upper House that no
+exemplification of the categorical plebiscitum will be favorably
+entertained or rejected.</p>
+<br><br>
+<p>In view of these important dispatches, PUNCHINELLO respectfully suggests
+to Mr. SIMONTON, that instead of trying to put an end to the stealing of
+his news, he put a peremptory end to the London agent of the Associated
+Press. Otherwise the agent will soon put an end to the Association. One
+or the other event must take place, and it is only a question of time
+which shall occur first.
+<br><br><br><br>
+
+<center>
+<img alt="006.jpg (280K)" src="images/006.jpg" height="730" width="1031">
+</center>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+COMIC ZOOLOGY.</h2>
+
+<p>The Boa Constrictor.</p>
+
+<p>Oriental tourists claim to have met with specimens of this reptile one
+hundred feet in length, but as travellers are proverbially prone to
+stretch their tales, narrative of this character must not be too readily
+swallowed. He is found in India, all along the course of the Hooghly,
+and is hugely superior in strength and size to all the other reptiles of
+Asia. His habitat is usually up a tree, where he lies in ambush, and
+he forages, and has for ages, on the nobler quadrupeds; seldom letting
+himself down to make a "picked-up dinner" on the lower animals.
+Sometimes, however, when tormented with an "all-gone sensation" in the
+pit of his stomach, he descends to dine on a high-caste Brahmin and to
+sup on a Gentoo.</p>
+
+<p>The skin of the Boa has a silky sheen, like that of the finest Rep, and,
+when taking a nap in the sun, his Damascened appearance may remind the
+pious spectator of a scene damned by the intrusion of a similar reptile
+several thousand years ago.</p>
+
+<p>The Boa Constrictor is not a fascinating snake&mdash;far from it. He relies
+on his muscles and not on his charms, for support. His appetite is
+vigorous, and the manner in which he disposes of his tid-bits, such
+as the larger carnivora, may be described as glutenous. Much has been
+written of the creature, but a glance at his enormous volume will give a
+truer idea of him than anything that has ever issued from the press.
+He serves the body of an animal, before devouring it, as mercenary
+politicians serve the body politic&mdash;crushing it with many Rings. By the
+keepers of menageries he is often called the Boa <i>Constructor</i>, but the
+name more aptly applies to the Furrier who simulates his shape on a
+small scale; the creature having no mechanical skill whatever.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally, from some branch that overhangs a <i>Nullah</i>, he will drop
+down on the thirsty eland or hartbeest, rendering resistance a Nullity;
+but his favorite game is fighting the tiger, at which, unlike the human
+species, he always wins when in the vein for that kind of sport. All the
+beasts of the jungle fear him&mdash;the wolf feeling no disposition to seek
+his folds, and the leopard frequently changing his spots to avoid him.
+Whatever his quarry may be, its sands are soon run out.</p>
+
+<p>The Boa, like other gourmands, is fond of gourmand-ease. After having
+put a victim through the mill and bolted him for a meal, the monster may
+be discovered (or he may not) on some knoll in the forest, indulging in
+somnolency. He can then be assailed with safety, but as his breath is a
+horrible fetor, a spice (of caution) should be used in approaching him.
+The windward side is best. As he lies limber, smelling like Limburger,
+a hatchet will be found a first-chop weapon of assault. The Hindoos,
+however, generally double him up with Creeses. Cutting off the
+creature's tail, just behind the jaws, is a pretty sure way to
+ex-terminate him. There are on record several instances of Boas having
+been despatched in this way by Ruthless adventurers.</p>
+
+<p>The reptile abounds in Ceylon, and is considered a delicacy by the
+Cingalese, but the civilized stomach would probably find Double Ease in
+letting it alone. <i>Cotelette de Constrictor</i>, however pleasant to the
+Pagan palate, would scarcely go down with a Christian.</p>
+
+<p>High old stories of the Boa have been obtained by travellers, from the
+Asiatics. They resemble those of the fabled dragon and hippogriff, and
+as they generally relate to the ravaging of whole districts by the
+voracious monster, a heap o' grief is connected with some of them. The
+gum-game, however, is much in vogue in India, and most of these snake
+stories may be characterized as India Rubbish.</p>
+
+<p>The great Boa is a native of Southern Africa as well as of Asia, and is
+much dreaded by all the Dutch Boers. The creature is reported to have
+been seen in crossing the interior deserts, but this is believed to be
+a fiction invented in the Caravans. In Congo there is a small species a
+few sizes larger than the Conger eel, while in the section of country
+visited by CUMMING the Boa is the biggest serpent Going.</p>
+
+<p>There are stupendous snakes in the islands of the Indian Archipelago,
+and a Yankee skipper who lived a year among the natives informs us that
+he "once saw some arter a boa in Sumatra." The skipper, however, is a
+small joker, and always ready to Sacrifice Truth on the Alter Ego of a
+miserable pun. A vile habit this, but one that it is to be feared will
+never be abandoned.</p>
+
+<p>The skin of the Boa is rarely embroidered with purple and gold, but,
+like many a priestly hypocrite, he hides under the livery of heaven the
+instincts of the Devil. And so we dismiss him.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>
+BITTER SARCASM</h3>
+
+<p>Canadians pronounce the sacred word "Sunburst" "Shunburst."</p>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="007.jpg (260K)" src="images/007.jpg" height="960" width="702">
+</center>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.</h2>
+
+<h3>SENATE.</h3>
+
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<img alt="008.jpg (86K)" src="images/008.jpg" height="599" width="410">
+</td><td>
+<p>Ind-Hearted Mr. CHANDLER had a proposition "which would restore American
+commerce to its former footing." It was simply to annex San Domingo,
+Cuba, and Canada. He repudiated with scorn and disgust the insinuation
+that he proposed to pay anything for them. That was foreign to his
+nature. He meant merely to take them. By this means they would not only
+restore American commerce&mdash;he din't profess to know exactly how&mdash;but
+they would inflict a deadly blow upon haughty England. At this point Mr.
+CHANDLER became incoherent, the only intelligible remark which reached
+the reporters, being that he could "lick" Queen VICTORIA single-handed.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. SUMNER remarked that a war with England would be costly.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. CHANDLER declined to accept any suggestion from a man who went to
+diplomatic dinners, and consorted with Englishmen. He had been told that
+at these dinners, to which he was proud to say he had never gone, and to
+which, while the custom of issuing invitations prevailed, he never
+would go, Mr. SUMNER ate with his fork. Such a man could not be a true
+American.</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+
+<p>Mr. MORRILL introduced a bill to increase the mileage of members.
+Notoriously, he observed, the mileage of members was scandalously small.
+He knew that the self-sacrificing nature of the senators would delight
+to pay this tribute to the fidelity of themselves, and the equally
+deserving public servants of the other house. Passed with acclamations.</p>
+
+<p>A resolution was introduced to appropriate a few millions towards the
+discovery of the North Pole.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. SAULSBURY said&mdash;Whazyoose?</p>
+
+<p>Mr. SUMNER explained that it would be a good thing for science.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. COLE explained that it would be an enormous thing for fishermen.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. YATES explained that it would be a vast thing for "cobblers."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. SAULSBURY said&mdash;Ah, B'gthing on Ice.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. MORRILL moved to extend the Capitol grounds to the next lot.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. YATES moved to extend them to Chicago.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. MORTON moved to extend them to Indianapolis.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. CHANDLER wildly shrieked Detroit.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. SUMNER faintly murmured Boston.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>HOUSE.</h3>
+
+<p>Somebody introduced a bill to pension the soldiers of 1812. Somebody
+else wanted to amend it by providing that no soldier of 1812 who aided
+and comforted the recent rebellion should get any pension.</p>
+
+<p>Even Mr. BUTLER showed gleams of good feeling. He said that the lot of
+these men was hard. They were liable to be brought out upon platforms
+every Fourth of July, and obliged to sit and blink under patriotic
+eloquence for hours. It was their dreadful lot subsequently to eat
+public dinners in country taverns, which brought their gray hairs down
+in sorrow and indigestion to the grave. The notion of these senile and
+patriotic duffers aiding and comforting the rebellion was preposterous.
+Their eyes purged thick amber and plum-tree gum, and they had no notion
+of doing anything but drawing their pensions, and getting three meals a
+day, with a horrible fourth on the glorious Fourth.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. LOGAN said this position was outrageous. He knew that some of these
+hoary wretches in his own district were so fully in sympathy with the
+rebellion as actually to refuse to vote for him, when carriages were
+sent to convey them to the polls. Such men ought not to receive a
+dollar.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. BUTLER not only reaffirmed his previous statements, but reintroduced
+his resolution to annex Dominica.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. KELLEY desired to abolish the income tax. He said that some of his
+most influential constituents disliked it. They would not pay. To lie
+they were ashamed. If a sufficient tariff were put upon pig-iron there
+would be no need of providing for this petty Tacks.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. BUTLER was in favor of the abolition of the tax. It had never seen
+anything but a tax on paper, and it was not worth a paper of tacks.
+But he considered the most feasible method of reducing it was to annex
+Dominica, and he introduced a resolution to that effect. As his friend
+KELLEY had suggested, if they did not remove the tax, their constituents
+would remove them. He did not consider it practicable, however, to bring
+a movement to abolish the tacks on the carpet until Dominica should be
+ours.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+FURTHER OF MYTHOLOGY.</h2>
+
+<p>DIANA. This goddess was generally admitted to be the most intellectual
+and disagreeable of the whole divine Sisterhood. Among the Greeks the
+popular estimate of her character was shown by the name of "Artful
+Miss"&mdash;afterwards corrupted to ARTEMIS&mdash;which they gave to her. She was
+an eminently strong-minded goddess, and insisted upon her right to adopt
+the habits of the other sex. Among them was the practice of hunting, of
+which she was passionately fond. Indeed, it was from her devotion to the
+pleasures of the chase that she obtained the epithet of the "Chased"
+DIANA&mdash;wild boars, and such like ungallant brutes, sometimes annoying
+her by refusing to be chased themselves, and by chasing her instead.
+There are those who pretend to think that "chaste," instead of "chased,"
+was really the original epithet, and that it was given to her as a
+recognition of the aggressive and malignant virtue which distinguishes
+most strong-minded women who are old and yet unmarried. The obvious
+absurdity of this theory will, however, be evident to any one who
+remembers her little flirtation with ENDYMION, whom she cruelly led from
+the paths of innocence, only to abandon him on the hills of Latmos,
+where he contracted the chills and fever by fruitlessly watching for her
+at night in the open field. A characteristic piece of ill-temper was her
+treatment of young ACTÆON. The latter, who was a respectable, though
+rather reckless young man, was once walking along the beach, when he
+suddenly came upon DIANA and several female friends in the act of taking
+the surf. Envious to behold the extremes of boniness, which then, as
+now, doubtless characterized the strong-minded females, he concealed
+himself in a neighboring bathing-house, and brought his opera-glass
+to bear on the group. He was, however, discovered, and DIANA and her
+friends were so indignant at being seen without their false teeth and
+false "fronts," that the former deliberately set her dogs on him, who
+tore him into imperceptible fragments so small that no coroner could
+possibly find enough of him in order to hold an inquest. Of course
+ACTÆON'S conduct cannot be defended, but then his punishment was
+altogether too severe. There is every reason to suppose that DIANA
+wanted some one to accidentally notice her proficiency in swimming, else
+why should she have chosen a place of popular resort for her bath? And
+then the simple nudity in which she was surprised was not nearly as
+suggestive as the peculiar costumes in which our fashionable ladies
+now-a-days enter the surf in the presence of admiring crowds. However,
+ideas change with successive ages, and what we now consider perfectly
+proper would probably have brought any quantity of blushes to the cheek
+of the young person of Athens or Rome. Among the Olympians DIANA was a
+common scold, and made herself as disagreeable to the goddesses as to
+the gods. Since she ceased to be openly worshipped she has been in a
+measure forgotten among men, but the strong-minded women still regard
+her with love and reverence, and it is understood that her statue,
+together with a painting representing her in the act of setting the
+dogs on ACTÆON, are among the most prominent decorations of the Sorosis
+Club-room and the <i>Revolution</i> office.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>Historical</h3>
+
+<p>Coney Island is celebrated for the saltness of its waters and the
+leathery qualities of its clams. This island is said to have been so
+named on account of its resemblance in shape to an inverted cone, but
+the attrition of the ocean has materially changed the conic base.
+Researches in the direction of the apex have not been made recently.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>Patentee Wanted.</h3>
+
+<p>The heavy hebdomadals complain that the style of the communications sent
+them is too diffuse. The "talented" contributor is adjured to condense.
+There is an apparatus, we believe, for condensing the article called
+milk, but who will devise a machine for condensing the milk-and-water
+article? A fortune awaits the genius of the inventor.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+THE HOLY GRAIL AND OTHER POEMS.</h2>
+
+<p>(This Is one of the other Poems.)</p>
+
+<p>BY A HALF-RED DENIZEN OF THE WEST.</p>
+
+<p>Part XI.</p>
+
+<p>PELLEAS then, when all the flies were gone, Sat faithful on his horse,
+upon the lawn That skirts the castle moat; and thought the dame, For
+want of pluck, could never give him blame. He sat a week. She grew so
+blazing mad, She raved, and called three other knights she had; And
+cried, "That fool will drive me wild, I fear! Go bind his hands, and
+walk him Spanish here." And when the idiot heard her, he did grin And
+smirk, and let them walk him Spanish in. Then, railing vile, that he
+might take offence, She, sneering, asked him would he ne'er go hence;</p>
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="009.jpg (339K)" src="images/009.jpg" height="692" width="1072">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+<p>And cursed him till her face grew crimson red. Like cats of Cheshire
+then he grinned, and said:</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sent by thy train and thee to Coventry, I hung with grooms and porters
+on the bridge; Watched by thy three tall squires. And there I shaped An
+ancient willow's sapling into this."</p>
+
+<p>And handed her a whistle. "Kick him out!" She yelled; and the knights,
+laughing, took the lout, And thrust him from the gate. A week from this,
+Looking without, she saw his simple phiz; And cried "Go kill him! Stick
+him like a pig! You three can do it, if he is so big!" Unwilling, yet
+the knights went out to try, And light-of-love GAWAIN came riding by.
+"What ho!" he cried, "I'm in, if that fight's free; So here I come-ye
+knavish cowards three!" "For me," PELLEAS cried, "the fight she means,"
+And charging, knocked them into smithereens. Now called she other
+knights, and cried out, "Once Again go bind and bring me here that
+dunce!" And when he heard, he let himself be bound,</p>
+
+<p>And o'er the bridge they kicked him like a hound. When she had sneered
+her sneeriest, then she said, "Turn him out bound!" He lifted up his
+head,</p>
+
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<p> "You ask me why, tho' ill at ease<br>
+ Within this region I subsist?"</p>
+
+<p> "I did," she said, "but pray desist<br>
+ From further quoting, if you please."</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p>When forth PELLEAS came, his hands all tied, The brave GAWAIN, he
+bounded to his side, And loosed his bonds and said, "Look here, good
+friend, This sort of thing had better have an end. Just you go home, and
+take a Turkish bath, And I will cure this lady of her wrath. Give me
+your horse and shield. Take mine, I'll say I've killed you, stiffly
+dead, in mortal fray. Then she will straight repent; your death will
+rue, And while her heart is soft, I'll send for you."</p>
+
+<p>This nincum-fubby-diddle-boodle, he Went home, and did not GAWATN'S
+laughter see! He waited till the moon, after three days, Gave promise of
+large lights on woods and ways, And then he hastened to ETTABBE'S gate.
+He found it open, and he did not wait to be announced, but hastened,
+full of hope, To where her tent stood on the garden slope. He knew she
+slept the roses all among, And as he softly stepped, he softly sung:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+<p> "I am coming, my own, my sweet!<br>
+ Were it ever so airy a tread,<br>
+ Thy heart would hear me and beat,<br>
+ Were it earth in an earthly bed.<br>
+ Thy dust would hear me and beat,<br>
+ Hads't thou lain for a century dead,<br>
+ Would start and tremble under my feet&mdash;</p>
+
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p>And just then he saw GAWAIN'S head! With one wild bound toward the
+dark'ning skies, From out the garden gates he madly flies. But soon his
+mind it alters. Slipping back, His tune he changes&mdash;trying this new tack:</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<p> "Howe'er it be, it seems to me<br>
+ 'Tis only noble to be good;<br>
+ Kind hearts are more than coronets,<br>
+ And simple faith, than Norman blood.</p>
+
+<p> O lady! You may veer and veer,<br>
+ A great enchantress you may be,<br>
+ But there'll be that across your throat,<br>
+ Which you would scarcely care to see."</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p>Then he, while sleep of senses them bereft, Soft thrust his lance
+through both their necks&mdash;and left. The cold touch in her throat she
+felt, and woke. She knew the lance, and to GAWAIN she spoke. "Liar!" she
+said. "That man you have not slain. Let's both clear out! He may come
+back again!"</p>
+
+<p>(<i>To be Continued.</i>)</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+OUR PORTFOLIO.</h2>
+
+<p>That most gay, gallant and airy body of horsemen known as the "Brooklyn
+Dutch Light Cavalry," are much indebted to the projectors of the
+Knightly meeting which took place recently at Prospect Park, for an
+opportunity to display those equestrian graces which a few cross-grained
+critics have been disposed to deny them. The general public never had
+any doubts upon the subject, but it is well enough to silence those who
+took much credit to themselves in detecting faults where others could
+not discover them. The result shows how completely such mendacity can be
+exposed. Of the numerous prizes awarded, two-thirds fell to the members
+of Brooklyn's Teutonic Cavalry. They were especially admired for the
+firmness with which they kept their saddles, under circumstances enough
+to unhorse a Centaur. We noted, particularly, one cavalier, known in
+the lists as the Knight of RUDESHEIMER. He keeps a pork store in Fulton
+Avenue, and turned a Fairbanks Scale, but two days before the tourney,
+at 275 lbs. This gallant rode a very sprightly steed, which struggled
+under the double calamity of being slightly spavined and quite blind in
+the left eye. One of the effects of the latter misfortune was to keep
+the animal constantly in the belief that somebody meditated foul play
+upon its unguarded flank, and at the slightest stir in the crowd it
+would wheel violently around, to the great consternation its rider,
+and the evident alarm of contiguous Knights. PUNCHINELLO, who was very
+conspicuous in the throng, and was mounted upon a highly mettled Ukraine
+steed, observed the cavorting of the Knight of RUDESHEIMER, and cantered
+gaily towards him. In attempting to pass, his spur touched the side of
+the blind steed,&mdash;which kicked at PUNCHINELLO'S fiery Ukraine in a very
+ungracious manner. Our animal would take a kick from no other animal
+calmly, and so, without waiting to weigh consequences, it gave
+RUDESHEIMER'S Rosinante a severe "chuck" in the ribs with its hind feet.
+In an instant horse and rider were spinning around like a top. A space
+was immediately cleared, and the crowd awaited in breathless silence
+the fate of the Knight. His swayings were fearful, until PUNCHINELLO,
+anticipating an apoplectic fit from such a terrific revolution, dashed
+in, and seizing the frightened steed by the bridle, brought him to
+bay. The Knight's face was livid with rage and, instead of thanking
+PUNCHINELLO, he roared at the pitch of his voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Dunder und blitzen! Du bist ein tam phool. Vat for you not sees I ish
+tied to mein saddle?"</p>
+
+<p>The pride of horsemanship could go no further, and so PUNCHINELLO left.</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+SONG OF THE RED CLOUD.</h2>
+
+<p>[Supposed to have been uttered on the occasion of a conference of
+Savages at Washington with a view to the settlement of our Indian
+difficulties.]</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<p> How! Call all my chiefs together&mdash;<br>
+ Makpialutah, Red Cloud wants 'em:<br>
+ Shunkalutah, him the Red Dog;<br>
+ Brave Bear, Montaohetekah;<br>
+ Setting Bear, Maktohutakah;<br>
+ Rock Bear, Live Bear, Long Bear, Short Bear,<br>
+ Little Bear, Yellow Bear, and Bear Skin,<br>
+ Keyalutah, Red Fly&mdash;Shoo Fly!<br>
+ Dahsanowee, White Cow Rattler,<br>
+ Pahgee, Shunkmonetoohakah,<br>
+ Shatonsapah, Maktohashena,<br>
+ Kokepah, Ocklehelutah,<br>
+ Newakohnkechaksaheuntah,<br>
+ Whoop! haloo! Yahoo! Halooooooooo!</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p> (Sudden rush of warriors on all sides with war-whoop, flourish of
+ tomahawks, and inexplicable dumb show.]</p>
+<center>
+<table summary="">
+<tr><td>
+
+<p> Ugh! What now would have the White Man?<br>
+ Sell he swindle, rum, fire-water,<br>
+ We will sell him Fear in plenty.<br>
+ What would have Great Cloud, our father,<br>
+ He the Smoke-nose, he the Big Fish?<br>
+ They not cheat us, we not murder.<br>
+ Pale-faces like the leaves of forests:<br>
+ Many squaws with paint and feathers&mdash;<br>
+ None like Makochawyuntaker,<br>
+ The World-looker, wife of Black Hawk.<br>
+ Much skull, but few scalp in Congress.<br>
+ Talk much&mdash;very great tongue-warriors.<br>
+ Tomahawk could end the tongue-fight.<br>
+ Hrumph! I like not these pale-faces,<br>
+ Makpialutah mourns for battle,<br>
+ Red Cloud thirsts for blood of Pawnees,<br>
+ Red Cloud cries for scalp of white men,<br>
+ Red Cloud angers the Great Spirit,<br>
+ Red Cloud trembles for the War Dance!<br>
+ Ugh! Hrumph! How! Whoop, whoop, haloooooo!</p>
+</td></tr>
+</table>
+</center>
+
+
+
+<p>[The Conference of Chiefs, after an uproar of shrill and guttural
+sounds, break: up with the favorite can-can of the Sioux.]</p>
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h3>
+A Pleasant Prospect.</h3>
+
+<p>The Massachusetts editors, who are shortly to meet in convention at
+Boston, are threatened with three distressing courtesies, viz: a concert
+on the Big Organ, a visit to the School Ship, and a banquet in Fanuil
+Hall. They have our sincerest condolences.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="010.jpg (140K)" src="images/010.jpg" height="390" width="1065">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="011.jpg (193K)" src="images/011.jpg" height="838" width="657">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+<br><br><hr><br><br>
+
+<h2>
+MY COUP D'ETAT.</h2>
+
+<p>Mr. PUNCHINELLO: For sometime&mdash;I would not like to say how long&mdash;the
+undersigned has been a candidate for the office of Whiskey Inspector for
+the Judasville district of his State. I have had powerful backing from
+the scrap-iron members of Congress from my section, but their efforts
+and my own have long seemed of little avail. The other day, however,
+I saw in the papers the account of the <i>coup d'etat</i> of the DUKE OF
+SALDANHA, in Portugal. An idea immediately entered my brain. These
+<i>effète</i> monarchies, these governments of the past, on which "the rust
+of ages," as VICTOR HUGO remarks, "lies like a bloody snow of bygone
+vassalage," have yet sufficient vitality to teach a lesson to the young
+and vigorous governments of the West. At any rate this old duke taught
+me a lesson, and I did my best to hurry off and say it. It was evident
+that if I wanted to be Whiskey Inspector of Judasville, (and I am
+justified in saying that no man in the district possesses more peculiar
+qualifications for the post,) that something in the SALDANHA style
+must be done. The time had passed for petitions and lobbying. I went
+immediately to the commander of the Judasville Rifles, and enlisted his
+sympathies in my cause. He willingly placed his company at my service,
+but whether this was due to my offer to pay the board-bills and car-fare
+of the organization while it was under my orders, or to my eloquent
+statement of my case, I have not yet had an opportunity to discover. The
+men who, from the very commencement of the undertaking, had constituted
+themselves the inspectors of my whiskey, were in high good spirits, and,
+in a body, numbering some forty-six, we arrived in Washington, on a
+bright morning, about a week ago. It would not do, on an occasion like
+this, to delay matters. Accordingly I marched my troops directly to the
+White House. The man in charge of the door took my men for a visiting
+target company, and told me, whom he supposed was the member from their
+district, that I must marshal my friends out on the green, and he would
+notify the Private Secretary. I made no answer to this, but ordered
+the troops to charge bayonets, and we entered the White House at a
+double-quick. I led the way directly to GRANT'S study, and stationing my
+men in the doorway, I entered. He was within, cutting up an "old soger"
+to smoke in his pipe. After shaking bands with him, I sat down and
+inquired if that was a <i>regalia</i> he was cutting up.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said he. "This is the HANCOCK brand."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" said he, looking somewhat inquisitively at the soldiers, who
+crowded into the doorway, and almost filled the entry beyond.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. President," said I, rising and clearing my throat, "I do not wish
+to occupy much time in the present business&mdash;especially as I have to pay
+the hotel bills of these brave veterans until it is finished. Therefore
+I will come directly to the point. I desire, immediately, the
+appointment of Whiskey Inspector for the Judasville district. I have
+been an applicant for said position quite long enough, and I demand that
+you make out my commission this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"And suppose I don't?" says GRANT.</p>
+
+<p>"In that case," said I,&mdash;"in that case&mdash;well, in that case, <i>there</i> are
+my companions in arms, the brave supporters of my cause!" and I pointed
+proudly to the Judasville Rifles.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said GRANT, puffing away at the HANCOCK remnants, "what do you
+propose to do with them&mdash;besides paying their hotel bills, I mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"To do?" said I, "to do?"&mdash;and now, to tell the truth, I experienced an
+immediate disadvantage of not having formed a plan of my campaign. But
+it would not do to hesitate.</p>
+
+<p>"To do?" I repeated, speaking louder this time. "I shall march
+upon&mdash;well, upon each of the public buildings in turn, and I shall take
+them and hold them."</p>
+
+<p>"And then?" said GRANT.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said I, "then, of course, you will see the impossibility of
+carrying my strongholds without a fearful slaughter, and to prevent
+the consequent effusion of blood, you will despatch a courier to me,
+requesting my presence in your council-room."</p>
+
+<p>"And then?" said GRANT.</p>
+
+<p>"I will come," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"And then?" said GRANT.</p>
+
+<p>"You will give me the Whiskey Inspectorship," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>GRANT glanced at me, and then at the body of troops by which I was
+supported. Indomitable resolution sat upon every lineament of my
+countenance, and resolute determination showed itself in the faces of my
+brave men. Already, from afar, they sniffed the delicious perfumes of
+the rewards of victory. (It is needless to particularize the alcoholic
+promises I had made them in case of success.)</p>
+
+<p>GRANT rang a little bell&mdash;I think he bought it second-hand, when SEWARD
+sold out to go travelling&mdash;and an obstrusive attendant entered by a back
+door.</p>
+
+<p>Then, to this obtrusive attendant said the President; "James, step
+over to the War Department and tell SHERMAN to send me the Eighth and
+Eleventh Brigades of Cavalry; the Seventy-first and Fortieth Regiments
+of Artillery; the Twenty-second, Forty-fourth, and Eighty-eighth
+regiments of infantry, and two companies of sappers and miners."</p>
+
+<p>JAMES departed.</p>
+
+<p>I stepped forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. PRESIDENT," said I, "in order to prevent the effusion of blood,
+might it not be as well to settle our little business at once?"</p>
+
+<p>GRANT smiled.</p>
+
+<p>HODGINS, the captain of the Judasville Rifles, now came up to me and
+touched me on the arm.</p>
+
+<p>"To prevent the effusion of blood," said he, "we are going home."</p>
+
+<p>And they went!</p>
+
+<p>My subsequent adventures, Mr. PUNCHINELLO, I cannot relate, for my paper
+is full, and the fellow who has charge of this cell has refused to get
+me any more, unless I give him more money, which I haven't got.</p>
+
+<p>But of one thing my mind is certain, and that is that this country has
+not yet arrived at that high grade of official refinement and tenderness
+which Portugal has reached.</p>
+
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="012.jpg (221K)" src="images/012.jpg" height="1125" width="771">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+<br><br>
+<center>
+<img alt="013.jpg (263K)" src="images/013.jpg" height="1124" width="774">
+</center>
+<br><br>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18,
+1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, JUNE 18, 1870 ***
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18, 1870, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Posting Date: October 29, 2011 [EBook #9636]
+Release Date: January, 2006
+First Posted: October 12, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, JUNE 18, 1870 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, David
+Widger and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONANT'S
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+PATENT BINDERS
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+FOR
+
+"PUNCHINELLO,"
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+to preserve the paper for binding, will be sent postpaid, on receipt of
+One Dollar, by
+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+The Weekly Numbers for May,
+
+Bound in a Handsome Cover,
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+Is now ready. Price Fifty Cents.
+
+THE TRADE
+
+Supplied by the
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+manufactured. The
+
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+
+we recommend for Bank and Office use.
+
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+
+Sole Agents For United States.
+
+Vol. I
+
+No. 12.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1870.
+
+PUBLISHED BY THE
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD,
+
+By ORPHEUS C. KERR.,
+
+Continued in this Number:
+
+[Along side of page: See 15th Page for Extra Premiums.] PUNCHINELLO.
+
+JUNE 18, 1870.
+
+APPLICATIONS FOR ADVERTISING IN "PUNCHINELLO" SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO J.
+NICKINSON, ROOM No. 4, No. 83 Nassau Street.
+
+
+
+DIBBLEEANIA, AND Japonica Juice, FOR THE HAIR.
+
+The most effective Soothing and Stimulating Compounds ever offered to
+the public for the
+
+Removal of Scurf, Dandruff, &c.
+
+For consultation, apply at WILLIAM DIBBLEE'S, Ladies' Hair Dresser and
+Wig Maker.
+
+854 BROADWAY, N.Y. City.
+
+
+
+FURNITURE.
+
+E. W. HUTCHINGS & SON, MANUFACTURERES OF Rich and Plain Furniture AND
+DECORATIONS, Nos. 99 and 101 Fourth Avenue, Formerly 475 Broadway, (Near
+A.T. Stewart & Co.'s.) NEW YORK.
+
+Where a general assortment can be had at moderate prices.
+
+_Wood Mantels, Pier and Mantel Frames and Wainscoting made to order from
+designs_
+
+
+
+PHELAN & COLLENDER, MANUFACTURERS OF Standard American Billiard Tables,
+WAREROOMS AND OFFICE, 738 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+NEW YORK CITIZEN and ROUND TABLE,
+
+A Literary, Political, and Sporting paper, with the best writers in each
+department. Published Saturday.
+
+PRICE, TEN CENTS.
+
+32 Beekman Street
+
+
+
+WEVILL & HAMMAR, Wood Engravers, 208 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+Thomas J. Rayner & Co., 29 Liberty Street, New York, MANUFACTURERS OF
+THE FINEST CIGARS _Made in the United States._
+
+All sizes and styles. Prices very moderate. Samples sent to any
+responsible house. Also importers of the "FUSBOS" BRAND, Equal in
+quality to the best of the Havana market, and from ten to twenty per
+cent cheaper.
+
+_Restaurant, Bar, Hotel, and Saloon trade will save money by calling at_
+
+No. 29 LIBERTY STREET.
+
+
+
+ERIE RAILWAY.
+
+TRAINS LEAVE DEPOTS Foot of Chambers Street AND Foot of Twenty-Third
+Street, AS FOLLOWS:
+
+Through Express Trains leave Chambers Street at 8 A.M., 10 A.M., 5:30
+P.M., and 7:00 P.M., (daily); leave 23d Street at 7:45 A.M., 9:45 A.M.,
+and 5:15 and 6:45 P.M. (daily.). New and improved Drawing-Room Coaches
+will accompany the 10:00 A.M. train through to Buffalo, connecting at
+Hornellsville with magnificent Sleeping Coaches running through to
+Cleveland and Galion. Sleeping Coaches will accompany the 8:00 A.M.
+train from Susquehanna to Buffalo, the 5:30 P.M. train from New York to
+Buffalo, and the 7:00 P.M. train from New York to Rochester, Buffalo and
+Cincinnati. An Emigrant train leaves daily at 7:30 P.M.
+
+For Port Jervis and Way, 11:30 A.M., and 4:30 P.M., (Twenty-third
+Street, 11:15 A.M. and 4:15 P.M.)
+
+For Middletown and Way, at 3:30 P.M., (Twenty-third Street, 3:15 P.M.);
+and, Sundays only, 8:30 A.M. (Twenty-third Street, 8:15 P.M.)
+
+For Greycourt and Way, at 8:30 A.M., (Twenty-third Street, 8:15 A.M.)
+
+For Newburgh and Way, at 8:00 A.M., 3:30 and 4:30 P.M. (Twenty-third
+Street 7:45 A.M., 3:15 and 4:15 P.M.)
+
+For Suffern and Way, 5:00 P.M. and 6:00 P.M (Twenty-third Street, 4:45
+and 5:45 P.M.) Theatre Train, 11:30 P.M. (Twenty-third Street, 11
+P.M.)
+
+For Paterson and Way, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 6:45, 10:15 and
+11:45 A.M.; 1:45, 3:45, 5:15 and 6:45 P.M. From Chambers Street Depot
+at 6:45, 10:15 A.M.; 12 M.; 1:45, 4:00, 5:15, and 6:45 P.M.
+
+For Hackensack and Hillsdale, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 8:45
+and 11:45 A.M.; [*]7:l5 3:45, [*]5:15, 5:45, and [*]6:45 P.M. From
+Chambers Street Depot, at 9:00 A.M.; 12:00 M.; [*]2:l5, 4:00 [*]5:15,
+6:00, and [*]6:45P.M.
+
+For Piermont, Monsey and Way, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 8:45
+A.M; 12:45, [**]3:15 4:15, 4:45 and [**]6:l5 P.M., and, Saturdays only,
+[**]12 midnight. From Chambers Street Depot, at 9:00 A.M.; 1:00, [**]3:30,
+4:15 5:00 and [**]6:30 P.M. Saturdays, only, [**]12:00 midnight.
+
+Tickets for passage and for apartments in Drawing-Room and Sleeping
+Coaches can be obtained, and orders for the Checking and Transfer of
+Baggage may be left at the
+
+COMPANY'S OFFICES:
+
+241, 529, and 957 Broadway. 205 Chambers Street. Cor. 125th Street
+& Third Ave., Harlem. 338 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. Depots, foot of
+Chambers Street and foot of Twenty-third Street, New York. 3 Exchange
+Place. Long Dock Depot, Jersey City, And of the Agents at the principal
+Hotels.
+
+WM. R. BARR, _General Passenger Agent._
+
+L.D. RUCKER, _General Superintendent._
+
+May 20, 1870
+
+[Footnote *: Daily.]
+
+[Footnote *: For Hackensack only.]
+
+[Footnote **: For Piermont only.]
+
+
+
+Mercantile Library, Clinton Hall, Astor Place, NEW YORK.
+
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+volumes on its shelves being 114,000. About 1000 volumes are added each
+month; and very large purchases are made of all new and popular works.
+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+Stamford, and Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+HORSEMEN, ATTENTION!
+
+Farmers, Farmers' Clubs, Drivers, Riders, Grooms, Livery Stable Keepers,
+Owners, Professional Horsemen.
+
+The whole press, sporting papers, secular and religious journals, unite
+in saying that HIRAM WOODRUFF'S work on
+
+"The Trotting Horse of America"
+
+Is "THE MOST PRACTICAL AND INSTRUCTIVE BOOK EVER PUBLISHED CONCERNING
+THE HORSE." And the best known professionals, Hoagland, Mace, Pfifer,
+etc, endorse it with equal heartiness.
+
+Ask your Bookseller for it,
+
+Or enclose the price, $2.25, and it will be mailed to you postpaid.
+
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+
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY SPEAR PRINTER - LITHOGRAPHER STATIONER & BLANK BOOK
+MANUFACTURER 82 WALL ST NEW YORK]
+
+
+
+$2 to ALBANY and TROY.
+
+The Day Line Steamboats C Vibbard and Daniel Drew, commencing May 31,
+will leave Vestry st. Pier at 8.45, and Thirty-fourth st. at 9 a.m.,
+landing at Yonkers, (Nyack, and Tarrytown by ferry-boat), Cozzens, West
+Point, Cornwall, Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, Rhinebeck, Bristol, Catskill,
+Hudson, and New Baltimore. A special train of broad-gauge cars
+in connection with the day boats will leave on arrival at Albany
+(commencing June 20) for Sharon Springs. Fare $4.25 from New York and
+for Cherry Valley. The Steamboat Seneca will transfer passengers from
+Albany to Troy.
+
+
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.
+
+AN ADAPTATION.
+
+BY ORPHEUS C. KERR.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ALMS-HOUSE.
+
+For the purpose of preventing an inconvenient rush of literary
+tuft-hunters and sight-seers thither next summer, a fictitious name must
+be bestowed upon the town of the Ritualistic church. Let it stand in
+these pages as Bumsteadville. Possibly it was not known to the Romans,
+the Saxons, nor the Normans by that name, if by any name at all; but
+a name more or less weird and full of damp syllables can be of little
+moment to a place not owned by any advertising Suburban-Residence
+benefactors.
+
+A disagreeable and healthy suburb, Bumsteadville, with a strange odor of
+dried bones from its ancient pauper burial-ground, and many quaint
+old ruins in the shapes of elderly men engaged as contributors to the
+monthly magazines of the day. Antiquity pervades Bumsteadville; nothing
+is new; the very Rye is old; also the Jamaica, Santa Cruz, and a number
+of the native maids. A drowsy place, with all its changes lying far
+behind it; or, at least, the sun-browned mendicants passing through say
+they never saw a place offering so little present change.
+
+In the midst of Bumsteadville stands the Alms-House; a building of an
+antic order of architecture; still known by its original title to the
+paynobility and indigentry of the surrounding country, several of
+whose ancestors abode there in the days before voting was a certain
+livelihood; although now bearing a door-plate inscribed, "Macassar
+Female College, Miss CAROWTHERS." Whether any of the country editors,
+projectors of American Comic papers, and other inmates of the edifice in
+times of yore, ever come back in spirit to be astonished by the manner
+in which modern serious and humorous print can be made productive of
+anything but penury by publishing True Stories of Lord BYRON and the
+autobiographies of detached wives, maybe of interest to philosophers,
+but is of no account to Miss CAROWTHERS. Every day, during school-hours,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS, in spectacles and high-necked alpaca, preside over
+her Young Ladies of Fashion, with an austerity and elderliness
+before which every mental image of Man, even as the most poetical of
+abstractions, withers and dies. Every night, after the young ladies have
+retired, does Miss CAROWTHERS put on a freshening aspect, don a more
+youthful low-necked dress--
+
+ As though a rose
+ Should leave its clothes
+ And be a bud again,--
+
+and become a sprightlier Miss CAROWTHERS. Every night, at the same hour,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS discuss with her First Assistant, Mrs. PILLSBURY,
+the Inalienable Bights of Women; always making certain casual reference
+to a gentleman in the dim past, whom she was obliged to sue for breach
+of promise, and to whom, for that reason, Miss CAROWTHERS airily refers,
+with a toleration bred of the lapse of time, as "Breachy Mr. BLODGETT."
+
+The pet pupil of the Alms-House is FLORA POTTS, of course called the
+Flowerpot; for whom a husband has been chosen by the will and bequest of
+her departed papa, and at whom none of the other Macassar young ladies
+can look without wondering how it must feel. On the afternoon after the
+day of the dinner at the boarding-house, the Macassar front-door bell
+rings, and Mr. EDWIN DROOD is announced as waiting to see Miss FLORA.
+Having first rubbed her lips and cheeks, alternately, with her fingers,
+to make them red; held her hands above her head to turn back the
+circulation and make them white; and added a little lead-penciling to
+her eyebrows to make them black; the Flowerpot trips innocently down
+to the parlor, and stops short at some distance from the visitor in a
+curious sort of angular deflection from the perpendicular.
+
+"O, you absurd creature!" she says, placing a finger in her mouth and
+slightly wriggling at him. "To go and have to be married to me whether
+we want to or not! It's perfectly disgusting."
+
+"Our parents _did_ rather come a little load on us," says EDWIN DROOD,
+not rendered enthusiastic by his reception.
+
+"Can't we get a _habeas corpus_, or some other ridiculous thing, and ask
+some perfectly absurd Judge to serve an injunction on somebody?" she
+asks, with pretty earnestness. "Don't, Eddy--do-o-n't." "Don't what,
+FLORA?" "Don't try to kiss me, please." "Why not, FLORA?" "Because I'm
+enameled." "Well, I do think," says EDWIN DROOD, "that you put on the
+Grecian Bend rather heavily with me. Perhaps I'd better go."
+
+"I wouldn't be so exquisitely hateful, Eddy. I got the gum-drops last
+night, and they were perfectly splendid."
+
+"Well, that's a comfort, at any rate," says her affianced, dimly
+conscious of a dawning civility in her last remark. "If it's really
+possible for you to walk on those high heels of yours, FLORA, let's try
+a promenade out-doors."
+
+Here Miss CAROWTHERS glides into the room to look for her scissors, is
+reminded by the scene before her of Breachy Mr. BLODGETT; whispers,
+"Don't trifle with her young affections, Mr. DROOD, unless you want to
+be sued, besides being interviewed by all the papers;" and glides out
+again with a sigh.
+
+FLORA then puts upon her head a fig-leaf trimmed with lace and ribbon,
+and gets her hoop and stick from behind the hall-door. EDWIN DROOD takes
+from one of his pockets an india-rubber ball, to practice fly-catches
+with as he walks; and driving the hoop and throwing and catching the
+ball, the two go down the ancient turnpike of Bumsteadville together.
+
+"Oh, please, EDDY, scrape yourself close to the fences, so that the
+girls can't see you out of the windows," pleads FLORA. "It's so utterly
+absurd to be walking with one that one's got to marry whether one likes
+it or not; and you do look so perfectly ridiculous in that short coat,
+and all your other things so tight."
+
+He gloomily scrapes against the fences, dropping his ball and catching
+it on the rebound at every step. "Which way shall we go?" "Up by the
+store, EDDY, dear."
+
+They go to the all-sorts country store in question, where EDWIN DROOD
+buys her some sassafras bull's-eye candy, and then they turn toward home
+again.
+
+"Now be a good-tempered EDDY," she says, trundling her hoop beside him,
+"and pretend that you aren't going to be my husband." "Not if I can help
+it," he says, catching the ball almost spitefully. "Then you're going to
+have somebody else?" "You make my head ache, so you do," whispers EDWIN
+DROOD. "I don't want to marry anybody at all!"
+
+She tickles him under the arm with her hoop-stick, and turns eyes that
+are all serious upon his. "I wish, EDDY, that we could be perfectly
+absurd friends to each other, instead of utterly ridiculous engaged
+people. It's exquisitely awful, you know, to have a husband picked out
+for you by dead folks, and I'm so sick about it sometimes that I hardly
+have the heart to fix my back-hair. Let each of us forbear, and stop
+teasing the other."
+
+Greatly pleased by this perfectly intelligent and forgiving arrangement,
+EDWIN DROOD says: "You're right, FLORA, Teasing is played out;" and
+drives his ball into a perfect frenzy of bounces.
+
+They have arrived near the Ritualistic church, through the windows of
+which come the organ-notes of one practising within. Something familiar
+in the grand air rolling out to them causes EDWIN DROOD to repeat,
+abstractedly, "I feel--I feel--I feel---"
+
+FLORA, simultaneously affected in the same way, unconsciously
+murmurs,---"I feel like a morning star."
+
+They then join hands, under the same irresistible spell, and take
+dancing steps, humming, in unison, "Shoo, fly! don't bodder me."
+
+"That's JACK BUMSTEAD'S playing," whispers EDWIN DROOD; "and he must be
+breathing this way, too, for I can smell the cloves."
+
+"O, take me home," cries FLORA, suddenly throwing her hoop over the
+young man's neck, and dragging him violently after her. "I think cloves
+are perfectly disgusting."
+
+At the door of the Alms-House the pretty Flowerpot blows a kiss to
+EDWIN, and goes in. He makes one trial of his ball against the door, and
+goes off. She is an in-fant, he Js an off-'un.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+MR. SWEENEY.
+
+Accepting the New American Cyclopaedia as a fair standard of
+stupidity--although the prejudice, perhaps, may arise rather from the
+irascibility of the few using it as a reference, than from the calm
+judgment of the many employing it to fill-out a showy book-case--then
+the newest and most American Cyclopaedist in Bumsteadville is Judge
+SWEENEY.
+
+[Footnote: Mr. SAPBEA, the original of this character In Mr. DICKENS'
+romance, is an auctioneer. The present Adapter can think of no nearer
+American equivalent, in the way of a person at once resident in a suburb
+and who sells to the highest bidder, than a supposable member of the New
+York judiciary.]
+
+It is Judge SWEENEY'S pleasure to found himself upon Father DEAN, whom
+he greatly resembles in the intellectual details of much forehead,
+stomach, and shirt-collar. When upon the bench in the city, even,
+granting an injunction in favor of some railroad company in which he
+owns a little stock, he frequently intones his accompanying remarks
+with an ecclesiastical solemnity eminently calculated to suppress every
+possible tendency to levity in the assembled lawyers; and his discharge
+from arrest of any foreign gentleman brought before him for illegal
+voting, has often been found strikingly similar in sound to a pastoral
+Benediction.
+
+That Judge SWEENEY has many admirers, is proved by the immense local
+majority electing him to judicial eminence; and that the admiration is
+mutual is likewise proved by his subsequent appreciative dismissal of
+certain frivolous complaints against a majority of that majority
+for trifling misapprehensions of the Registry law. He is a portly,
+double-chinned man of about fifty, with a moral cough, eye-glasses
+making even his red nose seem ministerial, and little gold ballot-boxes,
+locomotives, and five-dollar pieces, hanging as "charms" from the chain
+of his Repeater.
+
+Judge SWEENEY'S villa is on the turnpike, opposite the Alms-House, with
+doors and shutters giving in whichever direction they are opened; and he
+is sitting near a table, with a sheet of paper in his hand, and a bowl
+of warm lemon tea before him, when his servant-girl announces "Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."
+
+"Happy to see you, sir, in my house, for the first time," is Judge
+SWEENEY'S hospitable greeting.
+
+"You honor me, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, whose eyes are set, as though he
+were in some kind of a fit, and who shakes hands excessively. "You are
+a good man, sir. How do you do, sir? Shake hands again, sir. I am very
+well, sir, I thank you. Your hand, sir. I'll stand by you, sir--though I
+never spoke t' you b'fore in my life. Let us shake hands, sir."
+
+But instead of waiting for this last shake, Mr. BUMSTEAD abruptly turns
+away to the nearest chair, deposits his hat in the very middle of the
+seat with great care, and recklessly sits down upon it.
+
+The lemon tea in the bowl upon the table is a fruity compound,
+consisting of two very thin slices of lemon, which are maintained in
+horizontal positions, for the free action of the air upon their upper
+surfaces, by a pint of whiskey procured for that purpose. About half a
+pint of hot water has been added to help soften the rind of the lemon,
+and a portion of sugar to correct its acidity.
+
+With a wave of the hand toward this tropical preserve, Judge SWEENEY
+says: "You have a reputation, sir, as a man of taste. Try some lemon
+tea."
+
+Energetically, if not frantically, his guest holds out a tumbler to be
+filled, immediately after which he insists upon shaking hands again.
+"You're a man of insight, sir," he says, working Judge SWEENEY back and
+forth in his chair. "I _am_ a man of taste, sir, and you know the world,
+sir."
+
+"The _World_?" says Judge SWEENEY, complacently. "If you mean the
+religious female daily paper of that name, I certainly do know it. I
+used to take it for my late wife when she was trying to learn Latin."
+
+"I mean the terrestrial globe, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, irritably.
+"The great spherical foundation, sir, upon which Boston has since been
+built."
+
+"Ah, I see," says Judge SWEENEY, genially, "I believe, though, that I
+know that world, also, pretty well; for, if I have not exactly been to
+foreign countries, foreign countries have come to me. They have come to
+me on--hem!--business, and I have improved my opportunities. A man comes
+to me from a vessel, and I say 'Cork,' and give him Naturalization
+Certificates for himself and his friends. Another comes, and I say
+'Dublin;' another, and I say 'Belfast.' If I want to travel still
+further, I take them all together and say 'the Polls.'"
+
+"You'll do to travel, sir," responds Mr. BUMSTEAD, abstractedly helping
+himself to some more lemon tea; "but I thought we were to talk about the
+late Mrs. SWEENEY."
+
+"We were, sir," says Judge SWEENEY, abstractedly removing the bowl to a
+sideboard on his farther side. "My late wife, young man, as you may be
+aware, was a Miss HAGGERTY, and was imbued with homage to Shape. It was
+rumored, sir, that she admired me for my Manly Shape. When I offered to
+make her my bride, the only words she could articulate were, "O, my!
+_I_?"--meaning that she could scarcely believe that I really meant
+_her_. After which she fell into strong hysterics. We were married,
+despite certain objections on the score of temperance by that corrupt
+Radical, her father. From looking up to me too much she contracted an
+affection of the spine, and died about nine months ago. Now, sir, be
+good enough to run your eye over this Epitaph, which I have composed for
+the monument now erecting to her memory."
+
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, rousing from a doze for the purpose, fixes glassy eyes
+upon the slip of paper held out to him, and reads as follows:
+
+ MARY ANN,
+
+ Unlitigating and Unliterary Wife of
+
+ HIS HONOR, JUDGE SWEENEY.
+
+ In the darkest hours of
+
+ Her Husband's fortunes
+
+ She was never once tempted to Write for
+
+ THE TRIBUNE, THE INDEPENDENT, or THE RIVERSIDE MAGAZINE:
+
+ Nor did even a disappointment about a
+
+ new bonnet ever induce her to
+
+ threaten her husband with
+
+ AN INDIANA DIVORCE.
+
+ STRANGER, PAUSE,
+
+ and consider if thou canst say
+
+ the same about
+
+ THINE OWN WIFE!
+
+ If not,
+
+ WITH A RUSH RETIRE.
+
+
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, affected to tears, interspersed with nods, by his reading,
+has barely time to mutter that such a wife was too good to live long in
+these days, when the servant announces that "MCLAUGHLIN has come, sir."
+
+JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, who now enters, is a stone-cutter and mason, much
+employed in patching dilapidated graves and cutting inscriptions,
+and popularly known in Bumsteadville, on account of the dried mortar
+perpetually hanging about him, as "Old Mortarity." He is a ricketty man,
+with a chronic disease called bar-roomatism, and so very grave-yardy in
+his very '_Hic_' that one almost expects a _jacet_ to follow it as a
+matter of course.
+
+"JOHN MCLAUGHLIN," says Judge SWEENEY, handing him the paper with the
+Epitaph, "there is the inscription for the stone."
+
+"I guess I can get it all on, sir," says MCLAUGHLIN. "Your servant, Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."
+
+"Ah, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how are you?" says Mr. BUMSTEAD, his hand with the
+tumbler vaguely wandering toward where the bowl formerly stood. "By the
+way, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how came you to be called 'Old Mortarity'? It
+has a drunken sound, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, like one of Sir WALTER SCOTT'S
+characters disguised in liquor."
+
+"Never you mind about that," says MCLAUGHLIN. "I carry the keys of the
+Bumsteadville[1] churchyard vaults, and can tell to an atom, by a tap
+of my trowel, how fast a skeleton is dropping to dust in the pauper
+burial-ground. That's more than they can do who call me names." With
+which ghastly speech JOHN MCLAUGHLIN retires unceremoniously from the
+room.
+
+Judge SWEENEY now attempts a game of backgammon with the man of taste,
+but becomes discouraged after Mr. BUMSTEAD has landed the dice in his
+vest-opening three times running and fallen heavily asleep in the middle
+of a move. An ensuing potato salad is made equally discouraging by
+Mr. BUMSTEAD'S persistent attempts to cut up his handkerchief in it.
+Finally, Mr. BUMSTEAD[2] wildly finds his way to his feet, is plunged
+into profound gloom at discovering the condition of his hat, attempts to
+leave the room by each of the windows and closets in succession, and at
+last goes tempestuously through the door by accident.
+
+[_To be Continued._]
+
+
+
+
+Wanted for the Lecture-Room.
+
+Beloit, in Wisconsin, boasts a wife who has not spoken to her husband
+for fifteen years. Fifteen long years! Happy man!--happy woman! No
+insanity, no divorce, no murder, but Silence. Why isn't this wondrous
+woman brought to the platform, Miss ANTHONY?
+
+[Footnote 1: Certain fancied points of resemblance having led some
+persons to suppose that Bumsteadville means Rochester, the Adapter is
+impelled to declare that such is _not_ the case.]
+
+[Footnote 2: In compliance with the modern demand for fine realistic
+accuracy in art, the Adapter, previous to making his delineation of Mr.
+BUMSTEAD public, submitted it to the judgment of a physician having
+a large practice amongst younger journalists and Members of the
+Legislature. This authority, after due critical inspection,
+pronounced it psychologically correct as a study of monomania a potu.]
+
+
+[Illustration: _Piscator (to his progeny.)_ "NOW, GEORGE WASHINGTON, YOU
+TAKE A GOOD GRIP OF THIS YERE EEL, AND DON'T MUSS YOUR CLOTHES, OR YER
+MUDDER 'LL NEBER LET YOU GO FISHIN' AG'IN, SARTIN."]
+
+
+
+
+THE JOYS OF SUMMER.
+
+ I've Had my annual dream
+ Of boats and fishing, Congress-water, cream,
+ Strawberry-shortcake, lager-bier, iced punch,
+ And lobster-salad lunch.
+
+ It came about midday,
+ Toward the latter part of "flowering May"--
+ When nothing's fit to eat, or drink, or wear,
+ And nothing suits but air.
+
+ Let Summer come! said I;
+ Let _something_ happen quick, or I shall die!
+ I want to change my diet, clothes,--my skin,--
+ _Myself_, if not a sin!
+
+ (_One_ thing, I would remark,
+ I didn't dream of: that was Central Park.)
+ All these (the Park included) I have had;
+ Of course you think I'm glad.
+
+ No, I can't say I am.
+ Your summer, I must tell you, is a sham!
+ I _might_, perhaps, have some poetic flights,
+ If I could sleep o' nights!
+
+ But who on earth _can_ sleep
+ When the thermometer's so awful steep?
+ The night, if anything, (at least _our_ way,)
+ Is hotter than the day!
+
+ And then--my stars!--_oh_, then!
+ When sleep would kindly visit weary men,
+ The dread mosquito stings away his rest.
+ Ah-h-h! _curse_ that pest!
+
+ But breakfast comes,--so soon
+ You almost wish they'd put it off till noon!
+ Five minutes' sleep--no appetite--no force:
+ You're jolly, now, of course!
+
+ You sip your breakfast tea--
+ If with your qualmy stomach 'twill agree,
+ Or your weak coffee,--weighing, with dismay,
+ The prospects of the day.
+
+ Hot! you may well say Hot,
+ When Blistering would hit it to a dot!
+ The cheerful round is brilliantly begun--
+ And everything "well done."
+
+
+
+
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
+
+_Down East_.--"The Earthly Paradise" is published in Boston. The scene
+of the poem is laid elsewhere.
+
+_Miner_.--"Pan in Wall Street" was written by E.C. STEDMAN. The pan
+spoken of is not suitable for miners' use.
+
+_Autograph Collector_ says that he has seen in the papers such
+statements as the following: "LOWELL'S Under the Willows," "WHITTIER'S
+Among the Hills," "PUMPELLY'S Across America and Asia." A.C. wants the
+post-office address of either or all of tho gentlemen named. We are
+unable to give the information desired.
+
+_Constant Reader_.--What is the meaning of the word "Herc"?
+
+_Answer_.--It is the popular name of one of our Assurance Companies,
+only known to its intimate friends. The other name is the "_Hercules_."
+
+_Erie_.--You have been misinformed. Mr. FISK neither appeared as an
+Admiral, nor as one of the "Twelve Temptations," at the Reception of the
+Ninth Regiment.
+
+_Inquirer_.--The free translation of the legend, "_Ratione aut vi_," on
+the Ninth Regiment Badge, is "Strong in rations."
+
+_Wall Street_ asks, "Who are interested in PUNCHINELLO?" Though the
+question is not very business-like, we reply, "Every one;" and we are
+receiving fresh acquisitions daily.
+
+_Bergh_.--Was the English nightingale ever introduced into this country?
+
+_Answer_.--We cannot say. You had better go to FLORENCE for information
+on the subject.
+
+_R.G. White_.--It was a happy thought of yours to apply to PUNCHINELLO
+for information regarding Shaksperean readings. To your first question,
+"Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a gourmand?" we reply: undoubtedly he
+was. By adopting what is obviously the correct reading of the
+passage--"Shadows to-night," etc., it will be seen that "DICKON" was
+occasionally a sufferer from heavy suppers:
+
+ ----"Shad-roes to-night
+ Have struck more terror to the soul of RICHARD."
+
+Then, to your second query, "Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a cannibal?"
+our answer is: Certainly he was. Following the above quotation we have
+the line, "Than can the substance," etc. The proper reading is:
+
+ "Then Can the substance of ten thousand soldiers."
+
+Famine was staring RICHARD'S army in the face, so that nothing could
+be more natural and proper than that he should have issued orders to
+butcher ten thousand of his lower soldiers, and have their meat canned
+for the subsistence of his "Upper Ten!"
+
+_Knife_.--You have been misinformed. General BUTLER was not a
+participator in the Battle of Five Forks, though more than that number
+of Spoons has been laid to his charge.
+
+_Anxious Parent_.--Probably the publication to which you refer is the
+one entitled "Freedom of the Mind in Willing," not "Freedom of the Will
+in Minding." It is not written for the encouragement of recalcitrant
+boys.
+
+_Confectioner_, (San Francisco.)--Mr. BEECHER, who wrote the article on
+candy, in the _Ledger_, lives in Brooklyn, a town of some importance not
+far from this city.
+
+
+
+
+The Nose and the Rose.
+
+The pink-lined parasols now in fashion were devised by some thoughtful
+improver of woman, to enhance beauty by imparting a roseate hue to the
+complexion. Unfortunately, however, the reflection from the pink
+silk does not always reach the face at the right angle. Sometimes it
+concentrates altogether upon the most prominent feature of the face, and
+then "Red in the Nose is She" becomes applicable to the bearer of the
+parasol. _Couleur de rose_ is an expression for all that is lovely and
+serene, but the rose must not be worn on the nose.
+
+
+
+
+Going him one Better.
+
+The only difference between the Colossus of Rhodes and King HENRY VIII
+was that while Colossus was only a _won_der, King H. was a _Tu_dor.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+R. J. H. M'VICKER has for some years past conducted a Chicago theatre,
+of which he has been lessee, manager, and stock company. The Chicago
+people have liked M'VICKER'S Theatre, because it has occasionally
+treated them to the novel sensation of a comparatively moral
+performance. Occasional morality deftly inserted in the midst of a
+season of seductive legs, produces the same effect upon a Chicago
+audience that a naughty _opera bouffe_ does upon the New York lovers
+of the legitimate drama. In either case there is the charm of foreign
+novelty; a charm, however, which soon loses its attraction. _Opera
+bouffe_ in New York, and the moral drama in Chicago, can enjoy but a
+temporary success. The former city will always return to its love of
+standard comedies and SHAKSPEAREAN tragedies, and the latter will sooner
+or later clamor for its accustomed legs and its favorite dramas of
+bigamy and divorce.
+
+Mr. M'VICKER, having read of the MCFARLAND trial, immediately conceived
+the happy idea that the time had come when a Chicago actor would please
+a New York audience. Ha therefore flew to this city, by way of the
+Mississippi river and the New Orleans and Havana steamships, and last
+week made a debut at BOOTH'S Theatre. With an astuteness which reflects
+great credit upon his ability as a manager, he astonished the audience,
+which had assembled to be shocked by a genuine Chicago performance,
+by playing a part which fairly bristles with unnecessarily obtrusive
+morality. Thus did he present a double attraction. A Chicago actor would
+have been sure, in any case, of the support of the Free Love Press; but
+a moral Chicago actor is a surprise which appeals irresistibly to the
+love of novelty which exists in the theatre-going breast. The play
+in which he made his first appearance here, is entitled "Taking the
+Chances," and is from the pen of Mr. CHARLES GAYLER, to whom Dr. WATTS
+so beautifully referred in those touching verses:
+
+ "Gayler, the Troubadour,
+ Touched his guitar,"
+
+--and further language to a like effect. Mr. M'VICKER sustained the
+character of "PETER POMEROY," one of those oppressive rural Yankees
+whose mission seems to be to drive young men into the paths of vice, by
+representing virtue as inextricably associated with home-spun garments,
+and the manners of an uneducated bull in an unprotected china shop. The
+following version of the play will be recognized as literally exact, by
+all who have not seen the original.
+
+
+
+
+Taking the Chances.
+
+ACT I.
+
+MR. POMEROY, _a Preposterous Uncle, who regards his nephew_, PETER, _as
+a desirable person._ "My dear PETER will he here in a few moments. His
+presence will be a real blessing."
+
+MRS. POMEROY. "I am sorry to hear it. He breaks furniture and things,
+and I don't like him."
+
+_Enter_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE, _who make unnecessary remarks, and obviously
+exist only to meet_ PETER. _Finally_ PETER _enters, in butternut
+clothing and a condition of chronic moral perfection._
+
+PETER. "Jewhillikins! Haow de du, Unkil? Haow are ye, Aunt DEB? Haow is
+everybody? Our pigs and chickens and garden-sass is all doin' well."
+--_Falls on a chair._
+
+PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE. "Dear, noble, manly fellow."
+
+EVERYBODY ELSE. "Unbearable brute."
+
+_Enter_ BLANCHE POMEROY. "Do I see my dear cousin? I am glad to see you,
+but please don't tear all of my dress to pieces."
+
+PETER. "_Jewhillikins!_" "You used to not to mind abaout havin' your
+frock torn when you was up at Graniteville. But I s'pose society has
+sp'iled you."
+
+_Enter_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN, _and whispers to_ BLANCHE--"To-night you must
+fly with me. We have not a moment to lose."
+
+PETER. "_Jewhillikins!_ That is the chap that deserted his wife in
+Graniteville? I'll fix him."
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "What do I see? A virtuous rustic? Confusion! Can he
+suspect me?"
+
+PETER _devotes himself to the virtuous task of insulting every person in
+the room, thereby proving how much superior a cow-boy from New Hampshire
+is to the wretched resident of the city, whom fate has made a base
+and villainous gentleman. The_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN _goes through with
+a complicated fit of St. Vitus's Dance, by way of preserving a cool
+exterior, and thus allaying the suspicions of_ PETER. _Various_ TEDIOUS
+PEOPLE _enter and converse tediously with the_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. _After
+a time the stage-carpenters suddenly decide to lower the curtain, and
+thus put an end to an act that might otherwise go on forever._
+
+
+ACT II.
+
+_Enter_ PETER. "Jewhillikins! This is a nice garden. What pesky villains
+all these people must be, considerin' that they wear good clothes and
+don't break the furnitoor. There's that chap that deserted his wife.
+I'll fix him."--_Hides himself in an arbor._
+
+_Enter_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.--"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? In
+order to avert suspicion, I will confide everything to the friendly
+air."--_Relates his past life and future plans, at the top of his lungs,
+and then returns to the house._
+
+_Enter_ PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE, _and various_ TEDIOUS PEOPLE, _who all want
+to marry_ BLANCHE. _They converse tediously and go away again. Applause!
+Enter_ BLANCHE _and_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.--"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? BLANCHE, we
+must fly to-night. Not a moment is to be lost."
+
+_Re-enter_ PETER. "Jewhillikins! BLANCHE, I want to talk a spell with
+yon."--To PLAUSTBLE VILLAIN "Go into the haouse, will you?"--_He goes_.
+
+BLANCHE, "What do you want, PETER? Why do you tear my dress, and scratch
+your head so persistently?"
+
+PETER. "Jewhillikins! That feller you love is a scoundrel. I'll prove
+it. Will you believe it after it's proved?"
+
+BLANCHE, (_With a fine sense of what is truly womanly_.) "Of course I
+won't believe it. I despise proofs and arguments."
+
+_Enter_ TEDIOUS PEOPLE _and_ IREELEVANT PEOPLE. _They converse more
+tediously and irrelevantly than before. At last the carpenters, who have
+been out for beer, return and drop the curtain._
+
+
+ACT III.
+
+_Enter_ PETER, _in the clothes of an ordinary Christian. He practices a
+frightful dance, and remarks at intervals,_ "Jewhillikins."
+
+_Enter_ BLANCHE _and_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. _The latter notices_ PETER,
+_with convulsive alarm._
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "Confusion! Can he suspect me? BLANCHE, we must fly
+at once. There is not a moment to lose."
+
+_Enter_ EVERYBODY. _A quadrille is formed._ PETER _dances and falls
+over everybody else. The quadrille ends._ PETER _rises and remarks,
+"Jewhillikins." He goes out and returns, bringing the_ PLAUSIBLE
+VILLAIN'S _wife with him. The_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN _repents._ BLANCHE
+_consents to marry_ PETER. _Various preposterous engagements are entered
+into by the_ TEDIOUS _and the_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. _And at last the play
+is over._
+
+
+
+COMIC MAN _among the audience._ "Why should M'VICKER think a man a
+scoundrel, who deserts his wife and tries to marry another? Don't he
+come from Chicago?"
+
+2D COMIC MAN.--"Don't SHERIDAN," (who plays the PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN,)
+"look as if he wished he were 'twenty miles away' when PETER denounces
+him?"
+
+And the bystanders smile weakly, as though they had heard a good joke on
+SHERIDAN, and retire slowly toward their homes, evidently exhausted by
+the oppressive virtue of the intolerable Yankee boor, whom M'VICKER
+plays so well that the respectable portion of the audience is almost
+inclined to overlook the wretchedness of the part in admiration of the
+skill of the actor.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+
+
+
+Cue-rious Rumor.
+
+That the Sound steamers are to be furnished with billiard tables for
+the amusement of passengers between New York and Boston. This report,
+however, is flatly contradicted, and we have neither charity nor chalk
+for the man who would make a statement so groundless. GEORGE FRANCIS,
+THE UBIQUITOUS.
+
+Amidst all the chances and changes of this chequered, and, in some
+respects, lugubrious life, Mr. PUNCHINELLO has the perennial consolation
+of one friendship, which promises to be immortal, and over which time
+and space hold no sway. Need we say that we are alluding to the tender
+emotions which crowd our bosom whenever we hear of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN! And lest our love for him should grow colder, this considerate
+gentleman allows us to hear from him almost daily. To be sure he is like
+some great antediluvian grasshopper, and seems capable of spanning this
+almost boundless continent at a leap. He is in Maine in the morning--he
+is making a speech in Minnesota when the evening shades prevail; but
+wherever he is, the roll of his eloquence reaches us, and however busy
+he may be, he is never too busy to write letters to tho newspapers. The
+great man comes very near to solving the problem heretofore considered
+insoluble, of being in two places at once. Two, did we say? Absurd!
+Three, four, five, half a dozen! What a man! Jumping here! Leaping
+there! Skipping North! Vaulting South! Skimming (like a CAMILLA in
+pantaloons) over the plains of the West! Then, as if by magic, whirling
+himself to the East! A man, did we say? Bah! GEORGE FRANCIS is clearly
+one of the immortals.
+
+Clearly! JUPITER used to be rather lavish of electricity, but he did but
+a small retail business in it, compared with our dear GEORGE FRANCIS,
+the demi-god, who, when he is not talking with sublime garrulity, is
+telegraphing without regard to expense. Evidently it has dawned upon the
+mind (if he has any,) of this extraordinary being, that the world, in
+none of its quarters, can get along without him, and that the newspaper
+which does not mention his name must be stale, flat, and unprofitable.
+Wherefore he takes order that every newspaper shall print the wonderful
+name as often as possible. Whether he be laughed at, sneered at, sworn
+at, the virtue of the mere mention remains the same.
+
+The last we heard from GEORGE FRANCIS, he was, (to use his own choice
+language,) "away up here on the Chippewa," beseeching the lumber men,
+with all the charm of his inimitable eloquence, to vote him into the
+Presidential chair. "I am waking up these boys for 1872," writes the
+valuable phenomenon. Unto "millers, rafters, choppers, and jammers,"
+this Fountain of Oratory has gushed forth his "four hundred and
+twenty-first consecutive Presidential lecture." Imagine a possible scene
+upon a raft! GEORGE FRANCIS, mounted upon a whiskey-barrel, is making
+all the air resonant with rhetoric. The "rafters" are swearing!
+The "choppers" are cursing! The "jammers" are most reprehensibly
+blaspheming! The enormous mass floats onward, and "TRAIN!" the floods,
+"TRAIN!" the forests, "TRAIN!" the overarching skies resound! No
+miserable hall, no narrow street, no "pent-up Utica" contracts the
+power of this miraculous elocutionist--his auditorium seems to be a
+hemisphere--his audience all mankind! ORPHEUS singing moved rocks
+and trees. Great GEORGE spouting subdues all the inhabitants of the
+wilderness. Timid deer trip to the shore to listen; ferocious bears,
+catching the echo, shed tears of penitence; all creatures of the roaring
+kind acknowledge themselves surpassed and silenced; the whispering pines
+whisper all the more softly, as if ashamed of their own verbal weakness.
+All speeches, even the speeches of a TRAIN, must come to an end; and
+having ended, the floating DEMOSTHENES sits down to write to the
+newspapers, that he has just been delivered of his four-hundred-and-
+twenty-second, and is as well as could be expected.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO has, in his day, been considered talkative; but he
+feels, as he listens to GEORGE FRANCIS, that he is himself a marvel of
+taciturnity--that in the noble art of sounding his own trumpet he is
+a mere child--that as a contributor to the public amusement he is in
+danger of falling into paltry insignificance. Alas! he is not the
+marvellous mountebank which he has heretofore considered himself to be;
+and the nonsense upon which he so prided himself, in comparison with
+the nonsense of GEORGE FRANCIS, sinks into the most melancholy and
+insufferable wisdom. He looks forward to the future with a fear lest he
+may descend to the depths of serious and slow solemnity. When he has
+arrived at that deplorable stage of decay, he wishes it to be understood
+that his drum and trumpet are at the service of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN.
+
+
+[Illustration: A YOUNG STIR AMONG THE DAILIES.
+
+_Editor Dana._ "I WISH THAT FELLOW WOULD TAKE HIS BANNER OUT OF MY WAY.
+IT ECLIPSES MY SPECIAL NEWS."]
+
+
+
+
+ASSOCIATED PRESS TELEGRAMS.
+
+It is well known that there is a leak in the Associated Press Office. In
+point of fact there always is a leak. Why any one should think it worth
+while to steal the Associated Press cable dispatches is a mystery,
+when they could be manufactured in any newspaper office with much less
+trouble. The following dispatches are a fair sample of the ordinary
+cable news which is sent to the Association. "We need hardly say that
+they were not stolen from Mr. SIMONTON, but we will say, as we
+have already said, that there is a leak. A word to the wise is
+sufficient--though, of course, by the expression, 'the wise,' we do not
+mean any reference to the London agent of the Associated Press."
+
+
+LONDON, June 6. The _Times_ of to-day has a paragraph on the big trees
+of California.
+
+MR. SMALLEY denies that he ever wore a hat resembling that of GUSTAVE
+FLOURENS.
+
+A boy has been arrested for picking pockets in Oxford Street.
+
+JOHN SMITH, proprietor of a coffee and cake saloon in Ratcliffe Highway,
+has gone into bankruptcy.
+
+It is believed that if the Tories should oust the present cabinet, they
+would come into power.
+
+PARIS, June 7. There are rumors as to the health of the Emperor
+NAPOLEON.
+
+Yesterday a man is said to have cried, "_Vive la Republique!_" in his
+back-yard.
+
+ROME, June, 8. The Ecumenical Council is still in session.
+
+There are more strangers in Rome than there have been at times when the
+number was less.
+
+ALEXANDRIA, June 8. Several vessels have passed through the Suez Canal
+since its completion.
+
+The Suez Canal is by some regarded as a success. Others think it a
+failure.
+
+CALCUTTA, June 6. A native was killed by a tiger near Bundelcund
+eighteen months ago.
+
+YOKOHAMA, June 6. The P. & O. Steamer Bombay has run down and sunk the
+U.S. Sloop Oneida.
+
+ST. PETERSBURGH, June 7. Some discontent was caused by the emancipation
+of the serfs.
+
+BERLIN, June 8. BISMARCK has notified the Upper House that no
+exemplification of the categorical plebiscitum will be favorably
+entertained or rejected.
+
+In view of these important dispatches, PUNCHINELLO respectfully suggests
+to Mr. SIMONTON, that instead of trying to put an end to the stealing of
+his news, he put a peremptory end to the London agent of the Associated
+Press. Otherwise the agent will soon put an end to the Association. One
+or the other event must take place, and it is only a question of time
+which shall occur first. [Illustration: PONTOON FOR PARTIES. A NEW
+INVENTION, TO ENABLE GENTLEMEN TO CROSS THE FLOWING TRAINS OF LADIES IN
+FASHIONABLE DRAWING-ROOMS.]
+
+
+
+
+COMIC ZOOLOGY.
+
+The Boa Constrictor.
+
+Oriental tourists claim to have met with specimens of this reptile one
+hundred feet in length, but as travellers are proverbially prone to
+stretch their tales, narrative of this character must not be too readily
+swallowed. He is found in India, all along the course of the Hooghly,
+and is hugely superior in strength and size to all the other reptiles of
+Asia. His habitat is usually up a tree, where he lies in ambush, and
+he forages, and has for ages, on the nobler quadrupeds; seldom letting
+himself down to make a "picked-up dinner" on the lower animals.
+Sometimes, however, when tormented with an "all-gone sensation" in the
+pit of his stomach, he descends to dine on a high-caste Brahmin and to
+sup on a Gentoo.
+
+The skin of the Boa has a silky sheen, like that of the finest Rep, and,
+when taking a nap in the sun, his Damascened appearance may remind the
+pious spectator of a scene damned by the intrusion of a similar reptile
+several thousand years ago.
+
+The Boa Constrictor is not a fascinating snake--far from it. He relies
+on his muscles and not on his charms, for support. His appetite is
+vigorous, and the manner in which he disposes of his tid-bits, such
+as the larger carnivora, may be described as glutenous. Much has been
+written of the creature, but a glance at his enormous volume will give a
+truer idea of him than anything that has ever issued from the press.
+He serves the body of an animal, before devouring it, as mercenary
+politicians serve the body politic--crushing it with many Rings. By the
+keepers of menageries he is often called the Boa _Constructor_, but the
+name more aptly applies to the Furrier who simulates his shape on a
+small scale; the creature having no mechanical skill whatever.
+
+Occasionally, from some branch that overhangs a _Nullah_, he will drop
+down on the thirsty eland or hartbeest, rendering resistance a Nullity;
+but his favorite game is fighting the tiger, at which, unlike the human
+species, he always wins when in the vein for that kind of sport. All the
+beasts of the jungle fear him--the wolf feeling no disposition to seek
+his folds, and the leopard frequently changing his spots to avoid him.
+Whatever his quarry may be, its sands are soon run out.
+
+The Boa, like other gourmands, is fond of gourmand-ease. After having
+put a victim through the mill and bolted him for a meal, the monster may
+be discovered (or he may not) on some knoll in the forest, indulging in
+somnolency. He can then be assailed with safety, but as his breath is a
+horrible fetor, a spice (of caution) should be used in approaching him.
+The windward side is best. As he lies limber, smelling like Limburger,
+a hatchet will be found a first-chop weapon of assault. The Hindoos,
+however, generally double him up with Creeses. Cutting off the
+creature's tail, just behind the jaws, is a pretty sure way to
+ex-terminate him. There are on record several instances of Boas having
+been despatched in this way by Ruthless adventurers.
+
+The reptile abounds in Ceylon, and is considered a delicacy by the
+Cingalese, but the civilized stomach would probably find Double Ease in
+letting it alone. _Cotelette de Constrictor_, however pleasant to the
+Pagan palate, would scarcely go down with a Christian.
+
+High old stories of the Boa have been obtained by travellers, from the
+Asiatics. They resemble those of the fabled dragon and hippogriff, and
+as they generally relate to the ravaging of whole districts by the
+voracious monster, a heap o' grief is connected with some of them. The
+gum-game, however, is much in vogue in India, and most of these snake
+stories may be characterized as India Rubbish.
+
+The great Boa is a native of Southern Africa as well as of Asia, and is
+much dreaded by all the Dutch Boers. The creature is reported to have
+been seen in crossing the interior deserts, but this is believed to be
+a fiction invented in the Caravans. In Congo there is a small species a
+few sizes larger than the Conger eel, while in the section of country
+visited by CUMMING the Boa is the biggest serpent Going.
+
+There are stupendous snakes in the islands of the Indian Archipelago,
+and a Yankee skipper who lived a year among the natives informs us that
+he "once saw some arter a boa in Sumatra." The skipper, however, is a
+small joker, and always ready to Sacrifice Truth on the Alter Ego of a
+miserable pun. A vile habit this, but one that it is to be feared will
+never be abandoned.
+
+The skin of the Boa is rarely embroidered with purple and gold, but,
+like many a priestly hypocrite, he hides under the livery of heaven the
+instincts of the Devil. And so we dismiss him.
+
+
+
+
+BITTER SARCASM
+
+Canadians pronounce the sacred word "Sunburst" "Shunburst."
+
+
+[Illustration: THE WEDDING RING, AS SOKOSIS WOULD LIKE TO SEE IT WORN.]
+
+
+[ILLUSTRATION Description: Woman in Victorian dress with a small,
+free-running dog on her left holding a leash in her right hand which
+connects to a top-hatted man's nose ring. A sign behind them reads
+"Socuety for the prevention of cruelty to husbands $500 fine"] [blank
+page] [Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+Ind-Hearted Mr. CHANDLER had a proposition "which would restore American
+commerce to its former footing." It was simply to annex San Domingo,
+Cuba, and Canada. He repudiated with scorn and disgust the insinuation
+that he proposed to pay anything for them. That was foreign to his
+nature. He meant merely to take them. By this means they would not only
+restore American commerce--he din't profess to know exactly how--but
+they would inflict a deadly blow upon haughty England. At this point Mr.
+CHANDLER became incoherent, the only intelligible remark which reached
+the reporters, being that he could "lick" Queen VICTORIA single-handed.
+
+Mr. SUMNER remarked that a war with England would be costly.
+
+Mr. CHANDLER declined to accept any suggestion from a man who went to
+diplomatic dinners, and consorted with Englishmen. He had been told that
+at these dinners, to which he was proud to say he had never gone, and to
+which, while the custom of issuing invitations prevailed, he never
+would go, Mr. SUMNER ate with his fork. Such a man could not be a true
+American.
+
+Mr. MORRILL introduced a bill to increase the mileage of members.
+Notoriously, he observed, the mileage of members was scandalously small.
+He knew that the self-sacrificing nature of the senators would delight
+to pay this tribute to the fidelity of themselves, and the equally
+deserving public servants of the other house. Passed with acclamations.
+
+A resolution was introduced to appropriate a few millions towards the
+discovery of the North Pole.
+
+Mr. SAULSBURY said--Whazyoose?
+
+Mr. SUMNER explained that it would be a good thing for science.
+
+Mr. COLE explained that it would be an enormous thing for fishermen.
+
+Mr. YATES explained that it would be a vast thing for "cobblers."
+
+Mr. SAULSBURY said--Ah, B'gthing on Ice.
+
+Mr. MORRILL moved to extend the Capitol grounds to the next lot.
+
+Mr. YATES moved to extend them to Chicago.
+
+Mr. MORTON moved to extend them to Indianapolis.
+
+Mr. CHANDLER wildly shrieked Detroit.
+
+Mr. SUMNER faintly murmured Boston.
+
+
+
+HOUSE.
+
+Somebody introduced a bill to pension the soldiers of 1812. Somebody
+else wanted to amend it by providing that no soldier of 1812 who aided
+and comforted the recent rebellion should get any pension.
+
+Even Mr. BUTLER showed gleams of good feeling. He said that the lot of
+these men was hard. They were liable to be brought out upon platforms
+every Fourth of July, and obliged to sit and blink under patriotic
+eloquence for hours. It was their dreadful lot subsequently to eat
+public dinners in country taverns, which brought their gray hairs down
+in sorrow and indigestion to the grave. The notion of these senile and
+patriotic duffers aiding and comforting the rebellion was preposterous.
+Their eyes purged thick amber and plum-tree gum, and they had no notion
+of doing anything but drawing their pensions, and getting three meals a
+day, with a horrible fourth on the glorious Fourth.
+
+Mr. LOGAN said this position was outrageous. He knew that some of these
+hoary wretches in his own district were so fully in sympathy with the
+rebellion as actually to refuse to vote for him, when carriages were
+sent to convey them to the polls. Such men ought not to receive a
+dollar.
+
+Mr. BUTLER not only reaffirmed his previous statements, but reintroduced
+his resolution to annex Dominica.
+
+Mr. KELLEY desired to abolish the income tax. He said that some of his
+most influential constituents disliked it. They would not pay. To lie
+they were ashamed. If a sufficient tariff were put upon pig-iron there
+would be no need of providing for this petty Tacks.
+
+Mr. BUTLER was in favor of the abolition of the tax. It had never seen
+anything but a tax on paper, and it was not worth a paper of tacks.
+But he considered the most feasible method of reducing it was to annex
+Dominica, and he introduced a resolution to that effect. As his friend
+KELLEY had suggested, if they did not remove the tax, their constituents
+would remove them. He did not consider it practicable, however, to bring
+a movement to abolish the tacks on the carpet until Dominica should be
+ours.
+
+
+
+
+FURTHER OF MYTHOLOGY.
+
+DIANA. This goddess was generally admitted to be the most intellectual
+and disagreeable of the whole divine Sisterhood. Among the Greeks the
+popular estimate of her character was shown by the name of "Artful
+Miss"--afterwards corrupted to ARTEMIS--which they gave to her. She was
+an eminently strong-minded goddess, and insisted upon her right to adopt
+the habits of the other sex. Among them was the practice of hunting, of
+which she was passionately fond. Indeed, it was from her devotion to the
+pleasures of the chase that she obtained the epithet of the "Chased"
+DIANA--wild boars, and such like ungallant brutes, sometimes annoying
+her by refusing to be chased themselves, and by chasing her instead.
+There are those who pretend to think that "chaste," instead of "chased,"
+was really the original epithet, and that it was given to her as a
+recognition of the aggressive and malignant virtue which distinguishes
+most strong-minded women who are old and yet unmarried. The obvious
+absurdity of this theory will, however, be evident to any one who
+remembers her little flirtation with ENDYMION, whom she cruelly led from
+the paths of innocence, only to abandon him on the hills of Latmos,
+where he contracted the chills and fever by fruitlessly watching for her
+at night in the open field. A characteristic piece of ill-temper was her
+treatment of young ACTAEON. The latter, who was a respectable, though
+rather reckless young man, was once walking along the beach, when he
+suddenly came upon DIANA and several female friends in the act of taking
+the surf. Envious to behold the extremes of boniness, which then, as
+now, doubtless characterized the strong-minded females, he concealed
+himself in a neighboring bathing-house, and brought his opera-glass
+to bear on the group. He was, however, discovered, and DIANA and her
+friends were so indignant at being seen without their false teeth and
+false "fronts," that the former deliberately set her dogs on him, who
+tore him into imperceptible fragments so small that no coroner could
+possibly find enough of him in order to hold an inquest. Of course
+ACTAEON'S conduct cannot be defended, but then his punishment was
+altogether too severe. There is every reason to suppose that DIANA
+wanted some one to accidentally notice her proficiency in swimming, else
+why should she have chosen a place of popular resort for her bath? And
+then the simple nudity in which she was surprised was not nearly as
+suggestive as the peculiar costumes in which our fashionable ladies
+now-a-days enter the surf in the presence of admiring crowds. However,
+ideas change with successive ages, and what we now consider perfectly
+proper would probably have brought any quantity of blushes to the cheek
+of the young person of Athens or Rome. Among the Olympians DIANA was a
+common scold, and made herself as disagreeable to the goddesses as to
+the gods. Since she ceased to be openly worshipped she has been in a
+measure forgotten among men, but the strong-minded women still regard
+her with love and reverence, and it is understood that her statue,
+together with a painting representing her in the act of setting the
+dogs on ACTAEON, are among the most prominent decorations of the Sorosis
+Club-room and the _Revolution_ office.
+
+
+
+Historical
+
+Coney Island is celebrated for the saltness of its waters and the
+leathery qualities of its clams. This island is said to have been so
+named on account of its resemblance in shape to an inverted cone, but
+the attrition of the ocean has materially changed the conic base.
+Researches in the direction of the apex have not been made recently.
+
+
+
+Patentee Wanted.
+
+The heavy hebdomadals complain that the style of the communications sent
+them is too diffuse. The "talented" contributor is adjured to condense.
+There is an apparatus, we believe, for condensing the article called
+milk, but who will devise a machine for condensing the milk-and-water
+article? A fortune awaits the genius of the inventor.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLY GRAIL AND OTHER POEMS.
+
+(This Is one of the other Poems.)
+
+BY A HALF-RED DENIZEN OF THE WEST.
+
+Part XI.
+
+PELLEAS then, when all the flies were gone, Sat faithful on his horse,
+upon the lawn That skirts the castle moat; and thought the dame, For
+want of pluck, could never give him blame. He sat a week. She grew so
+blazing mad, She raved, and called three other knights she had; And
+cried, "That fool will drive me wild, I fear! Go bind his hands, and
+walk him Spanish here." And when the idiot heard her, he did grin And
+smirk, and let them walk him Spanish in. Then, railing vile, that he
+might take offence, She, sneering, asked him would he ne'er go hence;
+
+[Illustration]
+
+And cursed him till her face grew crimson red. Like cats of Cheshire
+then he grinned, and said:
+
+
+"Sent by thy train and thee to Coventry, I hung with grooms and porters
+on the bridge; Watched by thy three tall squires. And there I shaped An
+ancient willow's sapling into this."
+
+And handed her a whistle. "Kick him out!" She yelled; and the knights,
+laughing, took the lout, And thrust him from the gate. A week from this,
+Looking without, she saw his simple phiz; And cried "Go kill him! Stick
+him like a pig! You three can do it, if he is so big!" Unwilling, yet
+the knights went out to try, And light-of-love GAWAIN came riding by.
+"What ho!" he cried, "I'm in, if that fight's free; So here I come-ye
+knavish cowards three!" "For me," PELLEAS cried, "the fight she means,"
+And charging, knocked them into smithereens. Now called she other
+knights, and cried out, "Once Again go bind and bring me here that
+dunce!" And when he heard, he let himself be bound,
+
+And o'er the bridge they kicked him like a hound. When she had sneered
+her sneeriest, then she said, "Turn him out bound!" He lifted up his
+head,
+
+ "You ask me why, tho' ill at ease
+ Within this region I subsist?"
+
+ "I did," she said, "but pray desist
+ From further quoting, if you please."
+
+When forth PELLEAS came, his hands all tied, The brave GAWAIN, he
+bounded to his side, And loosed his bonds and said, "Look here, good
+friend, This sort of thing had better have an end. Just you go home, and
+take a Turkish bath, And I will cure this lady of her wrath. Give me
+your horse and shield. Take mine, I'll say I've killed you, stiffly
+dead, in mortal fray. Then she will straight repent; your death will
+rue, And while her heart is soft, I'll send for you."
+
+This nincum-fubby-diddle-boodle, he Went home, and did not GAWATN'S
+laughter see! He waited till the moon, after three days, Gave promise of
+large lights on woods and ways, And then he hastened to ETTABBE'S gate.
+He found it open, and he did not wait to be announced, but hastened,
+full of hope, To where her tent stood on the garden slope. He knew she
+slept the roses all among, And as he softly stepped, he softly sung:
+
+ "I am coming, my own, my sweet!
+ Were it ever so airy a tread,
+ Thy heart would hear me and beat,
+ Were it earth in an earthly bed.
+ Thy dust would hear me and beat,
+ Hads't thou lain for a century dead,
+ Would start and tremble under my feet--
+
+And just then he saw GAWAIN'S head! With one wild bound toward the
+dark'ning skies, From out the garden gates he madly flies. But soon his
+mind it alters. Slipping back, His tune he changes--trying this new
+ tack:"Howe'er it be, it seems to me
+ 'Tis only noble to be good;
+ Kind hearts are more than coronets,
+ And simple faith, than Norman blood.
+
+ O lady! You may veer and veer,
+ A great enchantress you may be,
+ But there'll be that across your throat,
+ Which you would scarcely care to see."
+
+Then he, while sleep of senses them bereft, Soft thrust his lance
+through both their necks--and left. The cold touch in her throat she
+felt, and woke. She knew the lance, and to GAWAIN she spoke. "Liar!" she
+said. "That man you have not slain. Let's both clear out! He may come
+back again!"
+
+(_To be Continued._)
+
+
+
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+That most gay, gallant and airy body of horsemen known as the "Brooklyn
+Dutch Light Cavalry," are much indebted to the projectors of the
+Knightly meeting which took place recently at Prospect Park, for an
+opportunity to display those equestrian graces which a few cross-grained
+critics have been disposed to deny them. The general public never had
+any doubts upon the subject, but it is well enough to silence those who
+took much credit to themselves in detecting faults where others could
+not discover them. The result shows how completely such mendacity can be
+exposed. Of the numerous prizes awarded, two-thirds fell to the members
+of Brooklyn's Teutonic Cavalry. They were especially admired for the
+firmness with which they kept their saddles, under circumstances enough
+to unhorse a Centaur. We noted, particularly, one cavalier, known in
+the lists as the Knight of RUDESHEIMER. He keeps a pork store in Fulton
+Avenue, and turned a Fairbanks Scale, but two days before the tourney,
+at 275 lbs. This gallant rode a very sprightly steed, which struggled
+under the double calamity of being slightly spavined and quite blind in
+the left eye. One of the effects of the latter misfortune was to keep
+the animal constantly in the belief that somebody meditated foul play
+upon its unguarded flank, and at the slightest stir in the crowd it
+would wheel violently around, to the great consternation its rider,
+and the evident alarm of contiguous Knights. PUNCHINELLO, who was very
+conspicuous in the throng, and was mounted upon a highly mettled Ukraine
+steed, observed the cavorting of the Knight of RUDESHEIMER, and cantered
+gaily towards him. In attempting to pass, his spur touched the side of
+the blind steed,--which kicked at PUNCHINELLO'S fiery Ukraine in a very
+ungracious manner. Our animal would take a kick from no other animal
+calmly, and so, without waiting to weigh consequences, it gave
+RUDESHEIMER'S Rosinante a severe "chuck" in the ribs with its hind feet.
+In an instant horse and rider were spinning around like a top. A space
+was immediately cleared, and the crowd awaited in breathless silence
+the fate of the Knight. His swayings were fearful, until PUNCHINELLO,
+anticipating an apoplectic fit from such a terrific revolution, dashed
+in, and seizing the frightened steed by the bridle, brought him to
+bay. The Knight's face was livid with rage and, instead of thanking
+PUNCHINELLO, he roared at the pitch of his voice.
+
+"Dunder und blitzen! Du bist ein tam phool. Vat for you not sees I ish
+tied to mein saddle?"
+
+The pride of horsemanship could go no further, and so PUNCHINELLO left.
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE RED CLOUD.
+
+[Supposed to have been uttered on the occasion of a conference of
+Savages at Washington with a view to the settlement of our Indian
+difficulties.]
+
+ How! Call all my chiefs together--
+ Makpialutah, Red Cloud wants 'em:
+ Shunkalutah, him the Red Dog;
+ Brave Bear, Montaohetekah;
+ Setting Bear, Maktohutakah;
+ Rock Bear, Live Bear, Long Bear, Short Bear,
+ Little Bear, Yellow Bear, and Bear Skin,
+ Keyalutah, Red Fly--Shoo Fly!
+ Dahsanowee, White Cow Rattler,
+ Pahgee, Shunkmonetoohakah,
+ Shatonsapah, Maktohashena,
+ Kokepah, Ocklehelutah,
+ Newakohnkechaksaheuntah,
+ Whoop! haloo! Yahoo! Halooooooooo!
+
+ (Sudden rush of warriors on all sides with war-whoop, flourish of
+ tomahawks, and inexplicable dumb show.]
+
+ Ugh! What now would have the White Man?
+ Sell he swindle, rum, fire-water,
+ We will sell him Fear in plenty.
+ What would have Great Cloud, our father,
+ He the Smoke-nose, he the Big Fish?
+ They not cheat us, we not murder.
+ Pale-faces like the leaves of forests:
+ Many squaws with paint and feathers--
+ None like Makochawyuntaker,
+ The World-looker, wife of Black Hawk.
+ Much skull, but few scalp in Congress.
+ Talk much--very great tongue-warriors.
+ Tomahawk could end the tongue-fight.
+ Hrumph! I like not these pale-faces,
+ Makpialutah mourns for battle,
+ Red Cloud thirsts for blood of Pawnees,
+ Red Cloud cries for scalp of white men,
+ Red Cloud angers the Great Spirit,
+ Red Cloud trembles for the War Dance!
+ Ugh! Hrumph! How! Whoop, whoop, haloooooo!
+
+[The Conference of Chiefs, after an uproar of shrill and guttural
+sounds, break: up with the favorite can-can of the Sioux.]
+
+
+
+
+A Pleasant Prospect.
+
+The Massachusetts editors, who are shortly to meet in convention at
+Boston, are threatened with three distressing courtesies, viz: a concert
+on the Big Organ, a visit to the School Ship, and a banquet in Fanuil
+Hall. They have our sincerest condolences.
+
+
+[Illustration: TREPIDATION.
+
+FRANK PAYS A VISIT OF CONDOLENCE TO HIS FRIEND, WHO IS ILL WITH
+RELAPSING FEVER.]
+
+[Illustration: FUMIGATION.
+
+THEN HE THINKS HIS HAIR SHOULD BE FUMIGATED, AND SUBSEQUENTLY HE HAS TO
+BE EXTINGUISHED.] [Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. (NOT BY HOGARTH.)
+_Clergyman_. "Do You TAKE THIS MAN TO LOVE, HONOR, AND AGREE WITH
+UNTIL--YOU SEE ANOTHER MAN YOU LIKE BETTER?"]
+
+
+
+
+MY COUP D'ETAT.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO: For sometime--I would not like to say how long--the
+undersigned has been a candidate for the office of Whiskey Inspector for
+the Judasville district of his State. I have had powerful backing from
+the scrap-iron members of Congress from my section, but their efforts
+and my own have long seemed of little avail. The other day, however,
+I saw in the papers the account of the _coup d'etat_ of the DUKE OF
+SALDANHA, in Portugal. An idea immediately entered my brain. These
+_effete_ monarchies, these governments of the past, on which "the rust
+of ages," as VICTOR HUGO remarks, "lies like a bloody snow of bygone
+vassalage," have yet sufficient vitality to teach a lesson to the young
+and vigorous governments of the West. At any rate this old duke taught
+me a lesson, and I did my best to hurry off and say it. It was evident
+that if I wanted to be Whiskey Inspector of Judasville, (and I am
+justified in saying that no man in the district possesses more peculiar
+qualifications for the post,) that something in the SALDANHA style
+must be done. The time had passed for petitions and lobbying. I went
+immediately to the commander of the Judasville Rifles, and enlisted his
+sympathies in my cause. He willingly placed his company at my service,
+but whether this was due to my offer to pay the board-bills and car-fare
+of the organization while it was under my orders, or to my eloquent
+statement of my case, I have not yet had an opportunity to discover. The
+men who, from the very commencement of the undertaking, had constituted
+themselves the inspectors of my whiskey, were in high good spirits, and,
+in a body, numbering some forty-six, we arrived in Washington, on a
+bright morning, about a week ago. It would not do, on an occasion like
+this, to delay matters. Accordingly I marched my troops directly to the
+White House. The man in charge of the door took my men for a visiting
+target company, and told me, whom he supposed was the member from their
+district, that I must marshal my friends out on the green, and he would
+notify the Private Secretary. I made no answer to this, but ordered
+the troops to charge bayonets, and we entered the White House at a
+double-quick. I led the way directly to GRANT'S study, and stationing my
+men in the doorway, I entered. He was within, cutting up an "old soger"
+to smoke in his pipe. After shaking bands with him, I sat down and
+inquired if that was a _regalia _he was cutting up.
+
+"No," said he. "This is the HANCOCK brand."
+
+"Oh!" said I.
+
+"Well?" said he, looking somewhat inquisitively at the soldiers, who
+crowded into the doorway, and almost filled the entry beyond.
+
+"Mr. President," said I, rising and clearing my throat, "I do not wish
+to occupy much time in the present business--especially as I have to pay
+the hotel bills of these brave veterans until it is finished. Therefore
+I will come directly to the point. I desire, immediately, the
+appointment of Whiskey Inspector for the Judasville district. I have
+been an applicant for said position quite long enough, and I demand that
+you make out my commission this morning."
+
+"And suppose I don't?" says GRANT.
+
+"In that case," said I,--"in that case--well, in that case, _there_ are
+my companions in arms, the brave supporters of my cause!" and I pointed
+proudly to the Judasville Rifles.
+
+"Well," said GRANT, puffing away at the HANCOCK remnants, "what do you
+propose to do with them--besides paying their hotel bills, I mean?"
+
+"To do?" said I, "to do?"--and now, to tell the truth, I experienced an
+immediate disadvantage of not having formed a plan of my campaign. But
+it would not do to hesitate.
+
+"To do?" I repeated, speaking louder this time. "I shall march
+upon--well, upon each of the public buildings in turn, and I shall take
+them and hold them."
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"Well," said I, "then, of course, you will see the impossibility of
+carrying my strongholds without a fearful slaughter, and to prevent
+the consequent effusion of blood, you will despatch a courier to me,
+requesting my presence in your council-room."
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"I will come," I answered.
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"You will give me the Whiskey Inspectorship," I answered.
+
+GRANT glanced at me, and then at the body of troops by which I was
+supported. Indomitable resolution sat upon every lineament of my
+countenance, and resolute determination showed itself in the faces of my
+brave men. Already, from afar, they sniffed the delicious perfumes of
+the rewards of victory. (It is needless to particularize the alcoholic
+promises I had made them in case of success.)
+
+GRANT rang a little bell--I think he bought it second-hand, when SEWARD
+sold out to go travelling--and an obstrusive attendant entered by a back
+door.
+
+Then, to this obtrusive attendant said the President; "James, step
+over to the War Department and tell SHERMAN to send me the Eighth and
+Eleventh Brigades of Cavalry; the Seventy-first and Fortieth Regiments
+of Artillery; the Twenty-second, Forty-fourth, and Eighty-eighth
+regiments of infantry, and two companies of sappers and miners."
+
+JAMES departed.
+
+I stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. PRESIDENT," said I, "in order to prevent the effusion of blood,
+might it not be as well to settle our little business at once?"
+
+GRANT smiled.
+
+HODGINS, the captain of the Judasville Rifles, now came up to me and
+touched me on the arm.
+
+"To prevent the effusion of blood," said he, "we are going home."
+
+And they went!
+
+My subsequent adventures, Mr. PUNCHINELLO, I cannot relate, for my paper
+is full, and the fellow who has charge of this cell has refused to get
+me any more, unless I give him more money, which I haven't got.
+
+But of one thing my mind is certain, and that is that this country has
+not yet arrived at that high grade of official refinement and tenderness
+which Portugal has reached.
+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+PUNCHINELLO:
+
+"Awakening." (A Litter of Puppies.) Half Chromo, size, 8 3-8 by 11 1-8,
+price $2.00, and a copy of PUNCHINELLO for one year, for $4.00.
+
+"Wild Roses." Chromo, 12 1-8 by 9, price $3.00, or any other $3.00
+Chromo, and a copy of the paper for one year, for $5.00.
+
+"The Baby in Trouble." Chromo, 13 by 16 l-4, price $6.00, or any other
+at $6.00, or any two Chromos at $3.00, and a copy of the paper for one
+year for $7.00.
+
+"Sunset,--California Scenery." after A. Bierstadt, 18 1-8 by 12, price
+$10.00, or any other $10.00 Chromo, and a copy of the paper for one year
+for $10.00. Or the four Chromos, and four copies of the paper for one
+year in one order, for clubs of FOUR, for $25.00.
+
+Remittances should be made in P. 0. 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.
+
+Now is the time to subscribe, as these Premiums will be offered for a
+limited time only. On receipt of a postage-stamp, we will send a copy of
+No. 1 to any one desiring to get up a club.
+
+Address,
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,
+
+P. O. Box 2783. No. 83 Nassau Street, New York. [Illustration: THE
+SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT AGAIN.
+
+Bar-room Lobbyist.--"I TELL YOU, NO, SIR; THIS SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT IS
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+Sold by JOHN F. HENRY, at the U. S. Family Medical Depot, 8 College
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+
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+
+This NEW GAME affords an attractive out-door sport, and furnishes a
+degree and kind of physical exercise that improves and develops the
+general health and strength. It may be learned in a few minutes; may be
+played by any number of persons; is compactly arranged in a handsome
+case of moderate size, that may be easily carried from place to place;
+will pack nicely in your trunk for a summer jaunt, and is sold for less
+than any other out-door Game. Already the demand for it has exceeded all
+expectation, and the prospect is that its popularity will be universal.
+Says one of our customers: "IN INTEREST IT IS SUPERIOR TO CROQUET, AND
+CANNOT FAIL TO BE LIKED BY EVERY ONE."
+
+Price of Ring-Toss, Complete, with Book of Directions, $3.50.
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+Securely packed, and sent by express to any address.
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+For Sale, Wholesale and Retail, at
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+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.
+
+The New Burlesque Serial, Written expressly for PUNCHINELLO, by ORPHEUS
+C. KERR,
+
+Commenced in last number, will be continued weekly throughout the year.
+
+A sketch of the eminent author, written by his bosom friend, with superb
+illustrations of
+
+1ST. THE AUTHOR'S PALATIAL RESIDENCE AT BEGAD'S HILL, TICKNOR'S FIELDS,
+NEW JERSEY.
+
+2D. THE AUTHOR AT THE DOOR OF SAID PALATIAL RESIDENCE, taken as he
+appears "Every Saturday," will also be found in No. 11.
+
+Single Copies, for Sale by all newsmen, (or mailed from this office,
+free,) Ten Cents.
+
+Subscription for One Year, one copy, with $2 Chromo Premium, $4.
+
+Those desirous of receiving the paper containing this new serial,
+which promises to be the best ever written by ORPHEUS C. KERB, should
+subscribe now, to insure its regular receipt weekly.
+
+We will send the first Ten Numbers of PUNCHINELLO to any one who wishes
+to see them, in view of subscribing, on the receipt of SIXTY CENTS.
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+P.O. Box2783 83 Nassau St., New York.
+
+
+
+Geo. W. WHEAT, PRINTER, No. 8 SPRUCE STREKT.
+
+
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+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 12, June 18,
+1870, by Various
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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol.1, No. 12 , June 18,1870, by Various
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+Title: Punchinello, Vol.1, No. 12 , June 18,1870
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+Author: Various
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+
+83 Nassau Street, New York City.
+
+TO NEWS-DEALERS.
+
+Punchinello's Monthly.
+
+The Weekly Numbers for May,
+
+Bound in a Handsome Cover,
+
+Is now ready. Price Fifty Cents.
+
+THE TRADE
+
+Supplied by the
+
+AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY,
+
+Who are now prepared to receive Orders.
+
+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. I
+
+No. 12.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1870.
+
+PUBLISHED BY THE
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD,
+
+By ORPHEUS C. KERR.,
+
+Continued in this Number:
+
+[Along side of page: See 15th Page for Extra Premiums.] PUNCHINELLO.
+
+JUNE 18, 1870.
+
+APPLICATIONS FOR ADVERTISING IN "PUNCHINELLO" SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO J.
+NICKINSON, ROOM No. 4, No. 83 Nassau Street.
+
+
+
+DIBBLEEANIA, AND Japonica Juice, FOR THE HAIR.
+
+The most effective Soothing and Stimulating Compounds ever offered to
+the public for the
+
+Removal of Scurf, Dandruff, &c.
+
+For consultation, apply at WILLIAM DIBBLEE'S, Ladies' Hair Dresser and
+Wig Maker.
+
+854 BROADWAY, N.Y. City.
+
+
+
+FURNITURE.
+
+E. W. HUTCHINGS & SON, MANUFACTURERES OF Rich and Plain Furniture AND
+DECORATIONS, Nos. 99 and 101 Fourth Avenue, Formerly 475 Broadway, (Near
+A.T. Stewart & Co.'s.) NEW YORK.
+
+Where a general assortment can be had at moderate prices.
+
+_Wood Mantels, Pier and Mantel Frames and Wainscoting made to order from
+designs_
+
+
+
+PHELAN & COLLENDER, MANUFACTURERS OF Standard American Billiard Tables,
+WAREROOMS AND OFFICE, 738 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+NEW YORK CITIZEN and ROUND TABLE,
+
+A Literary, Political, and Sporting paper, with the best writers in each
+department. Published Saturday.
+
+PRICE, TEN CENTS.
+
+32 Beekman Street
+
+
+
+WEVILL & HAMMAR, Wood Engravers, 208 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+Thomas J. Rayner & Co., 29 Liberty Street, New York, MANUFACTURERS OF
+THE FINEST CIGARS _Made in the United States._
+
+All sizes and styles. Prices very moderate. Samples sent to any
+responsible house. Also importers of the "FUSBOS" BRAND, Equal in
+quality to the best of the Havana market, and from ten to twenty per
+cent cheaper.
+
+_Restaurant, Bar, Hotel, and Saloon trade will save money by calling at_
+
+No. 29 LIBERTY STREET.
+
+
+
+ERIE RAILWAY.
+
+TRAINS LEAVE DEPOTS Foot of Chambers Street AND Foot of Twenty-Third
+Street, AS FOLLOWS:
+
+Through Express Trains leave Chambers Street at 8 A.M., 10 A.M., 5:30
+P.M., and 7:00 P.M., (daily); leave 23d Street at 7:45 A.M., 9:45 A.M.,
+and 5:15 and 6:45 P.M. (daily.). New and improved Drawing-Room Coaches
+will accompany the 10:00 A.M. train through to Buffalo, connecting at
+Hornellsville with magnificent Sleeping Coaches running through to
+Cleveland and Galion. Sleeping Coaches will accompany the 8:00 A.M.
+train from Susquehanna to Buffalo, the 5:30 P.M. train from New York to
+Buffalo, and the 7:00 P.M. train from New York to Rochester, Buffalo and
+Cincinnati. An Emigrant train leaves daily at 7:30 P.M.
+
+For Port Jervis and Way, 11:30 A.M., and 4:30 P.M., (Twenty-third
+Street, 11:15 A.M. and 4:15 P.M.)
+
+For Middletown and Way, at 3:30 P.M., (Twenty-third Street, 3:15 P.M.);
+and, Sundays only, 8:30 A.M. (Twenty-third Street, 8:15 P.M.)
+
+For Greycourt and Way, at 8:30 A.M., (Twenty-third Street, 8:15 A.M.)
+
+For Newburgh and Way, at 8:00 A.M., 3:30 and 4:30 P.M. (Twenty-third
+Street 7:45 A.M., 3:15 and 4:15 P.M.)
+
+For Suffern and Way, 5:00 P.M. and 6:00 P.M (Twenty-third Street, 4:45
+and 5:45 P.M.) Theatre Train, 11:30 P.M. (Twenty-third Street, 11
+P.M.)
+
+For Paterson and Way, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 6:45, 10:15 and
+11:45 A.M.; 1:45, 3:45, 5:15 and 6:45 P.M. From Chambers Street Depot
+at 6:45, 10:15 A.M.; 12 M.; 1:45, 4:00, 5:15, and 6:45 P.M.
+
+For Hackensack and Hillsdale, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 8:45
+and 11:45 A.M.; [*]7:l5 3:45, [*]5:15, 5:45, and [*]6:45 P.M. From
+Chambers Street Depot, at 9:00 A.M.; 12:00 M.; [*]2:l5, 4:00 [*]5:15,
+6:00, and [*]6:45P.M.
+
+For Piermont, Monsey and Way, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 8:45
+A.M; 12:45, [**]3:15 4:15, 4:45 and [**]6:l5 P.M., and, Saturdays only,
+[**]12 midnight. From Chambers Street Depot, at 9:00 A.M.; 1:00, [**]3:30,
+4:15 5:00 and [**]6:30 P.M. Saturdays, only, [**]12:00 midnight.
+
+Tickets for passage and for apartments in Drawing-Room and Sleeping
+Coaches can be obtained, and orders for the Checking and Transfer of
+Baggage may be left at the
+
+COMPANY'S OFFICES:
+
+241, 529, and 957 Broadway. 205 Chambers Street. Cor. 125th Street
+& Third Ave., Harlem. 338 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. Depots, foot of
+Chambers Street and foot of Twenty-third Street, New York. 3 Exchange
+Place. Long Dock Depot, Jersey City, And of the Agents at the principal
+Hotels.
+
+WM. R. BARR, _General Passenger Agent._
+
+L.D. RUCKER, _General Superintendent._
+
+May 20, 1870
+
+[Footnote *: Daily.]
+
+[Footnote *: For Hackensack only.]
+
+[Footnote **: For Piermont only.]
+
+
+
+Mercantile Library, Clinton Hall, Astor Place, NEW YORK.
+
+This is now the largest Circulating Library in America, the number of
+volumes on its shelves being 114,000. About 1000 volumes are added each
+month; and very large purchases are made of all new and popular works.
+
+Books are delivered at members' residences for five cents each delivery.
+
+TERMS OF MEMBERSHIP:
+
+TO CLERKS, - $1 INITIATION, $3 ANNUAL DUES. TO OTHERS, - - - -$5 A YEAR.
+
+Subscriptions Taken for Six Months.
+
+BRANCH OFFICES AT No. 76 Cedar St., New York, AND AT Yonkers, Norwalk,
+Stamford, and Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+HORSEMEN, ATTENTION!
+
+Farmers, Farmers' Clubs, Drivers, Riders, Grooms, Livery Stable Keepers,
+Owners, Professional Horsemen.
+
+The whole press, sporting papers, secular and religious journals, unite
+in saying that HIRAM WOODRUFF'S work on
+
+"The Trotting Horse of America"
+
+Is "THE MOST PRACTICAL AND INSTRUCTIVE BOOK EVER PUBLISHED CONCERNING
+THE HORSE." And the best known professionals, Hoagland, Mace, Pfifer,
+etc, endorse it with equal heartiness.
+
+Ask your Bookseller for it,
+
+Or enclose the price, $2.25, and it will be mailed to you postpaid.
+
+J.B. FORD & CO., Publishers, 39 Park Row, New York.
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY SPEAR PRINTER - LITHOGRAPHER STATIONER & BLANK BOOK
+MANUFACTURER 82 WALL ST NEW YORK]
+
+
+
+$2 to ALBANY and TROY.
+
+The Day Line Steamboats C Vibbard and Daniel Drew, commencing May 31,
+will leave Vestry st. Pier at 8.45, and Thirty-fourth st. at 9 a.m.,
+landing at Yonkers, (Nyack, and Tarrytown by ferry-boat), Cozzens, West
+Point, Cornwall, Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, Rhinebeck, Bristol, Catskill,
+Hudson, and New Baltimore. A special train of broad-gauge cars
+in connection with the day boats will leave on arrival at Albany
+(commencing June 20) for Sharon Springs. Fare $4.25 from New York and
+for Cherry Valley. The Steamboat Seneca will transfer passengers from
+Albany to Troy.
+
+
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.
+
+AN ADAPTATION.
+
+BY ORPHEUS C. KERR.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ALMS-HOUSE.
+
+For the purpose of preventing an inconvenient rush of literary
+tuft-hunters and sight-seers thither next summer, a fictitious name must
+be bestowed upon the town of the Ritualistic church. Let it stand in
+these pages as Bumsteadville. Possibly it was not known to the Romans,
+the Saxons, nor the Normans by that name, if by any name at all; but
+a name more or less weird and full of damp syllables can be of little
+moment to a place not owned by any advertising Suburban-Residence
+benefactors.
+
+A disagreeable and healthy suburb, Bumsteadville, with a strange odor of
+dried bones from its ancient pauper burial-ground, and many quaint
+old ruins in the shapes of elderly men engaged as contributors to the
+monthly magazines of the day. Antiquity pervades Bumsteadville; nothing
+is new; the very Rye is old; also the Jamaica, Santa Cruz, and a number
+of the native maids. A drowsy place, with all its changes lying far
+behind it; or, at least, the sun-browned mendicants passing through say
+they never saw a place offering so little present change.
+
+In the midst of Bumsteadville stands the Alms-House; a building of an
+antic order of architecture; still known by its original title to the
+paynobility and indigentry of the surrounding country, several of
+whose ancestors abode there in the days before voting was a certain
+livelihood; although now bearing a door-plate inscribed, "Macassar
+Female College, Miss CAROWTHERS." Whether any of the country editors,
+projectors of American Comic papers, and other inmates of the edifice in
+times of yore, ever come back in spirit to be astonished by the manner
+in which modern serious and humorous print can be made productive of
+anything but penury by publishing True Stories of Lord BYRON and the
+autobiographies of detached wives, maybe of interest to philosophers,
+but is of no account to Miss CAROWTHERS. Every day, during school-hours,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS, in spectacles and high-necked alpaca, preside over
+her Young Ladies of Fashion, with an austerity and elderliness
+before which every mental image of Man, even as the most poetical of
+abstractions, withers and dies. Every night, after the young ladies have
+retired, does Miss CAROWTHERS put on a freshening aspect, don a more
+youthful low-necked dress--
+
+ As though a rose
+ Should leave its clothes
+ And be a bud again,--
+
+and become a sprightlier Miss CAROWTHERS. Every night, at the same hour,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS discuss with her First Assistant, Mrs. PILLSBURY,
+the Inalienable Bights of Women; always making certain casual reference
+to a gentleman in the dim past, whom she was obliged to sue for breach
+of promise, and to whom, for that reason, Miss CAROWTHERS airily refers,
+with a toleration bred of the lapse of time, as "Breachy Mr. BLODGETT."
+
+The pet pupil of the Alms-House is FLORA POTTS, of course called the
+Flowerpot; for whom a husband has been chosen by the will and bequest of
+her departed papa, and at whom none of the other Macassar young ladies
+can look without wondering how it must feel. On the afternoon after the
+day of the dinner at the boarding-house, the Macassar front-door bell
+rings, and Mr. EDWIN DROOD is announced as waiting to see Miss FLORA.
+Having first rubbed her lips and cheeks, alternately, with her fingers,
+to make them red; held her hands above her head to turn back the
+circulation and make them white; and added a little lead-penciling to
+her eyebrows to make them black; the Flowerpot trips innocently down
+to the parlor, and stops short at some distance from the visitor in a
+curious sort of angular deflection from the perpendicular.
+
+"O, you absurd creature!" she says, placing a finger in her mouth and
+slightly wriggling at him. "To go and have to be married to me whether
+we want to or not! It's perfectly disgusting."
+
+"Our parents _did_ rather come a little load on us," says EDWIN DROOD,
+not rendered enthusiastic by his reception.
+
+"Can't we get a _habeas corpus_, or some other ridiculous thing, and ask
+some perfectly absurd Judge to serve an injunction on somebody?" she
+asks, with pretty earnestness. "Don't, Eddy--do-o-n't." "Don't what,
+FLORA?" "Don't try to kiss me, please." "Why not, FLORA?" "Because I'm
+enameled." "Well, I do think," says EDWIN DROOD, "that you put on the
+Grecian Bend rather heavily with me. Perhaps I'd better go."
+
+"I wouldn't be so exquisitely hateful, Eddy. I got the gum-drops last
+night, and they were perfectly splendid."
+
+"Well, that's a comfort, at any rate," says her affianced, dimly
+conscious of a dawning civility in her last remark. "If it's really
+possible for you to walk on those high heels of yours, FLORA, let's try
+a promenade out-doors."
+
+Here Miss CAROWTHERS glides into the room to look for her scissors, is
+reminded by the scene before her of Breachy Mr. BLODGETT; whispers,
+"Don't trifle with her young affections, Mr. DROOD, unless you want to
+be sued, besides being interviewed by all the papers;" and glides out
+again with a sigh.
+
+FLORA then puts upon her head a fig-leaf trimmed with lace and ribbon,
+and gets her hoop and stick from behind the hall-door. EDWIN DROOD takes
+from one of his pockets an india-rubber ball, to practice fly-catches
+with as he walks; and driving the hoop and throwing and catching the
+ball, the two go down the ancient turnpike of Bumsteadville together.
+
+"Oh, please, EDDY, scrape yourself close to the fences, so that the
+girls can't see you out of the windows," pleads FLORA. "It's so utterly
+absurd to be walking with one that one's got to marry whether one likes
+it or not; and you do look so perfectly ridiculous in that short coat,
+and all your other things so tight."
+
+He gloomily scrapes against the fences, dropping his ball and catching
+it on the rebound at every step. "Which way shall we go?" "Up by the
+store, EDDY, dear."
+
+They go to the all-sorts country store in question, where EDWIN DROOD
+buys her some sassafras bull's-eye candy, and then they turn toward home
+again.
+
+"Now be a good-tempered EDDY," she says, trundling her hoop beside him,
+"and pretend that you aren't going to be my husband." "Not if I can help
+it," he says, catching the ball almost spitefully. "Then you're going to
+have somebody else?" "You make my head ache, so you do," whispers EDWIN
+DROOD. "I don't want to marry anybody at all!"
+
+She tickles him under the arm with her hoop-stick, and turns eyes that
+are all serious upon his. "I wish, EDDY, that we could be perfectly
+absurd friends to each other, instead of utterly ridiculous engaged
+people. It's exquisitely awful, you know, to have a husband picked out
+for you by dead folks, and I'm so sick about it sometimes that I hardly
+have the heart to fix my back-hair. Let each of us forbear, and stop
+teasing the other."
+
+Greatly pleased by this perfectly intelligent and forgiving arrangement,
+EDWIN DROOD says: "You're right, FLORA, Teasing is played out;" and
+drives his ball into a perfect frenzy of bounces.
+
+They have arrived near the Ritualistic church, through the windows of
+which come the organ-notes of one practising within. Something familiar
+in the grand air rolling out to them causes EDWIN DROOD to repeat,
+abstractedly, "I feel--I feel--I feel---"
+
+FLORA, simultaneously affected in the same way, unconsciously
+murmurs,---"I feel like a morning star."
+
+They then join hands, under the same irresistible spell, and take
+dancing steps, humming, in unison, "Shoo, fly! don't bodder me."
+
+"That's JACK BUMSTEAD'S playing," whispers EDWIN DROOD; "and he must be
+breathing this way, too, for I can smell the cloves."
+
+"O, take me home," cries FLORA, suddenly throwing her hoop over the
+young man's neck, and dragging him violently after her. "I think cloves
+are perfectly disgusting."
+
+At the door of the Alms-House the pretty Flowerpot blows a kiss to
+EDWIN, and goes in. He makes one trial of his ball against the door, and
+goes off. She is an in-fant, he Js an off-'un.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+MR. SWEENEY.
+
+Accepting the New American Cyclopaedia as a fair standard of
+stupidity--although the prejudice, perhaps, may arise rather from the
+irascibility of the few using it as a reference, than from the calm
+judgment of the many employing it to fill-out a showy book-case--then
+the newest and most American Cyclopaedist in Bumsteadville is Judge
+SWEENEY.
+
+[Footnote: Mr. SAPBEA, the original of this character In Mr. DICKENS'
+romance, is an auctioneer. The present Adapter can think of no nearer
+American equivalent, in the way of a person at once resident in a suburb
+and who sells to the highest bidder, than a supposable member of the New
+York judiciary.]
+
+It is Judge SWEENEY'S pleasure to found himself upon Father DEAN, whom
+he greatly resembles in the intellectual details of much forehead,
+stomach, and shirt-collar. When upon the bench in the city, even,
+granting an injunction in favor of some railroad company in which he
+owns a little stock, he frequently intones his accompanying remarks
+with an ecclesiastical solemnity eminently calculated to suppress every
+possible tendency to levity in the assembled lawyers; and his discharge
+from arrest of any foreign gentleman brought before him for illegal
+voting, has often been found strikingly similar in sound to a pastoral
+Benediction.
+
+That Judge SWEENEY has many admirers, is proved by the immense local
+majority electing him to judicial eminence; and that the admiration is
+mutual is likewise proved by his subsequent appreciative dismissal of
+certain frivolous complaints against a majority of that majority
+for trifling misapprehensions of the Registry law. He is a portly,
+double-chinned man of about fifty, with a moral cough, eye-glasses
+making even his red nose seem ministerial, and little gold ballot-boxes,
+locomotives, and five-dollar pieces, hanging as "charms" from the chain
+of his Repeater.
+
+Judge SWEENEY'S villa is on the turnpike, opposite the Alms-House, with
+doors and shutters giving in whichever direction they are opened; and he
+is sitting near a table, with a sheet of paper in his hand, and a bowl
+of warm lemon tea before him, when his servant-girl announces "Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."
+
+"Happy to see you, sir, in my house, for the first time," is Judge
+SWEENEY'S hospitable greeting.
+
+"You honor me, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, whose eyes are set, as though he
+were in some kind of a fit, and who shakes hands excessively. "You are
+a good man, sir. How do you do, sir? Shake hands again, sir. I am very
+well, sir, I thank you. Your hand, sir. I'll stand by you, sir--though I
+never spoke t' you b'fore in my life. Let us shake hands, sir."
+
+But instead of waiting for this last shake, Mr. BUMSTEAD abruptly turns
+away to the nearest chair, deposits his hat in the very middle of the
+seat with great care, and recklessly sits down upon it.
+
+The lemon tea in the bowl upon the table is a fruity compound,
+consisting of two very thin slices of lemon, which are maintained in
+horizontal positions, for the free action of the air upon their upper
+surfaces, by a pint of whiskey procured for that purpose. About half a
+pint of hot water has been added to help soften the rind of the lemon,
+and a portion of sugar to correct its acidity.
+
+With a wave of the hand toward this tropical preserve, Judge SWEENEY
+says: "You have a reputation, sir, as a man of taste. Try some lemon
+tea."
+
+Energetically, if not frantically, his guest holds out a tumbler to be
+filled, immediately after which he insists upon shaking hands again.
+"You're a man of insight, sir," he says, working Judge SWEENEY back and
+forth in his chair. "I _am_ a man of taste, sir, and you know the world,
+sir."
+
+"The _World_?" says Judge SWEENEY, complacently. "If you mean the
+religious female daily paper of that name, I certainly do know it. I
+used to take it for my late wife when she was trying to learn Latin."
+
+"I mean the terrestrial globe, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, irritably.
+"The great spherical foundation, sir, upon which Boston has since been
+built."
+
+"Ah, I see," says Judge SWEENEY, genially, "I believe, though, that I
+know that world, also, pretty well; for, if I have not exactly been to
+foreign countries, foreign countries have come to me. They have come to
+me on--hem!--business, and I have improved my opportunities. A man comes
+to me from a vessel, and I say 'Cork,' and give him Naturalization
+Certificates for himself and his friends. Another comes, and I say
+'Dublin;' another, and I say 'Belfast.' If I want to travel still
+further, I take them all together and say 'the Polls.'"
+
+"You'll do to travel, sir," responds Mr. BUMSTEAD, abstractedly helping
+himself to some more lemon tea; "but I thought we were to talk about the
+late Mrs. SWEENEY."
+
+"We were, sir," says Judge SWEENEY, abstractedly removing the bowl to a
+sideboard on his farther side. "My late wife, young man, as you may be
+aware, was a Miss HAGGERTY, and was imbued with homage to Shape. It was
+rumored, sir, that she admired me for my Manly Shape. When I offered to
+make her my bride, the only words she could articulate were, "O, my!
+_I_?"--meaning that she could scarcely believe that I really meant
+_her_. After which she fell into strong hysterics. We were married,
+despite certain objections on the score of temperance by that corrupt
+Radical, her father. From looking up to me too much she contracted an
+affection of the spine, and died about nine months ago. Now, sir, be
+good enough to run your eye over this Epitaph, which I have composed for
+the monument now erecting to her memory."
+
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, rousing from a doze for the purpose, fixes glassy eyes
+upon the slip of paper held out to him, and reads as follows:
+
+ MARY ANN,
+
+ Unlitigating and Unliterary Wife of
+
+ HIS HONOR, JUDGE SWEENEY.
+
+ In the darkest hours of
+
+ Her Husband's fortunes
+
+ She was never once tempted to Write for
+
+ THE TRIBUNE, THE INDEPENDENT, or THE RIVERSIDE MAGAZINE:
+
+ Nor did even a disappointment about a
+
+ new bonnet ever induce her to
+
+ threaten her husband with
+
+ AN INDIANA DIVORCE.
+
+ STRANGER, PAUSE,
+
+ and consider if thou canst say
+
+ the same about
+
+ THINE OWN WIFE!
+
+ If not,
+
+ WITH A RUSH RETIRE.
+
+
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, affected to tears, interspersed with nods, by his reading,
+has barely time to mutter that such a wife was too good to live long in
+these days, when the servant announces that "MCLAUGHLIN has come, sir."
+
+JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, who now enters, is a stone-cutter and mason, much
+employed in patching dilapidated graves and cutting inscriptions,
+and popularly known in Bumsteadville, on account of the dried mortar
+perpetually hanging about him, as "Old Mortarity." He is a ricketty man,
+with a chronic disease called bar-roomatism, and so very grave-yardy in
+his very '_Hic_' that one almost expects a _jacet_ to follow it as a
+matter of course.
+
+"JOHN MCLAUGHLIN," says Judge SWEENEY, handing him the paper with the
+Epitaph, "there is the inscription for the stone."
+
+"I guess I can get it all on, sir," says MCLAUGHLIN. "Your servant, Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."
+
+"Ah, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how are you?" says Mr. BUMSTEAD, his hand with the
+tumbler vaguely wandering toward where the bowl formerly stood. "By the
+way, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how came you to be called 'Old Mortarity'? It
+has a drunken sound, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, like one of Sir WALTER SCOTT'S
+characters disguised in liquor."
+
+"Never you mind about that," says MCLAUGHLIN. "I carry the keys of the
+Bumsteadville[1] churchyard vaults, and can tell to an atom, by a tap
+of my trowel, how fast a skeleton is dropping to dust in the pauper
+burial-ground. That's more than they can do who call me names." With
+which ghastly speech JOHN MCLAUGHLIN retires unceremoniously from the
+room.
+
+Judge SWEENEY now attempts a game of backgammon with the man of taste,
+but becomes discouraged after Mr. BUMSTEAD has landed the dice in his
+vest-opening three times running and fallen heavily asleep in the middle
+of a move. An ensuing potato salad is made equally discouraging by
+Mr. BUMSTEAD'S persistent attempts to cut up his handkerchief in it.
+Finally, Mr. BUMSTEAD[2] wildly finds his way to his feet, is plunged
+into profound gloom at discovering the condition of his hat, attempts to
+leave the room by each of the windows and closets in succession, and at
+last goes tempestuously through the door by accident.
+
+[_To be Continued._]
+
+
+
+
+Wanted for the Lecture-Room.
+
+Beloit, in Wisconsin, boasts a wife who has not spoken to her husband
+for fifteen years. Fifteen long years! Happy man!--happy woman! No
+insanity, no divorce, no murder, but Silence. Why isn't this wondrous
+woman brought to the platform, Miss ANTHONY?
+
+[Footnote 1: Certain fancied points of resemblance having led some
+persons to suppose that Bumsteadville means Rochester, the Adapter is
+impelled to declare that such is _not_ the case.]
+
+[Footnote 2: In compliance with the modern demand for fine realistic
+accuracy in art, the Adapter, previous to making his delineation of Mr.
+BUMSTEAD public, submitted it to the judgment of a physician having
+a large practice amongst younger journalists and Members of the
+Legislature. This authority, after due critical inspection,
+pronounced it psychologically correct as a study of monomania a potu.]
+
+
+[Illustration: _Piscator (to his progeny.)_ "NOW, GEORGE WASHINGTON, YOU
+TAKE A GOOD GRIP OF THIS YERE EEL, AND DON'T MUSS YOUR CLOTHES, OR YER
+MUDDER 'LL NEBER LET YOU GO FISHIN' AG'IN, SARTIN."]
+
+
+
+
+THE JOYS OF SUMMER.
+
+ I've Had my annual dream
+ Of boats and fishing, Congress-water, cream,
+ Strawberry-shortcake, lager-bier, iced punch,
+ And lobster-salad lunch.
+
+ It came about midday,
+ Toward the latter part of "flowering May"--
+ When nothing's fit to eat, or drink, or wear,
+ And nothing suits but air.
+
+ Let Summer come! said I;
+ Let _something_ happen quick, or I shall die!
+ I want to change my diet, clothes,--my skin,--
+ _Myself_, if not a sin!
+
+ (_One_ thing, I would remark,
+ I didn't dream of: that was Central Park.)
+ All these (the Park included) I have had;
+ Of course you think I'm glad.
+
+ No, I can't say I am.
+ Your summer, I must tell you, is a sham!
+ I _might_, perhaps, have some poetic flights,
+ If I could sleep o' nights!
+
+ But who on earth _can_ sleep
+ When the thermometer's so awful steep?
+ The night, if anything, (at least _our_ way,)
+ Is hotter than the day!
+
+ And then--my stars!--_oh_, then!
+ When sleep would kindly visit weary men,
+ The dread mosquito stings away his rest.
+ Ah-h-h! _curse_ that pest!
+
+ But breakfast comes,--so soon
+ You almost wish they'd put it off till noon!
+ Five minutes' sleep--no appetite--no force:
+ You're jolly, now, of course!
+
+ You sip your breakfast tea--
+ If with your qualmy stomach 'twill agree,
+ Or your weak coffee,--weighing, with dismay,
+ The prospects of the day.
+
+ Hot! you may well say Hot,
+ When Blistering would hit it to a dot!
+ The cheerful round is brilliantly begun--
+ And everything "well done."
+
+
+
+
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
+
+_Down East_.--"The Earthly Paradise" is published in Boston. The scene
+of the poem is laid elsewhere.
+
+_Miner_.--"Pan in Wall Street" was written by E.C. STEDMAN. The pan
+spoken of is not suitable for miners' use.
+
+_Autograph Collector_ says that he has seen in the papers such
+statements as the following: "LOWELL'S Under the Willows," "WHITTIER'S
+Among the Hills," "PUMPELLY'S Across America and Asia." A.C. wants the
+post-office address of either or all of tho gentlemen named. We are
+unable to give the information desired.
+
+_Constant Reader_.--What is the meaning of the word "Herc"?
+
+_Answer_.--It is the popular name of one of our Assurance Companies,
+only known to its intimate friends. The other name is the "_Hercules_."
+
+_Erie_.--You have been misinformed. Mr. FISK neither appeared as an
+Admiral, nor as one of the "Twelve Temptations," at the Reception of the
+Ninth Regiment.
+
+_Inquirer_.--The free translation of the legend, "_Ratione aut vi_," on
+the Ninth Regiment Badge, is "Strong in rations."
+
+_Wall Street_ asks, "Who are interested in PUNCHINELLO?" Though the
+question is not very business-like, we reply, "Every one;" and we are
+receiving fresh acquisitions daily.
+
+_Bergh_.--Was the English nightingale ever introduced into this country?
+
+_Answer_.--We cannot say. You had better go to FLORENCE for information
+on the subject.
+
+_R.G. White_.--It was a happy thought of yours to apply to PUNCHINELLO
+for information regarding Shaksperean readings. To your first question,
+"Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a gourmand?" we reply: undoubtedly he
+was. By adopting what is obviously the correct reading of the
+passage--"Shadows to-night," etc., it will be seen that "DICKON" was
+occasionally a sufferer from heavy suppers:
+
+ ----"Shad-roes to-night
+ Have struck more terror to the soul of RICHARD."
+
+Then, to your second query, "Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a cannibal?"
+our answer is: Certainly he was. Following the above quotation we have
+the line, "Than can the substance," etc. The proper reading is:
+
+ "Then Can the substance of ten thousand soldiers."
+
+Famine was staring RICHARD'S army in the face, so that nothing could
+be more natural and proper than that he should have issued orders to
+butcher ten thousand of his lower soldiers, and have their meat canned
+for the subsistence of his "Upper Ten!"
+
+_Knife_.--You have been misinformed. General BUTLER was not a
+participator in the Battle of Five Forks, though more than that number
+of Spoons has been laid to his charge.
+
+_Anxious Parent_.--Probably the publication to which you refer is the
+one entitled "Freedom of the Mind in Willing," not "Freedom of the Will
+in Minding." It is not written for the encouragement of recalcitrant
+boys.
+
+_Confectioner_, (San Francisco.)--Mr. BEECHER, who wrote the article on
+candy, in the _Ledger_, lives in Brooklyn, a town of some importance not
+far from this city.
+
+
+
+
+The Nose and the Rose.
+
+The pink-lined parasols now in fashion were devised by some thoughtful
+improver of woman, to enhance beauty by imparting a roseate hue to the
+complexion. Unfortunately, however, the reflection from the pink
+silk does not always reach the face at the right angle. Sometimes it
+concentrates altogether upon the most prominent feature of the face, and
+then "Red in the Nose is She" becomes applicable to the bearer of the
+parasol. _Couleur de rose_ is an expression for all that is lovely and
+serene, but the rose must not be worn on the nose.
+
+
+
+
+Going him one Better.
+
+The only difference between the Colossus of Rhodes and King HENRY VIII
+was that while Colossus was only a _won_der, King H. was a _Tu_dor.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+R. J. H. M'VICKER has for some years past conducted a Chicago theatre,
+of which he has been lessee, manager, and stock company. The Chicago
+people have liked M'VICKER'S Theatre, because it has occasionally
+treated them to the novel sensation of a comparatively moral
+performance. Occasional morality deftly inserted in the midst of a
+season of seductive legs, produces the same effect upon a Chicago
+audience that a naughty _opera bouffe_ does upon the New York lovers
+of the legitimate drama. In either case there is the charm of foreign
+novelty; a charm, however, which soon loses its attraction. _Opera
+bouffe_ in New York, and the moral drama in Chicago, can enjoy but a
+temporary success. The former city will always return to its love of
+standard comedies and SHAKSPEAREAN tragedies, and the latter will sooner
+or later clamor for its accustomed legs and its favorite dramas of
+bigamy and divorce.
+
+Mr. M'VICKER, having read of the MCFARLAND trial, immediately conceived
+the happy idea that the time had come when a Chicago actor would please
+a New York audience. Ha therefore flew to this city, by way of the
+Mississippi river and the New Orleans and Havana steamships, and last
+week made a debut at BOOTH'S Theatre. With an astuteness which reflects
+great credit upon his ability as a manager, he astonished the audience,
+which had assembled to be shocked by a genuine Chicago performance,
+by playing a part which fairly bristles with unnecessarily obtrusive
+morality. Thus did he present a double attraction. A Chicago actor would
+have been sure, in any case, of the support of the Free Love Press; but
+a moral Chicago actor is a surprise which appeals irresistibly to the
+love of novelty which exists in the theatre-going breast. The play
+in which he made his first appearance here, is entitled "Taking the
+Chances," and is from the pen of Mr. CHARLES GAYLER, to whom Dr. WATTS
+so beautifully referred in those touching verses:
+
+ "Gayler, the Troubadour,
+ Touched his guitar,"
+
+--and further language to a like effect. Mr. M'VICKER sustained the
+character of "PETER POMEROY," one of those oppressive rural Yankees
+whose mission seems to be to drive young men into the paths of vice, by
+representing virtue as inextricably associated with home-spun garments,
+and the manners of an uneducated bull in an unprotected china shop. The
+following version of the play will be recognized as literally exact, by
+all who have not seen the original.
+
+
+
+
+Taking the Chances.
+
+ACT I.
+
+MR. POMEROY, _a Preposterous Uncle, who regards his nephew_, PETER, _as
+a desirable person._ "My dear PETER will he here in a few moments. His
+presence will be a real blessing."
+
+MRS. POMEROY. "I am sorry to hear it. He breaks furniture and things,
+and I don't like him."
+
+_Enter_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE, _who make unnecessary remarks, and obviously
+exist only to meet_ PETER. _Finally_ PETER _enters, in butternut
+clothing and a condition of chronic moral perfection._
+
+PETER. "Jewhillikins! Haow de du, Unkil? Haow are ye, Aunt DEB? Haow is
+everybody? Our pigs and chickens and garden-sass is all doin' well."
+--_Falls on a chair._
+
+PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE. "Dear, noble, manly fellow."
+
+EVERYBODY ELSE. "Unbearable brute."
+
+_Enter_ BLANCHE POMEROY. "Do I see my dear cousin? I am glad to see you,
+but please don't tear all of my dress to pieces."
+
+PETER. "_Jewhillikins!_" "You used to not to mind abaout havin' your
+frock torn when you was up at Graniteville. But I s'pose society has
+sp'iled you."
+
+_Enter_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN, _and whispers to_ BLANCHE--"To-night you must
+fly with me. We have not a moment to lose."
+
+PETER. "_Jewhillikins!_ That is the chap that deserted his wife in
+Graniteville? I'll fix him."
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "What do I see? A virtuous rustic? Confusion! Can he
+suspect me?"
+
+PETER _devotes himself to the virtuous task of insulting every person in
+the room, thereby proving how much superior a cow-boy from New Hampshire
+is to the wretched resident of the city, whom fate has made a base
+and villainous gentleman. The_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN _goes through with
+a complicated fit of St. Vitus's Dance, by way of preserving a cool
+exterior, and thus allaying the suspicions of_ PETER. _Various_ TEDIOUS
+PEOPLE _enter and converse tediously with the_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. _After
+a time the stage-carpenters suddenly decide to lower the curtain, and
+thus put an end to an act that might otherwise go on forever._
+
+
+ACT II.
+
+_Enter_ PETER. "Jewhillikins! This is a nice garden. What pesky villains
+all these people must be, considerin' that they wear good clothes and
+don't break the furnitoor. There's that chap that deserted his wife.
+I'll fix him."--_Hides himself in an arbor._
+
+_Enter_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.--"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? In
+order to avert suspicion, I will confide everything to the friendly
+air."--_Relates his past life and future plans, at the top of his lungs,
+and then returns to the house._
+
+_Enter_ PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE, _and various_ TEDIOUS PEOPLE, _who all want
+to marry_ BLANCHE. _They converse tediously and go away again. Applause!
+Enter_ BLANCHE _and_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.--"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? BLANCHE, we
+must fly to-night. Not a moment is to be lost."
+
+_Re-enter_ PETER. "Jewhillikins! BLANCHE, I want to talk a spell with
+yon."--To PLAUSTBLE VILLAIN "Go into the haouse, will you?"--_He goes_.
+
+BLANCHE, "What do you want, PETER? Why do you tear my dress, and scratch
+your head so persistently?"
+
+PETER. "Jewhillikins! That feller you love is a scoundrel. I'll prove
+it. Will you believe it after it's proved?"
+
+BLANCHE, (_With a fine sense of what is truly womanly_.) "Of course I
+won't believe it. I despise proofs and arguments."
+
+_Enter_ TEDIOUS PEOPLE _and_ IREELEVANT PEOPLE. _They converse more
+tediously and irrelevantly than before. At last the carpenters, who have
+been out for beer, return and drop the curtain._
+
+
+ACT III.
+
+_Enter_ PETER, _in the clothes of an ordinary Christian. He practices a
+frightful dance, and remarks at intervals,_ "Jewhillikins."
+
+_Enter_ BLANCHE _and_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. _The latter notices_ PETER,
+_with convulsive alarm._
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "Confusion! Can he suspect me? BLANCHE, we must fly
+at once. There is not a moment to lose."
+
+_Enter_ EVERYBODY. _A quadrille is formed._ PETER _dances and falls
+over everybody else. The quadrille ends._ PETER _rises and remarks,
+"Jewhillikins." He goes out and returns, bringing the_ PLAUSIBLE
+VILLAIN'S _wife with him. The_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN _repents._ BLANCHE
+_consents to marry_ PETER. _Various preposterous engagements are entered
+into by the_ TEDIOUS _and the_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. _And at last the play
+is over._
+
+
+
+COMIC MAN _among the audience._ "Why should M'VICKER think a man a
+scoundrel, who deserts his wife and tries to marry another? Don't he
+come from Chicago?"
+
+2D COMIC MAN.--"Don't SHERIDAN," (who plays the PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN,)
+"look as if he wished he were 'twenty miles away' when PETER denounces
+him?"
+
+And the bystanders smile weakly, as though they had heard a good joke on
+SHERIDAN, and retire slowly toward their homes, evidently exhausted by
+the oppressive virtue of the intolerable Yankee boor, whom M'VICKER
+plays so well that the respectable portion of the audience is almost
+inclined to overlook the wretchedness of the part in admiration of the
+skill of the actor.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+
+
+
+Cue-rious Rumor.
+
+That the Sound steamers are to be furnished with billiard tables for
+the amusement of passengers between New York and Boston. This report,
+however, is flatly contradicted, and we have neither charity nor chalk
+for the man who would make a statement so groundless. GEORGE FRANCIS,
+THE UBIQUITOUS.
+
+Amidst all the chances and changes of this chequered, and, in some
+respects, lugubrious life, Mr. PUNCHINELLO has the perennial consolation
+of one friendship, which promises to be immortal, and over which time
+and space hold no sway. Need we say that we are alluding to the tender
+emotions which crowd our bosom whenever we hear of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN! And lest our love for him should grow colder, this considerate
+gentleman allows us to hear from him almost daily. To be sure he is like
+some great antediluvian grasshopper, and seems capable of spanning this
+almost boundless continent at a leap. He is in Maine in the morning--he
+is making a speech in Minnesota when the evening shades prevail; but
+wherever he is, the roll of his eloquence reaches us, and however busy
+he may be, he is never too busy to write letters to tho newspapers. The
+great man comes very near to solving the problem heretofore considered
+insoluble, of being in two places at once. Two, did we say? Absurd!
+Three, four, five, half a dozen! What a man! Jumping here! Leaping
+there! Skipping North! Vaulting South! Skimming (like a CAMILLA in
+pantaloons) over the plains of the West! Then, as if by magic, whirling
+himself to the East! A man, did we say? Bah! GEORGE FRANCIS is clearly
+one of the immortals.
+
+Clearly! JUPITER used to be rather lavish of electricity, but he did but
+a small retail business in it, compared with our dear GEORGE FRANCIS,
+the demi-god, who, when he is not talking with sublime garrulity, is
+telegraphing without regard to expense. Evidently it has dawned upon the
+mind (if he has any,) of this extraordinary being, that the world, in
+none of its quarters, can get along without him, and that the newspaper
+which does not mention his name must be stale, flat, and unprofitable.
+Wherefore he takes order that every newspaper shall print the wonderful
+name as often as possible. Whether he be laughed at, sneered at, sworn
+at, the virtue of the mere mention remains the same.
+
+The last we heard from GEORGE FRANCIS, he was, (to use his own choice
+language,) "away up here on the Chippewa," beseeching the lumber men,
+with all the charm of his inimitable eloquence, to vote him into the
+Presidential chair. "I am waking up these boys for 1872," writes the
+valuable phenomenon. Unto "millers, rafters, choppers, and jammers,"
+this Fountain of Oratory has gushed forth his "four hundred and
+twenty-first consecutive Presidential lecture." Imagine a possible scene
+upon a raft! GEORGE FRANCIS, mounted upon a whiskey-barrel, is making
+all the air resonant with rhetoric. The "rafters" are swearing!
+The "choppers" are cursing! The "jammers" are most reprehensibly
+blaspheming! The enormous mass floats onward, and "TRAIN!" the floods,
+"TRAIN!" the forests, "TRAIN!" the overarching skies resound! No
+miserable hall, no narrow street, no "pent-up Utica" contracts the
+power of this miraculous elocutionist--his auditorium seems to be a
+hemisphere--his audience all mankind! ORPHEUS singing moved rocks
+and trees. Great GEORGE spouting subdues all the inhabitants of the
+wilderness. Timid deer trip to the shore to listen; ferocious bears,
+catching the echo, shed tears of penitence; all creatures of the roaring
+kind acknowledge themselves surpassed and silenced; the whispering pines
+whisper all the more softly, as if ashamed of their own verbal weakness.
+All speeches, even the speeches of a TRAIN, must come to an end; and
+having ended, the floating DEMOSTHENES sits down to write to the
+newspapers, that he has just been delivered of his four-hundred-and-
+twenty-second, and is as well as could be expected.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO has, in his day, been considered talkative; but he
+feels, as he listens to GEORGE FRANCIS, that he is himself a marvel of
+taciturnity--that in the noble art of sounding his own trumpet he is
+a mere child--that as a contributor to the public amusement he is in
+danger of falling into paltry insignificance. Alas! he is not the
+marvellous mountebank which he has heretofore considered himself to be;
+and the nonsense upon which he so prided himself, in comparison with
+the nonsense of GEORGE FRANCIS, sinks into the most melancholy and
+insufferable wisdom. He looks forward to the future with a fear lest he
+may descend to the depths of serious and slow solemnity. When he has
+arrived at that deplorable stage of decay, he wishes it to be understood
+that his drum and trumpet are at the service of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN.
+
+
+[Illustration: A YOUNG STIR AMONG THE DAILIES.
+
+_Editor Dana._ "I WISH THAT FELLOW WOULD TAKE HIS BANNER OUT OF MY WAY.
+IT ECLIPSES MY SPECIAL NEWS."]
+
+
+
+
+ASSOCIATED PRESS TELEGRAMS.
+
+It is well known that there is a leak in the Associated Press Office. In
+point of fact there always is a leak. Why any one should think it worth
+while to steal the Associated Press cable dispatches is a mystery,
+when they could be manufactured in any newspaper office with much less
+trouble. The following dispatches are a fair sample of the ordinary
+cable news which is sent to the Association. "We need hardly say that
+they were not stolen from Mr. SIMONTON, but we will say, as we
+have already said, that there is a leak. A word to the wise is
+sufficient--though, of course, by the expression, 'the wise,' we do not
+mean any reference to the London agent of the Associated Press."
+
+
+LONDON, June 6. The _Times_ of to-day has a paragraph on the big trees
+of California.
+
+MR. SMALLEY denies that he ever wore a hat resembling that of GUSTAVE
+FLOURENS.
+
+A boy has been arrested for picking pockets in Oxford Street.
+
+JOHN SMITH, proprietor of a coffee and cake saloon in Ratcliffe Highway,
+has gone into bankruptcy.
+
+It is believed that if the Tories should oust the present cabinet, they
+would come into power.
+
+PARIS, June 7. There are rumors as to the health of the Emperor
+NAPOLEON.
+
+Yesterday a man is said to have cried, "_Vive la Republique!_" in his
+back-yard.
+
+ROME, June, 8. The Ecumenical Council is still in session.
+
+There are more strangers in Rome than there have been at times when the
+number was less.
+
+ALEXANDRIA, June 8. Several vessels have passed through the Suez Canal
+since its completion.
+
+The Suez Canal is by some regarded as a success. Others think it a
+failure.
+
+CALCUTTA, June 6. A native was killed by a tiger near Bundelcund
+eighteen months ago.
+
+YOKOHAMA, June 6. The P. & O. Steamer Bombay has run down and sunk the
+U.S. Sloop Oneida.
+
+ST. PETERSBURGH, June 7. Some discontent was caused by the emancipation
+of the serfs.
+
+BERLIN, June 8. BISMARCK has notified the Upper House that no
+exemplification of the categorical plebiscitum will be favorably
+entertained or rejected.
+
+In view of these important dispatches, PUNCHINELLO respectfully suggests
+to Mr. SIMONTON, that instead of trying to put an end to the stealing of
+his news, he put a peremptory end to the London agent of the Associated
+Press. Otherwise the agent will soon put an end to the Association. One
+or the other event must take place, and it is only a question of time
+which shall occur first. [Illustration: PONTOON FOR PARTIES. A NEW
+INVENTION, TO ENABLE GENTLEMEN TO CROSS THE FLOWING TRAINS OF LADIES IN
+FASHIONABLE DRAWING-ROOMS.]
+
+
+
+
+COMIC ZOOLOGY.
+
+The Boa Constrictor.
+
+Oriental tourists claim to have met with specimens of this reptile one
+hundred feet in length, but as travellers are proverbially prone to
+stretch their tales, narrative of this character must not be too readily
+swallowed. He is found in India, all along the course of the Hooghly,
+and is hugely superior in strength and size to all the other reptiles of
+Asia. His habitat is usually up a tree, where he lies in ambush, and
+he forages, and has for ages, on the nobler quadrupeds; seldom letting
+himself down to make a "picked-up dinner" on the lower animals.
+Sometimes, however, when tormented with an "all-gone sensation" in the
+pit of his stomach, he descends to dine on a high-caste Brahmin and to
+sup on a Gentoo.
+
+The skin of the Boa has a silky sheen, like that of the finest Rep, and,
+when taking a nap in the sun, his Damascened appearance may remind the
+pious spectator of a scene damned by the intrusion of a similar reptile
+several thousand years ago.
+
+The Boa Constrictor is not a fascinating snake--far from it. He relies
+on his muscles and not on his charms, for support. His appetite is
+vigorous, and the manner in which he disposes of his tid-bits, such
+as the larger carnivora, may be described as glutenous. Much has been
+written of the creature, but a glance at his enormous volume will give a
+truer idea of him than anything that has ever issued from the press.
+He serves the body of an animal, before devouring it, as mercenary
+politicians serve the body politic--crushing it with many Rings. By the
+keepers of menageries he is often called the Boa _Constructor_, but the
+name more aptly applies to the Furrier who simulates his shape on a
+small scale; the creature having no mechanical skill whatever.
+
+Occasionally, from some branch that overhangs a _Nullah_, he will drop
+down on the thirsty eland or hartbeest, rendering resistance a Nullity;
+but his favorite game is fighting the tiger, at which, unlike the human
+species, he always wins when in the vein for that kind of sport. All the
+beasts of the jungle fear him--the wolf feeling no disposition to seek
+his folds, and the leopard frequently changing his spots to avoid him.
+Whatever his quarry may be, its sands are soon run out.
+
+The Boa, like other gourmands, is fond of gourmand-ease. After having
+put a victim through the mill and bolted him for a meal, the monster may
+be discovered (or he may not) on some knoll in the forest, indulging in
+somnolency. He can then be assailed with safety, but as his breath is a
+horrible fetor, a spice (of caution) should be used in approaching him.
+The windward side is best. As he lies limber, smelling like Limburger,
+a hatchet will be found a first-chop weapon of assault. The Hindoos,
+however, generally double him up with Creeses. Cutting off the
+creature's tail, just behind the jaws, is a pretty sure way to
+ex-terminate him. There are on record several instances of Boas having
+been despatched in this way by Ruthless adventurers.
+
+The reptile abounds in Ceylon, and is considered a delicacy by the
+Cingalese, but the civilized stomach would probably find Double Ease in
+letting it alone. _Cotelette de Constrictor_, however pleasant to the
+Pagan palate, would scarcely go down with a Christian.
+
+High old stories of the Boa have been obtained by travellers, from the
+Asiatics. They resemble those of the fabled dragon and hippogriff, and
+as they generally relate to the ravaging of whole districts by the
+voracious monster, a heap o' grief is connected with some of them. The
+gum-game, however, is much in vogue in India, and most of these snake
+stories may be characterized as India Rubbish.
+
+The great Boa is a native of Southern Africa as well as of Asia, and is
+much dreaded by all the Dutch Boers. The creature is reported to have
+been seen in crossing the interior deserts, but this is believed to be
+a fiction invented in the Caravans. In Congo there is a small species a
+few sizes larger than the Conger eel, while in the section of country
+visited by CUMMING the Boa is the biggest serpent Going.
+
+There are stupendous snakes in the islands of the Indian Archipelago,
+and a Yankee skipper who lived a year among the natives informs us that
+he "once saw some arter a boa in Sumatra." The skipper, however, is a
+small joker, and always ready to Sacrifice Truth on the Alter Ego of a
+miserable pun. A vile habit this, but one that it is to be feared will
+never be abandoned.
+
+The skin of the Boa is rarely embroidered with purple and gold, but,
+like many a priestly hypocrite, he hides under the livery of heaven the
+instincts of the Devil. And so we dismiss him.
+
+
+
+
+BITTER SARCASM
+
+Canadians pronounce the sacred word "Sunburst" "Shunburst."
+
+
+[Illustration: THE WEDDING RING, AS SOKOSIS WOULD LIKE TO SEE IT WORN.]
+
+
+[ILLUSTRATION Description: Woman in Victorian dress with a small,
+free-running dog on her left holding a leash in her right hand which
+connects to a top-hatted man's nose ring. A sign behind them reads
+"Socuety for the prevention of cruelty to husbands $500 fine"] [blank
+page] [Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+Ind-Hearted Mr. CHANDLER had a proposition "which would restore American
+commerce to its former footing." It was simply to annex San Domingo,
+Cuba, and Canada. He repudiated with scorn and disgust the insinuation
+that he proposed to pay anything for them. That was foreign to his
+nature. He meant merely to take them. By this means they would not only
+restore American commerce--he din't profess to know exactly how--but
+they would inflict a deadly blow upon haughty England. At this point Mr.
+CHANDLER became incoherent, the only intelligible remark which reached
+the reporters, being that he could "lick" Queen VICTORIA single-handed.
+
+Mr. SUMNER remarked that a war with England would be costly.
+
+Mr. CHANDLER declined to accept any suggestion from a man who went to
+diplomatic dinners, and consorted with Englishmen. He had been told that
+at these dinners, to which he was proud to say he had never gone, and to
+which, while the custom of issuing invitations prevailed, he never
+would go, Mr. SUMNER ate with his fork. Such a man could not be a true
+American.
+
+Mr. MORRILL introduced a bill to increase the mileage of members.
+Notoriously, he observed, the mileage of members was scandalously small.
+He knew that the self-sacrificing nature of the senators would delight
+to pay this tribute to the fidelity of themselves, and the equally
+deserving public servants of the other house. Passed with acclamations.
+
+A resolution was introduced to appropriate a few millions towards the
+discovery of the North Pole.
+
+Mr. SAULSBURY said--Whazyoose?
+
+Mr. SUMNER explained that it would be a good thing for science.
+
+Mr. COLE explained that it would be an enormous thing for fishermen.
+
+Mr. YATES explained that it would be a vast thing for "cobblers."
+
+Mr. SAULSBURY said--Ah, B'gthing on Ice.
+
+Mr. MORRILL moved to extend the Capitol grounds to the next lot.
+
+Mr. YATES moved to extend them to Chicago.
+
+Mr. MORTON moved to extend them to Indianapolis.
+
+Mr. CHANDLER wildly shrieked Detroit.
+
+Mr. SUMNER faintly murmured Boston.
+
+
+
+HOUSE.
+
+Somebody introduced a bill to pension the soldiers of 1812. Somebody
+else wanted to amend it by providing that no soldier of 1812 who aided
+and comforted the recent rebellion should get any pension.
+
+Even Mr. BUTLER showed gleams of good feeling. He said that the lot of
+these men was hard. They were liable to be brought out upon platforms
+every Fourth of July, and obliged to sit and blink under patriotic
+eloquence for hours. It was their dreadful lot subsequently to eat
+public dinners in country taverns, which brought their gray hairs down
+in sorrow and indigestion to the grave. The notion of these senile and
+patriotic duffers aiding and comforting the rebellion was preposterous.
+Their eyes purged thick amber and plum-tree gum, and they had no notion
+of doing anything but drawing their pensions, and getting three meals a
+day, with a horrible fourth on the glorious Fourth.
+
+Mr. LOGAN said this position was outrageous. He knew that some of these
+hoary wretches in his own district were so fully in sympathy with the
+rebellion as actually to refuse to vote for him, when carriages were
+sent to convey them to the polls. Such men ought not to receive a
+dollar.
+
+Mr. BUTLER not only reaffirmed his previous statements, but reintroduced
+his resolution to annex Dominica.
+
+Mr. KELLEY desired to abolish the income tax. He said that some of his
+most influential constituents disliked it. They would not pay. To lie
+they were ashamed. If a sufficient tariff were put upon pig-iron there
+would be no need of providing for this petty Tacks.
+
+Mr. BUTLER was in favor of the abolition of the tax. It had never seen
+anything but a tax on paper, and it was not worth a paper of tacks.
+But he considered the most feasible method of reducing it was to annex
+Dominica, and he introduced a resolution to that effect. As his friend
+KELLEY had suggested, if they did not remove the tax, their constituents
+would remove them. He did not consider it practicable, however, to bring
+a movement to abolish the tacks on the carpet until Dominica should be
+ours.
+
+
+
+
+FURTHER OF MYTHOLOGY.
+
+DIANA. This goddess was generally admitted to be the most intellectual
+and disagreeable of the whole divine Sisterhood. Among the Greeks the
+popular estimate of her character was shown by the name of "Artful
+Miss"--afterwards corrupted to ARTEMIS--which they gave to her. She was
+an eminently strong-minded goddess, and insisted upon her right to adopt
+the habits of the other sex. Among them was the practice of hunting, of
+which she was passionately fond. Indeed, it was from her devotion to the
+pleasures of the chase that she obtained the epithet of the "Chased"
+DIANA--wild boars, and such like ungallant brutes, sometimes annoying
+her by refusing to be chased themselves, and by chasing her instead.
+There are those who pretend to think that "chaste," instead of "chased,"
+was really the original epithet, and that it was given to her as a
+recognition of the aggressive and malignant virtue which distinguishes
+most strong-minded women who are old and yet unmarried. The obvious
+absurdity of this theory will, however, be evident to any one who
+remembers her little flirtation with ENDYMION, whom she cruelly led from
+the paths of innocence, only to abandon him on the hills of Latmos,
+where he contracted the chills and fever by fruitlessly watching for her
+at night in the open field. A characteristic piece of ill-temper was her
+treatment of young ACTAEON. The latter, who was a respectable, though
+rather reckless young man, was once walking along the beach, when he
+suddenly came upon DIANA and several female friends in the act of taking
+the surf. Envious to behold the extremes of boniness, which then, as
+now, doubtless characterized the strong-minded females, he concealed
+himself in a neighboring bathing-house, and brought his opera-glass
+to bear on the group. He was, however, discovered, and DIANA and her
+friends were so indignant at being seen without their false teeth and
+false "fronts," that the former deliberately set her dogs on him, who
+tore him into imperceptible fragments so small that no coroner could
+possibly find enough of him in order to hold an inquest. Of course
+ACTAEON'S conduct cannot be defended, but then his punishment was
+altogether too severe. There is every reason to suppose that DIANA
+wanted some one to accidentally notice her proficiency in swimming, else
+why should she have chosen a place of popular resort for her bath? And
+then the simple nudity in which she was surprised was not nearly as
+suggestive as the peculiar costumes in which our fashionable ladies
+now-a-days enter the surf in the presence of admiring crowds. However,
+ideas change with successive ages, and what we now consider perfectly
+proper would probably have brought any quantity of blushes to the cheek
+of the young person of Athens or Rome. Among the Olympians DIANA was a
+common scold, and made herself as disagreeable to the goddesses as to
+the gods. Since she ceased to be openly worshipped she has been in a
+measure forgotten among men, but the strong-minded women still regard
+her with love and reverence, and it is understood that her statue,
+together with a painting representing her in the act of setting the
+dogs on ACTAEON, are among the most prominent decorations of the Sorosis
+Club-room and the _Revolution_ office.
+
+
+
+Historical
+
+Coney Island is celebrated for the saltness of its waters and the
+leathery qualities of its clams. This island is said to have been so
+named on account of its resemblance in shape to an inverted cone, but
+the attrition of the ocean has materially changed the conic base.
+Researches in the direction of the apex have not been made recently.
+
+
+
+Patentee Wanted.
+
+The heavy hebdomadals complain that the style of the communications sent
+them is too diffuse. The "talented" contributor is adjured to condense.
+There is an apparatus, we believe, for condensing the article called
+milk, but who will devise a machine for condensing the milk-and-water
+article? A fortune awaits the genius of the inventor.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLY GRAIL AND OTHER POEMS.
+
+(This Is one of the other Poems.)
+
+BY A HALF-RED DENIZEN OF THE WEST.
+
+Part XI.
+
+PELLEAS then, when all the flies were gone, Sat faithful on his horse,
+upon the lawn That skirts the castle moat; and thought the dame, For
+want of pluck, could never give him blame. He sat a week. She grew so
+blazing mad, She raved, and called three other knights she had; And
+cried, "That fool will drive me wild, I fear! Go bind his hands, and
+walk him Spanish here." And when the idiot heard her, he did grin And
+smirk, and let them walk him Spanish in. Then, railing vile, that he
+might take offence, She, sneering, asked him would he ne'er go hence;
+
+[Illustration]
+
+And cursed him till her face grew crimson red. Like cats of Cheshire
+then he grinned, and said:
+
+
+"Sent by thy train and thee to Coventry, I hung with grooms and porters
+on the bridge; Watched by thy three tall squires. And there I shaped An
+ancient willow's sapling into this."
+
+And handed her a whistle. "Kick him out!" She yelled; and the knights,
+laughing, took the lout, And thrust him from the gate. A week from this,
+Looking without, she saw his simple phiz; And cried "Go kill him! Stick
+him like a pig! You three can do it, if he is so big!" Unwilling, yet
+the knights went out to try, And light-of-love GAWAIN came riding by.
+"What ho!" he cried, "I'm in, if that fight's free; So here I come-ye
+knavish cowards three!" "For me," PELLEAS cried, "the fight she means,"
+And charging, knocked them into smithereens. Now called she other
+knights, and cried out, "Once Again go bind and bring me here that
+dunce!" And when he heard, he let himself be bound,
+
+And o'er the bridge they kicked him like a hound. When she had sneered
+her sneeriest, then she said, "Turn him out bound!" He lifted up his
+head,
+
+ "You ask me why, tho' ill at ease
+ Within this region I subsist?"
+
+ "I did," she said, "but pray desist
+ From further quoting, if you please."
+
+When forth PELLEAS came, his hands all tied, The brave GAWAIN, he
+bounded to his side, And loosed his bonds and said, "Look here, good
+friend, This sort of thing had better have an end. Just you go home, and
+take a Turkish bath, And I will cure this lady of her wrath. Give me
+your horse and shield. Take mine, I'll say I've killed you, stiffly
+dead, in mortal fray. Then she will straight repent; your death will
+rue, And while her heart is soft, I'll send for you."
+
+This nincum-fubby-diddle-boodle, he Went home, and did not GAWATN'S
+laughter see! He waited till the moon, after three days, Gave promise of
+large lights on woods and ways, And then he hastened to ETTABBE'S gate.
+He found it open, and he did not wait to be announced, but hastened,
+full of hope, To where her tent stood on the garden slope. He knew she
+slept the roses all among, And as he softly stepped, he softly sung:
+
+ "I am coming, my own, my sweet!
+ Were it ever so airy a tread,
+ Thy heart would hear me and beat,
+ Were it earth in an earthly bed.
+ Thy dust would hear me and beat,
+ Hads't thou lain for a century dead,
+ Would start and tremble under my feet--
+
+And just then he saw GAWAIN'S head! With one wild bound toward the
+dark'ning skies, From out the garden gates he madly flies. But soon his
+mind it alters. Slipping back, His tune he changes--trying this new
+ tack:"Howe'er it be, it seems to me
+ 'Tis only noble to be good;
+ Kind hearts are more than coronets,
+ And simple faith, than Norman blood.
+
+ O lady! You may veer and veer,
+ A great enchantress you may be,
+ But there'll be that across your throat,
+ Which you would scarcely care to see."
+
+Then he, while sleep of senses them bereft, Soft thrust his lance
+through both their necks--and left. The cold touch in her throat she
+felt, and woke. She knew the lance, and to GAWAIN she spoke. "Liar!" she
+said. "That man you have not slain. Let's both clear out! He may come
+back again!"
+
+(_To be Continued._)
+
+
+
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+That most gay, gallant and airy body of horsemen known as the "Brooklyn
+Dutch Light Cavalry," are much indebted to the projectors of the
+Knightly meeting which took place recently at Prospect Park, for an
+opportunity to display those equestrian graces which a few cross-grained
+critics have been disposed to deny them. The general public never had
+any doubts upon the subject, but it is well enough to silence those who
+took much credit to themselves in detecting faults where others could
+not discover them. The result shows how completely such mendacity can be
+exposed. Of the numerous prizes awarded, two-thirds fell to the members
+of Brooklyn's Teutonic Cavalry. They were especially admired for the
+firmness with which they kept their saddles, under circumstances enough
+to unhorse a Centaur. We noted, particularly, one cavalier, known in
+the lists as the Knight of RUDESHEIMER. He keeps a pork store in Fulton
+Avenue, and turned a Fairbanks Scale, but two days before the tourney,
+at 275 lbs. This gallant rode a very sprightly steed, which struggled
+under the double calamity of being slightly spavined and quite blind in
+the left eye. One of the effects of the latter misfortune was to keep
+the animal constantly in the belief that somebody meditated foul play
+upon its unguarded flank, and at the slightest stir in the crowd it
+would wheel violently around, to the great consternation its rider,
+and the evident alarm of contiguous Knights. PUNCHINELLO, who was very
+conspicuous in the throng, and was mounted upon a highly mettled Ukraine
+steed, observed the cavorting of the Knight of RUDESHEIMER, and cantered
+gaily towards him. In attempting to pass, his spur touched the side of
+the blind steed,--which kicked at PUNCHINELLO'S fiery Ukraine in a very
+ungracious manner. Our animal would take a kick from no other animal
+calmly, and so, without waiting to weigh consequences, it gave
+RUDESHEIMER'S Rosinante a severe "chuck" in the ribs with its hind feet.
+In an instant horse and rider were spinning around like a top. A space
+was immediately cleared, and the crowd awaited in breathless silence
+the fate of the Knight. His swayings were fearful, until PUNCHINELLO,
+anticipating an apoplectic fit from such a terrific revolution, dashed
+in, and seizing the frightened steed by the bridle, brought him to
+bay. The Knight's face was livid with rage and, instead of thanking
+PUNCHINELLO, he roared at the pitch of his voice.
+
+"Dunder und blitzen! Du bist ein tam phool. Vat for you not sees I ish
+tied to mein saddle?"
+
+The pride of horsemanship could go no further, and so PUNCHINELLO left.
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE RED CLOUD.
+
+[Supposed to have been uttered on the occasion of a conference of
+Savages at Washington with a view to the settlement of our Indian
+difficulties.]
+
+ How! Call all my chiefs together--
+ Makpialutah, Red Cloud wants 'em:
+ Shunkalutah, him the Red Dog;
+ Brave Bear, Montaohetekah;
+ Setting Bear, Maktohutakah;
+ Rock Bear, Live Bear, Long Bear, Short Bear,
+ Little Bear, Yellow Bear, and Bear Skin,
+ Keyalutah, Red Fly--Shoo Fly!
+ Dahsanowee, White Cow Rattler,
+ Pahgee, Shunkmonetoohakah,
+ Shatonsapah, Maktohashena,
+ Kokepah, Ocklehelutah,
+ Newakohnkechaksaheuntah,
+ Whoop! haloo! Yahoo! Halooooooooo!
+
+ (Sudden rush of warriors on all sides with war-whoop, flourish of
+ tomahawks, and inexplicable dumb show.]
+
+ Ugh! What now would have the White Man?
+ Sell he swindle, rum, fire-water,
+ We will sell him Fear in plenty.
+ What would have Great Cloud, our father,
+ He the Smoke-nose, he the Big Fish?
+ They not cheat us, we not murder.
+ Pale-faces like the leaves of forests:
+ Many squaws with paint and feathers--
+ None like Makochawyuntaker,
+ The World-looker, wife of Black Hawk.
+ Much skull, but few scalp in Congress.
+ Talk much--very great tongue-warriors.
+ Tomahawk could end the tongue-fight.
+ Hrumph! I like not these pale-faces,
+ Makpialutah mourns for battle,
+ Red Cloud thirsts for blood of Pawnees,
+ Red Cloud cries for scalp of white men,
+ Red Cloud angers the Great Spirit,
+ Red Cloud trembles for the War Dance!
+ Ugh! Hrumph! How! Whoop, whoop, haloooooo!
+
+[The Conference of Chiefs, after an uproar of shrill and guttural
+sounds, break: up with the favorite can-can of the Sioux.]
+
+
+
+
+A Pleasant Prospect.
+
+The Massachusetts editors, who are shortly to meet in convention at
+Boston, are threatened with three distressing courtesies, viz: a concert
+on the Big Organ, a visit to the School Ship, and a banquet in Fanuil
+Hall. They have our sincerest condolences.
+
+
+[Illustration: TREPIDATION.
+
+FRANK PAYS A VISIT OF CONDOLENCE TO HIS FRIEND, WHO IS ILL WITH
+RELAPSING FEVER.]
+
+[Illustration: FUMIGATION.
+
+THEN HE THINKS HIS HAIR SHOULD BE FUMIGATED, AND SUBSEQUENTLY HE HAS TO
+BE EXTINGUISHED.] [Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. (NOT BY HOGARTH.)
+_Clergyman_. "Do You TAKE THIS MAN TO LOVE, HONOR, AND AGREE WITH
+UNTIL--YOU SEE ANOTHER MAN YOU LIKE BETTER?"]
+
+
+
+
+MY COUP D'ETAT.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO: For sometime--I would not like to say how long--the
+undersigned has been a candidate for the office of Whiskey Inspector for
+the Judasville district of his State. I have had powerful backing from
+the scrap-iron members of Congress from my section, but their efforts
+and my own have long seemed of little avail. The other day, however,
+I saw in the papers the account of the _coup d'etat_ of the DUKE OF
+SALDANHA, in Portugal. An idea immediately entered my brain. These
+_effete_ monarchies, these governments of the past, on which "the rust
+of ages," as VICTOR HUGO remarks, "lies like a bloody snow of bygone
+vassalage," have yet sufficient vitality to teach a lesson to the young
+and vigorous governments of the West. At any rate this old duke taught
+me a lesson, and I did my best to hurry off and say it. It was evident
+that if I wanted to be Whiskey Inspector of Judasville, (and I am
+justified in saying that no man in the district possesses more peculiar
+qualifications for the post,) that something in the SALDANHA style
+must be done. The time had passed for petitions and lobbying. I went
+immediately to the commander of the Judasville Rifles, and enlisted his
+sympathies in my cause. He willingly placed his company at my service,
+but whether this was due to my offer to pay the board-bills and car-fare
+of the organization while it was under my orders, or to my eloquent
+statement of my case, I have not yet had an opportunity to discover. The
+men who, from the very commencement of the undertaking, had constituted
+themselves the inspectors of my whiskey, were in high good spirits, and,
+in a body, numbering some forty-six, we arrived in Washington, on a
+bright morning, about a week ago. It would not do, on an occasion like
+this, to delay matters. Accordingly I marched my troops directly to the
+White House. The man in charge of the door took my men for a visiting
+target company, and told me, whom he supposed was the member from their
+district, that I must marshal my friends out on the green, and he would
+notify the Private Secretary. I made no answer to this, but ordered
+the troops to charge bayonets, and we entered the White House at a
+double-quick. I led the way directly to GRANT'S study, and stationing my
+men in the doorway, I entered. He was within, cutting up an "old soger"
+to smoke in his pipe. After shaking bands with him, I sat down and
+inquired if that was a _regalia _he was cutting up.
+
+"No," said he. "This is the HANCOCK brand."
+
+"Oh!" said I.
+
+"Well?" said he, looking somewhat inquisitively at the soldiers, who
+crowded into the doorway, and almost filled the entry beyond.
+
+"Mr. President," said I, rising and clearing my throat, "I do not wish
+to occupy much time in the present business--especially as I have to pay
+the hotel bills of these brave veterans until it is finished. Therefore
+I will come directly to the point. I desire, immediately, the
+appointment of Whiskey Inspector for the Judasville district. I have
+been an applicant for said position quite long enough, and I demand that
+you make out my commission this morning."
+
+"And suppose I don't?" says GRANT.
+
+"In that case," said I,--"in that case--well, in that case, _there_ are
+my companions in arms, the brave supporters of my cause!" and I pointed
+proudly to the Judasville Rifles.
+
+"Well," said GRANT, puffing away at the HANCOCK remnants, "what do you
+propose to do with them--besides paying their hotel bills, I mean?"
+
+"To do?" said I, "to do?"--and now, to tell the truth, I experienced an
+immediate disadvantage of not having formed a plan of my campaign. But
+it would not do to hesitate.
+
+"To do?" I repeated, speaking louder this time. "I shall march
+upon--well, upon each of the public buildings in turn, and I shall take
+them and hold them."
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"Well," said I, "then, of course, you will see the impossibility of
+carrying my strongholds without a fearful slaughter, and to prevent
+the consequent effusion of blood, you will despatch a courier to me,
+requesting my presence in your council-room."
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"I will come," I answered.
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"You will give me the Whiskey Inspectorship," I answered.
+
+GRANT glanced at me, and then at the body of troops by which I was
+supported. Indomitable resolution sat upon every lineament of my
+countenance, and resolute determination showed itself in the faces of my
+brave men. Already, from afar, they sniffed the delicious perfumes of
+the rewards of victory. (It is needless to particularize the alcoholic
+promises I had made them in case of success.)
+
+GRANT rang a little bell--I think he bought it second-hand, when SEWARD
+sold out to go travelling--and an obstrusive attendant entered by a back
+door.
+
+Then, to this obtrusive attendant said the President; "James, step
+over to the War Department and tell SHERMAN to send me the Eighth and
+Eleventh Brigades of Cavalry; the Seventy-first and Fortieth Regiments
+of Artillery; the Twenty-second, Forty-fourth, and Eighty-eighth
+regiments of infantry, and two companies of sappers and miners."
+
+JAMES departed.
+
+I stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. PRESIDENT," said I, "in order to prevent the effusion of blood,
+might it not be as well to settle our little business at once?"
+
+GRANT smiled.
+
+HODGINS, the captain of the Judasville Rifles, now came up to me and
+touched me on the arm.
+
+"To prevent the effusion of blood," said he, "we are going home."
+
+And they went!
+
+My subsequent adventures, Mr. PUNCHINELLO, I cannot relate, for my paper
+is full, and the fellow who has charge of this cell has refused to get
+me any more, unless I give him more money, which I haven't got.
+
+But of one thing my mind is certain, and that is that this country has
+not yet arrived at that high grade of official refinement and tenderness
+which Portugal has reached.
+
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+
+Issues all Kinds of Life and Endowment Policies on the Mutual System,
+free from restriction on travel and occupation, which permit residence
+anywhere without extra charge. Premiums may be paid annually,
+semi-annually, or quarterly in cash.
+
+All Policies are non-forfeitable, and participate in the profits of the
+Company. Dividends are made annually, on the Contribution plan.
+
+Pamphlets containing Rates of Premium, and information on the subject of
+Life Insurance, may be obtained at the office of the Company, or of any
+of its Agents.
+
+Parties desiring to represent this Company in the capacity of Agents
+will please address the New York Office.
+
+WILLIAM T. PHIPPS,
+
+_President_.
+
+A. D. HOLLY, _Secretary_. HENRY HILTON, _Counsel_.
+
+O. S. PAINE, M. D. _Medical Examiner_. C. H. KING, M. D. _Asst. Med.
+Ex._
+
+Each Agent in direct communication with the New York Office.
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+SPECIAL
+
+PUNCHINELLO PREMIUMS.
+
+BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH
+
+L. PRANG & CO.,
+
+we offer the following Elegant Premiums for new Subscribers to
+PUNCHINELLO:
+
+"Awakening." (A Litter of Puppies.) Half Chromo, size, 8 3-8 by 11 1-8,
+price $2.00, and a copy of PUNCHINELLO for one year, for $4.00.
+
+"Wild Roses." Chromo, 12 1-8 by 9, price $3.00, or any other $3.00
+Chromo, and a copy of the paper for one year, for $5.00.
+
+"The Baby in Trouble." Chromo, 13 by 16 l-4, price $6.00, or any other
+at $6.00, or any two Chromos at $3.00, and a copy of the paper for one
+year for $7.00.
+
+"Sunset,--California Scenery." after A. Bierstadt, 18 1-8 by 12, price
+$10.00, or any other $10.00 Chromo, and a copy of the paper for one year
+for $10.00. Or the four Chromos, and four copies of the paper for one
+year in one order, for clubs of FOUR, for $25.00.
+
+Remittances should be made in P. 0. 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.
+
+Now is the time to subscribe, as these Premiums will be offered for a
+limited time only. On receipt of a postage-stamp, we will send a copy of
+No. 1 to any one desiring to get up a club.
+
+Address,
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,
+
+P. O. Box 2783. No. 83 Nassau Street, New York. [Illustration: THE
+SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT AGAIN.
+
+Bar-room Lobbyist.--"I TELL YOU, NO, SIR; THIS SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT IS
+A DELUSION AND A SNARE. WHAT IN THUNDER IS TO BECOME OF US, WHEN WOMEN
+COME INTO THE LOBBY BUSINESS? "]
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+"The Printing House of the United States."
+
+GEO. F. NESBITT & CO.,
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+General JOB PRINTERS,
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+Engravers and Printers, COPPER-PLATE Engravers and Printers, CARD
+Manufacturers, ENVELOPE Manufacturers, FINE CUT and COLOR Printers.
+
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+
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+
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+subject to headache can insure themselves freedom from this malady by
+drinking it liberally in the morning before breakfast.
+
+Sold by JOHN F. HENRY, at the U. S. Family Medical Depot, 8 College
+Place, New York.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close resemblance to Oil
+Paintings. Sold in all Art and Bookstores throughout the world. PRANG'S
+LATEST CHROMOS: "Flowers of Hope," "Flowers of Memory." Illustrated
+Catalogues sent free on receipt of stamp.
+
+L. PRANG & CO., Boston.
+
+
+
+The New Summer Game.
+
+RING-TOSS!
+
+"Better than Croquet, and Cheaper."
+
+This NEW GAME affords an attractive out-door sport, and furnishes a
+degree and kind of physical exercise that improves and develops the
+general health and strength. It may be learned in a few minutes; may be
+played by any number of persons; is compactly arranged in a handsome
+case of moderate size, that may be easily carried from place to place;
+will pack nicely in your trunk for a summer jaunt, and is sold for less
+than any other out-door Game. Already the demand for it has exceeded all
+expectation, and the prospect is that its popularity will be universal.
+Says one of our customers: "IN INTEREST IT IS SUPERIOR TO CROQUET, AND
+CANNOT FAIL TO BE LIKED BY EVERY ONE."
+
+Price of Ring-Toss, Complete, with Book of Directions, $3.50.
+
+Securely packed, and sent by express to any address.
+
+For Sale, Wholesale and Retail, at
+
+HORSMAN'S Emporium of Croquet, Base Ball, Cricket, Archery, &c., &c.
+
+100 William St., New York.
+
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.
+
+The New Burlesque Serial, Written expressly for PUNCHINELLO, by ORPHEUS
+C. KERR,
+
+Commenced in last number, will be continued weekly throughout the year.
+
+A sketch of the eminent author, written by his bosom friend, with superb
+illustrations of
+
+1ST. THE AUTHOR'S PALATIAL RESIDENCE AT BEGAD'S HILL, TICKNOR'S FIELDS,
+NEW JERSEY.
+
+2D. THE AUTHOR AT THE DOOR OF SAID PALATIAL RESIDENCE, taken as he
+appears "Every Saturday," will also be found in No. 11.
+
+Single Copies, for Sale by all newsmen, (or mailed from this office,
+free,) Ten Cents.
+
+Subscription for One Year, one copy, with $2 Chromo Premium, $4.
+
+Those desirous of receiving the paper containing this new serial,
+which promises to be the best ever written by ORPHEUS C. KERB, should
+subscribe now, to insure its regular receipt weekly.
+
+We will send the first Ten Numbers of PUNCHINELLO to any one who wishes
+to see them, in view of subscribing, on the receipt of SIXTY CENTS.
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+P.O. Box2783 83 Nassau St., New York.
+
+
+
+Geo. W. WHEAT, PRINTER, No. 8 SPRUCE STREKT.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol.1, No. 12 , June
+18,1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL.1, NO. 12 ***
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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol.1, No. 12 , June 18,1870, by Various
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
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+Title: Punchinello, Vol.1, No. 12 , June 18,1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: January, 2006 [EBook #9636]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 12, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
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+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL.1, NO. 12 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, David Widger
+and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+CONANT'S
+
+PATENT BINDERS
+
+FOR
+
+"PUNCHINELLO,"
+
+to preserve the paper for binding, will be sent postpaid, on receipt of
+One Dollar, by
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,
+
+83 Nassau Street, New York City.
+
+TO NEWS-DEALERS.
+
+Punchinello's Monthly.
+
+The Weekly Numbers for May,
+
+Bound in a Handsome Cover,
+
+Is now ready. Price Fifty Cents.
+
+THE TRADE
+
+Supplied by the
+
+AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY,
+
+Who are now prepared to receive Orders.
+
+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. I
+
+No. 12.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1870.
+
+PUBLISHED BY THE
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD,
+
+By ORPHEUS C. KERR.,
+
+Continued in this Number:
+
+[Along side of page: See 15th Page for Extra Premiums.] PUNCHINELLO.
+
+JUNE 18, 1870.
+
+APPLICATIONS FOR ADVERTISING IN "PUNCHINELLO" SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO J.
+NICKINSON, ROOM No. 4, No. 83 Nassau Street.
+
+
+
+DIBBLEEANIA, AND Japonica Juice, FOR THE HAIR.
+
+The most effective Soothing and Stimulating Compounds ever offered to
+the public for the
+
+Removal of Scurf, Dandruff, &c.
+
+For consultation, apply at WILLIAM DIBBLEE'S, Ladies' Hair Dresser and
+Wig Maker.
+
+854 BROADWAY, N.Y. City.
+
+
+
+FURNITURE.
+
+E. W. HUTCHINGS & SON, MANUFACTURERES OF Rich and Plain Furniture AND
+DECORATIONS, Nos. 99 and 101 Fourth Avenue, Formerly 475 Broadway, (Near
+A.T. Stewart & Co.'s.) NEW YORK.
+
+Where a general assortment can be had at moderate prices.
+
+_Wood Mantels, Pier and Mantel Frames and Wainscoting made to order from
+designs_
+
+
+
+PHELAN & COLLENDER, MANUFACTURERS OF Standard American Billiard Tables,
+WAREROOMS AND OFFICE, 738 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
+
+
+
+NEW YORK CITIZEN and ROUND TABLE,
+
+A Literary, Political, and Sporting paper, with the best writers in each
+department. Published Saturday.
+
+PRICE, TEN CENTS.
+
+32 Beekman Street
+
+
+
+WEVILL & HAMMAR, Wood Engravers, 208 BROADWAY, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+Thomas J. Rayner & Co., 29 Liberty Street, New York, MANUFACTURERS OF
+THE FINEST CIGARS _Made in the United States._
+
+All sizes and styles. Prices very moderate. Samples sent to any
+responsible house. Also importers of the "FUSBOS" BRAND, Equal in
+quality to the best of the Havana market, and from ten to twenty per
+cent cheaper.
+
+_Restaurant, Bar, Hotel, and Saloon trade will save money by calling at_
+
+No. 29 LIBERTY STREET.
+
+
+
+ERIE RAILWAY.
+
+TRAINS LEAVE DEPOTS Foot of Chambers Street AND Foot of Twenty-Third
+Street, AS FOLLOWS:
+
+Through Express Trains leave Chambers Street at 8 A.M., 10 A.M., 5:30
+P.M., and 7:00 P.M., (daily); leave 23d Street at 7:45 A.M., 9:45 A.M.,
+and 5:15 and 6:45 P.M. (daily.). New and improved Drawing-Room Coaches
+will accompany the 10:00 A.M. train through to Buffalo, connecting at
+Hornellsville with magnificent Sleeping Coaches running through to
+Cleveland and Galion. Sleeping Coaches will accompany the 8:00 A.M.
+train from Susquehanna to Buffalo, the 5:30 P.M. train from New York to
+Buffalo, and the 7:00 P.M. train from New York to Rochester, Buffalo and
+Cincinnati. An Emigrant train leaves daily at 7:30 P.M.
+
+For Port Jervis and Way, 11:30 A.M., and 4:30 P.M., (Twenty-third
+Street, 11:15 A.M. and 4:15 P.M.)
+
+For Middletown and Way, at 3:30 P.M., (Twenty-third Street, 3:15 P.M.);
+and, Sundays only, 8:30 A.M. (Twenty-third Street, 8:15 P.M.)
+
+For Greycourt and Way, at 8:30 A.M., (Twenty-third Street, 8:15 A.M.)
+
+For Newburgh and Way, at 8:00 A.M., 3:30 and 4:30 P.M. (Twenty-third
+Street 7:45 A.M., 3:15 and 4:15 P.M.)
+
+For Suffern and Way, 5:00 P.M. and 6:00 P.M (Twenty-third Street, 4:45
+and 5:45 P.M.) Theatre Train, 11:30 P.M. (Twenty-third Street, 11
+P.M.)
+
+For Paterson and Way, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 6:45, 10:15 and
+11:45 A.M.; 1:45, 3:45, 5:15 and 6:45 P.M. From Chambers Street Depot
+at 6:45, 10:15 A.M.; 12 M.; 1:45, 4:00, 5:15, and 6:45 P.M.
+
+For Hackensack and Hillsdale, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 8:45
+and 11:45 A.M.; [*]7:l5 3:45, [*]5:15, 5:45, and [*]6:45 P.M. From
+Chambers Street Depot, at 9:00 A.M.; 12:00 M.; [*]2:l5, 4:00 [*]5:15,
+6:00, and [*]6:45P.M.
+
+For Piermont, Monsey and Way, from Twenty-third Street Depot, at 8:45
+A.M; 12:45, [**]3:15 4:15, 4:45 and [**]6:l5 P.M., and, Saturdays only,
+[**]12 midnight. From Chambers Street Depot, at 9:00 A.M.; 1:00, [**]3:30,
+4:15 5:00 and [**]6:30 P.M. Saturdays, only, [**]12:00 midnight.
+
+Tickets for passage and for apartments in Drawing-Room and Sleeping
+Coaches can be obtained, and orders for the Checking and Transfer of
+Baggage may be left at the
+
+COMPANY'S OFFICES:
+
+241, 529, and 957 Broadway. 205 Chambers Street. Cor. 125th Street
+& Third Ave., Harlem. 338 Fulton Street, Brooklyn. Depots, foot of
+Chambers Street and foot of Twenty-third Street, New York. 3 Exchange
+Place. Long Dock Depot, Jersey City, And of the Agents at the principal
+Hotels.
+
+WM. R. BARR, _General Passenger Agent._
+
+L.D. RUCKER, _General Superintendent._
+
+May 20, 1870
+
+[Footnote *: Daily.]
+
+[Footnote *: For Hackensack only.]
+
+[Footnote **: For Piermont only.]
+
+
+
+Mercantile Library, Clinton Hall, Astor Place, NEW YORK.
+
+This is now the largest Circulating Library in America, the number of
+volumes on its shelves being 114,000. About 1000 volumes are added each
+month; and very large purchases are made of all new and popular works.
+
+Books are delivered at members' residences for five cents each delivery.
+
+TERMS OF MEMBERSHIP:
+
+TO CLERKS, - $1 INITIATION, $3 ANNUAL DUES. TO OTHERS, - - - -$5 A YEAR.
+
+Subscriptions Taken for Six Months.
+
+BRANCH OFFICES AT No. 76 Cedar St., New York, AND AT Yonkers, Norwalk,
+Stamford, and Elizabeth.
+
+
+
+HORSEMEN, ATTENTION!
+
+Farmers, Farmers' Clubs, Drivers, Riders, Grooms, Livery Stable Keepers,
+Owners, Professional Horsemen.
+
+The whole press, sporting papers, secular and religious journals, unite
+in saying that HIRAM WOODRUFF'S work on
+
+"The Trotting Horse of America"
+
+Is "THE MOST PRACTICAL AND INSTRUCTIVE BOOK EVER PUBLISHED CONCERNING
+THE HORSE." And the best known professionals, Hoagland, Mace, Pfifer,
+etc, endorse it with equal heartiness.
+
+Ask your Bookseller for it,
+
+Or enclose the price, $2.25, and it will be mailed to you postpaid.
+
+J.B. FORD & CO., Publishers, 39 Park Row, New York.
+
+
+
+[Illustration: HENRY SPEAR PRINTER - LITHOGRAPHER STATIONER & BLANK BOOK
+MANUFACTURER 82 WALL ST NEW YORK]
+
+
+
+$2 to ALBANY and TROY.
+
+The Day Line Steamboats C Vibbard and Daniel Drew, commencing May 31,
+will leave Vestry st. Pier at 8.45, and Thirty-fourth st. at 9 a.m.,
+landing at Yonkers, (Nyack, and Tarrytown by ferry-boat), Cozzens, West
+Point, Cornwall, Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, Rhinebeck, Bristol, Catskill,
+Hudson, and New Baltimore. A special train of broad-gauge cars
+in connection with the day boats will leave on arrival at Albany
+(commencing June 20) for Sharon Springs. Fare $4.25 from New York and
+for Cherry Valley. The Steamboat Seneca will transfer passengers from
+Albany to Troy.
+
+
+
+
+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.
+
+AN ADAPTATION.
+
+BY ORPHEUS C. KERR.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE ALMS-HOUSE.
+
+For the purpose of preventing an inconvenient rush of literary
+tuft-hunters and sight-seers thither next summer, a fictitious name must
+be bestowed upon the town of the Ritualistic church. Let it stand in
+these pages as Bumsteadville. Possibly it was not known to the Romans,
+the Saxons, nor the Normans by that name, if by any name at all; but
+a name more or less weird and full of damp syllables can be of little
+moment to a place not owned by any advertising Suburban-Residence
+benefactors.
+
+A disagreeable and healthy suburb, Bumsteadville, with a strange odor of
+dried bones from its ancient pauper burial-ground, and many quaint
+old ruins in the shapes of elderly men engaged as contributors to the
+monthly magazines of the day. Antiquity pervades Bumsteadville; nothing
+is new; the very Rye is old; also the Jamaica, Santa Cruz, and a number
+of the native maids. A drowsy place, with all its changes lying far
+behind it; or, at least, the sun-browned mendicants passing through say
+they never saw a place offering so little present change.
+
+In the midst of Bumsteadville stands the Alms-House; a building of an
+antic order of architecture; still known by its original title to the
+paynobility and indigentry of the surrounding country, several of
+whose ancestors abode there in the days before voting was a certain
+livelihood; although now bearing a door-plate inscribed, "Macassar
+Female College, Miss CAROWTHERS." Whether any of the country editors,
+projectors of American Comic papers, and other inmates of the edifice in
+times of yore, ever come back in spirit to be astonished by the manner
+in which modern serious and humorous print can be made productive of
+anything but penury by publishing True Stories of Lord BYRON and the
+autobiographies of detached wives, maybe of interest to philosophers,
+but is of no account to Miss CAROWTHERS. Every day, during school-hours,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS, in spectacles and high-necked alpaca, preside over
+her Young Ladies of Fashion, with an austerity and elderliness
+before which every mental image of Man, even as the most poetical of
+abstractions, withers and dies. Every night, after the young ladies have
+retired, does Miss CAROWTHERS put on a freshening aspect, don a more
+youthful low-necked dress--
+
+ As though a rose
+ Should leave its clothes
+ And be a bud again,--
+
+and become a sprightlier Miss CAROWTHERS. Every night, at the same hour,
+does Miss CAROWTHERS discuss with her First Assistant, Mrs. PILLSBURY,
+the Inalienable Bights of Women; always making certain casual reference
+to a gentleman in the dim past, whom she was obliged to sue for breach
+of promise, and to whom, for that reason, Miss CAROWTHERS airily refers,
+with a toleration bred of the lapse of time, as "Breachy Mr. BLODGETT."
+
+The pet pupil of the Alms-House is FLORA POTTS, of course called the
+Flowerpot; for whom a husband has been chosen by the will and bequest of
+her departed papa, and at whom none of the other Macassar young ladies
+can look without wondering how it must feel. On the afternoon after the
+day of the dinner at the boarding-house, the Macassar front-door bell
+rings, and Mr. EDWIN DROOD is announced as waiting to see Miss FLORA.
+Having first rubbed her lips and cheeks, alternately, with her fingers,
+to make them red; held her hands above her head to turn back the
+circulation and make them white; and added a little lead-penciling to
+her eyebrows to make them black; the Flowerpot trips innocently down
+to the parlor, and stops short at some distance from the visitor in a
+curious sort of angular deflection from the perpendicular.
+
+"O, you absurd creature!" she says, placing a finger in her mouth and
+slightly wriggling at him. "To go and have to be married to me whether
+we want to or not! It's perfectly disgusting."
+
+"Our parents _did_ rather come a little load on us," says EDWIN DROOD,
+not rendered enthusiastic by his reception.
+
+"Can't we get a _habeas corpus_, or some other ridiculous thing, and ask
+some perfectly absurd Judge to serve an injunction on somebody?" she
+asks, with pretty earnestness. "Don't, Eddy--do-o-n't." "Don't what,
+FLORA?" "Don't try to kiss me, please." "Why not, FLORA?" "Because I'm
+enameled." "Well, I do think," says EDWIN DROOD, "that you put on the
+Grecian Bend rather heavily with me. Perhaps I'd better go."
+
+"I wouldn't be so exquisitely hateful, Eddy. I got the gum-drops last
+night, and they were perfectly splendid."
+
+"Well, that's a comfort, at any rate," says her affianced, dimly
+conscious of a dawning civility in her last remark. "If it's really
+possible for you to walk on those high heels of yours, FLORA, let's try
+a promenade out-doors."
+
+Here Miss CAROWTHERS glides into the room to look for her scissors, is
+reminded by the scene before her of Breachy Mr. BLODGETT; whispers,
+"Don't trifle with her young affections, Mr. DROOD, unless you want to
+be sued, besides being interviewed by all the papers;" and glides out
+again with a sigh.
+
+FLORA then puts upon her head a fig-leaf trimmed with lace and ribbon,
+and gets her hoop and stick from behind the hall-door. EDWIN DROOD takes
+from one of his pockets an india-rubber ball, to practice fly-catches
+with as he walks; and driving the hoop and throwing and catching the
+ball, the two go down the ancient turnpike of Bumsteadville together.
+
+"Oh, please, EDDY, scrape yourself close to the fences, so that the
+girls can't see you out of the windows," pleads FLORA. "It's so utterly
+absurd to be walking with one that one's got to marry whether one likes
+it or not; and you do look so perfectly ridiculous in that short coat,
+and all your other things so tight."
+
+He gloomily scrapes against the fences, dropping his ball and catching
+it on the rebound at every step. "Which way shall we go?" "Up by the
+store, EDDY, dear."
+
+They go to the all-sorts country store in question, where EDWIN DROOD
+buys her some sassafras bull's-eye candy, and then they turn toward home
+again.
+
+"Now be a good-tempered EDDY," she says, trundling her hoop beside him,
+"and pretend that you aren't going to be my husband." "Not if I can help
+it," he says, catching the ball almost spitefully. "Then you're going to
+have somebody else?" "You make my head ache, so you do," whispers EDWIN
+DROOD. "I don't want to marry anybody at all!"
+
+She tickles him under the arm with her hoop-stick, and turns eyes that
+are all serious upon his. "I wish, EDDY, that we could be perfectly
+absurd friends to each other, instead of utterly ridiculous engaged
+people. It's exquisitely awful, you know, to have a husband picked out
+for you by dead folks, and I'm so sick about it sometimes that I hardly
+have the heart to fix my back-hair. Let each of us forbear, and stop
+teasing the other."
+
+Greatly pleased by this perfectly intelligent and forgiving arrangement,
+EDWIN DROOD says: "You're right, FLORA, Teasing is played out;" and
+drives his ball into a perfect frenzy of bounces.
+
+They have arrived near the Ritualistic church, through the windows of
+which come the organ-notes of one practising within. Something familiar
+in the grand air rolling out to them causes EDWIN DROOD to repeat,
+abstractedly, "I feel--I feel--I feel---"
+
+FLORA, simultaneously affected in the same way, unconsciously
+murmurs,---"I feel like a morning star."
+
+They then join hands, under the same irresistible spell, and take
+dancing steps, humming, in unison, "Shoo, fly! don't bodder me."
+
+"That's JACK BUMSTEAD'S playing," whispers EDWIN DROOD; "and he must be
+breathing this way, too, for I can smell the cloves."
+
+"O, take me home," cries FLORA, suddenly throwing her hoop over the
+young man's neck, and dragging him violently after her. "I think cloves
+are perfectly disgusting."
+
+At the door of the Alms-House the pretty Flowerpot blows a kiss to
+EDWIN, and goes in. He makes one trial of his ball against the door, and
+goes off. She is an in-fant, he Js an off-'un.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+MR. SWEENEY.
+
+Accepting the New American Cyclopædia as a fair standard of
+stupidity--although the prejudice, perhaps, may arise rather from the
+irascibility of the few using it as a reference, than from the calm
+judgment of the many employing it to fill-out a showy book-case--then
+the newest and most American Cyclopædist in Bumsteadville is Judge
+SWEENEY.
+
+[Footnote: Mr. SAPBEA, the original of this character In Mr. DICKENS'
+romance, is an auctioneer. The present Adapter can think of no nearer
+American equivalent, in the way of a person at once resident in a suburb
+and who sells to the highest bidder, than a supposable member of the New
+York judiciary.]
+
+It is Judge SWEENEY'S pleasure to found himself upon Father DEAN, whom
+he greatly resembles in the intellectual details of much forehead,
+stomach, and shirt-collar. When upon the bench in the city, even,
+granting an injunction in favor of some railroad company in which he
+owns a little stock, he frequently intones his accompanying remarks
+with an ecclesiastical solemnity eminently calculated to suppress every
+possible tendency to levity in the assembled lawyers; and his discharge
+from arrest of any foreign gentleman brought before him for illegal
+voting, has often been found strikingly similar in sound to a pastoral
+Benediction.
+
+That Judge SWEENEY has many admirers, is proved by the immense local
+majority electing him to judicial eminence; and that the admiration is
+mutual is likewise proved by his subsequent appreciative dismissal of
+certain frivolous complaints against a majority of that majority
+for trifling misapprehensions of the Registry law. He is a portly,
+double-chinned man of about fifty, with a moral cough, eye-glasses
+making even his red nose seem ministerial, and little gold ballot-boxes,
+locomotives, and five-dollar pieces, hanging as "charms" from the chain
+of his Repeater.
+
+Judge SWEENEY'S villa is on the turnpike, opposite the Alms-House, with
+doors and shutters giving in whichever direction they are opened; and he
+is sitting near a table, with a sheet of paper in his hand, and a bowl
+of warm lemon tea before him, when his servant-girl announces "Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."
+
+"Happy to see you, sir, in my house, for the first time," is Judge
+SWEENEY'S hospitable greeting.
+
+"You honor me, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, whose eyes are set, as though he
+were in some kind of a fit, and who shakes hands excessively. "You are
+a good man, sir. How do you do, sir? Shake hands again, sir. I am very
+well, sir, I thank you. Your hand, sir. I'll stand by you, sir--though I
+never spoke t' you b'fore in my life. Let us shake hands, sir."
+
+But instead of waiting for this last shake, Mr. BUMSTEAD abruptly turns
+away to the nearest chair, deposits his hat in the very middle of the
+seat with great care, and recklessly sits down upon it.
+
+The lemon tea in the bowl upon the table is a fruity compound,
+consisting of two very thin slices of lemon, which are maintained in
+horizontal positions, for the free action of the air upon their upper
+surfaces, by a pint of whiskey procured for that purpose. About half a
+pint of hot water has been added to help soften the rind of the lemon,
+and a portion of sugar to correct its acidity.
+
+With a wave of the hand toward this tropical preserve, Judge SWEENEY
+says: "You have a reputation, sir, as a man of taste. Try some lemon
+tea."
+
+Energetically, if not frantically, his guest holds out a tumbler to be
+filled, immediately after which he insists upon shaking hands again.
+"You're a man of insight, sir," he says, working Judge SWEENEY back and
+forth in his chair. "I _am_ a man of taste, sir, and you know the world,
+sir."
+
+"The _World_?" says Judge SWEENEY, complacently. "If you mean the
+religious female daily paper of that name, I certainly do know it. I
+used to take it for my late wife when she was trying to learn Latin."
+
+"I mean the terrestrial globe, sir," says Mr. BUMSTEAD, irritably.
+"The great spherical foundation, sir, upon which Boston has since been
+built."
+
+"Ah, I see," says Judge SWEENEY, genially, "I believe, though, that I
+know that world, also, pretty well; for, if I have not exactly been to
+foreign countries, foreign countries have come to me. They have come to
+me on--hem!--business, and I have improved my opportunities. A man comes
+to me from a vessel, and I say 'Cork,' and give him Naturalization
+Certificates for himself and his friends. Another comes, and I say
+'Dublin;' another, and I say 'Belfast.' If I want to travel still
+further, I take them all together and say 'the Polls.'"
+
+"You'll do to travel, sir," responds Mr. BUMSTEAD, abstractedly helping
+himself to some more lemon tea; "but I thought we were to talk about the
+late Mrs. SWEENEY."
+
+"We were, sir," says Judge SWEENEY, abstractedly removing the bowl to a
+sideboard on his farther side. "My late wife, young man, as you may be
+aware, was a Miss HAGGERTY, and was imbued with homage to Shape. It was
+rumored, sir, that she admired me for my Manly Shape. When I offered to
+make her my bride, the only words she could articulate were, "O, my!
+_I_?"--meaning that she could scarcely believe that I really meant
+_her_. After which she fell into strong hysterics. We were married,
+despite certain objections on the score of temperance by that corrupt
+Radical, her father. From looking up to me too much she contracted an
+affection of the spine, and died about nine months ago. Now, sir, be
+good enough to run your eye over this Epitaph, which I have composed for
+the monument now erecting to her memory."
+
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, rousing from a doze for the purpose, fixes glassy eyes
+upon the slip of paper held out to him, and reads as follows:
+
+ MARY ANN,
+
+ Unlitigating and Unliterary Wife of
+
+ HIS HONOR, JUDGE SWEENEY.
+
+ In the darkest hours of
+
+ Her Husband's fortunes
+
+ She was never once tempted to Write for
+
+ THE TRIBUNE, THE INDEPENDENT, or THE RIVERSIDE MAGAZINE:
+
+ Nor did even a disappointment about a
+
+ new bonnet ever induce her to
+
+ threaten her husband with
+
+ AN INDIANA DIVORCE.
+
+ STRANGER, PAUSE,
+
+ and consider if thou canst say
+
+ the same about
+
+ THINE OWN WIFE!
+
+ If not,
+
+ WITH A RUSH RETIRE.
+
+
+Mr. BUMSTEAD, affected to tears, interspersed with nods, by his reading,
+has barely time to mutter that such a wife was too good to live long in
+these days, when the servant announces that "MCLAUGHLIN has come, sir."
+
+JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, who now enters, is a stone-cutter and mason, much
+employed in patching dilapidated graves and cutting inscriptions,
+and popularly known in Bumsteadville, on account of the dried mortar
+perpetually hanging about him, as "Old Mortarity." He is a ricketty man,
+with a chronic disease called bar-roomatism, and so very grave-yardy in
+his very '_Hic_' that one almost expects a _jacet_ to follow it as a
+matter of course.
+
+"JOHN MCLAUGHLIN," says Judge SWEENEY, handing him the paper with the
+Epitaph, "there is the inscription for the stone."
+
+"I guess I can get it all on, sir," says MCLAUGHLIN. "Your servant, Mr.
+BUMSTEAD."
+
+"Ah, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how are you?" says Mr. BUMSTEAD, his hand with the
+tumbler vaguely wandering toward where the bowl formerly stood. "By the
+way, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, how came you to be called 'Old Mortarity'? It
+has a drunken sound, JOHN MCLAUGHLIN, like one of Sir WALTER SCOTT'S
+characters disguised in liquor."
+
+"Never you mind about that," says MCLAUGHLIN. "I carry the keys of the
+Bumsteadville[1] churchyard vaults, and can tell to an atom, by a tap
+of my trowel, how fast a skeleton is dropping to dust in the pauper
+burial-ground. That's more than they can do who call me names." With
+which ghastly speech JOHN MCLAUGHLIN retires unceremoniously from the
+room.
+
+Judge SWEENEY now attempts a game of backgammon with the man of taste,
+but becomes discouraged after Mr. BUMSTEAD has landed the dice in his
+vest-opening three times running and fallen heavily asleep in the middle
+of a move. An ensuing potato salad is made equally discouraging by
+Mr. BUMSTEAD'S persistent attempts to cut up his handkerchief in it.
+Finally, Mr. BUMSTEAD[2] wildly finds his way to his feet, is plunged
+into profound gloom at discovering the condition of his hat, attempts to
+leave the room by each of the windows and closets in succession, and at
+last goes tempestuously through the door by accident.
+
+[_To be Continued._]
+
+
+
+
+Wanted for the Lecture-Room.
+
+Beloit, in Wisconsin, boasts a wife who has not spoken to her husband
+for fifteen years. Fifteen long years! Happy man!--happy woman! No
+insanity, no divorce, no murder, but Silence. Why isn't this wondrous
+woman brought to the platform, Miss ANTHONY?
+
+[Footnote 1: Certain fancied points of resemblance having led some
+persons to suppose that Bumsteadville means Rochester, the Adapter is
+impelled to declare that such is _not_ the case.]
+
+[Footnote 2: In compliance with the modern demand for fine realistic
+accuracy in art, the Adapter, previous to making his delineation of Mr.
+BUMSTEAD public, submitted it to the judgment of a physician having
+a large practice amongst younger journalists and Members of the
+Legislature. This authority, after due critical inspection,
+pronounced it psychologically correct as a study of monomania a potu.]
+
+
+[Illustration: _Piscator (to his progeny.)_ "NOW, GEORGE WASHINGTON, YOU
+TAKE A GOOD GRIP OF THIS YERE EEL, AND DON'T MUSS YOUR CLOTHES, OR YER
+MUDDER 'LL NEBER LET YOU GO FISHIN' AG'IN, SARTIN."]
+
+
+
+
+THE JOYS OF SUMMER.
+
+ I've Had my annual dream
+ Of boats and fishing, Congress-water, cream,
+ Strawberry-shortcake, lager-bier, iced punch,
+ And lobster-salad lunch.
+
+ It came about midday,
+ Toward the latter part of "flowering May"--
+ When nothing's fit to eat, or drink, or wear,
+ And nothing suits but air.
+
+ Let Summer come! said I;
+ Let _something_ happen quick, or I shall die!
+ I want to change my diet, clothes,--my skin,--
+ _Myself_, if not a sin!
+
+ (_One_ thing, I would remark,
+ I didn't dream of: that was Central Park.)
+ All these (the Park included) I have had;
+ Of course you think I'm glad.
+
+ No, I can't say I am.
+ Your summer, I must tell you, is a sham!
+ I _might_, perhaps, have some poetic flights,
+ If I could sleep o' nights!
+
+ But who on earth _can_ sleep
+ When the thermometer's so awful steep?
+ The night, if anything, (at least _our_ way,)
+ Is hotter than the day!
+
+ And then--my stars!--_oh_, then!
+ When sleep would kindly visit weary men,
+ The dread mosquito stings away his rest.
+ Ah-h-h! _curse_ that pest!
+
+ But breakfast comes,--so soon
+ You almost wish they'd put it off till noon!
+ Five minutes' sleep--no appetite--no force:
+ You're jolly, now, of course!
+
+ You sip your breakfast tea--
+ If with your qualmy stomach 'twill agree,
+ Or your weak coffee,--weighing, with dismay,
+ The prospects of the day.
+
+ Hot! you may well say Hot,
+ When Blistering would hit it to a dot!
+ The cheerful round is brilliantly begun--
+ And everything "well done."
+
+
+
+
+ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS.
+
+_Down East_.--"The Earthly Paradise" is published in Boston. The scene
+of the poem is laid elsewhere.
+
+_Miner_.--"Pan in Wall Street" was written by E.C. STEDMAN. The pan
+spoken of is not suitable for miners' use.
+
+_Autograph Collector_ says that he has seen in the papers such
+statements as the following: "LOWELL'S Under the Willows," "WHITTIER'S
+Among the Hills," "PUMPELLY'S Across America and Asia." A.C. wants the
+post-office address of either or all of tho gentlemen named. We are
+unable to give the information desired.
+
+_Constant Reader_.--What is the meaning of the word "Herc"?
+
+_Answer_.--It is the popular name of one of our Assurance Companies,
+only known to its intimate friends. The other name is the "_Hercules_."
+
+_Erie_.--You have been misinformed. Mr. FISK neither appeared as an
+Admiral, nor as one of the "Twelve Temptations," at the Reception of the
+Ninth Regiment.
+
+_Inquirer_.--The free translation of the legend, "_Ratione aut vi_," on
+the Ninth Regiment Badge, is "Strong in rations."
+
+_Wall Street_ asks, "Who are interested in PUNCHINELLO?" Though the
+question is not very business-like, we reply, "Every one;" and we are
+receiving fresh acquisitions daily.
+
+_Bergh_.--Was the English nightingale ever introduced into this country?
+
+_Answer_.--We cannot say. You had better go to FLORENCE for information
+on the subject.
+
+_R.G. White_.--It was a happy thought of yours to apply to PUNCHINELLO
+for information regarding Shaksperean readings. To your first question,
+"Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a gourmand?" we reply: undoubtedly he
+was. By adopting what is obviously the correct reading of the
+passage--"Shadows to-night," etc., it will be seen that "DICKON" was
+occasionally a sufferer from heavy suppers:
+
+ ----"Shad-roes to-night
+ Have struck more terror to the soul of RICHARD."
+
+Then, to your second query, "Was SHAKSPEARE'S RICHARD III a cannibal?"
+our answer is: Certainly he was. Following the above quotation we have
+the line, "Than can the substance," etc. The proper reading is:
+
+ "Then Can the substance of ten thousand soldiers."
+
+Famine was staring RICHARD'S army in the face, so that nothing could
+be more natural and proper than that he should have issued orders to
+butcher ten thousand of his lower soldiers, and have their meat canned
+for the subsistence of his "Upper Ten!"
+
+_Knife_.--You have been misinformed. General BUTLER was not a
+participator in the Battle of Five Forks, though more than that number
+of Spoons has been laid to his charge.
+
+_Anxious Parent_.--Probably the publication to which you refer is the
+one entitled "Freedom of the Mind in Willing," not "Freedom of the Will
+in Minding." It is not written for the encouragement of recalcitrant
+boys.
+
+_Confectioner_, (San Francisco.)--Mr. BEECHER, who wrote the article on
+candy, in the _Ledger_, lives in Brooklyn, a town of some importance not
+far from this city.
+
+
+
+
+The Nose and the Rose.
+
+The pink-lined parasols now in fashion were devised by some thoughtful
+improver of woman, to enhance beauty by imparting a roseate hue to the
+complexion. Unfortunately, however, the reflection from the pink
+silk does not always reach the face at the right angle. Sometimes it
+concentrates altogether upon the most prominent feature of the face, and
+then "Red in the Nose is She" becomes applicable to the bearer of the
+parasol. _Couleur de rose_ is an expression for all that is lovely and
+serene, but the rose must not be worn on the nose.
+
+
+
+
+Going him one Better.
+
+The only difference between the Colossus of Rhodes and King HENRY VIII
+was that while Colossus was only a _won_der, King H. was a _Tu_dor.
+
+
+
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+R. J. H. M'VICKER has for some years past conducted a Chicago theatre,
+of which he has been lessee, manager, and stock company. The Chicago
+people have liked M'VICKER'S Theatre, because it has occasionally
+treated them to the novel sensation of a comparatively moral
+performance. Occasional morality deftly inserted in the midst of a
+season of seductive legs, produces the same effect upon a Chicago
+audience that a naughty _opera bouffe_ does upon the New York lovers
+of the legitimate drama. In either case there is the charm of foreign
+novelty; a charm, however, which soon loses its attraction. _Opera
+bouffe_ in New York, and the moral drama in Chicago, can enjoy but a
+temporary success. The former city will always return to its love of
+standard comedies and SHAKSPEAREAN tragedies, and the latter will sooner
+or later clamor for its accustomed legs and its favorite dramas of
+bigamy and divorce.
+
+Mr. M'VICKER, having read of the MCFARLAND trial, immediately conceived
+the happy idea that the time had come when a Chicago actor would please
+a New York audience. Ha therefore flew to this city, by way of the
+Mississippi river and the New Orleans and Havana steamships, and last
+week made a debut at BOOTH'S Theatre. With an astuteness which reflects
+great credit upon his ability as a manager, he astonished the audience,
+which had assembled to be shocked by a genuine Chicago performance,
+by playing a part which fairly bristles with unnecessarily obtrusive
+morality. Thus did he present a double attraction. A Chicago actor would
+have been sure, in any case, of the support of the Free Love Press; but
+a moral Chicago actor is a surprise which appeals irresistibly to the
+love of novelty which exists in the theatre-going breast. The play
+in which he made his first appearance here, is entitled "Taking the
+Chances," and is from the pen of Mr. CHARLES GAYLER, to whom Dr. WATTS
+so beautifully referred in those touching verses:
+
+ "Gayler, the Troubadour,
+ Touched his guitar,"
+
+--and further language to a like effect. Mr. M'VICKER sustained the
+character of "PETER POMEROY," one of those oppressive rural Yankees
+whose mission seems to be to drive young men into the paths of vice, by
+representing virtue as inextricably associated with home-spun garments,
+and the manners of an uneducated bull in an unprotected china shop. The
+following version of the play will be recognized as literally exact, by
+all who have not seen the original.
+
+
+
+
+Taking the Chances.
+
+ACT I.
+
+MR. POMEROY, _a Preposterous Uncle, who regards his nephew_, PETER, _as
+a desirable person._ "My dear PETER will he here in a few moments. His
+presence will be a real blessing."
+
+MRS. POMEROY. "I am sorry to hear it. He breaks furniture and things,
+and I don't like him."
+
+_Enter_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE, _who make unnecessary remarks, and obviously
+exist only to meet_ PETER. _Finally_ PETER _enters, in butternut
+clothing and a condition of chronic moral perfection._
+
+PETER. "Jewhillikins! Haow de du, Unkil? Haow are ye, Aunt DEB? Haow is
+everybody? Our pigs and chickens and garden-sass is all doin' well."
+--_Falls on a chair._
+
+PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE. "Dear, noble, manly fellow."
+
+EVERYBODY ELSE. "Unbearable brute."
+
+_Enter_ BLANCHE POMEROY. "Do I see my dear cousin? I am glad to see you,
+but please don't tear all of my dress to pieces."
+
+PETER. "_Jewhillikins!_" "You used to not to mind abaout havin' your
+frock torn when you was up at Graniteville. But I s'pose society has
+sp'iled you."
+
+_Enter_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN, _and whispers to_ BLANCHE--"To-night you must
+fly with me. We have not a moment to lose."
+
+PETER. "_Jewhillikins!_ That is the chap that deserted his wife in
+Graniteville? I'll fix him."
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "What do I see? A virtuous rustic? Confusion! Can he
+suspect me?"
+
+PETER _devotes himself to the virtuous task of insulting every person in
+the room, thereby proving how much superior a cow-boy from New Hampshire
+is to the wretched resident of the city, whom fate has made a base
+and villainous gentleman. The_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN _goes through with
+a complicated fit of St. Vitus's Dance, by way of preserving a cool
+exterior, and thus allaying the suspicions of_ PETER. _Various_ TEDIOUS
+PEOPLE _enter and converse tediously with the_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. _After
+a time the stage-carpenters suddenly decide to lower the curtain, and
+thus put an end to an act that might otherwise go on forever._
+
+
+ACT II.
+
+_Enter_ PETER. "Jewhillikins! This is a nice garden. What pesky villains
+all these people must be, considerin' that they wear good clothes and
+don't break the furnitoor. There's that chap that deserted his wife.
+I'll fix him."--_Hides himself in an arbor._
+
+_Enter_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.--"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? In
+order to avert suspicion, I will confide everything to the friendly
+air."--_Relates his past life and future plans, at the top of his lungs,
+and then returns to the house._
+
+_Enter_ PREPOSTEROUS UNCLE, _and various_ TEDIOUS PEOPLE, _who all want
+to marry_ BLANCHE. _They converse tediously and go away again. Applause!
+Enter_ BLANCHE _and_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN.--"Confusion! Can the bumpkin suspect me? BLANCHE, we
+must fly to-night. Not a moment is to be lost."
+
+_Re-enter_ PETER. "Jewhillikins! BLANCHE, I want to talk a spell with
+yon."--To PLAUSTBLE VILLAIN "Go into the haouse, will you?"--_He goes_.
+
+BLANCHE, "What do you want, PETER? Why do you tear my dress, and scratch
+your head so persistently?"
+
+PETER. "Jewhillikins! That feller you love is a scoundrel. I'll prove
+it. Will you believe it after it's proved?"
+
+BLANCHE, (_With a fine sense of what is truly womanly_.) "Of course I
+won't believe it. I despise proofs and arguments."
+
+_Enter_ TEDIOUS PEOPLE _and_ IREELEVANT PEOPLE. _They converse more
+tediously and irrelevantly than before. At last the carpenters, who have
+been out for beer, return and drop the curtain._
+
+
+ACT III.
+
+_Enter_ PETER, _in the clothes of an ordinary Christian. He practices a
+frightful dance, and remarks at intervals,_ "Jewhillikins."
+
+_Enter_ BLANCHE _and_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. _The latter notices_ PETER,
+_with convulsive alarm._
+
+PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN. "Confusion! Can he suspect me? BLANCHE, we must fly
+at once. There is not a moment to lose."
+
+_Enter_ EVERYBODY. _A quadrille is formed._ PETER _dances and falls
+over everybody else. The quadrille ends._ PETER _rises and remarks,
+"Jewhillikins." He goes out and returns, bringing the_ PLAUSIBLE
+VILLAIN'S _wife with him. The_ PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN _repents._ BLANCHE
+_consents to marry_ PETER. _Various preposterous engagements are entered
+into by the_ TEDIOUS _and the_ IRRELEVANT PEOPLE. _And at last the play
+is over._
+
+
+
+COMIC MAN _among the audience._ "Why should M'VICKER think a man a
+scoundrel, who deserts his wife and tries to marry another? Don't he
+come from Chicago?"
+
+2D COMIC MAN.--"Don't SHERIDAN," (who plays the PLAUSIBLE VILLAIN,)
+"look as if he wished he were 'twenty miles away' when PETER denounces
+him?"
+
+And the bystanders smile weakly, as though they had heard a good joke on
+SHERIDAN, and retire slowly toward their homes, evidently exhausted by
+the oppressive virtue of the intolerable Yankee boor, whom M'VICKER
+plays so well that the respectable portion of the audience is almost
+inclined to overlook the wretchedness of the part in admiration of the
+skill of the actor.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+
+
+
+Cue-rious Rumor.
+
+That the Sound steamers are to be furnished with billiard tables for
+the amusement of passengers between New York and Boston. This report,
+however, is flatly contradicted, and we have neither charity nor chalk
+for the man who would make a statement so groundless. GEORGE FRANCIS,
+THE UBIQUITOUS.
+
+Amidst all the chances and changes of this chequered, and, in some
+respects, lugubrious life, Mr. PUNCHINELLO has the perennial consolation
+of one friendship, which promises to be immortal, and over which time
+and space hold no sway. Need we say that we are alluding to the tender
+emotions which crowd our bosom whenever we hear of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN! And lest our love for him should grow colder, this considerate
+gentleman allows us to hear from him almost daily. To be sure he is like
+some great antediluvian grasshopper, and seems capable of spanning this
+almost boundless continent at a leap. He is in Maine in the morning--he
+is making a speech in Minnesota when the evening shades prevail; but
+wherever he is, the roll of his eloquence reaches us, and however busy
+he may be, he is never too busy to write letters to tho newspapers. The
+great man comes very near to solving the problem heretofore considered
+insoluble, of being in two places at once. Two, did we say? Absurd!
+Three, four, five, half a dozen! What a man! Jumping here! Leaping
+there! Skipping North! Vaulting South! Skimming (like a CAMILLA in
+pantaloons) over the plains of the West! Then, as if by magic, whirling
+himself to the East! A man, did we say? Bah! GEORGE FRANCIS is clearly
+one of the immortals.
+
+Clearly! JUPITER used to be rather lavish of electricity, but he did but
+a small retail business in it, compared with our dear GEORGE FRANCIS,
+the demi-god, who, when he is not talking with sublime garrulity, is
+telegraphing without regard to expense. Evidently it has dawned upon the
+mind (if he has any,) of this extraordinary being, that the world, in
+none of its quarters, can get along without him, and that the newspaper
+which does not mention his name must be stale, flat, and unprofitable.
+Wherefore he takes order that every newspaper shall print the wonderful
+name as often as possible. Whether he be laughed at, sneered at, sworn
+at, the virtue of the mere mention remains the same.
+
+The last we heard from GEORGE FRANCIS, he was, (to use his own choice
+language,) "away up here on the Chippewa," beseeching the lumber men,
+with all the charm of his inimitable eloquence, to vote him into the
+Presidential chair. "I am waking up these boys for 1872," writes the
+valuable phenomenon. Unto "millers, rafters, choppers, and jammers,"
+this Fountain of Oratory has gushed forth his "four hundred and
+twenty-first consecutive Presidential lecture." Imagine a possible scene
+upon a raft! GEORGE FRANCIS, mounted upon a whiskey-barrel, is making
+all the air resonant with rhetoric. The "rafters" are swearing!
+The "choppers" are cursing! The "jammers" are most reprehensibly
+blaspheming! The enormous mass floats onward, and "TRAIN!" the floods,
+"TRAIN!" the forests, "TRAIN!" the overarching skies resound! No
+miserable hall, no narrow street, no "pent-up Utica" contracts the
+power of this miraculous elocutionist--his auditorium seems to be a
+hemisphere--his audience all mankind! ORPHEUS singing moved rocks
+and trees. Great GEORGE spouting subdues all the inhabitants of the
+wilderness. Timid deer trip to the shore to listen; ferocious bears,
+catching the echo, shed tears of penitence; all creatures of the roaring
+kind acknowledge themselves surpassed and silenced; the whispering pines
+whisper all the more softly, as if ashamed of their own verbal weakness.
+All speeches, even the speeches of a TRAIN, must come to an end; and
+having ended, the floating DEMOSTHENES sits down to write to the
+newspapers, that he has just been delivered of his four-hundred-and-
+twenty-second, and is as well as could be expected.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO has, in his day, been considered talkative; but he
+feels, as he listens to GEORGE FRANCIS, that he is himself a marvel of
+taciturnity--that in the noble art of sounding his own trumpet he is
+a mere child--that as a contributor to the public amusement he is in
+danger of falling into paltry insignificance. Alas! he is not the
+marvellous mountebank which he has heretofore considered himself to be;
+and the nonsense upon which he so prided himself, in comparison with
+the nonsense of GEORGE FRANCIS, sinks into the most melancholy and
+insufferable wisdom. He looks forward to the future with a fear lest he
+may descend to the depths of serious and slow solemnity. When he has
+arrived at that deplorable stage of decay, he wishes it to be understood
+that his drum and trumpet are at the service of Mr. GEORGE FRANCIS
+TRAIN.
+
+
+[Illustration: A YOUNG STIR AMONG THE DAILIES.
+
+_Editor Dana._ "I WISH THAT FELLOW WOULD TAKE HIS BANNER OUT OF MY WAY.
+IT ECLIPSES MY SPECIAL NEWS."]
+
+
+
+
+ASSOCIATED PRESS TELEGRAMS.
+
+It is well known that there is a leak in the Associated Press Office. In
+point of fact there always is a leak. Why any one should think it worth
+while to steal the Associated Press cable dispatches is a mystery,
+when they could be manufactured in any newspaper office with much less
+trouble. The following dispatches are a fair sample of the ordinary
+cable news which is sent to the Association. "We need hardly say that
+they were not stolen from Mr. SIMONTON, but we will say, as we
+have already said, that there is a leak. A word to the wise is
+sufficient--though, of course, by the expression, 'the wise,' we do not
+mean any reference to the London agent of the Associated Press."
+
+
+LONDON, June 6. The _Times_ of to-day has a paragraph on the big trees
+of California.
+
+MR. SMALLEY denies that he ever wore a hat resembling that of GUSTAVE
+FLOURENS.
+
+A boy has been arrested for picking pockets in Oxford Street.
+
+JOHN SMITH, proprietor of a coffee and cake saloon in Ratcliffe Highway,
+has gone into bankruptcy.
+
+It is believed that if the Tories should oust the present cabinet, they
+would come into power.
+
+PARIS, June 7. There are rumors as to the health of the Emperor
+NAPOLEON.
+
+Yesterday a man is said to have cried, "_Vive la Republique!_" in his
+back-yard.
+
+ROME, June, 8. The Ecumenical Council is still in session.
+
+There are more strangers in Rome than there have been at times when the
+number was less.
+
+ALEXANDRIA, June 8. Several vessels have passed through the Suez Canal
+since its completion.
+
+The Suez Canal is by some regarded as a success. Others think it a
+failure.
+
+CALCUTTA, June 6. A native was killed by a tiger near Bundelcund
+eighteen months ago.
+
+YOKOHAMA, June 6. The P. & O. Steamer Bombay has run down and sunk the
+U.S. Sloop Oneida.
+
+ST. PETERSBURGH, June 7. Some discontent was caused by the emancipation
+of the serfs.
+
+BERLIN, June 8. BISMARCK has notified the Upper House that no
+exemplification of the categorical plebiscitum will be favorably
+entertained or rejected.
+
+In view of these important dispatches, PUNCHINELLO respectfully suggests
+to Mr. SIMONTON, that instead of trying to put an end to the stealing of
+his news, he put a peremptory end to the London agent of the Associated
+Press. Otherwise the agent will soon put an end to the Association. One
+or the other event must take place, and it is only a question of time
+which shall occur first. [Illustration: PONTOON FOR PARTIES. A NEW
+INVENTION, TO ENABLE GENTLEMEN TO CROSS THE FLOWING TRAINS OF LADIES IN
+FASHIONABLE DRAWING-ROOMS.]
+
+
+
+
+COMIC ZOOLOGY.
+
+The Boa Constrictor.
+
+Oriental tourists claim to have met with specimens of this reptile one
+hundred feet in length, but as travellers are proverbially prone to
+stretch their tales, narrative of this character must not be too readily
+swallowed. He is found in India, all along the course of the Hooghly,
+and is hugely superior in strength and size to all the other reptiles of
+Asia. His habitat is usually up a tree, where he lies in ambush, and
+he forages, and has for ages, on the nobler quadrupeds; seldom letting
+himself down to make a "picked-up dinner" on the lower animals.
+Sometimes, however, when tormented with an "all-gone sensation" in the
+pit of his stomach, he descends to dine on a high-caste Brahmin and to
+sup on a Gentoo.
+
+The skin of the Boa has a silky sheen, like that of the finest Rep, and,
+when taking a nap in the sun, his Damascened appearance may remind the
+pious spectator of a scene damned by the intrusion of a similar reptile
+several thousand years ago.
+
+The Boa Constrictor is not a fascinating snake--far from it. He relies
+on his muscles and not on his charms, for support. His appetite is
+vigorous, and the manner in which he disposes of his tid-bits, such
+as the larger carnivora, may be described as glutenous. Much has been
+written of the creature, but a glance at his enormous volume will give a
+truer idea of him than anything that has ever issued from the press.
+He serves the body of an animal, before devouring it, as mercenary
+politicians serve the body politic--crushing it with many Rings. By the
+keepers of menageries he is often called the Boa _Constructor_, but the
+name more aptly applies to the Furrier who simulates his shape on a
+small scale; the creature having no mechanical skill whatever.
+
+Occasionally, from some branch that overhangs a _Nullah_, he will drop
+down on the thirsty eland or hartbeest, rendering resistance a Nullity;
+but his favorite game is fighting the tiger, at which, unlike the human
+species, he always wins when in the vein for that kind of sport. All the
+beasts of the jungle fear him--the wolf feeling no disposition to seek
+his folds, and the leopard frequently changing his spots to avoid him.
+Whatever his quarry may be, its sands are soon run out.
+
+The Boa, like other gourmands, is fond of gourmand-ease. After having
+put a victim through the mill and bolted him for a meal, the monster may
+be discovered (or he may not) on some knoll in the forest, indulging in
+somnolency. He can then be assailed with safety, but as his breath is a
+horrible fetor, a spice (of caution) should be used in approaching him.
+The windward side is best. As he lies limber, smelling like Limburger,
+a hatchet will be found a first-chop weapon of assault. The Hindoos,
+however, generally double him up with Creeses. Cutting off the
+creature's tail, just behind the jaws, is a pretty sure way to
+ex-terminate him. There are on record several instances of Boas having
+been despatched in this way by Ruthless adventurers.
+
+The reptile abounds in Ceylon, and is considered a delicacy by the
+Cingalese, but the civilized stomach would probably find Double Ease in
+letting it alone. _Cotelette de Constrictor_, however pleasant to the
+Pagan palate, would scarcely go down with a Christian.
+
+High old stories of the Boa have been obtained by travellers, from the
+Asiatics. They resemble those of the fabled dragon and hippogriff, and
+as they generally relate to the ravaging of whole districts by the
+voracious monster, a heap o' grief is connected with some of them. The
+gum-game, however, is much in vogue in India, and most of these snake
+stories may be characterized as India Rubbish.
+
+The great Boa is a native of Southern Africa as well as of Asia, and is
+much dreaded by all the Dutch Boers. The creature is reported to have
+been seen in crossing the interior deserts, but this is believed to be
+a fiction invented in the Caravans. In Congo there is a small species a
+few sizes larger than the Conger eel, while in the section of country
+visited by CUMMING the Boa is the biggest serpent Going.
+
+There are stupendous snakes in the islands of the Indian Archipelago,
+and a Yankee skipper who lived a year among the natives informs us that
+he "once saw some arter a boa in Sumatra." The skipper, however, is a
+small joker, and always ready to Sacrifice Truth on the Alter Ego of a
+miserable pun. A vile habit this, but one that it is to be feared will
+never be abandoned.
+
+The skin of the Boa is rarely embroidered with purple and gold, but,
+like many a priestly hypocrite, he hides under the livery of heaven the
+instincts of the Devil. And so we dismiss him.
+
+
+
+
+BITTER SARCASM
+
+Canadians pronounce the sacred word "Sunburst" "Shunburst."
+
+
+[Illustration: THE WEDDING RING, AS SOKOSIS WOULD LIKE TO SEE IT WORN.]
+
+
+[ILLUSTRATION Description: Woman in Victorian dress with a small,
+free-running dog on her left holding a leash in her right hand which
+connects to a top-hatted man's nose ring. A sign behind them reads
+"Socuety for the prevention of cruelty to husbands $500 fine"] [blank
+page] [Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+Ind-Hearted Mr. CHANDLER had a proposition "which would restore American
+commerce to its former footing." It was simply to annex San Domingo,
+Cuba, and Canada. He repudiated with scorn and disgust the insinuation
+that he proposed to pay anything for them. That was foreign to his
+nature. He meant merely to take them. By this means they would not only
+restore American commerce--he din't profess to know exactly how--but
+they would inflict a deadly blow upon haughty England. At this point Mr.
+CHANDLER became incoherent, the only intelligible remark which reached
+the reporters, being that he could "lick" Queen VICTORIA single-handed.
+
+Mr. SUMNER remarked that a war with England would be costly.
+
+Mr. CHANDLER declined to accept any suggestion from a man who went to
+diplomatic dinners, and consorted with Englishmen. He had been told that
+at these dinners, to which he was proud to say he had never gone, and to
+which, while the custom of issuing invitations prevailed, he never
+would go, Mr. SUMNER ate with his fork. Such a man could not be a true
+American.
+
+Mr. MORRILL introduced a bill to increase the mileage of members.
+Notoriously, he observed, the mileage of members was scandalously small.
+He knew that the self-sacrificing nature of the senators would delight
+to pay this tribute to the fidelity of themselves, and the equally
+deserving public servants of the other house. Passed with acclamations.
+
+A resolution was introduced to appropriate a few millions towards the
+discovery of the North Pole.
+
+Mr. SAULSBURY said--Whazyoose?
+
+Mr. SUMNER explained that it would be a good thing for science.
+
+Mr. COLE explained that it would be an enormous thing for fishermen.
+
+Mr. YATES explained that it would be a vast thing for "cobblers."
+
+Mr. SAULSBURY said--Ah, B'gthing on Ice.
+
+Mr. MORRILL moved to extend the Capitol grounds to the next lot.
+
+Mr. YATES moved to extend them to Chicago.
+
+Mr. MORTON moved to extend them to Indianapolis.
+
+Mr. CHANDLER wildly shrieked Detroit.
+
+Mr. SUMNER faintly murmured Boston.
+
+
+
+HOUSE.
+
+Somebody introduced a bill to pension the soldiers of 1812. Somebody
+else wanted to amend it by providing that no soldier of 1812 who aided
+and comforted the recent rebellion should get any pension.
+
+Even Mr. BUTLER showed gleams of good feeling. He said that the lot of
+these men was hard. They were liable to be brought out upon platforms
+every Fourth of July, and obliged to sit and blink under patriotic
+eloquence for hours. It was their dreadful lot subsequently to eat
+public dinners in country taverns, which brought their gray hairs down
+in sorrow and indigestion to the grave. The notion of these senile and
+patriotic duffers aiding and comforting the rebellion was preposterous.
+Their eyes purged thick amber and plum-tree gum, and they had no notion
+of doing anything but drawing their pensions, and getting three meals a
+day, with a horrible fourth on the glorious Fourth.
+
+Mr. LOGAN said this position was outrageous. He knew that some of these
+hoary wretches in his own district were so fully in sympathy with the
+rebellion as actually to refuse to vote for him, when carriages were
+sent to convey them to the polls. Such men ought not to receive a
+dollar.
+
+Mr. BUTLER not only reaffirmed his previous statements, but reintroduced
+his resolution to annex Dominica.
+
+Mr. KELLEY desired to abolish the income tax. He said that some of his
+most influential constituents disliked it. They would not pay. To lie
+they were ashamed. If a sufficient tariff were put upon pig-iron there
+would be no need of providing for this petty Tacks.
+
+Mr. BUTLER was in favor of the abolition of the tax. It had never seen
+anything but a tax on paper, and it was not worth a paper of tacks.
+But he considered the most feasible method of reducing it was to annex
+Dominica, and he introduced a resolution to that effect. As his friend
+KELLEY had suggested, if they did not remove the tax, their constituents
+would remove them. He did not consider it practicable, however, to bring
+a movement to abolish the tacks on the carpet until Dominica should be
+ours.
+
+
+
+
+FURTHER OF MYTHOLOGY.
+
+DIANA. This goddess was generally admitted to be the most intellectual
+and disagreeable of the whole divine Sisterhood. Among the Greeks the
+popular estimate of her character was shown by the name of "Artful
+Miss"--afterwards corrupted to ARTEMIS--which they gave to her. She was
+an eminently strong-minded goddess, and insisted upon her right to adopt
+the habits of the other sex. Among them was the practice of hunting, of
+which she was passionately fond. Indeed, it was from her devotion to the
+pleasures of the chase that she obtained the epithet of the "Chased"
+DIANA--wild boars, and such like ungallant brutes, sometimes annoying
+her by refusing to be chased themselves, and by chasing her instead.
+There are those who pretend to think that "chaste," instead of "chased,"
+was really the original epithet, and that it was given to her as a
+recognition of the aggressive and malignant virtue which distinguishes
+most strong-minded women who are old and yet unmarried. The obvious
+absurdity of this theory will, however, be evident to any one who
+remembers her little flirtation with ENDYMION, whom she cruelly led from
+the paths of innocence, only to abandon him on the hills of Latmos,
+where he contracted the chills and fever by fruitlessly watching for her
+at night in the open field. A characteristic piece of ill-temper was her
+treatment of young ACTÆON. The latter, who was a respectable, though
+rather reckless young man, was once walking along the beach, when he
+suddenly came upon DIANA and several female friends in the act of taking
+the surf. Envious to behold the extremes of boniness, which then, as
+now, doubtless characterized the strong-minded females, he concealed
+himself in a neighboring bathing-house, and brought his opera-glass
+to bear on the group. He was, however, discovered, and DIANA and her
+friends were so indignant at being seen without their false teeth and
+false "fronts," that the former deliberately set her dogs on him, who
+tore him into imperceptible fragments so small that no coroner could
+possibly find enough of him in order to hold an inquest. Of course
+ACTÆON'S conduct cannot be defended, but then his punishment was
+altogether too severe. There is every reason to suppose that DIANA
+wanted some one to accidentally notice her proficiency in swimming, else
+why should she have chosen a place of popular resort for her bath? And
+then the simple nudity in which she was surprised was not nearly as
+suggestive as the peculiar costumes in which our fashionable ladies
+now-a-days enter the surf in the presence of admiring crowds. However,
+ideas change with successive ages, and what we now consider perfectly
+proper would probably have brought any quantity of blushes to the cheek
+of the young person of Athens or Rome. Among the Olympians DIANA was a
+common scold, and made herself as disagreeable to the goddesses as to
+the gods. Since she ceased to be openly worshipped she has been in a
+measure forgotten among men, but the strong-minded women still regard
+her with love and reverence, and it is understood that her statue,
+together with a painting representing her in the act of setting the
+dogs on ACTÆON, are among the most prominent decorations of the Sorosis
+Club-room and the _Revolution_ office.
+
+
+
+Historical
+
+Coney Island is celebrated for the saltness of its waters and the
+leathery qualities of its clams. This island is said to have been so
+named on account of its resemblance in shape to an inverted cone, but
+the attrition of the ocean has materially changed the conic base.
+Researches in the direction of the apex have not been made recently.
+
+
+
+Patentee Wanted.
+
+The heavy hebdomadals complain that the style of the communications sent
+them is too diffuse. The "talented" contributor is adjured to condense.
+There is an apparatus, we believe, for condensing the article called
+milk, but who will devise a machine for condensing the milk-and-water
+article? A fortune awaits the genius of the inventor.
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLY GRAIL AND OTHER POEMS.
+
+(This Is one of the other Poems.)
+
+BY A HALF-RED DENIZEN OF THE WEST.
+
+Part XI.
+
+PELLEAS then, when all the flies were gone, Sat faithful on his horse,
+upon the lawn That skirts the castle moat; and thought the dame, For
+want of pluck, could never give him blame. He sat a week. She grew so
+blazing mad, She raved, and called three other knights she had; And
+cried, "That fool will drive me wild, I fear! Go bind his hands, and
+walk him Spanish here." And when the idiot heard her, he did grin And
+smirk, and let them walk him Spanish in. Then, railing vile, that he
+might take offence, She, sneering, asked him would he ne'er go hence;
+
+[Illustration]
+
+And cursed him till her face grew crimson red. Like cats of Cheshire
+then he grinned, and said:
+
+
+"Sent by thy train and thee to Coventry, I hung with grooms and porters
+on the bridge; Watched by thy three tall squires. And there I shaped An
+ancient willow's sapling into this."
+
+And handed her a whistle. "Kick him out!" She yelled; and the knights,
+laughing, took the lout, And thrust him from the gate. A week from this,
+Looking without, she saw his simple phiz; And cried "Go kill him! Stick
+him like a pig! You three can do it, if he is so big!" Unwilling, yet
+the knights went out to try, And light-of-love GAWAIN came riding by.
+"What ho!" he cried, "I'm in, if that fight's free; So here I come-ye
+knavish cowards three!" "For me," PELLEAS cried, "the fight she means,"
+And charging, knocked them into smithereens. Now called she other
+knights, and cried out, "Once Again go bind and bring me here that
+dunce!" And when he heard, he let himself be bound,
+
+And o'er the bridge they kicked him like a hound. When she had sneered
+her sneeriest, then she said, "Turn him out bound!" He lifted up his
+head,
+
+ "You ask me why, tho' ill at ease
+ Within this region I subsist?"
+
+ "I did," she said, "but pray desist
+ From further quoting, if you please."
+
+When forth PELLEAS came, his hands all tied, The brave GAWAIN, he
+bounded to his side, And loosed his bonds and said, "Look here, good
+friend, This sort of thing had better have an end. Just you go home, and
+take a Turkish bath, And I will cure this lady of her wrath. Give me
+your horse and shield. Take mine, I'll say I've killed you, stiffly
+dead, in mortal fray. Then she will straight repent; your death will
+rue, And while her heart is soft, I'll send for you."
+
+This nincum-fubby-diddle-boodle, he Went home, and did not GAWATN'S
+laughter see! He waited till the moon, after three days, Gave promise of
+large lights on woods and ways, And then he hastened to ETTABBE'S gate.
+He found it open, and he did not wait to be announced, but hastened,
+full of hope, To where her tent stood on the garden slope. He knew she
+slept the roses all among, And as he softly stepped, he softly sung:
+
+ "I am coming, my own, my sweet!
+ Were it ever so airy a tread,
+ Thy heart would hear me and beat,
+ Were it earth in an earthly bed.
+ Thy dust would hear me and beat,
+ Hads't thou lain for a century dead,
+ Would start and tremble under my feet--
+
+And just then he saw GAWAIN'S head! With one wild bound toward the
+dark'ning skies, From out the garden gates he madly flies. But soon his
+mind it alters. Slipping back, His tune he changes--trying this new
+ tack:"Howe'er it be, it seems to me
+ 'Tis only noble to be good;
+ Kind hearts are more than coronets,
+ And simple faith, than Norman blood.
+
+ O lady! You may veer and veer,
+ A great enchantress you may be,
+ But there'll be that across your throat,
+ Which you would scarcely care to see."
+
+Then he, while sleep of senses them bereft, Soft thrust his lance
+through both their necks--and left. The cold touch in her throat she
+felt, and woke. She knew the lance, and to GAWAIN she spoke. "Liar!" she
+said. "That man you have not slain. Let's both clear out! He may come
+back again!"
+
+(_To be Continued._)
+
+
+
+
+OUR PORTFOLIO.
+
+That most gay, gallant and airy body of horsemen known as the "Brooklyn
+Dutch Light Cavalry," are much indebted to the projectors of the
+Knightly meeting which took place recently at Prospect Park, for an
+opportunity to display those equestrian graces which a few cross-grained
+critics have been disposed to deny them. The general public never had
+any doubts upon the subject, but it is well enough to silence those who
+took much credit to themselves in detecting faults where others could
+not discover them. The result shows how completely such mendacity can be
+exposed. Of the numerous prizes awarded, two-thirds fell to the members
+of Brooklyn's Teutonic Cavalry. They were especially admired for the
+firmness with which they kept their saddles, under circumstances enough
+to unhorse a Centaur. We noted, particularly, one cavalier, known in
+the lists as the Knight of RUDESHEIMER. He keeps a pork store in Fulton
+Avenue, and turned a Fairbanks Scale, but two days before the tourney,
+at 275 lbs. This gallant rode a very sprightly steed, which struggled
+under the double calamity of being slightly spavined and quite blind in
+the left eye. One of the effects of the latter misfortune was to keep
+the animal constantly in the belief that somebody meditated foul play
+upon its unguarded flank, and at the slightest stir in the crowd it
+would wheel violently around, to the great consternation its rider,
+and the evident alarm of contiguous Knights. PUNCHINELLO, who was very
+conspicuous in the throng, and was mounted upon a highly mettled Ukraine
+steed, observed the cavorting of the Knight of RUDESHEIMER, and cantered
+gaily towards him. In attempting to pass, his spur touched the side of
+the blind steed,--which kicked at PUNCHINELLO'S fiery Ukraine in a very
+ungracious manner. Our animal would take a kick from no other animal
+calmly, and so, without waiting to weigh consequences, it gave
+RUDESHEIMER'S Rosinante a severe "chuck" in the ribs with its hind feet.
+In an instant horse and rider were spinning around like a top. A space
+was immediately cleared, and the crowd awaited in breathless silence
+the fate of the Knight. His swayings were fearful, until PUNCHINELLO,
+anticipating an apoplectic fit from such a terrific revolution, dashed
+in, and seizing the frightened steed by the bridle, brought him to
+bay. The Knight's face was livid with rage and, instead of thanking
+PUNCHINELLO, he roared at the pitch of his voice.
+
+"Dunder und blitzen! Du bist ein tam phool. Vat for you not sees I ish
+tied to mein saddle?"
+
+The pride of horsemanship could go no further, and so PUNCHINELLO left.
+
+
+
+
+SONG OF THE RED CLOUD.
+
+[Supposed to have been uttered on the occasion of a conference of
+Savages at Washington with a view to the settlement of our Indian
+difficulties.]
+
+ How! Call all my chiefs together--
+ Makpialutah, Red Cloud wants 'em:
+ Shunkalutah, him the Red Dog;
+ Brave Bear, Montaohetekah;
+ Setting Bear, Maktohutakah;
+ Rock Bear, Live Bear, Long Bear, Short Bear,
+ Little Bear, Yellow Bear, and Bear Skin,
+ Keyalutah, Red Fly--Shoo Fly!
+ Dahsanowee, White Cow Rattler,
+ Pahgee, Shunkmonetoohakah,
+ Shatonsapah, Maktohashena,
+ Kokepah, Ocklehelutah,
+ Newakohnkechaksaheuntah,
+ Whoop! haloo! Yahoo! Halooooooooo!
+
+ (Sudden rush of warriors on all sides with war-whoop, flourish of
+ tomahawks, and inexplicable dumb show.]
+
+ Ugh! What now would have the White Man?
+ Sell he swindle, rum, fire-water,
+ We will sell him Fear in plenty.
+ What would have Great Cloud, our father,
+ He the Smoke-nose, he the Big Fish?
+ They not cheat us, we not murder.
+ Pale-faces like the leaves of forests:
+ Many squaws with paint and feathers--
+ None like Makochawyuntaker,
+ The World-looker, wife of Black Hawk.
+ Much skull, but few scalp in Congress.
+ Talk much--very great tongue-warriors.
+ Tomahawk could end the tongue-fight.
+ Hrumph! I like not these pale-faces,
+ Makpialutah mourns for battle,
+ Red Cloud thirsts for blood of Pawnees,
+ Red Cloud cries for scalp of white men,
+ Red Cloud angers the Great Spirit,
+ Red Cloud trembles for the War Dance!
+ Ugh! Hrumph! How! Whoop, whoop, haloooooo!
+
+[The Conference of Chiefs, after an uproar of shrill and guttural
+sounds, break: up with the favorite can-can of the Sioux.]
+
+
+
+
+A Pleasant Prospect.
+
+The Massachusetts editors, who are shortly to meet in convention at
+Boston, are threatened with three distressing courtesies, viz: a concert
+on the Big Organ, a visit to the School Ship, and a banquet in Fanuil
+Hall. They have our sincerest condolences.
+
+
+[Illustration: TREPIDATION.
+
+FRANK PAYS A VISIT OF CONDOLENCE TO HIS FRIEND, WHO IS ILL WITH
+RELAPSING FEVER.]
+
+[Illustration: FUMIGATION.
+
+THEN HE THINKS HIS HAIR SHOULD BE FUMIGATED, AND SUBSEQUENTLY HE HAS TO
+BE EXTINGUISHED.] [Illustration: MARRIAGE A LA MODE. (NOT BY HOGARTH.)
+_Clergyman_. "Do You TAKE THIS MAN TO LOVE, HONOR, AND AGREE WITH
+UNTIL--YOU SEE ANOTHER MAN YOU LIKE BETTER?"]
+
+
+
+
+MY COUP D'ETAT.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO: For sometime--I would not like to say how long--the
+undersigned has been a candidate for the office of Whiskey Inspector for
+the Judasville district of his State. I have had powerful backing from
+the scrap-iron members of Congress from my section, but their efforts
+and my own have long seemed of little avail. The other day, however,
+I saw in the papers the account of the _coup d'etat_ of the DUKE OF
+SALDANHA, in Portugal. An idea immediately entered my brain. These
+_effète_ monarchies, these governments of the past, on which "the rust
+of ages," as VICTOR HUGO remarks, "lies like a bloody snow of bygone
+vassalage," have yet sufficient vitality to teach a lesson to the young
+and vigorous governments of the West. At any rate this old duke taught
+me a lesson, and I did my best to hurry off and say it. It was evident
+that if I wanted to be Whiskey Inspector of Judasville, (and I am
+justified in saying that no man in the district possesses more peculiar
+qualifications for the post,) that something in the SALDANHA style
+must be done. The time had passed for petitions and lobbying. I went
+immediately to the commander of the Judasville Rifles, and enlisted his
+sympathies in my cause. He willingly placed his company at my service,
+but whether this was due to my offer to pay the board-bills and car-fare
+of the organization while it was under my orders, or to my eloquent
+statement of my case, I have not yet had an opportunity to discover. The
+men who, from the very commencement of the undertaking, had constituted
+themselves the inspectors of my whiskey, were in high good spirits, and,
+in a body, numbering some forty-six, we arrived in Washington, on a
+bright morning, about a week ago. It would not do, on an occasion like
+this, to delay matters. Accordingly I marched my troops directly to the
+White House. The man in charge of the door took my men for a visiting
+target company, and told me, whom he supposed was the member from their
+district, that I must marshal my friends out on the green, and he would
+notify the Private Secretary. I made no answer to this, but ordered
+the troops to charge bayonets, and we entered the White House at a
+double-quick. I led the way directly to GRANT'S study, and stationing my
+men in the doorway, I entered. He was within, cutting up an "old soger"
+to smoke in his pipe. After shaking bands with him, I sat down and
+inquired if that was a _regalia _he was cutting up.
+
+"No," said he. "This is the HANCOCK brand."
+
+"Oh!" said I.
+
+"Well?" said he, looking somewhat inquisitively at the soldiers, who
+crowded into the doorway, and almost filled the entry beyond.
+
+"Mr. President," said I, rising and clearing my throat, "I do not wish
+to occupy much time in the present business--especially as I have to pay
+the hotel bills of these brave veterans until it is finished. Therefore
+I will come directly to the point. I desire, immediately, the
+appointment of Whiskey Inspector for the Judasville district. I have
+been an applicant for said position quite long enough, and I demand that
+you make out my commission this morning."
+
+"And suppose I don't?" says GRANT.
+
+"In that case," said I,--"in that case--well, in that case, _there_ are
+my companions in arms, the brave supporters of my cause!" and I pointed
+proudly to the Judasville Rifles.
+
+"Well," said GRANT, puffing away at the HANCOCK remnants, "what do you
+propose to do with them--besides paying their hotel bills, I mean?"
+
+"To do?" said I, "to do?"--and now, to tell the truth, I experienced an
+immediate disadvantage of not having formed a plan of my campaign. But
+it would not do to hesitate.
+
+"To do?" I repeated, speaking louder this time. "I shall march
+upon--well, upon each of the public buildings in turn, and I shall take
+them and hold them."
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"Well," said I, "then, of course, you will see the impossibility of
+carrying my strongholds without a fearful slaughter, and to prevent
+the consequent effusion of blood, you will despatch a courier to me,
+requesting my presence in your council-room."
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"I will come," I answered.
+
+"And then?" said GRANT.
+
+"You will give me the Whiskey Inspectorship," I answered.
+
+GRANT glanced at me, and then at the body of troops by which I was
+supported. Indomitable resolution sat upon every lineament of my
+countenance, and resolute determination showed itself in the faces of my
+brave men. Already, from afar, they sniffed the delicious perfumes of
+the rewards of victory. (It is needless to particularize the alcoholic
+promises I had made them in case of success.)
+
+GRANT rang a little bell--I think he bought it second-hand, when SEWARD
+sold out to go travelling--and an obstrusive attendant entered by a back
+door.
+
+Then, to this obtrusive attendant said the President; "James, step
+over to the War Department and tell SHERMAN to send me the Eighth and
+Eleventh Brigades of Cavalry; the Seventy-first and Fortieth Regiments
+of Artillery; the Twenty-second, Forty-fourth, and Eighty-eighth
+regiments of infantry, and two companies of sappers and miners."
+
+JAMES departed.
+
+I stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. PRESIDENT," said I, "in order to prevent the effusion of blood,
+might it not be as well to settle our little business at once?"
+
+GRANT smiled.
+
+HODGINS, the captain of the Judasville Rifles, now came up to me and
+touched me on the arm.
+
+"To prevent the effusion of blood," said he, "we are going home."
+
+And they went!
+
+My subsequent adventures, Mr. PUNCHINELLO, I cannot relate, for my paper
+is full, and the fellow who has charge of this cell has refused to get
+me any more, unless I give him more money, which I haven't got.
+
+But of one thing my mind is certain, and that is that this country has
+not yet arrived at that high grade of official refinement and tenderness
+which Portugal has reached.
+
+COODYTAW. [Advertisement] A.T. STEWART & CO.
+
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+
+THE
+
+MERCHANTS'
+
+Life Insurance Company
+
+OF NEW YORK
+
+Office, 257 BROADWAY.
+
+ORGANIZED UNDER THE LAWS OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK.
+
+Issues all Kinds of Life and Endowment Policies on the Mutual System,
+free from restriction on travel and occupation, which permit residence
+anywhere without extra charge. Premiums may be paid annually,
+semi-annually, or quarterly in cash.
+
+All Policies are non-forfeitable, and participate in the profits of the
+Company. Dividends are made annually, on the Contribution plan.
+
+Pamphlets containing Rates of Premium, and information on the subject of
+Life Insurance, may be obtained at the office of the Company, or of any
+of its Agents.
+
+Parties desiring to represent this Company in the capacity of Agents
+will please address the New York Office.
+
+WILLIAM T. PHIPPS,
+
+_President_.
+
+A. D. HOLLY, _Secretary_. HENRY HILTON, _Counsel_.
+
+O. S. PAINE, M. D. _Medical Examiner_. C. H. KING, M. D. _Asst. Med.
+Ex._
+
+Each Agent in direct communication with the New York Office.
+
+
+[Advertisement]
+
+SPECIAL
+
+PUNCHINELLO PREMIUMS.
+
+BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH
+
+L. PRANG & CO.,
+
+we offer the following Elegant Premiums for new Subscribers to
+PUNCHINELLO:
+
+"Awakening." (A Litter of Puppies.) Half Chromo, size, 8 3-8 by 11 1-8,
+price $2.00, and a copy of PUNCHINELLO for one year, for $4.00.
+
+"Wild Roses." Chromo, 12 1-8 by 9, price $3.00, or any other $3.00
+Chromo, and a copy of the paper for one year, for $5.00.
+
+"The Baby in Trouble." Chromo, 13 by 16 l-4, price $6.00, or any other
+at $6.00, or any two Chromos at $3.00, and a copy of the paper for one
+year for $7.00.
+
+"Sunset,--California Scenery." after A. Bierstadt, 18 1-8 by 12, price
+$10.00, or any other $10.00 Chromo, and a copy of the paper for one year
+for $10.00. Or the four Chromos, and four copies of the paper for one
+year in one order, for clubs of FOUR, for $25.00.
+
+Remittances should be made in P. 0. 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.
+
+Now is the time to subscribe, as these Premiums will be offered for a
+limited time only. On receipt of a postage-stamp, we will send a copy of
+No. 1 to any one desiring to get up a club.
+
+Address,
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,
+
+P. O. Box 2783. No. 83 Nassau Street, New York. [Illustration: THE
+SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT AGAIN.
+
+Bar-room Lobbyist.--"I TELL YOU, NO, SIR; THIS SIXTEENTH AMENDMENT IS
+A DELUSION AND A SNARE. WHAT IN THUNDER IS TO BECOME OF US, WHEN WOMEN
+COME INTO THE LOBBY BUSINESS? "]
+
+
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+Says one of our customers: "IN INTEREST IT IS SUPERIOR TO CROQUET, AND
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+THE MYSTERY OF MR. E. DROOD.
+
+The New Burlesque Serial, Written expressly for PUNCHINELLO, by ORPHEUS
+C. KERR,
+
+Commenced in last number, will be continued weekly throughout the year.
+
+A sketch of the eminent author, written by his bosom friend, with superb
+illustrations of
+
+1ST. THE AUTHOR'S PALATIAL RESIDENCE AT BEGAD'S HILL, TICKNOR'S FIELDS,
+NEW JERSEY.
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+2D. THE AUTHOR AT THE DOOR OF SAID PALATIAL RESIDENCE, taken as he
+appears "Every Saturday," will also be found in No. 11.
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+Geo. W. WHEAT, PRINTER, No. 8 SPRUCE STREKT.
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+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol.1, No. 12 , June
+18,1870, by Various
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