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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 6, May 7, 1870, by Various
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
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+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 6, May 7, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: February, 2006 [EBook #9960]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on November 5, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 6 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | NEARLY READY. |
+ | |
+ | ALASKA and its RESOURCES. |
+ | |
+ | By W. H. DALL, |
+ | |
+ | Director of the Scientific Corps of the Western Union |
+ | Telegraph Expedition. |
+ | |
+ | Full Octavo, with nearly One Hundred Elegant Illustrations, |
+ | engraved by the late JOHN ANDREW, from drawings by the |
+ | Author. This volume contains not only the record of a THREE |
+ | YEARS residence in Alaska--made under the most favorable |
+ | circumstances for explorations--but a complete history of |
+ | the country gathered from every available source. It is very |
+ | full in details of Productions, Climate, Soil, Temperature, |
+ | Language, the Manners and Customs of its peoples, etc., |
+ | etc.; and is the most valuable, as well as the most |
+ | authentic, addition to the history of Alaska. And is one of |
+ | the most elegant books issued in America. |
+ | |
+ | LEE & SHEPARD, Boston. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | TO NEWS-DEALERS. |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO'S MONTHLY. |
+ | |
+ | THE FIVE NUMBERS FOR APRIL, |
+ | |
+ | Bound in a Handsome Cover, |
+ | |
+ | Will be ready May 2d. 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO
+
+Vol. I. No. 6.
+
+SATURDAY, MAY 7, 1870.
+
+PUBLISHED BY THE
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,
+
+83 NASSAU STREET, NEW-YORK.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_CONANT'S PATENT BINDERS for "Punchinello," to preserve the paper for
+binding, will be sent, post-paid, on receipt of One Dollar, by
+"Punchinello Publishing Company," 83 Nassau Street, New-York City._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | APPLICATIONS FOR ADVERTISING IN |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | SHOULD BE ADDRESSED TO |
+ | |
+ | J. NICKINSON, |
+ | |
+ | Room No. 4, |
+ | |
+ | 83 NASSAU STREET. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | The Greatest Horse Book ever Published. |
+ | |
+ | HIRAM WOODRUFF |
+ | |
+ | ON THE |
+ | |
+ | TROTTING HORSE OF AMERICA! |
+ | |
+ | _How to Train and Drive Him._ |
+ | |
+ | With Reminiscenses of the Trotting Turf. A handsome 12mo, |
+ | with a splendid steel-plate portrait of Hiram Woodruff. |
+ | Price, extra cloth, $2.25. |
+ | |
+ | The New-York _Tribune_ says, "_This is a Masterly Treatise |
+ | by The Master of his Profession_--the ripened product of |
+ | forty years' experience in Handling, Training, Riding, and |
+ | Driving the Trotting Horse. There is no book like it in any |
+ | language on the subject of which it treats." |
+ | |
+ | BONNHE says in the _Ledger_, "It is a book for which every |
+ | man who owns a horse ought to subscribe. The information |
+ | which it contains is worth ten times its cost." For sale by |
+ | all booksellers, or single copies sent postpaid on receipt |
+ | of price. |
+ | |
+ | Agents wanted. |
+ | |
+ | J. B. FORD & CO., Printing-House Square, 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 |
+ | |
+ | 29 LIBERTY STREET. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Notice to Ladies. |
+ | |
+ | DIBBLEE, |
+ | |
+ | Of 854 Broadway, |
+ | |
+ | Has just received a large assortment of all the latest |
+ | styles of Chignons, Chatelaines, etc. |
+ | |
+ | FROM PARIS, |
+ | |
+ | Comprising the following beautiful varieties: |
+ | |
+ | La Coquette, La Plenitude, Le Bouquet, La Sirene, |
+ | L'Imperatrice, etc., |
+ | |
+ | At prices varying from $2 upward. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | WEVILL & HAMMAR, |
+ | |
+ | Wood Engravers, |
+ | |
+ | No. 208 BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | NEW-YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HERCULES MUTUAL |
+ | |
+ | LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY |
+ | |
+ | OF THE UNITED STATES |
+ | |
+ | No. 240 Broadway, New-York. |
+ | |
+ | POLICIES NON-FORFEITABLE. |
+ | |
+ | All Policies |
+ | |
+ | Entitled to Participation in Profits. |
+ | |
+ | Dividends Declared Annually. |
+ | |
+ | JAMES D. REYMERT, President. |
+ | |
+ | ASHER S. MILLS, Secretary |
+ | |
+ | THOMAS H. WHITE, M.D., Medical Examiner. |
+ | |
+ | ACTIVE AGENTS WANTED. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO. |
+ | |
+ | |
+ | With a large and varied experience in the management and |
+ | publication of a paper of the class herewith submitted, and |
+ | with the still more positive advantage of an Ample Capital |
+ | to justify the undertaking, the |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO. |
+ | |
+ | OF THE CITY OF NEW-YORK, |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the |
+ | |
+ | NEW ILLUSTRATED HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which was issued under date of April 2. |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO will be entirely original; humorous and witty |
+ | without vulgarity, and satirical without malice. It will be |
+ | printed on a superior tinted paper of sixteen pages, size 13 |
+ | by 9, and will be for sale by all respectable newsdealers |
+ | who have the judgment to know a good thing when they see it, |
+ | or by subscription from this office. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES, |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs, or suggestive |
+ | ideas or sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable, and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications cannot be returned, unless |
+ | postage-stamps are inclosed. |
+ | |
+ | Terms: |
+ | |
+ | One copy, per year, in advance. $4.00 |
+ | |
+ | Single copies, ten cents. |
+ | |
+ | A specimen copy will be mailed free upon the receipt of ten |
+ | cents. |
+ | |
+ | One copy, with the Riverside Magazine, or any other magazine |
+ | or paper, price, $2.50, for 5.50 |
+ | |
+ | One copy, with any magazine or paper, price, $4, for 7.00 |
+ | |
+ | All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed to |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., |
+ | |
+ | No. 83 Nassau Street, |
+ | |
+ | NEW-YORK. |
+ | |
+ | P. O. Box, 2783. |
+ | |
+ | _(For terms to Clubs, see 16th page.)_ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 STREET, NEW-YORK, |
+ | |
+ | AND AT |
+ | |
+ | Yonkers, Norwalk, Stamford, and Elizabeth. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | AMERICAN |
+ | |
+ | BUTTONHOLE, OVERSEAMING, |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | SEWING-MACHINE CO., |
+ | |
+ | 572 and 574 Broadway, New-York. |
+ | |
+ | This great combination machine is the last and greatest |
+ | improvement on all former machines, making, in addition to |
+ | all the work done on best Lock-Stitch machines, beautiful |
+ | |
+ | BUTTON AND EYELET HOLES: |
+ | |
+ | in all fabrics. |
+ | |
+ | Machine, with finely finished |
+ | |
+ | OILED WALNUT TABLE AND COVER |
+ | |
+ | complete, $75. Same machine, without the buttonhole parts, |
+ | $60. This last is beyond all question the simplest, easiest |
+ | to manage and to keep in order, of any machine in the |
+ | market. Machines warranted, and full instruction given to |
+ | purchasers. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HENRY SPEAR, |
+ | |
+ | STATIONER, PRINTER, |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | BLANK BOOK MANUFACTURER. |
+ | |
+ | ACCOUNT BOOKS MADE TO ORDER. |
+ | |
+ | PRINTING OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. |
+ | |
+ | 82 Wall Street, NEW-YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+[Illustration: YE YONGE MANNE OF MANHATTAN.
+
+Ye Yonge Manne is born, and his parents hasten with him to ye abode of
+ye BROWN, praying that he may be christened among ye upper tenne.
+
+And when ye Yonge Manne takes a daughter of ye upper tenne to wife, ye
+BROWN sees that he is married in ye BROWN his church.
+
+Ye BROWN demands if ye parents put in their coal in ye Summer time; and,
+being told that they do, he has ye Yonge Manne christened in his church,
+and when he grows up ye BROWN introduces him into Society.
+
+And when ye Yonge Manne he dies, ye BROWN arranges with all ye gardeners
+and black-goods men. And so, ye Yonge Manne, he is done entirely BROWN.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ THE BACHELOR'S MOVING-DAY.
+ AHA!
+ A mere half-hour's bother!
+ Suppose I were a father--
+ A luckless wight, called "Pa"!
+
+ I'd say,
+ "Now curse the restless rover
+ That first (despising clover!)
+ Invented Moving-day!"
+
+ O yes!
+ Especially, if moving
+ Was likely to be proving
+ (As usual) a mess!
+
+ Why, look!
+ You've got no end of articles.
+ Sure to be smashed to particles,
+ Or "snaked off" with a "hook"!
+
+ You've got
+ Chairs, bedsteads, tables, crockery--
+ (Recital seems a mockery!)
+ You've got--what have you not?
+
+ What's worse,
+ Your things won't fit new places,
+ Your wife won't like new faces--
+ Your very maid will curse!
+
+ Your hat
+ And other things _do_ fall so!
+ And children they _do_ bawl so!
+ Good heavens! think of that,
+
+ And think
+ Of possible colds and fevers--
+ Cartmen that prove deceivers--
+ Nothing to eat or drink!
+
+ Small bliss
+ For bachelors so lonely--.
+ Tired of one thing only:
+ But they escape all this!
+
+ And pray,
+ What man with sons and daughters
+ Don't sigh for bachelor quarters
+ About the First of May?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Printed, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District
+Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE DELIGHTS OF DOUGHERTY.
+
+At the Banquet of the Army of the Potomac in Philadelphia, Mr. DANIEL
+DOUGHERTY made one of the most extraordinary speeches on record, if we
+except certain forensic efforts of Mr. PUNCHINELLO delivered during the
+earlier stages of his career from his box. Mr. DOUGHERTY is a Soarer,
+and a Spreader, and a Screamer. Speaking metaphorically, be goes higher,
+measures more from the tip of one wing to the other, and is more
+suggestive of the warbling of a locomotive in his speech than any other
+Eagle in Philadelphia, which is saying a great deal. DANIEL is a Giant
+of Rhetoric, and would remind us of the Big Gentleman from Cardiff, only
+that mysterious personage is too heavy to Soar; for which reason he
+usually occupies the ground floor, which Mr. DOUGHERTY does not do by
+any manner of means.
+
+It was this extraordinary capacity of Mr. DOUGHERTY for Soaring which
+caused him to be called upon by the Army of the Potomac for a speech.
+The great D. begins by declaring that he would rather speak for his
+country than for Pennsylvania, which, considering that he also declared
+that he came "as a modest spectator," does not strike us as the depth of
+humility. However, "my bosom," said Mr. D., "is not confined to any
+locality;" and we believe that Mr. PECKSNIFF said something like this of
+his own frontal linen. Yet, we should like to know what Mr. DOUGHERTY
+does for a chest when his own has gone upon its extensive journeys;
+something temporary is done, we suppose, with a pad. But the Bosom was
+at the Banquet, and the proprietor was there to thump it, until it must
+have sounded and reverberated; and if Mr. DOUGHERTY had also thumped his
+head, there would have been equal evidence of hollowness within. "May my
+tongue never prove a traitor!" cried the orator. Mr. PUNCHINELLO hastens
+to reassure him. The tongue is well enough, and is likely to be. It's
+something a little higher up that is likely to give out.
+
+If the applause of the brave men before him was what Mr. DOUGHERTY
+wanted, (besides his dinner,) then of applause he got the Stomach under
+his Bosom full. The speech was received, according to the reporters,
+with a roaring which has not been equalled since the Lions in the Den
+roared at the other DANIEL, until they found that the good man was
+neither to be roared or sneezed at with impunity. The cheering was
+"tremendous." The cheering was "terrific." The cheering was "prolonged."
+And there stood "the Bosom not confined to any locality," but just then
+swelling, and expanding, and dilating--shall we for once be fine, and
+say like an Ocean Billow? Voices which shouted at Gettysburg now hailed
+Mr. DANIEL DOUGHERTY as a Conquering Hero--the conqueror of their cars!
+Once in a while there was "great laughter" when Mr. D.D. hadn't said any
+thing specially funny--that is, if Mr. PUNCHINELLO is a judge of fun;
+and if he isn't, who in all the world is? There are two kinds of
+laughter--the laughing at and the laughing with; and we have known
+"tremendous" and even "vociferous" applause to be very suspicious.
+
+It must be a source of calm satisfaction to General GRANT to know that
+he is considered the "great and glorious GRANT" by Mr. DANIEL DOUGHERTY;
+although DANIEL once considered Mr. BUCHANAN, poor man! to be equally
+"great and glorious." So DANIEL also considers SHERMAN to be "immortal,"
+and SHERIDAN "unconquerable," and MEADE "glorious." Adjectives are
+cheap, you know; and D.D., Esq., has evidently a great stock of them in
+his Wandering Bosom. Only, great soldiers, who know the precise value of
+Mr. DOUGHERTY'S military opinions, might not care to have them laid on
+too thickly.
+
+Mr. PUNCHINELLO has written to Mr. DOUGHERTY'S Family Doctor to inquire
+into the state of Mr. D's health after this tremendous effort, and he
+sends us a bulletin that Mr. D. is "as well as could be expected." We do
+not know what he means by this; it seems to us to lack scientific
+precision. The point upon which we wished to be informed was, whether
+Mr. D. did or did not break any thing--not the tumblers on the table,
+for that we should expect; but any thing in the way of blood-vessels.
+Not to put too fine a point upon it, How's the Bosom?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AMERICAN CUTLERY IN FRANCE.
+
+The great pride, the _dulce decus_ of Americans, has long been in their
+pocket hardware, and the skill with which they use it. But we must
+henceforth look to our laurels. France is competing alarmingly with us
+in the use of the revolver. They were always a revolutionary people,
+were the French, and revolving seems, therefore, to suit their temper to
+a T, (Gunpowder T, of course.) Since the slaying of NOIR by BONAPARTE,
+the affectation of readiness with the pistol has become quite the thing
+in Paris. New-York and Paris will soon be exactly alike in the bullet
+business--especially Paris. PAUL DE CASSAGNAC, it seems, has been
+invited by some anonymous person to meet him at a certain hour in front
+of the _mairie_ of the Seventeenth _arrondissement_, for the purpose of
+having his brains removed with a revolver. PAUL declined to go, however.
+The _Mairie_ mentioned in the cartel was not the one for PAUL. Probably
+he would have gone to VIRGINIA, had he been invited to do so; but never
+a MAIRIE for the faithful PAUL. And might have come by way of New-York,
+where he would soon have grown so used to having his brains removed with
+a revolver that the process would have become a pleasure to him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PHILADELVINGS.
+
+PUNCHINELLO cannot help liking Philadelphia, and always feels a pang of
+sympathy whenever any thing happens to that plain old city. One reason
+for this is, (and he is not ashamed of the weakness,) that Philadelphia
+likes PUNCHINELLO and takes, weekly, he would not be vain enough to say
+how many hundred copies of his journal. And now Philamaclink, as her
+natives love to call her, is afflicted with a terrible disease--a
+fearful attack of chronic Legislature. Even when the active symptoms of
+this dread malady have subsided, the effects linger, and the consequent
+suffering is excruciating. One of the direst of the effects of the last
+attack is a dreadful bill--not a bile--which has caused a utilization
+sewage company to appear upon her body corporate. It is almost
+impossible for sister cities to understand the torments of such an
+affliction. Nobody can now clear away their own dirt--Councils, Board of
+Health, or any body else. If rooms are swept, the sewage company must
+take up the dust; if a pig-pen or a stable needs cleaning, the company
+must do it; if the lady of a house throws the slops out of her breakfast
+cups, the company must carry them away; if a man knocks the ashes from
+his cigar, he must save them for the company; if, anywhere in the city,
+a foul word is spoken, the company must have the benefit of it. Even the
+birds in the squares must not cleanse their nests without a printed
+permit from the company. If a bedstead is cleaned, the company must have
+the bugs. Only one dirty thing is safe from this all-powerful
+corporation, and that is the legisiative delegation from the city. If
+the refuse matter were taken from that, there would be nothing left. It
+has been proposed that the Legislature itself should be purified; but
+this idea is Utopian, PUNCHINELLO fears. If Niagara were squirted
+through its halls, the water would be dirtied, but the halls would not
+be cleansed. Alas, poor city! Trampled under the heels of the
+aristocratic HONG and PENNY BUNN, what is there to hope for it?
+
+But all has not been told. There are about eight hundred thousand
+inhabitants in the place. Some twenty thousand of these owe small sums
+for unpaid taxes, averaging about nine and a quarter cents to a man. To
+collect these sums, an army of seventy-two thousand able-bodied men, at
+salaries of one thousand dollars per annum, has been commissioned by the
+PENNY BUNN Legislature.
+
+Alas, poor city! But all has not been told. A private firm has prevailed
+upon the imbecile old farmers from the western and interior counties to
+give them the right to build a private freight railroad through many of
+the principal streets of the Quaker City. This road will run through
+several school-house yards, and the time-tables are to be so arranged
+that trains shall always be due at those points at recess time. Every
+fiftieth private house along the lines is to have a road-station and
+freight-depot in its front-parlor, and all male residents on said routes
+are to serve in turn, without pay, as brakesmen and switch-tenders. The
+owners of all vehicles injured by the trains are to be heavily fined,
+and the families of individuals allowing themselves to be killed are to
+be mulcted in heavy damages.
+
+Alas, poor city! But all has not yet been told. A counterfeit tax-bill
+has been passed by the Legislature. All the sums handed in to the State
+Treasury by the tax collectors have been found to be "bogus" money. This
+action has been indorsed by the Legislature, and the action of that body
+is hereafter to be of the same character as the funds paid in by its
+creatures.
+
+Alas, poor city! But all has not yet been told. Colonel FORNEY intends
+resuming his "Occasional" letters in the _Press!_
+
+Enough! Humanity can bear no more.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query by a Constitutional Student.
+
+When the Governor or President V-toes a bill, is he supposed to put
+his foot on it?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+SPECTACLES are proverbially fit for old eyes. Probably that is the
+reason why the spectacle of the _Twelve Temptations_ is so dear to the
+aged eyes of the gray-haired old gentlemen who occupy the front seats at
+the Grand Opera House. It is certainly a brilliant spectacle, though,
+like the ideal scene to which Mrs. NICKLEBY's eccentric and vegetarian
+lover once referred, it consists principally of "gas and gaiters." Not
+that it is exclusively an Old Folks' entertainment; for, as the critics
+say of portentously dull juvenile books, "it will be found as
+interesting to the young as to the old." Though the dullest of dramas,
+it is so brightened by brilliant legs that it dazzles every beholder.
+Why, then, should the stern advocate of the legitimate drama refuse to
+acknowledge that the _Twelve Temptations_ has its redeeming legs? How
+runs the ancient proverb, "Singed milk is better than it looks;" or that
+equally ancient philosophical maxim, "There is no use in crying over
+spilt cats"? The stupid story of ULRIC'S folly is made more attractive
+than one would suppose that it could be, and we need not weep over the
+fact that it is a spectacle, and not a SHAKESPEAREAN tragedy.
+
+The bold explorers who have reached the remote Opera House,
+fought their way past the misanthropic door-keeper, and gained their
+seats, are first reduced to a state of mental chaos by the performance
+of a maddening overture, and are then fitted to appreciate the play,
+which proceeds after the following pattern:
+
+_Act 1. Curtain rises upon a score of Unintelligible Demons_, who sing
+this impressive chorus:
+
+ "Oh! um um um um
+ For um um um um
+ And um um um um
+ To um um um um."
+
+_Exeunt Demons. Enter_ RUDOLPH THE TEMPTER. _He remarks to the
+surrounding scenery_--"ULLERIC'S soul must be mine, or else the dark
+abodes of torment await me. I will tempt him. Great Master, appear."
+
+_The Great Master--a major-general of fiends--appears, and, approving
+of_ RUDOLPH'S _virtuous resolve, they descend to--well, they descend
+below the Erie Building, to drink to his success. Scene changes to_
+ULRIC'S _home. Enter_ ULRIC _and family, including Aged Mother, Virtuous
+Heroine, Hated Rival, and Demoniac Servant._
+
+ULRIC. "Motherr, this slife is intollerrabble; I will do any thing to
+escape frrrom it."
+
+_Enter_ RUDOLPH _and Unintelligible Demons (disguised.) They sing as
+before._
+
+ "Oh! um um um um," etc.
+
+ULRIC. "The song says terruly. I will go with you, though you were the
+fiend himself."
+
+_Consternation on the part of every one. Demoniac Servant remarks, "Ha!
+ha!"_ ULRIC _and the Demons sink through the floor. Scene changes to the
+Studio of Eblis._
+
+RUDOLPH. "Take this collar. Behold these stripes painted upon it.
+Whatever you wish you shall have at the price of five years of your
+life. A stripe will vanish each time your wish is gratified. (_Aside._)
+The stripes are only cloth, you know, and you can pull 'em off when your
+back is turned to the audience. Is it a bargain?"
+
+ULRIC. "It 'er is." (_Malignant crash from the orchestra._)
+
+RUDOLPH. "ULLERIC, 'tis well. Now thou shall behold our sports."
+
+_Enter ballet girls, dressed in red gaiters and torches. They dance the
+Demon Cancan, waving their torches and scattering the flames. Old
+Gentleman, in the front row hears such charming little asides as, "Drat
+you,_ MARY SMITH, _you've burnt my hand." "I'll slap your face, Miss, if
+you step on my foot again." "O_ NELLY! _my hair's a-coming down."_
+
+Curtain finally falls upon a blaze of light and a bewildering wealth of
+legs.
+
+_Old Gentleman, in front row._ "Well, he! he! that's pretty good; he! he!
+Devilish pretty girls some of 'em; he! he!"
+
+_Virtuous Matron._ "My dear, isn't it shameful. I never saw any thing so
+disgusting."
+
+_Sceptical Husband._ "Then perhaps we'd better go at once."
+
+_Virtuous Matron._ "N--no. I'll sit through one more act, and see if it
+gets any worse."
+
+_Fast Young Man._ "They're all padded, you know. You can't feel sure
+about one of 'em. There were gals in the _Crook_ who used to pad their's
+from here to here"--(_adds explanatory pantomime._)
+
+_Travelled Man, who has been to Paris._ "These girls can't dance, I
+assure you. Now, at the Chatelet they do these things differently."
+
+_Admiring Friend to Travelled Man._ "What spectacles did you see at the
+Chatelet?"
+
+_Travelled Man,_ (who was in Paris only two days, and never saw even the
+outside of the theatre.) "It was--let me see--Oh! _Moses in Egypt_ was
+the name of the piece. It was gorgeous; full of Egyptian scenery, and
+Egyptian dancing girls and things."
+
+_Admiring Friend, (with aggravating persistence.)_ "Do you mean
+Rossini's _Moses_?"
+
+_Travelled Man, (quite desperate.)_ "Of course! He's the rival of
+OFFENBACH, you know. But come, let's go and take something."
+
+(_They go, the faith of the Admiring Friend in the Travelled Man's
+veracity being, however, perceptibly shaken._)
+
+Three more acts follow. ULRIC makes a dozen wishes, all of which are
+gratified, and all of which have the inevitable effect of transporting
+him into scenes pervaded by the female leg to an extent that easily
+reconciles him to the successive loss of five years of his life. He
+finally becomes King of Egypt, and, after having fought against the
+Crusaders in defence of those well-known Mohammedan gods, ISIS and
+OSIRIS, is carried down a trap by exulting demons. An Intolerable Comic
+Man opens up hitherto unknown wastes of dreariness, and sings a comic
+song that is positively more tedious than an article from the _Nation_.
+The Demoniac Servant is continually shot up through spring traps, in
+order to remark, "Ha! ha!" and to immediately disappear again. The Aged
+Mother travels from Flanders to Egypt without changing her dress or
+combing her back hair, for the vain purpose of begging "ULLERIC" to
+repent. Consumptive Knights fight terrific broad-sword duels with a
+thirst for combat that beer alone is subsequently able to allay. The
+Virtuous HEROINE displays a very neat pair of ankles, but without
+winning "ULLERIC" from the devil of his ways. Half a dozen ballets are
+successively introduced, in which the skirts of the dancers are seen to
+decrease as rapidly and steadily as the stripes on ULRIC'S magic collar.
+Finally, a grand Transformation Scene, which has nothing whatever to do
+with the play, exhibits the best legs of the company in the most
+favorable attitudes, and the green baize curtain falls upon the great
+spectacle of the day.
+
+_Virtuous Matron._ "Well, I never! It's positively indecent. I'd like to
+take a whip to those shameless hussies."
+
+_Sceptical Husband._ "PAGE offered me a proscenium box the other day.
+Suppose we take it to-morrow night?"
+
+_Virtuous Matron._ "I'll go to please you, my dear. And really the
+scenery is pretty."
+
+_Wretched Man, who is shameless enough to admit that he likes it._ "I
+like it. The ballet's good, the scenery is splendid, and the music might
+be worse. Why don't these ladies, who come here and sit it through, have
+the honesty to admit that they come because they like it? But no; they
+go away, and at the next party, where they wear dresses lower in the
+neck than any I've seen on the stage to night, they'll abuse the poor
+girls who have danced here for their amusement. Their malignant modesty
+does not deserve the respect of an intelligent _figurante_. If they are
+sincere, why do they come here?"
+
+Which question still puzzles the perturbed mind of
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Give 'em Rope.
+
+We clip the following from the _Express_:
+
+"There seem to be more legal loopholes for convicted murderers to escape
+through than for any other class of criminals."
+
+That is too true, by a great deal. There should be but one "legal
+loophole" for a convicted murderer, and the authorities should not let
+him escape through the loop of it--they should Knot.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A MOVING INCIDENT.
+
+_Pat, (to Bridget.)_ "TAKE YOUR MASTHER'S TRUNK TO THE RAILROAD, IS IT?
+OCH! BOTHER--DON'T YOU SEE I'M MOVIN' A FAMILY?"]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE "TOBACCO PARLIAMENT" OF OHIO.
+
+For genial law-making in America commend us to the Ohio House of
+Representatives. While we haven't learned that the legislation of this
+august body has been particularly hazy of late, we think it must have
+been wholesome, for we are assured that much of it has been thoroughly
+"fumigated" through the exertions of the majority of its members, who
+perform their functions with pipes in their mouths, while drawn up in
+semi-circle around a couple of fire-places built expressly for their
+accommodation--"one on each side of the speaker's desk," Who _wouldn't_
+legislate, (and early, too,) if he could do it with his feet on the
+fender, his well-flavored Havana or best Virginia leaf in his mouth, and
+the privilege of cracking jokes and telling naughty stories _ad
+interim?_ Go it, ye Buckeye lawmakers! Shall we hear of any sympathy for
+Cuba in that quarter?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A "Woman's Physic."
+
+(MRS. C--N TO MRS. MCF--D.)
+
+"My Darling, I have found a panacea for all woes, In Man:
+
+ _When one man will not suit or stay,
+ Then get another, right away."_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CABLE NEWS.
+
+[EXCLUSIVELY FOR PUNCHINELLO.]
+
+GREAT BRITAIN.
+
+The Great PUNCHINELLO dinner has come off! JENKINS was there, and was to
+have telegraphed an account. But he was not so well as usual the next
+day, the Thames water having got into his head. JENKINS never _could_
+take much water. So your correspondent is obliged to trust to his
+memory--unaffected by the water, which he did not take.
+
+Old London Tavern was the scene of this banquet, given by the _literati_
+of England in honor of the long-wished-for coming of PUNCHINELLO. The
+dining-hall was decorated for the occasion with appropriate portraits.
+There were HOGARTH, CERVANTES, ADDISON, MOLIERE, SWIFT, STERNE,
+GOLDSMITH, TOM HOOD, IRVING, THACKERAY, DICKENS, and ARTEMUS WARD. A
+number of the waiters were costumed in character. From my seat, I
+recognized SAM WELLER, (right behind me;) the Fat Boy of _Pickwick;_
+SANCHO PANZA, and JEAMES YELLOWPLUSH.
+
+Mr. PUNCH was represented at the head of the table so well that you
+could know him at once from his weekly frontispiece. On one side of him
+sat CHARLES DICKENS; on the other, your humble ambassador. It would be
+rather invidious to name the other hundred guests; not to be there was
+to be nowhere in literature. Near me there sat Lord LYTTON, TOM HUGHES,
+PREVOST PARADOL, EDMOND ABOUT, CHARLES KINGSLEY, PAUL FEVAL, and the
+Rev. JOHN CUMMING.
+
+Asking, in a whisper, of Mr. PUNCH how the latter very staid individual
+came to be there, I understood that, of all the absurd men of this
+century, he was selected as the most representatively preposterous. The
+PRINCE OF WALES was not asked, lest his morals might be hurt by
+something that was said. And it is so important, you know, for the
+British nation--(for the rest, see the _Saturday Review_.) And then
+Madame GEORGE SAND was to be there, who sometimes wears trowsers.
+
+MATTHEW ARNOLD was spoken to about it; but he replied gruffly,
+
+"PUNCHINELLO is Goliath of the Philistines!" and declined.
+
+JOHN STUART MILL was too busy over his next book, which is to be "On the
+Subjection of Horses." But every body else was there, so we did not miss
+these grave and reverend seigniors.
+
+How the twenty-five courses came on and went off, from the ox-tail soup
+and salmon to the dessert, it would need the tongue or pen of SOYER or
+PIERRE BLOT to narrate; as it needed the capacity of a FALSTAFF to do
+justice to them. And then, when the cover was removed, came the time of
+trial to your correspondent. "The Queen" and "the President" were drunk
+with all the honors. Then Mr. PUNCH called out, through his magnificent
+old nose, so that you might have heard him across the Channel, "Health
+and long life to PUNCHINELLO!"
+
+Now, your correspondent had remembered Mr. HAWTHORNE'S experience at a
+Lord Mayor's dinner, and had begged Mr. PUNCH by all means to let him
+off without a speech. But, more worldly-wise than HAWTHORNE, he didn't
+believe that Mr. PUNCH would keep his promise; so he had prepared a
+speech, beginning, "Not anticipating any occasion to open my lips in
+this illustrious company, you must allow me to speak altogether on the
+impulse of the moment." (Hear, hear.) So this had to be delivered; but
+for the rest of it, and of the dinner, you must wait for my next
+telegram. Mr. PUNCH is going to have the speech published in pamphlet
+form, for distribution among his numerous constituents. So, now for the
+rest of my _news_.
+
+FRANCE.
+
+The PRINCE OF MONACO has declared war against France. OLLIVIER proposes
+to send the PRINCE IMPERIAL to extinguish him with a corps of infantry,
+armed with popguns; no one to be admitted to the corps who is more than
+four years old. MONACO aspires to be a sort of LOPEZ.
+
+TURKEY.
+
+Sultan ABDUL AZIZ has just had a visit from a friend of JOHN BRIGHT'S.
+To the surprise of every body, even his most intimate friends, the
+Sultan immediately made up his mind to turn Quaker! He came down stairs,
+and went into mosque, the other day, with a broad-brimmed hat, straight
+coat, and drab trowsers; and insisted on all the ladies of his _hareem_
+putting on plain bonnets, and holding a "silent meeting" in the
+Seraglio! How it bothered them to do that last thing you may well
+suppose! More anon, from PRIME.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Bit of Fish.
+
+SECRETARY FISH is said to preserve a decidedly spruce appearance
+at the State Dinners. Fish is nothing if not Fin-ical.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FISH SAUCE.
+
+The sight of a thick, four-pound steak, just cut from a halibut that
+must have weighed, (the idea of a fish wading!) some two hundred pounds,
+reminds us that trout-fishing is just now in full operation. What a
+strange, weird mystery there is about mental associations! Long, long
+ago, we possessed a favorite trout-rod fitted with a Hollow Butt, and so
+it is that whenever we see a Halibut, trouting comes to our mind.
+
+Yesterday, frogs were croaking, and insects all in green livery, with
+gilt buttons, contributed to Nature's Great Boston Jubilee of music with
+their hum. How ridiculous it seems that insects should have a hum!--and
+yet the Bee has its Hum in its hive.
+
+It is at this season that enthusiastic anglers always get water on the
+brain. Their dreams are of gurgling brooks. They have visions of
+mill-ponds, with beautiful little cascades sluicing into them over dams.
+They stand, in imagination, on bridges, in the eddies beneath which they
+discern the wagging of silvery tails and rosy fins; and a very common
+form of nightmare with them is to fancy that the reel of the fishing-rod
+won't work, just as they are going to wind up a four-pound trout.
+
+Now, also, is the time when friend gives much advice to friend on the
+subject of the "gentle art." (A trout's opinion on this branch of art,
+by the by, would be worth having. Perhaps he might not consider it so
+gentle.)
+
+One student of the angle will say to another, "Always fish up the
+stream. Fish lie with their heads to the current and their tails in the
+opposite direction: therefore, by casting up-stream, you run the less
+chance of being seen by them."
+
+Another says, "Be sure you make your casts down-stream; your bob-flies
+like it better, as you can see by the way they dance on the ripples."
+
+Quoth another, "Always soak your casting-lines with water before you
+start for the river-side;" while a fourth instructs you never to
+straighten your lines with water, but by passing them through a piece of
+India rubber doubled between the finger and thumb.
+
+_Our_ advice is, Never cast against the wind. In fact, you can't do it;
+and if you try it, you run the risk of getting _strabismus_--that is,
+the Cast in your eye. Artificial flies, like artificial flowers, never
+should follow nature. Manufacturers of both articles perfectly
+understand this; and hence the superiority of their productions to the
+mere realities that flutter and bloom for their brief hour, and then
+die. There is nothing in entomology so beautiful as a well-busked trout
+or salmon fly. And then it is comparatively indestructible. Take a
+natural May Fly and squeeze it in your hand. It is reduced to a pulp.
+Try the same experiment with an artificial one, and its plumage remains
+unruffled--which is more than you do, since the chance is that you will
+have to employ a surgeon to extract the hook from the ball of your
+thumb.
+
+[Illustration: "SHOO! FLY."]
+
+We are assured by a broker, who, in Spring-time, always becomes a
+brooker, that by far the surest lure for a large trout is the Greenback
+Fly. He is acquainted with a man who, whenever he goes a-fishing, always
+has a four-pound trout to pack in ice and send up to a friend in the
+city. By post, a letter is dispatched to the same quarter, containing a
+warm description of the playing and landing of that noble fish. The
+sender usually states that he captured it with the famous fly known to
+anglers as the Green Drake. Facts are against him, though; and it is
+well understood by his friends that the fish was first taken by some
+poaching rascal with a scoop-net, and subsequently hooked by the angler
+with a five-dollar Greenback Fly.
+
+Nothing in life is more beautiful than a five-dollar Greenback
+Fly--except, of course, a ten-dollar one, or one of indefinitely larger
+denomination.
+
+Provided with this most charming and effective of lures, the angler is
+always sure to fill his creel. He incurs no fatigue in doing so,
+either, for all the boys of the village become his humble servants to
+command; and if there be a four-pound trout in the miller's pond, he is
+sure to hook it with the Greenback Fly, while the boys generally "hook
+it" also, lest the miller should catch them at their tricks.
+
+_How to make the Greenback Fly_--Give it to your wife. Much has been
+said concerning the efficacy of the Water Fly as a lure. For our own
+part, we have not tried it. We know rather less about it than we do
+about the Water Cure; but we cheerfully print the following directions
+on the subject, taken from the fly-leaf of an old book.
+
+_How to make the Water Fly_: Fall into it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HALL AND HAYES.
+
+The friends of Dr. HAYKS and those of Captain HALL are engaged in a
+heated discussion as to which of the two ought to be sent by Congress in
+search of the North Pole. As the public does not know who is right and
+who is wrong, we present our readers with the arguments of each party;
+so that they can decide which explorer is the man for the post--we
+should say, pole.
+
+WHAT THE HAYES PARTY SAYS.
+
+1. The Pole being surrounded by water, must be reached by boats. HAYES
+is a sailor and HALL is not. Therefore HAYES is the man to sail to the
+Pole.
+
+2. HAYES is a Bostonian; HALL is a Western man. Bostonians are famed for
+their skill in prying into every thing; while Western men stupidly mind
+their own business. Therefore HAYES is naturally fitted to become an
+explorer.
+
+3. HALL spent his time while in the Arctic Region in the society of
+Esquimaux. HAYES attended to his ship, and lived on pork and beef
+like a Christian. Therefore HAYES is the better man.
+
+4. HAYES understands the use of instruments, and can take observations
+of the temperature of hot springs, if any are found. HALL knows nothing
+about instruments, and could not tell the time by a barometer if his
+life depended upon it. Therefore HAYES should be the Congressional
+favorite.
+
+5. HALL is hot-tempered and once killed one of his crew. HAYES is a cool
+man and never killed any body, except as a medical practitioner. Cool
+men are at home in the Arctic Region. Therefore send HAYES.
+
+WHAT THE HALL PARTY SAYS.
+
+1. If the Pole is surrounded by water, it must be a visible point of
+land. HALL is a landsman, and therefore the proper man to send in search
+of land. To send a sailor like HAYES in quest of land would be absurd.
+Therefore HALL is the right man.
+
+2. HALL is a steady, hardworking, energetic Western man. HAYES is a
+meddling Yankee. Of course HALL is the better man for carrying out a
+difficult enterprise.
+
+3. HALL has lived in the Arctic land as the Arctic people do; while
+HAYES knows nothing of the people of that region. Therefore HALL is by
+far the best man to send.
+
+4. HAYES can have no use for his instruments in a place where there is
+nothing but ice. HAYES would, therefore, only add to the cost of the
+expedition. HALL can take all necessary observations with his eyes, which
+cost Congress nothing and are easily carried. Therefore HALL is by all
+odds the man for the expedition.
+
+5. If HALL is hot-tempered, so much the better. He will keep warm with
+less consumption of fuel. That he killed a mutineer is proof of his
+resolute adherence to discipline. HAYES would never enforce discipline
+if he dared to inflict no more punishment for mutiny than a draught of
+Epsom salts. Therefore HALL is plainly the man to command an exploring
+party.
+
+Here we have the arguments which both sides advance, and our readers can
+easily make up their minds. As for ourselves, the true course for
+Congress to pursue seems so plainly evident that if we were asked which
+is the best man, the Doctor or the Captain, we should unhesitatingly
+answer in the negative.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: CINCINNATUS SWEENY.]
+
+
+CINCINNATUS SWEENY
+
+(Adapted from AUTHOR'S Classical Dictionary, p. 351.)
+
+"CINCINNATUS had retired to his patrimony, aloof from popular tumults.
+The successes of the Equi, (young Democracy,) however, rendered the
+appointment of a Dictator necessary, and CINCINNATUS was chosen to that
+high office. He laid aside his rural habiliments, assumed the ensigns of
+absolute power, levied a new army, marched all night to bring the
+necessary succor to the Consul MINCIUS, (W. M. TWEED,) who was
+surrounded by the enemy and blockaded in his camp, (Albany,) and before
+morning surrounded the enemy's army, and reduced it to a condition
+exactly similar to that in which the Romans had been placed. The baffled
+Equi were glad to submit to the victor's terms, and CINCINNATUS,
+returning in, triumph to Rome, (New-York,) laid down his dictatorial
+power after having held it only fourteen days, and returned to his farm"
+(Central Park.)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPRING FEVER,
+
+ In such a joyous way?
+ If it were as you say,
+ Wouldn't _I_ know it, who know every thing!
+
+ "Ethereal mildness!" Pshaw! what nonsense, man!
+ Pooh! "Gentle spring," indeed!
+ It makes my liver bleed
+ To hear you talk as only idiots can.
+
+ But you're no idiot, THOMSON; _that_ I'll say!
+ I'll yield another bit:
+ I'm ready to admit
+ The Seasons may have altered since your day.
+
+ At any rate, JAMES, in the windy West
+ (Which wasn't in your eye--
+ At least, not frequently)
+ Your boasted Spring is _not_ a gentle guest.
+
+ My patience, no! She's the reverse of that!
+ Ah! hear her savage roar;
+ (So often heard before!)
+ And there (confound it!) goes my new Spring hat.
+
+ Alas! what means this stupid somnolence?
+ Why do my pulses go
+ So "melancholy slow"?
+ Why can't I think? why always "on the fence"?
+
+ O dews and fogs! O rain and snow and slush!
+ O various other things!
+ My soul! what need of wings:
+ Yes, "Spring's delights" are coming with a rush!
+
+ But stay, friend THOMSON--what you say is true:
+ Here _is_ a nice warm day!
+ The breezes softly play--
+ Then why, oh! _why_ then, do I feel so blue?
+
+ One "would not die in Spring-time," certainly--
+ Nor any other season,
+ For the same reason--
+ But if one can't eat dinner, why _not_ die?
+
+ Is there no panacea for such ills?
+ Oh! yes, a jolly one:
+ I find it in the dun!
+ In landlords', butchers', grocers', tailors' bills!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Difference.
+
+GOLDEN calves were worshipped by men of old. Modern men prefer to
+worship saw-dust calves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dramatic Query.
+
+Is Canada to be the Theatre of a Fenian War? It seems that the Canadian
+Volunteers think so; and, to do justice to the performance, they have
+taken possession of the whole Front-tier.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Original Bow.
+
+The EL-bow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Not the Chimney for a Studio.
+
+ONE that won't Draw.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE SICK EAGLE.
+
+COLUMBIA. "DO LET THE POOR BIRD OUT, MR. B.; HE DROOPS SADLY."
+
+Mr. BOOTWELL. "REALLY I DON'T SEE ANY THING THE MATTER WITH HIM, MA'AM.
+HIS CAGE IS ALL GOLD, AND HE SURELY OUGHT TO BE CONTENTED."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+AN EXCELLENT OLD SONG MADE NEW.
+
+BY A DEFAULTER.
+
+ Is there for his dishonesty
+ Who hangs his head, and a' that?
+ The coward slave, we pass him by,
+ And dare to steal for a' that.
+ For a' that and a' that,
+ Our grabs and games, and a' that,
+ Our business is to make a pile
+ And swindle SAM, and a' that.
+
+ What though the people curse and swear
+ At losing gold, and a' that?
+ Their fiercest wrath we'll proudly bear,
+ And cash is cash for a' that.
+ For a' that and a' that,
+ Their lawyers, courts, and a' that.
+ The lucky rogue who wins his pile
+ Is king of men for a' that.
+
+ The President knows how to beat
+ In battle, siege, and a' that;
+ But we're the lads for swift retreat,
+ Although he growl, and a' that.
+ For a' that and a' that,
+ Our bonds and oaths and a' that,
+ A bouncing swag's the better thing
+ For gentlemen, and a' that.
+
+ Then let us pray that come it may,
+ As come it shall for a' that,
+ That plundering gents may keep the sway,
+ And help themselves, and a' that.
+ For a' that and a' that.
+ Leg bail's the thing, and a' that;
+ For travelling improves the mind,
+ The body saves, and a' that.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE THIRTEENTH MAN IN THE OMNIBUS.
+
+The New-York omnibus was constructed to seat and carry twelve persons;
+certainly not more. Indeed, when twelve men, of nominal size, sit
+squarely on the seats and do not clownishly cross their legs, one may
+ride in an omnibus with comfort. Nay, with these conditions, he _may_
+generally escape having his toes crushed, his shins kicked, his shoes
+soiled, or his trowsers daubed with mud by his neighbor. But alas! how
+often is this paradisiacal state disturbed by the intrusion of "the
+thirteenth man in the omnibus."
+
+Shall I attempt to portray the creature? He is pretty well known, and
+perhaps the picture will be recognized. Sometimes he may be seen
+standing at the corner of the street lying in wait for the "bus." He is
+never known to walk toward its starting-place, lest he might be
+confounded with the "twelve" by getting inside before the seats are
+filled. No; he is "nothing if not" odd. His very hat never sits squarely
+upon his head like the hat of a gentleman. It is either elevated in
+front like a sophomore's, or depressed on one side, as if he had just
+come from a cheap spree in the Bowery, or was troubled with some
+obtrusive "bump" that kept his hat awry. If by chance he gets a seat
+inside the omnibus, (as "accidents will happen," etc.,) he must cross
+his legs and wipe the mud from his ill-shod feet upon your trowsers or
+your wife's dress.
+
+Indeed, methinks it was he who invented sitting cross-legged in a public
+vehicle. Do savages ever sit thus when in close company? I have never
+been able to imagine what special human sin this ingenious mode of
+annoyance was meant to punish. It has been suggested that it might be
+the man's pantomimic protest against sitting at all. But the saddest
+commentary upon this vice of our hero is, that by some mysterious
+magnetism of awkwardness and ill-breeding, he has betrayed into
+imitation of it men whose early education has been less neglected than
+his own.
+
+Sometimes, as he gets into the "'bus," he carries in his hand or mouth
+the stump of a half-burned, extinct cigar, which fills the atmosphere
+with a rank and sickening odor. More frequently he is dressed in
+well-worn black, and his clothes reek with noisome exhalations of stale
+tobacco-smoke. Shall I finish his picture? I verily believe he is the
+original Loafer.
+
+Methinks I see him in my mind's eye. I am riding in a Broadway ominibus.
+I have just handed up my fare, and, taking my seat, have surrendered
+myself to a sweet half-hour of reverie. I disdain to spoil my eyes or
+waste my time by newspaper-reading. I dream, and save my time for better
+things, as I conceive.
+
+The stage is full. "Twelve inside." The driver does not seem to get
+along. He is constantly stopping or turning his horses to the sidewalk,
+right or left. You wonder what is the matter. You begin to think the
+whole town is striving to get a ride down with you in that particular
+"'bus." At every street-corner we linger or stop. Suddenly the door is
+pulled open with a jerk and our enemy leaps in. He sees the seats are
+filled, but he does not hesitate. There is always room for him. Indeed,
+his "spirit rises with the occasion." He becomes pertinacious as he is
+offensive. He tramples upon more than one pair of feet in his struggle
+to reach the middle of the omnibus. The passengers patiently submit to
+the intrusion with that quiet good nature with which Americans usually
+suffer imposition invasive of good manners, or petty social rights. They
+seem to feel they can "stand it" if he can.
+
+His mode of paying his fare evolves a climax of unconscious
+impertinence. In order to have free use of one hand to pass up his
+money, he grasps cane or umbrella with the other hand, by which he holds
+the pendent strap. By this means he loses control of the lower end of
+his stick, which thereby becomes an automatic instrument of torture,
+menacing your face and eyes in quite a savage way. Indeed, his apparent
+unconsciousness that he is a nuisance, and ought to be kicked out,
+really approaches the sublime.
+
+He is a pet of the driver, of course. Some innocent people wonder that
+the drivers of omnibuses or cars should feel so very charitably disposed
+toward the human family in general, as to take up extra passengers when
+all seats are filled. Short-sighted mortals! Do you not see it! The more
+passengers, beyond the complement of the "'bus," the more perquisites
+for an ill-requited profession.
+
+To return to our black sheep. Look where he stands. As he grows weary,
+he grasps the straps on either side to steady him. His attitude is a
+cunningly devised mode of tormenting his fellow-passengers. Either elbow
+of our nondescript just reaches the hat of your opposite neighbor or
+yourself. With each jolt of the stage, by a little dexterity of
+movement, or want of it, he can knock the hats over the eyes of two
+persons at a time, and by a little shifting of his position he can
+frequently bring down four by a single spasmodic lunge. When he is
+fresher, as in the morning, and can hold his own weight, he falls in his
+more natural posture. Would you know what that may be? Did you ever
+observe one of the descendants of the Lost Tribes who inhabit Chatham
+street dreamily waiting for a passing rustic? He is apparently in a
+comatose state. His abdomen is drawn in; his body is bent like a section
+of a hoop; his eyes are cast down; while both his hands are thrust
+deeply into his trowser's pockets.
+
+But I grow weary of the subject, and stop by commending the Thirteenth
+Man in the Omnibus to curiosity-hunters as a fungus growth of humanity
+nursed by over-virtuous forbearance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hyperborean.
+
+The hyperbole of bores it is, to bore Congress for a hundred thousand
+dollars to go to the Pole! If Captain HALL wants adventure, let him
+travel to the Halls of the MONTEZUMAS. If he wishes only to be left out
+in the cold, let him go to Chili; or else up in a balloon; or let him
+make himself Republican candidate for something in New York. We believe
+the North Pole would rather be let alone. The whole subject is, at all
+events, too HAYES-y just now to be comprehended. There is a sort of
+KANE-ine madness, which shows itself not in fear of water but in an
+insane disposition to do big things on ice. Haul off, Captain HALL!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meteorological Query.
+
+Is a temperance lecture synonymous with a Water Spout?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE SPIRIT OF THE NAVY.
+
+ITS PORTER. ITS SAILS.
+
+_Impressions of an Outsider_.
+
+MR. PUNCHINELLO: According to your instructions, your correspondent
+proceeded to Washington, and there interviewed our present efficient
+Secretary of the Navy, Admiral PORTER. I found him in his office,
+surrounded by bills-of-sale of main-tops, carronades, iron-clads,
+bo'sen's whistles, navy-yards, and other naval articles, the proceeds of
+which were needed for the future experiments of the Department. These
+papers were being bound up into bundles and stowed away by his
+assistant, ROBESON.
+
+After the ordinary greetings had passed between the admiral and your
+correspondent, the following conversation ensued:
+
+_Cor_. Admiral, what do you think of the Fifteenth Amendment?
+
+_Ad_. All right. When Americans want votes, I say, give 'em to 'em.
+
+_Cor_, (_A little apprehensively._) Votes are different from boats, then,
+admiral?
+
+_Ad_. Certainly. What do the negroes want with boats?
+
+_Cor_. How are you satisfied, Mr. Secretary, with the plan of always
+providing you with a civilian as an assistant?
+
+_Ad_. I don't like it. Can't help it, though. This one, however,
+(_pointing his thumb over his shoulder at_ ROBESON,) don't give me much
+trouble. Quiet man.
+
+_Cor_. What do you think of the condition of Cuba,
+
+_Ad_. Very nice indeed! Got Admiral POOR out there, cruising around.
+Just like a picnic, you know.
+
+_Cor_. Are you in favor of the recognition of Cuban Independence?
+
+_Ad_. No, sir! What's the good? POOR might have to come home, then.
+
+_Cor_. You think, then, that recognition would not be a Poor policy?
+
+_Ad_. Yes--no! No--yes! Doormat! You know what I mean.
+
+_Cor_.(_quickly_.) Oh! yes. Certainly, sir! But what is your opinion upon
+the woman question?
+
+_Ad_. Don't care a snap. Let 'em vote. Won't make a difference 'board
+ship.
+
+_Cor_. You think, then that women will never be sailors, Admiral?
+
+_Ad_. Nothing they could do. Except to trim the boats; look out for the
+mizen sheets or somethg o' that kind. Couldn't expect 'em, even in a
+calm, to be brisk in manning the yards, much less martingales.
+
+_Cor_. What is your opinion, Admiral, of SHERIDAN'S work among the
+Piegans?
+
+_Ad_. (_laughing_). Neat job. How was that for Lo?
+
+_Cor_. Good. Do you believe the Pope's infallible, Admiral?
+
+_Ad_. The Pope's what?
+
+_Cor_. Do you think that there is no such word as fail with PIO Nono?
+
+_Ad_. No, no!
+
+_Cor_. The Empress EUGENIE, Admiral, and Queen VICTORIA--which do you
+think is the prettiest of these women?
+
+_Ad_. Never saw 'em swimmin'. Can't say.
+
+_Cor_. What is your opinion about McFARLAND? Was he justifiable, think
+you?
+
+_Ad_. No! Poor shot.
+
+_Cor_. Have you seen _Frou Frou_, Admiral?
+
+_Ad_. Yes. In New-York.
+
+Cor. How did you like it, sir?
+
+_Ad_. Not much. Do for folks whose taste for that sort of thing is DAILY
+bred.
+
+_Cor_. What do you think of oar new City Charter?
+
+_Ad_. Is it a ship?
+
+_Cor_. Yes, sir. It is a sort of hardship for New-York.
+
+_Ad_. Well, the city must be used to that. Will take in its ale pretty
+much as usual, I reckon.
+
+_Cor_. What, sir, do you think of Chicago?
+
+_Ad_. Ah! go way.
+
+_Cor_. (_oblivious of hint_.) Where do you buy your pantaloon stuff, Mr.
+Secretary?
+
+_Ad_. (_sharply_.) Where the woodbine twineth.
+
+_Cor_. Admiral, have you any children?
+
+_Ad_. (_loudly_.) ROBESON!
+
+_Cor_. My dear sir, you surprise me! Is he your son?
+
+_Ad_. (_to assistant_.) ROBESON! Did you see MIKE HAINES?
+
+_Cor_. One moment. Admiral! Let me ask of you, in which, if any, of our
+New-York companies is your life insured; and do you wear the patent
+perforated buckskin?--
+
+Here the interview terminated. Your correspondent suddenly discovered
+that he would have barely time to catch the N. Y. Express, and he took
+leave with a renewed respect for the spirit of our Navy and its head.
+
+SNIQUE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: COME, GENTLE SPRING.
+
+SPRING has come. Now is the time to ask your friends for seed and roots,
+and to tell somebody they ought to see about the garden. Turn your
+chickens into your neighbors' grounds, and the cow too, if you think she
+would like to go there. Now also is the time for house-cleaning, as well
+as for settling up one's affairs generally; so, after you have called in
+all the money due you, and paid out as little as possible, perhaps you
+had better go out West for a week or so.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sort of Liquor most apt to Tell upon a Man.
+
+PEACH Brandy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Opinions of the Press.
+
+The _Sun_ thinks that the World's end would be a god-send.
+
+It also thinks that the Tribune is a try weakly and unique daily,
+besides being a four centenary.
+
+It thinks that the fact of the _Times_ being out of Joint is the reason
+it is getting the cold Shoulder from its subscribers.
+
+It thinks that the _Herald_ is not the leading paper, though it may have
+Ben-it.
+
+It thinks that the _Sun_ is awful shiny.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Politician's Half-and-Half.
+
+DEMAGOGUE and Demijohn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+LOFTY Mr. SUMNER wished to know what Mr. CARPENTER meant by pursuing
+him. He was used to being blackguarded by the enemies of his country,
+but now he was hounded in the house of his friends. He had looked
+through the whole Congressional Library and failed to find a precedent
+for the course of the carping CARPENTER, except in the case of the
+classic chap who had warmed a viper which had turned again and rent him.
+He did not mean to say that Mr. CARPENTER was a viper, but he thought
+nobody but an Adder would put this and that together as Mr. CARPENTER
+had done.
+
+Mr. CARPENTER said that the passion of his friend from Boston for
+maundering about himself amounted to a mild mania. All he had done was
+to suggest that SUMNER had upheld States Rights twenty years ago, and
+now pretended that he was never any such person.
+
+Mr. SUMNER said that twenty years ago the States Rights boot was upon
+the other leg. AENEAS SILVIUS had well observed that it made a heap of
+difference whose ox was gored, and HORACE had pointed out the difference
+between tweedle-dum and tweedle-dee. Unless his reading of the
+Cyclopedia had failed to inform him, he believed that there was a game
+known as "Heads I win, tails you lose." That was his little game. When
+Massachusetts States Rights were invoked to aid the colored man, States
+Rights were good. When Southern States Rights were invoked to crush the
+colored man, States Rights were bad. As for him, give him liberty or
+give him rats.
+
+Mr. HARLAN wished to know why the Pacific Railway grant should be
+passed. No officer of that railway had been to see him about it. He did
+not believe in legislation of this kind. If a thing were worth having,
+it was certainly worth asking for. He had no objection to breaking old
+"ties," but he was averse to paying for new ones, unless he had some
+personal reason for it. He wished he were altogether in the same
+position as some of his colleagues, including these "bonds."
+
+WILSON, and CASSERLY, and THURMAN, and THAYER said that HARLAN was of no
+account, and that was the reason why he had not been "seen." As long as
+a majority was prepared, it was wasting money to conciliate any body
+else.
+
+Mr. DRAKE said he had a better thing than the Pacific Railway. It was a
+bill to provide that the Army and Navy of the United States might be put
+on a war-footing on the application of any three colored persons. This
+did not seem to be profitable, but it was. The profit in it was a JOB,
+but much subtler than in the Pacific Railway. He hoped Senators would
+see the illimitable vistas of patronage opened by the bill.
+
+HOUSE.
+
+Mr. BUTLER insisted upon his bill to annex Dominica. Somebody had said
+that we had plenty of Dominicans already in the Southern States. This
+was net so. He wanted to be Governor-General of Dominica. It was true
+that silverware was not rife in that island, but there was an infinitude
+of potential voters, who could be converted into coin. The House refused
+to see it, however, and proceeded to discuss the case of SYPHER. Mr.
+BROOKS said SYPHER was nothing. He did not see how SYPHER, who was a
+nullity, could be figured out to be a member of Congress. Besides,
+SYPHER lived in Pennsylvania.
+
+Mr. KELLEY said that was the very reason why SYPHER should be admitted.
+Every body knew, who knew any thing of arithmetic, that a SYPHER in the
+proper place amounted to a great deal. He would like to know what
+objection there was to Pennsylvanians representing Louisiana? A
+Pennsylvanian was sure to be right on the tariff, and a Louisianian was
+sure to be wrong. Therefore a Pennsylvanian was a much better
+representative than a Louisianian. Besides, SYPHER's hands were not red
+with loyal blood, neither had he waded knee-deep in patriotic gore.
+
+Mr. BUTLER wanted to annex Dominica.
+
+Mr. Cox said he did not object to SYPHER'S coming in because he was a
+Pennsylvanian. He was an Ohio man, and represented a New-York district.
+But be thought there were too many SYPHERS here now. An integer or two
+would be more useful to maintain the integrity of the House.
+
+Mr. BUTLER said he would like to introduce a bill to annex Dominica.
+
+Mr. FARNSWORTH said he didn't care any thing about the merits of the
+case. He knew the committee was all right. It was a martter of comity to
+go with the committee. If the House added a SYPHER, it would increase
+their strength ten fold.
+
+Mr. STOKES said he would not weep for SYPHER if he were rejected. But he
+would sigh for SYPHER, if he could cipher SYPHER in.
+
+Mr. BUTLER moved a bill to annex Dominica.
+
+SYPHER tried to swear himself in, but he had been so much irritated by
+the previous proceedings that he found that he had sworn himself out.
+
+The House adjourned, except Mr. BUTLER, who was preparing a bill to
+annex Dominica.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A REMONSTRANCE.
+
+MR. PUNCHINELLO: In the _Express_ of Saturday, April 17th, I read the
+following announcement, printed at the foot of the regular weather
+table, furnished for that journal by Professor THATCHER:
+
+"Prediction.--It will not rain within 33/4 days from 8 P.M.
+
+"A. E. THATCHER."
+
+The positive character of this prediction made it very, welcome. My wife
+and myself had been invited by friends in Westchester County to go to
+their house on Saturday evening, stay all night, and pass the following
+day--Easter-Sunday--with them. We had nearly made up our minds to do it.
+They are very pleasant folks to visit, especially about Easter time; for
+the man of the house has a mania for hens, and, being a dyer by trade,
+his poultry, using the refuse of the drugs instead of gravel to aid
+their digestion, lay natural painted eggs of the most varied and
+delicate tints. If I am strict in any matter of religion, it is with
+regard to having a blow-out of eggs at Easter. My wife is as fond of
+eggs as myself, (the yolk sits lightly, she says, which is a joke upon
+yoke,) and she required no egging on to persuade her to accept the
+invitation. We were doubtful about the weather, though; but the
+"Professor's" prediction decided us, and we went.
+
+I thought it felt mighty like rain as we walked the short distance from
+the railway station to our host's. I had rain-pains in my back, and my
+wife said her corns were shooting. Nor did our punctual aches deceive
+us. Between that Saturday night and Easter-Sunday morning it began to
+rain. Easter-Sunday was the wettest day I remember ever to have
+experienced. There was no "let up" of the deluge throughout that day
+and Easter-Monday. We--my wife and I--are suffering dreadfully from the
+effects of Easter-eggs, which we were obliged to devour by the stack
+merely to kill time, as we could not walk out. Should we die, I will let
+you know; but really it was too bad of "Professor" THATCHER.
+
+WEATHERBOUND.
+
+P.S.--Who is "Professor" THATCHER?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+THE BIRD OF WISDOM IN IOWA.
+
+Civilization, it seems, is making some headway in Iowa. Boys are no
+longer allowed to shoot small birds there, especially song-birds. And so
+the little warblers can pipe it all day, if they like, and when they
+grow tired and hungry, they are welcome to refresh their small systems
+at the strawberry beds. There is one feature of the regulation in
+question, however, that does pain us. While vocal and fly-gobbling
+talents are tenderly fostered, dignified Wisdom is not only neglected,
+but persecuted. Our old friend the Owl is reputed by the people of Iowa
+to be rather particular in his diet, (as all wise creatures are,) and to
+prefer a nice young spring chicken to almost any other "delicacy of the
+season"--a proof of wisdom and refinement that proved too much for the
+people of Iowa. And so they have left the poor old Owl out of the
+protective enactment; and it is not only legal to shoot him, but
+meritorious. The legislators could have stood the wisdom, perhaps by
+itself; and possibly they might have respected the taste; but the
+combination troubled them, and could not, of course, be tolerated.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: "THE MERRY FIRST OF MAY."
+
+_First Young Wife_. "OH! THIS HORRID HOUSE-MOVING--AN'T YOU DISTRACTED
+ABOUT IT, DEAR?"
+
+_Second Ditto_. "O DEAR! NO. WE HAVE ARRANGED IT NICELY. CHARLES WILL
+SEE TO THE FURNITURE AND THINGS, AND I WILL SUPERINTEND THE REMOVAL OF
+FIDO MYSELF."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HOW A DISCIPLE OF FOX BECAME A LOVER OF BULL.
+
+PHILADELPHIA, 4th Month, 13th, 1870.
+
+FRIEND PUNCHINELLO: I know thee treats our good city with more
+consideration than thy brother journalists, and so it is that I address
+the on this occasion. Last night I listened to the fiddle of OLE BULL. I
+had long known of this man, even from the time when I first attired
+myself in a coat, (called by the world after the name of the abdomen of
+a fish,) as one who
+
+ --"skinned a cat
+ And put the fur around his hat."
+
+But having recently been made aware of the fact that this fiddler only
+availed himself, in his vain exhibitions, of a part of the _felis_ which
+was not necessary to its felicity after death, I determined to give a
+portion of my worldly goods toward the building of a light-house on the
+Norway coast, for which purpose, I heard it averred, this man's
+performances were given; and I went to the building where the fiddling
+was to be, to see if it were done with fidelity for this end.
+
+As I sat in the upper seats of the house, serenely elevated above the
+vain throng, the man BULL appeared before me. His mien was humble and
+his hair was of a gray tinge, which I attributed to the ceaseless
+gratings of the instrument which he held on his arm, as carefully as if
+it had been an immortal child.
+
+At first, though I labored conscientiously toward that end, I could
+discover nothing in the sounds he made which reminded me in the least
+degree of a Norwegian light-house. But suddenly I forgot that useful
+monument. Against my will, I seemed to be wafted aloft, even to where
+the seats were cheaper; and anon, I felt as though I disported among the
+shameless figures on the ceiling of the house. I now forgot all things
+earthly, even that suspicious bill which friend HOPKINS paid in to my
+cashier on Second-day. Yea, my whole being became, as it were, strung
+upon the entrails of a cat and tickled with the tail of horse. I felt as
+if I were wafted aloft on a blanket of shivering scrapes while quivering
+angels gently swung me among the stickery stars! And there I heard a
+melody as though the edges of glass skies were softly rubbed together.
+Then all was stiller, stiller, until methought I heard nothing but one
+consumptive angel breathing in his sleep. But even that sound dribbled
+away, until the last drop seemed to me about to be sucked down into a
+hole at the bottom of the airy void, when suddenly there came a rush as
+though a vast light-house of brass had fallen into a sea of tinkling
+cymbals, and I jumped so violently that my spectacles slipped from off
+my nose and fell among the vain ones below.
+
+A second time now came the fiddler forth, and soon methought I stood
+within a surgeon's operating hall. The player drew his bow as though it
+were a knife, gliding over the limb of a subject in a sleep.
+
+So keen the blade, so soft the touch, the sleeper did not wake! I
+clutched my knees--my breath did cease!
+
+The skin divides!
+
+And still he sleeps.
+
+The muscles and the tendons fall apart!
+
+He moves not.
+
+Oh! That glittering blade
+
+It deeper goes!
+
+A--Ah!
+
+He wakes!
+
+He yells!
+
+Horror! And now, through flesh and bones that vengeful weapon grinds!
+
+'Mid screams and oaths!
+
+Down falls the leg...
+
+I staggered forward. My hat, which much clamor in the rear had not made
+me remove, fell over the iron rail and plunged, resounding ike a sinful
+drum, upon the head of a painted Jersey belle below.
+
+I heeded not, but groped me to the door.
+
+And now I write to thee, friend PUNCHINELLO. Can thee buy me such a
+fiddle in New-York? Thy friend,
+
+VENTER CLUPLE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Puzzler.
+
+The Belgians, it is said, are anxious to have the letter _h_ dropped
+from the French alphabet. As that contains no _w_, how, in the event of
+a new elision, will the Parisians, who are so fond of English words,
+manage to spell _wheelwright_?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Blow that Hurteth not.
+
+The Blow of a flower.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Pleasant Prospect.
+
+If the new Superintendent of the New-York Police Force is to be as
+severely tried as was his predecessor, then, surely, JOURDAN will have
+"a hard road to travel."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+"OUT OF THE STREETS."
+
+ GEORGE W. MCLEAN am I,
+ And potent was my name,
+ Till TWEED and SWEENEY crossed my path
+ And spoiled my little game.
+
+ Our city roads I supervised,
+ Long time, with pious care,
+ The people's Ways I strictly watched--
+ Street, Avenue, and Square
+
+ But now, from office rudely swept
+ By Legislative BILL,
+ The crossing-sweeper's broom I ply,
+ My empty pouch, to fill.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Honeymoons in the Air
+
+The rage for passing the honeymoon in a balloon appears to be on the
+wane in this country. The reason for this may be that a majority of
+those who enter wedlock find they "go up" soon enough without the aid of
+a balloon.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Motto for Unsuccessful Croquet-Players.
+
+"Hoops deferred make the heart sick."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | Have made large additions to their very popular stock of |
+ | |
+ | ENGLISH BODY BRUSSELS, |
+ | |
+ | At $1.75, $2, and $2.25 per yard. |
+ | |
+ | BEST QUALITY VELVETS, |
+ | |
+ | At $2.50 per yard. |
+ | |
+ | ROYAL WILTONS, |
+ | |
+ | At $2.50 and $3 per yard, |
+ | |
+ | MOQUETTES AND AXMINSTERS, |
+ | |
+ | At $3.50 and $4 per yard, |
+ | |
+ | ALSO, |
+ | |
+ | Will offer a choice assortment of |
+ | |
+ | Ingrains, Three-Ply, Cocoa, |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | CANTON MATTINGS, |
+ | |
+ | ENGLISH AND DOMESTIC. |
+ | |
+ | OIL-CLOTHS, etc., |
+ | |
+ | Of the Best Quality and Newest Designs. |
+ | |
+ | Novelties in Carpets |
+ | |
+ | In one piece, with |
+ | |
+ | MEDALLIONS AND BORDERS, |
+ | |
+ | And also by the yard. Received by each and every steamer. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | 4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A.T. Stewart & Co. |
+ | |
+ | ARE OFFERING |
+ | |
+ | EXTRAORDINARY BARGAINS |
+ | |
+ | IN |
+ | |
+ | Silks, Dress-Goods, Japanese Poplins, |
+ | |
+ | MOHAIRS, |
+ | |
+ | PLAID AND BROCHE BAREGES, |
+ | |
+ | FRENCH PRINTED ORGANDIES, |
+ | |
+ | Jaconets, Percales, Iron Bareges, |
+ | |
+ | AND GRENADINE DITTO. |
+ | |
+ | Forming the largest assortment of choice, fresh goods they |
+ | have ever offered. |
+ | |
+ | The attention of their customers and the public is |
+ | respectfully invited. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | Fourth Ave., Ninth and Tenth Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | _The two great objects of a learner's ambition ought to be |
+ | to speak a foreign language idiomatically, and to pronounce |
+ | it correctly; and these are the objects which are |
+ | most carefully provided for in the_ MASTERY SYSTEM. |
+ | |
+ | The Mastery of Languages; |
+ | |
+ | OR, |
+ | |
+ | THE ART OF SPEAKING LANGUAGES |
+ | IDIOMATICALLY. |
+ | |
+ | BY THOMAS PRENDERGAST. |
+ | |
+ | I. Hand-Book of the Mastery Series. |
+ | II. The Mastery Series, French. |
+ | III. The Mastery Series, German. |
+ | IV. The Mastery Series, Spanish. |
+ | |
+ | PRICE 50 CENTS EACH. |
+ | |
+ | _From Professor E.M. Gallaudet, of the National Deaf Mute |
+ | College._ |
+ | |
+ | "The results which crowned the labor of the first week were |
+ | so astonishing that he fears to detail them fully, lest |
+ | doubts should be raised as to his credibility. But this much |
+ | he does not hesitate to claim, that, after a study of less |
+ | than two weeks, he was able to sustain conversation in the |
+ | newly-acquired language on a great variety of subjects." |
+ | |
+ | FROM THE ENGLISH PRESS. |
+ | |
+ | "The principle may be explained in a line--it is first |
+ | learning the language, and then studying the grammer, and |
+ | then learning (or trying to learn) the language."--_Morning |
+ | Star_. |
+ | |
+ | "We know that there are some who have given Mr. |
+ | Prendergast's plan a trial, and discovered that in a few |
+ | weeks its results had surpassed all their |
+ | expectations."--_Record_. |
+ | |
+ | "A week's patient trial of the French Manual has convinced |
+ | us that the method is sound."--_Papers for the |
+ | Schoolmaster_. |
+ | |
+ | "The simplicity and naturalness of the system are |
+ | obvious."--_Herald_ (Birmingham.) |
+ | |
+ | "We know of no other plan which will infallibly lead to the |
+ | result in a reasonable time."--_Norfolk News_. |
+ | |
+ | FROM THE AMERICAN PRESS. |
+ | |
+ | "The system is as near as can be to the one in which a child |
+ | learns to talk."--_Troy Whig_. |
+ | |
+ | "We would advise all who are about to begin the study of |
+ | languages to give it a trial."--_Rochester Democrat_. |
+ | |
+ | "For European travellers this volume is |
+ | invaluable."--_Worcester Spy_. |
+ | |
+ | Either of the above volumes sent by mail free to any part of |
+ | the United States on receipt of price. |
+ | |
+ | D. APPLETON & CO., Publishers, |
+ | |
+ | 90, 92, and 94 Grand Street, New-York. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. |
+ | |
+ | _Third Edition._ |
+ | |
+ | D. APPLETON & CO., |
+ | |
+ | 90, 92, and 94 Grand Street, |
+ | |
+ | Have now ready the Third Edition of |
+ | |
+ | RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. |
+ | |
+ | By the Author of "Cometh up as a Flower." |
+ | |
+ | 1 vol. 8vo. Paper Covers, 60 cents. |
+ | |
+ | From the New-York _Evening Express_. |
+ | "This is truly a charming novel; for half its contents |
+ | breathe the very odor of the flower it takes as its title." |
+ | |
+ | From the Philadelphia _Inquirer_. |
+ | "The author can and does write well; the descriptions of |
+ |scenery are particularly effective, always graphic, and never |
+ | overstrained." |
+ | |
+ | D.A. & Co. have just published: |
+ | |
+ | A SEARCH FOR WINTER SUNBEAMS IN THE |
+ | RIVIERA, CORSICA, ALGIERS, AND SPAIN. |
+ | By Hon. S.S. Cox. Illustrated. Price, $3. |
+ | |
+ | REPTILES AND BIRDS: A POPULAR ACCOUNT |
+ | OF THEIR VARIOUS ORDERS, WITH A |
+ | DESCRIPTIONS OF THE HABITS AND ECONOMY |
+ | OF THE MOST INTERESTING. |
+ | By Louis Figuler. Illustrated with 307 wood-cuts. 1 vol. |
+ | 8vo. $6. |
+ | |
+ | HEREDITARY GENIUS: AN INQUIRY INTO ITS |
+ | LAWS AND CONSEQUENCES. |
+ | By Francis Galton. 1 vol. 8vo. $3.50. |
+ | |
+ | HAND-BOOK OF THE MASTERY SERIES OF |
+ | LEARNING LANGUAGES. |
+ | |
+ | I. THE HAND-BOOK OF THE MASTERY SERIES. |
+ | II. THE MASTERY SERIES, FRENCH. |
+ | III. THE MASTERY SERIES, GERMAN. |
+ | IV. THE MASTERY SERIES, SPANISH. |
+ | Price, 50 cents each. |
+ | |
+ | Either of the above sent free by mail to any address on |
+ | receipt of the price. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | BURCH'S |
+ | |
+ | Merchant's Restaurant |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | DINING-ROOM, |
+ | |
+ | 310 BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | BETWEEN PEARL AND DUANE STREETS. |
+ | |
+ | _Breakfast from 7 to 10 A.M._ |
+ | |
+ | _Lunch and Dinner from 12 to 3 P.M._ |
+ | |
+ | _Supper from 4 to 7 P.M._ |
+ | |
+ | M.C. BURCH, of New-York. |
+ | |
+ | A. STOW, of Alabama. |
+ | |
+ | H.A. CARTER, of Massachusetts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | EXTRA PREMIUMS |
+ | |
+ | FOR |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO. |
+ | |
+ | Upon receipt of Five Dollars we will send PRANG & Co.'s |
+ | Superb Chromo of |
+ | |
+ | "EASTER MORNING." |
+ | |
+ | Size, 6-3/4 x 10-1/4. (Selling price, $3.) Free by mail. And |
+ | a copy of |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO |
+ | |
+ | FOR ONE YEAR. |
+ | |
+ | For Ten Dollars the Larger Size of |
+ | |
+ | "EASTER MORNING." |
+ | |
+ | 14x21. (Selling price, $10.) Free by mail. And a copy of |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO |
+ | |
+ | FOR ONE YEAR. |
+ | |
+ | The regular subscription to PUNCHINELLO is Four Dollars, |
+ | payable in advance. |
+ | |
+ | This offer will be kept open only for a limited time, and |
+ | persons desirous to avail themselves of it will please |
+ | |
+ | SEND IN AT ONCE. |
+ | |
+ | Remittances should be made in Money Orders, Bank Checks, or |
+ | Drafts on New-York, or by Registered Letters. |
+ | |
+ | Address, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., |
+ | |
+ | 83 Nassau Street. |
+ | |
+ | [P.O. Box 2783.] |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+[Illustration: OUR PAVEMENTS.
+
+_Timid Tax-payer_. "WHAT! GOING TO PAVE THIS STREET AGAIN? WHY, IT WAS
+NEWLY PAVED ONLY A WEEK AGO!"
+
+_Gentlemanly Contractor_. "PAVED? NOT MUCH! FOUNDATION LAID, ONLY; AND
+NOW WE'RE GOIN' TO PUT THE JOBBER'S PATENT TOP-SOLID-SUPERSTRUCTURE OVER
+THAT!"]
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | WALTHAM WATCHES. |
+ | |
+ | 3-4 PLATE. |
+ | |
+ | _16 and 20 Sizes._ |
+ | |
+ | To the manufacture of these fine Watches the Company have |
+ | devoted all the science and skill in the art at their |
+ | command, and confidently claim that, for fineness and |
+ | beauty, no less than for the greater excellences of |
+ | mechanical and scientific correctness of design and |
+ | execution these watches are unsurpassed anywhere. |
+ | |
+ | In this country the manufacture of this fine grade of |
+ | Watches is not even attempted except at Waltham. |
+ | |
+ | FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING JEWELLERS. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 E. SELMES, _Secretary_. |
+ | |
+ | WALTER ROCHE, |
+ | EDWARD HOGAN, _Vice-Presidents_. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close resemblance |
+ | to Oil Paintings. Sold in all Art and Bookstores throughout |
+ | the world. PRANG'S WEEKLY BULLETIN: "Bo-Peep," "Queen of the |
+ | Woods," "First Lesson in Music," "Travelling Comedians," |
+ | "City and Country Life." Illustrated Catalogues sent on |
+ | receipt of a stamp by |
+ | |
+ | L. PRANG & CO., Boston. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO:
+
+TERMS TO CLUBS.
+
+WE OFFER AS PREMIUMS FOR CLUBS
+
+FIRST:
+
+DANA BICKFORD'S PATENT FAMILY SPINNER,
+
+The most complete and desirable machine ever yet introduced for spinning
+purposes.
+
+SECOND:
+
+BICKFORD'S CROCHET AND FANCY WORK MACHINES.
+
+These beautiful little machines are very fascinating, as well as useful;
+and every lady should have one, as they can make every conceivable kind
+of crochet or fancy work upon them.
+
+THIRD:
+
+BICKFORD'S AUTOMATIC FAMILY KNITTER.
+
+This is the most perfect and complete machine in the world. It knits
+every thing.
+
+FOURTH:
+
+AMERICAN BUTTONHOLE, OVERSEAMING, AND SEWING-MACHINE.
+
+This great combination machine is the last and greatest improvement on
+all former machines. No. 1, with finely finished Oiled Walnut Table and
+Cover, complete, price, $75. No. 2, same machine without the buttonhole
+parts, etc., price, $60.
+
+WE WILL SEND THE
+
+ Family Spinner, price, $8, for 4 subscribers and $16.
+ No.1 Crochet, " 8, " 4 " " 16.
+ " 2 " " 15, " 6 " " 24.
+ " 1 Automatic Knitter, 72 needles, 30, " 12 " " 48.
+ " 2 " " 84 needles, 33, " 13 " " 52.
+ No.3 Automatic Knitter, 100 needles, 37, for 15 subscribers and $60.
+ " 4 " " 2 cylinders, 33, " 13 " " 52.
+ 1 72 needles 40. " 16 " " 64.
+ 1 100 needles
+
+No. 1 American Buttonhole and Overseaming Machine,
+ price, $75, for 30 subscribers and $120.
+
+No. 2 American Buttonhole and Overseaming Machine,
+ without buttonhole parts, etc., price, $60, for 25 subscribers and $100.
+
+Descriptive Circulars
+
+Of all these machines will be sent upon application to this office, and
+full instructions for working them will be sent to purchasers.
+
+Parties getting up Clubs preferring cash to premiums, may deduct
+seventy-five cents upon each full subscription sent for four subscribers
+and upward, and after the first remittance for four subscribers may send
+single names as they obtain them, deducting the commission.
+
+Remittances should be made in Post-Office Orders, Bank Checks, or Drafts
+on New-York City; or if these can not be obtained, then by Registered
+Letters, which any post-master will furnish.
+
+Charges on money sent by express must be prepaid, or the net amount only
+will be credited.
+
+Directions for shipping machines must be full and explicit, to prevent
+error. In sending subscriptions give address, with Town, County, and
+State.
+
+The postage on this paper will be twenty cents per year, payable
+quarterly in advance, at the place where it is received. Subscribers in
+the British Provinces will remit twenty cants in addition to
+subscription.
+
+All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed to
+P.O. Box 2783.
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+No. 83 Nassau Street,
+
+NEW-YORK
+
+ * * * * *
+
+S. W. GREEN. PRINTER, CORNER JACOB AND FRANKFORT STREETS.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 6, May 7, 1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 6 ***
+
+This file should be named 7p10610.txt or 7p10610.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, 7p10611.txt
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