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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:33:45 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:33:45 -0700
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10018 ***
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "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 169 PEARL ST., |
+ | |
+ | 73, 75, 77, and 79 PINE ST., New-York. |
+ | |
+ | ADVANTAGES--All on the same premises, and under the |
+ | immediate supervision of the proprietors. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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_ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+[Illustration: Vol. 1 No. 5]
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO
+
+
+SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close resemblance |
+ | to Oil Paintings. Sold in All Stores throughout the World. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S WEEKLY BULLETIN OF CHROMOS.--"Easter Morning" |
+ | "Family Scene in Pompeii" "Whittier's Birthplace," |
+ | Illustrated Catalogue sent, on receipt of stamp, by L. PRANG |
+ | & CO., Boston. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 Reminiscences 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." |
+ | |
+ | BONNER 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 post-paid 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the |
+ | |
+ | NEW ILLUSTRATED HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL |
+ | |
+ | WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which will be Issued under date of April |
+ | 2, 1870, and thereafter weekly. |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO will be _National_, and not _local_; and will |
+ | endeavor to become a household word in all parts of the |
+ | country; and to that end has secured a |
+ | |
+ | VALUABLE CORPS OF CONTRIBUTORS |
+ | |
+ | in various sections of the Union, while its columns will |
+ | always be open to appropriate first-class literary and |
+ | artistic talent. |
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | The Artistic department will be in charge of Henry L. |
+ | Stephens, whose celebrated cartoons in VANITY FAIR placed |
+ | him in the front rank of humorous artists, assisted by |
+ | leading artists in their respective specialties. |
+ | |
+ | The management of the paper will be in the hands of WILLIAM |
+ | A. STEPHENS, with whom is associated CHARLES DAWSON SHANLY, |
+ | both of whom were identified with VANITY FAIR. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES, |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs, or suggestive |
+ | ideas sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable, and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications can not 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: THE WARNING OF THE BELLE
+
+LOOK OUT FOR THE TRAIN]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATRIOTIC ADORATION.
+
+A TALE OF PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ People of the Quaker City,
+ How the world must stand aghast
+ At your wondrous veneration
+ For those relics of the past,
+ Kept in such precise condition,
+ Fostered with such tender care--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Splendid are its walks and grass-plots
+ Where the bootblacks base-ball play,
+ And its seats resembling toad-stools,
+ On which loafers lounge all day,
+ Waiting for their luck, or gazing
+ At the office of the Mayor--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Then, behold the fine old State-house
+ Cleanly kept inside and out,
+ Where the faithful office-holders
+ Squirt tobacco-juice about:
+ Placards highly ornamental
+ Decorate its outward wall--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Hall?
+
+ O! ye gods and little fishes!
+ Could bill-sticker be so vile
+ As to paste up nasty posters
+ On the sacred classic pile?
+ Greece and Rome yet have their relics,
+ But what are they? very small.
+ Never half so venerated
+ As old Independence Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has hitherto refrained from criticising the periodicals of
+the day, from the mistaken idea that superlative excellence was not
+expected in every number of every daily or weekly journal in the land.
+He did not know that, if every such journal was not edited so as to suit
+the comprehension of all classes of cursory critics, it should be
+unqualifiedly condemned. Supposing that a painter should not condemn a
+paper for publishing a musical article beyond his comprehension, and
+that an architect ought not to get in a rage because he finds in his
+favorite journal a paper on beavers which makes him feel insignificant,
+PUNCHINELLO has generally looked around upon his fellow-journalists, and
+thought them very good fellows, who generally published very good
+papers. He did not find superlative excellence in any of their issues,
+but then he did not look for it. He might as well pretend to look for
+that in the journalists themselves, or in society at large. But he has
+lately learned, from the critics of the period, that he ought to look
+for it, and that it is the proper thing nowadays to pitch into every
+journal which does not, in every part, please every body, whether they
+be smart or dull; those quick of appreciation, or those slow gentlemen
+who always come in with their congratulations upon the birth of a joke
+at the time its funeral is taking place. And so, PUNCHINELLO will do as
+others do, and will occasionally view, from the loop-hole in his
+curtain, the successes and failures of his neighbors, and will give his
+patrons the benefit of his observations.
+
+The first thing he notices to-day is, that the _Evening Snail_ of last
+night is not so good as it was a fortnight ago; or, let us think a
+bit--it may have been a good number at the beginning of last month that
+he was thinking of; at all events, this last issue is inferior. The
+matter on the first page is not printed in nearly as good type as the
+original periodicals had it, and while the letters in the heading are
+quite fair, it is very noticeable that the I's are very defective, and
+there is no C in it. The "Gleanings" are excellent, and it would be
+advisable to have more of them--if indeed such a thing were possible in
+this case. The spider-work inside shows no acquaintance with the
+writings of BACH or GLIDDON, and there is nothing about the Spectrum
+Analysis in any part of the paper. Besides, the paper is too stiff and
+rattles too much, and PUNCHINELLO could never abide the color of the
+editor's pantaloons. Why will not people dress and write so that every
+body can admire and understand them. Especially in regard to witty
+things and breastpins They ought to be loud, overpowering, and so
+glaring that people could not help seeing them. And they ought to be a
+little cheap, too, or average people won't comprehend them. In both
+cases paste (and scissors) pays better than diamonds. The reports of
+private parties in the _Snail_ are, however, very good, and if it would
+confine its original matter to such subjects, it could not fail to
+succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Query for Physicians.
+
+Are people's tastes apt to become Vichy-ated by the excessive use of
+certain mineral waters?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Behold, how Pleasant a Thing 't is," etc.
+
+Boston has a couple of clergymen who have fallen out upon matters not
+precisely theological. In the summer, the Rev. Mr. MURRAY leaves his
+sheep, to shoot deer by torchlight in the Adirondacks. This the Rev. Mr.
+ALGER, in addressing the Suppression of Cruelty to Animals Society,
+denounces as extremely wicked. From all which Mr. PUNCHINELLO, taking up
+his discourse, infers,
+
+_First_. That it is a great deal more wicked to shoot deer by torchlight
+than by daylight.
+
+_Secondly_. That the Rev. MURRAY and the Rev. ALGER are of different
+religious persuasions.
+
+_Thirdly and lastly_. That the Rev. Mr. ALGER doesn't love venison.
+
+P. S. Persons desiring to present Mr. PUNCHINELLO with a fine haunch,
+(in the season,) may shoot it by daylight, moonlight, torchlight, or by
+a Drummond light, as most convenient.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We are indebted to Mr. SARONY for a number of brilliant photographs of
+celebrities of the day. Lovely woman is well represented the batch, with
+all the characters of which PUNCHINELLO hopes to present his readers,
+from time to time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District
+Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ALL ABOARD FOR HOLLAND!]
+
+PUNCHINELLO understands that a performance is soon to take place at the
+Academy of Music, for the benefit of GEORGE HOLLAND, the well-known and
+ever-green "veteran" of "the stage." It pleases PUNCHINELLO to know that
+a combination of talent and beauty is to be brought together for so
+worthy a purpose. Seventy-four years ago, when GEORGE HOLLAND was a
+small child, PUNCHINELLO used to dandle him upon his knee. Hardly four
+years have passed since PUNCHINELLO was convulsed by the _Tony Lumpkin_
+of HOLLAND. He distinctly remembers, too, administering hot whiskey
+punch to little boy HOLLAND with a tea-spoon, which may in some measure
+account for the Spirit subsequently infused by the capital comedian into
+the numerous bits of character presented by him. Considering these
+facts, it is manifestly an incumbent duty on the part of PUNCHINELLO to
+request the earnest attention of his readers to the subject of GEORGE
+HOLLAND'S benefit, all particulars concerning which will be given due
+time through the public press. It used to be said, long ago, that "the
+Dutch have taken Holland," Well, let our own modern Knickerbockers
+improve upon that notion, by taking HOLLAND'S tickets. Remember how,
+in the early settlement of the country, it was Holland that made
+New-York, and see that New-York now returns the compliment, and makes
+HOLLAND. Convivial songsters frequently remind us that--
+
+ --"a Hollander's draught should potent be,
+ And deep as the rolling Zuyder Zee."
+
+Mind this, all ye Hollanders who would give your support to our HOLLAND.
+Let your drafts be potent, your cheeks heavy, your attendance punctual.
+Make the affair complete; so that when, here-after, a comparison is
+sought for something that has been a sued people will say of it--"As big
+as that Bumper of HOLLAND'S."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ASTRONOMICAL CONVERSATIONS.
+
+(BY A FATHER AND DAUGHTER RESIDING ON THE PLANET VENUS.)
+
+No. I.
+
+FATHER (_to_ DAUGHTER, _who is looking through a telescope_.) Yes HELENE,
+that is the Planet Tellus, or Earth. The darker streaks are land; the
+bright spots, water. We begin with a low power, which shows only the
+masses; presently you will have the pleasure of discriminating not only
+rivers and chains of mountains, but cities--single houses--even Human
+Beings! Yes, you shall this very night read page of PUNCHINELLO, a paper
+so bright that every word appears surrounded by a halo!
+
+DAUGHTER. O father! do that _now_. How delightful, to actually read the
+works of these singular creature's, and become familiar with their
+extraordinary ideas! Were the scintillations you spoke of the other
+night, that were seen all over the Western Continent, the result of the
+flashing of these radiant pages?
+
+F. Undoubtedly, my child; they began with the first issue of the paper,
+and have since regularly increased in brightness, just as It has.
+
+D. It really seems as though Earth would answer for a Moon, by and by, at
+this rate!
+
+F. You are quite right, HELENE; it will. Or say, rather, a Sun. For you
+will observe that it is a _warm_ light; not cool, as reflected light
+always is. It is Original.
+
+D. Well, this shows that PUNCHINELLO must have some Heart, as well as
+Head. Come, put on your highest power now, and let us seem to pay good
+old Tellus a visit!
+
+[_The indulgent Father complies, and, is at some pains to adjust the
+focus_.]
+
+F. Now, dear! take a good look.
+
+D. (_Looking intently_.) Oh! how splendid--how splendid! _Do_ see the
+beautiful things in those Shop Windows! It must be the Spring Season
+there! _Do_ see those lovely lumps on the backs of those creatures'
+heads! What place is it, Father?
+
+F. That? It's New-York; and the street is the famous Broadway.
+
+D. O dear! how I _would_ like to go shopping there, this minute!--for I
+see it is afternoon in that quarter. Is there no way of getting
+there?(!!!)
+
+F. (_Laughing heartily_.) Well, well, HELENE! That's pretty good, for
+the daughter of an astronomer! Do you know that at this precise moment
+you are Forty-five Million, Six Hundred and Fifty-four Thousand, Four
+Hundred and Ninety-one Miles and a half from those Muslins! I'll tell
+you, Sis, what _could_ be done: Drop a line to the Editor of
+PUNCHINELLO, and tell him what you want. He'll get it, some way.
+
+D. That I will, instantly! [_Turns to her portfolio, while her father
+turns to the telescope_.]
+
+"DEAR MR. EDITOR: Pardon the seeming _boldness_ of a _stranger:_ you are
+no _stranger to me!_ Long, _long_ have I deceived that _good man_, my
+father, by _pretending_ to know _nothing_ of the Earth, or of his
+_instrument!_ Many and _many_ a night, _unknown to him_, have I gone to
+the _Telescope_, to satisfy the _restless craving_ I feel to know more
+of _your Planet_, and of a _person of your sex_ whom I have _often_
+beheld, and watched with _eagerness_ as he came and went. How
+_thrilling_ the thought, that he cannot even _know of my existence_, and
+that we are _forever separated!_ This, good and _dear_ Editor, is my one
+Thought, my one great Agony.
+
+"It has occurred to me that, in this _dreadful_ situation--my Passion
+being sufficiently Hopeless, as any one may see--you might at least
+afford me some slight _alleviation_, by undertaking to let Him know of
+the _interest_ he excites in this far-off star! Let me describe my
+charmer, so that you will be able to identify him. He is of fair size,
+with a rolling gait and a smiling countenance, has light hair and
+complexion, wears often a White Hat, (on the back of his head--where
+Thoughtful men always place the hat, I've been told by observers,) and
+now and then carelessly leaves one leg of his trowsers at the top of his
+boot. I have often seen him, with a bundle of papers in his pocket,
+entering a large building with the words "_Tribune_ Office" over the
+door--and I _adore_ him! O excellent Editor! tell him this, I _implore_
+you! Be kind to your distant and _love-lorn_ friend,
+
+HELENE."
+
+F. What did you say, Helene?
+
+D. I was saying that I wished to look a little longer at the fashions in
+Broadway.
+
+F. Well, well--I believe the Fashions are all that these women think of!
+There--look away! I presume they have changed considerably since you
+looked before! When do you wish to begin your lessons in Astronomy?
+
+D. Next week. Father; let me see: we will say, next week--Thursday.
+
+F. Very well; I shall remind you.
+
+D. (_who is determined to have the last word, any way_.) Very well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beach's Soliloquy on entering his Pneumatic Chamber.
+
+"TU-BE or not tu-be."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Reflection by a Tallow-chandler.
+
+Though a man be the Mould of fashion, yet he cannot light himself to bed
+by the Dip in his back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration: 'M']
+
+_MEN AND ACRES,_ the new comedy at WALLACK'S, is one of the best of
+TAYLOR'S pieces, and a decided improvement upon the carpenter work of
+BOUCICAULT. It has been rechristened by Mr. WALLACK, and its former
+name--_Old Men and New Acres, or New Aches and Old Manors,_ or something
+else of that sort--has been conveniently shortened. If it does not
+convince us that the author has improved since he first began to write
+plays, it certainly reminds us that there is such a thing as _Progress_.
+In the latter play, Mr. J.W. WALLACK was a civil engineer. In the
+present drama, he is an uncivil tradesman. Both appeal to the levelling
+tendencies of the age; and in each, the author has done his "level
+best"--as Mr. GRANT WHITE would say--to flatter the Family Circle at the
+expense of the Boxes.
+
+The cast includes a Vague Baronet and his Managing Wife, their Slangy
+Daughter, their Unpleasant Neighbor and his wife and daughter, an
+Unintelligible Dutchman, an Innocuous Youth, a Disagreeable Lawyer, and
+the Merchant Prince. This is the sort of way in which they conduct
+themselves,
+
+_Act_ 1. _Disagreeable Lawyer to Vague Baronet:_ "You are ruined, and
+your estate is mortgaged to a Merchant Prince. What do you intend to
+do?"
+
+_Vague Baronet._ "I will ask my wife what I think about it."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are we? Allow me to remark,
+Fiddlesticks! Get the Merchant to take our third-story hall-bedroom for
+a week, and I'll soon clear off the mortgage."
+
+_Enter Slangy Daughter._ "O ma! there was such a precious guy at the
+ball last night, and I had no end of a lark with him. Good gracious!
+here comes the duffer himself."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince. (Aside.)_ "So here's the Vague Baronet and his
+wife. And there's the slangy girl I fell in love with. Nice lot they
+are!" (_To Managing Wife._) "Madam, there is nothing, so grand as the
+majesty of trade. Your rank and blood are all gammon. We Merchant
+Princes are the only people fit to live. However, I'll condescend to
+speak to you."
+
+_Managing Wife. (Aside.)_ "How noble! What a gentlemanly person he
+really is!" _(To Merchant Prince.)_ "Sir, I bid you welcome. Here is my
+daughter, who was just praising your beauty and accomplishments. I leave
+you to entertain her." (_Exeunt Baronet, Wife, and Lawyer_.)
+
+_Merchant Prince (placing his chair next to Slangy Daughter's, and
+leaning his elbow on her.)_ "There is nothing like trade. We tradesmen
+alone are great. We despise the whole lot of clean and idle aristocrats.
+I keep a Gin Palace in Liverpool. Does your bloated aristocracy do half
+as much for suffering humanity?"
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Speak on, speak ever thus, O Noble Being! It's
+awfully jolly!"
+
+_Curtain falls, and Baker wakes up to lead his orchestra through the
+mazes of "Shoo Fly."_
+
+
+_Appreciative Lady._ "Isn't it nice? Miss HENRIQUES'S dress is perfectly
+beautiful, and it sounds so cunning to hear her talk slang."
+
+_Second Appreciative Lady._ "How handsome ROCKWELL looks! Just like a
+real baronet, my dear!"
+
+_Other Appreciative Ladies._ "The dresses at WALLACK'S are always
+perfectly exquisite. I mean to have my next dress made with a green silk
+fichu, a moire antique bertha, and little point lace peplums and
+gussets, just like Miss MESTAYER'S. Won't it be sweet?"
+
+_All the Counter-Jumpers in the Theatre._ "JIM WALLACK'S the boy! Don't
+he talk up to those aristocratic snobs, though?"
+
+
+_Act 2. Enter Unpleasant Neighbor and Unintelligible German. The former
+says,_ "You're sure there's an iron mine on the Baronet's land?"
+
+_Unintelligible German._ "Ya! Das ist um-um-um."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince and Slangy Daughter. Exeunt the other fellows._
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "There is nothing like the grandeur of trade; and yet
+we tradesmen are not proud. See! I offer to marry you."
+
+_Slangy daughter._ "I love you wildly! _(Aside.)_ I do hope he won't
+rumple my hair."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "Come to my arrums! The majesty of trade is so
+infinitely above any thing else"--_and so forth._
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Take her, noble Merchant, and be happy
+_(Aside.)_ This settles the affair of the mortgage." _(To Daughter)_
+"Come, darling, we'll go and tell your father." _(They go.)_
+
+_Enter Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here's a telegram for you. No bad news, I
+hope?"
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I am ruined unless you lend me £40,000. Do it, and I
+will assign to you the mortgage on the baronet's property. The majesty
+of trade is something which"--
+
+_Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here it is." _(Aside.)_ "Now I'll get possession
+of the estate and the iron-mine."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are you? Of course you can't have my
+daughter now."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I resign her. We tradesmen are infinitely greater
+than you aristocrats."
+
+_Curtain falls, Baker wakes up. "Shoo Fly" by the Orchestra, and remarks
+on dress by the ladies as before. Counter-jumpers go out to drink to the
+majesty of trade, having grown perceptibly taller since the play began._
+
+
+_Act 3. Unprincipled Neighbor to Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Have you got
+the analysis of the iron ore?"
+
+_Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Ya! Das its um-um-um."
+
+_Unprincipled Neighbor._ "All right! Now I'll foreclose the mortgage,
+and will be richer than ever."
+
+_Enter Vague Baronet, and Wife and Daughter, and Lawyer. To them
+collectively remarks the Unprincipled Neighbor,_ "The mortgage is due.
+As you can't pay, you've got to move out."
+
+_Disagreeable Lawyer._ "Not much! Here's an analysis of iron ore found
+on our land. We raised money on the mine, and are ready to pay off the
+mortgage."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. I told
+them all about it. We tradesmen are great, but we will sometimes help
+even a wretched aristocrat."
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. Now I will marry
+my noble Merchant, and make him rich again; for there's dead loads of
+iron on the Governor's land, you bet!"
+
+_They all produce analyses of the ore, and the play itself being o'er,
+the curtain falls._
+
+
+_Exasperated critic, who has sent for twelve seats, and has been
+politely refused._ "I'd like to abuse it, if there was a chance; but
+there isn't. The play is really good, and I can't find much fault with
+the acting. However, I'll pitch into STODDARD for swearing, which his
+'Unprincipled Neighbor' does to an unnecessary extent, and I'll say that
+JIM WALLACK is too old and gouty to play the 'Merchant Prince,' and
+doesn't quite forget that he used to play in the Bowery."
+
+_Every body else._ "Did you ever see a play better acted? And did you
+ever see actresses better dressed?"
+
+And PUNCHINELLO is constrained to answer the latter question with an
+emphatic No! As to the acting, it might be improved were Mr. STODDARD to
+play the character for which he is cast, instead of insisting upon
+playing nothing but STODDARD. But to all the rest of the actors, not
+forgetting Mr. RINGGOLD, who plays the insignificant part of the
+"Innocuous Youth," PUNCHINELLO is pleased to accord his gracious
+approval.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Balmy Idea.
+
+According to Miss ANTHONY, the crying evil with women is that they will
+blubber; but it must be remembered that out of this blubber they make
+oil to pour into our conjugal wounds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Suit for Damages.
+
+Any clothes in a storm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE POLITICAL MILL-ENNIUM.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS UPON HIGH ART.
+
+Observant visitors to the National Academy of Design will allow that a
+tendency to greatness is beginning to develop itself in certain
+directions among our artists. In landscape some of them are almost
+immense. The works of PORPHYRO warm the walls with rays of splendor, or
+cool the lampooned sight-line with pearly gradations, as the case may
+be. MANDRAKE renders feelingly the summer uplands and groves, and
+SILVERBARK the melancholy autumnal woods. BYTHESEA infuses with
+sentiment even the blue wreaths of smoke that curl up from the distant
+ridge against which loom the concentrated lovers that he selects for his
+idyllic romances. Gushingly he does his work, but thoroughly; and there
+are other flowers than lackadaisies to be discerned in his herbage.
+GUSTIBUS blows gently the foliage aside, and gives us glimpses through
+it of rural contentment in connection with a mill, or some other
+interesting object beyond. The pencil of SAGEGREEN imbues canvases, both
+large and small, with infinite variety and force; and it is to
+SKETCHMORE that the great lakes owe their remarkable reputation as
+pieces of water with poems growing out of their broad lily-pads. Very
+tender are the pastoral banks and brooksides of LEAFHOPPER. ELFINLOCKS
+takes up his pencil, and lo! a hazy, mazy, lazy, dreamy vista where it
+has touched. But hold! Our critical Incubus has taken the bit between
+her teeth, and is beginning to run away with us. Stop that; and let our
+readers enumerate the other first American landscape painters for
+themselves.
+
+Not so strong are our artists in domestic incidents and compositions of
+life and character. We have STUNNINGTON, to be sure, whose traits of
+American expression, whether white or colored, are most true to the
+life; and there's BARLEYMOW, who will twist you an eclogue from the tail
+of his foreground pig. Others there be; but space has its limits, and we
+forbear.
+
+As for our portrait limners, their name is Legion, and that
+comprehensive name must go for all. Like BENVENUTO CELLINI they shall be
+known for their jugs; and their transmission to posterity on the heads
+of families is a thing to be reckoned on as sure.
+
+For the higher flights of art the American painter is by no manner of
+means endowed with the wings of his native eagle--wings that agitate the
+cerulean vault, spattering it with splashes of creamy cloud-spray, and
+churning into butter the stretches of the Milky Way. History has indeed
+been illustrated by American art, but has it been enriched? The
+WASHINGTONS and the WEBSTERS, the CLAYS and the LINCOLNS, have had their
+memories dreadfully lampooned on canvas. Allegory does not inspire the
+great American pencil. Tall art there is, and enough of it "at that;"
+but of high art we have none to speak of, except the canvases that are
+placed over doorways in the galleries of the Academy, and, in the sense
+of elevation, may consequently be spoken of as high. All this is wrong.
+Alas! that we should write it. Would that we could right it! And to
+think of the musty subjects that our historical and allegorical men
+select. Ho! young men--away with your CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS; relegate
+your METAMORA to his proper limbo; let WASHINGTON alone; and LINCOLN;
+and OSCEOLA the Savage; and POCAHONTAS, and all the rest. Leave them
+alone; and, taking fresh subjects, dip your brushes in brains, as old
+OPIE or somebody else said, and go to work with a will. No fresh
+subjects to be had, you say? Bosh! absurd interlocutor that you are.
+Here's a bundle of 'em ready cut to hand. We charge you no money for
+them, and you may take your choice.
+
+SUBJECTS FOR WORKS OF HIGH ART.
+
+PROVIDENCE tempering the wind to the shorn lamb.
+
+ABSENCE OF MIND marking a box of paper shirt-collars with indelible ink.
+
+MILTON "going it blind."
+
+The late Mr. WILLIAM COBBETT teaching his sons to shave with cold water.
+
+ST. PATRICK emptying the snakes out of his boots.
+
+TRUE LOVE never running smooth.
+
+NO MAN acting _Hero_ to his _valet de chambre_.
+
+ROBERT BONNER taking DEXTER by the forelock with one hand, and TIME with
+the other.
+
+Subjects like these might be worked out to advantage. The field in which
+they are to be found is almost unlimited; and they possess abundantly
+the two grand essentials to success in art at the present time, as well
+as in literature--novelty and sensation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+H.G. and Terpsichore.
+
+AMONG the strange revelations about _Tribune_ people elicited during the
+MCFARLAND trial, was the bit of gossip about Mr. GREELEY going to
+Saratoga to "trip the light fantastic toe." That Mr. GREELEY'S toe is
+"fantastic," every body who has ever inspected his "Congress gaiters"
+must know, but as to its lightness we have our doubts. "What I know
+about dancing" would be a capital subject for H.G. to handle, and we
+hope that he will take Steps for doing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sweeny's New Charter.
+
+ How doth the busy Peter B.,
+ Improve each shining hour!
+ From nettled young Democracy,
+ He plucks the safety-flower.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From Rome.
+
+The POPE is said to be "out of Spirits." Why doesn't he come to
+New-York, where he can get plenty of the article, either in the sense of
+the Tap or in that of the Rap?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"He who was Born to be Hanged," etc.
+
+On one of the mornings of the MCFARLAND trial, a very importunate person
+attempted to force his way into the court-room, which, as he was told,
+was already crowded "to suffocation." To this he retorted that he
+"wasn't born to be suffocated." That's in substance what the late JACK
+REYNOLDS said, and _he_ was mistaken.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Difference.
+
+Rice riots are reported as raging in all the ports of Japan. Rye was the
+principal mover in the famous conscription riots of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Celestial Idea.
+
+No wonder the Chinese theatre in San Francisco is a success, considering
+how skilful the actors must be in catching the Cue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUMBLES.
+
+Did you ever hear of my friend BOOTSBY? "No." That's rather queer. I
+see--you've been out of town. BOOTSBY is a man of standing--of decided
+standing, I may say. He stands, in fact, a great deal. The heavy
+standing round he does is enormous when the limited capacity of a single
+mortal is taken in view. BOOTSBY stands round among every class of
+people, and especially of politicians and potationers. He stands round
+to talk, to hear, and especially to drink. The power of the man in this
+last matter is wonderful, and the puzzle is, that his standing (and
+perpendicularity) is not perceptibly affected. Of course there are times
+when BOOTSBY'S standing is not so good. In so slippery a place as Wall
+Street, it is found to be less certain; while in a crowd on Broadway,
+waiting for a bus, it cannot be said to maintain a very remarkable
+firmness. But as a whole, and as the world goes, BOOTSBY is a man of
+standing. In the altitude of six feet ten, he may be called a man of
+high standing. He feels proud of the fact. "Is it not better to be a
+mountain than a mole?" he often asks in a proudly sneering manner of his
+neighbor PUGGS, who is about as far up in the world as the top of a
+yard-stick. It is very true that size is not quality, and a seven-footer
+may be no better than a three-footer; but it is observed that a Short
+Man is rarely any thing else. His stature is his measure throughout. My
+own impression of myself is, that I don't care to be short; but if the
+alternative were forced upon me, I should choose that of person rather
+than of purse. BOOTSBY does not care much about money, and he carries
+very little. Some people are like BOOTSBY, but most people are not. The
+ladies, it is true, never, or rarely, want money. Like newspapers and
+club-houses, they are self-supporting. In fact they surround themselves
+with supporters which stay tightly. Mrs. TODD is peculiar in her wants
+pecuniary. She, good soul, never wants (or keeps) money long, but she
+doesn't want it _little_. She prefers it like onions, in a large bunch,
+and strong. The reason why most women do not want money is because they
+have no use for it. They never dress; they never wear jewelry; silks and
+satins have no charms in their eyes; laces, ribbons, shawls never tempt.
+To exist and walk upright in simpleness and quiet is the sum of their
+desires. Dear creatures! how is it that they never want?
+
+My neighbor, Mr. DROWSE, desires to know where you get all your funny
+things for PUNCHINELLO? He knows they are there, does Mr. DROWSE; for he
+gets my copy of the penny postman, and he keeps it, too. It is the only
+good taste my neighbor has displayed of late years. I tell Mr. DROWSE
+that you make your fun. He further asks, Where? I tell him in the
+attic--up there where they keep the salt. He desires to know the size of
+attic. Of course he has never seen your noble, capacious, alabaster
+forehead, else he would perceive the source of those scintillations of
+light and warmth which radiate throughout the universe every Saturday
+for only ten cents. He is curious also to know about the salt, and
+doesn't comprehend how or where you use it. He used to use it when a boy
+in catching birds by putting the briny compound on the tails of the
+same, and _that_ he used to call "fun alive;" but he don't see it--the
+salt--about PUNCHINELLO. I suspect Mr. DROWSE doesn't see the sellers,
+(certainly he avoids them when PUNCHINELLO is offered, much to my
+mortification, and one dime to my cost,) and so is not likely to discern
+the source of the fun. I merely informed Mr. DROWSE that the editor was
+very tall, very handsome, with very black skin and rosy hair, (at which
+he opened his eyes with astonishment, and asked if I meant so; at which
+I said, "Yes, I guess so,") and that he laughed out of his nose, eyes,
+head, and hands, as well as his mouth. DROWSE wants to see the editor
+very much. He has seen men with black skins and hearts, (for he used to
+know lots of politicians;) but wants to put his vision on some "rosy
+hair"--and when he does, no doubt his gaze will be fixed. It is healthy
+sometimes to have the gaze fixed; and often, like sauce-pans and
+sermons, it has to be fixed. When Mr. DROWSE calls at 83, please show
+him in Parlor 6 with the Brussels, fresco-work, and lace curtains.
+
+April is a model month. So serene, steady, clear, and balmy. Nothing
+but blue sky, gentle zephyrs, kissing breezes, genial suns by day and
+sparkling stars by night. PUNCHINELLO no doubt likes sparkling
+stars--stars of magnitude--stars that show what they are. PUNCHINELLO
+perhaps goes to NIBLO'S, and not only sees plenty stars, but plenty of
+them. But of April. It is called "fickle;" but that's a slander. "Every
+thing by turns and nothing long"--that is a libel on which a suit could
+be hung. The same vile falsehood is cruelly uttered of some women, when
+every body knows, or should know, that these same women are nothing of
+the sort. Who ever knew a fickle woman?
+
+Where in history is there record of such an Impossibility? Fickle--that
+implies a change of mind. What woman ever changed her mind any more than
+her hands? Nonsense, avaunt!--banished be slander! April is _not_
+fickle--woman is _not_ fickle. As one is evenly beautiful, divinely
+serene, bewitchingly winning, so is the other sunny, cerulean, balmy,
+paradisiacal. April for ever--after that the rest of the calendar.
+
+Does PUNCHINELLO believe in the Woman Movement? TODD does. He believes
+woman should move as much as man; and he regards her movement in such
+numbers to the great West as full of hope (and husbands) for the sex.
+Mrs. TODD has not as yet been irresistibly seized by the movement; but
+if TIMOTHY knows himself, he longs for the day when the seizer may come.
+Although TODD--who is the writer of this epistle--says it, who perhaps
+shouldn't, lest the shaft of egotism be hurled mercilessly at him, he
+does unhesitatingly say that to aid this movement he would make the
+greatest of sacrifices. He is willing to sacrifice his wife and other
+female relations upon the sacred altar of the movement, and contribute
+liberally to the expense thereof. He is quite willing they should
+vote--early and often, if need be; but he wishes to see the movement go
+westward like the Star of Empire--westward _viâ_ cheerful Chicago. TODD
+trusts PUNCHINELLO will espouse this movement; for if it does, it--the
+movement, no less than PUNCHINELLO--will go straight onward and upward;
+but not by the route known as the Spout.
+
+Mucilage is a good thing. It is now extensively used in Church, State,
+and Society. We use it largely at the Veneerfront Avenue Church, of
+which Rev. Dr. ALEXANDER PLASTERWELL is pastor. Of course, Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO, you know that distinguished church, and have no doubt often
+listened to the distinguished Dr. PLASTERWELL. He is a kind man, has a
+high forehead, a Roman (Burgundy) nose, and a sweet, soft head--I should
+say heart. He has--great and good man--the largest faith in mucilage. He
+often makes it a text, and he sticks to it, he does--does Dr.
+PLASTERWELL. Nothing like mucilage, PUNCHINELLO. It is the hope of the
+human race, and the salvation of woman. It is the Philosopher's Stone in
+solution; the essence and link which connects and cements all that is
+great, good, and lovely, in the past, present, and future. At least,
+such is the humble opinion of
+
+TIMOTHY TODD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS TO CAR CONDUCTORS.
+
+When standing in Printing House Square, your destination being Grand
+Street Perry or Bleecker Street, if a stranger asks whether you are
+going to Harlem, nod, as it is considered improper to answer in the
+negative. If he finds out the mistake, you can plead deafness.
+
+When called upon to stop, never attempt to comply. There are several
+reasons why you should not. In the first place, if you did stop, it
+would show that you have no will of your own, and since the passage of
+the Fifteenth Amendment, _all_ men are equal in this country.
+
+You may stop about two blocks from the place named, just to please
+yourself and prove your independence; but take particular care to start
+the car when the passenger is half off the steps. If there is a young
+surgeon in the neighborhood, you can enter into an arrangement to break
+arms and legs in this way with impunity, have the maimed "carried into
+the surgery," and share the fees with the operator. Occasional cases of
+manslaughter may take place; but don't mind that, as coroners' juries in
+New-York will return verdicts of "death from natural causes." Besides
+this, remember that you have a vote, and that both coroners and judges
+are dependent upon the people. When a lame old gentleman hails you,
+beckon him furiously to come on, but be sure, at the same time, to urge
+the driver to greater speed.
+
+It is no part of your business to have change, so never give any, but
+drive on: people should provide for and look after their own business
+and that is none of yours.
+
+Always drive through the centre of a target company or funeral
+procession, never minding whether you kill one or more, and then abuse
+the captain or the undertaker for his stupidity.
+
+By the adoption of these essential rules, and by adding a good deal of
+incivility, you will soon reach the top of the wheel of your profession
+and in due time have a testimonial presented to you by an admiring and
+grateful public.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Out in the Cold.
+
+Commissioner Tweed proposes a new outside Bureau of the Department of
+Public Works, for late-Commissioner MCLEAN. He is to be Superintendent
+of Refrigerators.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS.
+
+ENGRAVED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION FOR PUNCHINELLO, FROM THE ORIGINAL
+PAINTING, BY MILES STANDISH, IN THE COLLECTION OF METHUSELAH PILGRIM,
+ESQ., OF PILGRIMSVILLE, MASS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO CAPTAIN HALL.
+
+(IN ANTICIPATION OF HIS TRIP TO THE POLE.)
+
+ HALL! HALL!
+ D'ye hear our call?
+ Or, do you fancy it to be
+ A weather sign--merely the pre-
+ Monition of a squall
+ At sea!
+ HALL!
+
+ You pay no heed at all.
+ Nevertheless, O hardy mariner!
+ (A Snow-Bird brings this with our kindest love,)
+ We're sorry you prefer
+ Those frigid walks (ever so far above
+ The 80th parallel, we guess!)
+ To stocks, and tariffs, and domestic bliss;
+ Yes, yes,
+ Captain, we're sorry it has come to this!
+
+ Why do you madly thirst
+ For grog that's chopped up with a hatchet? say!
+ And tell us of the first
+ Strange thought which spurred you to go up that way!
+ Was it the hope that on some icy coast
+ (Frozen, yourself, almost!)
+ You'd have the luck to meet poor FRANKLIN'S ghost?
+
+ And has it seemed, sometimes,
+ That drowning might be pleasanter up there
+ Among the icebergs, native to those climes,
+ Than where
+ The surf breaks gently on some coral-reef,
+ And sirens sweetly soothe one's slow despair?
+ Say, was that your belief?
+
+ And who is BENT?[*]
+ Why was _he_ sent,
+ With his Warm Currents wheeling round the Pole?
+ A long, long race must his disciples run:
+ No sun,
+ No fun,
+ No chance to toss a word to any one;
+ And what a goal?
+
+ As hopefully you munch
+ The flinty biscuit, watching whale or seal,
+ Or listening, undaunted, to the crunch
+ Of ice-floes at the keel,
+ Say, Sir Intrepid! shall you really think
+ You pioneer the navies of the world?
+ Not while the chink
+ Of well-housed dollars sounds so pleasantly,
+ And safer tracks map out the treacherous sea!
+ If that's your dream, oh! let your sails be furled.
+
+ But, no!
+ It is not this! Your spirit, high and bold,
+ Scorning all tamer joys, will have it so!
+ No cold
+ Can chill its ardor! Such a soul would sate
+ Its deathless craving in some lofty flight,
+ Some deed sublime, and read its shining fate
+ By the Aurora's light!
+ For fruitful fellowship, it seeks the wild,
+ The frozen waste,
+ Where the world's venturous heroes--reconciled
+ To sunless, shuddering gloom--
+ To joyless solitude--with ardor taste
+ Their dread delights! and so at last find room,
+ 'Mid nodding icebergs, for their watery tomb!
+
+ For this, we spare you,
+ O dauntless HALL! Once having breathed that air
+ So pure, so fresh, so rare!
+ And caught the wildness of the Esquimaux,
+ We declare you
+ Unfit to live where beans and lettuce grow!
+ Leave delving to the little pitiful mole,
+ Great soul!
+ And now, then, for the Pole!
+
+[Footnote *: Captain BENT, of Cincinnati, originator of the new theory
+of Polar Currents.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FINANCIAL RELIEF
+
+MR. BUMBLE BOUTWELL TO MRS. CORNEY FISH. _(See Oliver Twist.)_ "THE GREAT
+PRINCIPLE OF FINANCIAL RELIEF IS TO GIVE THE BUSINESS MEN EXACTLY WHAT
+THEY DON'T WANT: THEN THEY GET TIRED OF COMING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+MR. SUMNER said he was the friend of the oppressed. That, as was well
+known, was his regular business. Unfortunately, the Fifteenth Amendment
+had rendered the colored man incapable of being hereafter regarded as an
+oppressed creature. He was sorry, but it could not be helped. He was
+therefore forced to go down the chromatic scale of creation and find
+another class of clients. He found them in cattle. HOMER had sung about
+the ox-eyed Juno, and WALTER WHITMAN about bob veal. COWPER had remarked
+that he would not number in his list of friends the man who needlessly
+set foot upon a cow. He mentioned these things merely to show that
+railway companies had no right to starve cattle. He proposed an
+amendment to the Constitution, to provide that a dinner of at least
+three courses should be given to cows daily. Mr. DRAKE was heartily in
+favor of the proposition. He had got his feet in a web, so to speak, by
+paddling in the political waters of Missouri, and some people had gone
+so far as to call him "quack." He demanded redress.
+
+Mr. WILSON didn't see the use of all this legislation to protect
+animals. Animals had no votes, although he admitted a partial exception,
+in that every bull, it had its ballot. But he had something practical.
+Here was a jolly job, the Pacific Railway grant. There was a good deal
+more in it than they had made out of any other GRANT. Mr. THURMAN'S
+suggestion, that this land ought to be occupied by actual settlers, he
+scorned. "Actual settlers" were of a great deal more use to him in
+Massachusetts, where they could vote for him, than in the territories,
+where that boon would not be extended to them. It was much better that
+they should be occupied by imaginary settlers, who could pay and not
+vote. Actual "settlings" were the dregs of humanity.
+
+The Georgia bill came up, as it does every day with much more regularity
+than luncheon. The Senate has succeeded in muddling it to that degree of
+unintelligibility that nobody has the slightest notion what it provides.
+It is, therefore, in a condition to give rise to infinite debate. After
+several senators had said enough for a foundation for thirty columns
+each in the _Globe,_ they let it go for the present. The present was the
+one promised by Senator WILSON in return for the Pacific Railway grab
+grant.
+
+HOUSE.
+
+The House is given over to the tariff. A very indelicate discussion has
+been had upon corsets. Mr. BROOKS was of opinion that the corset would
+tariff it were subjected to any more strain in the way of duties. Mr.
+MARSHALL remarked that the corset avoided a great deal of Waist. It was
+whalebone of his bone, or something of that sort. It was one of the main
+Stays of our social system.
+
+Mr. SCHENCK made another speech. He ripped up the foreign corset in a
+truculent manner. He said that American corsets were far superior, only
+American women had not the sense to see it. The effect of taking off the
+duty on corsets would be to take off the corsets.
+
+Mr. BROOKS called the hooks and ayes on the corsets. Mr. SCHENCK opposed
+the call. He had found a simple tape much preferable. He wished a
+coffer-dam might be put upon the roaring BROOKS.
+
+Somebody at this point brought up a contested election case; but Mr.
+LOGAN objected to its being considered. What, he asked, was the use of
+wasting time? There was money in the tariff. There was no money at all
+in voting a Democrat out, and a Republican in. They could do that any
+day in five minutes. His friend Mr. BUTLER had recently remarked, one
+Democrat more or less made no difference. But Mr. BUTLER forgot that the
+larger the majority, the larger the divisor for spoils, and therefore
+the smaller the quotient and the "dividend." He did not know much about
+arithmetic. He had never been at West Point; but he believed that a
+million dollars, for instance, would go further and fare worse among two
+hundred men than among three. If the House were not careful, there would
+be a glut of Republicans in it, and the shares would be pitifully
+meagre. As for him, he had a great mind, (derisive cheers)--he repeated,
+that he had a great mind to vote for a Democrat next time.
+
+In spite of Mr. LOGAN'S warning, the House voted in a couple or so of
+Republicans, and then resumed the duty on wool.
+
+Mr. Cox thought this wool had been pulled over the eyes of the house
+often enough. It reminded him of an expedition, of which Mr. LOGAN had
+never heard, in search of a "Golden Fleece."
+
+Mr. JENCKES, and Mr. SCHENCK, and Mr. KELLEY called him to order in
+behalf of their constituents, who were in the wool business, and said
+that "wool" in one form or another had always been the staple of their
+political career.
+
+Mr. BUTLER said he had a little game worth two of that. He wanted to buy
+San Domingo. In this there were plenty of commissions, and hundreds of
+thousands of colored votes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT.
+
+ALDERMANIC RECEPTION UP-TOWN.
+
+ CAESAR, walk in! Ah POMPEY! how d'e do?
+ This way, CLEM! Gentlemen, please walk right through!
+ GEORGE, how's your mother? Fine day, PETE--fine day!
+ Well, how are things down there at Oyster Bay?
+
+ Ah AUNTIE! how's your rheumatiz, this spring?
+ Well, Mr. JOHNSON, did you try that sling?
+ Why, this is Uncle STEVE! How-do-you-do.
+ Uncle? Sit down. What can I do for you?
+
+ Well, Mr. PRINCE! You must be busy, now.
+ Whitewashing is the best thing done, I vow!
+ Why, hel-lo! REGIS! From the Cape so soon?
+ When do you open, this year--first of June?
+
+ Come, gentlemen--some wine? Now, don't refuse!
+ What! temperate? teetotal? Well, that's news!
+ And good news, too! Well, coffee, then. You see,
+ My friends, the _sentiment's_ the thing with me.
+
+ The real Mocha, AUNTIE! Simon pure!
+ Raised by free Arabs. For I can't endure
+ A single thing that's flavored with a Wrong!
+ Yes, AUNTIE, you are right, I've "come out strong!"
+
+ So have the Colored People, I may say!
+ (One fact explains the other, up this way!)
+ They've proved their strength! It's settled, sure as a gun,
+ That every Colored Voter now counts One!
+
+ Now, gentlemen, you'll be surprised to find
+ So many people with your turn of mind!
+ But, sure as tricks! remember what I say--
+ You'll learn some things before Election Day!
+
+ POMPEY--'twon't take much time, (and you can spare it!)
+ Try this old fiddle, picked up in the garret!
+ Good? It's your fiddle! AUNTIE, here's a pound
+ Of that same genuine Mocha, ready ground!
+
+ Say, Uncle STEVE, I've got a fish for you,
+ Down at the market. Call again, PETE; do!
+ I'll have a job for you and CAESAR soon:
+ It's only waiting for a change of moon.
+
+ CLEM, how'd you like a chance to wait on table?
+ Or, would you rather drive, and run my stable?
+ GEORGE, in the kitchen there's a pan of souse!
+ Going? All gone? Now, BRIDGET, air the house!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Historic Parallel.
+
+THE JACK CADE movement came near destroying London. The Ar-Cade movement
+threatens to destroy Broadway.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A CHEAP LUXURY.
+
+SNIFFLES LOVES THE SMELL OF ROASTED CHESTNUTS, AND ENJOYS IT FOR HOURS
+EVERY DAY; BUT HE NEVER EATS ANY--WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR THE JOYOUS EXPRESSION
+ON THE FACE OF THE VENDER.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BUSINESS.
+
+A CHICAGO LAY.
+
+ I saw her sweet lip quiver,
+ As he started for the store.
+ Because he hadn't kissed her
+ "Several" times or more.
+
+ She cried "This horrid business!"
+ And then flew to her glass;
+ "Oh! why his cold remissness?
+ Have I grown plain, alas?"
+
+ But no, that truthful article
+ Revealed her charms intact,
+ She hadn't lost one particle,
+ But had improved, in fact.
+
+ At nine the case was opened,
+ At ten the case was o'er;
+ The jury brought their virdict--
+ She was his wife no more.
+
+ That night the husband started,
+ And--"_you_ bet"--he swore,
+ To find his wife departed,
+ And "_To Let_" on the door.
+
+ Next day he moved and married.
+ And, that his bride might stay,
+ He kissed her every morning
+ Before he went away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Pot-umania.
+
+A correspondent writes that a new mania has sprung up among the ladies
+of Edinburgh--a fancy for learning to cook. There is a much older mania
+in some parts of that country--a fancy for something to cook.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+About a Foot.
+
+A BOOT when it's on.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IMPORTANT TO PUBLISHERS.
+
+One of our corps of Philosophers (a trifle visionary, perhaps) has been
+speculating as to certain possible (or, perhaps, impossible) results
+flowing from the practice among publishers of ante-dating their monthly
+issues. Thus, supposing that the world should be destroyed by fire (and
+why not? it is bad enough) on the 15th of May, 1870, and a cover of,
+say, _Putnam's_ for June, carried up by an air-current, should, after
+floating about ever so long in space, finally descend on some friendly
+planet--we will say, Venus. Here it would naturally get picked up by an
+archaeologist, (who would be on the spot looking out for it,) and the
+interesting relic would be promptly and reverently deposited among the
+other Vestiges of Creation, in the Royal Cabinet. In the course of
+years, some historian would probably have occasion to turn over these
+curiosities, and would presently light on the scorched but still legible
+waif. "Why," says he, in astonishment, "I thought the earth was burnt on
+the 15th of May! To be sure, it was _in the night_, and nobody saw it
+go, [think of that, conceited Worldling!] but it was missed by somebody
+the day after. But here we have a document from the late unfortunate
+planet dated the first of June!"
+
+Of course, upon this the History of the Universe would have to be
+rewritten, or that odd fortnight would play the mischief somewhere!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Boston Boy.
+
+HUB-BUB.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Curses Come Home to Roost."
+
+They are putting the Fifth Avenue pavement in front of the City Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Politicians.
+
+Will the working of the Fifteenth Amendment oblige a candidate to show
+his Color before election?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So We Go!
+
+We notice, with much agitation and a reasonable amount of grief, that
+somebody in Philadelphia (possibly Miss ANNA DICKINSON) has invented a
+machine for the laundry called The King Washer! A few years ago it would
+have been The Queen Washer; but in these days the name seems to indicate
+that to Man, unhappy Man, will speedily be committed the destinies of
+the weekly washing. Oh! the rubbing, the rinsing, the wringing. But Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO has already communicated to Mrs. PUNCHINELLO his sentiments
+upon this subject. Under no circumstances will he get at the family
+linen. He must make a stand somewhere, and he makes it here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let them Bark.
+
+Miss BARKALOW has been admitted to practice at the bar in St. Louis. We
+have frequently before seen young ladies at a bar, where others
+practiced more than they did; but we do not see why, if Miss BARKALOW
+wishes to bark aloud, she should not be allowed to bark, aloud or
+otherwise. Barking may be particularly good in a cross-examination; but
+we presume that a lady attorney's bark will be always worse than her
+bite.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"She Stoops to Conquer."
+
+The girl with the Grecian Bend.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query.
+
+Is it allowable for a Temperance man to be Cordial to his friends?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Weak as Water.
+
+Our cynical friend A. QUARIUS writes us from Philadelphia, that
+considering the manner in which the Sunday liquor law is enforced in
+that city, he thinks his native place is still entitled--perhaps more
+than ever entitled to be called the city of Rye-tangles. This is
+ungrateful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPIRITUAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF CATS.
+
+DEAR PUNCHINELLO: Our Society has been very learnedly debating as to
+whether Cats are susceptible of spiritual impressions; and, although the
+burden of opinion inclines to the negative of the question, I am firmly
+persuaded there is much to justify a contrary judgment.
+
+As I slept the other night, neither dreaming nor holding psychological
+intercourse of any description with outsiders, I was awakened suddenly
+about the first hour of the morning by a noise. I am quite certain it
+was a noise, and have therefore no hesitation in so recording it. The
+new moon hung athwart the western sky, and a few fleecy clouds were
+chasing each other like snow-drifts across the blue vault of the night.
+I may likewise note the fact that the stars were doing what they usually
+do, notwithstanding the difference of opinion that sometimes exists as
+to what that is. It was the evening after "wash-day," and family linen,
+in graceful curves and undulating outlines, everywhere met the eye as it
+turned from contemplating the stars to contemplating the clothes-lines
+in the gardens. But I wander. The noise? Ah! yes. Well, it was not like
+the collision of two hard substances, but rather of the heavy "thud"
+order of sound, like the descent of a solid into a soft substance; say,
+for instance, of a flat-iron into a jar of unrisen buck-wheat batter. I
+glanced along the ghostly battalions of family linen; along the fences
+traversed by feline sentries; along the latticed arbors; but nothing to
+indicate the origin of the alarm could be discovered, and as at that
+moment a breeze stirred in the apartment, producing a chilling
+sensation, I thought it prudent to jump back into bed.
+
+Next morning, upon making my usual visit to note the progress of the
+early bulbs in the flower-beds, I encountered at the further end of the
+garden the remains of a cat--a portly and ancient grimalkin of the
+sterner sex. Close at hand was a bottle lying face downward, and corked.
+I raised it--first in my hands, and then to my lips. The cork fell out,
+accidentally as it were, and, as a consequence, death. "Poor thing!" I
+murmured; "poor--" and a portion of the contents glided carelessly down
+my throat. I perceived that the liquid was "Old Rye." As I stooped down,
+tears would have come to my eyes; but it was useless, seeing that the
+breath had left the unfortunate's body. Nevertheless, I rested my hand a
+moment upon his head, and then glided it in a semi-professional manner
+along the line of dorsal elevation, until I came to a deep depression in
+his backbone, which corresponded exactly with the convexity of the
+bottle. Then I saw at once how it was; this missile, (in the heat of
+passion, being mistaken for an empty one, probably,) had been hurled by
+some treacherous hand upon the unsuspecting Tom, striking him midway
+between the root of the tail and the base of the brain, causing instant
+suspension of his vertebral communications, "Poor thing! You were the
+victim of a Catastrophe. You were also the victim of the bottle. The
+'Rye' was too heavy for you, and should have been drawn milder." This
+said, I turned sadly away to find a burial spade, and it then occurred
+to me that this little incident was kindly meant to confirm my view that
+cats are susceptible, even to a fatal extent, of spiritual
+impressions--especially when conveyed by spirits of "Old Rye."
+
+GOBBO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the Tombs.
+
+When a drunken man has been locked up for beating his wife, it is
+reasonable to suppose that he must feel rather the worse for lick her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PERSONAL GOSSIP.
+
+(From the Daily Press.)
+
+"A SON OF ONE OF OUR WEALTHIEST RESIDENTS DISPLAYS GREAT TALENTS AS A
+SCULPTOR. HE IS BUT NINE YEARS OLD."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A BIT OF NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+Naturalists tell us that the _Aye-aye_ is a small animal of Madagascar,
+with sharp teeth, long claws, and a tail; which eats whatever it can
+grab, and says nothing day or night but _aye-aye_. Now, we find that,
+AGASSIZ to the contrary notwithstanding, this strange and not very
+useful animal is indigenous to the State of Pennsylvania. It especially
+frequents Harrisburg; and may be seen and heard any day there, in the
+Senate or House. Being an active member of that House, your
+correspondent has been present during the passage of three hundred bills
+within a week or two, in about one hundred and ten of which he had some
+personal interest.
+
+Lifting his eyes one day from his newspaper, when the Speaker took the
+vote on an "Act to amend the Incorporation of the City of Philadelphia,"
+which your correspondent happened to know included the presentation of a
+three-story brownstone front to each of a committee of six members of
+the House, he found there was not one member in his seat; but, in the
+place of a few, there was a company of these remarkable _Aye-ayes_,
+responding duly to the call for a vote; but never a _no_ among them. No,
+no!
+
+Now, your correspondent holds the deliberate opinion that, in several
+respects, these aforesaid small animals of Madagascar might be an
+improvement upon the average Pennsylvania legislators. And, if your
+correspondent had to do with getting up the other one hundred and ninety
+bills, as he did the one hundred and ten, all right: Otherwise, _not_.
+How does PUNCHINELLO regard it?
+
+Yours, LEGISLATOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Augean Job.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has telegraphed to Governor GEARY his approval of the
+"Sewage Utilization" bill at Harrisburg, on one condition: that the
+first piece of work be finished up by the members of the Pennsylvania
+Legislature with their own hands; that work to be, to make up into
+_decent_ manure, _deodorized_ and _disinfected_, all bills passed at the
+late session of their House and Senate. Since, however, complete
+deodorization is probably _impossible_, PUNCHINELLO advises also that
+the said members be required to cart all their stuff out to the Bad
+Lands of Nebraska, and remain there to make the best use of it; or else
+make a contract with Captain HALL to ship it and them to the Arctic
+regions at once.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the Finances.
+
+Says Crispin, "Did not somebody say it was BOUTWELL in the Treasury now?
+A great mistake. About well, to be sure! When the newspaper men have
+111-1/2 of gold, and I haven't a round dollar! Where did they get it?
+And then the legal tender question. I never asked but _one_ tender
+question in all my life, and that was to SUSAN and she said, Yes. And
+then we were legally married. Nobody ought to ask such questions _out
+loud_; it's not _decent_. And _fine answering_ an't much better.
+Financiering, is it? Ah! well. _Specious assumption_, too; but that
+requires brass, and I want _gold_. Meantime, who's got a twenty-five
+cent note?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Massachusetts Flats.
+
+Massachusetts must abound in Flats. Its Legislature is annually agitated
+from the sands of Cape Cod to the hills of Berkshire over the question.
+It is said to be wisdom to set a rogue to catch a rogue. Is it equally
+so to set a flat to catch one?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NATIONAL TAXIDERMY.
+
+[Illustration 'P']
+
+PUNCHINELLO has for some time past carefully considered the subject of
+our national tariff of imposts, (_that is to say, he happened to see, in
+a Tribune, the other day, that lucifer matches were now to be stamped
+separately, and not by the box, as heretofore_) and he has come to the
+conclusion, after duly weighing in his mind all the arguments for and
+against the present system of taxation, (_that is to say, he made up his
+mind the minute he read the article_,) that what the present tariff
+needs, is a more thorough application and a better classification; or,
+what the technologists call Taxonomy, which term is suggested to him by
+a work on the subject which he has been recently studying. (_That is to
+say, he looked in the dictionary to find out what Taxidermy meant, and
+seeing Taxonomy there, snapped it up for a sort of collateral pun_.) As
+an illustration of what our impost legislators (or imposters) ought to
+be, let us take the Taxidermist. He is one who takes from an animal
+every thing but his skin and bones, and stuffs him up afterward with all
+sorts of nonsense. Now, our National Taxidermists ought to take a lesson
+from their original. Many of the good people of the United States have
+much more left them than their skin and bones. Why is not all that
+taken? The condition of the ordinary stuffed animal of the shops is
+strikingly significant of what should be expected of loyal communities.
+(_That is to say, communities which vote a certain ticket which need not
+be named here_.) It is often said that there are things which flesh and
+blood will not bear. Now, a thorough system of Taxidermy remedies all
+this. A stuffed 'possum, for instance, having no flesh or blood, will
+bear any thing. When the people of this country are thoroughly cleaned
+out, they will be just as docile. Among the things which PUNCHINELLO
+would recommend as fit subjects of taxation, is a man's expenses. They
+have not been taxed yet. If he pays for his income, why not for his
+outgoes? The immense sums that are annually expended in this country for
+this, that, and the other thing ought certainly to yield a revenue to
+the government. (_That is to say, there ought to be a new army of
+collectors and assessors appointed. P. knows lots of good men out of
+office_.) And then there's a man's time. Why not tax that? Nearly every
+man spends a lot of time, and he ought to pay for it. As it would be our
+tax, it could not be a very minute tax, although it is only the second
+tax which we have suggested. (_That is to say--- something pun-ny_.) And
+besides these things, there's energy. We often hear of a man's energies
+being taxed; but, so far as the matter is apparent to the naked eye, it
+is difficult to see whose energies are taxed for the good of the
+government at the present day. This subject should certainly be
+investigated. (_That is to say, a committee of Congressmen should be
+appointed, with power to send for persons, papers, and extra
+compensation_.) Politics, too. Every man has his politics, (_that is to
+say, every man except Bennett_,) and they ought to be taxed, if for no
+other reason than the great impetus the measure would give to the
+erection of fences throughout the land. And letters, too. If every one
+sent by the mail should yield one cent to the Treasury, how the currency
+would be inflated in that locality! (_That is to say, in the locality to
+which the collectors would abscond_.) But it is impossible, with the
+limited time at his disposal, for PUNCHINELLO to enter into a full
+examination and elucidation of this subject. (_That is to say, he can't
+think of any more illustrations just now, and the printer wouldn't stand
+any more, if he could_.) But it must be admitted that the great task of
+opening up the country, of which we hear so much, will never be complete
+until the Washington skinners and stuffers get us all into the prepared
+specimen condition. (_That is to say, when the people are all willing
+to_ "_dry up_.")
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JOHN CHINAMAN'S BILLING AND COOING.--Pigeon English.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CABLE NEWS.
+
+(EXCLUSIVELY FOR PUNCHINELLO.)
+
+QUEEN ISABELLA has sent her compliments to Señor CASTELAR, as well as to
+General PRIM, informing them that, on the whole, she thinks she will
+_not_ return to the throne of Spain. It does not agree with her quiet
+and refined tastes and habits to live so much in public. All she wants
+now is a little _château en Espagne_. She proposes to send her son,
+Prince of ASTURIAS, to Professor CASTELAR, to study modern history. Is
+it not odd, by the way, that a country so long _Mad-rid-den_ as Spain,
+should have now a governor with such a name as PRIM? But, what's in a
+name? BOURBON, by any other name, would smell as sweet. Some, however,
+prefer Old Rye. I prefer _water_ to both; _especially_ to BOURBON.
+
+It's an old story that _two positives make a negative_. Paris news tells
+us that a late will case has exemplified this. COMTE, you know, was a
+_positive_ philosopher. He had a positive wife. She had a will of her
+own. He wrote a will of his own. Consequently, it got into court. Mme.
+COMTE it seems, who did not agree with the philosophy while the
+philosopher lived, wanted his MSS. after his death. Positively, the
+court did not see it in that light; and so the negative came out. It was
+a case of no go, or _non-ego_, as HEGEL might have called it. Did you
+ever read HEGEL? I didn't; and I advise you not to begin. It won't pay.
+I am told that he divided all things into Egos, She goes, and Non-egos,
+or No-goes. The latter particularly; So do I.
+
+But to return to Spain; or rather to Paris. Don FRANÇOIS D'ASSISSI has,
+it appears, suddenly discovered that his wife is not Queen of Spain so
+much as she was. Much less so. So, he has found her company rather
+expensive than agreeable; and proposes to abdicate it. Not so _very_
+much of an ass, is he? Bravo for Don FRANÇOIS!
+
+In London, _to-morrow_ will be made famous in literature by _the_ great
+dinner in honor of the advent of PUNCHINELLO. Mr. PUNCH is talked of to
+preside. An unprecedented rush for tickets has begun. More about it in
+my next.
+
+PRIME.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cutting.
+
+We see extensively advertised the "Saxon Razor;" but have not yet
+summoned up sufficient courage to try this article, which "no
+gentleman's dressing-case should be without." We cannot dispossess our
+minds of the apprehension of cutting ourselves, remembering that line
+descriptive of the combat between FITZ-JAMES and RODERICK DHU, in which
+it is said, that,
+
+ "----thrice the Saxon blade drank blood."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Musical.
+
+The vocal abilities of hens are admitted; but they rarely attempt the
+Chro-matic scale.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+De Jure.
+
+No man can now be a juror who knows any thing about the case which he is
+to try. Thus a juryman was challenged in the MCFARLAND case merely
+because he belonged to Dr. BELLOWS's church. It was held that he might
+possibly have got Wind of the matter while listening to the Doctor's
+discourse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOK NOTICES.
+
+AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT. Boston: ROBERTS BROTHERS.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+The author of "Little Women" seeks, and not without success, to draw
+from her "Old-Fashioned Girl" a contrast and a moral. She presents to
+our view two young ladies of opposite "styles." One is fresh and rural:
+the other isn't. The difference between country and city bringing-up is
+the point aimed at; and the difference is about as great as that between
+the warbling of woodside birds and the jingle of one of OFFENBACH'S
+tunes on a corner barrel-organ. The book is neatly set forth, with
+illustrations by Messrs. ROBERTS, BROTHERS, of Boston.
+
+RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. By the author of "Cometh up as a Flower," etc.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+A readable book, notwithstanding that there are several naughty
+characters in it, or perhaps _because_ there are. Probably it depicts
+with truth the kind of society presented. If so, all the worse for
+society. Shall we never again have healthful, virtuous novels of the old
+school, such as "Tom Jones?" The book is published in tasteful form by
+Messrs. D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE OFFERING |
+ | |
+ | Extraordinary Inducements, |
+ | |
+ | IN PRICE, STYLE, AND QUALITY, |
+ | |
+ | TO HOUSEKEEPERS |
+ | |
+ | IN |
+ | |
+ | Linens, Sheetings, |
+ | |
+ | DAMASKS, NAPKINS, TOWELLINGS, |
+ | |
+ | DRESS LINENS, PRINTED LINENS, |
+ | |
+ | FLANNELS, BLANKETS, QUILTS, |
+ | |
+ | COUNTERPANES, SHEETINGS, |
+ | |
+ | Bleached and Brown Cottons, |
+ | |
+ | Standard American Prints, etc., etc. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | 4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. Stewart & Co. |
+ | |
+ | HAVE OPENED A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' PARIS MADE DRESSES |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | WALKING SUITS, |
+ | |
+ | In Silk, Poplin, and Linen, |
+ | |
+ | ENTIRE NEW DESIGNS. |
+ | |
+ | FRENCH SILK CLOAKS, |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | SHORT STREET SACQUES. |
+ | |
+ | Children's Cloaks, Ladies' Breakfast Jackets, |
+ | |
+ | Ladies' Pique, Swiss, and Cambric |
+ | |
+ | Morning Robes and Walking Suits, |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' UNDERGARMENTS |
+ | |
+ | Of every description. |
+ | |
+ | French, German, and Domestic Corsets, |
+ | |
+ | Woven and hand-made. |
+ | |
+ | JUST RECEIVED. |
+ | |
+ | AT EXTREMELY ATTRACTIVE PRICES, |
+ | |
+ | 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 grammar, 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 |
+ | me 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 |
+ | 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 THE VARIOUS ORDERS, |
+ | WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE HABITS AND ECONOMY OF THE MOST |
+ | INTERESTING. |
+ | By Louis Figuler. Illustrated with 307 wood-cuts. 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-ROOK 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HENRY L. STEPHENS |
+ | |
+ | ARTIST, |
+ | |
+ | No. 160 Fulton Street, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Important to Newsdealers! |
+ | |
+ | ALL ORDERS FOR |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO |
+ | |
+ | Will be supplied by |
+ | |
+ | OUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, |
+ | |
+ | American News Co. |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | J. NICKINSON |
+ | |
+ | BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO THE FRIENDS OF |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | RESIDING IN THE COUNTRY, THAT, |
+ | |
+ | FOR THEIR CONVENIENCE |
+ | |
+ | HE HAS MADE ARRANGEMENTS BY WHICH, ON RECEIPT OF THE PRICE |
+ | OF |
+ | |
+ | ANY STANDARD BOOK PUBLISHED, |
+ | |
+ | THE SAME WILL BE FORWARDED, POSTAGE PAID. |
+ | |
+ | Parties desiring Catalogues of any of our Publishing Houses, |
+ | can have the same forwarded by inclosing two stamps. |
+ | |
+ | OFFICE OF PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., 83 Nassau Street. |
+ | |
+ | [P. O. Box 2783.] |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: A SUCCESSFUL CATCH.
+
+_John Bull._ "WELL, GENERAL, HOW DID YOU CATCH YOUR FISH?"
+
+ _General Prim._ "WITH A SPANISH FLY."]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 excellence 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+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 the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30,
+1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 10018 ***
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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30, 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. 5, April 30, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 8, 2003 [EBook #10018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "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 169 PEARL ST., |
+ | |
+ | 73, 75, 77, and 79 PINE ST., New-York. |
+ | |
+ | ADVANTAGES--All on the same premises, and under the |
+ | immediate supervision of the proprietors. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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_ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+[Illustration: Vol. 1 No. 5]
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO
+
+
+SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close resemblance |
+ | to Oil Paintings. Sold in All Stores throughout the World. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S WEEKLY BULLETIN OF CHROMOS.--"Easter Morning" |
+ | "Family Scene in Pompeii" "Whittier's Birthplace," |
+ | Illustrated Catalogue sent, on receipt of stamp, by L. PRANG |
+ | & CO., Boston. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 Reminiscences 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." |
+ | |
+ | BONNER 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 post-paid 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the |
+ | |
+ | NEW ILLUSTRATED HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL |
+ | |
+ | WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which will be Issued under date of April |
+ | 2, 1870, and thereafter weekly. |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO will be _National_, and not _local_; and will |
+ | endeavor to become a household word in all parts of the |
+ | country; and to that end has secured a |
+ | |
+ | VALUABLE CORPS OF CONTRIBUTORS |
+ | |
+ | in various sections of the Union, while its columns will |
+ | always be open to appropriate first-class literary and |
+ | artistic talent. |
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | The Artistic department will be in charge of Henry L. |
+ | Stephens, whose celebrated cartoons in VANITY FAIR placed |
+ | him in the front rank of humorous artists, assisted by |
+ | leading artists in their respective specialties. |
+ | |
+ | The management of the paper will be in the hands of WILLIAM |
+ | A. STEPHENS, with whom is associated CHARLES DAWSON SHANLY, |
+ | both of whom were identified with VANITY FAIR. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES, |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs, or suggestive |
+ | ideas sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable, and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications can not 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, |
+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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: THE WARNING OF THE BELLE
+
+LOOK OUT FOR THE TRAIN]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATRIOTIC ADORATION.
+
+A TALE OF PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ People of the Quaker City,
+ How the world must stand aghast
+ At your wondrous veneration
+ For those relics of the past,
+ Kept in such precise condition,
+ Fostered with such tender care--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Splendid are its walks and grass-plots
+ Where the bootblacks base-ball play,
+ And its seats resembling toad-stools,
+ On which loafers lounge all day,
+ Waiting for their luck, or gazing
+ At the office of the Mayor--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Then, behold the fine old State-house
+ Cleanly kept inside and out,
+ Where the faithful office-holders
+ Squirt tobacco-juice about:
+ Placards highly ornamental
+ Decorate its outward wall--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Hall?
+
+ O! ye gods and little fishes!
+ Could bill-sticker be so vile
+ As to paste up nasty posters
+ On the sacred classic pile?
+ Greece and Rome yet have their relics,
+ But what are they? very small.
+ Never half so venerated
+ As old Independence Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has hitherto refrained from criticising the periodicals of
+the day, from the mistaken idea that superlative excellence was not
+expected in every number of every daily or weekly journal in the land.
+He did not know that, if every such journal was not edited so as to suit
+the comprehension of all classes of cursory critics, it should be
+unqualifiedly condemned. Supposing that a painter should not condemn a
+paper for publishing a musical article beyond his comprehension, and
+that an architect ought not to get in a rage because he finds in his
+favorite journal a paper on beavers which makes him feel insignificant,
+PUNCHINELLO has generally looked around upon his fellow-journalists, and
+thought them very good fellows, who generally published very good
+papers. He did not find superlative excellence in any of their issues,
+but then he did not look for it. He might as well pretend to look for
+that in the journalists themselves, or in society at large. But he has
+lately learned, from the critics of the period, that he ought to look
+for it, and that it is the proper thing nowadays to pitch into every
+journal which does not, in every part, please every body, whether they
+be smart or dull; those quick of appreciation, or those slow gentlemen
+who always come in with their congratulations upon the birth of a joke
+at the time its funeral is taking place. And so, PUNCHINELLO will do as
+others do, and will occasionally view, from the loop-hole in his
+curtain, the successes and failures of his neighbors, and will give his
+patrons the benefit of his observations.
+
+The first thing he notices to-day is, that the _Evening Snail_ of last
+night is not so good as it was a fortnight ago; or, let us think a
+bit--it may have been a good number at the beginning of last month that
+he was thinking of; at all events, this last issue is inferior. The
+matter on the first page is not printed in nearly as good type as the
+original periodicals had it, and while the letters in the heading are
+quite fair, it is very noticeable that the I's are very defective, and
+there is no C in it. The "Gleanings" are excellent, and it would be
+advisable to have more of them--if indeed such a thing were possible in
+this case. The spider-work inside shows no acquaintance with the
+writings of BACH or GLIDDON, and there is nothing about the Spectrum
+Analysis in any part of the paper. Besides, the paper is too stiff and
+rattles too much, and PUNCHINELLO could never abide the color of the
+editor's pantaloons. Why will not people dress and write so that every
+body can admire and understand them. Especially in regard to witty
+things and breastpins They ought to be loud, overpowering, and so
+glaring that people could not help seeing them. And they ought to be a
+little cheap, too, or average people won't comprehend them. In both
+cases paste (and scissors) pays better than diamonds. The reports of
+private parties in the _Snail_ are, however, very good, and if it would
+confine its original matter to such subjects, it could not fail to
+succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Query for Physicians.
+
+Are people's tastes apt to become Vichy-ated by the excessive use of
+certain mineral waters?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Behold, how Pleasant a Thing 't is," etc.
+
+Boston has a couple of clergymen who have fallen out upon matters not
+precisely theological. In the summer, the Rev. Mr. MURRAY leaves his
+sheep, to shoot deer by torchlight in the Adirondacks. This the Rev. Mr.
+ALGER, in addressing the Suppression of Cruelty to Animals Society,
+denounces as extremely wicked. From all which Mr. PUNCHINELLO, taking up
+his discourse, infers,
+
+_First_. That it is a great deal more wicked to shoot deer by torchlight
+than by daylight.
+
+_Secondly_. That the Rev. MURRAY and the Rev. ALGER are of different
+religious persuasions.
+
+_Thirdly and lastly_. That the Rev. Mr. ALGER doesn't love venison.
+
+P. S. Persons desiring to present Mr. PUNCHINELLO with a fine haunch,
+(in the season,) may shoot it by daylight, moonlight, torchlight, or by
+a Drummond light, as most convenient.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We are indebted to Mr. SARONY for a number of brilliant photographs of
+celebrities of the day. Lovely woman is well represented the batch, with
+all the characters of which PUNCHINELLO hopes to present his readers,
+from time to time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District
+Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ALL ABOARD FOR HOLLAND!]
+
+PUNCHINELLO understands that a performance is soon to take place at the
+Academy of Music, for the benefit of GEORGE HOLLAND, the well-known and
+ever-green "veteran" of "the stage." It pleases PUNCHINELLO to know that
+a combination of talent and beauty is to be brought together for so
+worthy a purpose. Seventy-four years ago, when GEORGE HOLLAND was a
+small child, PUNCHINELLO used to dandle him upon his knee. Hardly four
+years have passed since PUNCHINELLO was convulsed by the _Tony Lumpkin_
+of HOLLAND. He distinctly remembers, too, administering hot whiskey
+punch to little boy HOLLAND with a tea-spoon, which may in some measure
+account for the Spirit subsequently infused by the capital comedian into
+the numerous bits of character presented by him. Considering these
+facts, it is manifestly an incumbent duty on the part of PUNCHINELLO to
+request the earnest attention of his readers to the subject of GEORGE
+HOLLAND'S benefit, all particulars concerning which will be given due
+time through the public press. It used to be said, long ago, that "the
+Dutch have taken Holland," Well, let our own modern Knickerbockers
+improve upon that notion, by taking HOLLAND'S tickets. Remember how,
+in the early settlement of the country, it was Holland that made
+New-York, and see that New-York now returns the compliment, and makes
+HOLLAND. Convivial songsters frequently remind us that--
+
+ --"a Hollander's draught should potent be,
+ And deep as the rolling Zuyder Zee."
+
+Mind this, all ye Hollanders who would give your support to our HOLLAND.
+Let your drafts be potent, your cheeks heavy, your attendance punctual.
+Make the affair complete; so that when, here-after, a comparison is
+sought for something that has been a sued people will say of it--"As big
+as that Bumper of HOLLAND'S."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ASTRONOMICAL CONVERSATIONS.
+
+(BY A FATHER AND DAUGHTER RESIDING ON THE PLANET VENUS.)
+
+No. I.
+
+FATHER (_to_ DAUGHTER, _who is looking through a telescope_.) Yes HELENE,
+that is the Planet Tellus, or Earth. The darker streaks are land; the
+bright spots, water. We begin with a low power, which shows only the
+masses; presently you will have the pleasure of discriminating not only
+rivers and chains of mountains, but cities--single houses--even Human
+Beings! Yes, you shall this very night read page of PUNCHINELLO, a paper
+so bright that every word appears surrounded by a halo!
+
+DAUGHTER. O father! do that _now_. How delightful, to actually read the
+works of these singular creature's, and become familiar with their
+extraordinary ideas! Were the scintillations you spoke of the other
+night, that were seen all over the Western Continent, the result of the
+flashing of these radiant pages?
+
+F. Undoubtedly, my child; they began with the first issue of the paper,
+and have since regularly increased in brightness, just as It has.
+
+D. It really seems as though Earth would answer for a Moon, by and by, at
+this rate!
+
+F. You are quite right, HELENE; it will. Or say, rather, a Sun. For you
+will observe that it is a _warm_ light; not cool, as reflected light
+always is. It is Original.
+
+D. Well, this shows that PUNCHINELLO must have some Heart, as well as
+Head. Come, put on your highest power now, and let us seem to pay good
+old Tellus a visit!
+
+[_The indulgent Father complies, and, is at some pains to adjust the
+focus_.]
+
+F. Now, dear! take a good look.
+
+D. (_Looking intently_.) Oh! how splendid--how splendid! _Do_ see the
+beautiful things in those Shop Windows! It must be the Spring Season
+there! _Do_ see those lovely lumps on the backs of those creatures'
+heads! What place is it, Father?
+
+F. That? It's New-York; and the street is the famous Broadway.
+
+D. O dear! how I _would_ like to go shopping there, this minute!--for I
+see it is afternoon in that quarter. Is there no way of getting
+there?(!!!)
+
+F. (_Laughing heartily_.) Well, well, HELENE! That's pretty good, for
+the daughter of an astronomer! Do you know that at this precise moment
+you are Forty-five Million, Six Hundred and Fifty-four Thousand, Four
+Hundred and Ninety-one Miles and a half from those Muslins! I'll tell
+you, Sis, what _could_ be done: Drop a line to the Editor of
+PUNCHINELLO, and tell him what you want. He'll get it, some way.
+
+D. That I will, instantly! [_Turns to her portfolio, while her father
+turns to the telescope_.]
+
+"DEAR MR. EDITOR: Pardon the seeming _boldness_ of a _stranger:_ you are
+no _stranger to me!_ Long, _long_ have I deceived that _good man_, my
+father, by _pretending_ to know _nothing_ of the Earth, or of his
+_instrument!_ Many and _many_ a night, _unknown to him_, have I gone to
+the _Telescope_, to satisfy the _restless craving_ I feel to know more
+of _your Planet_, and of a _person of your sex_ whom I have _often_
+beheld, and watched with _eagerness_ as he came and went. How
+_thrilling_ the thought, that he cannot even _know of my existence_, and
+that we are _forever separated!_ This, good and _dear_ Editor, is my one
+Thought, my one great Agony.
+
+"It has occurred to me that, in this _dreadful_ situation--my Passion
+being sufficiently Hopeless, as any one may see--you might at least
+afford me some slight _alleviation_, by undertaking to let Him know of
+the _interest_ he excites in this far-off star! Let me describe my
+charmer, so that you will be able to identify him. He is of fair size,
+with a rolling gait and a smiling countenance, has light hair and
+complexion, wears often a White Hat, (on the back of his head--where
+Thoughtful men always place the hat, I've been told by observers,) and
+now and then carelessly leaves one leg of his trowsers at the top of his
+boot. I have often seen him, with a bundle of papers in his pocket,
+entering a large building with the words "_Tribune_ Office" over the
+door--and I _adore_ him! O excellent Editor! tell him this, I _implore_
+you! Be kind to your distant and _love-lorn_ friend,
+
+HELENE."
+
+F. What did you say, Helene?
+
+D. I was saying that I wished to look a little longer at the fashions in
+Broadway.
+
+F. Well, well--I believe the Fashions are all that these women think of!
+There--look away! I presume they have changed considerably since you
+looked before! When do you wish to begin your lessons in Astronomy?
+
+D. Next week. Father; let me see: we will say, next week--Thursday.
+
+F. Very well; I shall remind you.
+
+D. (_who is determined to have the last word, any way_.) Very well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beach's Soliloquy on entering his Pneumatic Chamber.
+
+"TU-BE or not tu-be."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Reflection by a Tallow-chandler.
+
+Though a man be the Mould of fashion, yet he cannot light himself to bed
+by the Dip in his back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration: 'M']
+
+_MEN AND ACRES,_ the new comedy at WALLACK'S, is one of the best of
+TAYLOR'S pieces, and a decided improvement upon the carpenter work of
+BOUCICAULT. It has been rechristened by Mr. WALLACK, and its former
+name--_Old Men and New Acres, or New Aches and Old Manors,_ or something
+else of that sort--has been conveniently shortened. If it does not
+convince us that the author has improved since he first began to write
+plays, it certainly reminds us that there is such a thing as _Progress_.
+In the latter play, Mr. J.W. WALLACK was a civil engineer. In the
+present drama, he is an uncivil tradesman. Both appeal to the levelling
+tendencies of the age; and in each, the author has done his "level
+best"--as Mr. GRANT WHITE would say--to flatter the Family Circle at the
+expense of the Boxes.
+
+The cast includes a Vague Baronet and his Managing Wife, their Slangy
+Daughter, their Unpleasant Neighbor and his wife and daughter, an
+Unintelligible Dutchman, an Innocuous Youth, a Disagreeable Lawyer, and
+the Merchant Prince. This is the sort of way in which they conduct
+themselves,
+
+_Act_ 1. _Disagreeable Lawyer to Vague Baronet:_ "You are ruined, and
+your estate is mortgaged to a Merchant Prince. What do you intend to
+do?"
+
+_Vague Baronet._ "I will ask my wife what I think about it."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are we? Allow me to remark,
+Fiddlesticks! Get the Merchant to take our third-story hall-bedroom for
+a week, and I'll soon clear off the mortgage."
+
+_Enter Slangy Daughter._ "O ma! there was such a precious guy at the
+ball last night, and I had no end of a lark with him. Good gracious!
+here comes the duffer himself."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince. (Aside.)_ "So here's the Vague Baronet and his
+wife. And there's the slangy girl I fell in love with. Nice lot they
+are!" (_To Managing Wife._) "Madam, there is nothing, so grand as the
+majesty of trade. Your rank and blood are all gammon. We Merchant
+Princes are the only people fit to live. However, I'll condescend to
+speak to you."
+
+_Managing Wife. (Aside.)_ "How noble! What a gentlemanly person he
+really is!" _(To Merchant Prince.)_ "Sir, I bid you welcome. Here is my
+daughter, who was just praising your beauty and accomplishments. I leave
+you to entertain her." (_Exeunt Baronet, Wife, and Lawyer_.)
+
+_Merchant Prince (placing his chair next to Slangy Daughter's, and
+leaning his elbow on her.)_ "There is nothing like trade. We tradesmen
+alone are great. We despise the whole lot of clean and idle aristocrats.
+I keep a Gin Palace in Liverpool. Does your bloated aristocracy do half
+as much for suffering humanity?"
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Speak on, speak ever thus, O Noble Being! It's
+awfully jolly!"
+
+_Curtain falls, and Baker wakes up to lead his orchestra through the
+mazes of "Shoo Fly."_
+
+
+_Appreciative Lady._ "Isn't it nice? Miss HENRIQUES'S dress is perfectly
+beautiful, and it sounds so cunning to hear her talk slang."
+
+_Second Appreciative Lady._ "How handsome ROCKWELL looks! Just like a
+real baronet, my dear!"
+
+_Other Appreciative Ladies._ "The dresses at WALLACK'S are always
+perfectly exquisite. I mean to have my next dress made with a green silk
+fichu, a moire antique bertha, and little point lace peplums and
+gussets, just like Miss MESTAYER'S. Won't it be sweet?"
+
+_All the Counter-Jumpers in the Theatre._ "JIM WALLACK'S the boy! Don't
+he talk up to those aristocratic snobs, though?"
+
+
+_Act 2. Enter Unpleasant Neighbor and Unintelligible German. The former
+says,_ "You're sure there's an iron mine on the Baronet's land?"
+
+_Unintelligible German._ "Ya! Das ist um-um-um."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince and Slangy Daughter. Exeunt the other fellows._
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "There is nothing like the grandeur of trade; and yet
+we tradesmen are not proud. See! I offer to marry you."
+
+_Slangy daughter._ "I love you wildly! _(Aside.)_ I do hope he won't
+rumple my hair."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "Come to my arrums! The majesty of trade is so
+infinitely above any thing else"--_and so forth._
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Take her, noble Merchant, and be happy
+_(Aside.)_ This settles the affair of the mortgage." _(To Daughter)_
+"Come, darling, we'll go and tell your father." _(They go.)_
+
+_Enter Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here's a telegram for you. No bad news, I
+hope?"
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I am ruined unless you lend me £40,000. Do it, and I
+will assign to you the mortgage on the baronet's property. The majesty
+of trade is something which"--
+
+_Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here it is." _(Aside.)_ "Now I'll get possession
+of the estate and the iron-mine."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are you? Of course you can't have my
+daughter now."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I resign her. We tradesmen are infinitely greater
+than you aristocrats."
+
+_Curtain falls, Baker wakes up. "Shoo Fly" by the Orchestra, and remarks
+on dress by the ladies as before. Counter-jumpers go out to drink to the
+majesty of trade, having grown perceptibly taller since the play began._
+
+
+_Act 3. Unprincipled Neighbor to Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Have you got
+the analysis of the iron ore?"
+
+_Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Ya! Das its um-um-um."
+
+_Unprincipled Neighbor._ "All right! Now I'll foreclose the mortgage,
+and will be richer than ever."
+
+_Enter Vague Baronet, and Wife and Daughter, and Lawyer. To them
+collectively remarks the Unprincipled Neighbor,_ "The mortgage is due.
+As you can't pay, you've got to move out."
+
+_Disagreeable Lawyer._ "Not much! Here's an analysis of iron ore found
+on our land. We raised money on the mine, and are ready to pay off the
+mortgage."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. I told
+them all about it. We tradesmen are great, but we will sometimes help
+even a wretched aristocrat."
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. Now I will marry
+my noble Merchant, and make him rich again; for there's dead loads of
+iron on the Governor's land, you bet!"
+
+_They all produce analyses of the ore, and the play itself being o'er,
+the curtain falls._
+
+
+_Exasperated critic, who has sent for twelve seats, and has been
+politely refused._ "I'd like to abuse it, if there was a chance; but
+there isn't. The play is really good, and I can't find much fault with
+the acting. However, I'll pitch into STODDARD for swearing, which his
+'Unprincipled Neighbor' does to an unnecessary extent, and I'll say that
+JIM WALLACK is too old and gouty to play the 'Merchant Prince,' and
+doesn't quite forget that he used to play in the Bowery."
+
+_Every body else._ "Did you ever see a play better acted? And did you
+ever see actresses better dressed?"
+
+And PUNCHINELLO is constrained to answer the latter question with an
+emphatic No! As to the acting, it might be improved were Mr. STODDARD to
+play the character for which he is cast, instead of insisting upon
+playing nothing but STODDARD. But to all the rest of the actors, not
+forgetting Mr. RINGGOLD, who plays the insignificant part of the
+"Innocuous Youth," PUNCHINELLO is pleased to accord his gracious
+approval.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Balmy Idea.
+
+According to Miss ANTHONY, the crying evil with women is that they will
+blubber; but it must be remembered that out of this blubber they make
+oil to pour into our conjugal wounds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Suit for Damages.
+
+Any clothes in a storm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE POLITICAL MILL-ENNIUM.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS UPON HIGH ART.
+
+Observant visitors to the National Academy of Design will allow that a
+tendency to greatness is beginning to develop itself in certain
+directions among our artists. In landscape some of them are almost
+immense. The works of PORPHYRO warm the walls with rays of splendor, or
+cool the lampooned sight-line with pearly gradations, as the case may
+be. MANDRAKE renders feelingly the summer uplands and groves, and
+SILVERBARK the melancholy autumnal woods. BYTHESEA infuses with
+sentiment even the blue wreaths of smoke that curl up from the distant
+ridge against which loom the concentrated lovers that he selects for his
+idyllic romances. Gushingly he does his work, but thoroughly; and there
+are other flowers than lackadaisies to be discerned in his herbage.
+GUSTIBUS blows gently the foliage aside, and gives us glimpses through
+it of rural contentment in connection with a mill, or some other
+interesting object beyond. The pencil of SAGEGREEN imbues canvases, both
+large and small, with infinite variety and force; and it is to
+SKETCHMORE that the great lakes owe their remarkable reputation as
+pieces of water with poems growing out of their broad lily-pads. Very
+tender are the pastoral banks and brooksides of LEAFHOPPER. ELFINLOCKS
+takes up his pencil, and lo! a hazy, mazy, lazy, dreamy vista where it
+has touched. But hold! Our critical Incubus has taken the bit between
+her teeth, and is beginning to run away with us. Stop that; and let our
+readers enumerate the other first American landscape painters for
+themselves.
+
+Not so strong are our artists in domestic incidents and compositions of
+life and character. We have STUNNINGTON, to be sure, whose traits of
+American expression, whether white or colored, are most true to the
+life; and there's BARLEYMOW, who will twist you an eclogue from the tail
+of his foreground pig. Others there be; but space has its limits, and we
+forbear.
+
+As for our portrait limners, their name is Legion, and that
+comprehensive name must go for all. Like BENVENUTO CELLINI they shall be
+known for their jugs; and their transmission to posterity on the heads
+of families is a thing to be reckoned on as sure.
+
+For the higher flights of art the American painter is by no manner of
+means endowed with the wings of his native eagle--wings that agitate the
+cerulean vault, spattering it with splashes of creamy cloud-spray, and
+churning into butter the stretches of the Milky Way. History has indeed
+been illustrated by American art, but has it been enriched? The
+WASHINGTONS and the WEBSTERS, the CLAYS and the LINCOLNS, have had their
+memories dreadfully lampooned on canvas. Allegory does not inspire the
+great American pencil. Tall art there is, and enough of it "at that;"
+but of high art we have none to speak of, except the canvases that are
+placed over doorways in the galleries of the Academy, and, in the sense
+of elevation, may consequently be spoken of as high. All this is wrong.
+Alas! that we should write it. Would that we could right it! And to
+think of the musty subjects that our historical and allegorical men
+select. Ho! young men--away with your CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS; relegate
+your METAMORA to his proper limbo; let WASHINGTON alone; and LINCOLN;
+and OSCEOLA the Savage; and POCAHONTAS, and all the rest. Leave them
+alone; and, taking fresh subjects, dip your brushes in brains, as old
+OPIE or somebody else said, and go to work with a will. No fresh
+subjects to be had, you say? Bosh! absurd interlocutor that you are.
+Here's a bundle of 'em ready cut to hand. We charge you no money for
+them, and you may take your choice.
+
+SUBJECTS FOR WORKS OF HIGH ART.
+
+PROVIDENCE tempering the wind to the shorn lamb.
+
+ABSENCE OF MIND marking a box of paper shirt-collars with indelible ink.
+
+MILTON "going it blind."
+
+The late Mr. WILLIAM COBBETT teaching his sons to shave with cold water.
+
+ST. PATRICK emptying the snakes out of his boots.
+
+TRUE LOVE never running smooth.
+
+NO MAN acting _Hero_ to his _valet de chambre_.
+
+ROBERT BONNER taking DEXTER by the forelock with one hand, and TIME with
+the other.
+
+Subjects like these might be worked out to advantage. The field in which
+they are to be found is almost unlimited; and they possess abundantly
+the two grand essentials to success in art at the present time, as well
+as in literature--novelty and sensation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+H.G. and Terpsichore.
+
+AMONG the strange revelations about _Tribune_ people elicited during the
+MCFARLAND trial, was the bit of gossip about Mr. GREELEY going to
+Saratoga to "trip the light fantastic toe." That Mr. GREELEY'S toe is
+"fantastic," every body who has ever inspected his "Congress gaiters"
+must know, but as to its lightness we have our doubts. "What I know
+about dancing" would be a capital subject for H.G. to handle, and we
+hope that he will take Steps for doing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sweeny's New Charter.
+
+ How doth the busy Peter B.,
+ Improve each shining hour!
+ From nettled young Democracy,
+ He plucks the safety-flower.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From Rome.
+
+The POPE is said to be "out of Spirits." Why doesn't he come to
+New-York, where he can get plenty of the article, either in the sense of
+the Tap or in that of the Rap?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"He who was Born to be Hanged," etc.
+
+On one of the mornings of the MCFARLAND trial, a very importunate person
+attempted to force his way into the court-room, which, as he was told,
+was already crowded "to suffocation." To this he retorted that he
+"wasn't born to be suffocated." That's in substance what the late JACK
+REYNOLDS said, and _he_ was mistaken.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Difference.
+
+Rice riots are reported as raging in all the ports of Japan. Rye was the
+principal mover in the famous conscription riots of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Celestial Idea.
+
+No wonder the Chinese theatre in San Francisco is a success, considering
+how skilful the actors must be in catching the Cue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUMBLES.
+
+Did you ever hear of my friend BOOTSBY? "No." That's rather queer. I
+see--you've been out of town. BOOTSBY is a man of standing--of decided
+standing, I may say. He stands, in fact, a great deal. The heavy
+standing round he does is enormous when the limited capacity of a single
+mortal is taken in view. BOOTSBY stands round among every class of
+people, and especially of politicians and potationers. He stands round
+to talk, to hear, and especially to drink. The power of the man in this
+last matter is wonderful, and the puzzle is, that his standing (and
+perpendicularity) is not perceptibly affected. Of course there are times
+when BOOTSBY'S standing is not so good. In so slippery a place as Wall
+Street, it is found to be less certain; while in a crowd on Broadway,
+waiting for a bus, it cannot be said to maintain a very remarkable
+firmness. But as a whole, and as the world goes, BOOTSBY is a man of
+standing. In the altitude of six feet ten, he may be called a man of
+high standing. He feels proud of the fact. "Is it not better to be a
+mountain than a mole?" he often asks in a proudly sneering manner of his
+neighbor PUGGS, who is about as far up in the world as the top of a
+yard-stick. It is very true that size is not quality, and a seven-footer
+may be no better than a three-footer; but it is observed that a Short
+Man is rarely any thing else. His stature is his measure throughout. My
+own impression of myself is, that I don't care to be short; but if the
+alternative were forced upon me, I should choose that of person rather
+than of purse. BOOTSBY does not care much about money, and he carries
+very little. Some people are like BOOTSBY, but most people are not. The
+ladies, it is true, never, or rarely, want money. Like newspapers and
+club-houses, they are self-supporting. In fact they surround themselves
+with supporters which stay tightly. Mrs. TODD is peculiar in her wants
+pecuniary. She, good soul, never wants (or keeps) money long, but she
+doesn't want it _little_. She prefers it like onions, in a large bunch,
+and strong. The reason why most women do not want money is because they
+have no use for it. They never dress; they never wear jewelry; silks and
+satins have no charms in their eyes; laces, ribbons, shawls never tempt.
+To exist and walk upright in simpleness and quiet is the sum of their
+desires. Dear creatures! how is it that they never want?
+
+My neighbor, Mr. DROWSE, desires to know where you get all your funny
+things for PUNCHINELLO? He knows they are there, does Mr. DROWSE; for he
+gets my copy of the penny postman, and he keeps it, too. It is the only
+good taste my neighbor has displayed of late years. I tell Mr. DROWSE
+that you make your fun. He further asks, Where? I tell him in the
+attic--up there where they keep the salt. He desires to know the size of
+attic. Of course he has never seen your noble, capacious, alabaster
+forehead, else he would perceive the source of those scintillations of
+light and warmth which radiate throughout the universe every Saturday
+for only ten cents. He is curious also to know about the salt, and
+doesn't comprehend how or where you use it. He used to use it when a boy
+in catching birds by putting the briny compound on the tails of the
+same, and _that_ he used to call "fun alive;" but he don't see it--the
+salt--about PUNCHINELLO. I suspect Mr. DROWSE doesn't see the sellers,
+(certainly he avoids them when PUNCHINELLO is offered, much to my
+mortification, and one dime to my cost,) and so is not likely to discern
+the source of the fun. I merely informed Mr. DROWSE that the editor was
+very tall, very handsome, with very black skin and rosy hair, (at which
+he opened his eyes with astonishment, and asked if I meant so; at which
+I said, "Yes, I guess so,") and that he laughed out of his nose, eyes,
+head, and hands, as well as his mouth. DROWSE wants to see the editor
+very much. He has seen men with black skins and hearts, (for he used to
+know lots of politicians;) but wants to put his vision on some "rosy
+hair"--and when he does, no doubt his gaze will be fixed. It is healthy
+sometimes to have the gaze fixed; and often, like sauce-pans and
+sermons, it has to be fixed. When Mr. DROWSE calls at 83, please show
+him in Parlor 6 with the Brussels, fresco-work, and lace curtains.
+
+April is a model month. So serene, steady, clear, and balmy. Nothing
+but blue sky, gentle zephyrs, kissing breezes, genial suns by day and
+sparkling stars by night. PUNCHINELLO no doubt likes sparkling
+stars--stars of magnitude--stars that show what they are. PUNCHINELLO
+perhaps goes to NIBLO'S, and not only sees plenty stars, but plenty of
+them. But of April. It is called "fickle;" but that's a slander. "Every
+thing by turns and nothing long"--that is a libel on which a suit could
+be hung. The same vile falsehood is cruelly uttered of some women, when
+every body knows, or should know, that these same women are nothing of
+the sort. Who ever knew a fickle woman?
+
+Where in history is there record of such an Impossibility? Fickle--that
+implies a change of mind. What woman ever changed her mind any more than
+her hands? Nonsense, avaunt!--banished be slander! April is _not_
+fickle--woman is _not_ fickle. As one is evenly beautiful, divinely
+serene, bewitchingly winning, so is the other sunny, cerulean, balmy,
+paradisiacal. April for ever--after that the rest of the calendar.
+
+Does PUNCHINELLO believe in the Woman Movement? TODD does. He believes
+woman should move as much as man; and he regards her movement in such
+numbers to the great West as full of hope (and husbands) for the sex.
+Mrs. TODD has not as yet been irresistibly seized by the movement; but
+if TIMOTHY knows himself, he longs for the day when the seizer may come.
+Although TODD--who is the writer of this epistle--says it, who perhaps
+shouldn't, lest the shaft of egotism be hurled mercilessly at him, he
+does unhesitatingly say that to aid this movement he would make the
+greatest of sacrifices. He is willing to sacrifice his wife and other
+female relations upon the sacred altar of the movement, and contribute
+liberally to the expense thereof. He is quite willing they should
+vote--early and often, if need be; but he wishes to see the movement go
+westward like the Star of Empire--westward _viâ_ cheerful Chicago. TODD
+trusts PUNCHINELLO will espouse this movement; for if it does, it--the
+movement, no less than PUNCHINELLO--will go straight onward and upward;
+but not by the route known as the Spout.
+
+Mucilage is a good thing. It is now extensively used in Church, State,
+and Society. We use it largely at the Veneerfront Avenue Church, of
+which Rev. Dr. ALEXANDER PLASTERWELL is pastor. Of course, Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO, you know that distinguished church, and have no doubt often
+listened to the distinguished Dr. PLASTERWELL. He is a kind man, has a
+high forehead, a Roman (Burgundy) nose, and a sweet, soft head--I should
+say heart. He has--great and good man--the largest faith in mucilage. He
+often makes it a text, and he sticks to it, he does--does Dr.
+PLASTERWELL. Nothing like mucilage, PUNCHINELLO. It is the hope of the
+human race, and the salvation of woman. It is the Philosopher's Stone in
+solution; the essence and link which connects and cements all that is
+great, good, and lovely, in the past, present, and future. At least,
+such is the humble opinion of
+
+TIMOTHY TODD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS TO CAR CONDUCTORS.
+
+When standing in Printing House Square, your destination being Grand
+Street Perry or Bleecker Street, if a stranger asks whether you are
+going to Harlem, nod, as it is considered improper to answer in the
+negative. If he finds out the mistake, you can plead deafness.
+
+When called upon to stop, never attempt to comply. There are several
+reasons why you should not. In the first place, if you did stop, it
+would show that you have no will of your own, and since the passage of
+the Fifteenth Amendment, _all_ men are equal in this country.
+
+You may stop about two blocks from the place named, just to please
+yourself and prove your independence; but take particular care to start
+the car when the passenger is half off the steps. If there is a young
+surgeon in the neighborhood, you can enter into an arrangement to break
+arms and legs in this way with impunity, have the maimed "carried into
+the surgery," and share the fees with the operator. Occasional cases of
+manslaughter may take place; but don't mind that, as coroners' juries in
+New-York will return verdicts of "death from natural causes." Besides
+this, remember that you have a vote, and that both coroners and judges
+are dependent upon the people. When a lame old gentleman hails you,
+beckon him furiously to come on, but be sure, at the same time, to urge
+the driver to greater speed.
+
+It is no part of your business to have change, so never give any, but
+drive on: people should provide for and look after their own business
+and that is none of yours.
+
+Always drive through the centre of a target company or funeral
+procession, never minding whether you kill one or more, and then abuse
+the captain or the undertaker for his stupidity.
+
+By the adoption of these essential rules, and by adding a good deal of
+incivility, you will soon reach the top of the wheel of your profession
+and in due time have a testimonial presented to you by an admiring and
+grateful public.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Out in the Cold.
+
+Commissioner Tweed proposes a new outside Bureau of the Department of
+Public Works, for late-Commissioner MCLEAN. He is to be Superintendent
+of Refrigerators.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS.
+
+ENGRAVED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION FOR PUNCHINELLO, FROM THE ORIGINAL
+PAINTING, BY MILES STANDISH, IN THE COLLECTION OF METHUSELAH PILGRIM,
+ESQ., OF PILGRIMSVILLE, MASS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO CAPTAIN HALL.
+
+(IN ANTICIPATION OF HIS TRIP TO THE POLE.)
+
+ HALL! HALL!
+ D'ye hear our call?
+ Or, do you fancy it to be
+ A weather sign--merely the pre-
+ Monition of a squall
+ At sea!
+ HALL!
+
+ You pay no heed at all.
+ Nevertheless, O hardy mariner!
+ (A Snow-Bird brings this with our kindest love,)
+ We're sorry you prefer
+ Those frigid walks (ever so far above
+ The 80th parallel, we guess!)
+ To stocks, and tariffs, and domestic bliss;
+ Yes, yes,
+ Captain, we're sorry it has come to this!
+
+ Why do you madly thirst
+ For grog that's chopped up with a hatchet? say!
+ And tell us of the first
+ Strange thought which spurred you to go up that way!
+ Was it the hope that on some icy coast
+ (Frozen, yourself, almost!)
+ You'd have the luck to meet poor FRANKLIN'S ghost?
+
+ And has it seemed, sometimes,
+ That drowning might be pleasanter up there
+ Among the icebergs, native to those climes,
+ Than where
+ The surf breaks gently on some coral-reef,
+ And sirens sweetly soothe one's slow despair?
+ Say, was that your belief?
+
+ And who is BENT?[*]
+ Why was _he_ sent,
+ With his Warm Currents wheeling round the Pole?
+ A long, long race must his disciples run:
+ No sun,
+ No fun,
+ No chance to toss a word to any one;
+ And what a goal?
+
+ As hopefully you munch
+ The flinty biscuit, watching whale or seal,
+ Or listening, undaunted, to the crunch
+ Of ice-floes at the keel,
+ Say, Sir Intrepid! shall you really think
+ You pioneer the navies of the world?
+ Not while the chink
+ Of well-housed dollars sounds so pleasantly,
+ And safer tracks map out the treacherous sea!
+ If that's your dream, oh! let your sails be furled.
+
+ But, no!
+ It is not this! Your spirit, high and bold,
+ Scorning all tamer joys, will have it so!
+ No cold
+ Can chill its ardor! Such a soul would sate
+ Its deathless craving in some lofty flight,
+ Some deed sublime, and read its shining fate
+ By the Aurora's light!
+ For fruitful fellowship, it seeks the wild,
+ The frozen waste,
+ Where the world's venturous heroes--reconciled
+ To sunless, shuddering gloom--
+ To joyless solitude--with ardor taste
+ Their dread delights! and so at last find room,
+ 'Mid nodding icebergs, for their watery tomb!
+
+ For this, we spare you,
+ O dauntless HALL! Once having breathed that air
+ So pure, so fresh, so rare!
+ And caught the wildness of the Esquimaux,
+ We declare you
+ Unfit to live where beans and lettuce grow!
+ Leave delving to the little pitiful mole,
+ Great soul!
+ And now, then, for the Pole!
+
+[Footnote *: Captain BENT, of Cincinnati, originator of the new theory
+of Polar Currents.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FINANCIAL RELIEF
+
+MR. BUMBLE BOUTWELL TO MRS. CORNEY FISH. _(See Oliver Twist.)_ "THE GREAT
+PRINCIPLE OF FINANCIAL RELIEF IS TO GIVE THE BUSINESS MEN EXACTLY WHAT
+THEY DON'T WANT: THEN THEY GET TIRED OF COMING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+MR. SUMNER said he was the friend of the oppressed. That, as was well
+known, was his regular business. Unfortunately, the Fifteenth Amendment
+had rendered the colored man incapable of being hereafter regarded as an
+oppressed creature. He was sorry, but it could not be helped. He was
+therefore forced to go down the chromatic scale of creation and find
+another class of clients. He found them in cattle. HOMER had sung about
+the ox-eyed Juno, and WALTER WHITMAN about bob veal. COWPER had remarked
+that he would not number in his list of friends the man who needlessly
+set foot upon a cow. He mentioned these things merely to show that
+railway companies had no right to starve cattle. He proposed an
+amendment to the Constitution, to provide that a dinner of at least
+three courses should be given to cows daily. Mr. DRAKE was heartily in
+favor of the proposition. He had got his feet in a web, so to speak, by
+paddling in the political waters of Missouri, and some people had gone
+so far as to call him "quack." He demanded redress.
+
+Mr. WILSON didn't see the use of all this legislation to protect
+animals. Animals had no votes, although he admitted a partial exception,
+in that every bull, it had its ballot. But he had something practical.
+Here was a jolly job, the Pacific Railway grant. There was a good deal
+more in it than they had made out of any other GRANT. Mr. THURMAN'S
+suggestion, that this land ought to be occupied by actual settlers, he
+scorned. "Actual settlers" were of a great deal more use to him in
+Massachusetts, where they could vote for him, than in the territories,
+where that boon would not be extended to them. It was much better that
+they should be occupied by imaginary settlers, who could pay and not
+vote. Actual "settlings" were the dregs of humanity.
+
+The Georgia bill came up, as it does every day with much more regularity
+than luncheon. The Senate has succeeded in muddling it to that degree of
+unintelligibility that nobody has the slightest notion what it provides.
+It is, therefore, in a condition to give rise to infinite debate. After
+several senators had said enough for a foundation for thirty columns
+each in the _Globe,_ they let it go for the present. The present was the
+one promised by Senator WILSON in return for the Pacific Railway grab
+grant.
+
+HOUSE.
+
+The House is given over to the tariff. A very indelicate discussion has
+been had upon corsets. Mr. BROOKS was of opinion that the corset would
+tariff it were subjected to any more strain in the way of duties. Mr.
+MARSHALL remarked that the corset avoided a great deal of Waist. It was
+whalebone of his bone, or something of that sort. It was one of the main
+Stays of our social system.
+
+Mr. SCHENCK made another speech. He ripped up the foreign corset in a
+truculent manner. He said that American corsets were far superior, only
+American women had not the sense to see it. The effect of taking off the
+duty on corsets would be to take off the corsets.
+
+Mr. BROOKS called the hooks and ayes on the corsets. Mr. SCHENCK opposed
+the call. He had found a simple tape much preferable. He wished a
+coffer-dam might be put upon the roaring BROOKS.
+
+Somebody at this point brought up a contested election case; but Mr.
+LOGAN objected to its being considered. What, he asked, was the use of
+wasting time? There was money in the tariff. There was no money at all
+in voting a Democrat out, and a Republican in. They could do that any
+day in five minutes. His friend Mr. BUTLER had recently remarked, one
+Democrat more or less made no difference. But Mr. BUTLER forgot that the
+larger the majority, the larger the divisor for spoils, and therefore
+the smaller the quotient and the "dividend." He did not know much about
+arithmetic. He had never been at West Point; but he believed that a
+million dollars, for instance, would go further and fare worse among two
+hundred men than among three. If the House were not careful, there would
+be a glut of Republicans in it, and the shares would be pitifully
+meagre. As for him, he had a great mind, (derisive cheers)--he repeated,
+that he had a great mind to vote for a Democrat next time.
+
+In spite of Mr. LOGAN'S warning, the House voted in a couple or so of
+Republicans, and then resumed the duty on wool.
+
+Mr. Cox thought this wool had been pulled over the eyes of the house
+often enough. It reminded him of an expedition, of which Mr. LOGAN had
+never heard, in search of a "Golden Fleece."
+
+Mr. JENCKES, and Mr. SCHENCK, and Mr. KELLEY called him to order in
+behalf of their constituents, who were in the wool business, and said
+that "wool" in one form or another had always been the staple of their
+political career.
+
+Mr. BUTLER said he had a little game worth two of that. He wanted to buy
+San Domingo. In this there were plenty of commissions, and hundreds of
+thousands of colored votes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT.
+
+ALDERMANIC RECEPTION UP-TOWN.
+
+ CAESAR, walk in! Ah POMPEY! how d'e do?
+ This way, CLEM! Gentlemen, please walk right through!
+ GEORGE, how's your mother? Fine day, PETE--fine day!
+ Well, how are things down there at Oyster Bay?
+
+ Ah AUNTIE! how's your rheumatiz, this spring?
+ Well, Mr. JOHNSON, did you try that sling?
+ Why, this is Uncle STEVE! How-do-you-do.
+ Uncle? Sit down. What can I do for you?
+
+ Well, Mr. PRINCE! You must be busy, now.
+ Whitewashing is the best thing done, I vow!
+ Why, hel-lo! REGIS! From the Cape so soon?
+ When do you open, this year--first of June?
+
+ Come, gentlemen--some wine? Now, don't refuse!
+ What! temperate? teetotal? Well, that's news!
+ And good news, too! Well, coffee, then. You see,
+ My friends, the _sentiment's_ the thing with me.
+
+ The real Mocha, AUNTIE! Simon pure!
+ Raised by free Arabs. For I can't endure
+ A single thing that's flavored with a Wrong!
+ Yes, AUNTIE, you are right, I've "come out strong!"
+
+ So have the Colored People, I may say!
+ (One fact explains the other, up this way!)
+ They've proved their strength! It's settled, sure as a gun,
+ That every Colored Voter now counts One!
+
+ Now, gentlemen, you'll be surprised to find
+ So many people with your turn of mind!
+ But, sure as tricks! remember what I say--
+ You'll learn some things before Election Day!
+
+ POMPEY--'twon't take much time, (and you can spare it!)
+ Try this old fiddle, picked up in the garret!
+ Good? It's your fiddle! AUNTIE, here's a pound
+ Of that same genuine Mocha, ready ground!
+
+ Say, Uncle STEVE, I've got a fish for you,
+ Down at the market. Call again, PETE; do!
+ I'll have a job for you and CAESAR soon:
+ It's only waiting for a change of moon.
+
+ CLEM, how'd you like a chance to wait on table?
+ Or, would you rather drive, and run my stable?
+ GEORGE, in the kitchen there's a pan of souse!
+ Going? All gone? Now, BRIDGET, air the house!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Historic Parallel.
+
+THE JACK CADE movement came near destroying London. The Ar-Cade movement
+threatens to destroy Broadway.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A CHEAP LUXURY.
+
+SNIFFLES LOVES THE SMELL OF ROASTED CHESTNUTS, AND ENJOYS IT FOR HOURS
+EVERY DAY; BUT HE NEVER EATS ANY--WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR THE JOYOUS EXPRESSION
+ON THE FACE OF THE VENDER.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BUSINESS.
+
+A CHICAGO LAY.
+
+ I saw her sweet lip quiver,
+ As he started for the store.
+ Because he hadn't kissed her
+ "Several" times or more.
+
+ She cried "This horrid business!"
+ And then flew to her glass;
+ "Oh! why his cold remissness?
+ Have I grown plain, alas?"
+
+ But no, that truthful article
+ Revealed her charms intact,
+ She hadn't lost one particle,
+ But had improved, in fact.
+
+ At nine the case was opened,
+ At ten the case was o'er;
+ The jury brought their virdict--
+ She was his wife no more.
+
+ That night the husband started,
+ And--"_you_ bet"--he swore,
+ To find his wife departed,
+ And "_To Let_" on the door.
+
+ Next day he moved and married.
+ And, that his bride might stay,
+ He kissed her every morning
+ Before he went away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Pot-umania.
+
+A correspondent writes that a new mania has sprung up among the ladies
+of Edinburgh--a fancy for learning to cook. There is a much older mania
+in some parts of that country--a fancy for something to cook.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+About a Foot.
+
+A BOOT when it's on.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IMPORTANT TO PUBLISHERS.
+
+One of our corps of Philosophers (a trifle visionary, perhaps) has been
+speculating as to certain possible (or, perhaps, impossible) results
+flowing from the practice among publishers of ante-dating their monthly
+issues. Thus, supposing that the world should be destroyed by fire (and
+why not? it is bad enough) on the 15th of May, 1870, and a cover of,
+say, _Putnam's_ for June, carried up by an air-current, should, after
+floating about ever so long in space, finally descend on some friendly
+planet--we will say, Venus. Here it would naturally get picked up by an
+archaeologist, (who would be on the spot looking out for it,) and the
+interesting relic would be promptly and reverently deposited among the
+other Vestiges of Creation, in the Royal Cabinet. In the course of
+years, some historian would probably have occasion to turn over these
+curiosities, and would presently light on the scorched but still legible
+waif. "Why," says he, in astonishment, "I thought the earth was burnt on
+the 15th of May! To be sure, it was _in the night_, and nobody saw it
+go, [think of that, conceited Worldling!] but it was missed by somebody
+the day after. But here we have a document from the late unfortunate
+planet dated the first of June!"
+
+Of course, upon this the History of the Universe would have to be
+rewritten, or that odd fortnight would play the mischief somewhere!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Boston Boy.
+
+HUB-BUB.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Curses Come Home to Roost."
+
+They are putting the Fifth Avenue pavement in front of the City Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Politicians.
+
+Will the working of the Fifteenth Amendment oblige a candidate to show
+his Color before election?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So We Go!
+
+We notice, with much agitation and a reasonable amount of grief, that
+somebody in Philadelphia (possibly Miss ANNA DICKINSON) has invented a
+machine for the laundry called The King Washer! A few years ago it would
+have been The Queen Washer; but in these days the name seems to indicate
+that to Man, unhappy Man, will speedily be committed the destinies of
+the weekly washing. Oh! the rubbing, the rinsing, the wringing. But Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO has already communicated to Mrs. PUNCHINELLO his sentiments
+upon this subject. Under no circumstances will he get at the family
+linen. He must make a stand somewhere, and he makes it here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let them Bark.
+
+Miss BARKALOW has been admitted to practice at the bar in St. Louis. We
+have frequently before seen young ladies at a bar, where others
+practiced more than they did; but we do not see why, if Miss BARKALOW
+wishes to bark aloud, she should not be allowed to bark, aloud or
+otherwise. Barking may be particularly good in a cross-examination; but
+we presume that a lady attorney's bark will be always worse than her
+bite.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"She Stoops to Conquer."
+
+The girl with the Grecian Bend.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query.
+
+Is it allowable for a Temperance man to be Cordial to his friends?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Weak as Water.
+
+Our cynical friend A. QUARIUS writes us from Philadelphia, that
+considering the manner in which the Sunday liquor law is enforced in
+that city, he thinks his native place is still entitled--perhaps more
+than ever entitled to be called the city of Rye-tangles. This is
+ungrateful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPIRITUAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF CATS.
+
+DEAR PUNCHINELLO: Our Society has been very learnedly debating as to
+whether Cats are susceptible of spiritual impressions; and, although the
+burden of opinion inclines to the negative of the question, I am firmly
+persuaded there is much to justify a contrary judgment.
+
+As I slept the other night, neither dreaming nor holding psychological
+intercourse of any description with outsiders, I was awakened suddenly
+about the first hour of the morning by a noise. I am quite certain it
+was a noise, and have therefore no hesitation in so recording it. The
+new moon hung athwart the western sky, and a few fleecy clouds were
+chasing each other like snow-drifts across the blue vault of the night.
+I may likewise note the fact that the stars were doing what they usually
+do, notwithstanding the difference of opinion that sometimes exists as
+to what that is. It was the evening after "wash-day," and family linen,
+in graceful curves and undulating outlines, everywhere met the eye as it
+turned from contemplating the stars to contemplating the clothes-lines
+in the gardens. But I wander. The noise? Ah! yes. Well, it was not like
+the collision of two hard substances, but rather of the heavy "thud"
+order of sound, like the descent of a solid into a soft substance; say,
+for instance, of a flat-iron into a jar of unrisen buck-wheat batter. I
+glanced along the ghostly battalions of family linen; along the fences
+traversed by feline sentries; along the latticed arbors; but nothing to
+indicate the origin of the alarm could be discovered, and as at that
+moment a breeze stirred in the apartment, producing a chilling
+sensation, I thought it prudent to jump back into bed.
+
+Next morning, upon making my usual visit to note the progress of the
+early bulbs in the flower-beds, I encountered at the further end of the
+garden the remains of a cat--a portly and ancient grimalkin of the
+sterner sex. Close at hand was a bottle lying face downward, and corked.
+I raised it--first in my hands, and then to my lips. The cork fell out,
+accidentally as it were, and, as a consequence, death. "Poor thing!" I
+murmured; "poor--" and a portion of the contents glided carelessly down
+my throat. I perceived that the liquid was "Old Rye." As I stooped down,
+tears would have come to my eyes; but it was useless, seeing that the
+breath had left the unfortunate's body. Nevertheless, I rested my hand a
+moment upon his head, and then glided it in a semi-professional manner
+along the line of dorsal elevation, until I came to a deep depression in
+his backbone, which corresponded exactly with the convexity of the
+bottle. Then I saw at once how it was; this missile, (in the heat of
+passion, being mistaken for an empty one, probably,) had been hurled by
+some treacherous hand upon the unsuspecting Tom, striking him midway
+between the root of the tail and the base of the brain, causing instant
+suspension of his vertebral communications, "Poor thing! You were the
+victim of a Catastrophe. You were also the victim of the bottle. The
+'Rye' was too heavy for you, and should have been drawn milder." This
+said, I turned sadly away to find a burial spade, and it then occurred
+to me that this little incident was kindly meant to confirm my view that
+cats are susceptible, even to a fatal extent, of spiritual
+impressions--especially when conveyed by spirits of "Old Rye."
+
+GOBBO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the Tombs.
+
+When a drunken man has been locked up for beating his wife, it is
+reasonable to suppose that he must feel rather the worse for lick her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PERSONAL GOSSIP.
+
+(From the Daily Press.)
+
+"A SON OF ONE OF OUR WEALTHIEST RESIDENTS DISPLAYS GREAT TALENTS AS A
+SCULPTOR. HE IS BUT NINE YEARS OLD."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A BIT OF NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+Naturalists tell us that the _Aye-aye_ is a small animal of Madagascar,
+with sharp teeth, long claws, and a tail; which eats whatever it can
+grab, and says nothing day or night but _aye-aye_. Now, we find that,
+AGASSIZ to the contrary notwithstanding, this strange and not very
+useful animal is indigenous to the State of Pennsylvania. It especially
+frequents Harrisburg; and may be seen and heard any day there, in the
+Senate or House. Being an active member of that House, your
+correspondent has been present during the passage of three hundred bills
+within a week or two, in about one hundred and ten of which he had some
+personal interest.
+
+Lifting his eyes one day from his newspaper, when the Speaker took the
+vote on an "Act to amend the Incorporation of the City of Philadelphia,"
+which your correspondent happened to know included the presentation of a
+three-story brownstone front to each of a committee of six members of
+the House, he found there was not one member in his seat; but, in the
+place of a few, there was a company of these remarkable _Aye-ayes_,
+responding duly to the call for a vote; but never a _no_ among them. No,
+no!
+
+Now, your correspondent holds the deliberate opinion that, in several
+respects, these aforesaid small animals of Madagascar might be an
+improvement upon the average Pennsylvania legislators. And, if your
+correspondent had to do with getting up the other one hundred and ninety
+bills, as he did the one hundred and ten, all right: Otherwise, _not_.
+How does PUNCHINELLO regard it?
+
+Yours, LEGISLATOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Augean Job.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has telegraphed to Governor GEARY his approval of the
+"Sewage Utilization" bill at Harrisburg, on one condition: that the
+first piece of work be finished up by the members of the Pennsylvania
+Legislature with their own hands; that work to be, to make up into
+_decent_ manure, _deodorized_ and _disinfected_, all bills passed at the
+late session of their House and Senate. Since, however, complete
+deodorization is probably _impossible_, PUNCHINELLO advises also that
+the said members be required to cart all their stuff out to the Bad
+Lands of Nebraska, and remain there to make the best use of it; or else
+make a contract with Captain HALL to ship it and them to the Arctic
+regions at once.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the Finances.
+
+Says Crispin, "Did not somebody say it was BOUTWELL in the Treasury now?
+A great mistake. About well, to be sure! When the newspaper men have
+111-1/2 of gold, and I haven't a round dollar! Where did they get it?
+And then the legal tender question. I never asked but _one_ tender
+question in all my life, and that was to SUSAN and she said, Yes. And
+then we were legally married. Nobody ought to ask such questions _out
+loud_; it's not _decent_. And _fine answering_ an't much better.
+Financiering, is it? Ah! well. _Specious assumption_, too; but that
+requires brass, and I want _gold_. Meantime, who's got a twenty-five
+cent note?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Massachusetts Flats.
+
+Massachusetts must abound in Flats. Its Legislature is annually agitated
+from the sands of Cape Cod to the hills of Berkshire over the question.
+It is said to be wisdom to set a rogue to catch a rogue. Is it equally
+so to set a flat to catch one?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NATIONAL TAXIDERMY.
+
+[Illustration 'P']
+
+PUNCHINELLO has for some time past carefully considered the subject of
+our national tariff of imposts, (_that is to say, he happened to see, in
+a Tribune, the other day, that lucifer matches were now to be stamped
+separately, and not by the box, as heretofore_) and he has come to the
+conclusion, after duly weighing in his mind all the arguments for and
+against the present system of taxation, (_that is to say, he made up his
+mind the minute he read the article_,) that what the present tariff
+needs, is a more thorough application and a better classification; or,
+what the technologists call Taxonomy, which term is suggested to him by
+a work on the subject which he has been recently studying. (_That is to
+say, he looked in the dictionary to find out what Taxidermy meant, and
+seeing Taxonomy there, snapped it up for a sort of collateral pun_.) As
+an illustration of what our impost legislators (or imposters) ought to
+be, let us take the Taxidermist. He is one who takes from an animal
+every thing but his skin and bones, and stuffs him up afterward with all
+sorts of nonsense. Now, our National Taxidermists ought to take a lesson
+from their original. Many of the good people of the United States have
+much more left them than their skin and bones. Why is not all that
+taken? The condition of the ordinary stuffed animal of the shops is
+strikingly significant of what should be expected of loyal communities.
+(_That is to say, communities which vote a certain ticket which need not
+be named here_.) It is often said that there are things which flesh and
+blood will not bear. Now, a thorough system of Taxidermy remedies all
+this. A stuffed 'possum, for instance, having no flesh or blood, will
+bear any thing. When the people of this country are thoroughly cleaned
+out, they will be just as docile. Among the things which PUNCHINELLO
+would recommend as fit subjects of taxation, is a man's expenses. They
+have not been taxed yet. If he pays for his income, why not for his
+outgoes? The immense sums that are annually expended in this country for
+this, that, and the other thing ought certainly to yield a revenue to
+the government. (_That is to say, there ought to be a new army of
+collectors and assessors appointed. P. knows lots of good men out of
+office_.) And then there's a man's time. Why not tax that? Nearly every
+man spends a lot of time, and he ought to pay for it. As it would be our
+tax, it could not be a very minute tax, although it is only the second
+tax which we have suggested. (_That is to say--- something pun-ny_.) And
+besides these things, there's energy. We often hear of a man's energies
+being taxed; but, so far as the matter is apparent to the naked eye, it
+is difficult to see whose energies are taxed for the good of the
+government at the present day. This subject should certainly be
+investigated. (_That is to say, a committee of Congressmen should be
+appointed, with power to send for persons, papers, and extra
+compensation_.) Politics, too. Every man has his politics, (_that is to
+say, every man except Bennett_,) and they ought to be taxed, if for no
+other reason than the great impetus the measure would give to the
+erection of fences throughout the land. And letters, too. If every one
+sent by the mail should yield one cent to the Treasury, how the currency
+would be inflated in that locality! (_That is to say, in the locality to
+which the collectors would abscond_.) But it is impossible, with the
+limited time at his disposal, for PUNCHINELLO to enter into a full
+examination and elucidation of this subject. (_That is to say, he can't
+think of any more illustrations just now, and the printer wouldn't stand
+any more, if he could_.) But it must be admitted that the great task of
+opening up the country, of which we hear so much, will never be complete
+until the Washington skinners and stuffers get us all into the prepared
+specimen condition. (_That is to say, when the people are all willing
+to_ "_dry up_.")
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JOHN CHINAMAN'S BILLING AND COOING.--Pigeon English.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CABLE NEWS.
+
+(EXCLUSIVELY FOR PUNCHINELLO.)
+
+QUEEN ISABELLA has sent her compliments to Señor CASTELAR, as well as to
+General PRIM, informing them that, on the whole, she thinks she will
+_not_ return to the throne of Spain. It does not agree with her quiet
+and refined tastes and habits to live so much in public. All she wants
+now is a little _château en Espagne_. She proposes to send her son,
+Prince of ASTURIAS, to Professor CASTELAR, to study modern history. Is
+it not odd, by the way, that a country so long _Mad-rid-den_ as Spain,
+should have now a governor with such a name as PRIM? But, what's in a
+name? BOURBON, by any other name, would smell as sweet. Some, however,
+prefer Old Rye. I prefer _water_ to both; _especially_ to BOURBON.
+
+It's an old story that _two positives make a negative_. Paris news tells
+us that a late will case has exemplified this. COMTE, you know, was a
+_positive_ philosopher. He had a positive wife. She had a will of her
+own. He wrote a will of his own. Consequently, it got into court. Mme.
+COMTE it seems, who did not agree with the philosophy while the
+philosopher lived, wanted his MSS. after his death. Positively, the
+court did not see it in that light; and so the negative came out. It was
+a case of no go, or _non-ego_, as HEGEL might have called it. Did you
+ever read HEGEL? I didn't; and I advise you not to begin. It won't pay.
+I am told that he divided all things into Egos, She goes, and Non-egos,
+or No-goes. The latter particularly; So do I.
+
+But to return to Spain; or rather to Paris. Don FRANÇOIS D'ASSISSI has,
+it appears, suddenly discovered that his wife is not Queen of Spain so
+much as she was. Much less so. So, he has found her company rather
+expensive than agreeable; and proposes to abdicate it. Not so _very_
+much of an ass, is he? Bravo for Don FRANÇOIS!
+
+In London, _to-morrow_ will be made famous in literature by _the_ great
+dinner in honor of the advent of PUNCHINELLO. Mr. PUNCH is talked of to
+preside. An unprecedented rush for tickets has begun. More about it in
+my next.
+
+PRIME.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cutting.
+
+We see extensively advertised the "Saxon Razor;" but have not yet
+summoned up sufficient courage to try this article, which "no
+gentleman's dressing-case should be without." We cannot dispossess our
+minds of the apprehension of cutting ourselves, remembering that line
+descriptive of the combat between FITZ-JAMES and RODERICK DHU, in which
+it is said, that,
+
+ "----thrice the Saxon blade drank blood."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Musical.
+
+The vocal abilities of hens are admitted; but they rarely attempt the
+Chro-matic scale.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+De Jure.
+
+No man can now be a juror who knows any thing about the case which he is
+to try. Thus a juryman was challenged in the MCFARLAND case merely
+because he belonged to Dr. BELLOWS's church. It was held that he might
+possibly have got Wind of the matter while listening to the Doctor's
+discourse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOK NOTICES.
+
+AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT. Boston: ROBERTS BROTHERS.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+The author of "Little Women" seeks, and not without success, to draw
+from her "Old-Fashioned Girl" a contrast and a moral. She presents to
+our view two young ladies of opposite "styles." One is fresh and rural:
+the other isn't. The difference between country and city bringing-up is
+the point aimed at; and the difference is about as great as that between
+the warbling of woodside birds and the jingle of one of OFFENBACH'S
+tunes on a corner barrel-organ. The book is neatly set forth, with
+illustrations by Messrs. ROBERTS, BROTHERS, of Boston.
+
+RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. By the author of "Cometh up as a Flower," etc.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+A readable book, notwithstanding that there are several naughty
+characters in it, or perhaps _because_ there are. Probably it depicts
+with truth the kind of society presented. If so, all the worse for
+society. Shall we never again have healthful, virtuous novels of the old
+school, such as "Tom Jones?" The book is published in tasteful form by
+Messrs. D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE OFFERING |
+ | |
+ | Extraordinary Inducements, |
+ | |
+ | IN PRICE, STYLE, AND QUALITY, |
+ | |
+ | TO HOUSEKEEPERS |
+ | |
+ | IN |
+ | |
+ | Linens, Sheetings, |
+ | |
+ | DAMASKS, NAPKINS, TOWELLINGS, |
+ | |
+ | DRESS LINENS, PRINTED LINENS, |
+ | |
+ | FLANNELS, BLANKETS, QUILTS, |
+ | |
+ | COUNTERPANES, SHEETINGS, |
+ | |
+ | Bleached and Brown Cottons, |
+ | |
+ | Standard American Prints, etc., etc. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | 4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. Stewart & Co. |
+ | |
+ | HAVE OPENED A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' PARIS MADE DRESSES |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | WALKING SUITS, |
+ | |
+ | In Silk, Poplin, and Linen, |
+ | |
+ | ENTIRE NEW DESIGNS. |
+ | |
+ | FRENCH SILK CLOAKS, |
+ | |
+ | AND |
+ | |
+ | SHORT STREET SACQUES. |
+ | |
+ | Children's Cloaks, Ladies' Breakfast Jackets, |
+ | |
+ | Ladies' Pique, Swiss, and Cambric |
+ | |
+ | Morning Robes and Walking Suits, |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' UNDERGARMENTS |
+ | |
+ | Of every description. |
+ | |
+ | French, German, and Domestic Corsets, |
+ | |
+ | Woven and hand-made. |
+ | |
+ | JUST RECEIVED. |
+ | |
+ | AT EXTREMELY ATTRACTIVE PRICES, |
+ | |
+ | 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 grammar, 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 |
+ | me 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 |
+ | 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 THE VARIOUS ORDERS, |
+ | WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE HABITS AND ECONOMY OF THE MOST |
+ | INTERESTING. |
+ | By Louis Figuler. Illustrated with 307 wood-cuts. 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-ROOK 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HENRY L. STEPHENS |
+ | |
+ | ARTIST, |
+ | |
+ | No. 160 Fulton Street, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Important to Newsdealers! |
+ | |
+ | ALL ORDERS FOR |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO |
+ | |
+ | Will be supplied by |
+ | |
+ | OUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, |
+ | |
+ | American News Co. |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | J. NICKINSON |
+ | |
+ | BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO THE FRIENDS OF |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | RESIDING IN THE COUNTRY, THAT, |
+ | |
+ | FOR THEIR CONVENIENCE |
+ | |
+ | HE HAS MADE ARRANGEMENTS BY WHICH, ON RECEIPT OF THE PRICE |
+ | OF |
+ | |
+ | ANY STANDARD BOOK PUBLISHED, |
+ | |
+ | THE SAME WILL BE FORWARDED, POSTAGE PAID. |
+ | |
+ | Parties desiring Catalogues of any of our Publishing Houses, |
+ | can have the same forwarded by inclosing two stamps. |
+ | |
+ | OFFICE OF PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., 83 Nassau Street. |
+ | |
+ | [P. O. Box 2783.] |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: A SUCCESSFUL CATCH.
+
+_John Bull._ "WELL, GENERAL, HOW DID YOU CATCH YOUR FISH?"
+
+ _General Prim._ "WITH A SPANISH FLY."]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 excellence 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+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 the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30,
+1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 10018-8.txt or 10018-8.zip *****
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+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of PUNCHINELLO Vol. 1, No. 5.</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+ <!--
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30, 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. 5, April 30, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 8, 2003 [EBook #10018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <table width="800" border="1" align="center" cellpadding="3"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p>"The Printing House of the United States."</p>
+
+ <p><big><b>GEO. F. NESBITT &amp; CO</b>.,</big></p>
+
+ <p>General <b>JOB PRINTERS</b>,<br>
+ BLANK BOOK Manufacturers,<br>
+ STATIONERS, Wholesale and Retail,<br>
+ LITHOGRAPHIC Engravers and Printers,<br>
+ COPPER-PLATE Engravers and Printers,<br>
+ CARD Manufacturers,<br>
+ ENVELOPE Manufacturers,<br>
+ FINE CUT and COLOR Printers.</p>
+
+ <p><b>163,165,167,</b> and <b>169 PEARL ST.,</b></p>
+
+ <p><b>73, 75, 77,</b> and <b>79 PINE ST.,</b>
+ New-York.</p>
+
+ <p><small><small>ADVANTAGES&#8212;All on the same
+ premises, and under the immediate supervision of the
+ proprietors.</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">TO NEWS-DEALERS.</p>
+
+ <p><big><b>PUNCHINELLO'S MONTHLY</b></big>.</p>
+
+ <p><small>THE FIVE NUMBERS FOR APRIL,</small></p>
+
+ <p>Bound in a Handsome Cover,</p>
+
+ <p>Will be ready May 2d. Price, Fifty Cents.</p>
+
+ <p><b>THE TRADE</b></p>
+
+ <p>SUPPLIED BY THE</p>
+
+ <p><big>AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY,</big></p>
+
+ <p><small>Who are now prepared to receive
+ Orders.</small></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HARRISON BRADFORD &amp;
+ CO.'S</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>STEEL
+ PENS.</big></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>These pens are of a finer quality, more durable, and
+ cheaper than any other Pen in the market. Special
+ attention is called to the following grades, as being
+ better suited for business purposes than any Pen
+ manufactured. The</p>
+
+ <p><b>"505," "22,"</b> and the
+ <b>"Anti-Corrosive."</b></p>
+
+ <p>We recommend for bank and office use.</p>
+
+ <p><b>D. APPLETON &amp; CO.,</b> <b><br>
+ Sole Agents for United States.</b></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table width="800" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="3"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <center>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <img src="images/01.jpg" alt=""><br>
+
+ <h1>PUNCHINELLO</h1>
+
+ <h2>Vol. I. No. 5.</h2>
+
+ <p>SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1870.</p><br>
+
+ <h3>PUBLISHED BY THE</h3><br>
+
+ <h3>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,</h3><br>
+ <br>
+
+ <h4>83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.</h4>
+ </center><br>
+ <br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><small><i>CONANT'S PATENT BINDERS for "Punchinello,"
+ to preserve the paper for binding, will be sent,
+ post-paid<br>
+ on receipt of One Dollar, by "Punchinello Publishing
+ Company," 83 Nassau Street, New-York
+ City.</i></small></p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+ <small>PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close
+ resemblance to Oil Paintings. Sold in All Stores through
+ out the World<br>
+ <br></small>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <small><br>
+ PRANG'S WEEKLY BULLETIN OF CHROMOS.&#8212;"Easter
+ Morning" "Family Scene in Pompeii"<br>
+ "Whittier's Birthplace," Illustrated Catalogue sent, on
+ receipt of stamp, by L. PRANG &amp; CO., Boston<br>
+ <br></small>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table width="800" align="center">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/03.jpg" alt="">
+ </center>
+
+ <p><b>THE WARNING OF THE BELLE</b></p>
+
+ <p>LOOK OUT FOR THE TRAIN.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>PATRIOTIC ADORATION.</b></p>
+
+ <p>A TALE OF PHILADELPHIA.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 1em;">People of the Quaker City,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">How the world must
+ stand aghast</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">At your wondrous
+ veneration</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">For those relics of the
+ past,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Kept in such precise
+ condition,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Fostered with such
+ tender care&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Don't, oh! don't the
+ Philadelphians</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Love old Independence
+ Square?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Splendid are its walks
+ and grass-plots</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Where the bootblacks
+ base-ball play,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And its seats resembling
+ toad-stools,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">On which loafers lounge
+ all day,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Waiting for their luck,
+ or gazing</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">At the office of the
+ Mayor&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Don't, oh! don't the
+ Philadelphians</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Love old Independence
+ Square?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Then, behold the fine old
+ State-house</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Cleanly kept inside and
+ out,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Where the faithful
+ office-holders</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Squirt tobacco-juice
+ about:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Placards highly
+ ornamental</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Decorate its outward
+ wall&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Don't, oh! don't the
+ Philadelphians</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Love old Independence
+ Hall?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O! ye gods and little
+ fishes!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Could bill-sticker be
+ so vile</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">As to paste up nasty
+ posters</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">On the sacred classic
+ pile?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Greece and Rome yet have
+ their relics,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">But what are they? very
+ small.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Never half so
+ venerated</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">As old Independence
+ Hall.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>PERIODICAL LITERATURE.</b></p>
+
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO has hitherto refrained from criticising
+ the periodicals of the day, from the mistaken idea that
+ superlative excellence was not expected in every number
+ of every daily or weekly journal in the land. He did not
+ know that, if every such journal was not edited so as to
+ suit the comprehension of all classes of cursory critics,
+ it should be unqualifiedly condemned. Supposing that a
+ painter should not condemn a paper for publishing a
+ musical article beyond his comprehension, and that an
+ architect ought not to get in a rage because he finds in
+ his favorite journal a paper on beavers which makes him
+ feel insignificant, PUNCHINELLO has generally looked
+ around upon his fellow-journalists, and thought them very
+ good fellows, who generally published very good papers.
+ He did not find superlative excellence in any of their
+ issues, but then he did not look for it. He might as well
+ pretend to look for that in the journalists themselves,
+ or in society at large. But he has lately learned, from
+ the critics of the period, that he ought to look for it,
+ and that it is the proper thing nowadays to pitch into
+ every journal which does not, in every part, please every
+ body, whether they be smart or dull; those quick of
+ appreciation, or those slow gentlemen who always come in
+ with their congratulations upon the birth of a joke at
+ the time its funeral is taking place. And so, PUNCHINELLO
+ will do as others do, and will occasionally view, from
+ the loop-hole in his curtain, the successes and failures
+ of his neighbors, and will give his patrons the benefit
+ of his observations.</p>
+
+ <p>The first thing he notices to-day is, that the
+ <i>Evening Snail</i> of last night is not so good as it
+ was a fortnight ago; or, let us think a bit&#8212;it
+ may have been a good number at the beginning of last
+ month that he was thinking of; at all events, this last
+ issue is inferior. The matter on the first page is not
+ printed in nearly as good type as the original
+ periodicals had it, and while the letters in the heading
+ are quite fair, it is very noticeable that the I's are
+ very defective, and there is no C in it. The "Gleanings"
+ are excellent, and it would be advisable to have more of
+ them&#8212;if indeed such a thing were possible in
+ this case. The spider-work inside shows no acquaintance
+ with the writings of BACH or GLIDDON, and there is
+ nothing about the Spectrum Analysis in any part of the
+ paper. Besides, the paper is too stiff and rattles too
+ much, and PUNCHINELLO could never abide the color of the
+ editor's pantaloons. Why will not people dress and write
+ so that every body can admire and understand them.
+ Especially in regard to witty things and breastpins They
+ ought to be loud, overpowering, and so glaring that
+ people could not help seeing them. And they ought to be a
+ little cheap, too, or average people won't comprehend
+ them. In both cases paste (and scissors) pays better than
+ diamonds. The reports of private parties in the
+ <i>Snail</i> are, however, very good, and if it would
+ confine its original matter to such subjects, it could
+ not fail to succeed.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Query for Physicians.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Are people's tastes apt to become Vichy-ated by the
+ excessive use of certain mineral waters?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>"Behold, how Pleasant a Thing 't is," etc.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Boston has a couple of clergymen who have fallen out
+ upon matters not precisely theological. In the summer,
+ the Rev. Mr. MURRAY leaves his sheep, to shoot deer by
+ torchlight in the Adirondacks. This the Rev. Mr. ALGER,
+ in addressing the Suppression of Cruelty to Animals
+ Society, denounces as extremely wicked. From all which Mr
+ PUNCHINELLO, taking up his discourse, infers,</p>
+
+ <p><i>First</i>. That it is a great deal more wicked to
+ shoot deer by torchlight than by daylight.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Secondly</i>. That the Rev. MURRAY and the Rev.
+ ALGER are of different religious persuasions.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Thirdly and lastly</i>. That the Rev. Mr. ALGER
+ doesn't love venison.</p>
+
+ <p>P. S. Persons desiring to present Mr. PUNCHINELLO with
+ a fine haunch, (in the season,) may shoot it by daylight,
+ moonlight, torchlight, or by a Drummond light, as most
+ convenient.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p>We are indebted to Mr. SARONY for a number of
+ brilliant photographs of celebrities of the day. Lovely
+ woman is well represented the batch, with all the
+ characters of which PUNCHINELLO hopes to present his
+ readers, from time to time.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="text-align: center;"><small>Entered, according
+ to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the PUNCHINELLO
+ PUBLISHING COMPANY,<br>
+ in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United
+ States, for the Southern District of
+ New-York.</small></p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/04.jpg" alt="">
+ </center>
+
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">ALL ABOARD FOR
+ HOLLAND</span></p>
+
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO understands that a performance is soon to
+ take place at the Academy of Music, for the benefit of
+ GEORGE HOLLAND, the well-known and ever-green "veteran"
+ of "the stage." It pleases PUNCHINELLO to know that a
+ combination of talent and beauty is to be brought
+ together for so worthy a purpose. Seventy-four years ago,
+ when GEORGE HOLLAND was a small child, PUNCHINELLO used
+ to dandle him upon his knee. Hardly four years have
+ passed since PUNCHINELLO was convulsed by the <i>Tony
+ Lumpkin</i> of HOLLAND. He distinctly remembers, too,
+ administering hot whiskey punch to little boy HOLLAND
+ with a tea-spoon, which may in some measure account for
+ the Spirit subsequently infused by the capital comedian
+ into the numerous bits of character presented by him.
+ Considering these facts, it is manifestly an incumbent
+ duty on the part of PUNCHINELLO to request the earnest
+ attention of his readers to the subject of GEORGE
+ HOLLAND'S benefit, all particulars concerning which will
+ be given due time through the public press. It used to be
+ said, long ago, that "the Dutch have taken Holland,"
+ Well, let our own modern Knickerbockers improve upon that
+ notion, by taking HOLLAND'S tickets. Remember how, in the
+ early settlement of the country, it was Holland that made
+ New-York, and see that New-York now returns the
+ compliment, and makes HOLLAND. Convivial songsters
+ frequently remind us that&#8212;</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 1em;">&#8212;"a Hollander's draught
+ should potent be,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And deep as the rolling
+ Zuyder Zee."</span><br>
+
+ <p>Mind this, all ye Hollanders who would give your
+ support to our HOLLAND. Let your drafts be potent, your
+ cheeks heavy, your attendance punctual. Make the affair
+ complete; so that when, here-after, a comparison is
+ sought for something that has been a sued people will say
+ of it&#8212;"As big as that Bumper of
+ HOLLAND'S."</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>ASTRONOMICAL CONVERSATIONS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>(BY A FATHER AND DAUGHTER RESIDING ON THE PLANET
+ VENUS.)</p>
+
+ <p><b>No. I.</b></p>
+
+ <p>FATHER (<i>to</i> DAUGHTER, <i>who is looking through a
+ telescope</i>.) Yes HELENE, that is the Planet Tellus, or
+ Earth. The darker streaks are land; the bright spots,
+ water. We begin with a low power, which shows only the
+ masses; presently you will have the pleasure of
+ discriminating not only rivers and chains of mountains,
+ but cities&#8212;single houses&#8212;even Human
+ Beings! Yes, you shall this very night read page of
+ PUNCHINELLO, a paper so bright that every word appears
+ surrounded by a halo!</p>
+
+ <p>DAUGHTER. O father! do that <i>now</i>. How
+ delightful, to actually read the works of these singular
+ creature's, and become familiar with their extraordinary
+ ideas! Were the scintillations you spoke of the other
+ night, that were seen all over the Western Continent, the
+ result of the flashing of these radiant pages?</p>
+
+ <p>F. Undoubtedly, my child; they began with the first
+ issue of the paper, and have since regularly increased in
+ brightness, just as It has.</p>
+
+ <p>D. It really seems as though Earth would answer for a
+ Moon, by and by, at this rate!</p>
+
+ <p>F. You are quite right, HELENE; it will. Or say,
+ rather, a Sun. For you will observe that it is a
+ <i>warm</i> light; not cool, as reflected light always
+ is. It is Original.</p>
+
+ <p>D. Well, this shows that PUNCHINELLO must have some
+ Heart, as well as Head. Come, put on your highest power
+ now, and let us seem to pay good old Tellus a visit!</p>
+
+ <p>[<i>The indulgent Father complies, and, is at some
+ pains to adjust the focus</i>.]</p>
+
+ <p>F. Now, dear! take a good look.</p>
+
+ <p>D. (<i>Looking intently</i>.) Oh! how splendid&#8212;how
+ splendid! <i>Do</i> see the beautiful things in those
+ Shop Windows! It must be the Spring Season there!
+ <i>Do</i> see those lovely lumps on the backs of those
+ creatures' heads! What place is it, Father?</p>
+
+ <p>F. That? It's New-York; and the street is the famous
+ Broadway.</p>
+
+ <p>D. O dear! how I <i>would</i> like to go shopping
+ there, this minute!&#8212;for I see it is afternoon
+ in that quarter. Is there no way of getting there?(!!!)</p>
+
+ <p>F. (<i>Laughing heartily</i>.) Well, well, HELENE!
+ That's pretty good, for the daughter of an astronomer! Do
+ you know that at this precise moment you are Forty-five
+ Million, Six Hundred and Fifty-four Thousand, Four
+ Hundred and Ninety-one Miles and a half from those
+ Muslins! I'll tell you, Sis, what <i>could</i> be done:
+ Drop a line to the Editor of PUNCHINELLO, and tell him
+ what you want. He'll get it, some way.</p>
+
+ <p>D. That I will, instantly! [<i>Turns to her portfolio,
+ while her father turns to the telescope</i>.]</p>
+
+ <p>"DEAR MR. EDITOR: Pardon the seeming <i>boldness</i> of a
+ <i>stranger:</i> you are no <i>stranger to me!</i> Long,
+ <i>long</i> have I deceived that <i>good man</i>, my
+ father, by <i>pretending</i> to know <i>nothing</i> of
+ the Earth, or of his <i>instrument!</i> Many and
+ <i>many</i> a night, <i>unknown to him</i>, have I gone
+ to the <i>Telescope</i>, to satisfy the <i>restless
+ craving</i> I feel to know more of <i>your Planet</i>,
+ and of a <i>person of your sex</i> whom I have
+ <i>often</i> beheld, and watched with <i>eagerness</i> as
+ he came and went. How <i>thrilling</i> the thought, that
+ he cannot even <i>know of my existence</i>, and that we
+ are <i>forever separated!</i> This, good and <i>dear</i>
+ Editor, is my one Thought, my one great Agony.</p>
+
+ <p>"It has occurred to me that, in this <i>dreadful</i>
+ situation&#8212;my Passion being sufficiently
+ Hopeless, as any one may see&#8212;you might at least
+ afford me some slight <i>alleviation</i>, by undertaking
+ to let Him know of the <i>interest</i> he excites in this
+ far-off star! Let me describe my charmer, so that you
+ will be able to identify him. He is of fair size, with a
+ rolling gait and a smiling countenance, has light hair
+ and complexion, wears often a White Hat, (on the back of
+ his head&#8212;where Thoughtful men always place the
+ hat, I've been told by observers,) and now and then
+ carelessly leaves one leg of his trowsers at the top of
+ his boot. I have often seen him, with a bundle of papers in
+ his pocket, entering a large building with the words
+ "<i>Tribune</i> Office" over the door&#8212;and I <i>adore</i>
+ him! O excellent Editor! tell him this, I <i>implore</i>
+ you! Be kind to your distant and <i>love-lorn</i> friend,
+ HELENE."</p>
+
+ <p>F. What did you say, Helene?</p>
+
+ <p>D. I was saying that I wished to look a little longer
+ at the fashions in Broadway.</p>
+
+ <p>F. Well, well&#8212;I believe the Fashions are all
+ that these women think of! There&#8212;look away! I
+ presume they have changed considerably since you looked
+ before! When do you wish to begin your lessons in
+ Astronomy?</p>
+
+ <p>D. Next week. Father; let me see: we will say, next
+ week&#8212;Thursday.</p>
+
+ <p>F. Very well; I shall remind you.</p>
+
+ <p>D. (<i>who is determined to have the last word, any
+ way</i>.) Very well.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Beach's Soliloquy on
+ entering his Pneumatic Chamber.</p>
+
+ <p>"TU-BE or not tu-be."</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Reflection by a
+ Tallow-chandler.</p>
+
+ <p>Though a man be the Mould of fashion, yet he cannot
+ light himself to bed by the Dip in his back.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>PLAYS AND SHOWS.</b></p>
+
+ <p><i><img src="images/05.jpg" align="left" alt="M">EN
+ AND ACRES,</i> the new comedy at WALLACK'S, is one of the
+ best of TAYLOR'S pieces, and a decided improvement upon
+ the carpenter work of BOUCICAULT. It has been
+ rechristened by Mr. WALLACK, and its former name&#8212;<i>Old
+ Men and New Acres, or New Aches and Old Manors,</i> or
+ something else of that sort&#8212;has been
+ conveniently shortened. If it does not convince us that
+ the author has improved since he first began to write
+ plays, it certainly reminds us that there is such a thing
+ as <i>Progress</i>. In the latter play, Mr. J.W. WALLACK
+ was a civil engineer. In the present drama, he is an
+ uncivil tradesman. Both appeal to the levelling
+ tendencies of the age; and in each, the author has done
+ his "level best"&#8212;as Mr. GRANT WHITE would
+ say&#8212;to flatter the Family Circle at the expense
+ of the Boxes.</p>
+
+ <p>The cast includes a Vague Baronet and his Managing
+ Wife, their Slangy Daughter, their Unpleasant Neighbor
+ and his wife and daughter, an Unintelligible Dutchman, an
+ Innocuous Youth, a Disagreeable Lawyer, and the Merchant
+ Prince. This is the sort of way in which they conduct
+ themselves,</p>
+
+ <p><i>Act</i> 1. <i>Disagreeable Lawyer to Vague
+ Baronet:</i> "You are ruined, and your estate is
+ mortgaged to a Merchant Prince. What do you intend to
+ do?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Vague Baronet.</i> "I will ask my wife what I think
+ about it."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Managing Wife.</i> "Ruined, are we? Allow me
+ to remark, Fiddlesticks! Get the Merchant to take our
+ third-story hall-bedroom for a week, and I'll soon clear
+ off the mortgage."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Slangy Daughter.</i> "O ma! there was such a
+ precious guy at the ball last night, and I had no end of
+ a lark with him. Good gracious! here comes the duffer
+ himself."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Merchant Prince. (Aside.)</i> "So here's the
+ Vague Baronet and his wife. And there's the slangy girl I
+ fell in love with. Nice lot they are!" (<i>To Managing
+ Wife.</i>) "Madam, there is nothing, so grand as the
+ majesty of trade. Your rank and blood are all gammon. We
+ Merchant Princes are the only people fit to live.
+ However, I'll condescend to speak to you."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Managing Wife. (Aside.)</i> "How noble! What a
+ gentlemanly person he really is!" <i>(To Merchant
+ Prince.)</i> "Sir, I bid you welcome. Here is my
+ daughter, who was just praising your beauty and
+ accomplishments. I leave you to entertain her."
+ (<i>Exeunt Baronet, Wife, and Lawyer</i>.)</p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince (placing his chair next to Slangy
+ Daughter's, and leaning his elbow on her.)</i> "There is
+ nothing like trade. We tradesmen alone are great. We
+ despise the whole lot of clean and idle aristocrats. I
+ keep a Gin Palace in Liverpool. Does your bloated
+ aristocracy do half as much for suffering humanity?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Slangy Daughter.</i> "Speak on, speak ever thus, O
+ Noble Being! It's awfully jolly!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Curtain falls, and Baker wakes up to lead his
+ orchestra through the mazes of "Shoo Fly."</i></p>
+ <hr style="height: 2px; width: 10%;">
+
+ <p><i>Appreciative Lady.</i> "Isn't it nice? Miss
+ HENRIQUES'S dress is perfectly beautiful, and it sounds
+ so cunning to hear her talk slang."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Second Appreciative Lady.</i> "How handsome
+ ROCKWELL looks! Just like a real baronet, my dear!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Other Appreciative Ladies.</i> "The dresses at
+ WALLACK'S are always perfectly exquisite. I mean to have
+ my next dress made with a green silk fichu, a moire
+ antique bertha, and little point lace peplums and
+ gussets, just like Miss MESTAYER'S. Won't it be
+ sweet?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>All the Counter-Jumpers in the Theatre.</i> "JIM
+ WALLACK'S the boy! Don't he talk up to those aristocratic
+ snobs, though?"</p>
+ <hr style="height: 2px; width: 10%;">
+
+ <p><i>Act 2. Enter Unpleasant Neighbor and Unintelligible
+ German. The former says,</i> "You're sure there's an iron
+ mine on the Baronet's land?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Unintelligible German.</i> "Ya! Das ist
+ um-um-um."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Merchant Prince and Slangy Daughter. Exeunt
+ the other fellows.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince.</i> "There is nothing like the
+ grandeur of trade; and yet we tradesmen are not proud.
+ See! I offer to marry you."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Slangy daughter.</i> "I love you wildly!
+ <i>(Aside.)</i> I do hope he won't rumple my hair."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince.</i> "Come to my arrums! The
+ majesty of trade is so infinitely above any thing
+ else"&#8212;<i>and so forth.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Managing Wife.</i> "Take her, noble Merchant,
+ and be happy <i>(Aside.)</i> This settles the affair of
+ the mortgage." <i>(To Daughter)</i> "Come, darling, we'll
+ go and tell your father." <i>(They go.)</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Unpleasant Neighbor.</i> "Here's a telegram
+ for you. No bad news, I hope?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince.</i> "I am ruined unless you lend
+ me &#163;40,000. Do it, and I will assign to you the
+ mortgage on the baronet's property. The majesty of trade
+ is something which"&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Unpleasant Neighbor.</i> "Here it is."
+ <i>(Aside.)</i> "Now I'll get possession of the estate
+ and the iron-mine."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Managing Wife.</i> "Ruined, are you? Of
+ course you can't have my daughter now."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince.</i> "I resign her. We tradesmen
+ are infinitely greater than you aristocrats."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Curtain falls, Baker wakes up. "Shoo Fly" by the
+ Orchestra, and remarks on dress by the ladies as before.
+ Counter-jumpers go out to drink to the majesty of trade,
+ having grown perceptibly taller since the play
+ began.</i></p>
+ <hr style="height: 2px; width: 10%;">
+
+ <p><i>Act 3. Unprincipled Neighbor to Unintelligible
+ Dutchman.</i> "Have you got the analysis of the iron
+ ore?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Unintelligible Dutchman.</i> "Ya! Das its
+ um-um-um."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Unprincipled Neighbor.</i> "All right! Now I'll
+ foreclose the mortgage, and will be richer than
+ ever."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Vague Baronet, and Wife and Daughter, and
+ Lawyer. To them collectively remarks the Unprincipled
+ Neighbor,</i> "The mortgage is due. As you can't pay,
+ you've got to move out."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Disagreeable Lawyer.</i> "Not much! Here's an
+ analysis of iron ore found on our land. We raised money
+ on the mine, and are ready to pay off the mortgage."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Merchant Prince.</i> "Here's an analysis of
+ the iron ore. I told them all about it. We tradesmen are
+ great, but we will sometimes help even a wretched
+ aristocrat."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Slangy Daughter.</i> "Here's an analysis of the
+ iron ore. Now I will marry my noble Merchant, and make
+ him rich again; for there's dead loads of iron on the
+ Governor's land, you bet!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>They all produce analyses of the ore, and the play
+ itself being o'er, the curtain falls.</i></p>
+ <hr style="height: 2px; width: 10%;">
+
+ <p><i>Exasperated critic, who has sent for twelve seats,
+ and has been politely refused.</i> "I'd like to abuse it,
+ if there was a chance; but there isn't. The play is
+ really good, and I can't find much fault with the acting.
+ However, I'll pitch into STODDARD for swearing, which his
+ 'Unprincipled Neighbor' does to an unnecessary extent,
+ and I'll say that JIM WALLACK is too old and gouty to
+ play the 'Merchant Prince,' and doesn't quite forget that
+ he used to play in the Bowery."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Every body else.</i> "Did you ever see a play
+ better acted? And did you ever see actresses better
+ dressed?"</p>
+
+ <p>And PUNCHINELLO is constrained to answer the latter
+ question with an emphatic No! As to the acting, it might
+ be improved were Mr. STODDARD to play the character for
+ which he is cast, instead of insisting upon playing
+ nothing but STODDARD. But to all the rest of the actors,
+ not forgetting Mr. RINGGOLD, who plays the insignificant
+ part of the "Innocuous Youth," PUNCHINELLO is pleased to
+ accord his gracious approval.</p>
+
+ <p>MATADOR.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Balmy Idea.</b></p>
+
+ <p>According to Miss ANTHONY, the crying evil with women
+ is that they will blubber; but it must be remembered that
+ out of this blubber they make oil to pour into our
+ conjugal wounds.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Suit for Damages.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Any clothes in a storm.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/06.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>THE POLITICAL MILL-ENNIUM.</b></p>
+ </center><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HINTS UPON HIGH ART.</p>
+
+ <p>Observant visitors to the National Academy of Design
+ will allow that a tendency to greatness is beginning to
+ develop itself in certain directions among our artists.
+ In landscape some of them are almost immense. The works
+ of PORPHYRO warm the walls with rays of splendor, or cool
+ the lampooned sight-line with pearly gradations, as the
+ case may be. MANDRAKE renders feelingly the summer
+ uplands and groves, and SILVERBARK the melancholy
+ autumnal woods. BYTHESEA infuses with sentiment even the
+ blue wreaths of smoke that curl up from the distant ridge
+ against which loom the concentrated lovers that he
+ selects for his idyllic romances. Gushingly he does his
+ work, but thoroughly; and there are other flowers than
+ lackadaisies to be discerned in his herbage. GUSTIBUS
+ blows gently the foliage aside, and gives us glimpses
+ through it of rural contentment in connection with a
+ mill, or some other interesting object beyond. The pencil
+ of SAGEGREEN imbues canvases, both large and small, with
+ infinite variety and force; and it is to SKETCHMORE that
+ the great lakes owe their remarkable reputation as pieces
+ of water with poems growing out of their broad lily-pads.
+ Very tender are the pastoral banks and brooksides of
+ LEAFHOPPER. ELFINLOCKS takes up his pencil, and lo! a
+ hazy, mazy, lazy, dreamy vista where it has touched. But
+ hold! Our critical Incubus has taken the bit between her
+ teeth, and is beginning to run away with us. Stop that;
+ and let our readers enumerate the other first American
+ landscape painters for themselves.</p>
+
+ <p>Not so strong are our artists in domestic incidents
+ and compositions of life and character. We have
+ STUNNINGTON, to be sure, whose traits of American
+ expression, whether white or colored, are most true to
+ the life; and there's BARLEYMOW, who will twist you an
+ eclogue from the tail of his foreground pig. Others there
+ be; but space has its limits, and we forbear.</p>
+
+ <p>As for our portrait limners, their name is Legion, and
+ that comprehensive name must go for all. Like BENVENUTO
+ CELLINI they shall be known for their jugs; and their
+ transmission to posterity on the heads of families is a
+ thing to be reckoned on as sure.</p>
+
+ <p>For the higher flights of art the American painter is
+ by no manner of means endowed with the wings of his
+ native eagle&#8212;wings that agitate the cerulean
+ vault, spattering it with splashes of creamy cloud-spray,
+ and churning into butter the stretches of the Milky Way.
+ History has indeed been illustrated by American art, but
+ has it been enriched? The WASHINGTONS and the WEBSTERS,
+ the CLAYS and the LINCOLNS, have had their memories
+ dreadfully lampooned on canvas. Allegory does not inspire
+ the great American pencil. Tall art there is, and enough
+ of it "at that;" but of high art we have none to speak
+ of, except the canvases that are placed over doorways in
+ the galleries of the Academy, and, in the sense of
+ elevation, may consequently be spoken of as high. All
+ this is wrong. Alas! that we should write it. Would that
+ we could right it! And to think of the musty subjects
+ that our historical and allegorical men select. Ho! young
+ men&#8212;away with your CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS;
+ relegate your METAMORA to his proper limbo; let
+ WASHINGTON alone; and LINCOLN; and OSCEOLA the Savage;
+ and POCAHONTAS, and all the rest. Leave them alone; and,
+ taking fresh subjects, dip your brushes in brains, as old
+ OPIE or somebody else said, and go to work with a will.
+ No fresh subjects to be had, you say? Bosh! absurd
+ interlocutor that you are. Here's a bundle of 'em ready
+ cut to hand. We charge you no money for them, and you may
+ take your choice.</p>
+
+ <p>SUBJECTS FOR WORKS OF HIGH ART.</p>
+
+ <p>PROVIDENCE tempering the wind to the shorn lamb.</p>
+
+ <p>ABSENCE OF MIND marking a box of paper shirt-collars
+ with indelible ink.</p>
+
+ <p>MILTON "going it blind."</p>
+
+ <p>The late Mr. WILLIAM COBBETT teaching his sons to
+ shave with cold water.</p>
+
+ <p>ST. PATRICK emptying the snakes out of his boots.</p>
+
+ <p>TRUE LOVE never running smooth.</p>
+
+ <p>NO MAN acting <i>Hero</i> to his <i>valet de
+ chambre</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>ROBERT BONNER taking DEXTER by the forelock with one
+ hand, and TIME with the other.</p>
+
+ <p>Subjects like these might be worked out to advantage.
+ The field in which they are to be found is almost
+ unlimited; and they possess abundantly the two grand
+ essentials to success in art at the present time, as well
+ as in literature&#8212;novelty and sensation.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>H.G. and Terpsichore.</b></p>
+
+ <p>AMONG the strange revelations about <i>Tribune</i>
+ people elicited during the MCFARLAND trial, was the bit
+ of gossip about Mr. GREELEY going to Saratoga to "trip
+ the light fantastic toe." That Mr. GREELEY'S toe is
+ "fantastic," every body who has ever inspected his
+ "Congress gaiters" must know, but as to its lightness we
+ have our doubts. "What I know about dancing" would be a
+ capital subject for H.G. to handle, and we hope that he
+ will take Steps for doing it.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Sweeny's New
+ Charter.</p><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">How doth
+ the busy Peter B.,</span><br>
+    <span style="margin-left: 1.75em;">Improve each
+ shining hour!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">From nettled young
+ Democracy,</span><br>
+    <span style="margin-left: 1.75em;">He plucks the
+ safety-flower.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>From Rome.</b></p>
+
+ <p>The POPE is said to be "out of Spirits." Why doesn't
+ he come to New-York, where he can get plenty of the
+ article, either in the sense of the Tap or in that of the
+ Rap?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>"He who was Born to be Hanged," etc.</b></p>
+
+ <p>On one of the mornings of the MCFARLAND trial, a very
+ importunate person attempted to force his way into the
+ court-room, which, as he was told, was already crowded
+ "to suffocation." To this he retorted that he "wasn't
+ born to be suffocated." That's in substance what the late
+ JACK REYNOLDS said, and <i>he</i> was mistaken.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>The Difference.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Rice riots are reported as raging in all the ports of
+ Japan. Rye was the principal mover in the famous
+ conscription riots of New-York.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Celestial Idea</b>.</p>
+
+ <p>No wonder the Chinese theatre in San Francisco is a
+ success, considering how skilful the actors must be in
+ catching the Cue.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>JUMBLES</b>.</p>
+
+ <p>Did you ever hear of my friend BOOTSBY? "No." That's
+ rather queer. I see&#8212;you've been out of town.
+ BOOTSBY is a man of standing&#8212;of decided
+ standing, I may say. He stands, in fact, a great deal.
+ The heavy standing round he does is enormous when the
+ limited capacity of a single mortal is taken in view.
+ BOOTSBY stands round among every class of people, and
+ especially of politicians and potationers. He stands
+ round to talk, to hear, and especially to drink. The
+ power of the man in this last matter is wonderful, and
+ the puzzle is, that his standing (and perpendicularity)
+ is not perceptibly affected. Of course there are times
+ when BOOTSBY'S standing is not so good. In so slippery a
+ place as Wall Street, it is found to be less certain;
+ while in a crowd on Broadway, waiting for a bus, it
+ cannot be said to maintain a very remarkable firmness.
+ But as a whole, and as the world goes, BOOTSBY is a man
+ of standing. In the altitude of six feet ten, he may be
+ called a man of high standing. He feels proud of the
+ fact. "Is it not better to be a mountain than a mole?" he
+ often asks in a proudly sneering manner of his neighbor
+ PUGGS, who is about as far up in the world as the top of
+ a yard-stick. It is very true that size is not quality,
+ and a seven-footer may be no better than a three-footer;
+ but it is observed that a Short Man is rarely any thing
+ else. His stature is his measure throughout. My own
+ impression of myself is, that I don't care to be short;
+ but if the alternative were forced upon me, I should
+ choose that of person rather than of purse. BOOTSBY does
+ not care much about money, and he carries very little.
+ Some people are like BOOTSBY, but most people are not.
+ The ladies, it is true, never, or rarely, want money.
+ Like newspapers and club-houses, they are
+ self-supporting. In fact they surround themselves with
+ supporters which stay tightly. Mrs. TODD is peculiar in
+ her wants pecuniary. She, good soul, never wants (or
+ keeps) money long, but she doesn't want it <i>little</i>.
+ She prefers it like onions, in a large bunch, and strong.
+ The reason why most women do not want money is because
+ they have no use for it. They never dress; they never
+ wear jewelry; silks and satins have no charms in their
+ eyes; laces, ribbons, shawls never tempt. To exist and
+ walk upright in simpleness and quiet is the sum of their
+ desires. Dear creatures! how is it that they never
+ want?</p>
+
+ <p>My neighbor, Mr. DROWSE, desires to know where you get
+ all your funny things for PUNCHINELLO? He knows they are
+ there, does Mr. DROWSE; for he gets my copy of the penny
+ postman, and he keeps it, too. It is the only good taste
+ my neighbor has displayed of late years. I tell Mr.
+ DROWSE that you make your fun. He further asks, Where? I
+ tell him in the attic&#8212;up there where they keep
+ the salt. He desires to know the size of attic. Of course
+ he has never seen your noble, capacious, alabaster
+ forehead, else he would perceive the source of those
+ scintillations of light and warmth which radiate
+ throughout the universe every Saturday for only ten
+ cents. He is curious also to know about the salt, and
+ doesn't comprehend how or where you use it. He used to
+ use it when a boy in catching birds by putting the briny
+ compound on the tails of the same, and <i>that</i> he
+ used to call "fun alive;" but he don't see
+ it&#8212;the salt&#8212;about PUNCHINELLO. I
+ suspect Mr. DROWSE doesn't see the sellers, (certainly he
+ avoids them when PUNCHINELLO is offered, much to my
+ mortification, and one dime to my cost,) and so is not
+ likely to discern the source of the fun. I merely
+ informed Mr. DROWSE that the editor was very tall, very
+ handsome, with very black skin and rosy hair, (at which
+ he opened his eyes with astonishment, and asked if I
+ meant so; at which I said, "Yes, I guess so,") and that
+ he laughed out of his nose, eyes, head, and hands, as
+ well as his mouth. DROWSE wants to see the editor very
+ much. He has seen men with black skins and hearts, (for
+ he used to know lots of politicians;) but wants to put
+ his vision on some "rosy hair"&#8212;and when he
+ does, no doubt his gaze will be fixed. It is healthy
+ sometimes to have the gaze fixed; and often, like
+ sauce-pans and sermons, it has to be fixed. When Mr.
+ DROWSE calls at 83, please show him in Parlor 6 with the
+ Brussels, fresco-work, and lace curtains.</p>
+
+ <p>April is a model month. So serene, steady, clear, and
+ balmy. Nothing but blue sky, gentle zephyrs, kissing
+ breezes, genial suns by day and sparkling stars by night.
+ PUNCHINELLO no doubt likes sparkling
+ stars&#8212;stars of magnitude&#8212;stars that
+ show what they are. PUNCHINELLO perhaps goes to NIBLO'S,
+ and not only sees plenty stars, but plenty of them. But
+ of April. It is called "fickle;" but that's a slander.
+ "Every thing by turns and nothing long"&#8212;that is
+ a libel on which a suit could be hung. The same vile
+ falsehood is cruelly uttered of some women, when every
+ body knows, or should know, that these same women are
+ nothing of the sort. Who ever knew a fickle woman?</p>
+
+ <p>Where in history is there record of such an
+ Impossibility? Fickle&#8212;that implies a change of
+ mind. What woman ever changed her mind any more than her
+ hands? Nonsense, avaunt!&#8212;banished be slander!
+ April is <i>not</i> fickle&#8212;woman is <i>not</i>
+ fickle. As one is evenly beautiful, divinely serene,
+ bewitchingly winning, so is the other sunny, cerulean,
+ balmy, paradisiacal. April for ever&#8212;after that
+ the rest of the calendar.</p>
+
+ <p>Does PUNCHINELLO believe in the Woman Movement? TODD
+ does. He believes woman should move as much as man; and
+ he regards her movement in such numbers to the great West
+ as full of hope (and husbands) for the sex. Mrs. TODD has
+ not as yet been irresistibly seized by the movement; but
+ if TIMOTHY knows himself, he longs for the day when the
+ seizer may come. Although TODD&#8212;who is the
+ writer of this epistle&#8212;says it, who perhaps
+ shouldn't, lest the shaft of egotism be hurled
+ mercilessly at him, he does unhesitatingly say that to
+ aid this movement he would make the greatest of
+ sacrifices. He is willing to sacrifice his wife and other
+ female relations upon the sacred altar of the movement,
+ and contribute liberally to the expense thereof. He is
+ quite willing they should vote&#8212;early and often,
+ if need be; but he wishes to see the movement go westward
+ like the Star of Empire&#8212;westward
+ <i>vi&#226;</i> cheerful Chicago. TODD trusts
+ PUNCHINELLO will espouse this movement; for if it does,
+ it&#8212;the movement, no less than
+ PUNCHINELLO&#8212;will go straight onward and upward;
+ but not by the route known as the Spout.</p>
+
+ <p>Mucilage is a good thing. It is now extensively used
+ in Church, State, and Society. We use it largely at the
+ Veneerfront Avenue Church, of which Rev. Dr. ALEXANDER
+ PLASTERWELL is pastor. Of course, Mr. PUNCHINELLO, you
+ know that distinguished church, and have no doubt often
+ listened to the distinguished Dr. PLASTERWELL. He is a
+ kind man, has a high forehead, a Roman (Burgundy) nose,
+ and a sweet, soft head&#8212;I should say heart. He
+ has&#8212;great and good man&#8212;the largest
+ faith in mucilage. He often makes it a text, and he
+ sticks to it, he does&#8212;does Dr. PLASTERWELL.
+ Nothing like mucilage, PUNCHINELLO. It is the hope of the
+ human race, and the salvation of woman. It is the
+ Philosopher's Stone in solution; the essence and link
+ which connects and cements all that is great, good, and
+ lovely, in the past, present, and future. At least, such
+ is the humble opinion of</p>
+
+ <p>TIMOTHY TODD.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>HINTS TO CAR CONDUCTORS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>When standing in Printing House Square, your
+ destination being Grand Street Perry or Bleecker Street,
+ if a stranger asks whether you are going to Harlem, nod,
+ as it is considered improper to answer in the negative.
+ If he finds out the mistake, you can plead deafness.</p>
+
+ <p>When called upon to stop, never attempt to comply.
+ There are several reasons why you should not. In the
+ first place, if you did stop, it would show that you have
+ no will of your own, and since the passage of the
+ Fifteenth Amendment, <i>all</i> men are equal in this
+ country.</p>
+
+ <p>You may stop about two blocks from the place named,
+ just to please yourself and prove your independence; but
+ take particular care to start the car when the passenger
+ is half off the steps. If there is a young surgeon in the
+ neighborhood, you can enter into an arrangement to break
+ arms and legs in this way with impunity, have the maimed
+ "carried into the surgery," and share the fees with the
+ operator. Occasional cases of manslaughter may take
+ place; but don't mind that, as coroners' juries in
+ New-York will return verdicts of "death from natural
+ causes." Besides this, remember that you have a vote, and
+ that both coroners and judges are dependent upon the
+ people. When a lame old gentleman hails you, beckon him
+ furiously to come on, but be sure, at the same time, to
+ urge the driver to greater speed.</p>
+
+ <p>It is no part of your business to have change, so
+ never give any, but drive on: people should provide for
+ and look after their own business and that is none of
+ yours.</p>
+
+ <p>Always drive through the centre of a target company or
+ funeral procession, never minding whether you kill one or
+ more, and then abuse the captain or the undertaker for
+ his stupidity.</p>
+
+ <p>By the adoption of these essential rules, and by
+ adding a good deal of incivility, you will soon reach the
+ top of the wheel of your profession and in due time have
+ a testimonial presented to you by an admiring and
+ grateful public.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Out in the Cold.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Commissioner Tweed proposes a new outside Bureau of
+ the Department of Public Works, for late-Commissioner
+ MCLEAN. He is to be Superintendent of
+ Refrigerators.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/08.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>THE LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS.</b></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p>ENGRAVED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION FOR PUNCHINELLO, FROM
+ THE ORIGINAL PAINTING, BY MILES STANDISH, IN THE
+ COLLECTION OF METHUSELAH PILGRIM, ESQ., OF PILGRIMSVILLE,
+ MASS.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">TO CAPTAIN HALL.</p>
+
+ <p>(IN ANTICIPATION OF HIS TRIP TO THE
+ POLE.)</p><span style="margin-left: 3em;">HALL!
+ HALL!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">D'ye hear our
+ call?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Or, do you fancy it to
+ be</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">A weather
+ sign&#8212;merely the pre-</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Monition of a
+ squall</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">At sea!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">HALL!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You pay no heed at
+ all.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nevertheless, O hardy
+ mariner!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">(A Snow-Bird brings
+ this with our kindest love,)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">We're sorry you
+ prefer</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Those frigid walks
+ (ever so far above</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The 80th parallel, we
+ guess!)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To stocks, and tariffs,
+ and domestic bliss;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Yes, yes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Captain, we're sorry it
+ has come to this!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Why do you madly
+ thirst</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">For grog that's chopped
+ up with a hatchet? say!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And tell us of the
+ first</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Strange thought which
+ spurred you to go up that way!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Was it the hope that on
+ some icy coast</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">(Frozen, yourself,
+ almost!)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">You'd have the luck to
+ meet poor FRANKLIN'S ghost?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And has it seemed,
+ sometimes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">That drowning might be
+ pleasanter up there</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Among the icebergs,
+ native to those climes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Than where</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The surf breaks gently on
+ some coral-reef,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And sirens sweetly
+ soothe one's slow despair?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Say, was that your
+ belief?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And who is BENT?<a name=
+ "FNanchor*"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_*"><sup>[*]</sup></a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Why was <i>he</i>
+ sent,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">With his Warm Currents
+ wheeling round the Pole?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A long, long race must
+ his disciples run:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">No sun,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">No fun,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">No chance to toss a word
+ to any one;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And what a
+ goal?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">As hopefully you
+ munch</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The flinty biscuit,
+ watching whale or seal,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Or listening, undaunted,
+ to the crunch</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Of ice-floes at the
+ keel,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Say, Sir Intrepid! shall
+ you really think</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">You pioneer the navies
+ of the world?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Not while the
+ chink</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Of well-housed dollars
+ sounds so pleasantly,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And safer tracks map
+ out the treacherous sea!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">If that's your dream, oh!
+ let your sails be furled.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">But, no!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">It is not this! Your
+ spirit, high and bold,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Scorning all tamer joys,
+ will have it so!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">No cold</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Can chill its ardor! Such
+ a soul would sate</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Its deathless craving
+ in some lofty flight,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Some deed sublime, and
+ read its shining fate</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">By the Aurora's
+ light!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">For fruitful fellowship,
+ it seeks the wild,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The frozen
+ waste,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Where the world's
+ venturous heroes&#8212;reconciled</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To sunless, shuddering
+ gloom&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">To joyless
+ solitude&#8212;with ardor taste</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Their dread delights!
+ and so at last find room,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">'Mid nodding icebergs,
+ for their watery tomb!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">For this, we spare
+ you,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">O dauntless HALL! Once
+ having breathed that air</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">So pure, so fresh, so
+ rare!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And caught the wildness
+ of the Esquimaux,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">We declare you</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Unfit to live where
+ beans and lettuce grow!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Leave delving to the
+ little pitiful mole,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Great soul!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And now, then, for the
+ Pole!</span><br>
+
+ <p><a name="Footnote_*"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor*">[*]</a>    Captain BENT, of Cincinnati,
+ originator of the new theory of Polar Currents.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/09.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>FINANCIAL RELIEF</b></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p>MR BUMBLE BOUTWELL TO MRS. CORNEY FISH. <i>(See Oliver
+ Twist.)</i> "THE GREAT PRINCIPLE OF FINANCIAL RELIEF IS
+ TO GIVE THE BUSINESS MEN EXACTLY WHAT THEY DON'T WANT:
+ THEN THEY GET TIRED OF COMING."</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>CONDENSED CONGRESS.</b><p>
+
+ <p><b>SENATE.</b></p>
+
+ <p><img src="images/11.jpg" align="left" alt="">MR.
+ SUMNER said he was the friend of the oppressed. That, as
+ was well known, was his regular business. Unfortunately,
+ the Fifteenth Amendment had rendered the colored man
+ incapable of being hereafter regarded as an oppressed
+ creature. He was sorry, but it could not be helped. He
+ was therefore forced to go down the chromatic scale of
+ creation and find another class of clients. He found them
+ in cattle. HOMER had sung about the ox-eyed Juno, and
+ WALTER WHITMAN about bob veal. COWPER had remarked that
+ he would not number in his list of friends the man who
+ needlessly set foot upon a cow. He mentioned these things
+ merely to show that railway companies had no right to
+ starve cattle. He proposed an amendment to the
+ Constitution, to provide that a dinner of at least three
+ courses should be given to cows daily. Mr. DRAKE was
+ heartily in favor of the proposition. He had got his feet
+ in a web, so to speak, by paddling in the political
+ waters of Missouri, and some people had gone so far as to
+ call him "quack." He demanded redress.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. WILSON didn't see the use of all this legislation
+ to protect animals. Animals had no votes, although he
+ admitted a partial exception, in that every bull, it had
+ its ballot. But he had something practical. Here was a
+ jolly job, the Pacific Railway grant. There was a good
+ deal more in it than they had made out of any other
+ GRANT. Mr. THURMAN'S suggestion, that this land ought to
+ be occupied by actual settlers, he scorned. "Actual
+ settlers" were of a great deal more use to him in
+ Massachusetts, where they could vote for him, than in the
+ territories, where that boon would not be extended to
+ them. It was much better that they should be occupied by
+ imaginary settlers, who could pay and not vote. Actual
+ "settlings" were the dregs of humanity.</p>
+
+ <p>The Georgia bill came up, as it does every day with
+ much more regularity than luncheon. The Senate has
+ succeeded in muddling it to that degree of
+ unintelligibility that nobody has the slightest notion
+ what it provides. It is, therefore, in a condition to
+ give rise to infinite debate. After several senators had
+ said enough for a foundation for thirty columns each in
+ the <i>Globe,</i> they let it go for the present. The
+ present was the one promised by Senator WILSON in return
+ for the Pacific Railway grab grant.</p>
+
+ <p><b>HOUSE.</b></p>
+
+ <p>The House is given over to the tariff. A very
+ indelicate discussion has been had upon corsets. Mr.
+ BROOKS was of opinion that the corset would tariff it
+ were subjected to any more strain in the way of duties.
+ Mr. MARSHALL remarked that the corset avoided a great
+ deal of Waist. It was whalebone of his bone, or something
+ of that sort. It was one of the main Stays of our social
+ system.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. SCHENCK made another speech. He ripped up the
+ foreign corset in a truculent manner. He said that
+ American corsets were far superior, only American women
+ had not the sense to see it. The effect of taking off the
+ duty on corsets would be to take off the corsets.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. BROOKS called the hooks and ayes on the corsets.
+ Mr. SCHENCK opposed the call. He had found a simple tape
+ much preferable. He wished a coffer-dam might be put upon
+ the roaring BROOKS.</p>
+
+ <p>Somebody at this point brought up a contested election
+ case; but Mr. LOGAN objected to its being considered.
+ What, he asked, was the use of wasting time? There was
+ money in the tariff. There was no money at all in voting
+ a Democrat out, and a Republican in. They could do that
+ any day in five minutes. His friend Mr. BUTLER had
+ recently remarked, one Democrat more or less made no
+ difference. But Mr. BUTLER forgot that the larger the
+ majority, the larger the divisor for spoils, and
+ therefore the smaller the quotient and the "dividend." He
+ did not know much about arithmetic. He had never been at
+ West Point; but he believed that a million dollars, for
+ instance, would go further and fare worse among two
+ hundred men than among three. If the House were not
+ careful, there would be a glut of Republicans in it, and
+ the shares would be pitifully meagre. As for him, he had
+ a great mind, (derisive cheers)&#8212;he repeated,
+ that he had a great mind to vote for a Democrat next
+ time.</p>
+
+ <p>In spite of Mr. LOGAN'S warning, the House voted in a
+ couple or so of Republicans, and then resumed the duty on
+ wool.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Cox thought this wool had been pulled over the
+ eyes of the house often enough. It reminded him of an
+ expedition, of which Mr. LOGAN had never heard, in search
+ of a "Golden Fleece."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. JENCKES, and Mr. SCHENCK, and Mr. KELLEY called
+ him to order in behalf of their constituents, who were in
+ the wool business, and said that "wool" in one form or
+ another had always been the staple of their political
+ career.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. BUTLER said he had a little game worth two of
+ that. He wanted to buy San Domingo. In this there were
+ plenty of commissions, and hundreds of thousands of
+ colored votes.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT.</p>
+
+ <p>ALDERMANIC RECEPTION UP-TOWN.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 2.5em;">CAESAR, walk in! Ah POMPEY! how d'e
+ do?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">This way, CLEM!
+ Gentlemen, please walk right through!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">GEORGE, how's your
+ mother? Fine day, PETE&#8212;fine day!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Well, how are things
+ down there at Oyster Bay?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Ah AUNTIE! how's your
+ rheumatiz, this spring?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Well, Mr. JOHNSON, did
+ you try that sling?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Why, this is Uncle
+ STEVE! How-do-you-do.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Uncle? Sit down. What
+ can I do for you?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Well, Mr. PRINCE! You
+ must be busy, now.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Whitewashing is the
+ best thing done, I vow!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Why, hel-lo! REGIS!
+ From the Cape so soon?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When do you open, this
+ year&#8212;first of June?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Come,
+ gentlemen&#8212;some wine? Now, don't
+ refuse!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">What! temperate?
+ teetotal? Well, that's news!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And good news, too!
+ Well, coffee, then. You see,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">My friends, the
+ <i>sentiment's</i> the thing with me.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">The real Mocha, AUNTIE!
+ Simon pure!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Raised by free Arabs.
+ For I can't endure</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">A single thing that's
+ flavored with a Wrong!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Yes, AUNTIE, you are
+ right, I've "come out strong!"</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">So have the Colored
+ People, I may say!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">(One fact explains the
+ other, up this way!)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">They've proved their
+ strength! It's settled, sure as a gun,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">That every Colored
+ Voter now counts One!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Now, gentlemen, you'll
+ be surprised to find</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">So many people with
+ your turn of mind!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">But, sure as tricks!
+ remember what I say&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You'll learn some
+ things before Election Day!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style=
+ "margin-left: 2.5em;">POMPEY&#8212;'twon't take much
+ time, (and you can spare it!)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Try this old fiddle,
+ picked up in the garret!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Good? It's your fiddle!
+ AUNTIE, here's a pound</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Of that same genuine
+ Mocha, ready ground!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Say, Uncle STEVE, I've
+ got a fish for you,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Down at the market.
+ Call again, PETE; do!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I'll have a job for you
+ and CAESAR soon:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">It's only waiting for a
+ change of moon.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">CLEM, how'd you like a
+ chance to wait on table?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Or, would you rather
+ drive, and run my stable?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">GEORGE, in the kitchen
+ there's a pan of souse!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Going? All gone? Now,
+ BRIDGET, air the house!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Historic Parallel.</b></p>
+
+ <p>THE JACK CADE movement came near destroying London.
+ The Ar-Cade movement threatens to destroy
+ Broadway.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/12.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>A CHEAP LUXURY.</b></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p>SNIFFLES LOVES THE SMELL OF ROASTED CHESTNUTS, AND
+ ENJOYS IT FOR HOURS EVERY DAY; BUT HE NEVER EATS
+ ANY&#8212;WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR THE JOYOUS EXPRESSION ON
+ THE FACE OF THE VENDER.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>BUSINESS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>A CHICAGO LAY.</p><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">I
+ saw her sweet lip quiver,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">As he started for the
+ store.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Because he hadn't
+ kissed her</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Several" times or
+ more.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">She cried "This horrid
+ business!"</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And then flew to her
+ glass;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"Oh! why his cold
+ remissness?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have I grown plain,
+ alas?"</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">But no, that truthful
+ article</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Revealed her charms
+ intact,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">She hadn't lost one
+ particle,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">But had improved, in
+ fact.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">At nine the case was
+ opened,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">At ten the case was
+ o'er;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The jury brought their
+ virdict&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">She was his wife no
+ more.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">That night the husband
+ started,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And&#8212;"<i>you</i>
+ bet"&#8212;he swore,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To find his wife
+ departed,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And "<i>To Let</i>" on
+ the door.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Next day he moved and
+ married.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And, that his bride might
+ stay,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">He kissed her every
+ morning</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Before he went
+ away.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Pot-umania.</b></p>
+
+ <p>A correspondent writes that a new mania has sprung up
+ among the ladies of Edinburgh&#8212;a fancy for
+ learning to cook. There is a much older mania in some
+ parts of that country&#8212;a fancy for something to
+ cook.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>About a Foot.</b></p>
+
+ <p>A BOOT when it's on.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>IMPORTANT TO PUBLISHERS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>One of our corps of Philosophers (a trifle visionary,
+ perhaps) has been speculating as to certain possible (or,
+ perhaps, impossible) results flowing from the practice
+ among publishers of ante-dating their monthly issues.
+ Thus, supposing that the world should be destroyed by
+ fire (and why not? it is bad enough) on the 15th of May,
+ 1870, and a cover of, say, <i>Putnam's</i> for June,
+ carried up by an air-current, should, after floating
+ about ever so long in space, finally descend on some
+ friendly planet&#8212;we will say, Venus. Here it
+ would naturally get picked up by an archaeologist, (who
+ would be on the spot looking out for it,) and the
+ interesting relic would be promptly and reverently
+ deposited among the other Vestiges of Creation, in the
+ Royal Cabinet. In the course of years, some historian
+ would probably have occasion to turn over these
+ curiosities, and would presently light on the scorched
+ but still legible waif. "Why," says he, in astonishment,
+ "I thought the earth was burnt on the 15th of May! To be
+ sure, it was <i>in the night</i>, and nobody saw it go,
+ [think of that, conceited Worldling!] but it was missed
+ by somebody the day after. But here we have a document
+ from the late unfortunate planet dated the first of
+ June!"</p>
+
+ <p>Of course, upon this the History of the Universe would
+ have to be rewritten, or that odd fortnight would play
+ the mischief somewhere!</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Boston Boy.</b></p>
+
+ <p>HUB-BUB.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>"Curses Come Home to Roost."</b></p>
+
+ <p>They are putting the Fifth Avenue pavement in front of
+ the City Hall.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>To Politicians.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Will the working of the Fifteenth Amendment oblige a
+ candidate to show his Color before election?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>So We Go!</b></p>
+
+ <p>We notice, with much agitation and a reasonable amount
+ of grief, that somebody in Philadelphia (possibly Miss
+ ANNA DICKINSON) has invented a machine for the laundry
+ called The King Washer! A few years ago it would have
+ been The Queen Washer; but in these days the name seems
+ to indicate that to Man, unhappy Man, will speedily be
+ committed the destinies of the weekly washing. Oh! the
+ rubbing, the rinsing, the wringing. But Mr. PUNCHINELLO
+ has already communicated to Mrs. PUNCHINELLO his
+ sentiments upon this subject. Under no circumstances will
+ he get at the family linen. He must make a stand
+ somewhere, and he makes it here.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Let them Bark.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Miss BARKALOW has been admitted to practice at the bar
+ in St. Louis. We have frequently before seen young ladies
+ at a bar, where others practiced more than they did; but
+ we do not see why, if Miss BARKALOW wishes to bark aloud,
+ she should not be allowed to bark, aloud or otherwise.
+ Barking may be particularly good in a cross-examination;
+ but we presume that a lady attorney's bark will be always
+ worse than her bite.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>"She Stoops to Conquer."</b></p>
+
+ <p>The girl with the Grecian Bend.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Query.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Is it allowable for a Temperance man to be Cordial to
+ his friends?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Weak as Water.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Our cynical friend A. QUARIUS writes us from
+ Philadelphia, that considering the manner in which the
+ Sunday liquor law is enforced in that city, he thinks his
+ native place is still entitled&#8212;perhaps more
+ than ever entitled to be called the city of Rye-tangles.
+ This is ungrateful.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">SPIRITUAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF
+ CATS.</p>
+
+ <p>DEAR PUNCHINELLO: Our Society has been very learnedly
+ debating as to whether Cats are susceptible of spiritual
+ impressions; and, although the burden of opinion inclines
+ to the negative of the question, I am firmly persuaded
+ there is much to justify a contrary judgment.</p>
+
+ <p>As I slept the other night, neither dreaming nor
+ holding psychological intercourse of any description with
+ outsiders, I was awakened suddenly about the first hour
+ of the morning by a noise. I am quite certain it was a
+ noise, and have therefore no hesitation in so recording
+ it. The new moon hung athwart the western sky, and a few
+ fleecy clouds were chasing each other like snow-drifts
+ across the blue vault of the night. I may likewise note
+ the fact that the stars were doing what they usually do,
+ notwithstanding the difference of opinion that sometimes
+ exists as to what that is. It was the evening after
+ "wash-day," and family linen, in graceful curves and
+ undulating outlines, everywhere met the eye as it turned
+ from contemplating the stars to contemplating the
+ clothes-lines in the gardens. But I wander. The noise?
+ Ah! yes. Well, it was not like the collision of two hard
+ substances, but rather of the heavy "thud" order of
+ sound, like the descent of a solid into a soft substance;
+ say, for instance, of a flat-iron into a jar of unrisen
+ buck-wheat batter. I glanced along the ghostly battalions
+ of family linen; along the fences traversed by feline
+ sentries; along the latticed arbors; but nothing to
+ indicate the origin of the alarm could be discovered, and
+ as at that moment a breeze stirred in the apartment,
+ producing a chilling sensation, I thought it prudent to
+ jump back into bed.</p>
+
+ <p>Next morning, upon making my usual visit to note the
+ progress of the early bulbs in the flower-beds, I
+ encountered at the further end of the garden the remains
+ of a cat&#8212;a portly and ancient grimalkin of the
+ sterner sex. Close at hand was a bottle lying face
+ downward, and corked. I raised it&#8212;first in my
+ hands, and then to my lips. The cork fell out,
+ accidentally as it were, and, as a consequence, death.
+ "Poor thing!" I murmured; "poor&#8212;" and a portion
+ of the contents glided carelessly down my throat. I
+ perceived that the liquid was "Old Rye." As I stooped
+ down, tears would have come to my eyes; but it was
+ useless, seeing that the breath had left the
+ unfortunate's body. Nevertheless, I rested my hand a
+ moment upon his head, and then glided it in a
+ semi-professional manner along the line of dorsal
+ elevation, until I came to a deep depression in his
+ backbone, which corresponded exactly with the convexity
+ of the bottle. Then I saw at once how it was; this
+ missile, (in the heat of passion, being mistaken for an
+ empty one, probably,) had been hurled by some treacherous
+ hand upon the unsuspecting Tom, striking him midway
+ between the root of the tail and the base of the brain,
+ causing instant suspension of his vertebral
+ communications, "Poor thing! You were the victim of a
+ Catastrophe. You were also the victim of the bottle. The
+ 'Rye' was too heavy for you, and should have been drawn
+ milder." This said, I turned sadly away to find a burial
+ spade, and it then occurred to me that this little
+ incident was kindly meant to confirm my view that cats
+ are susceptible, even to a fatal extent, of spiritual
+ impressions&#8212;especially when conveyed by spirits
+ of "Old Rye."</p>
+
+ <p>GOBBO.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>From the Tombs.</b></p>
+
+ <p>When a drunken man has been locked up for beating his
+ wife, it is reasonable to suppose that he must feel
+ rather the worse for lick her.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/13.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>PERSONAL GOSSIP.</b></p>
+
+ <p>(From the Daily Press.)</p>
+
+ <p>"A SON OF ONE OF OUR WEALTHIEST RESIDENTS DISPLAYS
+ GREAT<br>
+ TALENTS AS A SCULPTOR. HE IS BUT NINE YEARS OLD."</p>
+ </center><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A BIT OF NATURAL HISTORY.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Naturalists tell us that the <i>Aye-aye</i> is a small
+ animal of Madagascar, with sharp teeth, long claws, and a
+ tail; which eats whatever it can grab, and says nothing
+ day or night but <i>aye-aye</i>. Now, we find that,
+ AGASSIZ to the contrary notwithstanding, this strange and
+ not very useful animal is indigenous to the State of
+ Pennsylvania. It especially frequents Harrisburg; and may
+ be seen and heard any day there, in the Senate or House.
+ Being an active member of that House, your correspondent
+ has been present during the passage of three hundred
+ bills within a week or two, in about one hundred and ten
+ of which he had some personal interest.</p>
+
+ <p>Lifting his eyes one day from his newspaper, when the
+ Speaker took the vote on an "Act to amend the
+ Incorporation of the City of Philadelphia," which your
+ correspondent happened to know included the presentation
+ of a three-story brownstone front to each of a committee
+ of six members of the House, he found there was not one
+ member in his seat; but, in the place of a few, there was
+ a company of these remarkable <i>Aye-ayes</i>, responding
+ duly to the call for a vote; but never a <i>no</i> among
+ them. No, no!</p>
+
+ <p>Now, your correspondent holds the deliberate opinion
+ that, in several respects, these aforesaid small animals
+ of Madagascar might be an improvement upon the average
+ Pennsylvania legislators. And, if your correspondent had
+ to do with getting up the other one hundred and ninety
+ bills, as he did the one hundred and ten, all right:
+ Otherwise, <i>not</i>. How does PUNCHINELLO regard
+ it?</p>
+
+ <p>Yours, LEGISLATOR.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>An Augean Job.</b></p>
+
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO has telegraphed to Governor GEARY his
+ approval of the "Sewage Utilization" bill at Harrisburg,
+ on one condition: that the first piece of work be
+ finished up by the members of the Pennsylvania
+ Legislature with their own hands; that work to be, to
+ make up into <i>decent</i> manure, <i>deodorized</i> and
+ <i>disinfected</i>, all bills passed at the late session
+ of their House and Senate. Since, however, complete
+ deodorization is probably <i>impossible</i>, PUNCHINELLO
+ advises also that the said members be required to cart
+ all their stuff out to the Bad Lands of Nebraska, and
+ remain there to make the best use of it; or else make a
+ contract with Captain HALL to ship it and them to the
+ Arctic regions at once.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>On the Finances.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Says Crispin, "Did not somebody say it was BOUTWELL in
+ the Treasury now? A great mistake. About well, to be
+ sure! When the newspaper men have 111-1/2 of gold, and I
+ haven't a round dollar! Where did they get it? And then
+ the legal tender question. I never asked but <i>one</i>
+ tender question in all my life, and that was to SUSAN and
+ she said, Yes. And then we were legally married. Nobody
+ ought to ask such questions <i>out loud</i>; it's not
+ <i>decent</i>. And <i>fine answering</i> an't much
+ better. Financiering, is it? Ah! well. <i>Specious
+ assumption</i>, too; but that requires brass, and I want
+ <i>gold</i>. Meantime, who's got a twenty-five cent
+ note?"</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Massachusetts Flats.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Massachusetts must abound in Flats. Its Legislature is
+ annually agitated from the sands of Cape Cod to the hills
+ of Berkshire over the question. It is said to be wisdom
+ to set a rogue to catch a rogue. Is it equally so to set
+ a flat to catch one?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>NATIONAL TAXIDERMY.</b></p>
+
+ <p><img src="images/14.jpg" align="left" alt=
+ "P">UNCHINELLO has for some time past carefully
+ considered the subject of our national tariff of imposts,
+ (<i>that is to say, he happened to see, in a Tribune, the
+ other day, that lucifer matches were now to be stamped
+ separately, and not by the box, as heretofore</i>) and he
+ has come to the conclusion, after duly weighing in his
+ mind all the arguments for and against the present system
+ of taxation, (<i>that is to say, he made up his mind the
+ minute he read the article</i>,) that what the present
+ tariff needs, is a more thorough application and a better
+ classification; or, what the technologists call Taxonomy,
+ which term is suggested to him by a work on the subject
+ which he has been recently studying. (<i>That is to say,
+ he looked in the dictionary to find out what Taxidermy
+ meant, and seeing Taxonomy there, snapped it up for a
+ sort of collateral pun</i>.) As an illustration of what
+ our impost legislators (or imposters) ought to be, let us
+ take the Taxidermist. He is one who takes from an animal
+ every thing but his skin and bones, and stuffs him up
+ afterward with all sorts of nonsense. Now, our National
+ Taxidermists ought to take a lesson from their original.
+ Many of the good people of the United States have much
+ more left them than their skin and bones. Why is not all
+ that taken? The condition of the ordinary stuffed animal
+ of the shops is strikingly significant of what should be
+ expected of loyal communities. (<i>That is to say,
+ communities which vote a certain ticket which need not be
+ named here</i>.) It is often said that there are things
+ which flesh and blood will not bear. Now, a thorough
+ system of Taxidermy remedies all this. A stuffed 'possum,
+ for instance, having no flesh or blood, will bear any
+ thing. When the people of this country are thoroughly
+ cleaned out, they will be just as docile. Among the
+ things which PUNCHINELLO would recommend as fit subjects
+ of taxation, is a man's expenses. They have not been
+ taxed yet. If he pays for his income, why not for his
+ outgoes? The immense sums that are annually expended in
+ this country for this, that, and the other thing ought
+ certainly to yield a revenue to the government. (<i>That
+ is to say, there ought to be a new army of collectors and
+ assessors appointed. P. knows lots of good men out of
+ office</i>.) And then there's a man's time. Why not tax
+ that? Nearly every man spends a lot of time, and he ought
+ to pay for it. As it would be our tax, it could not be a
+ very minute tax, although it is only the second tax which
+ we have suggested. (<i>That is to say&#8212;something
+ pun-ny</i>.) And besides these things, there's energy. We
+ often hear of a man's energies being taxed; but, so far
+ as the matter is apparent to the naked eye, it is
+ difficult to see whose energies are taxed for the good of
+ the government at the present day. This subject should
+ certainly be investigated. (<i>That is to say, a
+ committee of Congressmen should be appointed, with power
+ to send for persons, papers, and extra compensation</i>.)
+ Politics, too. Every man has his politics, (<i>that is to
+ say, every man except Bennett</i>,) and they ought to be
+ taxed, if for no other reason than the great impetus the
+ measure would give to the erection of fences throughout
+ the land. And letters, too. If every one sent by the mail
+ should yield one cent to the Treasury, how the currency
+ would be inflated in that locality! (<i>That is to say,
+ in the locality to which the collectors would
+ abscond</i>.) But it is impossible, with the limited time
+ at his disposal, for PUNCHINELLO to enter into a full
+ examination and elucidation of this subject. (<i>That is
+ to say, he can't think of any more illustrations just
+ now, and the printer wouldn't stand any more, if he
+ could</i>.) But it must be admitted that the great task
+ of opening up the country, of which we hear so much, will
+ never be complete until the Washington skinners and
+ stuffers get us all into the prepared specimen condition.
+ (<i>That is to say, when the people are all willing
+ to</i> "<i>dry up</i>.")</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">JOHN CHINAMAN'S
+ BILLING AND COOING.</span>&#8212;Pigeon
+ English.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>CABLE NEWS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>(EXCLUSIVELY FOR PUNCHINELLO.)</p>
+
+ <p>QUEEN ISABELLA has sent her compliments to
+ Se&#241;or CASTELAR, as well as to General PRIM,
+ informing them that, on the whole, she thinks she will
+ <i>not</i> return to the throne of Spain. It does not
+ agree with her quiet and refined tastes and habits to
+ live so much in public. All she wants now is a little
+ <i>ch&#226;teau en Espagne</i>. She proposes to send
+ her son, Prince of ASTURIAS, to Professor CASTELAR, to
+ study modern history. Is it not odd, by the way, that a
+ country so long <i>Mad-rid-den</i> as Spain, should have
+ now a governor with such a name as PRIM? But, what's in a
+ name? BOURBON, by any other name, would smell as sweet.
+ Some, however, prefer Old Rye. I prefer <i>water</i> to
+ both; <i>especially</i> to BOURBON.</p>
+
+ <p>It's an old story that <i>two positives make a
+ negative</i>. Paris news tells us that a late will case
+ has exemplified this. COMTE, you know, was a
+ <i>positive</i> philosopher. He had a positive wife. She
+ had a will of her own. He wrote a will of his own.
+ Consequently, it got into court. Mme. COMTE it seems, who
+ did not agree with the philosophy while the philosopher
+ lived, wanted his MSS. after his death. Positively, the
+ court did not see it in that light; and so the negative
+ came out. It was a case of no go, or <i>non-ego</i>, as
+ HEGEL might have called it. Did you ever read HEGEL? I
+ didn't; and I advise you not to begin. It won't pay. I am
+ told that he divided all things into Egos, She goes, and
+ Non-egos, or No-goes. The latter particularly; So do
+ I.</p>
+
+ <p>But to return to Spain; or rather to Paris. Don
+ FRAN&#199;OIS D'ASSISSI has, it appears, suddenly
+ discovered that his wife is not Queen of Spain so much as
+ she was. Much less so. So, he has found her company
+ rather expensive than agreeable; and proposes to abdicate
+ it. Not so <i>very</i> much of an ass, is he? Bravo for
+ Don FRAN&#199;OIS!</p>
+
+ <p>In London, <i>to-morrow</i> will be made famous in
+ literature by <i>the</i> great dinner in honor of the
+ advent of PUNCHINELLO. Mr. PUNCH is talked of to preside.
+ An unprecedented rush for tickets has begun. More about
+ it in my next.</p>
+
+ <p>PRIME.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Cutting.</b></p>
+
+ <p>We see extensively advertised the "Saxon Razor;" but
+ have not yet summoned up sufficient courage to try this
+ article, which "no gentleman's dressing-case should be
+ without." We cannot dispossess our minds of the
+ apprehension of cutting ourselves, remembering that line
+ descriptive of the combat between FITZ-JAMES and RODERICK
+ DHU, in which it is said, that,</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 1em;">"----thrice the Saxon blade
+ drank blood."</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Musical.</b></p>
+
+ <p>The vocal abilities of hens are admitted; but they
+ rarely attempt the Chro-matic scale.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>De Jure.</b></p>
+
+ <p>No man can now be a juror who knows any thing about
+ the case which he is to try. Thus a juryman was
+ challenged in the MCFARLAND case merely because he
+ belonged to Dr. BELLOWS's church. It was held that he
+ might possibly have got Wind of the matter while
+ listening to the Doctor's discourse.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>BOOK NOTICES.</b></p>
+
+ <p>AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT. Boston:
+ ROBERTS BROTHERS. New-York: D. APPLETON &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>The author of "Little Women" seeks, and not without
+ success, to draw from her "Old-Fashioned Girl" a contrast
+ and a moral. She presents to our view two young ladies of
+ opposite "styles." One is fresh and rural: the other
+ isn't. The difference between country and city
+ bringing-up is the point aimed at; and the difference is
+ about as great as that between the warbling of woodside
+ birds and the jingle of one of OFFENBACH'S tunes on a
+ corner barrel-organ. The book is neatly set forth, with
+ illustrations by Messrs. ROBERTS, BROTHERS, of
+ Boston.</p>
+
+ <p>RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. By the author of "Cometh up as a
+ Flower," etc. New-York: D. APPLETON &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>A readable book, notwithstanding that there are
+ several naughty characters in it, or perhaps
+ <i>because</i> there are. Probably it depicts with truth
+ the kind of society presented. If so, all the worse for
+ society. Shall we never again have healthful, virtuous
+ novels of the old school, such as "Tom Jones?" The book
+ is published in tasteful form by Messrs. D. APPLETON
+ &amp; Co.</p><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table style=
+ "width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align: center;" rowspan="2">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big>A. T. STEWART
+ &amp; CO.<br>
+ <br></big></big></p>
+
+ <p><small>ARE OFFERING</small></p>
+
+ <p><big>Extraordinary Inducements,</big></p>
+
+ <p><small>IN PRICE, STYLE, AND QUALITY,</small></p>
+
+ <p>TO HOUSEKEEPERS</p>
+
+ <p><small><small>IN</small></small></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>Linens,
+ Sheetings,</big></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">DAMASKS,<br>
+ NAPKINS, TOWELLINGS,</p>
+
+ <p><b>DRESS LINENS, PRINTED LINENS,</b></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">FLANNELS, BLANKETS,<br>
+  QUILTS,</p>
+
+ <p><big>COUNTERPANES, SHEETINGS,</big></p>
+
+ <p>Bleached and Brown Cottons,</p>
+
+ <p>Standard American Prints, etc., etc.</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">4th Ave., 9th and 10th
+ Sts.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td style="text-align: center;" rowspan="2">
+ <p><i>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</i> MASTERY
+ SYSTEM.</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>The Mastery of
+ Languages;</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>OR,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">THE ART OF SPEAKING
+ LANGUAGES IDIOMATICALLY.</p>
+
+ <p>BY THOMAS PRENDERGAST.</p><i style=
+ "font-weight: bold;">I. Hand-Book of the Mastery
+ Series.<br>
+ II. The Mastery Series. French.<br>
+ III. The Mastery Series. German.<br>
+ IV. The Mastery Series. Spanish.</i><br>
+
+ <p>PRICE 50 CENTS EACH.</p>
+
+ <p><i>From Professor E. M. Gallaudet,<br>
+ of the National Deaf Mute College.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"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."</p>
+
+ <p><b>FROM THE ENGLISH PRESS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>"The principle may be explained in a line&#8212;it
+ is first learning the language, and then studying the
+ grammar, and then learning (or trying to learn) the
+ language."&#8212;<i>Morning Star</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"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."&#8212;<i>Record</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"A week's patient trial of the French Manual has
+ convinced me that the method is
+ sound."&#8212;<i>Papers for the Schoolmaster</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"The simplicity and naturalness of the system are
+ obvious."&#8212;<i>Herald</i> (Birmingham.)</p>
+
+ <p>"We know of no other plan which will infallibly lead
+ to the result in a reasonable time."&#8212;<i>Norfolk
+ News</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><b>FROM THE AMERICAN PRESS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>"The system is as near as can be to the one in which a
+ child to talk."&#8212;<i>Troy Whig</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"We would advise all who are about to begin the study
+ of languages to give it a trial."&#8212;<i>Rochester
+ Democrat</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"For European travellers this volume is
+ invaluable."&#8212;<i>Worcester Spy</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Either of the above volumes sent by mail free to any
+ part of the United States on receipt of price.</p>
+
+ <p>D. APPLETON &amp; CO., Publishers,</p>
+
+ <p>90, 92, and 94 Grand Street, New York.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td style="text-align: center;">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BURCH'S</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><big><b>Merchant's
+ Restaurant</b></big></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>AND</p>
+
+ <p><big><b>DINING-ROOM,</b></big></p>
+
+ <p>310 BROADWAY,</p>
+
+ <p>BETWEEN PEARL AND<br>
+ DUANE STREETS.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Breakfast from 7 to 10 A.M.<br></i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Lunch and Dinner from 12 to 3 P.M<br></i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Supper from 4 to 7 P.M.</i></p>
+
+ <p>M. C. BURCH, of New-York.</p>
+
+ <p>A. STOW, of Alabama.</p>
+
+ <p>H. A. CARTER, of Massachusetts.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big>HENRY L. STEPHENS</big></p>
+
+ <p><big>ARTIST</big>,</p>
+
+ <p>No. 160 Fulton Street,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">NEW YORK.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center" rowspan="2">
+ <p><big><big><big><b>A. T. Stewart &amp;
+ Co.</b></big></big></big></p>
+
+ <p><small>HAVE OPENED A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF</small></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">LADIES' PARIS MADE
+ DRESSES</p>
+
+ <p><small>AND</small></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">WALKING SUITS,</p>
+
+ <p><small>In Silk, Poplin, and Linen,</small></p>
+
+ <p>ENTIRE NEW DESIGNS.</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>FRENCH SILK CLOAKS,</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p><small>AND</small></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">SHORT STREET SACQUES.</p>
+
+ <p>Children's Cloaks, Ladies' Breakfast Jackets,</p>
+
+ <p><small>Ladies' Pique, Swiss, and Cambric</small></p>
+
+ <p><b>Morning Robes and Walking Suits,</b></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small>LADIES'
+ UNDERGARMENTS</small></p>
+
+ <p><small>Of every description.</small></p>
+
+ <p>French, German, and Domestic Corsets,</p>
+
+ <p><small>Woven and hand-made.</small></p>
+
+ <p>JUST RECEIVED.</p>
+
+ <p>AT EXTREMELY ATTRACTIVE PRICES,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Fourth Ave., Ninth and
+ Tenth Sts.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td align="center" rowspan="2">
+ <p><big><big><b>RED AS A ROSE IS SHE.</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p><i>Third Edition.</i></p>
+
+ <p>D. APPLETON &amp; CO.,</p>
+
+ <p>90, 92, and 94 Grand Street,</p>
+
+ <p>Have now ready the Third Edition of</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>RED AS A ROSE IS SHE.</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>By the Author of "Cometh up as a Flower."</p>
+
+ <p>1 vol. 8vo. Paper Covers, 60 cents.</p>
+
+ <p>From the New York <i>Evening Express</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is truly a charming novel; for half its contents
+ breathe the very odor of the flower it takes as its
+ title."</p>
+
+ <p>From the Philadelphia <i>Inquirer</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"The author can and does write well; the descriptions
+ of scenery are particularly effective, always graphic,
+ and never overstrained."</p>
+
+ <p>D. A. &amp; Co. have just published:</p>
+
+ <p>A SEARCH FOR WINTER SUNBEAMS IN THE RIVIERA, CORSICA,
+ ALGIERS, AND SPAIN.</p>
+
+ <p>By Hon. S. S. Cox. Illustrated. Price, $3.</p>
+
+ <p>REPTILES AND BIRDS: A POPULAR ACCOUNT OF THE VARIOUS
+ ORDERS, WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE HABITS AND ECONOMY OF
+ THE MOST INTERESTING.</p>
+
+ <p>By Louis Figuler. Illustrated with 307 wood-cuts. 8vo,
+ $6.</p>
+
+ <p>HEREDITARY GENIUS: AN INQUIRY INTO ITS LAWS AND
+ CONSEQUENCES.</p>
+
+ <p>By Francis Galton. 1 vol. 8vo. $3.50.</p>
+
+ <p>HAND-BOOK OF THE MASTERY SERIES OF LEARNING
+ LANGUAGES.<br>
+ I. THE HAND-ROOK OF THE MASTERY SERIES.<br>
+ II. THE MASTERY SERIES, FRENCH.<br>
+ III. THE MASTERY SERIES, GERMAN.<br>
+ IV. THE MASTERY SERIES, SPANISH.<br>
+ Price, 50 cents each.</p>
+
+ <p>Either of the above sent free by mail to any address
+ on receipt of the price.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td align="center">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small>Important to
+ Newsdealers!</small></p>
+
+ <p>ALL ORDERS FOR</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>PUNCHINELLO</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>Will be supplied by</p>
+
+ <p>OUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE AGENTS,</p>
+
+ <p><b>American News Co.</b></p>
+
+ <p>NEW YORK.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><b>J. NICKINSON</b></big></p>
+
+ <p>BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO THE FRIENDS OF</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>"PUNCHINELLO"</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>RESIDING IN THE COUNTRY, THAT,</p>
+
+ <p>FOR THEIR CONVENIENCE</p>
+
+ <p><small>HE HAS MADE ARRANGEMENTS BY WHICH, ON RECEIPT
+ OF THE PRICE OF</small></p>
+
+ <p><b>ANY STANDARD BOOK PUBLISHED,</b></p>
+
+ <p>THE SAME WILL BE FORWARDED, POSTAGE PAID.</p>
+
+ <p><small>Parties desiring Catalogues of any of our
+ Publishing Houses, can have the same forwarded by
+ inclosing two stamps.</small></p>
+
+ <p>OFFICE OF</p>
+
+ <p><b>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,<br></b></p>
+
+ <p><b>83 Nassau Street.</b></p>
+
+ <p>[P. O. Box 2783.]</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table width="800" align="center" border="1" cellpadding="2"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td rowspan="2" width="66%">
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/16.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>A SUCCESSFUL CATCH.</b></p>
+
+ <p><i>John Bull.</i> "WELL, GENERAL, HOW DID YOU CATCH
+ YOUR FISH?"<span style=
+ "font-style: italic;"><br></span> <i>General Prim.</i>
+ "WITH A SPANISH FLY."</p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">WALTHAM
+ WATCHES.</span></big></p>
+
+ <p><br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">3-4
+ PLATE.</span><span style=
+ "font-style: italic;"><br></span></p>
+
+ <p><i><br>
+ 16 and 20 Sizes.</i></p>
+
+ <p><small>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
+ excellence of mechanical and scientific correctness of
+ design and execution, these watches are unsurpassed
+ anywhere.</small></p>
+
+ <p><small>In this country the manufacture of this fine
+ grade of Watches is not even attempted except at
+ Waltham.</small></p>
+
+ <p>FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING JEWELLERS.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Bowling Green
+ Savings-Bank,<br></span></big></p>
+
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">33
+ BROADWAY,<br></span></p>
+
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">NEW-YORK.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Open Every Day from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Deposits of any sum, from Ten Cents to Ten Thousand
+ Dollars, will be received.</p>
+
+ <p>Six Per Cent Interest,<br>
+ Free of Government Tax.</p>
+
+ <p>INTEREST ON NEW DEPOSITS</p>
+
+ <p>Commences on the first of every month.</p>
+
+ <p>HENRY SMITH, <i>President.</i></p>
+
+ <p>REEVES E. SELMES, <i>Secretary.</i></p>
+
+ <p>WALTER ROCHE, EDWARD HOGAN,
+ <i>Vice-Presidents.</i></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table style=
+ "width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <center>
+ <h2>PUNCHINELLO:</h2>
+
+ <h1><b>TERMS TO CLUBS.</b></h1>
+
+ <p>WE OFFER AS PREMIUMS FOR CLUBS</p>
+ </center>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small><small>FIRST:</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p><i>DANA BICKFORD'S PATENT FAMILY SPINNER,</i></p>
+
+ <p>The most complete and desirable machine ever yet
+ introduced for spinning purposes.</p>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small><small>SECOND:</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p><i>BICKFORD'S CROCHET AND FANCY WORK MACHINES.</i></p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small><small>THIRD:</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p><i>BICKFORD'S AUTOMATIC FAMILY KNITTER.</i></p>
+
+ <p>This is the most perfect and complete machine in the
+ world. It knits every thing.</p>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small><small>FOURTH:</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p><i>AMERICAN BUTTONHOLE, OVERSEAMING, AND
+ SEWING-MACHINE.</i></p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small>WE WILL SEND THE</small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="6"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">Family Spinner,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $8,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 4 subscribers and $16.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.1 Crochet,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $8,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 4 subscribers and $16.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.2 Crochet,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $15,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 6 subscribers and $24.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.1 Automatic
+ Knitter,<br>
+ 72 needles,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $30,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 12 subscribers and $48.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.2 Automatic
+ Knitter,<br>
+ 84 needles,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $33,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 13 subscribers and $52.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.3 Automatic
+ Knitter,<br>
+ 100 needles,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $37,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 15 subscribers and $60.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">No.4 Automatic Knitter,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">2 cylinders,<br>
+ 72 needles<br>
+ 1 100 needles</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $40.</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 16 subscribers and $64.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No. 1 American
+ Buttonhole<br>
+ and Overseaming Machine,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $75,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 30 subscribers and $120.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">No. 2 American Buttonhole<br>
+ and Overseaming Machine,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">without buttonhole<br>
+ parts, etc.,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $60,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 25 subscribers and $100.</td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Descriptive Circulars</p>
+
+ <p>Of all these machines will be sent upon application to
+ this office, and full instructions for working them will
+ be sent to purchasers.</p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <p>Charges on money sent by express must be prepaid, or
+ the net amount only will be credited.</p>
+
+ <p>Directions for shipping machines must be full and
+ explicit, to prevent error. In sending subscriptions give
+ address, with Town, County, and State.</p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <p>All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed
+ to P.O. Box 2783.</p><br>
+
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY</p>
+
+ <p>No. 83 Nassau Street,</p>
+
+ <p>NEW-YORK</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <p style="text-align: center;"><small>S.W. GREEN, PRINTER, CORNER
+ JACOB AND FRANKFORT STREETS.</small></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30,
+1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 10018-h.htm or 10018-h.zip *****
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30, 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. 5, April 30, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 8, 2003 [EBook #10018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "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 169 PEARL ST., |
+ | |
+ | 73, 75, 77, and 79 PINE ST., New-York. |
+ | |
+ | ADVANTAGES--All on the same premises, and under the |
+ | immediate supervision of the proprietors. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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_ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+[Illustration: Vol. 1 No. 5]
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO
+
+
+SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close resemblance |
+ | to Oil Paintings. Sold in All Stores throughout the World. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S WEEKLY BULLETIN OF CHROMOS.--"Easter Morning" |
+ | "Family Scene in Pompeii" "Whittier's Birthplace," |
+ | Illustrated Catalogue sent, on receipt of stamp, by L. PRANG |
+ | & CO., Boston. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 Reminiscences 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." |
+ | |
+ | BONNER 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 post-paid 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the |
+ | |
+ | NEW ILLUSTRATED HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL |
+ | |
+ | WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which will be Issued under date of April |
+ | 2, 1870, and thereafter weekly. |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO will be _National_, and not _local_; and will |
+ | endeavor to become a household word in all parts of the |
+ | country; and to that end has secured a |
+ | |
+ | VALUABLE CORPS OF CONTRIBUTORS |
+ | |
+ | in various sections of the Union, while its columns will |
+ | always be open to appropriate first-class literary and |
+ | artistic talent. |
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | The Artistic department will be in charge of Henry L. |
+ | Stephens, whose celebrated cartoons in VANITY FAIR placed |
+ | him in the front rank of humorous artists, assisted by |
+ | leading artists in their respective specialties. |
+ | |
+ | The management of the paper will be in the hands of WILLIAM |
+ | A. STEPHENS, with whom is associated CHARLES DAWSON SHANLY, |
+ | both of whom were identified with VANITY FAIR. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES, |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs, or suggestive |
+ | ideas sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable, and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications can not 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: THE WARNING OF THE BELLE
+
+LOOK OUT FOR THE TRAIN]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATRIOTIC ADORATION.
+
+A TALE OF PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ People of the Quaker City,
+ How the world must stand aghast
+ At your wondrous veneration
+ For those relics of the past,
+ Kept in such precise condition,
+ Fostered with such tender care--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Splendid are its walks and grass-plots
+ Where the bootblacks base-ball play,
+ And its seats resembling toad-stools,
+ On which loafers lounge all day,
+ Waiting for their luck, or gazing
+ At the office of the Mayor--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Then, behold the fine old State-house
+ Cleanly kept inside and out,
+ Where the faithful office-holders
+ Squirt tobacco-juice about:
+ Placards highly ornamental
+ Decorate its outward wall--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Hall?
+
+ O! ye gods and little fishes!
+ Could bill-sticker be so vile
+ As to paste up nasty posters
+ On the sacred classic pile?
+ Greece and Rome yet have their relics,
+ But what are they? very small.
+ Never half so venerated
+ As old Independence Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has hitherto refrained from criticising the periodicals of
+the day, from the mistaken idea that superlative excellence was not
+expected in every number of every daily or weekly journal in the land.
+He did not know that, if every such journal was not edited so as to suit
+the comprehension of all classes of cursory critics, it should be
+unqualifiedly condemned. Supposing that a painter should not condemn a
+paper for publishing a musical article beyond his comprehension, and
+that an architect ought not to get in a rage because he finds in his
+favorite journal a paper on beavers which makes him feel insignificant,
+PUNCHINELLO has generally looked around upon his fellow-journalists, and
+thought them very good fellows, who generally published very good
+papers. He did not find superlative excellence in any of their issues,
+but then he did not look for it. He might as well pretend to look for
+that in the journalists themselves, or in society at large. But he has
+lately learned, from the critics of the period, that he ought to look
+for it, and that it is the proper thing nowadays to pitch into every
+journal which does not, in every part, please every body, whether they
+be smart or dull; those quick of appreciation, or those slow gentlemen
+who always come in with their congratulations upon the birth of a joke
+at the time its funeral is taking place. And so, PUNCHINELLO will do as
+others do, and will occasionally view, from the loop-hole in his
+curtain, the successes and failures of his neighbors, and will give his
+patrons the benefit of his observations.
+
+The first thing he notices to-day is, that the _Evening Snail_ of last
+night is not so good as it was a fortnight ago; or, let us think a
+bit--it may have been a good number at the beginning of last month that
+he was thinking of; at all events, this last issue is inferior. The
+matter on the first page is not printed in nearly as good type as the
+original periodicals had it, and while the letters in the heading are
+quite fair, it is very noticeable that the I's are very defective, and
+there is no C in it. The "Gleanings" are excellent, and it would be
+advisable to have more of them--if indeed such a thing were possible in
+this case. The spider-work inside shows no acquaintance with the
+writings of BACH or GLIDDON, and there is nothing about the Spectrum
+Analysis in any part of the paper. Besides, the paper is too stiff and
+rattles too much, and PUNCHINELLO could never abide the color of the
+editor's pantaloons. Why will not people dress and write so that every
+body can admire and understand them. Especially in regard to witty
+things and breastpins They ought to be loud, overpowering, and so
+glaring that people could not help seeing them. And they ought to be a
+little cheap, too, or average people won't comprehend them. In both
+cases paste (and scissors) pays better than diamonds. The reports of
+private parties in the _Snail_ are, however, very good, and if it would
+confine its original matter to such subjects, it could not fail to
+succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Query for Physicians.
+
+Are people's tastes apt to become Vichy-ated by the excessive use of
+certain mineral waters?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Behold, how Pleasant a Thing 't is," etc.
+
+Boston has a couple of clergymen who have fallen out upon matters not
+precisely theological. In the summer, the Rev. Mr. MURRAY leaves his
+sheep, to shoot deer by torchlight in the Adirondacks. This the Rev. Mr.
+ALGER, in addressing the Suppression of Cruelty to Animals Society,
+denounces as extremely wicked. From all which Mr. PUNCHINELLO, taking up
+his discourse, infers,
+
+_First_. That it is a great deal more wicked to shoot deer by torchlight
+than by daylight.
+
+_Secondly_. That the Rev. MURRAY and the Rev. ALGER are of different
+religious persuasions.
+
+_Thirdly and lastly_. That the Rev. Mr. ALGER doesn't love venison.
+
+P. S. Persons desiring to present Mr. PUNCHINELLO with a fine haunch,
+(in the season,) may shoot it by daylight, moonlight, torchlight, or by
+a Drummond light, as most convenient.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We are indebted to Mr. SARONY for a number of brilliant photographs of
+celebrities of the day. Lovely woman is well represented the batch, with
+all the characters of which PUNCHINELLO hopes to present his readers,
+from time to time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District
+Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ALL ABOARD FOR HOLLAND!]
+
+PUNCHINELLO understands that a performance is soon to take place at the
+Academy of Music, for the benefit of GEORGE HOLLAND, the well-known and
+ever-green "veteran" of "the stage." It pleases PUNCHINELLO to know that
+a combination of talent and beauty is to be brought together for so
+worthy a purpose. Seventy-four years ago, when GEORGE HOLLAND was a
+small child, PUNCHINELLO used to dandle him upon his knee. Hardly four
+years have passed since PUNCHINELLO was convulsed by the _Tony Lumpkin_
+of HOLLAND. He distinctly remembers, too, administering hot whiskey
+punch to little boy HOLLAND with a tea-spoon, which may in some measure
+account for the Spirit subsequently infused by the capital comedian into
+the numerous bits of character presented by him. Considering these
+facts, it is manifestly an incumbent duty on the part of PUNCHINELLO to
+request the earnest attention of his readers to the subject of GEORGE
+HOLLAND'S benefit, all particulars concerning which will be given due
+time through the public press. It used to be said, long ago, that "the
+Dutch have taken Holland," Well, let our own modern Knickerbockers
+improve upon that notion, by taking HOLLAND'S tickets. Remember how,
+in the early settlement of the country, it was Holland that made
+New-York, and see that New-York now returns the compliment, and makes
+HOLLAND. Convivial songsters frequently remind us that--
+
+ --"a Hollander's draught should potent be,
+ And deep as the rolling Zuyder Zee."
+
+Mind this, all ye Hollanders who would give your support to our HOLLAND.
+Let your drafts be potent, your cheeks heavy, your attendance punctual.
+Make the affair complete; so that when, here-after, a comparison is
+sought for something that has been a sued people will say of it--"As big
+as that Bumper of HOLLAND'S."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ASTRONOMICAL CONVERSATIONS.
+
+(BY A FATHER AND DAUGHTER RESIDING ON THE PLANET VENUS.)
+
+No. I.
+
+FATHER (_to_ DAUGHTER, _who is looking through a telescope_.) Yes HELENE,
+that is the Planet Tellus, or Earth. The darker streaks are land; the
+bright spots, water. We begin with a low power, which shows only the
+masses; presently you will have the pleasure of discriminating not only
+rivers and chains of mountains, but cities--single houses--even Human
+Beings! Yes, you shall this very night read page of PUNCHINELLO, a paper
+so bright that every word appears surrounded by a halo!
+
+DAUGHTER. O father! do that _now_. How delightful, to actually read the
+works of these singular creature's, and become familiar with their
+extraordinary ideas! Were the scintillations you spoke of the other
+night, that were seen all over the Western Continent, the result of the
+flashing of these radiant pages?
+
+F. Undoubtedly, my child; they began with the first issue of the paper,
+and have since regularly increased in brightness, just as It has.
+
+D. It really seems as though Earth would answer for a Moon, by and by, at
+this rate!
+
+F. You are quite right, HELENE; it will. Or say, rather, a Sun. For you
+will observe that it is a _warm_ light; not cool, as reflected light
+always is. It is Original.
+
+D. Well, this shows that PUNCHINELLO must have some Heart, as well as
+Head. Come, put on your highest power now, and let us seem to pay good
+old Tellus a visit!
+
+[_The indulgent Father complies, and, is at some pains to adjust the
+focus_.]
+
+F. Now, dear! take a good look.
+
+D. (_Looking intently_.) Oh! how splendid--how splendid! _Do_ see the
+beautiful things in those Shop Windows! It must be the Spring Season
+there! _Do_ see those lovely lumps on the backs of those creatures'
+heads! What place is it, Father?
+
+F. That? It's New-York; and the street is the famous Broadway.
+
+D. O dear! how I _would_ like to go shopping there, this minute!--for I
+see it is afternoon in that quarter. Is there no way of getting
+there?(!!!)
+
+F. (_Laughing heartily_.) Well, well, HELENE! That's pretty good, for
+the daughter of an astronomer! Do you know that at this precise moment
+you are Forty-five Million, Six Hundred and Fifty-four Thousand, Four
+Hundred and Ninety-one Miles and a half from those Muslins! I'll tell
+you, Sis, what _could_ be done: Drop a line to the Editor of
+PUNCHINELLO, and tell him what you want. He'll get it, some way.
+
+D. That I will, instantly! [_Turns to her portfolio, while her father
+turns to the telescope_.]
+
+"DEAR MR. EDITOR: Pardon the seeming _boldness_ of a _stranger:_ you are
+no _stranger to me!_ Long, _long_ have I deceived that _good man_, my
+father, by _pretending_ to know _nothing_ of the Earth, or of his
+_instrument!_ Many and _many_ a night, _unknown to him_, have I gone to
+the _Telescope_, to satisfy the _restless craving_ I feel to know more
+of _your Planet_, and of a _person of your sex_ whom I have _often_
+beheld, and watched with _eagerness_ as he came and went. How
+_thrilling_ the thought, that he cannot even _know of my existence_, and
+that we are _forever separated!_ This, good and _dear_ Editor, is my one
+Thought, my one great Agony.
+
+"It has occurred to me that, in this _dreadful_ situation--my Passion
+being sufficiently Hopeless, as any one may see--you might at least
+afford me some slight _alleviation_, by undertaking to let Him know of
+the _interest_ he excites in this far-off star! Let me describe my
+charmer, so that you will be able to identify him. He is of fair size,
+with a rolling gait and a smiling countenance, has light hair and
+complexion, wears often a White Hat, (on the back of his head--where
+Thoughtful men always place the hat, I've been told by observers,) and
+now and then carelessly leaves one leg of his trowsers at the top of his
+boot. I have often seen him, with a bundle of papers in his pocket,
+entering a large building with the words "_Tribune_ Office" over the
+door--and I _adore_ him! O excellent Editor! tell him this, I _implore_
+you! Be kind to your distant and _love-lorn_ friend,
+
+HELENE."
+
+F. What did you say, Helene?
+
+D. I was saying that I wished to look a little longer at the fashions in
+Broadway.
+
+F. Well, well--I believe the Fashions are all that these women think of!
+There--look away! I presume they have changed considerably since you
+looked before! When do you wish to begin your lessons in Astronomy?
+
+D. Next week. Father; let me see: we will say, next week--Thursday.
+
+F. Very well; I shall remind you.
+
+D. (_who is determined to have the last word, any way_.) Very well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beach's Soliloquy on entering his Pneumatic Chamber.
+
+"TU-BE or not tu-be."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Reflection by a Tallow-chandler.
+
+Though a man be the Mould of fashion, yet he cannot light himself to bed
+by the Dip in his back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration: 'M']
+
+_MEN AND ACRES,_ the new comedy at WALLACK'S, is one of the best of
+TAYLOR'S pieces, and a decided improvement upon the carpenter work of
+BOUCICAULT. It has been rechristened by Mr. WALLACK, and its former
+name--_Old Men and New Acres, or New Aches and Old Manors,_ or something
+else of that sort--has been conveniently shortened. If it does not
+convince us that the author has improved since he first began to write
+plays, it certainly reminds us that there is such a thing as _Progress_.
+In the latter play, Mr. J.W. WALLACK was a civil engineer. In the
+present drama, he is an uncivil tradesman. Both appeal to the levelling
+tendencies of the age; and in each, the author has done his "level
+best"--as Mr. GRANT WHITE would say--to flatter the Family Circle at the
+expense of the Boxes.
+
+The cast includes a Vague Baronet and his Managing Wife, their Slangy
+Daughter, their Unpleasant Neighbor and his wife and daughter, an
+Unintelligible Dutchman, an Innocuous Youth, a Disagreeable Lawyer, and
+the Merchant Prince. This is the sort of way in which they conduct
+themselves,
+
+_Act_ 1. _Disagreeable Lawyer to Vague Baronet:_ "You are ruined, and
+your estate is mortgaged to a Merchant Prince. What do you intend to
+do?"
+
+_Vague Baronet._ "I will ask my wife what I think about it."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are we? Allow me to remark,
+Fiddlesticks! Get the Merchant to take our third-story hall-bedroom for
+a week, and I'll soon clear off the mortgage."
+
+_Enter Slangy Daughter._ "O ma! there was such a precious guy at the
+ball last night, and I had no end of a lark with him. Good gracious!
+here comes the duffer himself."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince. (Aside.)_ "So here's the Vague Baronet and his
+wife. And there's the slangy girl I fell in love with. Nice lot they
+are!" (_To Managing Wife._) "Madam, there is nothing, so grand as the
+majesty of trade. Your rank and blood are all gammon. We Merchant
+Princes are the only people fit to live. However, I'll condescend to
+speak to you."
+
+_Managing Wife. (Aside.)_ "How noble! What a gentlemanly person he
+really is!" _(To Merchant Prince.)_ "Sir, I bid you welcome. Here is my
+daughter, who was just praising your beauty and accomplishments. I leave
+you to entertain her." (_Exeunt Baronet, Wife, and Lawyer_.)
+
+_Merchant Prince (placing his chair next to Slangy Daughter's, and
+leaning his elbow on her.)_ "There is nothing like trade. We tradesmen
+alone are great. We despise the whole lot of clean and idle aristocrats.
+I keep a Gin Palace in Liverpool. Does your bloated aristocracy do half
+as much for suffering humanity?"
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Speak on, speak ever thus, O Noble Being! It's
+awfully jolly!"
+
+_Curtain falls, and Baker wakes up to lead his orchestra through the
+mazes of "Shoo Fly."_
+
+
+_Appreciative Lady._ "Isn't it nice? Miss HENRIQUES'S dress is perfectly
+beautiful, and it sounds so cunning to hear her talk slang."
+
+_Second Appreciative Lady._ "How handsome ROCKWELL looks! Just like a
+real baronet, my dear!"
+
+_Other Appreciative Ladies._ "The dresses at WALLACK'S are always
+perfectly exquisite. I mean to have my next dress made with a green silk
+fichu, a moire antique bertha, and little point lace peplums and
+gussets, just like Miss MESTAYER'S. Won't it be sweet?"
+
+_All the Counter-Jumpers in the Theatre._ "JIM WALLACK'S the boy! Don't
+he talk up to those aristocratic snobs, though?"
+
+
+_Act 2. Enter Unpleasant Neighbor and Unintelligible German. The former
+says,_ "You're sure there's an iron mine on the Baronet's land?"
+
+_Unintelligible German._ "Ya! Das ist um-um-um."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince and Slangy Daughter. Exeunt the other fellows._
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "There is nothing like the grandeur of trade; and yet
+we tradesmen are not proud. See! I offer to marry you."
+
+_Slangy daughter._ "I love you wildly! _(Aside.)_ I do hope he won't
+rumple my hair."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "Come to my arrums! The majesty of trade is so
+infinitely above any thing else"--_and so forth._
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Take her, noble Merchant, and be happy
+_(Aside.)_ This settles the affair of the mortgage." _(To Daughter)_
+"Come, darling, we'll go and tell your father." _(They go.)_
+
+_Enter Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here's a telegram for you. No bad news, I
+hope?"
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I am ruined unless you lend me L40,000. Do it, and I
+will assign to you the mortgage on the baronet's property. The majesty
+of trade is something which"--
+
+_Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here it is." _(Aside.)_ "Now I'll get possession
+of the estate and the iron-mine."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are you? Of course you can't have my
+daughter now."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I resign her. We tradesmen are infinitely greater
+than you aristocrats."
+
+_Curtain falls, Baker wakes up. "Shoo Fly" by the Orchestra, and remarks
+on dress by the ladies as before. Counter-jumpers go out to drink to the
+majesty of trade, having grown perceptibly taller since the play began._
+
+
+_Act 3. Unprincipled Neighbor to Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Have you got
+the analysis of the iron ore?"
+
+_Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Ya! Das its um-um-um."
+
+_Unprincipled Neighbor._ "All right! Now I'll foreclose the mortgage,
+and will be richer than ever."
+
+_Enter Vague Baronet, and Wife and Daughter, and Lawyer. To them
+collectively remarks the Unprincipled Neighbor,_ "The mortgage is due.
+As you can't pay, you've got to move out."
+
+_Disagreeable Lawyer._ "Not much! Here's an analysis of iron ore found
+on our land. We raised money on the mine, and are ready to pay off the
+mortgage."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. I told
+them all about it. We tradesmen are great, but we will sometimes help
+even a wretched aristocrat."
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. Now I will marry
+my noble Merchant, and make him rich again; for there's dead loads of
+iron on the Governor's land, you bet!"
+
+_They all produce analyses of the ore, and the play itself being o'er,
+the curtain falls._
+
+
+_Exasperated critic, who has sent for twelve seats, and has been
+politely refused._ "I'd like to abuse it, if there was a chance; but
+there isn't. The play is really good, and I can't find much fault with
+the acting. However, I'll pitch into STODDARD for swearing, which his
+'Unprincipled Neighbor' does to an unnecessary extent, and I'll say that
+JIM WALLACK is too old and gouty to play the 'Merchant Prince,' and
+doesn't quite forget that he used to play in the Bowery."
+
+_Every body else._ "Did you ever see a play better acted? And did you
+ever see actresses better dressed?"
+
+And PUNCHINELLO is constrained to answer the latter question with an
+emphatic No! As to the acting, it might be improved were Mr. STODDARD to
+play the character for which he is cast, instead of insisting upon
+playing nothing but STODDARD. But to all the rest of the actors, not
+forgetting Mr. RINGGOLD, who plays the insignificant part of the
+"Innocuous Youth," PUNCHINELLO is pleased to accord his gracious
+approval.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Balmy Idea.
+
+According to Miss ANTHONY, the crying evil with women is that they will
+blubber; but it must be remembered that out of this blubber they make
+oil to pour into our conjugal wounds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Suit for Damages.
+
+Any clothes in a storm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE POLITICAL MILL-ENNIUM.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS UPON HIGH ART.
+
+Observant visitors to the National Academy of Design will allow that a
+tendency to greatness is beginning to develop itself in certain
+directions among our artists. In landscape some of them are almost
+immense. The works of PORPHYRO warm the walls with rays of splendor, or
+cool the lampooned sight-line with pearly gradations, as the case may
+be. MANDRAKE renders feelingly the summer uplands and groves, and
+SILVERBARK the melancholy autumnal woods. BYTHESEA infuses with
+sentiment even the blue wreaths of smoke that curl up from the distant
+ridge against which loom the concentrated lovers that he selects for his
+idyllic romances. Gushingly he does his work, but thoroughly; and there
+are other flowers than lackadaisies to be discerned in his herbage.
+GUSTIBUS blows gently the foliage aside, and gives us glimpses through
+it of rural contentment in connection with a mill, or some other
+interesting object beyond. The pencil of SAGEGREEN imbues canvases, both
+large and small, with infinite variety and force; and it is to
+SKETCHMORE that the great lakes owe their remarkable reputation as
+pieces of water with poems growing out of their broad lily-pads. Very
+tender are the pastoral banks and brooksides of LEAFHOPPER. ELFINLOCKS
+takes up his pencil, and lo! a hazy, mazy, lazy, dreamy vista where it
+has touched. But hold! Our critical Incubus has taken the bit between
+her teeth, and is beginning to run away with us. Stop that; and let our
+readers enumerate the other first American landscape painters for
+themselves.
+
+Not so strong are our artists in domestic incidents and compositions of
+life and character. We have STUNNINGTON, to be sure, whose traits of
+American expression, whether white or colored, are most true to the
+life; and there's BARLEYMOW, who will twist you an eclogue from the tail
+of his foreground pig. Others there be; but space has its limits, and we
+forbear.
+
+As for our portrait limners, their name is Legion, and that
+comprehensive name must go for all. Like BENVENUTO CELLINI they shall be
+known for their jugs; and their transmission to posterity on the heads
+of families is a thing to be reckoned on as sure.
+
+For the higher flights of art the American painter is by no manner of
+means endowed with the wings of his native eagle--wings that agitate the
+cerulean vault, spattering it with splashes of creamy cloud-spray, and
+churning into butter the stretches of the Milky Way. History has indeed
+been illustrated by American art, but has it been enriched? The
+WASHINGTONS and the WEBSTERS, the CLAYS and the LINCOLNS, have had their
+memories dreadfully lampooned on canvas. Allegory does not inspire the
+great American pencil. Tall art there is, and enough of it "at that;"
+but of high art we have none to speak of, except the canvases that are
+placed over doorways in the galleries of the Academy, and, in the sense
+of elevation, may consequently be spoken of as high. All this is wrong.
+Alas! that we should write it. Would that we could right it! And to
+think of the musty subjects that our historical and allegorical men
+select. Ho! young men--away with your CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS; relegate
+your METAMORA to his proper limbo; let WASHINGTON alone; and LINCOLN;
+and OSCEOLA the Savage; and POCAHONTAS, and all the rest. Leave them
+alone; and, taking fresh subjects, dip your brushes in brains, as old
+OPIE or somebody else said, and go to work with a will. No fresh
+subjects to be had, you say? Bosh! absurd interlocutor that you are.
+Here's a bundle of 'em ready cut to hand. We charge you no money for
+them, and you may take your choice.
+
+SUBJECTS FOR WORKS OF HIGH ART.
+
+PROVIDENCE tempering the wind to the shorn lamb.
+
+ABSENCE OF MIND marking a box of paper shirt-collars with indelible ink.
+
+MILTON "going it blind."
+
+The late Mr. WILLIAM COBBETT teaching his sons to shave with cold water.
+
+ST. PATRICK emptying the snakes out of his boots.
+
+TRUE LOVE never running smooth.
+
+NO MAN acting _Hero_ to his _valet de chambre_.
+
+ROBERT BONNER taking DEXTER by the forelock with one hand, and TIME with
+the other.
+
+Subjects like these might be worked out to advantage. The field in which
+they are to be found is almost unlimited; and they possess abundantly
+the two grand essentials to success in art at the present time, as well
+as in literature--novelty and sensation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+H.G. and Terpsichore.
+
+AMONG the strange revelations about _Tribune_ people elicited during the
+MCFARLAND trial, was the bit of gossip about Mr. GREELEY going to
+Saratoga to "trip the light fantastic toe." That Mr. GREELEY'S toe is
+"fantastic," every body who has ever inspected his "Congress gaiters"
+must know, but as to its lightness we have our doubts. "What I know
+about dancing" would be a capital subject for H.G. to handle, and we
+hope that he will take Steps for doing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sweeny's New Charter.
+
+ How doth the busy Peter B.,
+ Improve each shining hour!
+ From nettled young Democracy,
+ He plucks the safety-flower.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From Rome.
+
+The POPE is said to be "out of Spirits." Why doesn't he come to
+New-York, where he can get plenty of the article, either in the sense of
+the Tap or in that of the Rap?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"He who was Born to be Hanged," etc.
+
+On one of the mornings of the MCFARLAND trial, a very importunate person
+attempted to force his way into the court-room, which, as he was told,
+was already crowded "to suffocation." To this he retorted that he
+"wasn't born to be suffocated." That's in substance what the late JACK
+REYNOLDS said, and _he_ was mistaken.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Difference.
+
+Rice riots are reported as raging in all the ports of Japan. Rye was the
+principal mover in the famous conscription riots of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Celestial Idea.
+
+No wonder the Chinese theatre in San Francisco is a success, considering
+how skilful the actors must be in catching the Cue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUMBLES.
+
+Did you ever hear of my friend BOOTSBY? "No." That's rather queer. I
+see--you've been out of town. BOOTSBY is a man of standing--of decided
+standing, I may say. He stands, in fact, a great deal. The heavy
+standing round he does is enormous when the limited capacity of a single
+mortal is taken in view. BOOTSBY stands round among every class of
+people, and especially of politicians and potationers. He stands round
+to talk, to hear, and especially to drink. The power of the man in this
+last matter is wonderful, and the puzzle is, that his standing (and
+perpendicularity) is not perceptibly affected. Of course there are times
+when BOOTSBY'S standing is not so good. In so slippery a place as Wall
+Street, it is found to be less certain; while in a crowd on Broadway,
+waiting for a bus, it cannot be said to maintain a very remarkable
+firmness. But as a whole, and as the world goes, BOOTSBY is a man of
+standing. In the altitude of six feet ten, he may be called a man of
+high standing. He feels proud of the fact. "Is it not better to be a
+mountain than a mole?" he often asks in a proudly sneering manner of his
+neighbor PUGGS, who is about as far up in the world as the top of a
+yard-stick. It is very true that size is not quality, and a seven-footer
+may be no better than a three-footer; but it is observed that a Short
+Man is rarely any thing else. His stature is his measure throughout. My
+own impression of myself is, that I don't care to be short; but if the
+alternative were forced upon me, I should choose that of person rather
+than of purse. BOOTSBY does not care much about money, and he carries
+very little. Some people are like BOOTSBY, but most people are not. The
+ladies, it is true, never, or rarely, want money. Like newspapers and
+club-houses, they are self-supporting. In fact they surround themselves
+with supporters which stay tightly. Mrs. TODD is peculiar in her wants
+pecuniary. She, good soul, never wants (or keeps) money long, but she
+doesn't want it _little_. She prefers it like onions, in a large bunch,
+and strong. The reason why most women do not want money is because they
+have no use for it. They never dress; they never wear jewelry; silks and
+satins have no charms in their eyes; laces, ribbons, shawls never tempt.
+To exist and walk upright in simpleness and quiet is the sum of their
+desires. Dear creatures! how is it that they never want?
+
+My neighbor, Mr. DROWSE, desires to know where you get all your funny
+things for PUNCHINELLO? He knows they are there, does Mr. DROWSE; for he
+gets my copy of the penny postman, and he keeps it, too. It is the only
+good taste my neighbor has displayed of late years. I tell Mr. DROWSE
+that you make your fun. He further asks, Where? I tell him in the
+attic--up there where they keep the salt. He desires to know the size of
+attic. Of course he has never seen your noble, capacious, alabaster
+forehead, else he would perceive the source of those scintillations of
+light and warmth which radiate throughout the universe every Saturday
+for only ten cents. He is curious also to know about the salt, and
+doesn't comprehend how or where you use it. He used to use it when a boy
+in catching birds by putting the briny compound on the tails of the
+same, and _that_ he used to call "fun alive;" but he don't see it--the
+salt--about PUNCHINELLO. I suspect Mr. DROWSE doesn't see the sellers,
+(certainly he avoids them when PUNCHINELLO is offered, much to my
+mortification, and one dime to my cost,) and so is not likely to discern
+the source of the fun. I merely informed Mr. DROWSE that the editor was
+very tall, very handsome, with very black skin and rosy hair, (at which
+he opened his eyes with astonishment, and asked if I meant so; at which
+I said, "Yes, I guess so,") and that he laughed out of his nose, eyes,
+head, and hands, as well as his mouth. DROWSE wants to see the editor
+very much. He has seen men with black skins and hearts, (for he used to
+know lots of politicians;) but wants to put his vision on some "rosy
+hair"--and when he does, no doubt his gaze will be fixed. It is healthy
+sometimes to have the gaze fixed; and often, like sauce-pans and
+sermons, it has to be fixed. When Mr. DROWSE calls at 83, please show
+him in Parlor 6 with the Brussels, fresco-work, and lace curtains.
+
+April is a model month. So serene, steady, clear, and balmy. Nothing
+but blue sky, gentle zephyrs, kissing breezes, genial suns by day and
+sparkling stars by night. PUNCHINELLO no doubt likes sparkling
+stars--stars of magnitude--stars that show what they are. PUNCHINELLO
+perhaps goes to NIBLO'S, and not only sees plenty stars, but plenty of
+them. But of April. It is called "fickle;" but that's a slander. "Every
+thing by turns and nothing long"--that is a libel on which a suit could
+be hung. The same vile falsehood is cruelly uttered of some women, when
+every body knows, or should know, that these same women are nothing of
+the sort. Who ever knew a fickle woman?
+
+Where in history is there record of such an Impossibility? Fickle--that
+implies a change of mind. What woman ever changed her mind any more than
+her hands? Nonsense, avaunt!--banished be slander! April is _not_
+fickle--woman is _not_ fickle. As one is evenly beautiful, divinely
+serene, bewitchingly winning, so is the other sunny, cerulean, balmy,
+paradisiacal. April for ever--after that the rest of the calendar.
+
+Does PUNCHINELLO believe in the Woman Movement? TODD does. He believes
+woman should move as much as man; and he regards her movement in such
+numbers to the great West as full of hope (and husbands) for the sex.
+Mrs. TODD has not as yet been irresistibly seized by the movement; but
+if TIMOTHY knows himself, he longs for the day when the seizer may come.
+Although TODD--who is the writer of this epistle--says it, who perhaps
+shouldn't, lest the shaft of egotism be hurled mercilessly at him, he
+does unhesitatingly say that to aid this movement he would make the
+greatest of sacrifices. He is willing to sacrifice his wife and other
+female relations upon the sacred altar of the movement, and contribute
+liberally to the expense thereof. He is quite willing they should
+vote--early and often, if need be; but he wishes to see the movement go
+westward like the Star of Empire--westward _via_ cheerful Chicago. TODD
+trusts PUNCHINELLO will espouse this movement; for if it does, it--the
+movement, no less than PUNCHINELLO--will go straight onward and upward;
+but not by the route known as the Spout.
+
+Mucilage is a good thing. It is now extensively used in Church, State,
+and Society. We use it largely at the Veneerfront Avenue Church, of
+which Rev. Dr. ALEXANDER PLASTERWELL is pastor. Of course, Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO, you know that distinguished church, and have no doubt often
+listened to the distinguished Dr. PLASTERWELL. He is a kind man, has a
+high forehead, a Roman (Burgundy) nose, and a sweet, soft head--I should
+say heart. He has--great and good man--the largest faith in mucilage. He
+often makes it a text, and he sticks to it, he does--does Dr.
+PLASTERWELL. Nothing like mucilage, PUNCHINELLO. It is the hope of the
+human race, and the salvation of woman. It is the Philosopher's Stone in
+solution; the essence and link which connects and cements all that is
+great, good, and lovely, in the past, present, and future. At least,
+such is the humble opinion of
+
+TIMOTHY TODD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS TO CAR CONDUCTORS.
+
+When standing in Printing House Square, your destination being Grand
+Street Perry or Bleecker Street, if a stranger asks whether you are
+going to Harlem, nod, as it is considered improper to answer in the
+negative. If he finds out the mistake, you can plead deafness.
+
+When called upon to stop, never attempt to comply. There are several
+reasons why you should not. In the first place, if you did stop, it
+would show that you have no will of your own, and since the passage of
+the Fifteenth Amendment, _all_ men are equal in this country.
+
+You may stop about two blocks from the place named, just to please
+yourself and prove your independence; but take particular care to start
+the car when the passenger is half off the steps. If there is a young
+surgeon in the neighborhood, you can enter into an arrangement to break
+arms and legs in this way with impunity, have the maimed "carried into
+the surgery," and share the fees with the operator. Occasional cases of
+manslaughter may take place; but don't mind that, as coroners' juries in
+New-York will return verdicts of "death from natural causes." Besides
+this, remember that you have a vote, and that both coroners and judges
+are dependent upon the people. When a lame old gentleman hails you,
+beckon him furiously to come on, but be sure, at the same time, to urge
+the driver to greater speed.
+
+It is no part of your business to have change, so never give any, but
+drive on: people should provide for and look after their own business
+and that is none of yours.
+
+Always drive through the centre of a target company or funeral
+procession, never minding whether you kill one or more, and then abuse
+the captain or the undertaker for his stupidity.
+
+By the adoption of these essential rules, and by adding a good deal of
+incivility, you will soon reach the top of the wheel of your profession
+and in due time have a testimonial presented to you by an admiring and
+grateful public.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Out in the Cold.
+
+Commissioner Tweed proposes a new outside Bureau of the Department of
+Public Works, for late-Commissioner MCLEAN. He is to be Superintendent
+of Refrigerators.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS.
+
+ENGRAVED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION FOR PUNCHINELLO, FROM THE ORIGINAL
+PAINTING, BY MILES STANDISH, IN THE COLLECTION OF METHUSELAH PILGRIM,
+ESQ., OF PILGRIMSVILLE, MASS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO CAPTAIN HALL.
+
+(IN ANTICIPATION OF HIS TRIP TO THE POLE.)
+
+ HALL! HALL!
+ D'ye hear our call?
+ Or, do you fancy it to be
+ A weather sign--merely the pre-
+ Monition of a squall
+ At sea!
+ HALL!
+
+ You pay no heed at all.
+ Nevertheless, O hardy mariner!
+ (A Snow-Bird brings this with our kindest love,)
+ We're sorry you prefer
+ Those frigid walks (ever so far above
+ The 80th parallel, we guess!)
+ To stocks, and tariffs, and domestic bliss;
+ Yes, yes,
+ Captain, we're sorry it has come to this!
+
+ Why do you madly thirst
+ For grog that's chopped up with a hatchet? say!
+ And tell us of the first
+ Strange thought which spurred you to go up that way!
+ Was it the hope that on some icy coast
+ (Frozen, yourself, almost!)
+ You'd have the luck to meet poor FRANKLIN'S ghost?
+
+ And has it seemed, sometimes,
+ That drowning might be pleasanter up there
+ Among the icebergs, native to those climes,
+ Than where
+ The surf breaks gently on some coral-reef,
+ And sirens sweetly soothe one's slow despair?
+ Say, was that your belief?
+
+ And who is BENT?[*]
+ Why was _he_ sent,
+ With his Warm Currents wheeling round the Pole?
+ A long, long race must his disciples run:
+ No sun,
+ No fun,
+ No chance to toss a word to any one;
+ And what a goal?
+
+ As hopefully you munch
+ The flinty biscuit, watching whale or seal,
+ Or listening, undaunted, to the crunch
+ Of ice-floes at the keel,
+ Say, Sir Intrepid! shall you really think
+ You pioneer the navies of the world?
+ Not while the chink
+ Of well-housed dollars sounds so pleasantly,
+ And safer tracks map out the treacherous sea!
+ If that's your dream, oh! let your sails be furled.
+
+ But, no!
+ It is not this! Your spirit, high and bold,
+ Scorning all tamer joys, will have it so!
+ No cold
+ Can chill its ardor! Such a soul would sate
+ Its deathless craving in some lofty flight,
+ Some deed sublime, and read its shining fate
+ By the Aurora's light!
+ For fruitful fellowship, it seeks the wild,
+ The frozen waste,
+ Where the world's venturous heroes--reconciled
+ To sunless, shuddering gloom--
+ To joyless solitude--with ardor taste
+ Their dread delights! and so at last find room,
+ 'Mid nodding icebergs, for their watery tomb!
+
+ For this, we spare you,
+ O dauntless HALL! Once having breathed that air
+ So pure, so fresh, so rare!
+ And caught the wildness of the Esquimaux,
+ We declare you
+ Unfit to live where beans and lettuce grow!
+ Leave delving to the little pitiful mole,
+ Great soul!
+ And now, then, for the Pole!
+
+[Footnote *: Captain BENT, of Cincinnati, originator of the new theory
+of Polar Currents.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FINANCIAL RELIEF
+
+MR. BUMBLE BOUTWELL TO MRS. CORNEY FISH. _(See Oliver Twist.)_ "THE GREAT
+PRINCIPLE OF FINANCIAL RELIEF IS TO GIVE THE BUSINESS MEN EXACTLY WHAT
+THEY DON'T WANT: THEN THEY GET TIRED OF COMING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+MR. SUMNER said he was the friend of the oppressed. That, as was well
+known, was his regular business. Unfortunately, the Fifteenth Amendment
+had rendered the colored man incapable of being hereafter regarded as an
+oppressed creature. He was sorry, but it could not be helped. He was
+therefore forced to go down the chromatic scale of creation and find
+another class of clients. He found them in cattle. HOMER had sung about
+the ox-eyed Juno, and WALTER WHITMAN about bob veal. COWPER had remarked
+that he would not number in his list of friends the man who needlessly
+set foot upon a cow. He mentioned these things merely to show that
+railway companies had no right to starve cattle. He proposed an
+amendment to the Constitution, to provide that a dinner of at least
+three courses should be given to cows daily. Mr. DRAKE was heartily in
+favor of the proposition. He had got his feet in a web, so to speak, by
+paddling in the political waters of Missouri, and some people had gone
+so far as to call him "quack." He demanded redress.
+
+Mr. WILSON didn't see the use of all this legislation to protect
+animals. Animals had no votes, although he admitted a partial exception,
+in that every bull, it had its ballot. But he had something practical.
+Here was a jolly job, the Pacific Railway grant. There was a good deal
+more in it than they had made out of any other GRANT. Mr. THURMAN'S
+suggestion, that this land ought to be occupied by actual settlers, he
+scorned. "Actual settlers" were of a great deal more use to him in
+Massachusetts, where they could vote for him, than in the territories,
+where that boon would not be extended to them. It was much better that
+they should be occupied by imaginary settlers, who could pay and not
+vote. Actual "settlings" were the dregs of humanity.
+
+The Georgia bill came up, as it does every day with much more regularity
+than luncheon. The Senate has succeeded in muddling it to that degree of
+unintelligibility that nobody has the slightest notion what it provides.
+It is, therefore, in a condition to give rise to infinite debate. After
+several senators had said enough for a foundation for thirty columns
+each in the _Globe,_ they let it go for the present. The present was the
+one promised by Senator WILSON in return for the Pacific Railway grab
+grant.
+
+HOUSE.
+
+The House is given over to the tariff. A very indelicate discussion has
+been had upon corsets. Mr. BROOKS was of opinion that the corset would
+tariff it were subjected to any more strain in the way of duties. Mr.
+MARSHALL remarked that the corset avoided a great deal of Waist. It was
+whalebone of his bone, or something of that sort. It was one of the main
+Stays of our social system.
+
+Mr. SCHENCK made another speech. He ripped up the foreign corset in a
+truculent manner. He said that American corsets were far superior, only
+American women had not the sense to see it. The effect of taking off the
+duty on corsets would be to take off the corsets.
+
+Mr. BROOKS called the hooks and ayes on the corsets. Mr. SCHENCK opposed
+the call. He had found a simple tape much preferable. He wished a
+coffer-dam might be put upon the roaring BROOKS.
+
+Somebody at this point brought up a contested election case; but Mr.
+LOGAN objected to its being considered. What, he asked, was the use of
+wasting time? There was money in the tariff. There was no money at all
+in voting a Democrat out, and a Republican in. They could do that any
+day in five minutes. His friend Mr. BUTLER had recently remarked, one
+Democrat more or less made no difference. But Mr. BUTLER forgot that the
+larger the majority, the larger the divisor for spoils, and therefore
+the smaller the quotient and the "dividend." He did not know much about
+arithmetic. He had never been at West Point; but he believed that a
+million dollars, for instance, would go further and fare worse among two
+hundred men than among three. If the House were not careful, there would
+be a glut of Republicans in it, and the shares would be pitifully
+meagre. As for him, he had a great mind, (derisive cheers)--he repeated,
+that he had a great mind to vote for a Democrat next time.
+
+In spite of Mr. LOGAN'S warning, the House voted in a couple or so of
+Republicans, and then resumed the duty on wool.
+
+Mr. Cox thought this wool had been pulled over the eyes of the house
+often enough. It reminded him of an expedition, of which Mr. LOGAN had
+never heard, in search of a "Golden Fleece."
+
+Mr. JENCKES, and Mr. SCHENCK, and Mr. KELLEY called him to order in
+behalf of their constituents, who were in the wool business, and said
+that "wool" in one form or another had always been the staple of their
+political career.
+
+Mr. BUTLER said he had a little game worth two of that. He wanted to buy
+San Domingo. In this there were plenty of commissions, and hundreds of
+thousands of colored votes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT.
+
+ALDERMANIC RECEPTION UP-TOWN.
+
+ CAESAR, walk in! Ah POMPEY! how d'e do?
+ This way, CLEM! Gentlemen, please walk right through!
+ GEORGE, how's your mother? Fine day, PETE--fine day!
+ Well, how are things down there at Oyster Bay?
+
+ Ah AUNTIE! how's your rheumatiz, this spring?
+ Well, Mr. JOHNSON, did you try that sling?
+ Why, this is Uncle STEVE! How-do-you-do.
+ Uncle? Sit down. What can I do for you?
+
+ Well, Mr. PRINCE! You must be busy, now.
+ Whitewashing is the best thing done, I vow!
+ Why, hel-lo! REGIS! From the Cape so soon?
+ When do you open, this year--first of June?
+
+ Come, gentlemen--some wine? Now, don't refuse!
+ What! temperate? teetotal? Well, that's news!
+ And good news, too! Well, coffee, then. You see,
+ My friends, the _sentiment's_ the thing with me.
+
+ The real Mocha, AUNTIE! Simon pure!
+ Raised by free Arabs. For I can't endure
+ A single thing that's flavored with a Wrong!
+ Yes, AUNTIE, you are right, I've "come out strong!"
+
+ So have the Colored People, I may say!
+ (One fact explains the other, up this way!)
+ They've proved their strength! It's settled, sure as a gun,
+ That every Colored Voter now counts One!
+
+ Now, gentlemen, you'll be surprised to find
+ So many people with your turn of mind!
+ But, sure as tricks! remember what I say--
+ You'll learn some things before Election Day!
+
+ POMPEY--'twon't take much time, (and you can spare it!)
+ Try this old fiddle, picked up in the garret!
+ Good? It's your fiddle! AUNTIE, here's a pound
+ Of that same genuine Mocha, ready ground!
+
+ Say, Uncle STEVE, I've got a fish for you,
+ Down at the market. Call again, PETE; do!
+ I'll have a job for you and CAESAR soon:
+ It's only waiting for a change of moon.
+
+ CLEM, how'd you like a chance to wait on table?
+ Or, would you rather drive, and run my stable?
+ GEORGE, in the kitchen there's a pan of souse!
+ Going? All gone? Now, BRIDGET, air the house!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Historic Parallel.
+
+THE JACK CADE movement came near destroying London. The Ar-Cade movement
+threatens to destroy Broadway.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A CHEAP LUXURY.
+
+SNIFFLES LOVES THE SMELL OF ROASTED CHESTNUTS, AND ENJOYS IT FOR HOURS
+EVERY DAY; BUT HE NEVER EATS ANY--WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR THE JOYOUS EXPRESSION
+ON THE FACE OF THE VENDER.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BUSINESS.
+
+A CHICAGO LAY.
+
+ I saw her sweet lip quiver,
+ As he started for the store.
+ Because he hadn't kissed her
+ "Several" times or more.
+
+ She cried "This horrid business!"
+ And then flew to her glass;
+ "Oh! why his cold remissness?
+ Have I grown plain, alas?"
+
+ But no, that truthful article
+ Revealed her charms intact,
+ She hadn't lost one particle,
+ But had improved, in fact.
+
+ At nine the case was opened,
+ At ten the case was o'er;
+ The jury brought their virdict--
+ She was his wife no more.
+
+ That night the husband started,
+ And--"_you_ bet"--he swore,
+ To find his wife departed,
+ And "_To Let_" on the door.
+
+ Next day he moved and married.
+ And, that his bride might stay,
+ He kissed her every morning
+ Before he went away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Pot-umania.
+
+A correspondent writes that a new mania has sprung up among the ladies
+of Edinburgh--a fancy for learning to cook. There is a much older mania
+in some parts of that country--a fancy for something to cook.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+About a Foot.
+
+A BOOT when it's on.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IMPORTANT TO PUBLISHERS.
+
+One of our corps of Philosophers (a trifle visionary, perhaps) has been
+speculating as to certain possible (or, perhaps, impossible) results
+flowing from the practice among publishers of ante-dating their monthly
+issues. Thus, supposing that the world should be destroyed by fire (and
+why not? it is bad enough) on the 15th of May, 1870, and a cover of,
+say, _Putnam's_ for June, carried up by an air-current, should, after
+floating about ever so long in space, finally descend on some friendly
+planet--we will say, Venus. Here it would naturally get picked up by an
+archaeologist, (who would be on the spot looking out for it,) and the
+interesting relic would be promptly and reverently deposited among the
+other Vestiges of Creation, in the Royal Cabinet. In the course of
+years, some historian would probably have occasion to turn over these
+curiosities, and would presently light on the scorched but still legible
+waif. "Why," says he, in astonishment, "I thought the earth was burnt on
+the 15th of May! To be sure, it was _in the night_, and nobody saw it
+go, [think of that, conceited Worldling!] but it was missed by somebody
+the day after. But here we have a document from the late unfortunate
+planet dated the first of June!"
+
+Of course, upon this the History of the Universe would have to be
+rewritten, or that odd fortnight would play the mischief somewhere!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Boston Boy.
+
+HUB-BUB.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Curses Come Home to Roost."
+
+They are putting the Fifth Avenue pavement in front of the City Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Politicians.
+
+Will the working of the Fifteenth Amendment oblige a candidate to show
+his Color before election?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So We Go!
+
+We notice, with much agitation and a reasonable amount of grief, that
+somebody in Philadelphia (possibly Miss ANNA DICKINSON) has invented a
+machine for the laundry called The King Washer! A few years ago it would
+have been The Queen Washer; but in these days the name seems to indicate
+that to Man, unhappy Man, will speedily be committed the destinies of
+the weekly washing. Oh! the rubbing, the rinsing, the wringing. But Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO has already communicated to Mrs. PUNCHINELLO his sentiments
+upon this subject. Under no circumstances will he get at the family
+linen. He must make a stand somewhere, and he makes it here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let them Bark.
+
+Miss BARKALOW has been admitted to practice at the bar in St. Louis. We
+have frequently before seen young ladies at a bar, where others
+practiced more than they did; but we do not see why, if Miss BARKALOW
+wishes to bark aloud, she should not be allowed to bark, aloud or
+otherwise. Barking may be particularly good in a cross-examination; but
+we presume that a lady attorney's bark will be always worse than her
+bite.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"She Stoops to Conquer."
+
+The girl with the Grecian Bend.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query.
+
+Is it allowable for a Temperance man to be Cordial to his friends?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Weak as Water.
+
+Our cynical friend A. QUARIUS writes us from Philadelphia, that
+considering the manner in which the Sunday liquor law is enforced in
+that city, he thinks his native place is still entitled--perhaps more
+than ever entitled to be called the city of Rye-tangles. This is
+ungrateful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPIRITUAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF CATS.
+
+DEAR PUNCHINELLO: Our Society has been very learnedly debating as to
+whether Cats are susceptible of spiritual impressions; and, although the
+burden of opinion inclines to the negative of the question, I am firmly
+persuaded there is much to justify a contrary judgment.
+
+As I slept the other night, neither dreaming nor holding psychological
+intercourse of any description with outsiders, I was awakened suddenly
+about the first hour of the morning by a noise. I am quite certain it
+was a noise, and have therefore no hesitation in so recording it. The
+new moon hung athwart the western sky, and a few fleecy clouds were
+chasing each other like snow-drifts across the blue vault of the night.
+I may likewise note the fact that the stars were doing what they usually
+do, notwithstanding the difference of opinion that sometimes exists as
+to what that is. It was the evening after "wash-day," and family linen,
+in graceful curves and undulating outlines, everywhere met the eye as it
+turned from contemplating the stars to contemplating the clothes-lines
+in the gardens. But I wander. The noise? Ah! yes. Well, it was not like
+the collision of two hard substances, but rather of the heavy "thud"
+order of sound, like the descent of a solid into a soft substance; say,
+for instance, of a flat-iron into a jar of unrisen buck-wheat batter. I
+glanced along the ghostly battalions of family linen; along the fences
+traversed by feline sentries; along the latticed arbors; but nothing to
+indicate the origin of the alarm could be discovered, and as at that
+moment a breeze stirred in the apartment, producing a chilling
+sensation, I thought it prudent to jump back into bed.
+
+Next morning, upon making my usual visit to note the progress of the
+early bulbs in the flower-beds, I encountered at the further end of the
+garden the remains of a cat--a portly and ancient grimalkin of the
+sterner sex. Close at hand was a bottle lying face downward, and corked.
+I raised it--first in my hands, and then to my lips. The cork fell out,
+accidentally as it were, and, as a consequence, death. "Poor thing!" I
+murmured; "poor--" and a portion of the contents glided carelessly down
+my throat. I perceived that the liquid was "Old Rye." As I stooped down,
+tears would have come to my eyes; but it was useless, seeing that the
+breath had left the unfortunate's body. Nevertheless, I rested my hand a
+moment upon his head, and then glided it in a semi-professional manner
+along the line of dorsal elevation, until I came to a deep depression in
+his backbone, which corresponded exactly with the convexity of the
+bottle. Then I saw at once how it was; this missile, (in the heat of
+passion, being mistaken for an empty one, probably,) had been hurled by
+some treacherous hand upon the unsuspecting Tom, striking him midway
+between the root of the tail and the base of the brain, causing instant
+suspension of his vertebral communications, "Poor thing! You were the
+victim of a Catastrophe. You were also the victim of the bottle. The
+'Rye' was too heavy for you, and should have been drawn milder." This
+said, I turned sadly away to find a burial spade, and it then occurred
+to me that this little incident was kindly meant to confirm my view that
+cats are susceptible, even to a fatal extent, of spiritual
+impressions--especially when conveyed by spirits of "Old Rye."
+
+GOBBO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the Tombs.
+
+When a drunken man has been locked up for beating his wife, it is
+reasonable to suppose that he must feel rather the worse for lick her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PERSONAL GOSSIP.
+
+(From the Daily Press.)
+
+"A SON OF ONE OF OUR WEALTHIEST RESIDENTS DISPLAYS GREAT TALENTS AS A
+SCULPTOR. HE IS BUT NINE YEARS OLD."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A BIT OF NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+Naturalists tell us that the _Aye-aye_ is a small animal of Madagascar,
+with sharp teeth, long claws, and a tail; which eats whatever it can
+grab, and says nothing day or night but _aye-aye_. Now, we find that,
+AGASSIZ to the contrary notwithstanding, this strange and not very
+useful animal is indigenous to the State of Pennsylvania. It especially
+frequents Harrisburg; and may be seen and heard any day there, in the
+Senate or House. Being an active member of that House, your
+correspondent has been present during the passage of three hundred bills
+within a week or two, in about one hundred and ten of which he had some
+personal interest.
+
+Lifting his eyes one day from his newspaper, when the Speaker took the
+vote on an "Act to amend the Incorporation of the City of Philadelphia,"
+which your correspondent happened to know included the presentation of a
+three-story brownstone front to each of a committee of six members of
+the House, he found there was not one member in his seat; but, in the
+place of a few, there was a company of these remarkable _Aye-ayes_,
+responding duly to the call for a vote; but never a _no_ among them. No,
+no!
+
+Now, your correspondent holds the deliberate opinion that, in several
+respects, these aforesaid small animals of Madagascar might be an
+improvement upon the average Pennsylvania legislators. And, if your
+correspondent had to do with getting up the other one hundred and ninety
+bills, as he did the one hundred and ten, all right: Otherwise, _not_.
+How does PUNCHINELLO regard it?
+
+Yours, LEGISLATOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Augean Job.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has telegraphed to Governor GEARY his approval of the
+"Sewage Utilization" bill at Harrisburg, on one condition: that the
+first piece of work be finished up by the members of the Pennsylvania
+Legislature with their own hands; that work to be, to make up into
+_decent_ manure, _deodorized_ and _disinfected_, all bills passed at the
+late session of their House and Senate. Since, however, complete
+deodorization is probably _impossible_, PUNCHINELLO advises also that
+the said members be required to cart all their stuff out to the Bad
+Lands of Nebraska, and remain there to make the best use of it; or else
+make a contract with Captain HALL to ship it and them to the Arctic
+regions at once.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the Finances.
+
+Says Crispin, "Did not somebody say it was BOUTWELL in the Treasury now?
+A great mistake. About well, to be sure! When the newspaper men have
+111-1/2 of gold, and I haven't a round dollar! Where did they get it?
+And then the legal tender question. I never asked but _one_ tender
+question in all my life, and that was to SUSAN and she said, Yes. And
+then we were legally married. Nobody ought to ask such questions _out
+loud_; it's not _decent_. And _fine answering_ an't much better.
+Financiering, is it? Ah! well. _Specious assumption_, too; but that
+requires brass, and I want _gold_. Meantime, who's got a twenty-five
+cent note?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Massachusetts Flats.
+
+Massachusetts must abound in Flats. Its Legislature is annually agitated
+from the sands of Cape Cod to the hills of Berkshire over the question.
+It is said to be wisdom to set a rogue to catch a rogue. Is it equally
+so to set a flat to catch one?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NATIONAL TAXIDERMY.
+
+[Illustration 'P']
+
+PUNCHINELLO has for some time past carefully considered the subject of
+our national tariff of imposts, (_that is to say, he happened to see, in
+a Tribune, the other day, that lucifer matches were now to be stamped
+separately, and not by the box, as heretofore_) and he has come to the
+conclusion, after duly weighing in his mind all the arguments for and
+against the present system of taxation, (_that is to say, he made up his
+mind the minute he read the article_,) that what the present tariff
+needs, is a more thorough application and a better classification; or,
+what the technologists call Taxonomy, which term is suggested to him by
+a work on the subject which he has been recently studying. (_That is to
+say, he looked in the dictionary to find out what Taxidermy meant, and
+seeing Taxonomy there, snapped it up for a sort of collateral pun_.) As
+an illustration of what our impost legislators (or imposters) ought to
+be, let us take the Taxidermist. He is one who takes from an animal
+every thing but his skin and bones, and stuffs him up afterward with all
+sorts of nonsense. Now, our National Taxidermists ought to take a lesson
+from their original. Many of the good people of the United States have
+much more left them than their skin and bones. Why is not all that
+taken? The condition of the ordinary stuffed animal of the shops is
+strikingly significant of what should be expected of loyal communities.
+(_That is to say, communities which vote a certain ticket which need not
+be named here_.) It is often said that there are things which flesh and
+blood will not bear. Now, a thorough system of Taxidermy remedies all
+this. A stuffed 'possum, for instance, having no flesh or blood, will
+bear any thing. When the people of this country are thoroughly cleaned
+out, they will be just as docile. Among the things which PUNCHINELLO
+would recommend as fit subjects of taxation, is a man's expenses. They
+have not been taxed yet. If he pays for his income, why not for his
+outgoes? The immense sums that are annually expended in this country for
+this, that, and the other thing ought certainly to yield a revenue to
+the government. (_That is to say, there ought to be a new army of
+collectors and assessors appointed. P. knows lots of good men out of
+office_.) And then there's a man's time. Why not tax that? Nearly every
+man spends a lot of time, and he ought to pay for it. As it would be our
+tax, it could not be a very minute tax, although it is only the second
+tax which we have suggested. (_That is to say--- something pun-ny_.) And
+besides these things, there's energy. We often hear of a man's energies
+being taxed; but, so far as the matter is apparent to the naked eye, it
+is difficult to see whose energies are taxed for the good of the
+government at the present day. This subject should certainly be
+investigated. (_That is to say, a committee of Congressmen should be
+appointed, with power to send for persons, papers, and extra
+compensation_.) Politics, too. Every man has his politics, (_that is to
+say, every man except Bennett_,) and they ought to be taxed, if for no
+other reason than the great impetus the measure would give to the
+erection of fences throughout the land. And letters, too. If every one
+sent by the mail should yield one cent to the Treasury, how the currency
+would be inflated in that locality! (_That is to say, in the locality to
+which the collectors would abscond_.) But it is impossible, with the
+limited time at his disposal, for PUNCHINELLO to enter into a full
+examination and elucidation of this subject. (_That is to say, he can't
+think of any more illustrations just now, and the printer wouldn't stand
+any more, if he could_.) But it must be admitted that the great task of
+opening up the country, of which we hear so much, will never be complete
+until the Washington skinners and stuffers get us all into the prepared
+specimen condition. (_That is to say, when the people are all willing
+to_ "_dry up_.")
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JOHN CHINAMAN'S BILLING AND COOING.--Pigeon English.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CABLE NEWS.
+
+(EXCLUSIVELY FOR PUNCHINELLO.)
+
+QUEEN ISABELLA has sent her compliments to Senor CASTELAR, as well as to
+General PRIM, informing them that, on the whole, she thinks she will
+_not_ return to the throne of Spain. It does not agree with her quiet
+and refined tastes and habits to live so much in public. All she wants
+now is a little _chateau en Espagne_. She proposes to send her son,
+Prince of ASTURIAS, to Professor CASTELAR, to study modern history. Is
+it not odd, by the way, that a country so long _Mad-rid-den_ as Spain,
+should have now a governor with such a name as PRIM? But, what's in a
+name? BOURBON, by any other name, would smell as sweet. Some, however,
+prefer Old Rye. I prefer _water_ to both; _especially_ to BOURBON.
+
+It's an old story that _two positives make a negative_. Paris news tells
+us that a late will case has exemplified this. COMTE, you know, was a
+_positive_ philosopher. He had a positive wife. She had a will of her
+own. He wrote a will of his own. Consequently, it got into court. Mme.
+COMTE it seems, who did not agree with the philosophy while the
+philosopher lived, wanted his MSS. after his death. Positively, the
+court did not see it in that light; and so the negative came out. It was
+a case of no go, or _non-ego_, as HEGEL might have called it. Did you
+ever read HEGEL? I didn't; and I advise you not to begin. It won't pay.
+I am told that he divided all things into Egos, She goes, and Non-egos,
+or No-goes. The latter particularly; So do I.
+
+But to return to Spain; or rather to Paris. Don FRANCOIS D'ASSISSI has,
+it appears, suddenly discovered that his wife is not Queen of Spain so
+much as she was. Much less so. So, he has found her company rather
+expensive than agreeable; and proposes to abdicate it. Not so _very_
+much of an ass, is he? Bravo for Don FRANCOIS!
+
+In London, _to-morrow_ will be made famous in literature by _the_ great
+dinner in honor of the advent of PUNCHINELLO. Mr. PUNCH is talked of to
+preside. An unprecedented rush for tickets has begun. More about it in
+my next.
+
+PRIME.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cutting.
+
+We see extensively advertised the "Saxon Razor;" but have not yet
+summoned up sufficient courage to try this article, which "no
+gentleman's dressing-case should be without." We cannot dispossess our
+minds of the apprehension of cutting ourselves, remembering that line
+descriptive of the combat between FITZ-JAMES and RODERICK DHU, in which
+it is said, that,
+
+ "----thrice the Saxon blade drank blood."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Musical.
+
+The vocal abilities of hens are admitted; but they rarely attempt the
+Chro-matic scale.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+De Jure.
+
+No man can now be a juror who knows any thing about the case which he is
+to try. Thus a juryman was challenged in the MCFARLAND case merely
+because he belonged to Dr. BELLOWS's church. It was held that he might
+possibly have got Wind of the matter while listening to the Doctor's
+discourse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOK NOTICES.
+
+AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT. Boston: ROBERTS BROTHERS.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+The author of "Little Women" seeks, and not without success, to draw
+from her "Old-Fashioned Girl" a contrast and a moral. She presents to
+our view two young ladies of opposite "styles." One is fresh and rural:
+the other isn't. The difference between country and city bringing-up is
+the point aimed at; and the difference is about as great as that between
+the warbling of woodside birds and the jingle of one of OFFENBACH'S
+tunes on a corner barrel-organ. The book is neatly set forth, with
+illustrations by Messrs. ROBERTS, BROTHERS, of Boston.
+
+RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. By the author of "Cometh up as a Flower," etc.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+A readable book, notwithstanding that there are several naughty
+characters in it, or perhaps _because_ there are. Probably it depicts
+with truth the kind of society presented. If so, all the worse for
+society. Shall we never again have healthful, virtuous novels of the old
+school, such as "Tom Jones?" The book is published in tasteful form by
+Messrs. D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE OFFERING |
+ | |
+ | Extraordinary Inducements, |
+ | |
+ | IN PRICE, STYLE, AND QUALITY, |
+ | |
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+ | |
+ | DAMASKS, NAPKINS, TOWELLINGS, |
+ | |
+ | DRESS LINENS, PRINTED LINENS, |
+ | |
+ | FLANNELS, BLANKETS, QUILTS, |
+ | |
+ | COUNTERPANES, SHEETINGS, |
+ | |
+ | Bleached and Brown Cottons, |
+ | |
+ | Standard American Prints, etc., etc. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | 4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. Stewart & Co. |
+ | |
+ | HAVE OPENED A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' PARIS MADE DRESSES |
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+ | SHORT STREET SACQUES. |
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+ | Children's Cloaks, Ladies' Breakfast Jackets, |
+ | |
+ | Ladies' Pique, Swiss, and Cambric |
+ | |
+ | Morning Robes and Walking Suits, |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' UNDERGARMENTS |
+ | |
+ | Of every description. |
+ | |
+ | French, German, and Domestic Corsets, |
+ | |
+ | Woven and hand-made. |
+ | |
+ | JUST RECEIVED. |
+ | |
+ | AT EXTREMELY ATTRACTIVE PRICES, |
+ | |
+ | 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 grammar, 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 |
+ | me 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 |
+ | 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 THE VARIOUS ORDERS, |
+ | WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE HABITS AND ECONOMY OF THE MOST |
+ | INTERESTING. |
+ | By Louis Figuler. Illustrated with 307 wood-cuts. 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-ROOK 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HENRY L. STEPHENS |
+ | |
+ | ARTIST, |
+ | |
+ | No. 160 Fulton Street, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Important to Newsdealers! |
+ | |
+ | ALL ORDERS FOR |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO |
+ | |
+ | Will be supplied by |
+ | |
+ | OUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, |
+ | |
+ | American News Co. |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | J. NICKINSON |
+ | |
+ | BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO THE FRIENDS OF |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | RESIDING IN THE COUNTRY, THAT, |
+ | |
+ | FOR THEIR CONVENIENCE |
+ | |
+ | HE HAS MADE ARRANGEMENTS BY WHICH, ON RECEIPT OF THE PRICE |
+ | OF |
+ | |
+ | ANY STANDARD BOOK PUBLISHED, |
+ | |
+ | THE SAME WILL BE FORWARDED, POSTAGE PAID. |
+ | |
+ | Parties desiring Catalogues of any of our Publishing Houses, |
+ | can have the same forwarded by inclosing two stamps. |
+ | |
+ | OFFICE OF PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., 83 Nassau Street. |
+ | |
+ | [P. O. Box 2783.] |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: A SUCCESSFUL CATCH.
+
+_John Bull._ "WELL, GENERAL, HOW DID YOU CATCH YOUR FISH?"
+
+ _General Prim._ "WITH A SPANISH FLY."]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 excellence 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+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.
+
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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30, 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. 5, April 30, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 8, 2003 [EBook #10018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "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 169 PEARL ST., |
+ | |
+ | 73, 75, 77, and 79 PINE ST., New-York. |
+ | |
+ | ADVANTAGES--All on the same premises, and under the |
+ | immediate supervision of the proprietors. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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_ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+[Illustration: Vol. 1 No. 5]
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO
+
+
+SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close resemblance |
+ | to Oil Paintings. Sold in All Stores throughout the World. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S WEEKLY BULLETIN OF CHROMOS.--"Easter Morning" |
+ | "Family Scene in Pompeii" "Whittier's Birthplace," |
+ | Illustrated Catalogue sent, on receipt of stamp, by L. PRANG |
+ | & CO., Boston. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 Reminiscences 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." |
+ | |
+ | BONNER 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 post-paid 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the |
+ | |
+ | NEW ILLUSTRATED HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL |
+ | |
+ | WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which will be Issued under date of April |
+ | 2, 1870, and thereafter weekly. |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO will be _National_, and not _local_; and will |
+ | endeavor to become a household word in all parts of the |
+ | country; and to that end has secured a |
+ | |
+ | VALUABLE CORPS OF CONTRIBUTORS |
+ | |
+ | in various sections of the Union, while its columns will |
+ | always be open to appropriate first-class literary and |
+ | artistic talent. |
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | The Artistic department will be in charge of Henry L. |
+ | Stephens, whose celebrated cartoons in VANITY FAIR placed |
+ | him in the front rank of humorous artists, assisted by |
+ | leading artists in their respective specialties. |
+ | |
+ | The management of the paper will be in the hands of WILLIAM |
+ | A. STEPHENS, with whom is associated CHARLES DAWSON SHANLY, |
+ | both of whom were identified with VANITY FAIR. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES, |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs, or suggestive |
+ | ideas sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable, and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications can not 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. |
+ | |
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+ | |
+ | 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: THE WARNING OF THE BELLE
+
+LOOK OUT FOR THE TRAIN]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATRIOTIC ADORATION.
+
+A TALE OF PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ People of the Quaker City,
+ How the world must stand aghast
+ At your wondrous veneration
+ For those relics of the past,
+ Kept in such precise condition,
+ Fostered with such tender care--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Splendid are its walks and grass-plots
+ Where the bootblacks base-ball play,
+ And its seats resembling toad-stools,
+ On which loafers lounge all day,
+ Waiting for their luck, or gazing
+ At the office of the Mayor--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Then, behold the fine old State-house
+ Cleanly kept inside and out,
+ Where the faithful office-holders
+ Squirt tobacco-juice about:
+ Placards highly ornamental
+ Decorate its outward wall--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Hall?
+
+ O! ye gods and little fishes!
+ Could bill-sticker be so vile
+ As to paste up nasty posters
+ On the sacred classic pile?
+ Greece and Rome yet have their relics,
+ But what are they? very small.
+ Never half so venerated
+ As old Independence Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has hitherto refrained from criticising the periodicals of
+the day, from the mistaken idea that superlative excellence was not
+expected in every number of every daily or weekly journal in the land.
+He did not know that, if every such journal was not edited so as to suit
+the comprehension of all classes of cursory critics, it should be
+unqualifiedly condemned. Supposing that a painter should not condemn a
+paper for publishing a musical article beyond his comprehension, and
+that an architect ought not to get in a rage because he finds in his
+favorite journal a paper on beavers which makes him feel insignificant,
+PUNCHINELLO has generally looked around upon his fellow-journalists, and
+thought them very good fellows, who generally published very good
+papers. He did not find superlative excellence in any of their issues,
+but then he did not look for it. He might as well pretend to look for
+that in the journalists themselves, or in society at large. But he has
+lately learned, from the critics of the period, that he ought to look
+for it, and that it is the proper thing nowadays to pitch into every
+journal which does not, in every part, please every body, whether they
+be smart or dull; those quick of appreciation, or those slow gentlemen
+who always come in with their congratulations upon the birth of a joke
+at the time its funeral is taking place. And so, PUNCHINELLO will do as
+others do, and will occasionally view, from the loop-hole in his
+curtain, the successes and failures of his neighbors, and will give his
+patrons the benefit of his observations.
+
+The first thing he notices to-day is, that the _Evening Snail_ of last
+night is not so good as it was a fortnight ago; or, let us think a
+bit--it may have been a good number at the beginning of last month that
+he was thinking of; at all events, this last issue is inferior. The
+matter on the first page is not printed in nearly as good type as the
+original periodicals had it, and while the letters in the heading are
+quite fair, it is very noticeable that the I's are very defective, and
+there is no C in it. The "Gleanings" are excellent, and it would be
+advisable to have more of them--if indeed such a thing were possible in
+this case. The spider-work inside shows no acquaintance with the
+writings of BACH or GLIDDON, and there is nothing about the Spectrum
+Analysis in any part of the paper. Besides, the paper is too stiff and
+rattles too much, and PUNCHINELLO could never abide the color of the
+editor's pantaloons. Why will not people dress and write so that every
+body can admire and understand them. Especially in regard to witty
+things and breastpins They ought to be loud, overpowering, and so
+glaring that people could not help seeing them. And they ought to be a
+little cheap, too, or average people won't comprehend them. In both
+cases paste (and scissors) pays better than diamonds. The reports of
+private parties in the _Snail_ are, however, very good, and if it would
+confine its original matter to such subjects, it could not fail to
+succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Query for Physicians.
+
+Are people's tastes apt to become Vichy-ated by the excessive use of
+certain mineral waters?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Behold, how Pleasant a Thing 't is," etc.
+
+Boston has a couple of clergymen who have fallen out upon matters not
+precisely theological. In the summer, the Rev. Mr. MURRAY leaves his
+sheep, to shoot deer by torchlight in the Adirondacks. This the Rev. Mr.
+ALGER, in addressing the Suppression of Cruelty to Animals Society,
+denounces as extremely wicked. From all which Mr. PUNCHINELLO, taking up
+his discourse, infers,
+
+_First_. That it is a great deal more wicked to shoot deer by torchlight
+than by daylight.
+
+_Secondly_. That the Rev. MURRAY and the Rev. ALGER are of different
+religious persuasions.
+
+_Thirdly and lastly_. That the Rev. Mr. ALGER doesn't love venison.
+
+P. S. Persons desiring to present Mr. PUNCHINELLO with a fine haunch,
+(in the season,) may shoot it by daylight, moonlight, torchlight, or by
+a Drummond light, as most convenient.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We are indebted to Mr. SARONY for a number of brilliant photographs of
+celebrities of the day. Lovely woman is well represented the batch, with
+all the characters of which PUNCHINELLO hopes to present his readers,
+from time to time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District
+Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ALL ABOARD FOR HOLLAND!]
+
+PUNCHINELLO understands that a performance is soon to take place at the
+Academy of Music, for the benefit of GEORGE HOLLAND, the well-known and
+ever-green "veteran" of "the stage." It pleases PUNCHINELLO to know that
+a combination of talent and beauty is to be brought together for so
+worthy a purpose. Seventy-four years ago, when GEORGE HOLLAND was a
+small child, PUNCHINELLO used to dandle him upon his knee. Hardly four
+years have passed since PUNCHINELLO was convulsed by the _Tony Lumpkin_
+of HOLLAND. He distinctly remembers, too, administering hot whiskey
+punch to little boy HOLLAND with a tea-spoon, which may in some measure
+account for the Spirit subsequently infused by the capital comedian into
+the numerous bits of character presented by him. Considering these
+facts, it is manifestly an incumbent duty on the part of PUNCHINELLO to
+request the earnest attention of his readers to the subject of GEORGE
+HOLLAND'S benefit, all particulars concerning which will be given due
+time through the public press. It used to be said, long ago, that "the
+Dutch have taken Holland," Well, let our own modern Knickerbockers
+improve upon that notion, by taking HOLLAND'S tickets. Remember how,
+in the early settlement of the country, it was Holland that made
+New-York, and see that New-York now returns the compliment, and makes
+HOLLAND. Convivial songsters frequently remind us that--
+
+ --"a Hollander's draught should potent be,
+ And deep as the rolling Zuyder Zee."
+
+Mind this, all ye Hollanders who would give your support to our HOLLAND.
+Let your drafts be potent, your cheeks heavy, your attendance punctual.
+Make the affair complete; so that when, here-after, a comparison is
+sought for something that has been a sued people will say of it--"As big
+as that Bumper of HOLLAND'S."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ASTRONOMICAL CONVERSATIONS.
+
+(BY A FATHER AND DAUGHTER RESIDING ON THE PLANET VENUS.)
+
+No. I.
+
+FATHER (_to_ DAUGHTER, _who is looking through a telescope_.) Yes HELENE,
+that is the Planet Tellus, or Earth. The darker streaks are land; the
+bright spots, water. We begin with a low power, which shows only the
+masses; presently you will have the pleasure of discriminating not only
+rivers and chains of mountains, but cities--single houses--even Human
+Beings! Yes, you shall this very night read page of PUNCHINELLO, a paper
+so bright that every word appears surrounded by a halo!
+
+DAUGHTER. O father! do that _now_. How delightful, to actually read the
+works of these singular creature's, and become familiar with their
+extraordinary ideas! Were the scintillations you spoke of the other
+night, that were seen all over the Western Continent, the result of the
+flashing of these radiant pages?
+
+F. Undoubtedly, my child; they began with the first issue of the paper,
+and have since regularly increased in brightness, just as It has.
+
+D. It really seems as though Earth would answer for a Moon, by and by, at
+this rate!
+
+F. You are quite right, HELENE; it will. Or say, rather, a Sun. For you
+will observe that it is a _warm_ light; not cool, as reflected light
+always is. It is Original.
+
+D. Well, this shows that PUNCHINELLO must have some Heart, as well as
+Head. Come, put on your highest power now, and let us seem to pay good
+old Tellus a visit!
+
+[_The indulgent Father complies, and, is at some pains to adjust the
+focus_.]
+
+F. Now, dear! take a good look.
+
+D. (_Looking intently_.) Oh! how splendid--how splendid! _Do_ see the
+beautiful things in those Shop Windows! It must be the Spring Season
+there! _Do_ see those lovely lumps on the backs of those creatures'
+heads! What place is it, Father?
+
+F. That? It's New-York; and the street is the famous Broadway.
+
+D. O dear! how I _would_ like to go shopping there, this minute!--for I
+see it is afternoon in that quarter. Is there no way of getting
+there?(!!!)
+
+F. (_Laughing heartily_.) Well, well, HELENE! That's pretty good, for
+the daughter of an astronomer! Do you know that at this precise moment
+you are Forty-five Million, Six Hundred and Fifty-four Thousand, Four
+Hundred and Ninety-one Miles and a half from those Muslins! I'll tell
+you, Sis, what _could_ be done: Drop a line to the Editor of
+PUNCHINELLO, and tell him what you want. He'll get it, some way.
+
+D. That I will, instantly! [_Turns to her portfolio, while her father
+turns to the telescope_.]
+
+"DEAR MR. EDITOR: Pardon the seeming _boldness_ of a _stranger:_ you are
+no _stranger to me!_ Long, _long_ have I deceived that _good man_, my
+father, by _pretending_ to know _nothing_ of the Earth, or of his
+_instrument!_ Many and _many_ a night, _unknown to him_, have I gone to
+the _Telescope_, to satisfy the _restless craving_ I feel to know more
+of _your Planet_, and of a _person of your sex_ whom I have _often_
+beheld, and watched with _eagerness_ as he came and went. How
+_thrilling_ the thought, that he cannot even _know of my existence_, and
+that we are _forever separated!_ This, good and _dear_ Editor, is my one
+Thought, my one great Agony.
+
+"It has occurred to me that, in this _dreadful_ situation--my Passion
+being sufficiently Hopeless, as any one may see--you might at least
+afford me some slight _alleviation_, by undertaking to let Him know of
+the _interest_ he excites in this far-off star! Let me describe my
+charmer, so that you will be able to identify him. He is of fair size,
+with a rolling gait and a smiling countenance, has light hair and
+complexion, wears often a White Hat, (on the back of his head--where
+Thoughtful men always place the hat, I've been told by observers,) and
+now and then carelessly leaves one leg of his trowsers at the top of his
+boot. I have often seen him, with a bundle of papers in his pocket,
+entering a large building with the words "_Tribune_ Office" over the
+door--and I _adore_ him! O excellent Editor! tell him this, I _implore_
+you! Be kind to your distant and _love-lorn_ friend,
+
+HELENE."
+
+F. What did you say, Helene?
+
+D. I was saying that I wished to look a little longer at the fashions in
+Broadway.
+
+F. Well, well--I believe the Fashions are all that these women think of!
+There--look away! I presume they have changed considerably since you
+looked before! When do you wish to begin your lessons in Astronomy?
+
+D. Next week. Father; let me see: we will say, next week--Thursday.
+
+F. Very well; I shall remind you.
+
+D. (_who is determined to have the last word, any way_.) Very well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beach's Soliloquy on entering his Pneumatic Chamber.
+
+"TU-BE or not tu-be."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Reflection by a Tallow-chandler.
+
+Though a man be the Mould of fashion, yet he cannot light himself to bed
+by the Dip in his back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration: 'M']
+
+_MEN AND ACRES,_ the new comedy at WALLACK'S, is one of the best of
+TAYLOR'S pieces, and a decided improvement upon the carpenter work of
+BOUCICAULT. It has been rechristened by Mr. WALLACK, and its former
+name--_Old Men and New Acres, or New Aches and Old Manors,_ or something
+else of that sort--has been conveniently shortened. If it does not
+convince us that the author has improved since he first began to write
+plays, it certainly reminds us that there is such a thing as _Progress_.
+In the latter play, Mr. J.W. WALLACK was a civil engineer. In the
+present drama, he is an uncivil tradesman. Both appeal to the levelling
+tendencies of the age; and in each, the author has done his "level
+best"--as Mr. GRANT WHITE would say--to flatter the Family Circle at the
+expense of the Boxes.
+
+The cast includes a Vague Baronet and his Managing Wife, their Slangy
+Daughter, their Unpleasant Neighbor and his wife and daughter, an
+Unintelligible Dutchman, an Innocuous Youth, a Disagreeable Lawyer, and
+the Merchant Prince. This is the sort of way in which they conduct
+themselves,
+
+_Act_ 1. _Disagreeable Lawyer to Vague Baronet:_ "You are ruined, and
+your estate is mortgaged to a Merchant Prince. What do you intend to
+do?"
+
+_Vague Baronet._ "I will ask my wife what I think about it."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are we? Allow me to remark,
+Fiddlesticks! Get the Merchant to take our third-story hall-bedroom for
+a week, and I'll soon clear off the mortgage."
+
+_Enter Slangy Daughter._ "O ma! there was such a precious guy at the
+ball last night, and I had no end of a lark with him. Good gracious!
+here comes the duffer himself."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince. (Aside.)_ "So here's the Vague Baronet and his
+wife. And there's the slangy girl I fell in love with. Nice lot they
+are!" (_To Managing Wife._) "Madam, there is nothing, so grand as the
+majesty of trade. Your rank and blood are all gammon. We Merchant
+Princes are the only people fit to live. However, I'll condescend to
+speak to you."
+
+_Managing Wife. (Aside.)_ "How noble! What a gentlemanly person he
+really is!" _(To Merchant Prince.)_ "Sir, I bid you welcome. Here is my
+daughter, who was just praising your beauty and accomplishments. I leave
+you to entertain her." (_Exeunt Baronet, Wife, and Lawyer_.)
+
+_Merchant Prince (placing his chair next to Slangy Daughter's, and
+leaning his elbow on her.)_ "There is nothing like trade. We tradesmen
+alone are great. We despise the whole lot of clean and idle aristocrats.
+I keep a Gin Palace in Liverpool. Does your bloated aristocracy do half
+as much for suffering humanity?"
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Speak on, speak ever thus, O Noble Being! It's
+awfully jolly!"
+
+_Curtain falls, and Baker wakes up to lead his orchestra through the
+mazes of "Shoo Fly."_
+
+
+_Appreciative Lady._ "Isn't it nice? Miss HENRIQUES'S dress is perfectly
+beautiful, and it sounds so cunning to hear her talk slang."
+
+_Second Appreciative Lady._ "How handsome ROCKWELL looks! Just like a
+real baronet, my dear!"
+
+_Other Appreciative Ladies._ "The dresses at WALLACK'S are always
+perfectly exquisite. I mean to have my next dress made with a green silk
+fichu, a moire antique bertha, and little point lace peplums and
+gussets, just like Miss MESTAYER'S. Won't it be sweet?"
+
+_All the Counter-Jumpers in the Theatre._ "JIM WALLACK'S the boy! Don't
+he talk up to those aristocratic snobs, though?"
+
+
+_Act 2. Enter Unpleasant Neighbor and Unintelligible German. The former
+says,_ "You're sure there's an iron mine on the Baronet's land?"
+
+_Unintelligible German._ "Ya! Das ist um-um-um."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince and Slangy Daughter. Exeunt the other fellows._
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "There is nothing like the grandeur of trade; and yet
+we tradesmen are not proud. See! I offer to marry you."
+
+_Slangy daughter._ "I love you wildly! _(Aside.)_ I do hope he won't
+rumple my hair."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "Come to my arrums! The majesty of trade is so
+infinitely above any thing else"--_and so forth._
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Take her, noble Merchant, and be happy
+_(Aside.)_ This settles the affair of the mortgage." _(To Daughter)_
+"Come, darling, we'll go and tell your father." _(They go.)_
+
+_Enter Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here's a telegram for you. No bad news, I
+hope?"
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I am ruined unless you lend me £40,000. Do it, and I
+will assign to you the mortgage on the baronet's property. The majesty
+of trade is something which"--
+
+_Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here it is." _(Aside.)_ "Now I'll get possession
+of the estate and the iron-mine."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are you? Of course you can't have my
+daughter now."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I resign her. We tradesmen are infinitely greater
+than you aristocrats."
+
+_Curtain falls, Baker wakes up. "Shoo Fly" by the Orchestra, and remarks
+on dress by the ladies as before. Counter-jumpers go out to drink to the
+majesty of trade, having grown perceptibly taller since the play began._
+
+
+_Act 3. Unprincipled Neighbor to Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Have you got
+the analysis of the iron ore?"
+
+_Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Ya! Das its um-um-um."
+
+_Unprincipled Neighbor._ "All right! Now I'll foreclose the mortgage,
+and will be richer than ever."
+
+_Enter Vague Baronet, and Wife and Daughter, and Lawyer. To them
+collectively remarks the Unprincipled Neighbor,_ "The mortgage is due.
+As you can't pay, you've got to move out."
+
+_Disagreeable Lawyer._ "Not much! Here's an analysis of iron ore found
+on our land. We raised money on the mine, and are ready to pay off the
+mortgage."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. I told
+them all about it. We tradesmen are great, but we will sometimes help
+even a wretched aristocrat."
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. Now I will marry
+my noble Merchant, and make him rich again; for there's dead loads of
+iron on the Governor's land, you bet!"
+
+_They all produce analyses of the ore, and the play itself being o'er,
+the curtain falls._
+
+
+_Exasperated critic, who has sent for twelve seats, and has been
+politely refused._ "I'd like to abuse it, if there was a chance; but
+there isn't. The play is really good, and I can't find much fault with
+the acting. However, I'll pitch into STODDARD for swearing, which his
+'Unprincipled Neighbor' does to an unnecessary extent, and I'll say that
+JIM WALLACK is too old and gouty to play the 'Merchant Prince,' and
+doesn't quite forget that he used to play in the Bowery."
+
+_Every body else._ "Did you ever see a play better acted? And did you
+ever see actresses better dressed?"
+
+And PUNCHINELLO is constrained to answer the latter question with an
+emphatic No! As to the acting, it might be improved were Mr. STODDARD to
+play the character for which he is cast, instead of insisting upon
+playing nothing but STODDARD. But to all the rest of the actors, not
+forgetting Mr. RINGGOLD, who plays the insignificant part of the
+"Innocuous Youth," PUNCHINELLO is pleased to accord his gracious
+approval.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Balmy Idea.
+
+According to Miss ANTHONY, the crying evil with women is that they will
+blubber; but it must be remembered that out of this blubber they make
+oil to pour into our conjugal wounds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Suit for Damages.
+
+Any clothes in a storm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE POLITICAL MILL-ENNIUM.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS UPON HIGH ART.
+
+Observant visitors to the National Academy of Design will allow that a
+tendency to greatness is beginning to develop itself in certain
+directions among our artists. In landscape some of them are almost
+immense. The works of PORPHYRO warm the walls with rays of splendor, or
+cool the lampooned sight-line with pearly gradations, as the case may
+be. MANDRAKE renders feelingly the summer uplands and groves, and
+SILVERBARK the melancholy autumnal woods. BYTHESEA infuses with
+sentiment even the blue wreaths of smoke that curl up from the distant
+ridge against which loom the concentrated lovers that he selects for his
+idyllic romances. Gushingly he does his work, but thoroughly; and there
+are other flowers than lackadaisies to be discerned in his herbage.
+GUSTIBUS blows gently the foliage aside, and gives us glimpses through
+it of rural contentment in connection with a mill, or some other
+interesting object beyond. The pencil of SAGEGREEN imbues canvases, both
+large and small, with infinite variety and force; and it is to
+SKETCHMORE that the great lakes owe their remarkable reputation as
+pieces of water with poems growing out of their broad lily-pads. Very
+tender are the pastoral banks and brooksides of LEAFHOPPER. ELFINLOCKS
+takes up his pencil, and lo! a hazy, mazy, lazy, dreamy vista where it
+has touched. But hold! Our critical Incubus has taken the bit between
+her teeth, and is beginning to run away with us. Stop that; and let our
+readers enumerate the other first American landscape painters for
+themselves.
+
+Not so strong are our artists in domestic incidents and compositions of
+life and character. We have STUNNINGTON, to be sure, whose traits of
+American expression, whether white or colored, are most true to the
+life; and there's BARLEYMOW, who will twist you an eclogue from the tail
+of his foreground pig. Others there be; but space has its limits, and we
+forbear.
+
+As for our portrait limners, their name is Legion, and that
+comprehensive name must go for all. Like BENVENUTO CELLINI they shall be
+known for their jugs; and their transmission to posterity on the heads
+of families is a thing to be reckoned on as sure.
+
+For the higher flights of art the American painter is by no manner of
+means endowed with the wings of his native eagle--wings that agitate the
+cerulean vault, spattering it with splashes of creamy cloud-spray, and
+churning into butter the stretches of the Milky Way. History has indeed
+been illustrated by American art, but has it been enriched? The
+WASHINGTONS and the WEBSTERS, the CLAYS and the LINCOLNS, have had their
+memories dreadfully lampooned on canvas. Allegory does not inspire the
+great American pencil. Tall art there is, and enough of it "at that;"
+but of high art we have none to speak of, except the canvases that are
+placed over doorways in the galleries of the Academy, and, in the sense
+of elevation, may consequently be spoken of as high. All this is wrong.
+Alas! that we should write it. Would that we could right it! And to
+think of the musty subjects that our historical and allegorical men
+select. Ho! young men--away with your CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS; relegate
+your METAMORA to his proper limbo; let WASHINGTON alone; and LINCOLN;
+and OSCEOLA the Savage; and POCAHONTAS, and all the rest. Leave them
+alone; and, taking fresh subjects, dip your brushes in brains, as old
+OPIE or somebody else said, and go to work with a will. No fresh
+subjects to be had, you say? Bosh! absurd interlocutor that you are.
+Here's a bundle of 'em ready cut to hand. We charge you no money for
+them, and you may take your choice.
+
+SUBJECTS FOR WORKS OF HIGH ART.
+
+PROVIDENCE tempering the wind to the shorn lamb.
+
+ABSENCE OF MIND marking a box of paper shirt-collars with indelible ink.
+
+MILTON "going it blind."
+
+The late Mr. WILLIAM COBBETT teaching his sons to shave with cold water.
+
+ST. PATRICK emptying the snakes out of his boots.
+
+TRUE LOVE never running smooth.
+
+NO MAN acting _Hero_ to his _valet de chambre_.
+
+ROBERT BONNER taking DEXTER by the forelock with one hand, and TIME with
+the other.
+
+Subjects like these might be worked out to advantage. The field in which
+they are to be found is almost unlimited; and they possess abundantly
+the two grand essentials to success in art at the present time, as well
+as in literature--novelty and sensation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+H.G. and Terpsichore.
+
+AMONG the strange revelations about _Tribune_ people elicited during the
+MCFARLAND trial, was the bit of gossip about Mr. GREELEY going to
+Saratoga to "trip the light fantastic toe." That Mr. GREELEY'S toe is
+"fantastic," every body who has ever inspected his "Congress gaiters"
+must know, but as to its lightness we have our doubts. "What I know
+about dancing" would be a capital subject for H.G. to handle, and we
+hope that he will take Steps for doing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sweeny's New Charter.
+
+ How doth the busy Peter B.,
+ Improve each shining hour!
+ From nettled young Democracy,
+ He plucks the safety-flower.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From Rome.
+
+The POPE is said to be "out of Spirits." Why doesn't he come to
+New-York, where he can get plenty of the article, either in the sense of
+the Tap or in that of the Rap?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"He who was Born to be Hanged," etc.
+
+On one of the mornings of the MCFARLAND trial, a very importunate person
+attempted to force his way into the court-room, which, as he was told,
+was already crowded "to suffocation." To this he retorted that he
+"wasn't born to be suffocated." That's in substance what the late JACK
+REYNOLDS said, and _he_ was mistaken.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Difference.
+
+Rice riots are reported as raging in all the ports of Japan. Rye was the
+principal mover in the famous conscription riots of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Celestial Idea.
+
+No wonder the Chinese theatre in San Francisco is a success, considering
+how skilful the actors must be in catching the Cue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUMBLES.
+
+Did you ever hear of my friend BOOTSBY? "No." That's rather queer. I
+see--you've been out of town. BOOTSBY is a man of standing--of decided
+standing, I may say. He stands, in fact, a great deal. The heavy
+standing round he does is enormous when the limited capacity of a single
+mortal is taken in view. BOOTSBY stands round among every class of
+people, and especially of politicians and potationers. He stands round
+to talk, to hear, and especially to drink. The power of the man in this
+last matter is wonderful, and the puzzle is, that his standing (and
+perpendicularity) is not perceptibly affected. Of course there are times
+when BOOTSBY'S standing is not so good. In so slippery a place as Wall
+Street, it is found to be less certain; while in a crowd on Broadway,
+waiting for a bus, it cannot be said to maintain a very remarkable
+firmness. But as a whole, and as the world goes, BOOTSBY is a man of
+standing. In the altitude of six feet ten, he may be called a man of
+high standing. He feels proud of the fact. "Is it not better to be a
+mountain than a mole?" he often asks in a proudly sneering manner of his
+neighbor PUGGS, who is about as far up in the world as the top of a
+yard-stick. It is very true that size is not quality, and a seven-footer
+may be no better than a three-footer; but it is observed that a Short
+Man is rarely any thing else. His stature is his measure throughout. My
+own impression of myself is, that I don't care to be short; but if the
+alternative were forced upon me, I should choose that of person rather
+than of purse. BOOTSBY does not care much about money, and he carries
+very little. Some people are like BOOTSBY, but most people are not. The
+ladies, it is true, never, or rarely, want money. Like newspapers and
+club-houses, they are self-supporting. In fact they surround themselves
+with supporters which stay tightly. Mrs. TODD is peculiar in her wants
+pecuniary. She, good soul, never wants (or keeps) money long, but she
+doesn't want it _little_. She prefers it like onions, in a large bunch,
+and strong. The reason why most women do not want money is because they
+have no use for it. They never dress; they never wear jewelry; silks and
+satins have no charms in their eyes; laces, ribbons, shawls never tempt.
+To exist and walk upright in simpleness and quiet is the sum of their
+desires. Dear creatures! how is it that they never want?
+
+My neighbor, Mr. DROWSE, desires to know where you get all your funny
+things for PUNCHINELLO? He knows they are there, does Mr. DROWSE; for he
+gets my copy of the penny postman, and he keeps it, too. It is the only
+good taste my neighbor has displayed of late years. I tell Mr. DROWSE
+that you make your fun. He further asks, Where? I tell him in the
+attic--up there where they keep the salt. He desires to know the size of
+attic. Of course he has never seen your noble, capacious, alabaster
+forehead, else he would perceive the source of those scintillations of
+light and warmth which radiate throughout the universe every Saturday
+for only ten cents. He is curious also to know about the salt, and
+doesn't comprehend how or where you use it. He used to use it when a boy
+in catching birds by putting the briny compound on the tails of the
+same, and _that_ he used to call "fun alive;" but he don't see it--the
+salt--about PUNCHINELLO. I suspect Mr. DROWSE doesn't see the sellers,
+(certainly he avoids them when PUNCHINELLO is offered, much to my
+mortification, and one dime to my cost,) and so is not likely to discern
+the source of the fun. I merely informed Mr. DROWSE that the editor was
+very tall, very handsome, with very black skin and rosy hair, (at which
+he opened his eyes with astonishment, and asked if I meant so; at which
+I said, "Yes, I guess so,") and that he laughed out of his nose, eyes,
+head, and hands, as well as his mouth. DROWSE wants to see the editor
+very much. He has seen men with black skins and hearts, (for he used to
+know lots of politicians;) but wants to put his vision on some "rosy
+hair"--and when he does, no doubt his gaze will be fixed. It is healthy
+sometimes to have the gaze fixed; and often, like sauce-pans and
+sermons, it has to be fixed. When Mr. DROWSE calls at 83, please show
+him in Parlor 6 with the Brussels, fresco-work, and lace curtains.
+
+April is a model month. So serene, steady, clear, and balmy. Nothing
+but blue sky, gentle zephyrs, kissing breezes, genial suns by day and
+sparkling stars by night. PUNCHINELLO no doubt likes sparkling
+stars--stars of magnitude--stars that show what they are. PUNCHINELLO
+perhaps goes to NIBLO'S, and not only sees plenty stars, but plenty of
+them. But of April. It is called "fickle;" but that's a slander. "Every
+thing by turns and nothing long"--that is a libel on which a suit could
+be hung. The same vile falsehood is cruelly uttered of some women, when
+every body knows, or should know, that these same women are nothing of
+the sort. Who ever knew a fickle woman?
+
+Where in history is there record of such an Impossibility? Fickle--that
+implies a change of mind. What woman ever changed her mind any more than
+her hands? Nonsense, avaunt!--banished be slander! April is _not_
+fickle--woman is _not_ fickle. As one is evenly beautiful, divinely
+serene, bewitchingly winning, so is the other sunny, cerulean, balmy,
+paradisiacal. April for ever--after that the rest of the calendar.
+
+Does PUNCHINELLO believe in the Woman Movement? TODD does. He believes
+woman should move as much as man; and he regards her movement in such
+numbers to the great West as full of hope (and husbands) for the sex.
+Mrs. TODD has not as yet been irresistibly seized by the movement; but
+if TIMOTHY knows himself, he longs for the day when the seizer may come.
+Although TODD--who is the writer of this epistle--says it, who perhaps
+shouldn't, lest the shaft of egotism be hurled mercilessly at him, he
+does unhesitatingly say that to aid this movement he would make the
+greatest of sacrifices. He is willing to sacrifice his wife and other
+female relations upon the sacred altar of the movement, and contribute
+liberally to the expense thereof. He is quite willing they should
+vote--early and often, if need be; but he wishes to see the movement go
+westward like the Star of Empire--westward _viâ_ cheerful Chicago. TODD
+trusts PUNCHINELLO will espouse this movement; for if it does, it--the
+movement, no less than PUNCHINELLO--will go straight onward and upward;
+but not by the route known as the Spout.
+
+Mucilage is a good thing. It is now extensively used in Church, State,
+and Society. We use it largely at the Veneerfront Avenue Church, of
+which Rev. Dr. ALEXANDER PLASTERWELL is pastor. Of course, Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO, you know that distinguished church, and have no doubt often
+listened to the distinguished Dr. PLASTERWELL. He is a kind man, has a
+high forehead, a Roman (Burgundy) nose, and a sweet, soft head--I should
+say heart. He has--great and good man--the largest faith in mucilage. He
+often makes it a text, and he sticks to it, he does--does Dr.
+PLASTERWELL. Nothing like mucilage, PUNCHINELLO. It is the hope of the
+human race, and the salvation of woman. It is the Philosopher's Stone in
+solution; the essence and link which connects and cements all that is
+great, good, and lovely, in the past, present, and future. At least,
+such is the humble opinion of
+
+TIMOTHY TODD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS TO CAR CONDUCTORS.
+
+When standing in Printing House Square, your destination being Grand
+Street Perry or Bleecker Street, if a stranger asks whether you are
+going to Harlem, nod, as it is considered improper to answer in the
+negative. If he finds out the mistake, you can plead deafness.
+
+When called upon to stop, never attempt to comply. There are several
+reasons why you should not. In the first place, if you did stop, it
+would show that you have no will of your own, and since the passage of
+the Fifteenth Amendment, _all_ men are equal in this country.
+
+You may stop about two blocks from the place named, just to please
+yourself and prove your independence; but take particular care to start
+the car when the passenger is half off the steps. If there is a young
+surgeon in the neighborhood, you can enter into an arrangement to break
+arms and legs in this way with impunity, have the maimed "carried into
+the surgery," and share the fees with the operator. Occasional cases of
+manslaughter may take place; but don't mind that, as coroners' juries in
+New-York will return verdicts of "death from natural causes." Besides
+this, remember that you have a vote, and that both coroners and judges
+are dependent upon the people. When a lame old gentleman hails you,
+beckon him furiously to come on, but be sure, at the same time, to urge
+the driver to greater speed.
+
+It is no part of your business to have change, so never give any, but
+drive on: people should provide for and look after their own business
+and that is none of yours.
+
+Always drive through the centre of a target company or funeral
+procession, never minding whether you kill one or more, and then abuse
+the captain or the undertaker for his stupidity.
+
+By the adoption of these essential rules, and by adding a good deal of
+incivility, you will soon reach the top of the wheel of your profession
+and in due time have a testimonial presented to you by an admiring and
+grateful public.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Out in the Cold.
+
+Commissioner Tweed proposes a new outside Bureau of the Department of
+Public Works, for late-Commissioner MCLEAN. He is to be Superintendent
+of Refrigerators.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS.
+
+ENGRAVED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION FOR PUNCHINELLO, FROM THE ORIGINAL
+PAINTING, BY MILES STANDISH, IN THE COLLECTION OF METHUSELAH PILGRIM,
+ESQ., OF PILGRIMSVILLE, MASS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO CAPTAIN HALL.
+
+(IN ANTICIPATION OF HIS TRIP TO THE POLE.)
+
+ HALL! HALL!
+ D'ye hear our call?
+ Or, do you fancy it to be
+ A weather sign--merely the pre-
+ Monition of a squall
+ At sea!
+ HALL!
+
+ You pay no heed at all.
+ Nevertheless, O hardy mariner!
+ (A Snow-Bird brings this with our kindest love,)
+ We're sorry you prefer
+ Those frigid walks (ever so far above
+ The 80th parallel, we guess!)
+ To stocks, and tariffs, and domestic bliss;
+ Yes, yes,
+ Captain, we're sorry it has come to this!
+
+ Why do you madly thirst
+ For grog that's chopped up with a hatchet? say!
+ And tell us of the first
+ Strange thought which spurred you to go up that way!
+ Was it the hope that on some icy coast
+ (Frozen, yourself, almost!)
+ You'd have the luck to meet poor FRANKLIN'S ghost?
+
+ And has it seemed, sometimes,
+ That drowning might be pleasanter up there
+ Among the icebergs, native to those climes,
+ Than where
+ The surf breaks gently on some coral-reef,
+ And sirens sweetly soothe one's slow despair?
+ Say, was that your belief?
+
+ And who is BENT?[*]
+ Why was _he_ sent,
+ With his Warm Currents wheeling round the Pole?
+ A long, long race must his disciples run:
+ No sun,
+ No fun,
+ No chance to toss a word to any one;
+ And what a goal?
+
+ As hopefully you munch
+ The flinty biscuit, watching whale or seal,
+ Or listening, undaunted, to the crunch
+ Of ice-floes at the keel,
+ Say, Sir Intrepid! shall you really think
+ You pioneer the navies of the world?
+ Not while the chink
+ Of well-housed dollars sounds so pleasantly,
+ And safer tracks map out the treacherous sea!
+ If that's your dream, oh! let your sails be furled.
+
+ But, no!
+ It is not this! Your spirit, high and bold,
+ Scorning all tamer joys, will have it so!
+ No cold
+ Can chill its ardor! Such a soul would sate
+ Its deathless craving in some lofty flight,
+ Some deed sublime, and read its shining fate
+ By the Aurora's light!
+ For fruitful fellowship, it seeks the wild,
+ The frozen waste,
+ Where the world's venturous heroes--reconciled
+ To sunless, shuddering gloom--
+ To joyless solitude--with ardor taste
+ Their dread delights! and so at last find room,
+ 'Mid nodding icebergs, for their watery tomb!
+
+ For this, we spare you,
+ O dauntless HALL! Once having breathed that air
+ So pure, so fresh, so rare!
+ And caught the wildness of the Esquimaux,
+ We declare you
+ Unfit to live where beans and lettuce grow!
+ Leave delving to the little pitiful mole,
+ Great soul!
+ And now, then, for the Pole!
+
+[Footnote *: Captain BENT, of Cincinnati, originator of the new theory
+of Polar Currents.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FINANCIAL RELIEF
+
+MR. BUMBLE BOUTWELL TO MRS. CORNEY FISH. _(See Oliver Twist.)_ "THE GREAT
+PRINCIPLE OF FINANCIAL RELIEF IS TO GIVE THE BUSINESS MEN EXACTLY WHAT
+THEY DON'T WANT: THEN THEY GET TIRED OF COMING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+MR. SUMNER said he was the friend of the oppressed. That, as was well
+known, was his regular business. Unfortunately, the Fifteenth Amendment
+had rendered the colored man incapable of being hereafter regarded as an
+oppressed creature. He was sorry, but it could not be helped. He was
+therefore forced to go down the chromatic scale of creation and find
+another class of clients. He found them in cattle. HOMER had sung about
+the ox-eyed Juno, and WALTER WHITMAN about bob veal. COWPER had remarked
+that he would not number in his list of friends the man who needlessly
+set foot upon a cow. He mentioned these things merely to show that
+railway companies had no right to starve cattle. He proposed an
+amendment to the Constitution, to provide that a dinner of at least
+three courses should be given to cows daily. Mr. DRAKE was heartily in
+favor of the proposition. He had got his feet in a web, so to speak, by
+paddling in the political waters of Missouri, and some people had gone
+so far as to call him "quack." He demanded redress.
+
+Mr. WILSON didn't see the use of all this legislation to protect
+animals. Animals had no votes, although he admitted a partial exception,
+in that every bull, it had its ballot. But he had something practical.
+Here was a jolly job, the Pacific Railway grant. There was a good deal
+more in it than they had made out of any other GRANT. Mr. THURMAN'S
+suggestion, that this land ought to be occupied by actual settlers, he
+scorned. "Actual settlers" were of a great deal more use to him in
+Massachusetts, where they could vote for him, than in the territories,
+where that boon would not be extended to them. It was much better that
+they should be occupied by imaginary settlers, who could pay and not
+vote. Actual "settlings" were the dregs of humanity.
+
+The Georgia bill came up, as it does every day with much more regularity
+than luncheon. The Senate has succeeded in muddling it to that degree of
+unintelligibility that nobody has the slightest notion what it provides.
+It is, therefore, in a condition to give rise to infinite debate. After
+several senators had said enough for a foundation for thirty columns
+each in the _Globe,_ they let it go for the present. The present was the
+one promised by Senator WILSON in return for the Pacific Railway grab
+grant.
+
+HOUSE.
+
+The House is given over to the tariff. A very indelicate discussion has
+been had upon corsets. Mr. BROOKS was of opinion that the corset would
+tariff it were subjected to any more strain in the way of duties. Mr.
+MARSHALL remarked that the corset avoided a great deal of Waist. It was
+whalebone of his bone, or something of that sort. It was one of the main
+Stays of our social system.
+
+Mr. SCHENCK made another speech. He ripped up the foreign corset in a
+truculent manner. He said that American corsets were far superior, only
+American women had not the sense to see it. The effect of taking off the
+duty on corsets would be to take off the corsets.
+
+Mr. BROOKS called the hooks and ayes on the corsets. Mr. SCHENCK opposed
+the call. He had found a simple tape much preferable. He wished a
+coffer-dam might be put upon the roaring BROOKS.
+
+Somebody at this point brought up a contested election case; but Mr.
+LOGAN objected to its being considered. What, he asked, was the use of
+wasting time? There was money in the tariff. There was no money at all
+in voting a Democrat out, and a Republican in. They could do that any
+day in five minutes. His friend Mr. BUTLER had recently remarked, one
+Democrat more or less made no difference. But Mr. BUTLER forgot that the
+larger the majority, the larger the divisor for spoils, and therefore
+the smaller the quotient and the "dividend." He did not know much about
+arithmetic. He had never been at West Point; but he believed that a
+million dollars, for instance, would go further and fare worse among two
+hundred men than among three. If the House were not careful, there would
+be a glut of Republicans in it, and the shares would be pitifully
+meagre. As for him, he had a great mind, (derisive cheers)--he repeated,
+that he had a great mind to vote for a Democrat next time.
+
+In spite of Mr. LOGAN'S warning, the House voted in a couple or so of
+Republicans, and then resumed the duty on wool.
+
+Mr. Cox thought this wool had been pulled over the eyes of the house
+often enough. It reminded him of an expedition, of which Mr. LOGAN had
+never heard, in search of a "Golden Fleece."
+
+Mr. JENCKES, and Mr. SCHENCK, and Mr. KELLEY called him to order in
+behalf of their constituents, who were in the wool business, and said
+that "wool" in one form or another had always been the staple of their
+political career.
+
+Mr. BUTLER said he had a little game worth two of that. He wanted to buy
+San Domingo. In this there were plenty of commissions, and hundreds of
+thousands of colored votes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT.
+
+ALDERMANIC RECEPTION UP-TOWN.
+
+ CAESAR, walk in! Ah POMPEY! how d'e do?
+ This way, CLEM! Gentlemen, please walk right through!
+ GEORGE, how's your mother? Fine day, PETE--fine day!
+ Well, how are things down there at Oyster Bay?
+
+ Ah AUNTIE! how's your rheumatiz, this spring?
+ Well, Mr. JOHNSON, did you try that sling?
+ Why, this is Uncle STEVE! How-do-you-do.
+ Uncle? Sit down. What can I do for you?
+
+ Well, Mr. PRINCE! You must be busy, now.
+ Whitewashing is the best thing done, I vow!
+ Why, hel-lo! REGIS! From the Cape so soon?
+ When do you open, this year--first of June?
+
+ Come, gentlemen--some wine? Now, don't refuse!
+ What! temperate? teetotal? Well, that's news!
+ And good news, too! Well, coffee, then. You see,
+ My friends, the _sentiment's_ the thing with me.
+
+ The real Mocha, AUNTIE! Simon pure!
+ Raised by free Arabs. For I can't endure
+ A single thing that's flavored with a Wrong!
+ Yes, AUNTIE, you are right, I've "come out strong!"
+
+ So have the Colored People, I may say!
+ (One fact explains the other, up this way!)
+ They've proved their strength! It's settled, sure as a gun,
+ That every Colored Voter now counts One!
+
+ Now, gentlemen, you'll be surprised to find
+ So many people with your turn of mind!
+ But, sure as tricks! remember what I say--
+ You'll learn some things before Election Day!
+
+ POMPEY--'twon't take much time, (and you can spare it!)
+ Try this old fiddle, picked up in the garret!
+ Good? It's your fiddle! AUNTIE, here's a pound
+ Of that same genuine Mocha, ready ground!
+
+ Say, Uncle STEVE, I've got a fish for you,
+ Down at the market. Call again, PETE; do!
+ I'll have a job for you and CAESAR soon:
+ It's only waiting for a change of moon.
+
+ CLEM, how'd you like a chance to wait on table?
+ Or, would you rather drive, and run my stable?
+ GEORGE, in the kitchen there's a pan of souse!
+ Going? All gone? Now, BRIDGET, air the house!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Historic Parallel.
+
+THE JACK CADE movement came near destroying London. The Ar-Cade movement
+threatens to destroy Broadway.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A CHEAP LUXURY.
+
+SNIFFLES LOVES THE SMELL OF ROASTED CHESTNUTS, AND ENJOYS IT FOR HOURS
+EVERY DAY; BUT HE NEVER EATS ANY--WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR THE JOYOUS EXPRESSION
+ON THE FACE OF THE VENDER.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BUSINESS.
+
+A CHICAGO LAY.
+
+ I saw her sweet lip quiver,
+ As he started for the store.
+ Because he hadn't kissed her
+ "Several" times or more.
+
+ She cried "This horrid business!"
+ And then flew to her glass;
+ "Oh! why his cold remissness?
+ Have I grown plain, alas?"
+
+ But no, that truthful article
+ Revealed her charms intact,
+ She hadn't lost one particle,
+ But had improved, in fact.
+
+ At nine the case was opened,
+ At ten the case was o'er;
+ The jury brought their virdict--
+ She was his wife no more.
+
+ That night the husband started,
+ And--"_you_ bet"--he swore,
+ To find his wife departed,
+ And "_To Let_" on the door.
+
+ Next day he moved and married.
+ And, that his bride might stay,
+ He kissed her every morning
+ Before he went away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Pot-umania.
+
+A correspondent writes that a new mania has sprung up among the ladies
+of Edinburgh--a fancy for learning to cook. There is a much older mania
+in some parts of that country--a fancy for something to cook.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+About a Foot.
+
+A BOOT when it's on.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IMPORTANT TO PUBLISHERS.
+
+One of our corps of Philosophers (a trifle visionary, perhaps) has been
+speculating as to certain possible (or, perhaps, impossible) results
+flowing from the practice among publishers of ante-dating their monthly
+issues. Thus, supposing that the world should be destroyed by fire (and
+why not? it is bad enough) on the 15th of May, 1870, and a cover of,
+say, _Putnam's_ for June, carried up by an air-current, should, after
+floating about ever so long in space, finally descend on some friendly
+planet--we will say, Venus. Here it would naturally get picked up by an
+archaeologist, (who would be on the spot looking out for it,) and the
+interesting relic would be promptly and reverently deposited among the
+other Vestiges of Creation, in the Royal Cabinet. In the course of
+years, some historian would probably have occasion to turn over these
+curiosities, and would presently light on the scorched but still legible
+waif. "Why," says he, in astonishment, "I thought the earth was burnt on
+the 15th of May! To be sure, it was _in the night_, and nobody saw it
+go, [think of that, conceited Worldling!] but it was missed by somebody
+the day after. But here we have a document from the late unfortunate
+planet dated the first of June!"
+
+Of course, upon this the History of the Universe would have to be
+rewritten, or that odd fortnight would play the mischief somewhere!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Boston Boy.
+
+HUB-BUB.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Curses Come Home to Roost."
+
+They are putting the Fifth Avenue pavement in front of the City Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Politicians.
+
+Will the working of the Fifteenth Amendment oblige a candidate to show
+his Color before election?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So We Go!
+
+We notice, with much agitation and a reasonable amount of grief, that
+somebody in Philadelphia (possibly Miss ANNA DICKINSON) has invented a
+machine for the laundry called The King Washer! A few years ago it would
+have been The Queen Washer; but in these days the name seems to indicate
+that to Man, unhappy Man, will speedily be committed the destinies of
+the weekly washing. Oh! the rubbing, the rinsing, the wringing. But Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO has already communicated to Mrs. PUNCHINELLO his sentiments
+upon this subject. Under no circumstances will he get at the family
+linen. He must make a stand somewhere, and he makes it here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let them Bark.
+
+Miss BARKALOW has been admitted to practice at the bar in St. Louis. We
+have frequently before seen young ladies at a bar, where others
+practiced more than they did; but we do not see why, if Miss BARKALOW
+wishes to bark aloud, she should not be allowed to bark, aloud or
+otherwise. Barking may be particularly good in a cross-examination; but
+we presume that a lady attorney's bark will be always worse than her
+bite.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"She Stoops to Conquer."
+
+The girl with the Grecian Bend.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query.
+
+Is it allowable for a Temperance man to be Cordial to his friends?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Weak as Water.
+
+Our cynical friend A. QUARIUS writes us from Philadelphia, that
+considering the manner in which the Sunday liquor law is enforced in
+that city, he thinks his native place is still entitled--perhaps more
+than ever entitled to be called the city of Rye-tangles. This is
+ungrateful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPIRITUAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF CATS.
+
+DEAR PUNCHINELLO: Our Society has been very learnedly debating as to
+whether Cats are susceptible of spiritual impressions; and, although the
+burden of opinion inclines to the negative of the question, I am firmly
+persuaded there is much to justify a contrary judgment.
+
+As I slept the other night, neither dreaming nor holding psychological
+intercourse of any description with outsiders, I was awakened suddenly
+about the first hour of the morning by a noise. I am quite certain it
+was a noise, and have therefore no hesitation in so recording it. The
+new moon hung athwart the western sky, and a few fleecy clouds were
+chasing each other like snow-drifts across the blue vault of the night.
+I may likewise note the fact that the stars were doing what they usually
+do, notwithstanding the difference of opinion that sometimes exists as
+to what that is. It was the evening after "wash-day," and family linen,
+in graceful curves and undulating outlines, everywhere met the eye as it
+turned from contemplating the stars to contemplating the clothes-lines
+in the gardens. But I wander. The noise? Ah! yes. Well, it was not like
+the collision of two hard substances, but rather of the heavy "thud"
+order of sound, like the descent of a solid into a soft substance; say,
+for instance, of a flat-iron into a jar of unrisen buck-wheat batter. I
+glanced along the ghostly battalions of family linen; along the fences
+traversed by feline sentries; along the latticed arbors; but nothing to
+indicate the origin of the alarm could be discovered, and as at that
+moment a breeze stirred in the apartment, producing a chilling
+sensation, I thought it prudent to jump back into bed.
+
+Next morning, upon making my usual visit to note the progress of the
+early bulbs in the flower-beds, I encountered at the further end of the
+garden the remains of a cat--a portly and ancient grimalkin of the
+sterner sex. Close at hand was a bottle lying face downward, and corked.
+I raised it--first in my hands, and then to my lips. The cork fell out,
+accidentally as it were, and, as a consequence, death. "Poor thing!" I
+murmured; "poor--" and a portion of the contents glided carelessly down
+my throat. I perceived that the liquid was "Old Rye." As I stooped down,
+tears would have come to my eyes; but it was useless, seeing that the
+breath had left the unfortunate's body. Nevertheless, I rested my hand a
+moment upon his head, and then glided it in a semi-professional manner
+along the line of dorsal elevation, until I came to a deep depression in
+his backbone, which corresponded exactly with the convexity of the
+bottle. Then I saw at once how it was; this missile, (in the heat of
+passion, being mistaken for an empty one, probably,) had been hurled by
+some treacherous hand upon the unsuspecting Tom, striking him midway
+between the root of the tail and the base of the brain, causing instant
+suspension of his vertebral communications, "Poor thing! You were the
+victim of a Catastrophe. You were also the victim of the bottle. The
+'Rye' was too heavy for you, and should have been drawn milder." This
+said, I turned sadly away to find a burial spade, and it then occurred
+to me that this little incident was kindly meant to confirm my view that
+cats are susceptible, even to a fatal extent, of spiritual
+impressions--especially when conveyed by spirits of "Old Rye."
+
+GOBBO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the Tombs.
+
+When a drunken man has been locked up for beating his wife, it is
+reasonable to suppose that he must feel rather the worse for lick her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PERSONAL GOSSIP.
+
+(From the Daily Press.)
+
+"A SON OF ONE OF OUR WEALTHIEST RESIDENTS DISPLAYS GREAT TALENTS AS A
+SCULPTOR. HE IS BUT NINE YEARS OLD."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A BIT OF NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+Naturalists tell us that the _Aye-aye_ is a small animal of Madagascar,
+with sharp teeth, long claws, and a tail; which eats whatever it can
+grab, and says nothing day or night but _aye-aye_. Now, we find that,
+AGASSIZ to the contrary notwithstanding, this strange and not very
+useful animal is indigenous to the State of Pennsylvania. It especially
+frequents Harrisburg; and may be seen and heard any day there, in the
+Senate or House. Being an active member of that House, your
+correspondent has been present during the passage of three hundred bills
+within a week or two, in about one hundred and ten of which he had some
+personal interest.
+
+Lifting his eyes one day from his newspaper, when the Speaker took the
+vote on an "Act to amend the Incorporation of the City of Philadelphia,"
+which your correspondent happened to know included the presentation of a
+three-story brownstone front to each of a committee of six members of
+the House, he found there was not one member in his seat; but, in the
+place of a few, there was a company of these remarkable _Aye-ayes_,
+responding duly to the call for a vote; but never a _no_ among them. No,
+no!
+
+Now, your correspondent holds the deliberate opinion that, in several
+respects, these aforesaid small animals of Madagascar might be an
+improvement upon the average Pennsylvania legislators. And, if your
+correspondent had to do with getting up the other one hundred and ninety
+bills, as he did the one hundred and ten, all right: Otherwise, _not_.
+How does PUNCHINELLO regard it?
+
+Yours, LEGISLATOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Augean Job.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has telegraphed to Governor GEARY his approval of the
+"Sewage Utilization" bill at Harrisburg, on one condition: that the
+first piece of work be finished up by the members of the Pennsylvania
+Legislature with their own hands; that work to be, to make up into
+_decent_ manure, _deodorized_ and _disinfected_, all bills passed at the
+late session of their House and Senate. Since, however, complete
+deodorization is probably _impossible_, PUNCHINELLO advises also that
+the said members be required to cart all their stuff out to the Bad
+Lands of Nebraska, and remain there to make the best use of it; or else
+make a contract with Captain HALL to ship it and them to the Arctic
+regions at once.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the Finances.
+
+Says Crispin, "Did not somebody say it was BOUTWELL in the Treasury now?
+A great mistake. About well, to be sure! When the newspaper men have
+111-1/2 of gold, and I haven't a round dollar! Where did they get it?
+And then the legal tender question. I never asked but _one_ tender
+question in all my life, and that was to SUSAN and she said, Yes. And
+then we were legally married. Nobody ought to ask such questions _out
+loud_; it's not _decent_. And _fine answering_ an't much better.
+Financiering, is it? Ah! well. _Specious assumption_, too; but that
+requires brass, and I want _gold_. Meantime, who's got a twenty-five
+cent note?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Massachusetts Flats.
+
+Massachusetts must abound in Flats. Its Legislature is annually agitated
+from the sands of Cape Cod to the hills of Berkshire over the question.
+It is said to be wisdom to set a rogue to catch a rogue. Is it equally
+so to set a flat to catch one?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NATIONAL TAXIDERMY.
+
+[Illustration 'P']
+
+PUNCHINELLO has for some time past carefully considered the subject of
+our national tariff of imposts, (_that is to say, he happened to see, in
+a Tribune, the other day, that lucifer matches were now to be stamped
+separately, and not by the box, as heretofore_) and he has come to the
+conclusion, after duly weighing in his mind all the arguments for and
+against the present system of taxation, (_that is to say, he made up his
+mind the minute he read the article_,) that what the present tariff
+needs, is a more thorough application and a better classification; or,
+what the technologists call Taxonomy, which term is suggested to him by
+a work on the subject which he has been recently studying. (_That is to
+say, he looked in the dictionary to find out what Taxidermy meant, and
+seeing Taxonomy there, snapped it up for a sort of collateral pun_.) As
+an illustration of what our impost legislators (or imposters) ought to
+be, let us take the Taxidermist. He is one who takes from an animal
+every thing but his skin and bones, and stuffs him up afterward with all
+sorts of nonsense. Now, our National Taxidermists ought to take a lesson
+from their original. Many of the good people of the United States have
+much more left them than their skin and bones. Why is not all that
+taken? The condition of the ordinary stuffed animal of the shops is
+strikingly significant of what should be expected of loyal communities.
+(_That is to say, communities which vote a certain ticket which need not
+be named here_.) It is often said that there are things which flesh and
+blood will not bear. Now, a thorough system of Taxidermy remedies all
+this. A stuffed 'possum, for instance, having no flesh or blood, will
+bear any thing. When the people of this country are thoroughly cleaned
+out, they will be just as docile. Among the things which PUNCHINELLO
+would recommend as fit subjects of taxation, is a man's expenses. They
+have not been taxed yet. If he pays for his income, why not for his
+outgoes? The immense sums that are annually expended in this country for
+this, that, and the other thing ought certainly to yield a revenue to
+the government. (_That is to say, there ought to be a new army of
+collectors and assessors appointed. P. knows lots of good men out of
+office_.) And then there's a man's time. Why not tax that? Nearly every
+man spends a lot of time, and he ought to pay for it. As it would be our
+tax, it could not be a very minute tax, although it is only the second
+tax which we have suggested. (_That is to say--- something pun-ny_.) And
+besides these things, there's energy. We often hear of a man's energies
+being taxed; but, so far as the matter is apparent to the naked eye, it
+is difficult to see whose energies are taxed for the good of the
+government at the present day. This subject should certainly be
+investigated. (_That is to say, a committee of Congressmen should be
+appointed, with power to send for persons, papers, and extra
+compensation_.) Politics, too. Every man has his politics, (_that is to
+say, every man except Bennett_,) and they ought to be taxed, if for no
+other reason than the great impetus the measure would give to the
+erection of fences throughout the land. And letters, too. If every one
+sent by the mail should yield one cent to the Treasury, how the currency
+would be inflated in that locality! (_That is to say, in the locality to
+which the collectors would abscond_.) But it is impossible, with the
+limited time at his disposal, for PUNCHINELLO to enter into a full
+examination and elucidation of this subject. (_That is to say, he can't
+think of any more illustrations just now, and the printer wouldn't stand
+any more, if he could_.) But it must be admitted that the great task of
+opening up the country, of which we hear so much, will never be complete
+until the Washington skinners and stuffers get us all into the prepared
+specimen condition. (_That is to say, when the people are all willing
+to_ "_dry up_.")
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JOHN CHINAMAN'S BILLING AND COOING.--Pigeon English.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CABLE NEWS.
+
+(EXCLUSIVELY FOR PUNCHINELLO.)
+
+QUEEN ISABELLA has sent her compliments to Señor CASTELAR, as well as to
+General PRIM, informing them that, on the whole, she thinks she will
+_not_ return to the throne of Spain. It does not agree with her quiet
+and refined tastes and habits to live so much in public. All she wants
+now is a little _château en Espagne_. She proposes to send her son,
+Prince of ASTURIAS, to Professor CASTELAR, to study modern history. Is
+it not odd, by the way, that a country so long _Mad-rid-den_ as Spain,
+should have now a governor with such a name as PRIM? But, what's in a
+name? BOURBON, by any other name, would smell as sweet. Some, however,
+prefer Old Rye. I prefer _water_ to both; _especially_ to BOURBON.
+
+It's an old story that _two positives make a negative_. Paris news tells
+us that a late will case has exemplified this. COMTE, you know, was a
+_positive_ philosopher. He had a positive wife. She had a will of her
+own. He wrote a will of his own. Consequently, it got into court. Mme.
+COMTE it seems, who did not agree with the philosophy while the
+philosopher lived, wanted his MSS. after his death. Positively, the
+court did not see it in that light; and so the negative came out. It was
+a case of no go, or _non-ego_, as HEGEL might have called it. Did you
+ever read HEGEL? I didn't; and I advise you not to begin. It won't pay.
+I am told that he divided all things into Egos, She goes, and Non-egos,
+or No-goes. The latter particularly; So do I.
+
+But to return to Spain; or rather to Paris. Don FRANÇOIS D'ASSISSI has,
+it appears, suddenly discovered that his wife is not Queen of Spain so
+much as she was. Much less so. So, he has found her company rather
+expensive than agreeable; and proposes to abdicate it. Not so _very_
+much of an ass, is he? Bravo for Don FRANÇOIS!
+
+In London, _to-morrow_ will be made famous in literature by _the_ great
+dinner in honor of the advent of PUNCHINELLO. Mr. PUNCH is talked of to
+preside. An unprecedented rush for tickets has begun. More about it in
+my next.
+
+PRIME.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cutting.
+
+We see extensively advertised the "Saxon Razor;" but have not yet
+summoned up sufficient courage to try this article, which "no
+gentleman's dressing-case should be without." We cannot dispossess our
+minds of the apprehension of cutting ourselves, remembering that line
+descriptive of the combat between FITZ-JAMES and RODERICK DHU, in which
+it is said, that,
+
+ "----thrice the Saxon blade drank blood."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Musical.
+
+The vocal abilities of hens are admitted; but they rarely attempt the
+Chro-matic scale.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+De Jure.
+
+No man can now be a juror who knows any thing about the case which he is
+to try. Thus a juryman was challenged in the MCFARLAND case merely
+because he belonged to Dr. BELLOWS's church. It was held that he might
+possibly have got Wind of the matter while listening to the Doctor's
+discourse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOK NOTICES.
+
+AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT. Boston: ROBERTS BROTHERS.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+The author of "Little Women" seeks, and not without success, to draw
+from her "Old-Fashioned Girl" a contrast and a moral. She presents to
+our view two young ladies of opposite "styles." One is fresh and rural:
+the other isn't. The difference between country and city bringing-up is
+the point aimed at; and the difference is about as great as that between
+the warbling of woodside birds and the jingle of one of OFFENBACH'S
+tunes on a corner barrel-organ. The book is neatly set forth, with
+illustrations by Messrs. ROBERTS, BROTHERS, of Boston.
+
+RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. By the author of "Cometh up as a Flower," etc.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+A readable book, notwithstanding that there are several naughty
+characters in it, or perhaps _because_ there are. Probably it depicts
+with truth the kind of society presented. If so, all the worse for
+society. Shall we never again have healthful, virtuous novels of the old
+school, such as "Tom Jones?" The book is published in tasteful form by
+Messrs. D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE OFFERING |
+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
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+ | |
+ | HAVE OPENED A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF |
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+ | |
+ | Children's Cloaks, Ladies' Breakfast Jackets, |
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+ | |
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+ | |
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+ | |
+ | Of every description. |
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+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | _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 grammar, 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 |
+ | me 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 |
+ | 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 THE VARIOUS ORDERS, |
+ | WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE HABITS AND ECONOMY OF THE MOST |
+ | INTERESTING. |
+ | By Louis Figuler. Illustrated with 307 wood-cuts. 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-ROOK 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HENRY L. STEPHENS |
+ | |
+ | ARTIST, |
+ | |
+ | No. 160 Fulton Street, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Important to Newsdealers! |
+ | |
+ | ALL ORDERS FOR |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO |
+ | |
+ | Will be supplied by |
+ | |
+ | OUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, |
+ | |
+ | American News Co. |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | J. NICKINSON |
+ | |
+ | BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO THE FRIENDS OF |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | RESIDING IN THE COUNTRY, THAT, |
+ | |
+ | FOR THEIR CONVENIENCE |
+ | |
+ | HE HAS MADE ARRANGEMENTS BY WHICH, ON RECEIPT OF THE PRICE |
+ | OF |
+ | |
+ | ANY STANDARD BOOK PUBLISHED, |
+ | |
+ | THE SAME WILL BE FORWARDED, POSTAGE PAID. |
+ | |
+ | Parties desiring Catalogues of any of our Publishing Houses, |
+ | can have the same forwarded by inclosing two stamps. |
+ | |
+ | OFFICE OF PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., 83 Nassau Street. |
+ | |
+ | [P. O. Box 2783.] |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: A SUCCESSFUL CATCH.
+
+_John Bull._ "WELL, GENERAL, HOW DID YOU CATCH YOUR FISH?"
+
+ _General Prim._ "WITH A SPANISH FLY."]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 excellence 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+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 the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30,
+1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 10018-8.txt or 10018-8.zip *****
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+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of PUNCHINELLO Vol. 1, No. 5.</title>
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30, 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. 5, April 30, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 8, 2003 [EBook #10018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <table width="800" border="1" align="center" cellpadding="3"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p>"The Printing House of the United States."</p>
+
+ <p><big><b>GEO. F. NESBITT &amp; CO</b>.,</big></p>
+
+ <p>General <b>JOB PRINTERS</b>,<br>
+ BLANK BOOK Manufacturers,<br>
+ STATIONERS, Wholesale and Retail,<br>
+ LITHOGRAPHIC Engravers and Printers,<br>
+ COPPER-PLATE Engravers and Printers,<br>
+ CARD Manufacturers,<br>
+ ENVELOPE Manufacturers,<br>
+ FINE CUT and COLOR Printers.</p>
+
+ <p><b>163,165,167,</b> and <b>169 PEARL ST.,</b></p>
+
+ <p><b>73, 75, 77,</b> and <b>79 PINE ST.,</b>
+ New-York.</p>
+
+ <p><small><small>ADVANTAGES&#8212;All on the same
+ premises, and under the immediate supervision of the
+ proprietors.</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">TO NEWS-DEALERS.</p>
+
+ <p><big><b>PUNCHINELLO'S MONTHLY</b></big>.</p>
+
+ <p><small>THE FIVE NUMBERS FOR APRIL,</small></p>
+
+ <p>Bound in a Handsome Cover,</p>
+
+ <p>Will be ready May 2d. Price, Fifty Cents.</p>
+
+ <p><b>THE TRADE</b></p>
+
+ <p>SUPPLIED BY THE</p>
+
+ <p><big>AMERICAN NEWS COMPANY,</big></p>
+
+ <p><small>Who are now prepared to receive
+ Orders.</small></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+
+ <td width="33%">
+ <center>
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HARRISON BRADFORD &amp;
+ CO.'S</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big><big>STEEL
+ PENS.</big></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>These pens are of a finer quality, more durable, and
+ cheaper than any other Pen in the market. Special
+ attention is called to the following grades, as being
+ better suited for business purposes than any Pen
+ manufactured. The</p>
+
+ <p><b>"505," "22,"</b> and the
+ <b>"Anti-Corrosive."</b></p>
+
+ <p>We recommend for bank and office use.</p>
+
+ <p><b>D. APPLETON &amp; CO.,</b> <b><br>
+ Sole Agents for United States.</b></p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table width="800" border="0" align="center" cellpadding="3"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <center>
+ <br>
+ <br>
+ <img src="images/01.jpg" alt=""><br>
+
+ <h1>PUNCHINELLO</h1>
+
+ <h2>Vol. I. No. 5.</h2>
+
+ <p>SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1870.</p><br>
+
+ <h3>PUBLISHED BY THE</h3><br>
+
+ <h3>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY,</h3><br>
+ <br>
+
+ <h4>83 NASSAU STREET, NEW YORK.</h4>
+ </center><br>
+ <br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><small><i>CONANT'S PATENT BINDERS for "Punchinello,"
+ to preserve the paper for binding, will be sent,
+ post-paid<br>
+ on receipt of One Dollar, by "Punchinello Publishing
+ Company," 83 Nassau Street, New-York
+ City.</i></small></p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+ <small>PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close
+ resemblance to Oil Paintings. Sold in All Stores through
+ out the World<br>
+ <br></small>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <small><br>
+ PRANG'S WEEKLY BULLETIN OF CHROMOS.&#8212;"Easter
+ Morning" "Family Scene in Pompeii"<br>
+ "Whittier's Birthplace," Illustrated Catalogue sent, on
+ receipt of stamp, by L. PRANG &amp; CO., Boston<br>
+ <br></small>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table width="800" align="center">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/03.jpg" alt="">
+ </center>
+
+ <p><b>THE WARNING OF THE BELLE</b></p>
+
+ <p>LOOK OUT FOR THE TRAIN.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>PATRIOTIC ADORATION.</b></p>
+
+ <p>A TALE OF PHILADELPHIA.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 1em;">People of the Quaker City,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">How the world must
+ stand aghast</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">At your wondrous
+ veneration</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">For those relics of the
+ past,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Kept in such precise
+ condition,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Fostered with such
+ tender care&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Don't, oh! don't the
+ Philadelphians</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Love old Independence
+ Square?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Splendid are its walks
+ and grass-plots</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Where the bootblacks
+ base-ball play,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And its seats resembling
+ toad-stools,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">On which loafers lounge
+ all day,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Waiting for their luck,
+ or gazing</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">At the office of the
+ Mayor&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Don't, oh! don't the
+ Philadelphians</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Love old Independence
+ Square?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Then, behold the fine old
+ State-house</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Cleanly kept inside and
+ out,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Where the faithful
+ office-holders</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Squirt tobacco-juice
+ about:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Placards highly
+ ornamental</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Decorate its outward
+ wall&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Don't, oh! don't the
+ Philadelphians</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Love old Independence
+ Hall?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">O! ye gods and little
+ fishes!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Could bill-sticker be
+ so vile</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">As to paste up nasty
+ posters</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">On the sacred classic
+ pile?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Greece and Rome yet have
+ their relics,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">But what are they? very
+ small.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">Never half so
+ venerated</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">As old Independence
+ Hall.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>PERIODICAL LITERATURE.</b></p>
+
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO has hitherto refrained from criticising
+ the periodicals of the day, from the mistaken idea that
+ superlative excellence was not expected in every number
+ of every daily or weekly journal in the land. He did not
+ know that, if every such journal was not edited so as to
+ suit the comprehension of all classes of cursory critics,
+ it should be unqualifiedly condemned. Supposing that a
+ painter should not condemn a paper for publishing a
+ musical article beyond his comprehension, and that an
+ architect ought not to get in a rage because he finds in
+ his favorite journal a paper on beavers which makes him
+ feel insignificant, PUNCHINELLO has generally looked
+ around upon his fellow-journalists, and thought them very
+ good fellows, who generally published very good papers.
+ He did not find superlative excellence in any of their
+ issues, but then he did not look for it. He might as well
+ pretend to look for that in the journalists themselves,
+ or in society at large. But he has lately learned, from
+ the critics of the period, that he ought to look for it,
+ and that it is the proper thing nowadays to pitch into
+ every journal which does not, in every part, please every
+ body, whether they be smart or dull; those quick of
+ appreciation, or those slow gentlemen who always come in
+ with their congratulations upon the birth of a joke at
+ the time its funeral is taking place. And so, PUNCHINELLO
+ will do as others do, and will occasionally view, from
+ the loop-hole in his curtain, the successes and failures
+ of his neighbors, and will give his patrons the benefit
+ of his observations.</p>
+
+ <p>The first thing he notices to-day is, that the
+ <i>Evening Snail</i> of last night is not so good as it
+ was a fortnight ago; or, let us think a bit&#8212;it
+ may have been a good number at the beginning of last
+ month that he was thinking of; at all events, this last
+ issue is inferior. The matter on the first page is not
+ printed in nearly as good type as the original
+ periodicals had it, and while the letters in the heading
+ are quite fair, it is very noticeable that the I's are
+ very defective, and there is no C in it. The "Gleanings"
+ are excellent, and it would be advisable to have more of
+ them&#8212;if indeed such a thing were possible in
+ this case. The spider-work inside shows no acquaintance
+ with the writings of BACH or GLIDDON, and there is
+ nothing about the Spectrum Analysis in any part of the
+ paper. Besides, the paper is too stiff and rattles too
+ much, and PUNCHINELLO could never abide the color of the
+ editor's pantaloons. Why will not people dress and write
+ so that every body can admire and understand them.
+ Especially in regard to witty things and breastpins They
+ ought to be loud, overpowering, and so glaring that
+ people could not help seeing them. And they ought to be a
+ little cheap, too, or average people won't comprehend
+ them. In both cases paste (and scissors) pays better than
+ diamonds. The reports of private parties in the
+ <i>Snail</i> are, however, very good, and if it would
+ confine its original matter to such subjects, it could
+ not fail to succeed.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Query for Physicians.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Are people's tastes apt to become Vichy-ated by the
+ excessive use of certain mineral waters?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>"Behold, how Pleasant a Thing 't is," etc.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Boston has a couple of clergymen who have fallen out
+ upon matters not precisely theological. In the summer,
+ the Rev. Mr. MURRAY leaves his sheep, to shoot deer by
+ torchlight in the Adirondacks. This the Rev. Mr. ALGER,
+ in addressing the Suppression of Cruelty to Animals
+ Society, denounces as extremely wicked. From all which Mr
+ PUNCHINELLO, taking up his discourse, infers,</p>
+
+ <p><i>First</i>. That it is a great deal more wicked to
+ shoot deer by torchlight than by daylight.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Secondly</i>. That the Rev. MURRAY and the Rev.
+ ALGER are of different religious persuasions.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Thirdly and lastly</i>. That the Rev. Mr. ALGER
+ doesn't love venison.</p>
+
+ <p>P. S. Persons desiring to present Mr. PUNCHINELLO with
+ a fine haunch, (in the season,) may shoot it by daylight,
+ moonlight, torchlight, or by a Drummond light, as most
+ convenient.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p>We are indebted to Mr. SARONY for a number of
+ brilliant photographs of celebrities of the day. Lovely
+ woman is well represented the batch, with all the
+ characters of which PUNCHINELLO hopes to present his
+ readers, from time to time.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="text-align: center;"><small>Entered, according
+ to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the PUNCHINELLO
+ PUBLISHING COMPANY,<br>
+ in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United
+ States, for the Southern District of
+ New-York.</small></p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/04.jpg" alt="">
+ </center>
+
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">ALL ABOARD FOR
+ HOLLAND</span></p>
+
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO understands that a performance is soon to
+ take place at the Academy of Music, for the benefit of
+ GEORGE HOLLAND, the well-known and ever-green "veteran"
+ of "the stage." It pleases PUNCHINELLO to know that a
+ combination of talent and beauty is to be brought
+ together for so worthy a purpose. Seventy-four years ago,
+ when GEORGE HOLLAND was a small child, PUNCHINELLO used
+ to dandle him upon his knee. Hardly four years have
+ passed since PUNCHINELLO was convulsed by the <i>Tony
+ Lumpkin</i> of HOLLAND. He distinctly remembers, too,
+ administering hot whiskey punch to little boy HOLLAND
+ with a tea-spoon, which may in some measure account for
+ the Spirit subsequently infused by the capital comedian
+ into the numerous bits of character presented by him.
+ Considering these facts, it is manifestly an incumbent
+ duty on the part of PUNCHINELLO to request the earnest
+ attention of his readers to the subject of GEORGE
+ HOLLAND'S benefit, all particulars concerning which will
+ be given due time through the public press. It used to be
+ said, long ago, that "the Dutch have taken Holland,"
+ Well, let our own modern Knickerbockers improve upon that
+ notion, by taking HOLLAND'S tickets. Remember how, in the
+ early settlement of the country, it was Holland that made
+ New-York, and see that New-York now returns the
+ compliment, and makes HOLLAND. Convivial songsters
+ frequently remind us that&#8212;</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 1em;">&#8212;"a Hollander's draught
+ should potent be,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1em;">And deep as the rolling
+ Zuyder Zee."</span><br>
+
+ <p>Mind this, all ye Hollanders who would give your
+ support to our HOLLAND. Let your drafts be potent, your
+ cheeks heavy, your attendance punctual. Make the affair
+ complete; so that when, here-after, a comparison is
+ sought for something that has been a sued people will say
+ of it&#8212;"As big as that Bumper of
+ HOLLAND'S."</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>ASTRONOMICAL CONVERSATIONS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>(BY A FATHER AND DAUGHTER RESIDING ON THE PLANET
+ VENUS.)</p>
+
+ <p><b>No. I.</b></p>
+
+ <p>FATHER (<i>to</i> DAUGHTER, <i>who is looking through a
+ telescope</i>.) Yes HELENE, that is the Planet Tellus, or
+ Earth. The darker streaks are land; the bright spots,
+ water. We begin with a low power, which shows only the
+ masses; presently you will have the pleasure of
+ discriminating not only rivers and chains of mountains,
+ but cities&#8212;single houses&#8212;even Human
+ Beings! Yes, you shall this very night read page of
+ PUNCHINELLO, a paper so bright that every word appears
+ surrounded by a halo!</p>
+
+ <p>DAUGHTER. O father! do that <i>now</i>. How
+ delightful, to actually read the works of these singular
+ creature's, and become familiar with their extraordinary
+ ideas! Were the scintillations you spoke of the other
+ night, that were seen all over the Western Continent, the
+ result of the flashing of these radiant pages?</p>
+
+ <p>F. Undoubtedly, my child; they began with the first
+ issue of the paper, and have since regularly increased in
+ brightness, just as It has.</p>
+
+ <p>D. It really seems as though Earth would answer for a
+ Moon, by and by, at this rate!</p>
+
+ <p>F. You are quite right, HELENE; it will. Or say,
+ rather, a Sun. For you will observe that it is a
+ <i>warm</i> light; not cool, as reflected light always
+ is. It is Original.</p>
+
+ <p>D. Well, this shows that PUNCHINELLO must have some
+ Heart, as well as Head. Come, put on your highest power
+ now, and let us seem to pay good old Tellus a visit!</p>
+
+ <p>[<i>The indulgent Father complies, and, is at some
+ pains to adjust the focus</i>.]</p>
+
+ <p>F. Now, dear! take a good look.</p>
+
+ <p>D. (<i>Looking intently</i>.) Oh! how splendid&#8212;how
+ splendid! <i>Do</i> see the beautiful things in those
+ Shop Windows! It must be the Spring Season there!
+ <i>Do</i> see those lovely lumps on the backs of those
+ creatures' heads! What place is it, Father?</p>
+
+ <p>F. That? It's New-York; and the street is the famous
+ Broadway.</p>
+
+ <p>D. O dear! how I <i>would</i> like to go shopping
+ there, this minute!&#8212;for I see it is afternoon
+ in that quarter. Is there no way of getting there?(!!!)</p>
+
+ <p>F. (<i>Laughing heartily</i>.) Well, well, HELENE!
+ That's pretty good, for the daughter of an astronomer! Do
+ you know that at this precise moment you are Forty-five
+ Million, Six Hundred and Fifty-four Thousand, Four
+ Hundred and Ninety-one Miles and a half from those
+ Muslins! I'll tell you, Sis, what <i>could</i> be done:
+ Drop a line to the Editor of PUNCHINELLO, and tell him
+ what you want. He'll get it, some way.</p>
+
+ <p>D. That I will, instantly! [<i>Turns to her portfolio,
+ while her father turns to the telescope</i>.]</p>
+
+ <p>"DEAR MR. EDITOR: Pardon the seeming <i>boldness</i> of a
+ <i>stranger:</i> you are no <i>stranger to me!</i> Long,
+ <i>long</i> have I deceived that <i>good man</i>, my
+ father, by <i>pretending</i> to know <i>nothing</i> of
+ the Earth, or of his <i>instrument!</i> Many and
+ <i>many</i> a night, <i>unknown to him</i>, have I gone
+ to the <i>Telescope</i>, to satisfy the <i>restless
+ craving</i> I feel to know more of <i>your Planet</i>,
+ and of a <i>person of your sex</i> whom I have
+ <i>often</i> beheld, and watched with <i>eagerness</i> as
+ he came and went. How <i>thrilling</i> the thought, that
+ he cannot even <i>know of my existence</i>, and that we
+ are <i>forever separated!</i> This, good and <i>dear</i>
+ Editor, is my one Thought, my one great Agony.</p>
+
+ <p>"It has occurred to me that, in this <i>dreadful</i>
+ situation&#8212;my Passion being sufficiently
+ Hopeless, as any one may see&#8212;you might at least
+ afford me some slight <i>alleviation</i>, by undertaking
+ to let Him know of the <i>interest</i> he excites in this
+ far-off star! Let me describe my charmer, so that you
+ will be able to identify him. He is of fair size, with a
+ rolling gait and a smiling countenance, has light hair
+ and complexion, wears often a White Hat, (on the back of
+ his head&#8212;where Thoughtful men always place the
+ hat, I've been told by observers,) and now and then
+ carelessly leaves one leg of his trowsers at the top of
+ his boot. I have often seen him, with a bundle of papers in
+ his pocket, entering a large building with the words
+ "<i>Tribune</i> Office" over the door&#8212;and I <i>adore</i>
+ him! O excellent Editor! tell him this, I <i>implore</i>
+ you! Be kind to your distant and <i>love-lorn</i> friend,
+ HELENE."</p>
+
+ <p>F. What did you say, Helene?</p>
+
+ <p>D. I was saying that I wished to look a little longer
+ at the fashions in Broadway.</p>
+
+ <p>F. Well, well&#8212;I believe the Fashions are all
+ that these women think of! There&#8212;look away! I
+ presume they have changed considerably since you looked
+ before! When do you wish to begin your lessons in
+ Astronomy?</p>
+
+ <p>D. Next week. Father; let me see: we will say, next
+ week&#8212;Thursday.</p>
+
+ <p>F. Very well; I shall remind you.</p>
+
+ <p>D. (<i>who is determined to have the last word, any
+ way</i>.) Very well.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Beach's Soliloquy on
+ entering his Pneumatic Chamber.</p>
+
+ <p>"TU-BE or not tu-be."</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Reflection by a
+ Tallow-chandler.</p>
+
+ <p>Though a man be the Mould of fashion, yet he cannot
+ light himself to bed by the Dip in his back.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>PLAYS AND SHOWS.</b></p>
+
+ <p><i><img src="images/05.jpg" align="left" alt="M">EN
+ AND ACRES,</i> the new comedy at WALLACK'S, is one of the
+ best of TAYLOR'S pieces, and a decided improvement upon
+ the carpenter work of BOUCICAULT. It has been
+ rechristened by Mr. WALLACK, and its former name&#8212;<i>Old
+ Men and New Acres, or New Aches and Old Manors,</i> or
+ something else of that sort&#8212;has been
+ conveniently shortened. If it does not convince us that
+ the author has improved since he first began to write
+ plays, it certainly reminds us that there is such a thing
+ as <i>Progress</i>. In the latter play, Mr. J.W. WALLACK
+ was a civil engineer. In the present drama, he is an
+ uncivil tradesman. Both appeal to the levelling
+ tendencies of the age; and in each, the author has done
+ his "level best"&#8212;as Mr. GRANT WHITE would
+ say&#8212;to flatter the Family Circle at the expense
+ of the Boxes.</p>
+
+ <p>The cast includes a Vague Baronet and his Managing
+ Wife, their Slangy Daughter, their Unpleasant Neighbor
+ and his wife and daughter, an Unintelligible Dutchman, an
+ Innocuous Youth, a Disagreeable Lawyer, and the Merchant
+ Prince. This is the sort of way in which they conduct
+ themselves,</p>
+
+ <p><i>Act</i> 1. <i>Disagreeable Lawyer to Vague
+ Baronet:</i> "You are ruined, and your estate is
+ mortgaged to a Merchant Prince. What do you intend to
+ do?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Vague Baronet.</i> "I will ask my wife what I think
+ about it."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Managing Wife.</i> "Ruined, are we? Allow me
+ to remark, Fiddlesticks! Get the Merchant to take our
+ third-story hall-bedroom for a week, and I'll soon clear
+ off the mortgage."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Slangy Daughter.</i> "O ma! there was such a
+ precious guy at the ball last night, and I had no end of
+ a lark with him. Good gracious! here comes the duffer
+ himself."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Merchant Prince. (Aside.)</i> "So here's the
+ Vague Baronet and his wife. And there's the slangy girl I
+ fell in love with. Nice lot they are!" (<i>To Managing
+ Wife.</i>) "Madam, there is nothing, so grand as the
+ majesty of trade. Your rank and blood are all gammon. We
+ Merchant Princes are the only people fit to live.
+ However, I'll condescend to speak to you."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Managing Wife. (Aside.)</i> "How noble! What a
+ gentlemanly person he really is!" <i>(To Merchant
+ Prince.)</i> "Sir, I bid you welcome. Here is my
+ daughter, who was just praising your beauty and
+ accomplishments. I leave you to entertain her."
+ (<i>Exeunt Baronet, Wife, and Lawyer</i>.)</p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince (placing his chair next to Slangy
+ Daughter's, and leaning his elbow on her.)</i> "There is
+ nothing like trade. We tradesmen alone are great. We
+ despise the whole lot of clean and idle aristocrats. I
+ keep a Gin Palace in Liverpool. Does your bloated
+ aristocracy do half as much for suffering humanity?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Slangy Daughter.</i> "Speak on, speak ever thus, O
+ Noble Being! It's awfully jolly!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Curtain falls, and Baker wakes up to lead his
+ orchestra through the mazes of "Shoo Fly."</i></p>
+ <hr style="height: 2px; width: 10%;">
+
+ <p><i>Appreciative Lady.</i> "Isn't it nice? Miss
+ HENRIQUES'S dress is perfectly beautiful, and it sounds
+ so cunning to hear her talk slang."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Second Appreciative Lady.</i> "How handsome
+ ROCKWELL looks! Just like a real baronet, my dear!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Other Appreciative Ladies.</i> "The dresses at
+ WALLACK'S are always perfectly exquisite. I mean to have
+ my next dress made with a green silk fichu, a moire
+ antique bertha, and little point lace peplums and
+ gussets, just like Miss MESTAYER'S. Won't it be
+ sweet?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>All the Counter-Jumpers in the Theatre.</i> "JIM
+ WALLACK'S the boy! Don't he talk up to those aristocratic
+ snobs, though?"</p>
+ <hr style="height: 2px; width: 10%;">
+
+ <p><i>Act 2. Enter Unpleasant Neighbor and Unintelligible
+ German. The former says,</i> "You're sure there's an iron
+ mine on the Baronet's land?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Unintelligible German.</i> "Ya! Das ist
+ um-um-um."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Merchant Prince and Slangy Daughter. Exeunt
+ the other fellows.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince.</i> "There is nothing like the
+ grandeur of trade; and yet we tradesmen are not proud.
+ See! I offer to marry you."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Slangy daughter.</i> "I love you wildly!
+ <i>(Aside.)</i> I do hope he won't rumple my hair."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince.</i> "Come to my arrums! The
+ majesty of trade is so infinitely above any thing
+ else"&#8212;<i>and so forth.</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Managing Wife.</i> "Take her, noble Merchant,
+ and be happy <i>(Aside.)</i> This settles the affair of
+ the mortgage." <i>(To Daughter)</i> "Come, darling, we'll
+ go and tell your father." <i>(They go.)</i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Unpleasant Neighbor.</i> "Here's a telegram
+ for you. No bad news, I hope?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince.</i> "I am ruined unless you lend
+ me &#163;40,000. Do it, and I will assign to you the
+ mortgage on the baronet's property. The majesty of trade
+ is something which"&#8212;</p>
+
+ <p><i>Unpleasant Neighbor.</i> "Here it is."
+ <i>(Aside.)</i> "Now I'll get possession of the estate
+ and the iron-mine."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Managing Wife.</i> "Ruined, are you? Of
+ course you can't have my daughter now."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Merchant Prince.</i> "I resign her. We tradesmen
+ are infinitely greater than you aristocrats."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Curtain falls, Baker wakes up. "Shoo Fly" by the
+ Orchestra, and remarks on dress by the ladies as before.
+ Counter-jumpers go out to drink to the majesty of trade,
+ having grown perceptibly taller since the play
+ began.</i></p>
+ <hr style="height: 2px; width: 10%;">
+
+ <p><i>Act 3. Unprincipled Neighbor to Unintelligible
+ Dutchman.</i> "Have you got the analysis of the iron
+ ore?"</p>
+
+ <p><i>Unintelligible Dutchman.</i> "Ya! Das its
+ um-um-um."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Unprincipled Neighbor.</i> "All right! Now I'll
+ foreclose the mortgage, and will be richer than
+ ever."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Vague Baronet, and Wife and Daughter, and
+ Lawyer. To them collectively remarks the Unprincipled
+ Neighbor,</i> "The mortgage is due. As you can't pay,
+ you've got to move out."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Disagreeable Lawyer.</i> "Not much! Here's an
+ analysis of iron ore found on our land. We raised money
+ on the mine, and are ready to pay off the mortgage."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Enter Merchant Prince.</i> "Here's an analysis of
+ the iron ore. I told them all about it. We tradesmen are
+ great, but we will sometimes help even a wretched
+ aristocrat."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Slangy Daughter.</i> "Here's an analysis of the
+ iron ore. Now I will marry my noble Merchant, and make
+ him rich again; for there's dead loads of iron on the
+ Governor's land, you bet!"</p>
+
+ <p><i>They all produce analyses of the ore, and the play
+ itself being o'er, the curtain falls.</i></p>
+ <hr style="height: 2px; width: 10%;">
+
+ <p><i>Exasperated critic, who has sent for twelve seats,
+ and has been politely refused.</i> "I'd like to abuse it,
+ if there was a chance; but there isn't. The play is
+ really good, and I can't find much fault with the acting.
+ However, I'll pitch into STODDARD for swearing, which his
+ 'Unprincipled Neighbor' does to an unnecessary extent,
+ and I'll say that JIM WALLACK is too old and gouty to
+ play the 'Merchant Prince,' and doesn't quite forget that
+ he used to play in the Bowery."</p>
+
+ <p><i>Every body else.</i> "Did you ever see a play
+ better acted? And did you ever see actresses better
+ dressed?"</p>
+
+ <p>And PUNCHINELLO is constrained to answer the latter
+ question with an emphatic No! As to the acting, it might
+ be improved were Mr. STODDARD to play the character for
+ which he is cast, instead of insisting upon playing
+ nothing but STODDARD. But to all the rest of the actors,
+ not forgetting Mr. RINGGOLD, who plays the insignificant
+ part of the "Innocuous Youth," PUNCHINELLO is pleased to
+ accord his gracious approval.</p>
+
+ <p>MATADOR.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Balmy Idea.</b></p>
+
+ <p>According to Miss ANTHONY, the crying evil with women
+ is that they will blubber; but it must be remembered that
+ out of this blubber they make oil to pour into our
+ conjugal wounds.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Suit for Damages.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Any clothes in a storm.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/06.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>THE POLITICAL MILL-ENNIUM.</b></p>
+ </center><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">HINTS UPON HIGH ART.</p>
+
+ <p>Observant visitors to the National Academy of Design
+ will allow that a tendency to greatness is beginning to
+ develop itself in certain directions among our artists.
+ In landscape some of them are almost immense. The works
+ of PORPHYRO warm the walls with rays of splendor, or cool
+ the lampooned sight-line with pearly gradations, as the
+ case may be. MANDRAKE renders feelingly the summer
+ uplands and groves, and SILVERBARK the melancholy
+ autumnal woods. BYTHESEA infuses with sentiment even the
+ blue wreaths of smoke that curl up from the distant ridge
+ against which loom the concentrated lovers that he
+ selects for his idyllic romances. Gushingly he does his
+ work, but thoroughly; and there are other flowers than
+ lackadaisies to be discerned in his herbage. GUSTIBUS
+ blows gently the foliage aside, and gives us glimpses
+ through it of rural contentment in connection with a
+ mill, or some other interesting object beyond. The pencil
+ of SAGEGREEN imbues canvases, both large and small, with
+ infinite variety and force; and it is to SKETCHMORE that
+ the great lakes owe their remarkable reputation as pieces
+ of water with poems growing out of their broad lily-pads.
+ Very tender are the pastoral banks and brooksides of
+ LEAFHOPPER. ELFINLOCKS takes up his pencil, and lo! a
+ hazy, mazy, lazy, dreamy vista where it has touched. But
+ hold! Our critical Incubus has taken the bit between her
+ teeth, and is beginning to run away with us. Stop that;
+ and let our readers enumerate the other first American
+ landscape painters for themselves.</p>
+
+ <p>Not so strong are our artists in domestic incidents
+ and compositions of life and character. We have
+ STUNNINGTON, to be sure, whose traits of American
+ expression, whether white or colored, are most true to
+ the life; and there's BARLEYMOW, who will twist you an
+ eclogue from the tail of his foreground pig. Others there
+ be; but space has its limits, and we forbear.</p>
+
+ <p>As for our portrait limners, their name is Legion, and
+ that comprehensive name must go for all. Like BENVENUTO
+ CELLINI they shall be known for their jugs; and their
+ transmission to posterity on the heads of families is a
+ thing to be reckoned on as sure.</p>
+
+ <p>For the higher flights of art the American painter is
+ by no manner of means endowed with the wings of his
+ native eagle&#8212;wings that agitate the cerulean
+ vault, spattering it with splashes of creamy cloud-spray,
+ and churning into butter the stretches of the Milky Way.
+ History has indeed been illustrated by American art, but
+ has it been enriched? The WASHINGTONS and the WEBSTERS,
+ the CLAYS and the LINCOLNS, have had their memories
+ dreadfully lampooned on canvas. Allegory does not inspire
+ the great American pencil. Tall art there is, and enough
+ of it "at that;" but of high art we have none to speak
+ of, except the canvases that are placed over doorways in
+ the galleries of the Academy, and, in the sense of
+ elevation, may consequently be spoken of as high. All
+ this is wrong. Alas! that we should write it. Would that
+ we could right it! And to think of the musty subjects
+ that our historical and allegorical men select. Ho! young
+ men&#8212;away with your CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS;
+ relegate your METAMORA to his proper limbo; let
+ WASHINGTON alone; and LINCOLN; and OSCEOLA the Savage;
+ and POCAHONTAS, and all the rest. Leave them alone; and,
+ taking fresh subjects, dip your brushes in brains, as old
+ OPIE or somebody else said, and go to work with a will.
+ No fresh subjects to be had, you say? Bosh! absurd
+ interlocutor that you are. Here's a bundle of 'em ready
+ cut to hand. We charge you no money for them, and you may
+ take your choice.</p>
+
+ <p>SUBJECTS FOR WORKS OF HIGH ART.</p>
+
+ <p>PROVIDENCE tempering the wind to the shorn lamb.</p>
+
+ <p>ABSENCE OF MIND marking a box of paper shirt-collars
+ with indelible ink.</p>
+
+ <p>MILTON "going it blind."</p>
+
+ <p>The late Mr. WILLIAM COBBETT teaching his sons to
+ shave with cold water.</p>
+
+ <p>ST. PATRICK emptying the snakes out of his boots.</p>
+
+ <p>TRUE LOVE never running smooth.</p>
+
+ <p>NO MAN acting <i>Hero</i> to his <i>valet de
+ chambre</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>ROBERT BONNER taking DEXTER by the forelock with one
+ hand, and TIME with the other.</p>
+
+ <p>Subjects like these might be worked out to advantage.
+ The field in which they are to be found is almost
+ unlimited; and they possess abundantly the two grand
+ essentials to success in art at the present time, as well
+ as in literature&#8212;novelty and sensation.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>H.G. and Terpsichore.</b></p>
+
+ <p>AMONG the strange revelations about <i>Tribune</i>
+ people elicited during the MCFARLAND trial, was the bit
+ of gossip about Mr. GREELEY going to Saratoga to "trip
+ the light fantastic toe." That Mr. GREELEY'S toe is
+ "fantastic," every body who has ever inspected his
+ "Congress gaiters" must know, but as to its lightness we
+ have our doubts. "What I know about dancing" would be a
+ capital subject for H.G. to handle, and we hope that he
+ will take Steps for doing it.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Sweeny's New
+ Charter.</p><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">How doth
+ the busy Peter B.,</span><br>
+    <span style="margin-left: 1.75em;">Improve each
+ shining hour!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">From nettled young
+ Democracy,</span><br>
+    <span style="margin-left: 1.75em;">He plucks the
+ safety-flower.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>From Rome.</b></p>
+
+ <p>The POPE is said to be "out of Spirits." Why doesn't
+ he come to New-York, where he can get plenty of the
+ article, either in the sense of the Tap or in that of the
+ Rap?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>"He who was Born to be Hanged," etc.</b></p>
+
+ <p>On one of the mornings of the MCFARLAND trial, a very
+ importunate person attempted to force his way into the
+ court-room, which, as he was told, was already crowded
+ "to suffocation." To this he retorted that he "wasn't
+ born to be suffocated." That's in substance what the late
+ JACK REYNOLDS said, and <i>he</i> was mistaken.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>The Difference.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Rice riots are reported as raging in all the ports of
+ Japan. Rye was the principal mover in the famous
+ conscription riots of New-York.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Celestial Idea</b>.</p>
+
+ <p>No wonder the Chinese theatre in San Francisco is a
+ success, considering how skilful the actors must be in
+ catching the Cue.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>JUMBLES</b>.</p>
+
+ <p>Did you ever hear of my friend BOOTSBY? "No." That's
+ rather queer. I see&#8212;you've been out of town.
+ BOOTSBY is a man of standing&#8212;of decided
+ standing, I may say. He stands, in fact, a great deal.
+ The heavy standing round he does is enormous when the
+ limited capacity of a single mortal is taken in view.
+ BOOTSBY stands round among every class of people, and
+ especially of politicians and potationers. He stands
+ round to talk, to hear, and especially to drink. The
+ power of the man in this last matter is wonderful, and
+ the puzzle is, that his standing (and perpendicularity)
+ is not perceptibly affected. Of course there are times
+ when BOOTSBY'S standing is not so good. In so slippery a
+ place as Wall Street, it is found to be less certain;
+ while in a crowd on Broadway, waiting for a bus, it
+ cannot be said to maintain a very remarkable firmness.
+ But as a whole, and as the world goes, BOOTSBY is a man
+ of standing. In the altitude of six feet ten, he may be
+ called a man of high standing. He feels proud of the
+ fact. "Is it not better to be a mountain than a mole?" he
+ often asks in a proudly sneering manner of his neighbor
+ PUGGS, who is about as far up in the world as the top of
+ a yard-stick. It is very true that size is not quality,
+ and a seven-footer may be no better than a three-footer;
+ but it is observed that a Short Man is rarely any thing
+ else. His stature is his measure throughout. My own
+ impression of myself is, that I don't care to be short;
+ but if the alternative were forced upon me, I should
+ choose that of person rather than of purse. BOOTSBY does
+ not care much about money, and he carries very little.
+ Some people are like BOOTSBY, but most people are not.
+ The ladies, it is true, never, or rarely, want money.
+ Like newspapers and club-houses, they are
+ self-supporting. In fact they surround themselves with
+ supporters which stay tightly. Mrs. TODD is peculiar in
+ her wants pecuniary. She, good soul, never wants (or
+ keeps) money long, but she doesn't want it <i>little</i>.
+ She prefers it like onions, in a large bunch, and strong.
+ The reason why most women do not want money is because
+ they have no use for it. They never dress; they never
+ wear jewelry; silks and satins have no charms in their
+ eyes; laces, ribbons, shawls never tempt. To exist and
+ walk upright in simpleness and quiet is the sum of their
+ desires. Dear creatures! how is it that they never
+ want?</p>
+
+ <p>My neighbor, Mr. DROWSE, desires to know where you get
+ all your funny things for PUNCHINELLO? He knows they are
+ there, does Mr. DROWSE; for he gets my copy of the penny
+ postman, and he keeps it, too. It is the only good taste
+ my neighbor has displayed of late years. I tell Mr.
+ DROWSE that you make your fun. He further asks, Where? I
+ tell him in the attic&#8212;up there where they keep
+ the salt. He desires to know the size of attic. Of course
+ he has never seen your noble, capacious, alabaster
+ forehead, else he would perceive the source of those
+ scintillations of light and warmth which radiate
+ throughout the universe every Saturday for only ten
+ cents. He is curious also to know about the salt, and
+ doesn't comprehend how or where you use it. He used to
+ use it when a boy in catching birds by putting the briny
+ compound on the tails of the same, and <i>that</i> he
+ used to call "fun alive;" but he don't see
+ it&#8212;the salt&#8212;about PUNCHINELLO. I
+ suspect Mr. DROWSE doesn't see the sellers, (certainly he
+ avoids them when PUNCHINELLO is offered, much to my
+ mortification, and one dime to my cost,) and so is not
+ likely to discern the source of the fun. I merely
+ informed Mr. DROWSE that the editor was very tall, very
+ handsome, with very black skin and rosy hair, (at which
+ he opened his eyes with astonishment, and asked if I
+ meant so; at which I said, "Yes, I guess so,") and that
+ he laughed out of his nose, eyes, head, and hands, as
+ well as his mouth. DROWSE wants to see the editor very
+ much. He has seen men with black skins and hearts, (for
+ he used to know lots of politicians;) but wants to put
+ his vision on some "rosy hair"&#8212;and when he
+ does, no doubt his gaze will be fixed. It is healthy
+ sometimes to have the gaze fixed; and often, like
+ sauce-pans and sermons, it has to be fixed. When Mr.
+ DROWSE calls at 83, please show him in Parlor 6 with the
+ Brussels, fresco-work, and lace curtains.</p>
+
+ <p>April is a model month. So serene, steady, clear, and
+ balmy. Nothing but blue sky, gentle zephyrs, kissing
+ breezes, genial suns by day and sparkling stars by night.
+ PUNCHINELLO no doubt likes sparkling
+ stars&#8212;stars of magnitude&#8212;stars that
+ show what they are. PUNCHINELLO perhaps goes to NIBLO'S,
+ and not only sees plenty stars, but plenty of them. But
+ of April. It is called "fickle;" but that's a slander.
+ "Every thing by turns and nothing long"&#8212;that is
+ a libel on which a suit could be hung. The same vile
+ falsehood is cruelly uttered of some women, when every
+ body knows, or should know, that these same women are
+ nothing of the sort. Who ever knew a fickle woman?</p>
+
+ <p>Where in history is there record of such an
+ Impossibility? Fickle&#8212;that implies a change of
+ mind. What woman ever changed her mind any more than her
+ hands? Nonsense, avaunt!&#8212;banished be slander!
+ April is <i>not</i> fickle&#8212;woman is <i>not</i>
+ fickle. As one is evenly beautiful, divinely serene,
+ bewitchingly winning, so is the other sunny, cerulean,
+ balmy, paradisiacal. April for ever&#8212;after that
+ the rest of the calendar.</p>
+
+ <p>Does PUNCHINELLO believe in the Woman Movement? TODD
+ does. He believes woman should move as much as man; and
+ he regards her movement in such numbers to the great West
+ as full of hope (and husbands) for the sex. Mrs. TODD has
+ not as yet been irresistibly seized by the movement; but
+ if TIMOTHY knows himself, he longs for the day when the
+ seizer may come. Although TODD&#8212;who is the
+ writer of this epistle&#8212;says it, who perhaps
+ shouldn't, lest the shaft of egotism be hurled
+ mercilessly at him, he does unhesitatingly say that to
+ aid this movement he would make the greatest of
+ sacrifices. He is willing to sacrifice his wife and other
+ female relations upon the sacred altar of the movement,
+ and contribute liberally to the expense thereof. He is
+ quite willing they should vote&#8212;early and often,
+ if need be; but he wishes to see the movement go westward
+ like the Star of Empire&#8212;westward
+ <i>vi&#226;</i> cheerful Chicago. TODD trusts
+ PUNCHINELLO will espouse this movement; for if it does,
+ it&#8212;the movement, no less than
+ PUNCHINELLO&#8212;will go straight onward and upward;
+ but not by the route known as the Spout.</p>
+
+ <p>Mucilage is a good thing. It is now extensively used
+ in Church, State, and Society. We use it largely at the
+ Veneerfront Avenue Church, of which Rev. Dr. ALEXANDER
+ PLASTERWELL is pastor. Of course, Mr. PUNCHINELLO, you
+ know that distinguished church, and have no doubt often
+ listened to the distinguished Dr. PLASTERWELL. He is a
+ kind man, has a high forehead, a Roman (Burgundy) nose,
+ and a sweet, soft head&#8212;I should say heart. He
+ has&#8212;great and good man&#8212;the largest
+ faith in mucilage. He often makes it a text, and he
+ sticks to it, he does&#8212;does Dr. PLASTERWELL.
+ Nothing like mucilage, PUNCHINELLO. It is the hope of the
+ human race, and the salvation of woman. It is the
+ Philosopher's Stone in solution; the essence and link
+ which connects and cements all that is great, good, and
+ lovely, in the past, present, and future. At least, such
+ is the humble opinion of</p>
+
+ <p>TIMOTHY TODD.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>HINTS TO CAR CONDUCTORS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>When standing in Printing House Square, your
+ destination being Grand Street Perry or Bleecker Street,
+ if a stranger asks whether you are going to Harlem, nod,
+ as it is considered improper to answer in the negative.
+ If he finds out the mistake, you can plead deafness.</p>
+
+ <p>When called upon to stop, never attempt to comply.
+ There are several reasons why you should not. In the
+ first place, if you did stop, it would show that you have
+ no will of your own, and since the passage of the
+ Fifteenth Amendment, <i>all</i> men are equal in this
+ country.</p>
+
+ <p>You may stop about two blocks from the place named,
+ just to please yourself and prove your independence; but
+ take particular care to start the car when the passenger
+ is half off the steps. If there is a young surgeon in the
+ neighborhood, you can enter into an arrangement to break
+ arms and legs in this way with impunity, have the maimed
+ "carried into the surgery," and share the fees with the
+ operator. Occasional cases of manslaughter may take
+ place; but don't mind that, as coroners' juries in
+ New-York will return verdicts of "death from natural
+ causes." Besides this, remember that you have a vote, and
+ that both coroners and judges are dependent upon the
+ people. When a lame old gentleman hails you, beckon him
+ furiously to come on, but be sure, at the same time, to
+ urge the driver to greater speed.</p>
+
+ <p>It is no part of your business to have change, so
+ never give any, but drive on: people should provide for
+ and look after their own business and that is none of
+ yours.</p>
+
+ <p>Always drive through the centre of a target company or
+ funeral procession, never minding whether you kill one or
+ more, and then abuse the captain or the undertaker for
+ his stupidity.</p>
+
+ <p>By the adoption of these essential rules, and by
+ adding a good deal of incivility, you will soon reach the
+ top of the wheel of your profession and in due time have
+ a testimonial presented to you by an admiring and
+ grateful public.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Out in the Cold.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Commissioner Tweed proposes a new outside Bureau of
+ the Department of Public Works, for late-Commissioner
+ MCLEAN. He is to be Superintendent of
+ Refrigerators.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/08.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>THE LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS.</b></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p>ENGRAVED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION FOR PUNCHINELLO, FROM
+ THE ORIGINAL PAINTING, BY MILES STANDISH, IN THE
+ COLLECTION OF METHUSELAH PILGRIM, ESQ., OF PILGRIMSVILLE,
+ MASS.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">TO CAPTAIN HALL.</p>
+
+ <p>(IN ANTICIPATION OF HIS TRIP TO THE
+ POLE.)</p><span style="margin-left: 3em;">HALL!
+ HALL!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">D'ye hear our
+ call?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Or, do you fancy it to
+ be</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">A weather
+ sign&#8212;merely the pre-</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Monition of a
+ squall</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">At sea!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 4em;">HALL!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You pay no heed at
+ all.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Nevertheless, O hardy
+ mariner!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">(A Snow-Bird brings
+ this with our kindest love,)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">We're sorry you
+ prefer</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Those frigid walks
+ (ever so far above</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The 80th parallel, we
+ guess!)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To stocks, and tariffs,
+ and domestic bliss;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Yes, yes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Captain, we're sorry it
+ has come to this!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Why do you madly
+ thirst</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">For grog that's chopped
+ up with a hatchet? say!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And tell us of the
+ first</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Strange thought which
+ spurred you to go up that way!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Was it the hope that on
+ some icy coast</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">(Frozen, yourself,
+ almost!)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">You'd have the luck to
+ meet poor FRANKLIN'S ghost?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And has it seemed,
+ sometimes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">That drowning might be
+ pleasanter up there</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Among the icebergs,
+ native to those climes,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3em;">Than where</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">The surf breaks gently on
+ some coral-reef,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And sirens sweetly
+ soothe one's slow despair?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Say, was that your
+ belief?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And who is BENT?<a name=
+ "FNanchor*"></a><a href=
+ "#Footnote_*"><sup>[*]</sup></a></span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Why was <i>he</i>
+ sent,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">With his Warm Currents
+ wheeling round the Pole?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">A long, long race must
+ his disciples run:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">No sun,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">No fun,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">No chance to toss a word
+ to any one;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And what a
+ goal?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">As hopefully you
+ munch</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The flinty biscuit,
+ watching whale or seal,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Or listening, undaunted,
+ to the crunch</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Of ice-floes at the
+ keel,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Say, Sir Intrepid! shall
+ you really think</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">You pioneer the navies
+ of the world?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Not while the
+ chink</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Of well-housed dollars
+ sounds so pleasantly,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And safer tracks map
+ out the treacherous sea!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">If that's your dream, oh!
+ let your sails be furled.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">But, no!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">It is not this! Your
+ spirit, high and bold,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Scorning all tamer joys,
+ will have it so!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 3.5em;">No cold</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Can chill its ardor! Such
+ a soul would sate</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Its deathless craving
+ in some lofty flight,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Some deed sublime, and
+ read its shining fate</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">By the Aurora's
+ light!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">For fruitful fellowship,
+ it seeks the wild,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The frozen
+ waste,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Where the world's
+ venturous heroes&#8212;reconciled</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To sunless, shuddering
+ gloom&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">To joyless
+ solitude&#8212;with ardor taste</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Their dread delights!
+ and so at last find room,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">'Mid nodding icebergs,
+ for their watery tomb!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">For this, we spare
+ you,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">O dauntless HALL! Once
+ having breathed that air</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">So pure, so fresh, so
+ rare!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">And caught the wildness
+ of the Esquimaux,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">We declare you</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Unfit to live where
+ beans and lettuce grow!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Leave delving to the
+ little pitiful mole,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Great soul!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And now, then, for the
+ Pole!</span><br>
+
+ <p><a name="Footnote_*"></a><a href=
+ "#FNanchor*">[*]</a>    Captain BENT, of Cincinnati,
+ originator of the new theory of Polar Currents.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/09.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>FINANCIAL RELIEF</b></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p>MR BUMBLE BOUTWELL TO MRS. CORNEY FISH. <i>(See Oliver
+ Twist.)</i> "THE GREAT PRINCIPLE OF FINANCIAL RELIEF IS
+ TO GIVE THE BUSINESS MEN EXACTLY WHAT THEY DON'T WANT:
+ THEN THEY GET TIRED OF COMING."</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>CONDENSED CONGRESS.</b><p>
+
+ <p><b>SENATE.</b></p>
+
+ <p><img src="images/11.jpg" align="left" alt="">MR.
+ SUMNER said he was the friend of the oppressed. That, as
+ was well known, was his regular business. Unfortunately,
+ the Fifteenth Amendment had rendered the colored man
+ incapable of being hereafter regarded as an oppressed
+ creature. He was sorry, but it could not be helped. He
+ was therefore forced to go down the chromatic scale of
+ creation and find another class of clients. He found them
+ in cattle. HOMER had sung about the ox-eyed Juno, and
+ WALTER WHITMAN about bob veal. COWPER had remarked that
+ he would not number in his list of friends the man who
+ needlessly set foot upon a cow. He mentioned these things
+ merely to show that railway companies had no right to
+ starve cattle. He proposed an amendment to the
+ Constitution, to provide that a dinner of at least three
+ courses should be given to cows daily. Mr. DRAKE was
+ heartily in favor of the proposition. He had got his feet
+ in a web, so to speak, by paddling in the political
+ waters of Missouri, and some people had gone so far as to
+ call him "quack." He demanded redress.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. WILSON didn't see the use of all this legislation
+ to protect animals. Animals had no votes, although he
+ admitted a partial exception, in that every bull, it had
+ its ballot. But he had something practical. Here was a
+ jolly job, the Pacific Railway grant. There was a good
+ deal more in it than they had made out of any other
+ GRANT. Mr. THURMAN'S suggestion, that this land ought to
+ be occupied by actual settlers, he scorned. "Actual
+ settlers" were of a great deal more use to him in
+ Massachusetts, where they could vote for him, than in the
+ territories, where that boon would not be extended to
+ them. It was much better that they should be occupied by
+ imaginary settlers, who could pay and not vote. Actual
+ "settlings" were the dregs of humanity.</p>
+
+ <p>The Georgia bill came up, as it does every day with
+ much more regularity than luncheon. The Senate has
+ succeeded in muddling it to that degree of
+ unintelligibility that nobody has the slightest notion
+ what it provides. It is, therefore, in a condition to
+ give rise to infinite debate. After several senators had
+ said enough for a foundation for thirty columns each in
+ the <i>Globe,</i> they let it go for the present. The
+ present was the one promised by Senator WILSON in return
+ for the Pacific Railway grab grant.</p>
+
+ <p><b>HOUSE.</b></p>
+
+ <p>The House is given over to the tariff. A very
+ indelicate discussion has been had upon corsets. Mr.
+ BROOKS was of opinion that the corset would tariff it
+ were subjected to any more strain in the way of duties.
+ Mr. MARSHALL remarked that the corset avoided a great
+ deal of Waist. It was whalebone of his bone, or something
+ of that sort. It was one of the main Stays of our social
+ system.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. SCHENCK made another speech. He ripped up the
+ foreign corset in a truculent manner. He said that
+ American corsets were far superior, only American women
+ had not the sense to see it. The effect of taking off the
+ duty on corsets would be to take off the corsets.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. BROOKS called the hooks and ayes on the corsets.
+ Mr. SCHENCK opposed the call. He had found a simple tape
+ much preferable. He wished a coffer-dam might be put upon
+ the roaring BROOKS.</p>
+
+ <p>Somebody at this point brought up a contested election
+ case; but Mr. LOGAN objected to its being considered.
+ What, he asked, was the use of wasting time? There was
+ money in the tariff. There was no money at all in voting
+ a Democrat out, and a Republican in. They could do that
+ any day in five minutes. His friend Mr. BUTLER had
+ recently remarked, one Democrat more or less made no
+ difference. But Mr. BUTLER forgot that the larger the
+ majority, the larger the divisor for spoils, and
+ therefore the smaller the quotient and the "dividend." He
+ did not know much about arithmetic. He had never been at
+ West Point; but he believed that a million dollars, for
+ instance, would go further and fare worse among two
+ hundred men than among three. If the House were not
+ careful, there would be a glut of Republicans in it, and
+ the shares would be pitifully meagre. As for him, he had
+ a great mind, (derisive cheers)&#8212;he repeated,
+ that he had a great mind to vote for a Democrat next
+ time.</p>
+
+ <p>In spite of Mr. LOGAN'S warning, the House voted in a
+ couple or so of Republicans, and then resumed the duty on
+ wool.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Cox thought this wool had been pulled over the
+ eyes of the house often enough. It reminded him of an
+ expedition, of which Mr. LOGAN had never heard, in search
+ of a "Golden Fleece."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. JENCKES, and Mr. SCHENCK, and Mr. KELLEY called
+ him to order in behalf of their constituents, who were in
+ the wool business, and said that "wool" in one form or
+ another had always been the staple of their political
+ career.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. BUTLER said he had a little game worth two of
+ that. He wanted to buy San Domingo. In this there were
+ plenty of commissions, and hundreds of thousands of
+ colored votes.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT.</p>
+
+ <p>ALDERMANIC RECEPTION UP-TOWN.</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 2.5em;">CAESAR, walk in! Ah POMPEY! how d'e
+ do?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">This way, CLEM!
+ Gentlemen, please walk right through!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">GEORGE, how's your
+ mother? Fine day, PETE&#8212;fine day!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Well, how are things
+ down there at Oyster Bay?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Ah AUNTIE! how's your
+ rheumatiz, this spring?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Well, Mr. JOHNSON, did
+ you try that sling?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Why, this is Uncle
+ STEVE! How-do-you-do.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Uncle? Sit down. What
+ can I do for you?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Well, Mr. PRINCE! You
+ must be busy, now.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Whitewashing is the
+ best thing done, I vow!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Why, hel-lo! REGIS!
+ From the Cape so soon?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">When do you open, this
+ year&#8212;first of June?</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Come,
+ gentlemen&#8212;some wine? Now, don't
+ refuse!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">What! temperate?
+ teetotal? Well, that's news!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">And good news, too!
+ Well, coffee, then. You see,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">My friends, the
+ <i>sentiment's</i> the thing with me.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">The real Mocha, AUNTIE!
+ Simon pure!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Raised by free Arabs.
+ For I can't endure</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">A single thing that's
+ flavored with a Wrong!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Yes, AUNTIE, you are
+ right, I've "come out strong!"</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">So have the Colored
+ People, I may say!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">(One fact explains the
+ other, up this way!)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">They've proved their
+ strength! It's settled, sure as a gun,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">That every Colored
+ Voter now counts One!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Now, gentlemen, you'll
+ be surprised to find</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">So many people with
+ your turn of mind!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">But, sure as tricks!
+ remember what I say&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">You'll learn some
+ things before Election Day!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style=
+ "margin-left: 2.5em;">POMPEY&#8212;'twon't take much
+ time, (and you can spare it!)</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Try this old fiddle,
+ picked up in the garret!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Good? It's your fiddle!
+ AUNTIE, here's a pound</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Of that same genuine
+ Mocha, ready ground!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Say, Uncle STEVE, I've
+ got a fish for you,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Down at the market.
+ Call again, PETE; do!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">I'll have a job for you
+ and CAESAR soon:</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">It's only waiting for a
+ change of moon.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">CLEM, how'd you like a
+ chance to wait on table?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Or, would you rather
+ drive, and run my stable?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">GEORGE, in the kitchen
+ there's a pan of souse!</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">Going? All gone? Now,
+ BRIDGET, air the house!</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Historic Parallel.</b></p>
+
+ <p>THE JACK CADE movement came near destroying London.
+ The Ar-Cade movement threatens to destroy
+ Broadway.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/12.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>A CHEAP LUXURY.</b></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p>SNIFFLES LOVES THE SMELL OF ROASTED CHESTNUTS, AND
+ ENJOYS IT FOR HOURS EVERY DAY; BUT HE NEVER EATS
+ ANY&#8212;WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR THE JOYOUS EXPRESSION ON
+ THE FACE OF THE VENDER.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>BUSINESS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>A CHICAGO LAY.</p><span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">I
+ saw her sweet lip quiver,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">As he started for the
+ store.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Because he hadn't
+ kissed her</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">"Several" times or
+ more.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">She cried "This horrid
+ business!"</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And then flew to her
+ glass;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">"Oh! why his cold
+ remissness?</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Have I grown plain,
+ alas?"</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">But no, that truthful
+ article</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Revealed her charms
+ intact,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">She hadn't lost one
+ particle,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">But had improved, in
+ fact.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">At nine the case was
+ opened,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">At ten the case was
+ o'er;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">The jury brought their
+ virdict&#8212;</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">She was his wife no
+ more.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">That night the husband
+ started,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And&#8212;"<i>you</i>
+ bet"&#8212;he swore,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">To find his wife
+ departed,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And "<i>To Let</i>" on
+ the door.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Next day he moved and
+ married.</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">And, that his bride might
+ stay,</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">He kissed her every
+ morning</span><br>
+ <span style="margin-left: 2em;">Before he went
+ away.</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Pot-umania.</b></p>
+
+ <p>A correspondent writes that a new mania has sprung up
+ among the ladies of Edinburgh&#8212;a fancy for
+ learning to cook. There is a much older mania in some
+ parts of that country&#8212;a fancy for something to
+ cook.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>About a Foot.</b></p>
+
+ <p>A BOOT when it's on.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>IMPORTANT TO PUBLISHERS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>One of our corps of Philosophers (a trifle visionary,
+ perhaps) has been speculating as to certain possible (or,
+ perhaps, impossible) results flowing from the practice
+ among publishers of ante-dating their monthly issues.
+ Thus, supposing that the world should be destroyed by
+ fire (and why not? it is bad enough) on the 15th of May,
+ 1870, and a cover of, say, <i>Putnam's</i> for June,
+ carried up by an air-current, should, after floating
+ about ever so long in space, finally descend on some
+ friendly planet&#8212;we will say, Venus. Here it
+ would naturally get picked up by an archaeologist, (who
+ would be on the spot looking out for it,) and the
+ interesting relic would be promptly and reverently
+ deposited among the other Vestiges of Creation, in the
+ Royal Cabinet. In the course of years, some historian
+ would probably have occasion to turn over these
+ curiosities, and would presently light on the scorched
+ but still legible waif. "Why," says he, in astonishment,
+ "I thought the earth was burnt on the 15th of May! To be
+ sure, it was <i>in the night</i>, and nobody saw it go,
+ [think of that, conceited Worldling!] but it was missed
+ by somebody the day after. But here we have a document
+ from the late unfortunate planet dated the first of
+ June!"</p>
+
+ <p>Of course, upon this the History of the Universe would
+ have to be rewritten, or that odd fortnight would play
+ the mischief somewhere!</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A Boston Boy.</b></p>
+
+ <p>HUB-BUB.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>"Curses Come Home to Roost."</b></p>
+
+ <p>They are putting the Fifth Avenue pavement in front of
+ the City Hall.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>To Politicians.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Will the working of the Fifteenth Amendment oblige a
+ candidate to show his Color before election?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>So We Go!</b></p>
+
+ <p>We notice, with much agitation and a reasonable amount
+ of grief, that somebody in Philadelphia (possibly Miss
+ ANNA DICKINSON) has invented a machine for the laundry
+ called The King Washer! A few years ago it would have
+ been The Queen Washer; but in these days the name seems
+ to indicate that to Man, unhappy Man, will speedily be
+ committed the destinies of the weekly washing. Oh! the
+ rubbing, the rinsing, the wringing. But Mr. PUNCHINELLO
+ has already communicated to Mrs. PUNCHINELLO his
+ sentiments upon this subject. Under no circumstances will
+ he get at the family linen. He must make a stand
+ somewhere, and he makes it here.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Let them Bark.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Miss BARKALOW has been admitted to practice at the bar
+ in St. Louis. We have frequently before seen young ladies
+ at a bar, where others practiced more than they did; but
+ we do not see why, if Miss BARKALOW wishes to bark aloud,
+ she should not be allowed to bark, aloud or otherwise.
+ Barking may be particularly good in a cross-examination;
+ but we presume that a lady attorney's bark will be always
+ worse than her bite.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>"She Stoops to Conquer."</b></p>
+
+ <p>The girl with the Grecian Bend.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Query.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Is it allowable for a Temperance man to be Cordial to
+ his friends?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Weak as Water.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Our cynical friend A. QUARIUS writes us from
+ Philadelphia, that considering the manner in which the
+ Sunday liquor law is enforced in that city, he thinks his
+ native place is still entitled&#8212;perhaps more
+ than ever entitled to be called the city of Rye-tangles.
+ This is ungrateful.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">SPIRITUAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF
+ CATS.</p>
+
+ <p>DEAR PUNCHINELLO: Our Society has been very learnedly
+ debating as to whether Cats are susceptible of spiritual
+ impressions; and, although the burden of opinion inclines
+ to the negative of the question, I am firmly persuaded
+ there is much to justify a contrary judgment.</p>
+
+ <p>As I slept the other night, neither dreaming nor
+ holding psychological intercourse of any description with
+ outsiders, I was awakened suddenly about the first hour
+ of the morning by a noise. I am quite certain it was a
+ noise, and have therefore no hesitation in so recording
+ it. The new moon hung athwart the western sky, and a few
+ fleecy clouds were chasing each other like snow-drifts
+ across the blue vault of the night. I may likewise note
+ the fact that the stars were doing what they usually do,
+ notwithstanding the difference of opinion that sometimes
+ exists as to what that is. It was the evening after
+ "wash-day," and family linen, in graceful curves and
+ undulating outlines, everywhere met the eye as it turned
+ from contemplating the stars to contemplating the
+ clothes-lines in the gardens. But I wander. The noise?
+ Ah! yes. Well, it was not like the collision of two hard
+ substances, but rather of the heavy "thud" order of
+ sound, like the descent of a solid into a soft substance;
+ say, for instance, of a flat-iron into a jar of unrisen
+ buck-wheat batter. I glanced along the ghostly battalions
+ of family linen; along the fences traversed by feline
+ sentries; along the latticed arbors; but nothing to
+ indicate the origin of the alarm could be discovered, and
+ as at that moment a breeze stirred in the apartment,
+ producing a chilling sensation, I thought it prudent to
+ jump back into bed.</p>
+
+ <p>Next morning, upon making my usual visit to note the
+ progress of the early bulbs in the flower-beds, I
+ encountered at the further end of the garden the remains
+ of a cat&#8212;a portly and ancient grimalkin of the
+ sterner sex. Close at hand was a bottle lying face
+ downward, and corked. I raised it&#8212;first in my
+ hands, and then to my lips. The cork fell out,
+ accidentally as it were, and, as a consequence, death.
+ "Poor thing!" I murmured; "poor&#8212;" and a portion
+ of the contents glided carelessly down my throat. I
+ perceived that the liquid was "Old Rye." As I stooped
+ down, tears would have come to my eyes; but it was
+ useless, seeing that the breath had left the
+ unfortunate's body. Nevertheless, I rested my hand a
+ moment upon his head, and then glided it in a
+ semi-professional manner along the line of dorsal
+ elevation, until I came to a deep depression in his
+ backbone, which corresponded exactly with the convexity
+ of the bottle. Then I saw at once how it was; this
+ missile, (in the heat of passion, being mistaken for an
+ empty one, probably,) had been hurled by some treacherous
+ hand upon the unsuspecting Tom, striking him midway
+ between the root of the tail and the base of the brain,
+ causing instant suspension of his vertebral
+ communications, "Poor thing! You were the victim of a
+ Catastrophe. You were also the victim of the bottle. The
+ 'Rye' was too heavy for you, and should have been drawn
+ milder." This said, I turned sadly away to find a burial
+ spade, and it then occurred to me that this little
+ incident was kindly meant to confirm my view that cats
+ are susceptible, even to a fatal extent, of spiritual
+ impressions&#8212;especially when conveyed by spirits
+ of "Old Rye."</p>
+
+ <p>GOBBO.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>From the Tombs.</b></p>
+
+ <p>When a drunken man has been locked up for beating his
+ wife, it is reasonable to suppose that he must feel
+ rather the worse for lick her.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/13.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>PERSONAL GOSSIP.</b></p>
+
+ <p>(From the Daily Press.)</p>
+
+ <p>"A SON OF ONE OF OUR WEALTHIEST RESIDENTS DISPLAYS
+ GREAT<br>
+ TALENTS AS A SCULPTOR. HE IS BUT NINE YEARS OLD."</p>
+ </center><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>A BIT OF NATURAL HISTORY.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Naturalists tell us that the <i>Aye-aye</i> is a small
+ animal of Madagascar, with sharp teeth, long claws, and a
+ tail; which eats whatever it can grab, and says nothing
+ day or night but <i>aye-aye</i>. Now, we find that,
+ AGASSIZ to the contrary notwithstanding, this strange and
+ not very useful animal is indigenous to the State of
+ Pennsylvania. It especially frequents Harrisburg; and may
+ be seen and heard any day there, in the Senate or House.
+ Being an active member of that House, your correspondent
+ has been present during the passage of three hundred
+ bills within a week or two, in about one hundred and ten
+ of which he had some personal interest.</p>
+
+ <p>Lifting his eyes one day from his newspaper, when the
+ Speaker took the vote on an "Act to amend the
+ Incorporation of the City of Philadelphia," which your
+ correspondent happened to know included the presentation
+ of a three-story brownstone front to each of a committee
+ of six members of the House, he found there was not one
+ member in his seat; but, in the place of a few, there was
+ a company of these remarkable <i>Aye-ayes</i>, responding
+ duly to the call for a vote; but never a <i>no</i> among
+ them. No, no!</p>
+
+ <p>Now, your correspondent holds the deliberate opinion
+ that, in several respects, these aforesaid small animals
+ of Madagascar might be an improvement upon the average
+ Pennsylvania legislators. And, if your correspondent had
+ to do with getting up the other one hundred and ninety
+ bills, as he did the one hundred and ten, all right:
+ Otherwise, <i>not</i>. How does PUNCHINELLO regard
+ it?</p>
+
+ <p>Yours, LEGISLATOR.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>An Augean Job.</b></p>
+
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO has telegraphed to Governor GEARY his
+ approval of the "Sewage Utilization" bill at Harrisburg,
+ on one condition: that the first piece of work be
+ finished up by the members of the Pennsylvania
+ Legislature with their own hands; that work to be, to
+ make up into <i>decent</i> manure, <i>deodorized</i> and
+ <i>disinfected</i>, all bills passed at the late session
+ of their House and Senate. Since, however, complete
+ deodorization is probably <i>impossible</i>, PUNCHINELLO
+ advises also that the said members be required to cart
+ all their stuff out to the Bad Lands of Nebraska, and
+ remain there to make the best use of it; or else make a
+ contract with Captain HALL to ship it and them to the
+ Arctic regions at once.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>On the Finances.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Says Crispin, "Did not somebody say it was BOUTWELL in
+ the Treasury now? A great mistake. About well, to be
+ sure! When the newspaper men have 111-1/2 of gold, and I
+ haven't a round dollar! Where did they get it? And then
+ the legal tender question. I never asked but <i>one</i>
+ tender question in all my life, and that was to SUSAN and
+ she said, Yes. And then we were legally married. Nobody
+ ought to ask such questions <i>out loud</i>; it's not
+ <i>decent</i>. And <i>fine answering</i> an't much
+ better. Financiering, is it? Ah! well. <i>Specious
+ assumption</i>, too; but that requires brass, and I want
+ <i>gold</i>. Meantime, who's got a twenty-five cent
+ note?"</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Massachusetts Flats.</b></p>
+
+ <p>Massachusetts must abound in Flats. Its Legislature is
+ annually agitated from the sands of Cape Cod to the hills
+ of Berkshire over the question. It is said to be wisdom
+ to set a rogue to catch a rogue. Is it equally so to set
+ a flat to catch one?</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>NATIONAL TAXIDERMY.</b></p>
+
+ <p><img src="images/14.jpg" align="left" alt=
+ "P">UNCHINELLO has for some time past carefully
+ considered the subject of our national tariff of imposts,
+ (<i>that is to say, he happened to see, in a Tribune, the
+ other day, that lucifer matches were now to be stamped
+ separately, and not by the box, as heretofore</i>) and he
+ has come to the conclusion, after duly weighing in his
+ mind all the arguments for and against the present system
+ of taxation, (<i>that is to say, he made up his mind the
+ minute he read the article</i>,) that what the present
+ tariff needs, is a more thorough application and a better
+ classification; or, what the technologists call Taxonomy,
+ which term is suggested to him by a work on the subject
+ which he has been recently studying. (<i>That is to say,
+ he looked in the dictionary to find out what Taxidermy
+ meant, and seeing Taxonomy there, snapped it up for a
+ sort of collateral pun</i>.) As an illustration of what
+ our impost legislators (or imposters) ought to be, let us
+ take the Taxidermist. He is one who takes from an animal
+ every thing but his skin and bones, and stuffs him up
+ afterward with all sorts of nonsense. Now, our National
+ Taxidermists ought to take a lesson from their original.
+ Many of the good people of the United States have much
+ more left them than their skin and bones. Why is not all
+ that taken? The condition of the ordinary stuffed animal
+ of the shops is strikingly significant of what should be
+ expected of loyal communities. (<i>That is to say,
+ communities which vote a certain ticket which need not be
+ named here</i>.) It is often said that there are things
+ which flesh and blood will not bear. Now, a thorough
+ system of Taxidermy remedies all this. A stuffed 'possum,
+ for instance, having no flesh or blood, will bear any
+ thing. When the people of this country are thoroughly
+ cleaned out, they will be just as docile. Among the
+ things which PUNCHINELLO would recommend as fit subjects
+ of taxation, is a man's expenses. They have not been
+ taxed yet. If he pays for his income, why not for his
+ outgoes? The immense sums that are annually expended in
+ this country for this, that, and the other thing ought
+ certainly to yield a revenue to the government. (<i>That
+ is to say, there ought to be a new army of collectors and
+ assessors appointed. P. knows lots of good men out of
+ office</i>.) And then there's a man's time. Why not tax
+ that? Nearly every man spends a lot of time, and he ought
+ to pay for it. As it would be our tax, it could not be a
+ very minute tax, although it is only the second tax which
+ we have suggested. (<i>That is to say&#8212;something
+ pun-ny</i>.) And besides these things, there's energy. We
+ often hear of a man's energies being taxed; but, so far
+ as the matter is apparent to the naked eye, it is
+ difficult to see whose energies are taxed for the good of
+ the government at the present day. This subject should
+ certainly be investigated. (<i>That is to say, a
+ committee of Congressmen should be appointed, with power
+ to send for persons, papers, and extra compensation</i>.)
+ Politics, too. Every man has his politics, (<i>that is to
+ say, every man except Bennett</i>,) and they ought to be
+ taxed, if for no other reason than the great impetus the
+ measure would give to the erection of fences throughout
+ the land. And letters, too. If every one sent by the mail
+ should yield one cent to the Treasury, how the currency
+ would be inflated in that locality! (<i>That is to say,
+ in the locality to which the collectors would
+ abscond</i>.) But it is impossible, with the limited time
+ at his disposal, for PUNCHINELLO to enter into a full
+ examination and elucidation of this subject. (<i>That is
+ to say, he can't think of any more illustrations just
+ now, and the printer wouldn't stand any more, if he
+ could</i>.) But it must be admitted that the great task
+ of opening up the country, of which we hear so much, will
+ never be complete until the Washington skinners and
+ stuffers get us all into the prepared specimen condition.
+ (<i>That is to say, when the people are all willing
+ to</i> "<i>dry up</i>.")</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">JOHN CHINAMAN'S
+ BILLING AND COOING.</span>&#8212;Pigeon
+ English.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>CABLE NEWS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>(EXCLUSIVELY FOR PUNCHINELLO.)</p>
+
+ <p>QUEEN ISABELLA has sent her compliments to
+ Se&#241;or CASTELAR, as well as to General PRIM,
+ informing them that, on the whole, she thinks she will
+ <i>not</i> return to the throne of Spain. It does not
+ agree with her quiet and refined tastes and habits to
+ live so much in public. All she wants now is a little
+ <i>ch&#226;teau en Espagne</i>. She proposes to send
+ her son, Prince of ASTURIAS, to Professor CASTELAR, to
+ study modern history. Is it not odd, by the way, that a
+ country so long <i>Mad-rid-den</i> as Spain, should have
+ now a governor with such a name as PRIM? But, what's in a
+ name? BOURBON, by any other name, would smell as sweet.
+ Some, however, prefer Old Rye. I prefer <i>water</i> to
+ both; <i>especially</i> to BOURBON.</p>
+
+ <p>It's an old story that <i>two positives make a
+ negative</i>. Paris news tells us that a late will case
+ has exemplified this. COMTE, you know, was a
+ <i>positive</i> philosopher. He had a positive wife. She
+ had a will of her own. He wrote a will of his own.
+ Consequently, it got into court. Mme. COMTE it seems, who
+ did not agree with the philosophy while the philosopher
+ lived, wanted his MSS. after his death. Positively, the
+ court did not see it in that light; and so the negative
+ came out. It was a case of no go, or <i>non-ego</i>, as
+ HEGEL might have called it. Did you ever read HEGEL? I
+ didn't; and I advise you not to begin. It won't pay. I am
+ told that he divided all things into Egos, She goes, and
+ Non-egos, or No-goes. The latter particularly; So do
+ I.</p>
+
+ <p>But to return to Spain; or rather to Paris. Don
+ FRAN&#199;OIS D'ASSISSI has, it appears, suddenly
+ discovered that his wife is not Queen of Spain so much as
+ she was. Much less so. So, he has found her company
+ rather expensive than agreeable; and proposes to abdicate
+ it. Not so <i>very</i> much of an ass, is he? Bravo for
+ Don FRAN&#199;OIS!</p>
+
+ <p>In London, <i>to-morrow</i> will be made famous in
+ literature by <i>the</i> great dinner in honor of the
+ advent of PUNCHINELLO. Mr. PUNCH is talked of to preside.
+ An unprecedented rush for tickets has begun. More about
+ it in my next.</p>
+
+ <p>PRIME.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Cutting.</b></p>
+
+ <p>We see extensively advertised the "Saxon Razor;" but
+ have not yet summoned up sufficient courage to try this
+ article, which "no gentleman's dressing-case should be
+ without." We cannot dispossess our minds of the
+ apprehension of cutting ourselves, remembering that line
+ descriptive of the combat between FITZ-JAMES and RODERICK
+ DHU, in which it is said, that,</p><span style=
+ "margin-left: 1em;">"----thrice the Saxon blade
+ drank blood."</span><br>
+ <br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>Musical.</b></p>
+
+ <p>The vocal abilities of hens are admitted; but they
+ rarely attempt the Chro-matic scale.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>De Jure.</b></p>
+
+ <p>No man can now be a juror who knows any thing about
+ the case which he is to try. Thus a juryman was
+ challenged in the MCFARLAND case merely because he
+ belonged to Dr. BELLOWS's church. It was held that he
+ might possibly have got Wind of the matter while
+ listening to the Doctor's discourse.</p><br>
+ <hr style="width: 45%;">
+ <br>
+
+ <p><b>BOOK NOTICES.</b></p>
+
+ <p>AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT. Boston:
+ ROBERTS BROTHERS. New-York: D. APPLETON &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>The author of "Little Women" seeks, and not without
+ success, to draw from her "Old-Fashioned Girl" a contrast
+ and a moral. She presents to our view two young ladies of
+ opposite "styles." One is fresh and rural: the other
+ isn't. The difference between country and city
+ bringing-up is the point aimed at; and the difference is
+ about as great as that between the warbling of woodside
+ birds and the jingle of one of OFFENBACH'S tunes on a
+ corner barrel-organ. The book is neatly set forth, with
+ illustrations by Messrs. ROBERTS, BROTHERS, of
+ Boston.</p>
+
+ <p>RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. By the author of "Cometh up as a
+ Flower," etc. New-York: D. APPLETON &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>A readable book, notwithstanding that there are
+ several naughty characters in it, or perhaps
+ <i>because</i> there are. Probably it depicts with truth
+ the kind of society presented. If so, all the worse for
+ society. Shall we never again have healthful, virtuous
+ novels of the old school, such as "Tom Jones?" The book
+ is published in tasteful form by Messrs. D. APPLETON
+ &amp; Co.</p><br>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table style=
+ "width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td style="text-align: center;" rowspan="2">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big><big>A. T. STEWART
+ &amp; CO.<br>
+ <br></big></big></p>
+
+ <p><small>ARE OFFERING</small></p>
+
+ <p><big>Extraordinary Inducements,</big></p>
+
+ <p><small>IN PRICE, STYLE, AND QUALITY,</small></p>
+
+ <p>TO HOUSEKEEPERS</p>
+
+ <p><small><small>IN</small></small></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><big>Linens,
+ Sheetings,</big></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">DAMASKS,<br>
+ NAPKINS, TOWELLINGS,</p>
+
+ <p><b>DRESS LINENS, PRINTED LINENS,</b></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">FLANNELS, BLANKETS,<br>
+  QUILTS,</p>
+
+ <p><big>COUNTERPANES, SHEETINGS,</big></p>
+
+ <p>Bleached and Brown Cottons,</p>
+
+ <p>Standard American Prints, etc., etc.</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">4th Ave., 9th and 10th
+ Sts.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td style="text-align: center;" rowspan="2">
+ <p><i>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</i> MASTERY
+ SYSTEM.</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>The Mastery of
+ Languages;</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>OR,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">THE ART OF SPEAKING
+ LANGUAGES IDIOMATICALLY.</p>
+
+ <p>BY THOMAS PRENDERGAST.</p><i style=
+ "font-weight: bold;">I. Hand-Book of the Mastery
+ Series.<br>
+ II. The Mastery Series. French.<br>
+ III. The Mastery Series. German.<br>
+ IV. The Mastery Series. Spanish.</i><br>
+
+ <p>PRICE 50 CENTS EACH.</p>
+
+ <p><i>From Professor E. M. Gallaudet,<br>
+ of the National Deaf Mute College.</i></p>
+
+ <p>"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."</p>
+
+ <p><b>FROM THE ENGLISH PRESS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>"The principle may be explained in a line&#8212;it
+ is first learning the language, and then studying the
+ grammar, and then learning (or trying to learn) the
+ language."&#8212;<i>Morning Star</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"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."&#8212;<i>Record</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"A week's patient trial of the French Manual has
+ convinced me that the method is
+ sound."&#8212;<i>Papers for the Schoolmaster</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"The simplicity and naturalness of the system are
+ obvious."&#8212;<i>Herald</i> (Birmingham.)</p>
+
+ <p>"We know of no other plan which will infallibly lead
+ to the result in a reasonable time."&#8212;<i>Norfolk
+ News</i>.</p>
+
+ <p><b>FROM THE AMERICAN PRESS.</b></p>
+
+ <p>"The system is as near as can be to the one in which a
+ child to talk."&#8212;<i>Troy Whig</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"We would advise all who are about to begin the study
+ of languages to give it a trial."&#8212;<i>Rochester
+ Democrat</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"For European travellers this volume is
+ invaluable."&#8212;<i>Worcester Spy</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Either of the above volumes sent by mail free to any
+ part of the United States on receipt of price.</p>
+
+ <p>D. APPLETON &amp; CO., Publishers,</p>
+
+ <p>90, 92, and 94 Grand Street, New York.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td style="text-align: center;">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BURCH'S</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><big><b>Merchant's
+ Restaurant</b></big></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>AND</p>
+
+ <p><big><b>DINING-ROOM,</b></big></p>
+
+ <p>310 BROADWAY,</p>
+
+ <p>BETWEEN PEARL AND<br>
+ DUANE STREETS.</p>
+
+ <p><i>Breakfast from 7 to 10 A.M.<br></i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Lunch and Dinner from 12 to 3 P.M<br></i></p>
+
+ <p><i>Supper from 4 to 7 P.M.</i></p>
+
+ <p>M. C. BURCH, of New-York.</p>
+
+ <p>A. STOW, of Alabama.</p>
+
+ <p>H. A. CARTER, of Massachusetts.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big>HENRY L. STEPHENS</big></p>
+
+ <p><big>ARTIST</big>,</p>
+
+ <p>No. 160 Fulton Street,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">NEW YORK.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center" rowspan="2">
+ <p><big><big><big><b>A. T. Stewart &amp;
+ Co.</b></big></big></big></p>
+
+ <p><small>HAVE OPENED A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF</small></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">LADIES' PARIS MADE
+ DRESSES</p>
+
+ <p><small>AND</small></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">WALKING SUITS,</p>
+
+ <p><small>In Silk, Poplin, and Linen,</small></p>
+
+ <p>ENTIRE NEW DESIGNS.</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>FRENCH SILK CLOAKS,</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p><small>AND</small></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">SHORT STREET SACQUES.</p>
+
+ <p>Children's Cloaks, Ladies' Breakfast Jackets,</p>
+
+ <p><small>Ladies' Pique, Swiss, and Cambric</small></p>
+
+ <p><b>Morning Robes and Walking Suits,</b></p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small>LADIES'
+ UNDERGARMENTS</small></p>
+
+ <p><small>Of every description.</small></p>
+
+ <p>French, German, and Domestic Corsets,</p>
+
+ <p><small>Woven and hand-made.</small></p>
+
+ <p>JUST RECEIVED.</p>
+
+ <p>AT EXTREMELY ATTRACTIVE PRICES,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">BROADWAY,</p>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Fourth Ave., Ninth and
+ Tenth Sts.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td align="center" rowspan="2">
+ <p><big><big><b>RED AS A ROSE IS SHE.</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p><i>Third Edition.</i></p>
+
+ <p>D. APPLETON &amp; CO.,</p>
+
+ <p>90, 92, and 94 Grand Street,</p>
+
+ <p>Have now ready the Third Edition of</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>RED AS A ROSE IS SHE.</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>By the Author of "Cometh up as a Flower."</p>
+
+ <p>1 vol. 8vo. Paper Covers, 60 cents.</p>
+
+ <p>From the New York <i>Evening Express</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is truly a charming novel; for half its contents
+ breathe the very odor of the flower it takes as its
+ title."</p>
+
+ <p>From the Philadelphia <i>Inquirer</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>"The author can and does write well; the descriptions
+ of scenery are particularly effective, always graphic,
+ and never overstrained."</p>
+
+ <p>D. A. &amp; Co. have just published:</p>
+
+ <p>A SEARCH FOR WINTER SUNBEAMS IN THE RIVIERA, CORSICA,
+ ALGIERS, AND SPAIN.</p>
+
+ <p>By Hon. S. S. Cox. Illustrated. Price, $3.</p>
+
+ <p>REPTILES AND BIRDS: A POPULAR ACCOUNT OF THE VARIOUS
+ ORDERS, WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE HABITS AND ECONOMY OF
+ THE MOST INTERESTING.</p>
+
+ <p>By Louis Figuler. Illustrated with 307 wood-cuts. 8vo,
+ $6.</p>
+
+ <p>HEREDITARY GENIUS: AN INQUIRY INTO ITS LAWS AND
+ CONSEQUENCES.</p>
+
+ <p>By Francis Galton. 1 vol. 8vo. $3.50.</p>
+
+ <p>HAND-BOOK OF THE MASTERY SERIES OF LEARNING
+ LANGUAGES.<br>
+ I. THE HAND-ROOK OF THE MASTERY SERIES.<br>
+ II. THE MASTERY SERIES, FRENCH.<br>
+ III. THE MASTERY SERIES, GERMAN.<br>
+ IV. THE MASTERY SERIES, SPANISH.<br>
+ Price, 50 cents each.</p>
+
+ <p>Either of the above sent free by mail to any address
+ on receipt of the price.</p>
+ </td>
+
+ <td align="center">
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;"><small>Important to
+ Newsdealers!</small></p>
+
+ <p>ALL ORDERS FOR</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>PUNCHINELLO</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>Will be supplied by</p>
+
+ <p>OUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE AGENTS,</p>
+
+ <p><b>American News Co.</b></p>
+
+ <p>NEW YORK.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><b>J. NICKINSON</b></big></p>
+
+ <p>BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO THE FRIENDS OF</p>
+
+ <p><big><big><b>"PUNCHINELLO"</b></big></big></p>
+
+ <p>RESIDING IN THE COUNTRY, THAT,</p>
+
+ <p>FOR THEIR CONVENIENCE</p>
+
+ <p><small>HE HAS MADE ARRANGEMENTS BY WHICH, ON RECEIPT
+ OF THE PRICE OF</small></p>
+
+ <p><b>ANY STANDARD BOOK PUBLISHED,</b></p>
+
+ <p>THE SAME WILL BE FORWARDED, POSTAGE PAID.</p>
+
+ <p><small>Parties desiring Catalogues of any of our
+ Publishing Houses, can have the same forwarded by
+ inclosing two stamps.</small></p>
+
+ <p>OFFICE OF</p>
+
+ <p><b>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO.,<br></b></p>
+
+ <p><b>83 Nassau Street.</b></p>
+
+ <p>[P. O. Box 2783.]</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table width="800" align="center" border="1" cellpadding="2"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td rowspan="2" width="66%">
+ <center>
+ <img src="images/16.jpg" alt="">
+
+ <p><b>A SUCCESSFUL CATCH.</b></p>
+
+ <p><i>John Bull.</i> "WELL, GENERAL, HOW DID YOU CATCH
+ YOUR FISH?"<span style=
+ "font-style: italic;"><br></span> <i>General Prim.</i>
+ "WITH A SPANISH FLY."</p>
+ </center>
+ </td>
+
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">WALTHAM
+ WATCHES.</span></big></p>
+
+ <p><br>
+ <span style="font-weight: bold;">3-4
+ PLATE.</span><span style=
+ "font-style: italic;"><br></span></p>
+
+ <p><i><br>
+ 16 and 20 Sizes.</i></p>
+
+ <p><small>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
+ excellence of mechanical and scientific correctness of
+ design and execution, these watches are unsurpassed
+ anywhere.</small></p>
+
+ <p><small>In this country the manufacture of this fine
+ grade of Watches is not even attempted except at
+ Waltham.</small></p>
+
+ <p>FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING JEWELLERS.</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="center">
+ <p><big><span style="font-weight: bold;">Bowling Green
+ Savings-Bank,<br></span></big></p>
+
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">33
+ BROADWAY,<br></span></p>
+
+ <p><span style="font-weight: bold;">NEW-YORK.</span></p>
+
+ <p><i>Open Every Day from 10 A.M. to 3 P.M</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Deposits of any sum, from Ten Cents to Ten Thousand
+ Dollars, will be received.</p>
+
+ <p>Six Per Cent Interest,<br>
+ Free of Government Tax.</p>
+
+ <p>INTEREST ON NEW DEPOSITS</p>
+
+ <p>Commences on the first of every month.</p>
+
+ <p>HENRY SMITH, <i>President.</i></p>
+
+ <p>REEVES E. SELMES, <i>Secretary.</i></p>
+
+ <p>WALTER ROCHE, EDWARD HOGAN,
+ <i>Vice-Presidents.</i></p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <table style=
+ "width: 800px; text-align: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"
+ border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td>
+ <center>
+ <h2>PUNCHINELLO:</h2>
+
+ <h1><b>TERMS TO CLUBS.</b></h1>
+
+ <p>WE OFFER AS PREMIUMS FOR CLUBS</p>
+ </center>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small><small>FIRST:</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p><i>DANA BICKFORD'S PATENT FAMILY SPINNER,</i></p>
+
+ <p>The most complete and desirable machine ever yet
+ introduced for spinning purposes.</p>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small><small>SECOND:</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p><i>BICKFORD'S CROCHET AND FANCY WORK MACHINES.</i></p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small><small>THIRD:</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p><i>BICKFORD'S AUTOMATIC FAMILY KNITTER.</i></p>
+
+ <p>This is the most perfect and complete machine in the
+ world. It knits every thing.</p>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small><small>FOURTH:</small></small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <p><i>AMERICAN BUTTONHOLE, OVERSEAMING, AND
+ SEWING-MACHINE.</i></p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <center style="font-weight: bold;">
+ <p><small>WE WILL SEND THE</small></p>
+ </center>
+
+ <table align="center" border="0" cellpadding="6"
+ cellspacing="0">
+ <tbody>
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">Family Spinner,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $8,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 4 subscribers and $16.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.1 Crochet,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $8,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 4 subscribers and $16.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.2 Crochet,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $15,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 6 subscribers and $24.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.1 Automatic
+ Knitter,<br>
+ 72 needles,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $30,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 12 subscribers and $48.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.2 Automatic
+ Knitter,<br>
+ 84 needles,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $33,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 13 subscribers and $52.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No.3 Automatic
+ Knitter,<br>
+ 100 needles,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $37,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 15 subscribers and $60.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">No.4 Automatic Knitter,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">2 cylinders,<br>
+ 72 needles<br>
+ 1 100 needles</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $40.</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 16 subscribers and $64.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left" colspan="2">No. 1 American
+ Buttonhole<br>
+ and Overseaming Machine,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $75,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 30 subscribers and $120.</td>
+ </tr>
+
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">No. 2 American Buttonhole<br>
+ and Overseaming Machine,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">without buttonhole<br>
+ parts, etc.,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">price, $60,</td>
+
+ <td align="left">for 25 subscribers and $100.</td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <p style="font-weight: bold;">Descriptive Circulars</p>
+
+ <p>Of all these machines will be sent upon application to
+ this office, and full instructions for working them will
+ be sent to purchasers.</p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <p>Charges on money sent by express must be prepaid, or
+ the net amount only will be credited.</p>
+
+ <p>Directions for shipping machines must be full and
+ explicit, to prevent error. In sending subscriptions give
+ address, with Town, County, and State.</p>
+
+ <p>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.</p>
+
+ <p>All communications, remittances, etc., to be addressed
+ to P.O. Box 2783.</p><br>
+
+ <p>PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY</p>
+
+ <p>No. 83 Nassau Street,</p>
+
+ <p>NEW-YORK</p>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+ </tbody>
+ </table>
+
+ <p style="text-align: center;"><small>S.W. GREEN, PRINTER, CORNER
+ JACOB AND FRANKFORT STREETS.</small></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30,
+1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 10018-h.htm or 10018-h.zip *****
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+Project Gutenberg's Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30, 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. 5, April 30, 1870
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: November 8, 2003 [EBook #10018]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Cornell University, Joshua Hutchinson, Steve Schulze
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | "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 169 PEARL ST., |
+ | |
+ | 73, 75, 77, and 79 PINE ST., New-York. |
+ | |
+ | ADVANTAGES--All on the same premises, and under the |
+ | immediate supervision of the proprietors. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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_ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+[Illustration: Vol. 1 No. 5]
+
+
+PUNCHINELLO
+
+
+SATURDAY, APRIL 30, 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S CHROMOS are celebrated for their close resemblance |
+ | to Oil Paintings. Sold in All Stores throughout the World. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | PRANG'S WEEKLY BULLETIN OF CHROMOS.--"Easter Morning" |
+ | "Family Scene in Pompeii" "Whittier's Birthplace," |
+ | Illustrated Catalogue sent, on receipt of stamp, by L. PRANG |
+ | & CO., Boston. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 Reminiscences 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." |
+ | |
+ | BONNER 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 post-paid 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | Presents to the public for approval, the |
+ | |
+ | NEW ILLUSTRATED HUMOROUS AND SATIRICAL |
+ | |
+ | WEEKLY PAPER, |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO, |
+ | |
+ | The first number of which will be Issued under date of April |
+ | 2, 1870, and thereafter weekly. |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO will be _National_, and not _local_; and will |
+ | endeavor to become a household word in all parts of the |
+ | country; and to that end has secured a |
+ | |
+ | VALUABLE CORPS OF CONTRIBUTORS |
+ | |
+ | in various sections of the Union, while its columns will |
+ | always be open to appropriate first-class literary and |
+ | artistic talent. |
+ | |
+ | 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. |
+ | |
+ | The Artistic department will be in charge of Henry L. |
+ | Stephens, whose celebrated cartoons in VANITY FAIR placed |
+ | him in the front rank of humorous artists, assisted by |
+ | leading artists in their respective specialties. |
+ | |
+ | The management of the paper will be in the hands of WILLIAM |
+ | A. STEPHENS, with whom is associated CHARLES DAWSON SHANLY, |
+ | both of whom were identified with VANITY FAIR. |
+ | |
+ | ORIGINAL ARTICLES, |
+ | |
+ | Suitable for the paper, and Original Designs, or suggestive |
+ | ideas sketches for illustrations, upon the topics of the |
+ | day, are always acceptable, and will be paid for liberally. |
+ | |
+ | Rejected communications can not 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: THE WARNING OF THE BELLE
+
+LOOK OUT FOR THE TRAIN]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PATRIOTIC ADORATION.
+
+A TALE OF PHILADELPHIA.
+
+ People of the Quaker City,
+ How the world must stand aghast
+ At your wondrous veneration
+ For those relics of the past,
+ Kept in such precise condition,
+ Fostered with such tender care--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Splendid are its walks and grass-plots
+ Where the bootblacks base-ball play,
+ And its seats resembling toad-stools,
+ On which loafers lounge all day,
+ Waiting for their luck, or gazing
+ At the office of the Mayor--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Square?
+
+ Then, behold the fine old State-house
+ Cleanly kept inside and out,
+ Where the faithful office-holders
+ Squirt tobacco-juice about:
+ Placards highly ornamental
+ Decorate its outward wall--
+ Don't, oh! don't the Philadelphians
+ Love old Independence Hall?
+
+ O! ye gods and little fishes!
+ Could bill-sticker be so vile
+ As to paste up nasty posters
+ On the sacred classic pile?
+ Greece and Rome yet have their relics,
+ But what are they? very small.
+ Never half so venerated
+ As old Independence Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PERIODICAL LITERATURE.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has hitherto refrained from criticising the periodicals of
+the day, from the mistaken idea that superlative excellence was not
+expected in every number of every daily or weekly journal in the land.
+He did not know that, if every such journal was not edited so as to suit
+the comprehension of all classes of cursory critics, it should be
+unqualifiedly condemned. Supposing that a painter should not condemn a
+paper for publishing a musical article beyond his comprehension, and
+that an architect ought not to get in a rage because he finds in his
+favorite journal a paper on beavers which makes him feel insignificant,
+PUNCHINELLO has generally looked around upon his fellow-journalists, and
+thought them very good fellows, who generally published very good
+papers. He did not find superlative excellence in any of their issues,
+but then he did not look for it. He might as well pretend to look for
+that in the journalists themselves, or in society at large. But he has
+lately learned, from the critics of the period, that he ought to look
+for it, and that it is the proper thing nowadays to pitch into every
+journal which does not, in every part, please every body, whether they
+be smart or dull; those quick of appreciation, or those slow gentlemen
+who always come in with their congratulations upon the birth of a joke
+at the time its funeral is taking place. And so, PUNCHINELLO will do as
+others do, and will occasionally view, from the loop-hole in his
+curtain, the successes and failures of his neighbors, and will give his
+patrons the benefit of his observations.
+
+The first thing he notices to-day is, that the _Evening Snail_ of last
+night is not so good as it was a fortnight ago; or, let us think a
+bit--it may have been a good number at the beginning of last month that
+he was thinking of; at all events, this last issue is inferior. The
+matter on the first page is not printed in nearly as good type as the
+original periodicals had it, and while the letters in the heading are
+quite fair, it is very noticeable that the I's are very defective, and
+there is no C in it. The "Gleanings" are excellent, and it would be
+advisable to have more of them--if indeed such a thing were possible in
+this case. The spider-work inside shows no acquaintance with the
+writings of BACH or GLIDDON, and there is nothing about the Spectrum
+Analysis in any part of the paper. Besides, the paper is too stiff and
+rattles too much, and PUNCHINELLO could never abide the color of the
+editor's pantaloons. Why will not people dress and write so that every
+body can admire and understand them. Especially in regard to witty
+things and breastpins They ought to be loud, overpowering, and so
+glaring that people could not help seeing them. And they ought to be a
+little cheap, too, or average people won't comprehend them. In both
+cases paste (and scissors) pays better than diamonds. The reports of
+private parties in the _Snail_ are, however, very good, and if it would
+confine its original matter to such subjects, it could not fail to
+succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Query for Physicians.
+
+Are people's tastes apt to become Vichy-ated by the excessive use of
+certain mineral waters?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Behold, how Pleasant a Thing 't is," etc.
+
+Boston has a couple of clergymen who have fallen out upon matters not
+precisely theological. In the summer, the Rev. Mr. MURRAY leaves his
+sheep, to shoot deer by torchlight in the Adirondacks. This the Rev. Mr.
+ALGER, in addressing the Suppression of Cruelty to Animals Society,
+denounces as extremely wicked. From all which Mr. PUNCHINELLO, taking up
+his discourse, infers,
+
+_First_. That it is a great deal more wicked to shoot deer by torchlight
+than by daylight.
+
+_Secondly_. That the Rev. MURRAY and the Rev. ALGER are of different
+religious persuasions.
+
+_Thirdly and lastly_. That the Rev. Mr. ALGER doesn't love venison.
+
+P. S. Persons desiring to present Mr. PUNCHINELLO with a fine haunch,
+(in the season,) may shoot it by daylight, moonlight, torchlight, or by
+a Drummond light, as most convenient.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We are indebted to Mr. SARONY for a number of brilliant photographs of
+celebrities of the day. Lovely woman is well represented the batch, with
+all the characters of which PUNCHINELLO hopes to present his readers,
+from time to time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1870, by the
+PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING COMPANY, in the Clerk's Office of the District
+Court of the United States, for the Southern District of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: ALL ABOARD FOR HOLLAND!]
+
+PUNCHINELLO understands that a performance is soon to take place at the
+Academy of Music, for the benefit of GEORGE HOLLAND, the well-known and
+ever-green "veteran" of "the stage." It pleases PUNCHINELLO to know that
+a combination of talent and beauty is to be brought together for so
+worthy a purpose. Seventy-four years ago, when GEORGE HOLLAND was a
+small child, PUNCHINELLO used to dandle him upon his knee. Hardly four
+years have passed since PUNCHINELLO was convulsed by the _Tony Lumpkin_
+of HOLLAND. He distinctly remembers, too, administering hot whiskey
+punch to little boy HOLLAND with a tea-spoon, which may in some measure
+account for the Spirit subsequently infused by the capital comedian into
+the numerous bits of character presented by him. Considering these
+facts, it is manifestly an incumbent duty on the part of PUNCHINELLO to
+request the earnest attention of his readers to the subject of GEORGE
+HOLLAND'S benefit, all particulars concerning which will be given due
+time through the public press. It used to be said, long ago, that "the
+Dutch have taken Holland," Well, let our own modern Knickerbockers
+improve upon that notion, by taking HOLLAND'S tickets. Remember how,
+in the early settlement of the country, it was Holland that made
+New-York, and see that New-York now returns the compliment, and makes
+HOLLAND. Convivial songsters frequently remind us that--
+
+ --"a Hollander's draught should potent be,
+ And deep as the rolling Zuyder Zee."
+
+Mind this, all ye Hollanders who would give your support to our HOLLAND.
+Let your drafts be potent, your cheeks heavy, your attendance punctual.
+Make the affair complete; so that when, here-after, a comparison is
+sought for something that has been a sued people will say of it--"As big
+as that Bumper of HOLLAND'S."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ASTRONOMICAL CONVERSATIONS.
+
+(BY A FATHER AND DAUGHTER RESIDING ON THE PLANET VENUS.)
+
+No. I.
+
+FATHER (_to_ DAUGHTER, _who is looking through a telescope_.) Yes HELENE,
+that is the Planet Tellus, or Earth. The darker streaks are land; the
+bright spots, water. We begin with a low power, which shows only the
+masses; presently you will have the pleasure of discriminating not only
+rivers and chains of mountains, but cities--single houses--even Human
+Beings! Yes, you shall this very night read page of PUNCHINELLO, a paper
+so bright that every word appears surrounded by a halo!
+
+DAUGHTER. O father! do that _now_. How delightful, to actually read the
+works of these singular creature's, and become familiar with their
+extraordinary ideas! Were the scintillations you spoke of the other
+night, that were seen all over the Western Continent, the result of the
+flashing of these radiant pages?
+
+F. Undoubtedly, my child; they began with the first issue of the paper,
+and have since regularly increased in brightness, just as It has.
+
+D. It really seems as though Earth would answer for a Moon, by and by, at
+this rate!
+
+F. You are quite right, HELENE; it will. Or say, rather, a Sun. For you
+will observe that it is a _warm_ light; not cool, as reflected light
+always is. It is Original.
+
+D. Well, this shows that PUNCHINELLO must have some Heart, as well as
+Head. Come, put on your highest power now, and let us seem to pay good
+old Tellus a visit!
+
+[_The indulgent Father complies, and, is at some pains to adjust the
+focus_.]
+
+F. Now, dear! take a good look.
+
+D. (_Looking intently_.) Oh! how splendid--how splendid! _Do_ see the
+beautiful things in those Shop Windows! It must be the Spring Season
+there! _Do_ see those lovely lumps on the backs of those creatures'
+heads! What place is it, Father?
+
+F. That? It's New-York; and the street is the famous Broadway.
+
+D. O dear! how I _would_ like to go shopping there, this minute!--for I
+see it is afternoon in that quarter. Is there no way of getting
+there?(!!!)
+
+F. (_Laughing heartily_.) Well, well, HELENE! That's pretty good, for
+the daughter of an astronomer! Do you know that at this precise moment
+you are Forty-five Million, Six Hundred and Fifty-four Thousand, Four
+Hundred and Ninety-one Miles and a half from those Muslins! I'll tell
+you, Sis, what _could_ be done: Drop a line to the Editor of
+PUNCHINELLO, and tell him what you want. He'll get it, some way.
+
+D. That I will, instantly! [_Turns to her portfolio, while her father
+turns to the telescope_.]
+
+"DEAR MR. EDITOR: Pardon the seeming _boldness_ of a _stranger:_ you are
+no _stranger to me!_ Long, _long_ have I deceived that _good man_, my
+father, by _pretending_ to know _nothing_ of the Earth, or of his
+_instrument!_ Many and _many_ a night, _unknown to him_, have I gone to
+the _Telescope_, to satisfy the _restless craving_ I feel to know more
+of _your Planet_, and of a _person of your sex_ whom I have _often_
+beheld, and watched with _eagerness_ as he came and went. How
+_thrilling_ the thought, that he cannot even _know of my existence_, and
+that we are _forever separated!_ This, good and _dear_ Editor, is my one
+Thought, my one great Agony.
+
+"It has occurred to me that, in this _dreadful_ situation--my Passion
+being sufficiently Hopeless, as any one may see--you might at least
+afford me some slight _alleviation_, by undertaking to let Him know of
+the _interest_ he excites in this far-off star! Let me describe my
+charmer, so that you will be able to identify him. He is of fair size,
+with a rolling gait and a smiling countenance, has light hair and
+complexion, wears often a White Hat, (on the back of his head--where
+Thoughtful men always place the hat, I've been told by observers,) and
+now and then carelessly leaves one leg of his trowsers at the top of his
+boot. I have often seen him, with a bundle of papers in his pocket,
+entering a large building with the words "_Tribune_ Office" over the
+door--and I _adore_ him! O excellent Editor! tell him this, I _implore_
+you! Be kind to your distant and _love-lorn_ friend,
+
+HELENE."
+
+F. What did you say, Helene?
+
+D. I was saying that I wished to look a little longer at the fashions in
+Broadway.
+
+F. Well, well--I believe the Fashions are all that these women think of!
+There--look away! I presume they have changed considerably since you
+looked before! When do you wish to begin your lessons in Astronomy?
+
+D. Next week. Father; let me see: we will say, next week--Thursday.
+
+F. Very well; I shall remind you.
+
+D. (_who is determined to have the last word, any way_.) Very well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beach's Soliloquy on entering his Pneumatic Chamber.
+
+"TU-BE or not tu-be."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Reflection by a Tallow-chandler.
+
+Though a man be the Mould of fashion, yet he cannot light himself to bed
+by the Dip in his back.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+PLAYS AND SHOWS.
+
+[Illustration: 'M']
+
+_MEN AND ACRES,_ the new comedy at WALLACK'S, is one of the best of
+TAYLOR'S pieces, and a decided improvement upon the carpenter work of
+BOUCICAULT. It has been rechristened by Mr. WALLACK, and its former
+name--_Old Men and New Acres, or New Aches and Old Manors,_ or something
+else of that sort--has been conveniently shortened. If it does not
+convince us that the author has improved since he first began to write
+plays, it certainly reminds us that there is such a thing as _Progress_.
+In the latter play, Mr. J.W. WALLACK was a civil engineer. In the
+present drama, he is an uncivil tradesman. Both appeal to the levelling
+tendencies of the age; and in each, the author has done his "level
+best"--as Mr. GRANT WHITE would say--to flatter the Family Circle at the
+expense of the Boxes.
+
+The cast includes a Vague Baronet and his Managing Wife, their Slangy
+Daughter, their Unpleasant Neighbor and his wife and daughter, an
+Unintelligible Dutchman, an Innocuous Youth, a Disagreeable Lawyer, and
+the Merchant Prince. This is the sort of way in which they conduct
+themselves,
+
+_Act_ 1. _Disagreeable Lawyer to Vague Baronet:_ "You are ruined, and
+your estate is mortgaged to a Merchant Prince. What do you intend to
+do?"
+
+_Vague Baronet._ "I will ask my wife what I think about it."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are we? Allow me to remark,
+Fiddlesticks! Get the Merchant to take our third-story hall-bedroom for
+a week, and I'll soon clear off the mortgage."
+
+_Enter Slangy Daughter._ "O ma! there was such a precious guy at the
+ball last night, and I had no end of a lark with him. Good gracious!
+here comes the duffer himself."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince. (Aside.)_ "So here's the Vague Baronet and his
+wife. And there's the slangy girl I fell in love with. Nice lot they
+are!" (_To Managing Wife._) "Madam, there is nothing, so grand as the
+majesty of trade. Your rank and blood are all gammon. We Merchant
+Princes are the only people fit to live. However, I'll condescend to
+speak to you."
+
+_Managing Wife. (Aside.)_ "How noble! What a gentlemanly person he
+really is!" _(To Merchant Prince.)_ "Sir, I bid you welcome. Here is my
+daughter, who was just praising your beauty and accomplishments. I leave
+you to entertain her." (_Exeunt Baronet, Wife, and Lawyer_.)
+
+_Merchant Prince (placing his chair next to Slangy Daughter's, and
+leaning his elbow on her.)_ "There is nothing like trade. We tradesmen
+alone are great. We despise the whole lot of clean and idle aristocrats.
+I keep a Gin Palace in Liverpool. Does your bloated aristocracy do half
+as much for suffering humanity?"
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Speak on, speak ever thus, O Noble Being! It's
+awfully jolly!"
+
+_Curtain falls, and Baker wakes up to lead his orchestra through the
+mazes of "Shoo Fly."_
+
+
+_Appreciative Lady._ "Isn't it nice? Miss HENRIQUES'S dress is perfectly
+beautiful, and it sounds so cunning to hear her talk slang."
+
+_Second Appreciative Lady._ "How handsome ROCKWELL looks! Just like a
+real baronet, my dear!"
+
+_Other Appreciative Ladies._ "The dresses at WALLACK'S are always
+perfectly exquisite. I mean to have my next dress made with a green silk
+fichu, a moire antique bertha, and little point lace peplums and
+gussets, just like Miss MESTAYER'S. Won't it be sweet?"
+
+_All the Counter-Jumpers in the Theatre._ "JIM WALLACK'S the boy! Don't
+he talk up to those aristocratic snobs, though?"
+
+
+_Act 2. Enter Unpleasant Neighbor and Unintelligible German. The former
+says,_ "You're sure there's an iron mine on the Baronet's land?"
+
+_Unintelligible German._ "Ya! Das ist um-um-um."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince and Slangy Daughter. Exeunt the other fellows._
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "There is nothing like the grandeur of trade; and yet
+we tradesmen are not proud. See! I offer to marry you."
+
+_Slangy daughter._ "I love you wildly! _(Aside.)_ I do hope he won't
+rumple my hair."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "Come to my arrums! The majesty of trade is so
+infinitely above any thing else"--_and so forth._
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Take her, noble Merchant, and be happy
+_(Aside.)_ This settles the affair of the mortgage." _(To Daughter)_
+"Come, darling, we'll go and tell your father." _(They go.)_
+
+_Enter Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here's a telegram for you. No bad news, I
+hope?"
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I am ruined unless you lend me L40,000. Do it, and I
+will assign to you the mortgage on the baronet's property. The majesty
+of trade is something which"--
+
+_Unpleasant Neighbor._ "Here it is." _(Aside.)_ "Now I'll get possession
+of the estate and the iron-mine."
+
+_Enter Managing Wife._ "Ruined, are you? Of course you can't have my
+daughter now."
+
+_Merchant Prince._ "I resign her. We tradesmen are infinitely greater
+than you aristocrats."
+
+_Curtain falls, Baker wakes up. "Shoo Fly" by the Orchestra, and remarks
+on dress by the ladies as before. Counter-jumpers go out to drink to the
+majesty of trade, having grown perceptibly taller since the play began._
+
+
+_Act 3. Unprincipled Neighbor to Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Have you got
+the analysis of the iron ore?"
+
+_Unintelligible Dutchman._ "Ya! Das its um-um-um."
+
+_Unprincipled Neighbor._ "All right! Now I'll foreclose the mortgage,
+and will be richer than ever."
+
+_Enter Vague Baronet, and Wife and Daughter, and Lawyer. To them
+collectively remarks the Unprincipled Neighbor,_ "The mortgage is due.
+As you can't pay, you've got to move out."
+
+_Disagreeable Lawyer._ "Not much! Here's an analysis of iron ore found
+on our land. We raised money on the mine, and are ready to pay off the
+mortgage."
+
+_Enter Merchant Prince._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. I told
+them all about it. We tradesmen are great, but we will sometimes help
+even a wretched aristocrat."
+
+_Slangy Daughter._ "Here's an analysis of the iron ore. Now I will marry
+my noble Merchant, and make him rich again; for there's dead loads of
+iron on the Governor's land, you bet!"
+
+_They all produce analyses of the ore, and the play itself being o'er,
+the curtain falls._
+
+
+_Exasperated critic, who has sent for twelve seats, and has been
+politely refused._ "I'd like to abuse it, if there was a chance; but
+there isn't. The play is really good, and I can't find much fault with
+the acting. However, I'll pitch into STODDARD for swearing, which his
+'Unprincipled Neighbor' does to an unnecessary extent, and I'll say that
+JIM WALLACK is too old and gouty to play the 'Merchant Prince,' and
+doesn't quite forget that he used to play in the Bowery."
+
+_Every body else._ "Did you ever see a play better acted? And did you
+ever see actresses better dressed?"
+
+And PUNCHINELLO is constrained to answer the latter question with an
+emphatic No! As to the acting, it might be improved were Mr. STODDARD to
+play the character for which he is cast, instead of insisting upon
+playing nothing but STODDARD. But to all the rest of the actors, not
+forgetting Mr. RINGGOLD, who plays the insignificant part of the
+"Innocuous Youth," PUNCHINELLO is pleased to accord his gracious
+approval.
+
+MATADOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Balmy Idea.
+
+According to Miss ANTHONY, the crying evil with women is that they will
+blubber; but it must be remembered that out of this blubber they make
+oil to pour into our conjugal wounds.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Suit for Damages.
+
+Any clothes in a storm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE POLITICAL MILL-ENNIUM.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS UPON HIGH ART.
+
+Observant visitors to the National Academy of Design will allow that a
+tendency to greatness is beginning to develop itself in certain
+directions among our artists. In landscape some of them are almost
+immense. The works of PORPHYRO warm the walls with rays of splendor, or
+cool the lampooned sight-line with pearly gradations, as the case may
+be. MANDRAKE renders feelingly the summer uplands and groves, and
+SILVERBARK the melancholy autumnal woods. BYTHESEA infuses with
+sentiment even the blue wreaths of smoke that curl up from the distant
+ridge against which loom the concentrated lovers that he selects for his
+idyllic romances. Gushingly he does his work, but thoroughly; and there
+are other flowers than lackadaisies to be discerned in his herbage.
+GUSTIBUS blows gently the foliage aside, and gives us glimpses through
+it of rural contentment in connection with a mill, or some other
+interesting object beyond. The pencil of SAGEGREEN imbues canvases, both
+large and small, with infinite variety and force; and it is to
+SKETCHMORE that the great lakes owe their remarkable reputation as
+pieces of water with poems growing out of their broad lily-pads. Very
+tender are the pastoral banks and brooksides of LEAFHOPPER. ELFINLOCKS
+takes up his pencil, and lo! a hazy, mazy, lazy, dreamy vista where it
+has touched. But hold! Our critical Incubus has taken the bit between
+her teeth, and is beginning to run away with us. Stop that; and let our
+readers enumerate the other first American landscape painters for
+themselves.
+
+Not so strong are our artists in domestic incidents and compositions of
+life and character. We have STUNNINGTON, to be sure, whose traits of
+American expression, whether white or colored, are most true to the
+life; and there's BARLEYMOW, who will twist you an eclogue from the tail
+of his foreground pig. Others there be; but space has its limits, and we
+forbear.
+
+As for our portrait limners, their name is Legion, and that
+comprehensive name must go for all. Like BENVENUTO CELLINI they shall be
+known for their jugs; and their transmission to posterity on the heads
+of families is a thing to be reckoned on as sure.
+
+For the higher flights of art the American painter is by no manner of
+means endowed with the wings of his native eagle--wings that agitate the
+cerulean vault, spattering it with splashes of creamy cloud-spray, and
+churning into butter the stretches of the Milky Way. History has indeed
+been illustrated by American art, but has it been enriched? The
+WASHINGTONS and the WEBSTERS, the CLAYS and the LINCOLNS, have had their
+memories dreadfully lampooned on canvas. Allegory does not inspire the
+great American pencil. Tall art there is, and enough of it "at that;"
+but of high art we have none to speak of, except the canvases that are
+placed over doorways in the galleries of the Academy, and, in the sense
+of elevation, may consequently be spoken of as high. All this is wrong.
+Alas! that we should write it. Would that we could right it! And to
+think of the musty subjects that our historical and allegorical men
+select. Ho! young men--away with your CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS; relegate
+your METAMORA to his proper limbo; let WASHINGTON alone; and LINCOLN;
+and OSCEOLA the Savage; and POCAHONTAS, and all the rest. Leave them
+alone; and, taking fresh subjects, dip your brushes in brains, as old
+OPIE or somebody else said, and go to work with a will. No fresh
+subjects to be had, you say? Bosh! absurd interlocutor that you are.
+Here's a bundle of 'em ready cut to hand. We charge you no money for
+them, and you may take your choice.
+
+SUBJECTS FOR WORKS OF HIGH ART.
+
+PROVIDENCE tempering the wind to the shorn lamb.
+
+ABSENCE OF MIND marking a box of paper shirt-collars with indelible ink.
+
+MILTON "going it blind."
+
+The late Mr. WILLIAM COBBETT teaching his sons to shave with cold water.
+
+ST. PATRICK emptying the snakes out of his boots.
+
+TRUE LOVE never running smooth.
+
+NO MAN acting _Hero_ to his _valet de chambre_.
+
+ROBERT BONNER taking DEXTER by the forelock with one hand, and TIME with
+the other.
+
+Subjects like these might be worked out to advantage. The field in which
+they are to be found is almost unlimited; and they possess abundantly
+the two grand essentials to success in art at the present time, as well
+as in literature--novelty and sensation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+H.G. and Terpsichore.
+
+AMONG the strange revelations about _Tribune_ people elicited during the
+MCFARLAND trial, was the bit of gossip about Mr. GREELEY going to
+Saratoga to "trip the light fantastic toe." That Mr. GREELEY'S toe is
+"fantastic," every body who has ever inspected his "Congress gaiters"
+must know, but as to its lightness we have our doubts. "What I know
+about dancing" would be a capital subject for H.G. to handle, and we
+hope that he will take Steps for doing it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sweeny's New Charter.
+
+ How doth the busy Peter B.,
+ Improve each shining hour!
+ From nettled young Democracy,
+ He plucks the safety-flower.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From Rome.
+
+The POPE is said to be "out of Spirits." Why doesn't he come to
+New-York, where he can get plenty of the article, either in the sense of
+the Tap or in that of the Rap?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"He who was Born to be Hanged," etc.
+
+On one of the mornings of the MCFARLAND trial, a very importunate person
+attempted to force his way into the court-room, which, as he was told,
+was already crowded "to suffocation." To this he retorted that he
+"wasn't born to be suffocated." That's in substance what the late JACK
+REYNOLDS said, and _he_ was mistaken.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Difference.
+
+Rice riots are reported as raging in all the ports of Japan. Rye was the
+principal mover in the famous conscription riots of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Celestial Idea.
+
+No wonder the Chinese theatre in San Francisco is a success, considering
+how skilful the actors must be in catching the Cue.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JUMBLES.
+
+Did you ever hear of my friend BOOTSBY? "No." That's rather queer. I
+see--you've been out of town. BOOTSBY is a man of standing--of decided
+standing, I may say. He stands, in fact, a great deal. The heavy
+standing round he does is enormous when the limited capacity of a single
+mortal is taken in view. BOOTSBY stands round among every class of
+people, and especially of politicians and potationers. He stands round
+to talk, to hear, and especially to drink. The power of the man in this
+last matter is wonderful, and the puzzle is, that his standing (and
+perpendicularity) is not perceptibly affected. Of course there are times
+when BOOTSBY'S standing is not so good. In so slippery a place as Wall
+Street, it is found to be less certain; while in a crowd on Broadway,
+waiting for a bus, it cannot be said to maintain a very remarkable
+firmness. But as a whole, and as the world goes, BOOTSBY is a man of
+standing. In the altitude of six feet ten, he may be called a man of
+high standing. He feels proud of the fact. "Is it not better to be a
+mountain than a mole?" he often asks in a proudly sneering manner of his
+neighbor PUGGS, who is about as far up in the world as the top of a
+yard-stick. It is very true that size is not quality, and a seven-footer
+may be no better than a three-footer; but it is observed that a Short
+Man is rarely any thing else. His stature is his measure throughout. My
+own impression of myself is, that I don't care to be short; but if the
+alternative were forced upon me, I should choose that of person rather
+than of purse. BOOTSBY does not care much about money, and he carries
+very little. Some people are like BOOTSBY, but most people are not. The
+ladies, it is true, never, or rarely, want money. Like newspapers and
+club-houses, they are self-supporting. In fact they surround themselves
+with supporters which stay tightly. Mrs. TODD is peculiar in her wants
+pecuniary. She, good soul, never wants (or keeps) money long, but she
+doesn't want it _little_. She prefers it like onions, in a large bunch,
+and strong. The reason why most women do not want money is because they
+have no use for it. They never dress; they never wear jewelry; silks and
+satins have no charms in their eyes; laces, ribbons, shawls never tempt.
+To exist and walk upright in simpleness and quiet is the sum of their
+desires. Dear creatures! how is it that they never want?
+
+My neighbor, Mr. DROWSE, desires to know where you get all your funny
+things for PUNCHINELLO? He knows they are there, does Mr. DROWSE; for he
+gets my copy of the penny postman, and he keeps it, too. It is the only
+good taste my neighbor has displayed of late years. I tell Mr. DROWSE
+that you make your fun. He further asks, Where? I tell him in the
+attic--up there where they keep the salt. He desires to know the size of
+attic. Of course he has never seen your noble, capacious, alabaster
+forehead, else he would perceive the source of those scintillations of
+light and warmth which radiate throughout the universe every Saturday
+for only ten cents. He is curious also to know about the salt, and
+doesn't comprehend how or where you use it. He used to use it when a boy
+in catching birds by putting the briny compound on the tails of the
+same, and _that_ he used to call "fun alive;" but he don't see it--the
+salt--about PUNCHINELLO. I suspect Mr. DROWSE doesn't see the sellers,
+(certainly he avoids them when PUNCHINELLO is offered, much to my
+mortification, and one dime to my cost,) and so is not likely to discern
+the source of the fun. I merely informed Mr. DROWSE that the editor was
+very tall, very handsome, with very black skin and rosy hair, (at which
+he opened his eyes with astonishment, and asked if I meant so; at which
+I said, "Yes, I guess so,") and that he laughed out of his nose, eyes,
+head, and hands, as well as his mouth. DROWSE wants to see the editor
+very much. He has seen men with black skins and hearts, (for he used to
+know lots of politicians;) but wants to put his vision on some "rosy
+hair"--and when he does, no doubt his gaze will be fixed. It is healthy
+sometimes to have the gaze fixed; and often, like sauce-pans and
+sermons, it has to be fixed. When Mr. DROWSE calls at 83, please show
+him in Parlor 6 with the Brussels, fresco-work, and lace curtains.
+
+April is a model month. So serene, steady, clear, and balmy. Nothing
+but blue sky, gentle zephyrs, kissing breezes, genial suns by day and
+sparkling stars by night. PUNCHINELLO no doubt likes sparkling
+stars--stars of magnitude--stars that show what they are. PUNCHINELLO
+perhaps goes to NIBLO'S, and not only sees plenty stars, but plenty of
+them. But of April. It is called "fickle;" but that's a slander. "Every
+thing by turns and nothing long"--that is a libel on which a suit could
+be hung. The same vile falsehood is cruelly uttered of some women, when
+every body knows, or should know, that these same women are nothing of
+the sort. Who ever knew a fickle woman?
+
+Where in history is there record of such an Impossibility? Fickle--that
+implies a change of mind. What woman ever changed her mind any more than
+her hands? Nonsense, avaunt!--banished be slander! April is _not_
+fickle--woman is _not_ fickle. As one is evenly beautiful, divinely
+serene, bewitchingly winning, so is the other sunny, cerulean, balmy,
+paradisiacal. April for ever--after that the rest of the calendar.
+
+Does PUNCHINELLO believe in the Woman Movement? TODD does. He believes
+woman should move as much as man; and he regards her movement in such
+numbers to the great West as full of hope (and husbands) for the sex.
+Mrs. TODD has not as yet been irresistibly seized by the movement; but
+if TIMOTHY knows himself, he longs for the day when the seizer may come.
+Although TODD--who is the writer of this epistle--says it, who perhaps
+shouldn't, lest the shaft of egotism be hurled mercilessly at him, he
+does unhesitatingly say that to aid this movement he would make the
+greatest of sacrifices. He is willing to sacrifice his wife and other
+female relations upon the sacred altar of the movement, and contribute
+liberally to the expense thereof. He is quite willing they should
+vote--early and often, if need be; but he wishes to see the movement go
+westward like the Star of Empire--westward _via_ cheerful Chicago. TODD
+trusts PUNCHINELLO will espouse this movement; for if it does, it--the
+movement, no less than PUNCHINELLO--will go straight onward and upward;
+but not by the route known as the Spout.
+
+Mucilage is a good thing. It is now extensively used in Church, State,
+and Society. We use it largely at the Veneerfront Avenue Church, of
+which Rev. Dr. ALEXANDER PLASTERWELL is pastor. Of course, Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO, you know that distinguished church, and have no doubt often
+listened to the distinguished Dr. PLASTERWELL. He is a kind man, has a
+high forehead, a Roman (Burgundy) nose, and a sweet, soft head--I should
+say heart. He has--great and good man--the largest faith in mucilage. He
+often makes it a text, and he sticks to it, he does--does Dr.
+PLASTERWELL. Nothing like mucilage, PUNCHINELLO. It is the hope of the
+human race, and the salvation of woman. It is the Philosopher's Stone in
+solution; the essence and link which connects and cements all that is
+great, good, and lovely, in the past, present, and future. At least,
+such is the humble opinion of
+
+TIMOTHY TODD.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+HINTS TO CAR CONDUCTORS.
+
+When standing in Printing House Square, your destination being Grand
+Street Perry or Bleecker Street, if a stranger asks whether you are
+going to Harlem, nod, as it is considered improper to answer in the
+negative. If he finds out the mistake, you can plead deafness.
+
+When called upon to stop, never attempt to comply. There are several
+reasons why you should not. In the first place, if you did stop, it
+would show that you have no will of your own, and since the passage of
+the Fifteenth Amendment, _all_ men are equal in this country.
+
+You may stop about two blocks from the place named, just to please
+yourself and prove your independence; but take particular care to start
+the car when the passenger is half off the steps. If there is a young
+surgeon in the neighborhood, you can enter into an arrangement to break
+arms and legs in this way with impunity, have the maimed "carried into
+the surgery," and share the fees with the operator. Occasional cases of
+manslaughter may take place; but don't mind that, as coroners' juries in
+New-York will return verdicts of "death from natural causes." Besides
+this, remember that you have a vote, and that both coroners and judges
+are dependent upon the people. When a lame old gentleman hails you,
+beckon him furiously to come on, but be sure, at the same time, to urge
+the driver to greater speed.
+
+It is no part of your business to have change, so never give any, but
+drive on: people should provide for and look after their own business
+and that is none of yours.
+
+Always drive through the centre of a target company or funeral
+procession, never minding whether you kill one or more, and then abuse
+the captain or the undertaker for his stupidity.
+
+By the adoption of these essential rules, and by adding a good deal of
+incivility, you will soon reach the top of the wheel of your profession
+and in due time have a testimonial presented to you by an admiring and
+grateful public.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Out in the Cold.
+
+Commissioner Tweed proposes a new outside Bureau of the Department of
+Public Works, for late-Commissioner MCLEAN. He is to be Superintendent
+of Refrigerators.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: THE LANDING OF THE PILGRIMS.
+
+ENGRAVED BY SPECIAL PERMISSION FOR PUNCHINELLO, FROM THE ORIGINAL
+PAINTING, BY MILES STANDISH, IN THE COLLECTION OF METHUSELAH PILGRIM,
+ESQ., OF PILGRIMSVILLE, MASS.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+TO CAPTAIN HALL.
+
+(IN ANTICIPATION OF HIS TRIP TO THE POLE.)
+
+ HALL! HALL!
+ D'ye hear our call?
+ Or, do you fancy it to be
+ A weather sign--merely the pre-
+ Monition of a squall
+ At sea!
+ HALL!
+
+ You pay no heed at all.
+ Nevertheless, O hardy mariner!
+ (A Snow-Bird brings this with our kindest love,)
+ We're sorry you prefer
+ Those frigid walks (ever so far above
+ The 80th parallel, we guess!)
+ To stocks, and tariffs, and domestic bliss;
+ Yes, yes,
+ Captain, we're sorry it has come to this!
+
+ Why do you madly thirst
+ For grog that's chopped up with a hatchet? say!
+ And tell us of the first
+ Strange thought which spurred you to go up that way!
+ Was it the hope that on some icy coast
+ (Frozen, yourself, almost!)
+ You'd have the luck to meet poor FRANKLIN'S ghost?
+
+ And has it seemed, sometimes,
+ That drowning might be pleasanter up there
+ Among the icebergs, native to those climes,
+ Than where
+ The surf breaks gently on some coral-reef,
+ And sirens sweetly soothe one's slow despair?
+ Say, was that your belief?
+
+ And who is BENT?[*]
+ Why was _he_ sent,
+ With his Warm Currents wheeling round the Pole?
+ A long, long race must his disciples run:
+ No sun,
+ No fun,
+ No chance to toss a word to any one;
+ And what a goal?
+
+ As hopefully you munch
+ The flinty biscuit, watching whale or seal,
+ Or listening, undaunted, to the crunch
+ Of ice-floes at the keel,
+ Say, Sir Intrepid! shall you really think
+ You pioneer the navies of the world?
+ Not while the chink
+ Of well-housed dollars sounds so pleasantly,
+ And safer tracks map out the treacherous sea!
+ If that's your dream, oh! let your sails be furled.
+
+ But, no!
+ It is not this! Your spirit, high and bold,
+ Scorning all tamer joys, will have it so!
+ No cold
+ Can chill its ardor! Such a soul would sate
+ Its deathless craving in some lofty flight,
+ Some deed sublime, and read its shining fate
+ By the Aurora's light!
+ For fruitful fellowship, it seeks the wild,
+ The frozen waste,
+ Where the world's venturous heroes--reconciled
+ To sunless, shuddering gloom--
+ To joyless solitude--with ardor taste
+ Their dread delights! and so at last find room,
+ 'Mid nodding icebergs, for their watery tomb!
+
+ For this, we spare you,
+ O dauntless HALL! Once having breathed that air
+ So pure, so fresh, so rare!
+ And caught the wildness of the Esquimaux,
+ We declare you
+ Unfit to live where beans and lettuce grow!
+ Leave delving to the little pitiful mole,
+ Great soul!
+ And now, then, for the Pole!
+
+[Footnote *: Captain BENT, of Cincinnati, originator of the new theory
+of Polar Currents.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: FINANCIAL RELIEF
+
+MR. BUMBLE BOUTWELL TO MRS. CORNEY FISH. _(See Oliver Twist.)_ "THE GREAT
+PRINCIPLE OF FINANCIAL RELIEF IS TO GIVE THE BUSINESS MEN EXACTLY WHAT
+THEY DON'T WANT: THEN THEY GET TIRED OF COMING."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CONDENSED CONGRESS.
+
+SENATE.
+
+MR. SUMNER said he was the friend of the oppressed. That, as was well
+known, was his regular business. Unfortunately, the Fifteenth Amendment
+had rendered the colored man incapable of being hereafter regarded as an
+oppressed creature. He was sorry, but it could not be helped. He was
+therefore forced to go down the chromatic scale of creation and find
+another class of clients. He found them in cattle. HOMER had sung about
+the ox-eyed Juno, and WALTER WHITMAN about bob veal. COWPER had remarked
+that he would not number in his list of friends the man who needlessly
+set foot upon a cow. He mentioned these things merely to show that
+railway companies had no right to starve cattle. He proposed an
+amendment to the Constitution, to provide that a dinner of at least
+three courses should be given to cows daily. Mr. DRAKE was heartily in
+favor of the proposition. He had got his feet in a web, so to speak, by
+paddling in the political waters of Missouri, and some people had gone
+so far as to call him "quack." He demanded redress.
+
+Mr. WILSON didn't see the use of all this legislation to protect
+animals. Animals had no votes, although he admitted a partial exception,
+in that every bull, it had its ballot. But he had something practical.
+Here was a jolly job, the Pacific Railway grant. There was a good deal
+more in it than they had made out of any other GRANT. Mr. THURMAN'S
+suggestion, that this land ought to be occupied by actual settlers, he
+scorned. "Actual settlers" were of a great deal more use to him in
+Massachusetts, where they could vote for him, than in the territories,
+where that boon would not be extended to them. It was much better that
+they should be occupied by imaginary settlers, who could pay and not
+vote. Actual "settlings" were the dregs of humanity.
+
+The Georgia bill came up, as it does every day with much more regularity
+than luncheon. The Senate has succeeded in muddling it to that degree of
+unintelligibility that nobody has the slightest notion what it provides.
+It is, therefore, in a condition to give rise to infinite debate. After
+several senators had said enough for a foundation for thirty columns
+each in the _Globe,_ they let it go for the present. The present was the
+one promised by Senator WILSON in return for the Pacific Railway grab
+grant.
+
+HOUSE.
+
+The House is given over to the tariff. A very indelicate discussion has
+been had upon corsets. Mr. BROOKS was of opinion that the corset would
+tariff it were subjected to any more strain in the way of duties. Mr.
+MARSHALL remarked that the corset avoided a great deal of Waist. It was
+whalebone of his bone, or something of that sort. It was one of the main
+Stays of our social system.
+
+Mr. SCHENCK made another speech. He ripped up the foreign corset in a
+truculent manner. He said that American corsets were far superior, only
+American women had not the sense to see it. The effect of taking off the
+duty on corsets would be to take off the corsets.
+
+Mr. BROOKS called the hooks and ayes on the corsets. Mr. SCHENCK opposed
+the call. He had found a simple tape much preferable. He wished a
+coffer-dam might be put upon the roaring BROOKS.
+
+Somebody at this point brought up a contested election case; but Mr.
+LOGAN objected to its being considered. What, he asked, was the use of
+wasting time? There was money in the tariff. There was no money at all
+in voting a Democrat out, and a Republican in. They could do that any
+day in five minutes. His friend Mr. BUTLER had recently remarked, one
+Democrat more or less made no difference. But Mr. BUTLER forgot that the
+larger the majority, the larger the divisor for spoils, and therefore
+the smaller the quotient and the "dividend." He did not know much about
+arithmetic. He had never been at West Point; but he believed that a
+million dollars, for instance, would go further and fare worse among two
+hundred men than among three. If the House were not careful, there would
+be a glut of Republicans in it, and the shares would be pitifully
+meagre. As for him, he had a great mind, (derisive cheers)--he repeated,
+that he had a great mind to vote for a Democrat next time.
+
+In spite of Mr. LOGAN'S warning, the House voted in a couple or so of
+Republicans, and then resumed the duty on wool.
+
+Mr. Cox thought this wool had been pulled over the eyes of the house
+often enough. It reminded him of an expedition, of which Mr. LOGAN had
+never heard, in search of a "Golden Fleece."
+
+Mr. JENCKES, and Mr. SCHENCK, and Mr. KELLEY called him to order in
+behalf of their constituents, who were in the wool business, and said
+that "wool" in one form or another had always been the staple of their
+political career.
+
+Mr. BUTLER said he had a little game worth two of that. He wanted to buy
+San Domingo. In this there were plenty of commissions, and hundreds of
+thousands of colored votes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+FIFTEENTH AMENDMENT.
+
+ALDERMANIC RECEPTION UP-TOWN.
+
+ CAESAR, walk in! Ah POMPEY! how d'e do?
+ This way, CLEM! Gentlemen, please walk right through!
+ GEORGE, how's your mother? Fine day, PETE--fine day!
+ Well, how are things down there at Oyster Bay?
+
+ Ah AUNTIE! how's your rheumatiz, this spring?
+ Well, Mr. JOHNSON, did you try that sling?
+ Why, this is Uncle STEVE! How-do-you-do.
+ Uncle? Sit down. What can I do for you?
+
+ Well, Mr. PRINCE! You must be busy, now.
+ Whitewashing is the best thing done, I vow!
+ Why, hel-lo! REGIS! From the Cape so soon?
+ When do you open, this year--first of June?
+
+ Come, gentlemen--some wine? Now, don't refuse!
+ What! temperate? teetotal? Well, that's news!
+ And good news, too! Well, coffee, then. You see,
+ My friends, the _sentiment's_ the thing with me.
+
+ The real Mocha, AUNTIE! Simon pure!
+ Raised by free Arabs. For I can't endure
+ A single thing that's flavored with a Wrong!
+ Yes, AUNTIE, you are right, I've "come out strong!"
+
+ So have the Colored People, I may say!
+ (One fact explains the other, up this way!)
+ They've proved their strength! It's settled, sure as a gun,
+ That every Colored Voter now counts One!
+
+ Now, gentlemen, you'll be surprised to find
+ So many people with your turn of mind!
+ But, sure as tricks! remember what I say--
+ You'll learn some things before Election Day!
+
+ POMPEY--'twon't take much time, (and you can spare it!)
+ Try this old fiddle, picked up in the garret!
+ Good? It's your fiddle! AUNTIE, here's a pound
+ Of that same genuine Mocha, ready ground!
+
+ Say, Uncle STEVE, I've got a fish for you,
+ Down at the market. Call again, PETE; do!
+ I'll have a job for you and CAESAR soon:
+ It's only waiting for a change of moon.
+
+ CLEM, how'd you like a chance to wait on table?
+ Or, would you rather drive, and run my stable?
+ GEORGE, in the kitchen there's a pan of souse!
+ Going? All gone? Now, BRIDGET, air the house!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Historic Parallel.
+
+THE JACK CADE movement came near destroying London. The Ar-Cade movement
+threatens to destroy Broadway.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: A CHEAP LUXURY.
+
+SNIFFLES LOVES THE SMELL OF ROASTED CHESTNUTS, AND ENJOYS IT FOR HOURS
+EVERY DAY; BUT HE NEVER EATS ANY--WHICH ACCOUNTS FOR THE JOYOUS EXPRESSION
+ON THE FACE OF THE VENDER.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BUSINESS.
+
+A CHICAGO LAY.
+
+ I saw her sweet lip quiver,
+ As he started for the store.
+ Because he hadn't kissed her
+ "Several" times or more.
+
+ She cried "This horrid business!"
+ And then flew to her glass;
+ "Oh! why his cold remissness?
+ Have I grown plain, alas?"
+
+ But no, that truthful article
+ Revealed her charms intact,
+ She hadn't lost one particle,
+ But had improved, in fact.
+
+ At nine the case was opened,
+ At ten the case was o'er;
+ The jury brought their virdict--
+ She was his wife no more.
+
+ That night the husband started,
+ And--"_you_ bet"--he swore,
+ To find his wife departed,
+ And "_To Let_" on the door.
+
+ Next day he moved and married.
+ And, that his bride might stay,
+ He kissed her every morning
+ Before he went away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Pot-umania.
+
+A correspondent writes that a new mania has sprung up among the ladies
+of Edinburgh--a fancy for learning to cook. There is a much older mania
+in some parts of that country--a fancy for something to cook.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+About a Foot.
+
+A BOOT when it's on.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+IMPORTANT TO PUBLISHERS.
+
+One of our corps of Philosophers (a trifle visionary, perhaps) has been
+speculating as to certain possible (or, perhaps, impossible) results
+flowing from the practice among publishers of ante-dating their monthly
+issues. Thus, supposing that the world should be destroyed by fire (and
+why not? it is bad enough) on the 15th of May, 1870, and a cover of,
+say, _Putnam's_ for June, carried up by an air-current, should, after
+floating about ever so long in space, finally descend on some friendly
+planet--we will say, Venus. Here it would naturally get picked up by an
+archaeologist, (who would be on the spot looking out for it,) and the
+interesting relic would be promptly and reverently deposited among the
+other Vestiges of Creation, in the Royal Cabinet. In the course of
+years, some historian would probably have occasion to turn over these
+curiosities, and would presently light on the scorched but still legible
+waif. "Why," says he, in astonishment, "I thought the earth was burnt on
+the 15th of May! To be sure, it was _in the night_, and nobody saw it
+go, [think of that, conceited Worldling!] but it was missed by somebody
+the day after. But here we have a document from the late unfortunate
+planet dated the first of June!"
+
+Of course, upon this the History of the Universe would have to be
+rewritten, or that odd fortnight would play the mischief somewhere!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A Boston Boy.
+
+HUB-BUB.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Curses Come Home to Roost."
+
+They are putting the Fifth Avenue pavement in front of the City Hall.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+To Politicians.
+
+Will the working of the Fifteenth Amendment oblige a candidate to show
+his Color before election?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So We Go!
+
+We notice, with much agitation and a reasonable amount of grief, that
+somebody in Philadelphia (possibly Miss ANNA DICKINSON) has invented a
+machine for the laundry called The King Washer! A few years ago it would
+have been The Queen Washer; but in these days the name seems to indicate
+that to Man, unhappy Man, will speedily be committed the destinies of
+the weekly washing. Oh! the rubbing, the rinsing, the wringing. But Mr.
+PUNCHINELLO has already communicated to Mrs. PUNCHINELLO his sentiments
+upon this subject. Under no circumstances will he get at the family
+linen. He must make a stand somewhere, and he makes it here.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Let them Bark.
+
+Miss BARKALOW has been admitted to practice at the bar in St. Louis. We
+have frequently before seen young ladies at a bar, where others
+practiced more than they did; but we do not see why, if Miss BARKALOW
+wishes to bark aloud, she should not be allowed to bark, aloud or
+otherwise. Barking may be particularly good in a cross-examination; but
+we presume that a lady attorney's bark will be always worse than her
+bite.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"She Stoops to Conquer."
+
+The girl with the Grecian Bend.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Query.
+
+Is it allowable for a Temperance man to be Cordial to his friends?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Weak as Water.
+
+Our cynical friend A. QUARIUS writes us from Philadelphia, that
+considering the manner in which the Sunday liquor law is enforced in
+that city, he thinks his native place is still entitled--perhaps more
+than ever entitled to be called the city of Rye-tangles. This is
+ungrateful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+SPIRITUAL SUSCEPTIBILITY OF CATS.
+
+DEAR PUNCHINELLO: Our Society has been very learnedly debating as to
+whether Cats are susceptible of spiritual impressions; and, although the
+burden of opinion inclines to the negative of the question, I am firmly
+persuaded there is much to justify a contrary judgment.
+
+As I slept the other night, neither dreaming nor holding psychological
+intercourse of any description with outsiders, I was awakened suddenly
+about the first hour of the morning by a noise. I am quite certain it
+was a noise, and have therefore no hesitation in so recording it. The
+new moon hung athwart the western sky, and a few fleecy clouds were
+chasing each other like snow-drifts across the blue vault of the night.
+I may likewise note the fact that the stars were doing what they usually
+do, notwithstanding the difference of opinion that sometimes exists as
+to what that is. It was the evening after "wash-day," and family linen,
+in graceful curves and undulating outlines, everywhere met the eye as it
+turned from contemplating the stars to contemplating the clothes-lines
+in the gardens. But I wander. The noise? Ah! yes. Well, it was not like
+the collision of two hard substances, but rather of the heavy "thud"
+order of sound, like the descent of a solid into a soft substance; say,
+for instance, of a flat-iron into a jar of unrisen buck-wheat batter. I
+glanced along the ghostly battalions of family linen; along the fences
+traversed by feline sentries; along the latticed arbors; but nothing to
+indicate the origin of the alarm could be discovered, and as at that
+moment a breeze stirred in the apartment, producing a chilling
+sensation, I thought it prudent to jump back into bed.
+
+Next morning, upon making my usual visit to note the progress of the
+early bulbs in the flower-beds, I encountered at the further end of the
+garden the remains of a cat--a portly and ancient grimalkin of the
+sterner sex. Close at hand was a bottle lying face downward, and corked.
+I raised it--first in my hands, and then to my lips. The cork fell out,
+accidentally as it were, and, as a consequence, death. "Poor thing!" I
+murmured; "poor--" and a portion of the contents glided carelessly down
+my throat. I perceived that the liquid was "Old Rye." As I stooped down,
+tears would have come to my eyes; but it was useless, seeing that the
+breath had left the unfortunate's body. Nevertheless, I rested my hand a
+moment upon his head, and then glided it in a semi-professional manner
+along the line of dorsal elevation, until I came to a deep depression in
+his backbone, which corresponded exactly with the convexity of the
+bottle. Then I saw at once how it was; this missile, (in the heat of
+passion, being mistaken for an empty one, probably,) had been hurled by
+some treacherous hand upon the unsuspecting Tom, striking him midway
+between the root of the tail and the base of the brain, causing instant
+suspension of his vertebral communications, "Poor thing! You were the
+victim of a Catastrophe. You were also the victim of the bottle. The
+'Rye' was too heavy for you, and should have been drawn milder." This
+said, I turned sadly away to find a burial spade, and it then occurred
+to me that this little incident was kindly meant to confirm my view that
+cats are susceptible, even to a fatal extent, of spiritual
+impressions--especially when conveyed by spirits of "Old Rye."
+
+GOBBO.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the Tombs.
+
+When a drunken man has been locked up for beating his wife, it is
+reasonable to suppose that he must feel rather the worse for lick her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Illustration: PERSONAL GOSSIP.
+
+(From the Daily Press.)
+
+"A SON OF ONE OF OUR WEALTHIEST RESIDENTS DISPLAYS GREAT TALENTS AS A
+SCULPTOR. HE IS BUT NINE YEARS OLD."]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A BIT OF NATURAL HISTORY.
+
+Naturalists tell us that the _Aye-aye_ is a small animal of Madagascar,
+with sharp teeth, long claws, and a tail; which eats whatever it can
+grab, and says nothing day or night but _aye-aye_. Now, we find that,
+AGASSIZ to the contrary notwithstanding, this strange and not very
+useful animal is indigenous to the State of Pennsylvania. It especially
+frequents Harrisburg; and may be seen and heard any day there, in the
+Senate or House. Being an active member of that House, your
+correspondent has been present during the passage of three hundred bills
+within a week or two, in about one hundred and ten of which he had some
+personal interest.
+
+Lifting his eyes one day from his newspaper, when the Speaker took the
+vote on an "Act to amend the Incorporation of the City of Philadelphia,"
+which your correspondent happened to know included the presentation of a
+three-story brownstone front to each of a committee of six members of
+the House, he found there was not one member in his seat; but, in the
+place of a few, there was a company of these remarkable _Aye-ayes_,
+responding duly to the call for a vote; but never a _no_ among them. No,
+no!
+
+Now, your correspondent holds the deliberate opinion that, in several
+respects, these aforesaid small animals of Madagascar might be an
+improvement upon the average Pennsylvania legislators. And, if your
+correspondent had to do with getting up the other one hundred and ninety
+bills, as he did the one hundred and ten, all right: Otherwise, _not_.
+How does PUNCHINELLO regard it?
+
+Yours, LEGISLATOR.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An Augean Job.
+
+PUNCHINELLO has telegraphed to Governor GEARY his approval of the
+"Sewage Utilization" bill at Harrisburg, on one condition: that the
+first piece of work be finished up by the members of the Pennsylvania
+Legislature with their own hands; that work to be, to make up into
+_decent_ manure, _deodorized_ and _disinfected_, all bills passed at the
+late session of their House and Senate. Since, however, complete
+deodorization is probably _impossible_, PUNCHINELLO advises also that
+the said members be required to cart all their stuff out to the Bad
+Lands of Nebraska, and remain there to make the best use of it; or else
+make a contract with Captain HALL to ship it and them to the Arctic
+regions at once.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the Finances.
+
+Says Crispin, "Did not somebody say it was BOUTWELL in the Treasury now?
+A great mistake. About well, to be sure! When the newspaper men have
+111-1/2 of gold, and I haven't a round dollar! Where did they get it?
+And then the legal tender question. I never asked but _one_ tender
+question in all my life, and that was to SUSAN and she said, Yes. And
+then we were legally married. Nobody ought to ask such questions _out
+loud_; it's not _decent_. And _fine answering_ an't much better.
+Financiering, is it? Ah! well. _Specious assumption_, too; but that
+requires brass, and I want _gold_. Meantime, who's got a twenty-five
+cent note?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Massachusetts Flats.
+
+Massachusetts must abound in Flats. Its Legislature is annually agitated
+from the sands of Cape Cod to the hills of Berkshire over the question.
+It is said to be wisdom to set a rogue to catch a rogue. Is it equally
+so to set a flat to catch one?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NATIONAL TAXIDERMY.
+
+[Illustration 'P']
+
+PUNCHINELLO has for some time past carefully considered the subject of
+our national tariff of imposts, (_that is to say, he happened to see, in
+a Tribune, the other day, that lucifer matches were now to be stamped
+separately, and not by the box, as heretofore_) and he has come to the
+conclusion, after duly weighing in his mind all the arguments for and
+against the present system of taxation, (_that is to say, he made up his
+mind the minute he read the article_,) that what the present tariff
+needs, is a more thorough application and a better classification; or,
+what the technologists call Taxonomy, which term is suggested to him by
+a work on the subject which he has been recently studying. (_That is to
+say, he looked in the dictionary to find out what Taxidermy meant, and
+seeing Taxonomy there, snapped it up for a sort of collateral pun_.) As
+an illustration of what our impost legislators (or imposters) ought to
+be, let us take the Taxidermist. He is one who takes from an animal
+every thing but his skin and bones, and stuffs him up afterward with all
+sorts of nonsense. Now, our National Taxidermists ought to take a lesson
+from their original. Many of the good people of the United States have
+much more left them than their skin and bones. Why is not all that
+taken? The condition of the ordinary stuffed animal of the shops is
+strikingly significant of what should be expected of loyal communities.
+(_That is to say, communities which vote a certain ticket which need not
+be named here_.) It is often said that there are things which flesh and
+blood will not bear. Now, a thorough system of Taxidermy remedies all
+this. A stuffed 'possum, for instance, having no flesh or blood, will
+bear any thing. When the people of this country are thoroughly cleaned
+out, they will be just as docile. Among the things which PUNCHINELLO
+would recommend as fit subjects of taxation, is a man's expenses. They
+have not been taxed yet. If he pays for his income, why not for his
+outgoes? The immense sums that are annually expended in this country for
+this, that, and the other thing ought certainly to yield a revenue to
+the government. (_That is to say, there ought to be a new army of
+collectors and assessors appointed. P. knows lots of good men out of
+office_.) And then there's a man's time. Why not tax that? Nearly every
+man spends a lot of time, and he ought to pay for it. As it would be our
+tax, it could not be a very minute tax, although it is only the second
+tax which we have suggested. (_That is to say--- something pun-ny_.) And
+besides these things, there's energy. We often hear of a man's energies
+being taxed; but, so far as the matter is apparent to the naked eye, it
+is difficult to see whose energies are taxed for the good of the
+government at the present day. This subject should certainly be
+investigated. (_That is to say, a committee of Congressmen should be
+appointed, with power to send for persons, papers, and extra
+compensation_.) Politics, too. Every man has his politics, (_that is to
+say, every man except Bennett_,) and they ought to be taxed, if for no
+other reason than the great impetus the measure would give to the
+erection of fences throughout the land. And letters, too. If every one
+sent by the mail should yield one cent to the Treasury, how the currency
+would be inflated in that locality! (_That is to say, in the locality to
+which the collectors would abscond_.) But it is impossible, with the
+limited time at his disposal, for PUNCHINELLO to enter into a full
+examination and elucidation of this subject. (_That is to say, he can't
+think of any more illustrations just now, and the printer wouldn't stand
+any more, if he could_.) But it must be admitted that the great task of
+opening up the country, of which we hear so much, will never be complete
+until the Washington skinners and stuffers get us all into the prepared
+specimen condition. (_That is to say, when the people are all willing
+to_ "_dry up_.")
+
+ * * * * *
+
+JOHN CHINAMAN'S BILLING AND COOING.--Pigeon English.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+CABLE NEWS.
+
+(EXCLUSIVELY FOR PUNCHINELLO.)
+
+QUEEN ISABELLA has sent her compliments to Senor CASTELAR, as well as to
+General PRIM, informing them that, on the whole, she thinks she will
+_not_ return to the throne of Spain. It does not agree with her quiet
+and refined tastes and habits to live so much in public. All she wants
+now is a little _chateau en Espagne_. She proposes to send her son,
+Prince of ASTURIAS, to Professor CASTELAR, to study modern history. Is
+it not odd, by the way, that a country so long _Mad-rid-den_ as Spain,
+should have now a governor with such a name as PRIM? But, what's in a
+name? BOURBON, by any other name, would smell as sweet. Some, however,
+prefer Old Rye. I prefer _water_ to both; _especially_ to BOURBON.
+
+It's an old story that _two positives make a negative_. Paris news tells
+us that a late will case has exemplified this. COMTE, you know, was a
+_positive_ philosopher. He had a positive wife. She had a will of her
+own. He wrote a will of his own. Consequently, it got into court. Mme.
+COMTE it seems, who did not agree with the philosophy while the
+philosopher lived, wanted his MSS. after his death. Positively, the
+court did not see it in that light; and so the negative came out. It was
+a case of no go, or _non-ego_, as HEGEL might have called it. Did you
+ever read HEGEL? I didn't; and I advise you not to begin. It won't pay.
+I am told that he divided all things into Egos, She goes, and Non-egos,
+or No-goes. The latter particularly; So do I.
+
+But to return to Spain; or rather to Paris. Don FRANCOIS D'ASSISSI has,
+it appears, suddenly discovered that his wife is not Queen of Spain so
+much as she was. Much less so. So, he has found her company rather
+expensive than agreeable; and proposes to abdicate it. Not so _very_
+much of an ass, is he? Bravo for Don FRANCOIS!
+
+In London, _to-morrow_ will be made famous in literature by _the_ great
+dinner in honor of the advent of PUNCHINELLO. Mr. PUNCH is talked of to
+preside. An unprecedented rush for tickets has begun. More about it in
+my next.
+
+PRIME.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cutting.
+
+We see extensively advertised the "Saxon Razor;" but have not yet
+summoned up sufficient courage to try this article, which "no
+gentleman's dressing-case should be without." We cannot dispossess our
+minds of the apprehension of cutting ourselves, remembering that line
+descriptive of the combat between FITZ-JAMES and RODERICK DHU, in which
+it is said, that,
+
+ "----thrice the Saxon blade drank blood."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Musical.
+
+The vocal abilities of hens are admitted; but they rarely attempt the
+Chro-matic scale.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+De Jure.
+
+No man can now be a juror who knows any thing about the case which he is
+to try. Thus a juryman was challenged in the MCFARLAND case merely
+because he belonged to Dr. BELLOWS's church. It was held that he might
+possibly have got Wind of the matter while listening to the Doctor's
+discourse.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+BOOK NOTICES.
+
+AN OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT. Boston: ROBERTS BROTHERS.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+The author of "Little Women" seeks, and not without success, to draw
+from her "Old-Fashioned Girl" a contrast and a moral. She presents to
+our view two young ladies of opposite "styles." One is fresh and rural:
+the other isn't. The difference between country and city bringing-up is
+the point aimed at; and the difference is about as great as that between
+the warbling of woodside birds and the jingle of one of OFFENBACH'S
+tunes on a corner barrel-organ. The book is neatly set forth, with
+illustrations by Messrs. ROBERTS, BROTHERS, of Boston.
+
+RED AS A ROSE IS SHE. By the author of "Cometh up as a Flower," etc.
+New-York: D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+A readable book, notwithstanding that there are several naughty
+characters in it, or perhaps _because_ there are. Probably it depicts
+with truth the kind of society presented. If so, all the worse for
+society. Shall we never again have healthful, virtuous novels of the old
+school, such as "Tom Jones?" The book is published in tasteful form by
+Messrs. D. APPLETON & Co.
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. STEWART & CO. |
+ | |
+ | ARE OFFERING |
+ | |
+ | Extraordinary Inducements, |
+ | |
+ | IN PRICE, STYLE, AND QUALITY, |
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+ | |
+ | DAMASKS, NAPKINS, TOWELLINGS, |
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+ | FLANNELS, BLANKETS, QUILTS, |
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+ | COUNTERPANES, SHEETINGS, |
+ | |
+ | Bleached and Brown Cottons, |
+ | |
+ | Standard American Prints, etc., etc. |
+ | |
+ | BROADWAY, |
+ | |
+ | 4th Ave., 9th and 10th Sts. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | A. T. Stewart & Co. |
+ | |
+ | HAVE OPENED A LARGE ASSORTMENT OF |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' PARIS MADE DRESSES |
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+ | Children's Cloaks, Ladies' Breakfast Jackets, |
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+ | Ladies' Pique, Swiss, and Cambric |
+ | |
+ | Morning Robes and Walking Suits, |
+ | |
+ | LADIES' UNDERGARMENTS |
+ | |
+ | Of every description. |
+ | |
+ | French, German, and Domestic Corsets, |
+ | |
+ | Woven and hand-made. |
+ | |
+ | JUST RECEIVED. |
+ | |
+ | AT EXTREMELY ATTRACTIVE PRICES, |
+ | |
+ | 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 grammar, 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 |
+ | me 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 |
+ | 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 THE VARIOUS ORDERS, |
+ | WITH A DESCRIPTION OF THE HABITS AND ECONOMY OF THE MOST |
+ | INTERESTING. |
+ | By Louis Figuler. Illustrated with 307 wood-cuts. 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-ROOK 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. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | HENRY L. STEPHENS |
+ | |
+ | ARTIST, |
+ | |
+ | No. 160 Fulton Street, |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | Important to Newsdealers! |
+ | |
+ | ALL ORDERS FOR |
+ | |
+ | PUNCHINELLO |
+ | |
+ | Will be supplied by |
+ | |
+ | OUR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE AGENTS, |
+ | |
+ | American News Co. |
+ | |
+ | NEW YORK. |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | J. NICKINSON |
+ | |
+ | BEGS TO ANNOUNCE TO THE FRIENDS OF |
+ | |
+ | "PUNCHINELLO" |
+ | |
+ | RESIDING IN THE COUNTRY, THAT, |
+ | |
+ | FOR THEIR CONVENIENCE |
+ | |
+ | HE HAS MADE ARRANGEMENTS BY WHICH, ON RECEIPT OF THE PRICE |
+ | OF |
+ | |
+ | ANY STANDARD BOOK PUBLISHED, |
+ | |
+ | THE SAME WILL BE FORWARDED, POSTAGE PAID. |
+ | |
+ | Parties desiring Catalogues of any of our Publishing Houses, |
+ | can have the same forwarded by inclosing two stamps. |
+ | |
+ | OFFICE OF PUNCHINELLO PUBLISHING CO., 83 Nassau Street. |
+ | |
+ | [P. O. Box 2783.] |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: A SUCCESSFUL CATCH.
+
+_John Bull._ "WELL, GENERAL, HOW DID YOU CATCH YOUR FISH?"
+
+ _General Prim._ "WITH A SPANISH FLY."]
+
+
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | |
+ | 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 excellence 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._ |
+ | |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+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 the Project Gutenberg EBook of Punchinello, Vol. 1, No. 5, April 30,
+1870, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PUNCHINELLO, VOL. 1, NO. 5 ***
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