THE NEW COAL STOVE.
We never had a coal stove around the
house until last Saturday. Have always used pine
slabs and pieces of our neighbor’s fence.
They burn well, too, but the fence got all burned
up, and the neighbor said he wouldn’t build
a new one, so we went down to Jones’ and got
a coal stove.
After supper we took a piece of ice
and rubbed our hands warm, and went in where that
stove was, resolved to make her draw and burn if it
took all the pine fence in the first Ward. Our
better-half threw a quilt over her, and shiveringly
remarked that she never knew what real solid comfort
was until she got a coal stove.
Stung by the sarcasm in her remark,
we turned every dingus on the stove that was movable,
or looked like it had anything to do with the draft,
and pretty soon the stove began to heave up heat.
It was not long before she stuttered like the new
Silsby steamer. Talk about your heat! In
ten minutes that room was as much worse than a Turkish
bath as Hades is hotter than Liverman’s ice-house.
The perspiration fairly fried out of a tin water cooler
in the next room. We opened the doors, and snow
began to melt as far up Vine street as Hanscombe’s
house, and people all round the neighborhood put on
linen clothes. And we couldn’t stop the
confounded thing.
We forgot what Jones told us about
the dampers, and she kept a biling. The only
thing we could do was to go to bed, and leave the thing
to burn the house up if it wanted to. We stood
off with a pole and turned the damper every way, and
at every turn she just sent out heat enough to roast
an ox. We went to bed, supposing that the coal
would eventually burn out, but about 12 o’clock
the whole family had to get up and sit on the fence.
Finally a man came along who had been
brought up among coal stoves, and he put a wet blanket
over him and crept up to the stove and turned the proper
dingus, and she cooled off, and since that time has
been just as comfortable as possible. If you
buy a coal stove you got to learn how to engineer
it, or you may get roasted.
PECKS BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA IS DISCOURAGED.
“Say, you leave here mighty
quick,” said the grocery man to the bad boy,
as he came in, with his arm in a sling, and backed
up against the stove to get warm. “Everything
has gone wrong since you got to coming here, and I
think you are a regular Jonah. I find sand in
my sugar, kerosene in the butter, the codfish is all
picked off, and there is something wrong every time
you come here. Now you leave.”
“I aint no Joner,” said
the boy as he wiped his nose on his coat sleeve, and
reached into a barrel for a snow apple. “I
never swallered no whale. Say, do you believe
that story about Joner being in the whale’s belly,
all night? I don’t. The minister was
telling about it at Sunday school last Sunday, and
asked me what I thought Joner was doing while he was
in there, and I told him I interpreted the story this
way, that the whale was fixed up inside with upper
and lower berths, like a sleeping car, and Joner had
a lower berth, and the porter made up the berth as
soon as Joner came in with his satchel, and Joner
pulled off his boots and gave them to the porter to
black, and put his watch under the pillow and turned
in. The boys in Sunday school all laffed, and
the minister said I was a bigger fool than Pa was,
and that was useless. If you go back on me, now,
I won’t have a friend, except my chum and a
dog, and I swear, by my halidom, that I never put
no sand in your sugar, or kerosene in your butter.
I admit the picking off of the codfish, but you can
charge it to Pa, the same as you did the eggs that
I pushed my chum over into last summer, though I thought
you did wrong in charging Christmas prices for dog
days eggs. When my chum’s Ma scraped his
pants she said there was not an egg represented on
there that was less than two years old. The Sunday
school folks have all gone back on me, since I put
kyan pepper on the stove, when they were singing ‘Little
Drops of Water,’ and they all had to go out doors
and air themselves, but I didn’t mean to let
the pepper drop on the stove. I was just holding
it over the stove to warm it, when my chum hit the
funny bone of my elbow. Pa says I am a terror
to cats. Every time Pa says anything, it gives
me a new idea. I tell you Pa has got a great brain,
but sometimes he don’t have it with him.
When he said I was a terror to cats I thought what
fun there is in cats, and me and my chum went to stealing
cats right off, and before night we had eleven cats
caged. We had one in a canary bird cage, three
in Pa’s old hat boxes, three in Ma’s band
box, four in valises, two in a trunk, and the rest
in a closet up stairs.
“That night Pa said he wanted
me to stay home because the committee that is going
to get up a noyster supper in the church was going
to meet at our house, and they might want to send
me on errands. I asked him if my chum couldn’t
stay too, ’cause he is the healthiest infant
to run after errands that ever was, and Pa said he
could stay, but we must remember that there musn’t
be no monkey business going on. I told him there
shouldn’t be no monkey business, but I didn’t
promise nothing about cats. Well, sir, you’d
a dide. The committee was in the library by the
back stairs, and me and my chum got the cat boxes
all together, at the top of the stairs, and we took
them all out and put them in a clothes basket, and
just as the minister was speaking, and telling what
a great good was done by these oyster sociables,
in bringing the young people together, and taking their
minds from the wickedness of the world, and turning
their thoughts into different channels, one of the
old tom cats in the basket gave a ‘purmeow’
that sounded like the wail of a lost soul, or a challenge
to battle. I told my chum that we couldn’t
hold the bread-board over the clothes basket much
longer, when two or three cats began to yowl, and the
minister stopped talking and Pa told Ma to open the
stair door and tell the hired girl to see what was
the matter up there. She thought our cat had got
shut up in the storm door, and she opened the stair
door to yell to the girl, and then I pushed the clothes
basket, cats and all down the back stairs. Well,
sir, I suppose no committee for a noyster supper, was
ever more astonished. I heard Ma fall over a
willow rocking chair, and say, ‘scat,’
and I heard Pa say, ‘well. I’m dam’d,’
and a girl that sings in the choir say, ‘Heavens,
I am stabbed,’ then my chum and me ran to the
front of the house and come down the front stairs
looking as innocent as could be, and we went in the
library, and I was just going to tell Pa if there was
any errands he wanted run my chum and me was just
aching to run them, when a yellow cat without any
tail was walking over the minister, and Pa was throwing
a hassock at two cats that were clawing each other
under the piano, and Ma was trying to get her frizzes
back on her head, and the choir girl was standing
on the lounge with her dress pulled up, trying to
scare cats with her striped stockings, and the minister
was holding his hands up, and I guess he was asking
a blessing on the cats, and my chum opened the front
door and all the cats went out. Pa and Ma looked
at me, and I said it wasn’t me, and the minister
wanted to know how so much cat hair got on my coat
and vest, and I said a cat met me in the hall and
kicked me, and Ma cried, and Pa said ‘that boy
beats hell,’ and the minister said, I would
be all right if I had been properly brought up, and
then Ma was mad, and the committee broke up. Well,
to tell the honest truth Pa basted me, and yanked
me around until I had to have my arm in a sling, but
what’s the use of making such a fuss about a
few cats. Ma said she never wanted to have my
company again, ’cause I spoiled everything.
But I got even with Pa for basting me, this morning,
and I dassent go home. You see Ma has got a great
big bath sponge as big as a chair cushion, and this
morning I took the sponge and filled it with warm water,
and took the feather cushion out of the chair Pa sits
in at the table, and put the sponge in its place,
and covered it over with the cushion cover, and when
we all got set down to the table Pa came in and sat
down on it to ask a blessing. He started in by
closing his eyes and placing his hands up in front
of him like the letter V, and then he began to ask
that the food we were about to partake off be blessed,
and then he was going on to ask that all of us be
made to see the error of our ways, when he began to
hitch around, and he opened one eye and looked at me,
and I looked as pious as a boy can look when he knows
the pancakes are getting cold, and Pa he kind of sighed
and said ‘Amen’ sort of snappish, and he
got up and told Ma he didn’t feel well, and
she would have to take his place and pass around the
sassidge and potatoes, and he looked kind of scart
and went out with his hand on his pistol pocket, as
though he would like to shoot, and Ma she got up and
went around and sat in Pa’s chair. The sponge
didn’t hold more than half a pail full of water,
and I didn’t want to play no joke on Ma, cause
the cats nearly broke her up, but she sat down and
was just going to help me, when she rung the bell
and called the hired girl, and said she felt as though
her neuralgia was coming on, and she would go to her
room, and told the girl to sit down and help Hennery.
The girl sat down and poured me out some coffee, and
then she said, ’Howly Saint Patrick, but I blave
those pancakes are burning,’ and she went out
in the kitchen. I drank my coffee, and then took
the big sponge out of the chair and put the cushion
in the place of it, and then I put the sponge in the
bath room, and I went up to Pa and Ma’s room,
and asked them if I should go after the doctor, and
Pa had changed his clothes and got on his Sunday pants,
and he said, ‘never mind the doctor, I guess
we will pull through,’ and for me to get out
and go to the devil, and I came over here. Say,
there is no harm in a little warm water, is there?
Well, I’d like to know what Pa and Ma and the
hired girl thought. I am the only real healthy
one there is in our family.”
THREE INCHES OF LEG.
Blanche Williams, of Philadelphia,
who met with an accident at Fairmount Water-works,
by which one leg was broken, and rendered three inches
shorter than the rest of her legs, has recovered $10,000
damages. It would seem, to the student of nature,
to be a pretty good price for three inches of ordinary
leg, but then some people will make such a fuss.
MORE DANGEROUS THAN KEROSENE.
The regular weekly murder is reported
from Peshtigo. Two men named Glass and Penrue,
got to quarreling about a girl, in a hay loft, over
a barn. Glass stabbed Penrue quite a number of
times and he died. There is nothing much more
dangerous, unless it is kerosene, than two men and
a girl, in a hay loft quarreling.
TEN DAYS IN LOVE.
There is a fearfully harrowing story
going the rounds of the papers headed “Ten Days
in Love.” It must have been dreadful, with
no Sunday, no day of rest, no holiday, just nothing
but love, for ten long days. By the way, did
the person live?
BOYS WILL BE BOYS.
Not many months ago there was a meeting
of ministers in Wisconsin, and after the holy work
in which they were engaged had been done up to the
satisfaction of all, a citizen of the place where the
conference was held invited a large number of them
to a collation at his house. After supper a dozen
of them adjourned to a room up stairs to have a quiet
smoke, as ministers sometimes do, when they got to
talking about old times, when they attended school
and were boys together, and The Sun man, who
was present, disguised as a preacher, came to the
conclusion that ministers were rather human than otherwise
when they are young.
One two-hundred pound delegate with
a cigar between his fingers, blew the smoke out of
the mouth which but a few hours before was uttering
a supplication to the Most High to make us all good,
punched a thin elder in the ribs with his thumb and
said: “Jim, do you remember the time we
carried the cow and calf up into the recitation room?”
For a moment “Jim” was inclined to stand
on his dignity, and he looked pained, until they all
began to laugh, when he looked around to see if any
worldly person was present, and satisfying himself
that we were all truly good, he said: “You
bet your life I remember it. I have got a scar
on my shin now where that d blessed cow
hooked me,” and he began to roll up his trouser
leg to show the scar. They told him they would
take his word, and he pulled down his pants and said:
“Well, you see I was detailed
to attend to the calf, and I carried the calf up stairs,
assisted by Bill Smith who is preaching
in Chicago; got a soft thing five thousand
a year, and a parsonage furnished, and keeps a team,
and if one of those horses is not a trotter then I
am no judge of horseflesh or of Bill, and if he don’t
put on an old driving coat and go out on the road
occasionally and catch on for a race with some wordly-minded
man, then I am another. You hear me well,
I never knew a calf was so heavy, and had so many
hind legs. Kick! Why, bless your old alabaster
heart, that calf walked all over me, from Genesis to
Revelations. And say, we didn’t get much
of a breeze the next morning, did we, when we had
to clean out the recitation room?”
A solemn-looking minister, with red
hair, who was present, and whose eyes twinkled some
through the smoke, said to another:
“Charlie, you remember you were
completely gone on the professor’s niece who
was visiting there from Poughkeepsie? What become
of her.”
Charlie put his feet on the table,
struck a match on his trousers, and said:
“Well, I wasn’t gone on
her, as you say, but just liked her. Not too
well, you know, but just well enough. She had
a color of hair that I could never stand just
the color of yours, Hank and when she got
to going with a printer I kind of let up, and they
were married. I understand he is editing a paper
somewhere in Illinois, and getting rich. It was
better for her, as now she has a place to live, and
does not have to board around like a country school
ma’am, as she would if she had married me.”
A dark haired man, with a coat buttoned
clear to the neck, and a countenance like a funeral
sermon, with no more expression than a wooden decoy
duck, who was smoking a briar-wood pipe that he had
picked up on a what-not that belonged to the host,
knocked the ashes out in a spittoon, and said:
“Boys, do you remember the time
we stole that three-seated wagon and went out across
the marsh to Kingsley’s farm, after watermelons?”
Four of them said they remembered
it well enough, and Jim said all he asked was to live
long enough to get even with Bill Smith, the Chicago
preacher, for suggesting to him to steal a bee-hive
on the trip. “Why,” said he, “before
I had got twenty feet with that hive, every bee in
it had stung me a dozen times. And do you remember
how we played it on the professor, and made him believe
that I had the chicken pox? O, gentlemen, a glorious
immortality awaits you beyond the grave for lying me
out of that scrape.”
The fat man hitched around uneasy
in his chair and said they all seemed to have forgotten
the principal event of that excursion, and that was
how he tried to lift a bull dog over the fence by
the teeth, which had become entangled in a certain
portion of his wardrobe that should not be mentioned,
and how he left a sample of his trousers in the possession
of the dog, and how the farmer came to the college
the next day with his eyes blacked, and a piece of
trousers cloth done up in a paper, and wanted the
professor to try and match it with the pants of some
of the divinity students, and how he had to put on
a pair of nankeen pants and hide his cassimeres in
the boat house until the watermelon scrape blew over
and he could get them mended.
Then the small brunette minister asked
if he was not entitled to some credit for blacking
the farmer’s eyes. Says he: “When
he got over the fence and grabbed the near horse by
the bits, and said he would have the whole gang in
jail, I felt as though something had got to be done,
and I jumped out on the other side of the wagon and
walked around to him and put up my hands and gave
him ‘one, two, three’ about the nose, with
my blessing, and he let go that horse and took his
dog back to the house.”
“Well,” says the red haired
minister, “those melons were green, anyway,
but it was the fun of stealing them that we were after.”
At this point the door opened and
the host entered, and, pushing the smoke away with
his hands, he said: “Well, gentlemen, you
are enjoying yourselves?”
They threw their cigar stubs in the
spittoon, the solemn man laid the brier wood pipe
where he got it, and the fat man said:
“Brother Drake, we have been
discussing the evil effects of indulging in the weed,
and we have come to the conclusion that while tobacco
is always bound to be used to a certain extent by
the thoughtless, it is a duty the clergy owe to the
community to discountenance its use on all possible
occasions. Perhaps we had better adjourn to the
parlor, and after asking divine guidance take our
departure.”
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HE BECOMES A DRUGGIST.
“Whew! What is that smells
so about this store? It seems as though everything
had turned frowy,” said the grocery man to his
clerk in the presence of the bad boy, who was standing
with his back to the stove, his coat-tails parted
with his hands, and a cigarette in his mouth.
“May be it is me that smells
frowy,” said the boy as he put his thumbs in
the armholes of his vest, and spit at the keyhole in
the door. “I have gone into business.”
“By thunder, I believe it is
you,” said the grocery man, as he went up to
the boy and snuffed a couple of times and then held
his hand to his nose. “The board of health
will kerosene you if they ever smell that smell, and
send you to the glue factory. What business have
you gone into to make you smell so rank?”
“Well, you see Pa began to think
it was time I learned a trade, or a profession, and
he saw a sign in a drug store window ‘boy wanted,’
and as he had a boy he didn’t want, he went
to the druggist and got a job for me. This smell
on me will go off in a few weeks. You know I wanted
to try all the perfumery in the store, and after I
had got about forty different extracts on my clothes,
another boy that worked there he fixed up a bottle
of benzine and assafety and brimstone, and a whole
lot of other horrid stuff, and labeled it ‘rose
geranium,’ and I guess I just wallered in it.
It is awful, aint it? It kerflummixed Ma
when I went into the dining-room the first night that
I got home from the store, and broke Pa all up.
He said I reminded him of the time they had a litter
of skunks under the barn. The air seemed fixed
around where I am, and everybody seems to know who
fixed it. A girl came into the store yesterday
to buy a satchet, and there wasn’t anybody there
but me, and I didn’t know what it was, and I
took down everything in the store pretty near before
I found it, and then I wouldn’t have found it
only the proprietor came in. The girl asked the
proprietor if there wasn’t a good deal of sewer
gas in the store, and he told me to go out and shake
myself. I think the girl was mad at me because
I got a nursing bottle out of the show case with a
rubber muzzle, and asked her if that was what she
wanted. Well, she told me a sachet was something
for the stummick, and I thought a nursing bottle was
the nearest thing to it.”
I should think you would drive
all the customers away from the store,” said
the groceryman as he opened the door to let the fresh
air in.
“I don’t know but I will,
but I am hired for a month on trial, and I shall stay.
You see, I sha’n’t practice on anybody
but Pa for a spell. I made up my mind to that
when I gave a woman some salts instead of powdered
borax, and she came back mad. Pa seems to want
to encourage me, and is willing to take anything that
I ask him to. He had a sore throat and wanted
something for it, and the boss drugger told me to
put some tannin and chlorate of potash in a mortar
and grind it, and I let Pa pound it with the mortar,
and while he was pounding I dropped in a couple of
drops of sulphuric acid, and it exploded and blowed
Pa’s hat clear across the store, and Pa was
whiter than a sheet. He said he guessed his throat
was all right, and he wouldn’t come near me
again that day. The next day Pa came in, and I
was laying for him. I took a white seidletz powder
and a blue one, and dissolved them in separate glasses,
and when Pa came in I asked him if he didn’t
want some lemonade, and he said he did, and I gave
him the sour one and he drank it. He said it
was too sour, and then I gave him the other glass
that looked like water, to take the taste out of his
mouth, and he drank it. Well, sir, when those
two powders got together in Pa’s stummick, and
began to siz and steam and foam, Pa pretty near choked
to death, and the suds came out of his nostrils, and
his eyes stuck out, and as soon as he could get his
breath he yelled ‘fire,’ and said he was
poisoned, and called for a doctor, but I thought as
long as we had a doctor right in the family there
was no use of hiring one, so I got a stomach pump
and would have baled him out in no time, only the proprietor
came in and told me to go and wash some bottles, and
he gave Pa a drink of brandy, and Pa said he felt
better. Pa has learned where we keep the liquor,
and he comes in two or three times a day with a pain
in his stomach. They play awful mean tricks on
a boy in a drug store. The first day they put
a chunk of something blue into a mortar, and told me
to pulverize it and then make it up into two grain
pills. Well, sir, I pounded that chunk all the
forenoon, and it never pulverized at all, and the
boss told me to hurry up as the woman was waiting for
the pills, and I mauled it till I was nearly dead,
and when it was time to go to supper the boss came
and looked in the mortar, and took out the chunk and
said, ’You dum fool, you have been pounding
all day on a chunk of India rubber, instead of blue
mass!’ Well, how did I know? But I will
get even with them if I stay there long enough, and
don’t you forget it. If you have a prescription
you want filled you can come down to the store and
I will put it up for you myself, and then you will
be sure to get what you pay for.”
“Yes,” said the grocery
man, as he cut off a piece of limberg cheese and put
it on the stove to purify the air in the room, “I
should laugh to see myself taking any medicine you
put up. You will kill some one yet, by giving
them poison instead of quinine. But what has your
Pa got his nose tied up for? He looks as though
he had had a fight.”
“O, that was from my treatment.
He had a wart on his nose. You know that wart.
You remember how the minister told him if other peoples’
business had a button hole in it, Pa could button the
wart in the button-hole, as he always had his nose
there. Well, I told Pa I could cure that wart
with caustic, and he said he would give five dollars
if I could cure it, so I took a stick of caustic and
burned the wart off, but I guess I burned down into
the nose a little, for it swelled up as big as a lobster.
Pa says he would rather have a whole nest of warts
than such a nose, but it will be all right in a year
or two.”
A LOAN EXHIBITION.
“What is a loan exhibition?”
asks a correspondent. Well, when a fellow borrows
ten dollars of you, to be paid next Saturday, and he
lets it run a year and a half, and don’t pay
it, and he meets you on the street and asks for five
dollars more, and you turn him around and kick him
right before the crowd, that is a loan exhibition.
THE WICKED MON KEE.
Mon Kee, a Chinaman that was converted
to regular United States religious doctrines, and
opened a mission in New York for the purpose of converting
more heathens and shethens, has been arrested for stealing.
This is a terrible blow, and Mon Kee was a terrible
plower. A few weeks since the religious papers
made more blow over the coming into the fold of that
Chinaman than they did over all the editors in the
country, who went not astray. Now they have shut
up their yawp about him, since he has proved to be
no better than Talmage or Beecher.
UNSCREWING THE TOP OF A FRUIT JAR.
There is one thing that there should
be a law passed about, and that is, these glass fruit
jars, with a top that screws on. It should be
made a criminal offense, punishable with death or
banishment to Chicago, for a person to manufacture
a fruit jar, for preserving fruit, with a top that
screws on. Those jars look nice when the fruit
is put up in them, and the house-wife feels as though
she was repaid for all her perspiration over a hot
stove, as she looks at the glass jars of different
berries, on the shelf in the cellar.
The trouble does not begin until she
has company, and decides to tap a little of her choice
fruit. After the supper is well under way, she
sends for a jar, and tells the servant to unscrew
the top, and pour the fruit into a dish. The
girl brings it into the kitchen, and proceeds to unscrew
the top. She works gently at first, then gets
mad, wrenches at it, sprains her wrist, and begins
to cry, with her nose on the underside of her apron,
and skins her nose on the dried pancake batter that
is hidden in the folds of the apron.
Then the little house-wife takes hold
of the fruit can, smilingly, and says she will show
the girl how to take off the top. She sits down
on the wood-box, takes the glass jar between her knees,
runs out her tongue, and twists. But the cover
does not twist. The cover seems to feel as though
it was placed there to keep guard over that fruit,
and it is as immovable as the Egyptian pyramids.
The little lady works until she is red in the face,
and until her crimps all come down, and then she sets
it away to wait for the old man to come home.
He comes in tired, disgusted, and mad as a hornet,
and when the case is laid before him, he goes out in
the kitchen, pulls off his coat and takes the jar.
He remarks that he is at a loss to
know what women are made for, anyway. He says
they are all right to sit around and do crochet work,
but when strategy, brain, and muscle are required,
then they can’t get along without a man.
He tries to unscrew the cover, and his thumb slips
off and knocks the skin off the knuckle. He breathes
a silent prayer and calls for the kerosene can, and
pours a little oil into the crevice, and lets it soak,
and then he tries again, and swears audibly.
Then he calls for a tack-hammer, and
taps the cover gently on one side, the glass jar breaks,
and the juice runs down his trousers leg, on the table
and all around. Enough of the fruit is saved for
supper, and the old man goes up the back stairs to
tie his thumb up in a rag, and change his pants.
All come to the table smiling, as
though nothing had happened, and the house-wife don’t
allow any of the family to have any sauce for fear
they will get broken glass into their stomachs, but
the “company” is provided for generously,
and all would be well only for a remark of a little
boy who, when asked if he will have some more of the
sauce, says he “don’t want no strawberries
pickled in kerosene.” The smiling little
hostess steals a smell of the sauce while they are
discussing politics, and believes she does smell kerosene,
and she looks at the old man kind of spunky, when
he glances at the rag on his thumb and asks if there
is no liniment in the house.
The preserving of fruit in glass jars
is broken up in that house, and four dozen jars are
down cellar to lay upon the lady’s mind till
she gets a chance to send some of them to a charity
picnic. The glass jar fruit can business is played
out unless a scheme can be invented to get the top
off.
HE WOULDN’T HAVE HIS FATHER CALLED NAMES.
A man died in Oshkosh who was over
eighty years of age. After the funeral the minister
who conducted the services, said to the son of the
deceased, “your father was an octogenarian.”
The young man colored up, doubled up his fist, and
said to the minister that he would like to have him
repeat that remark. The minister said, “I
say your father was an old octogenarian.”
He had not more than got the word out of his mouth
before the young man struck him on the nose, knocked
him down, kicked him in the ear, and when pulled off
by a policeman, he said no holyghoster could call
his dead father names, not around him. The minister
said he couldn’t have been more surprised if
some one had paid a year’s pew rent, than he
was when that young man’s fist hit him.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HE QUITS THE DRUG BUSINESS.
“What are you loafing around
here for,” says the grocery man to the bad boy
one day this week. “It is after nine o’clock,
and I should think you would want to be down to the
drug store. How do you know but there may be
somebody dying for a dose of pills?”
“O, darn the drug store.
I have got sick of that business, and I have dissolved
with the drugger. I have resigned. The policy
of the store did not meet with my approval, and I
have stepped out and am waiting for them to come and
tender me a better position at an increased salary,”
said the boy, as he threw a cigar stub into a barrel
of prunes and lit a fresh one.
“Resigned, eh?” said the
grocery man as he fished out the cigar stub and charged
the boy’s father with two pounds of prunes, didn’t
you and the boss agree?”
“Not exactly, I gave an old
lady some gin when she asked for camphor and water,
and she made a show of herself. I thought I would
fool her, but she knew mighty well what it was, and
she drank about half a pint of gin, and got to tipping
over bottles and kegs of paint, and when the drug man
came in with his wife, the old woman threw her arms
around his neck and called him her darling, and when
he pushed her away, and told her she was drunk, she
picked up a bottle of citrate of magnesia and pointed
it at him, and the cork came out like a pistol, and
he thought he was shot, and his wife fainted away,
and the police came and took the old gin refrigerator
away, and then the drug man told me to face the door,
and, when I wasn’t looking he kicked me four
times, and I landed in the street, and he said if I
ever came in sight of the store again he would kill
me dead. That is the way I resigned. I tell
you, they will send for me again. They never can
run that store without me.
“I guess they will worry along
without you,” said the grocery man. “How
does your Pa take your being fired out? I should
think it would brake him all up.”
“O, I think Pa rather likes
it. At first he thought he had a soft snap with
me in the drug store, cause he has got to drinking
again, like a fish, and he has gone back on the church
entirely; but after I had put a few things in his
brandy he concluded it was cheaper to buy it, and he
is now patronizing a barrel house down by the river.
“One day I put some Castile
soap in a drink of drandy, and Pa leaned over the
back fence more than an hour, with his finger down
his throat. The man that collects the ashes from
the alley asked Pa if he had lost anything, and Pa
said he was only ‘sugaring off.’ I
don’t know what that is. When Pa felt better
he came in and wanted a little whisky to take the taste
out of his mouth, and I gave him some, with about
a teaspoonful of pulverized alum in it. Well,
sir, you’d a dide. Pa’s mouth and
throat was so puckered up that he couldn’t talk.
I don’t think that drugman will make anything
by firing me out, because I shall turn all the trade
that I control to another store. Why, sir, sometimes
there were eight and nine girls in the store all at
wonct, on account of my being there. They came
to have me put extracts on their handkerchiefs, and
to eat gum drops he will lose all that
trade now. My girl that went back on me for the
telegraph messenger boy, she came with the rest of
the girls, but she found that I could be as ‘hawty
as a dook.’ I got even with her, though.
I pretended I wasn’t mad, and when she wanted
me to put some perfumery on her handkerchief I said
‘all right,’ and I put on a little geranium
and white rose, and then I got some tincture of assafety,
and sprinkled it on her dress and cloak when she went
out. That is about the worst smelling stuff that
ever was, and I was glad when she went out and met
the telegraph boy on the corner. They went off
together; but he came back pretty soon, about the
homesickest boy you ever saw, and he told my chum he
would never go with that girl again because she smelled
like spoiled oysters or sewer gas. Her folks
noticed it, and made her go and wash her feet and soak
herself, and her brother told my chum it didn’t
do any good, she smelled just like a glue factory,
and my chum the darn fool told
her brother that it was me who perfumed her, and he
hit me in the eye with a frozen fish, down by the
fish store, and that’s what made my eye black;
but I know how to cure a black eye. I have not
been in a drug store eight days, and not know how to
cure a black eye; and I guess I learned that girl not
to go back on a boy ’cause he smelled like a
goat.
“Well, what was it about your
leaving the wrong medicine at houses? The policeman
in this ward told me you come pretty near killing several
people by leaving the wrong medicine.”
“The way of it was this.
There was about a dozen different kinds of medicine
to leave at different places, and I was in a hurry
to go to the roller skating rink, so I got my chum
to help me, and we just took the numbers of the houses,
and when we rung the bell we would hand out the first
package we come to, and I understand there was a good
deal of complaint. One old maid who ordered powder
for her face, her ticket drew some worm lozengers,
and she kicked awfully, and a widow who was going to
be married, she ordered a celluloid comb and brush,
and she got a nursing bottle with a rubber nozzle,
and a toothing ring, and she made quite a fuss; but
the woman who was weaning her baby and wanted the nursing
bottle, she got the comb and brush and some blue pills,
and she never made any fuss at all. It makes
a good deal of difference, I notice, whether a person
gets a better thing than they order or not. But
the drug business is too lively for me. I have
got to have a quiet place, and I guess I will be a
cash boy in a store. Pa says he thinks I was cut
out for a bunko steerer, and I may look for that kind
of a job. Pa he is a terror since he got to drinking
again. He came home the other day, when the minister
was calling on Ma, and just cause the minister was
sitting on the sofa with Ma, and had his hand on her
shoulder, where she said the pain was when the rheumatiz
came on, Pa was mad and told the minister he would
kick his liver clear around on the other side if he
caught him there again, and Ma felt awful about it.
After the minister had gone away, Ma told Pa he had
got no feeling at all, and Pa said he had got enough
feeling for one family, and he didn’t want no
sky-sharp to help him. He said he could cure
all the rheumatiz there was around the house, and then
he went down town and didn’t get home till most
breakfast time. Ma says she thinks I am responsible
for Pa’s falling into bad ways again, and now
I am going to cure him. You watch me, and see
if I don’t have Pa in the church in less than
a week, praying and singing, and going home with the
choir singers, just as pious as ever. I am going
to get a boy that writes a woman’s hand to write
to Pa, and but I must not give it away.
But you just watch Pa, that’s all. Well,
I must go and saw some wood. It is coming down
a good deal, from a drug clerk to sawing wood, but
I will get on top yet, and don’t you forget
it.”
GIVE US WAR!
We are in receipt of a circular from
the American peace society, requesting us to leave
a sum of money, in our will, to the society to be
applied to the interest of peace. We are opposed
to peace, on such terms. Give us war, every time.
THE FIRE NEW YEAR’S DAY.
If there is anything the young men
of Rescue Hose Company pride themselves upon, it is
in getting themselves up, regardless of expense, on
New Year’s day, and calling upon their lady
friends. On Monday last these young men arrayed
themselves in their best clothes and sat around in
stores and waited for the time to go calling.
Solomon in all his glory, was not arrayed like one
of these firemen.
Just as the young gentlemen were about
throwing away their last cigar at noon, preparatory
to calling at the first place on the list, the fire-bell
rang, and there was a lively procession followed the
steamer down Fourth street in a few minutes.
It looked as though a wedding had been broken up and
bridegrooms were running around loose. The party
arrived at the scene of the fire, which was Matt.
Larsen’s hotel on the corner of Second and King
streets, and such a shinning of swallow-tailed coats
up blue ladders was never seen. The fellows that
belonged in the house threw out bedsteads and crockery
on to stove-pipe hats, and emptied beds on to broadcloth
coats. The wedding party disappeared in the third
story window with the hose, in the smoke, and after
half an hour’s work they came out looking as
though they had been in the Ashtabula railroad accident.
Young Mr. Smith had a stream of dirty water sent up
his trousers leg, which went clear up to his collar,
and wilted it beyond repair. Mr. Hatch entwined
his doeskin pants around the burnt ridge-pole of the
roof, hung on to a rafter with his teeth, and chopped
shingles, and the pipemen kept him wet, and he looked
like a bundle of damp stuff in a paper mill. Mr.
Spence was on the top of the ladder, and Mr. Drummond
was next below him. In falling, Mr. D. caught
hold of one tail of Mr. Spence’s swallow hammer
coat, and stretched the tail about two feet longer
than the other. Mr. Foote was as dry as a bone,
until the pipeman saw him, and they nailed him up against
the wall with a stream and Foote was damp as a wet
nurse in a minute.
Young Mr. Osborne, confidential adviser
of Hyde, Cargill & Co., got half way up the ladder,
and a leak in the hose struck him and froze him to
the ladder, and Mr. Watson had to strike a match and
thaw him loose. He wet his pants from Genesis
to Revelations, and had to go calling with an ulster
overcoat on. The most of the young men, after
returning from the fire, stood by the stove and dried
themselves, and went calling all the same, but the
girls said they smelt like burnt shingles. The
boys were all dry enough at the dance in the evening.
SOUTHERN “HONAW.”
Bennett and May fought a duel in Maryland
the other day, and as near as the truth can be arrived
at neither party received a scratch. But their
“honaw” was satisfied.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA KILLS HIM.
“For heaven’s sake dry
up that whistling,” said the grocery man to the
bad boy, as he sat on a bag of peanuts, whistling
and filling his pockets. “There is no sense
in such whistling. What do you whistle for, anyway?”
“I am practicing my profession,”
said the boy, as he got up and stretched himself,
and cut off a slice of cheese, and took a few crackers.
“I have always been a good whistler, and I have
decided to turn my talent to account. I am going
to hire an office and put out a sign, ’Boy furnished
to whistle for lost dogs.’ You see there
are dogs lost every day, and any man would give half
a dollar to a boy to find his dog. I can hire
out to whistle for dogs, and can go around whistling
and enjoy myself, and make money. Don’t
you think it is a good scheme?” asked the boy
of the grocery man.
“Naw,” said the grocery
man, as he charged the cheese to the boy’s father,
and picked up his cigar stub, which he had left on
the counter, and which the boy had rubbed on the kerosene
barrel, “No, sir, that whistle would scare any
dog that heard it. Say, what was your Pa running
after the doctor in his shirt sleeves for last Sunday
morning? He looked scared. Was your Ma sick
again?”
“O, no; Ma is healthy enough,
now she has got a new fur lined cloak. She played
consumption on Pa, and coughed so she liked to raise
her lights and liver, and made Pa believe she couldn’t
live, and got the doctor to prescribe a fur lined
circular, and Pa went and got one, and Ma has improved
awfully. Her cough is all gone, and she can walk
ten miles. I was the one that was sick.
You see, I wanted to get Pa into the church again,
and get him to stop drinking, so I got a boy to write
a letter to him, in a female hand, and sign the name
of a choir singer Pa was mashed on, and tell him she
was yearning for him to come back to the church, and
that the church seemed a blank without his smiling
face, and benevolent heart, and to please come back
for her sake. Pa got the letters Saturday night
and he seemed tickled, but I guess he dreamed about
it all night, and Sunday morning he was mad, and he
took me by the ear and said I couldn’t come
no ‘Daisy’ business on him the second time.
He said he knew I wrote the letter, and for me to
go up to the store room and prepare for the almightiest
licking a boy ever had, and he went down stairs and
broke up an apple barrel and got a stave to whip me
with. Well, I had to think mighty quick, but
I was enough for him. I got a dried bladder in
my room, one that me and my chum got to the slotter
house, and I blowed it partly up, so it would be sort
of flat like, and I put it down inside the back part
of my pants, right about where Pa hits when he punishes
me. I knowed when the barrel stave hit the bladder
it would explode. Well, Pa came up and found
me crying. I can cry just as easy as you can turn
on the water at a faucet, and Pa took off his coat
and looked sorry. I was afraid he would give
up whipping me when he saw me cry, and I wanted the
bladder experiment to go on, so I looked kind of hard,
as if I was defying him to do his worst, and then
he took me by the neck and laid me across a trunk.
I didn’t dare struggle much for fear the bladder
would loose itself, and Pa said, ’Now, Hennery,
I am going to break you of this damfoolishness, or
I will break your back,’ and he spit on his hands
and brought the barrel stave down on my best pants.
Well, you’d a dide if you had heard the explosion.
It almost knocked me off the trunk. It sounded
like firing a firecracker away down cellar in a barrel,
and Pa looked scared. I rolled off the trunk,
on the floor, and put some flour on my face, to make
me look pale, and then I kind of kicked my legs like
a fellow who is dying on the stage, after being stabbed
with a piece of lath, and groaned, and said, ‘Pa
you have killed me, but I forgive you,’ and then
rolled around, and frothed at the mouth, cause I had
a piece of soap in my mouth to make foam. Well,
Pa was all broke up. He said, ’Great God,
what have I done? I have broke his spinal column.
O, my poor boy, do not die!’ I kept chewing
the soap and foaming at the mouth, and I drew my legs
up and kicked them out, and clutched my hair, and
rolled my eyes, and then kicked Pa in the stummick
as he bent over me, and knocked his breath out of him,
and then my limbs began to get rigid, and I said,
’Too late, Pa, I die at the hand of an assassin.
Go for a doctor.’ Pa throwed his coat over
me, and started down stairs on a run, ‘I have
murdered my brave boy,’ and he told Ma to go
up stairs and stay with me, cause I had fallen off
a trunk and ruptured a blood vessel, and he went after
a doctor. When he went out the front door, I
sat up and lit a cigarette, and Ma came up and I told
her all about how I fooled Pa, and if she would take
on and cry, when Pa got back, I would get him to go
to church again, and swear off drinking, and she said
she would.
“So when Pa and the doc. came
back, Ma was sitting on a velocipede I used to ride,
which was in the store-room, and she had her apron
over her face, and she just more than bellowed.
Pa he was pale, and he told the doc. he was just playing
with me with a little piece of board, and he heard
something crack, and he guessed my spine got broke
falling off the trunk. The doctor wanted to feel
where my spine got broke, but I opened my eyes and
had a vacant kind of stare, like a woman who leads
a dog by a string, and looked as though my mind was
wandering, and I told the doctor there was no use
setting my spine, as it was broke in several places,
and I wouldn’t let him feel of the dried bladder.
I told Pa I was going to die, and I wanted him to
promise me two things on my dying bed. He cried
and said he would, and I told him to promise me he
would quit drinking, and attend church regular, and
he said he would never drink another drop, and would
go to church every Sunday. I made him get down
on his knees beside me and swear it, and the doc.
witnessed it, and Ma said she was so glad, and Ma
called the doctor out in the hall and told him the
joke, and the doc. came in and told Pa he was afraid
Pa’s presence would excite the patient, and
for him to put on his coat and go out and walk around
the block, or go to church, and Ma and he would remove
me to another room, and do all that was possible to
make my last hours pleasant. Pa he cried, and
said he would put on his plug hat and go to church,
and he kissed me, and got flour on his nose, and I
came near laughing right out, to see the white flour
on his red nose, when I thought how the people in church
would laugh at Pa. But he went out feeling mighty
bad, and then I got up and pulled the bladder out
of my pants, and Ma and the doc. laughed awful.
When Pa got back from church and asked for me, Ma said
that I had gone down town. She said the doctor
found my spine was only uncoupled and he coupled it
together, and I was all right. Pa was nervous
all the afternoon, and Ma thinks he suspects that
we played it on him. Say, you don’t think
there is any harm in playing it on an old man a little
for a good cause, do you?”
The grocery man said he supposed,
in the interest of reform it was all right, but if
it was his boy that played such tricks he would take
an ax to him, and the boy went out, apparently encouraged,
saying he hadn’t seen the old man since the
day before, and he was almost afraid to meet him.
A MUSICAL CRITIQUE.
The second lecture of the Library
Association course was delivered on Tuesday evening
by a female lecturer named Camilla Urso, on a fiddle.
The lecturer was supported by a female singer, two
male clamsellers, and a piano masher, all of them
decidedly talented in their particular lines.
The lecture on the fiddle gave the most unbounded satisfaction,
and the Association in taking this new departure,
has struck a popular chord. Scarcely a person
in the vast audience but would prefer such an entertainment
to a dry lecture by some dictionary sharp. Of
the performance, it is unnecessary to go into details,
as all our readers were there, with few exceptions.
The fat female, Urso, more than carved the fiddle.
She dug sweet morsels of music out of it, all the way
from the wish-bone to the part that goes over the
fence last. She made it talk Norwegian, and squeezed
little notes out of it not bigger than a cambric needle,
and as smooth as a book agent. The female singer
was fair, though nothing to brag on, while the male
grasshopper sufferers sang as well as was necessary.
But the most agile flea-catcher that has been here
since Anna Dickinson’s time, was sixteen-fingered
Jack, the sandhill crane that had the disturbance
with the piano. We never knew what the row was
about, but when he walked up to the piano smiling,
and shied his castor into the ring, everybody could
see there was going to be trouble. He spit on
his hands, sparred a little, and suddenly landed a
stunning blow right on the ivory, which staggered
the piano, and caused an exclamation of agony.
First knock down for Jack. He paused a moment
and then began putting in blows right and left, in
such a cruel manner that the spectators came near
breaking into the ring. Whenever a key showed
its head he mauled it. We never saw a piano stand
so much punishment, and live, and Jack never got a
scratch. The whole concert was a success, and
the troupe can always get a good house here.
A DEAD SURE THING.
The only persons that are real sure
that their calling and election is sure, and that
they are going to heaven across lots, are the men who
are hung for murder. They always announce that
they have got a dead thing on it, just before the
drop falls. How encouraging it must be to children
to listen to the prayers of our ministers in churches,
who admit that they are miserable sinners living on
God’s charity, and doubtful if they would be
allowed to sit at His right hand, and as they tell
the story of their unworthiness the tears trickle
down their cheeks. Then let the children read
an account of a hanging bee, and see how happy the
condemned man is, how he shouts glory hallelujah,
and confesses that, though he killed his man, he is
going to heaven. A child will naturally ask why
don’t the ministers murder somebody and make
a dead sure thing of it?
PECKS BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA MORTIFIED.
“What was the health officer
doing over to your house this morning?” said
the grocery man to the bad boy, as the youth was firing
frozen potatoes at the man who collects garbage in
the alley.
“O, they are searching for sewer
gas and such things, and they have got plumbers and
other society experts till you can’t rest, and
I came away for fear they would find the sewer gas
and warm my jacket. Say, do you think it is right
when anything smells awfully, to always lay it to a
boy?”
“Well, in nine cases out of
ten they would hit it right, but what do you think
is the trouble over to your house, honest?”
“S-h-h! Now don’t
breathe a word of it to a living soul, or I am a dead
boy. You see I was over to the dairy fair at the
Exposition building Saturday night, and when they
were breaking up me and my chum helped to carry boxes
of cheese and firkins of butter, and a cheese man gave
each of us a piece of limberger cheese, wrapped up
in tin foil. Sunday morning I opened my piece,
and it made me tired. O, it was the offulest smell
I ever heard of, except the smell when they found
a tramp who hung himself in the woods on the Whitefish
Bay road, and had been dead three weeks. It was
just like an old back number funeral. Pa and Ma
were just getting ready to go to church, and I cut
off a piece of cheese and put it in the inside pocket
of Pa’s vest, and I put another in the lining
of Ma’s muff, and they went to church.
I went down to church too, and sat on a back seat
with my chum, looking just as pious as though I was
taking up a collection. The church was pretty
warm, and by the time they got up to sing the first
hymn Pa’s cheese began to smell a match against
Ma’s cheese. Pa held one side of the hymn
book and Ma held the other, and Pa he always sings
for all that is out, and when he braced himself and
sang ‘Just as I am,’ Ma thought Pa’s
voice was tinctured a little with biliousness, and
she looked at him and hunched him, and told him to
stop singing and breathe through his nose, cause his
breath was enough to stop a clock. Pa stopped
singing and turned around kind of cross towards Ma,
and then he smelled Ma’s cheese and he turned
his head the other way and said, ‘whew,’
and they didn’t sing any more, but they looked
at each other as though they smelled frowy. When
they sat down they sat as far apart as they could
get, and Pa sat next to a woman who used to be a nurse
in a hospital, and when she smelled Pa’s cheese
she looked at him as though she thought he had the
small pox, and she held her handkerchief to her nose.
The man in the other end of the pew, that Ma sat near,
he was a stranger from Racine, who belongs to our
church, and he looked at Ma sort of queer, and after
the minister prayed, and they got up to sing again,
the man took his hat and went out, and when he came
by me he said something in a whisper about a female
glue factory.
“Well, sir, before the sermon
was over everybody in that part of the church had
their handkerchiefs to their noses, and they looked
at Pa and Ma scandalous, and the two ushers they came
around in the pews looking for a dog, and when the
minister got over his sermon, and wiped the prespiration
off his face, he said he would like to have the trustees
of the church stay after meeting, as there was some
business of importance to transact. He said the
question of proper ventilation and sewerage for the
church would be brought up, and that he presumed the
congregation had noticed this morning that the church
was unusually full of sewer gas. He said he had
spoken of the matter before, and expected it would
be attended to before this. He said he was a
meek and humble follower of the lamb, and was willing
to cast his lot wherever the Master decided, but he
would be blessed if he would preach any longer in
a church that smelled like a bone boiling establishment.
He said religion was a good thing, but no person could
enjoy religion as well in a fat rendering establishment
as he could in a flower garden, and as far as he was
concerned he had got enough. Everybody looked
at everybody else, and Pa looked at Ma as though he
knew where the sewer gas came from, and Ma looked
at Pa real mad, and me and my chum lit out, and I
went home and distributed my cheese all around.
I put a slice in Ma’s bureau drawer, down under
her underclothes, and a piece in the spare room, under
the bed, and a piece in the bath-room in the soap
dish, and a slice in the album on the parlor table,
and a piece in the library in a book, and I went to
the dining room and put some under the table, and
dropped a piece under the range in the kitchen.
I tell you the house was loaded for bear. Ma
came home from church first, and when I asked where
Pa was, she said she hoped he had gone to walk around
the block to air hisself. Pa came home to dinner
and when he got a smell of the house he opened all
the doors, and Ma put a comfortable around her shoulders,
and told Pa he was a disgrace to civilization.
She tried to get Pa to drink some carbolic acid.
Pa finally convinced Ma that it was not him, and then
they decided it was the house that smelled so, as well
as the church, and all Sunday afternoon they went
visiting, and this morning Pa went down to the health
office and got the inspector of nuisances to come
up to the house, and when he smelled around a spell
he said there was dead rats in the main sewer pipe,
and they sent for plumbers, and Ma went out to a neighbors
to borry some fresh air, and when the plumbers began
to dig up the floor in the basement I came over here.
If they find any of that limberger cheese it will
go hard with me. The hired girls have both quit,
and Ma says she is going to break up keeping house
and board. That is just into my hand. I
want to board at a hotel, where you can have a bill-of-fare,
and tooth picks, and billiards, and everything.
Well I guess I will go over to the house and stand
in the back door and listen to the mocking bird.
If you see me come flying out of the alley with my
coat tail full of boots you can bet they have discovered
the sewer gas.”
MRS. LANGTRY.
America is to be visited by the most
beautiful woman in all England, Mrs. Langtry.
It is said that she is so sweet that when you look
at her you feel caterpillars crawling up the small
of your back, your heart begins to jump like a box
car, and a streak of lightning goes down one trousers
leg and up the other, and escapes up the back of your
neck, causing the hair to raise and be filled with
electricity enough to light a circus tent, and that
when looking at her your hands clutch nervously as
though you wanted to grasp something to hold you up,
a sense of faintness comes over you, your eyes roll
heavenward, your head falls helpless on your breast,
your left side becomes numb, your liver quits working,
your breath comes hot and heavy, your lips turn livid
and tremble, your teeth chew on imaginary taffy, and
you look around imploringly for somebody to take her
away. If all this occurs to a person from looking
at her, it would be sudden death or six months illness,
to shake hands with her. If she comes to Milwaukee,
there is one bald headed man going to the country where
they are not so bad. You bet!
A PECK AT THE CHEESE.
Geo. W. Peck, of the Sun, recently
delivered an address before the Wisconsin State Dairyman’s
Association. The following is an extract from
the document:
Fellow Cremationists: In calling
upon me, on this occasion, to enlighten you upon a
subject that is dear to the hearts of all Americans,
you have got the right man in the right place.
It makes me proud to come to my old home and unfold
truths that have been folded since I can remember.
It may be said by scoffers, and it has been said to-day,
in my presence, that I didn’t know enough to
even milk a cow. I deny the allegation; show me
the allegator. If any gentleman present has got
a cow here with him, and I can borrow a clothes-wringer,
I will show you whether I can milk a cow or not.
Or, if there is a cheese mine here handy, I will demonstrate
that I can runnet.
The manufacture of cheese and butter
has been among the earliest industries. Away
back in the history of the world, we find Adam and
Eve conveying their milk from the garden of Eden,
in a one-horse wagon to the cool spring cheese factory
to be weighed in the balance. Whatever may be
said of Adam and Eve to their discredit in the marketing
of the products of their orchard, it has never been
charged that they stopped at the pump and put water
in their milk cans. Doubtless you will remember
how Cain killed his brother Abel because Abel would
not let him do the churning. We can picture Cain
and Abel driving mooly cows up to the house from the
pasture in the southeast corner of the garden, and
Adam standing at the bars with a tin pail and a three-legged
stool, smoking a meerschaum pipe and singing “Hold
the fort for I am coming through the rye,” while
Eve sat on the verandah altering over her last year’s
polonaise, and winking at the devil who stood behind
the milk house singing, “I want to be an angel.”
After he got through milking he came up and saw Eve
blushing, and he said, “Madame, cheese it,”
and she chose it.
But to come down to the present day,
we find that cheese has become one of the most important
branches of manufacture. It is next in importance
to the silver interest. And, fellow cheese-mongers,
you are doing yourselves great injustice that you
do not petition congress to pass a bill to remonetize
cheese. There is more cheese raised in this country
than there is silver, and it is more valuable.
Suppose you had not eaten a mouthful in thirty days,
and you should have placed on the table before you
ten dollars stamped out of silver bullion on one plate
and nine dollars stamped from cheese bullion on another
plate. Which would you take first? Though
the face value of the nine cheese dollars would be
ten per cent below the face value of ten silver dollars,
you would take the cheese. You could use it to
better advantage in your business. Hence I say
cheese is more valuable than silver, and it should
be made legal tender for all debts, public and private,
except pew rent. I may be in advance of other
eminent financiers, who have studied the currency question,
but I want to see the time come, and I trust the day
is not far distant, when 412-1/2 grains of cheese
will be equal to a dollar in codfish, and when the
merry jingle of slices of cheese shall be heard in
every pocket.
Then every cheese factory can make
its own coin, money will be plenty, everybody will
be happy, and there never will be any more war.
It may be asked how this currency can be redeemed?
I would have an incontrovertible bond, made of Limburger
cheese, which is stronger and more durable. When
this is done you can tell the rich from the poor man
by the smell of his money. Now-a-days many of
us do not even get a smell of money, but in the good
days which are coming the gentle zephyr will waft to
us the able-bodied Limburger, and we shall know that
money is plenty.
The manufacture of cheese is a business
that a poor man can engage in, as well as a rich man,
I say it without fear of successful contradiction,
and say it boldly, that a poor man with, say 200 cows,
if he thoroughly understands his business, can market
more cheese than a rich man with 300 oxen. This
is susceptible of demonstration. If any boy showed
a desire to become a statesman, I would say to him,
“Young man, get married, buy a mooly cow, go
to Sheboygan county, and start a cheese factory.”
Speaking of cows, did it ever occur
to you, gentlemen, what a saving it would be to you
if you should adopt mooley cows instead of horned cattle?
It takes at least three tons of hay and a large quantity
of ground feed annually to keep a pair of horns fat,
and what earthly use are they? Statistics show
that there are annually killed 45,000 grangers by
cattle with horns. You pass laws to muzzle dogs,
because one in ten thousand goes mad, and yet more
people are killed by cattle horns than by dogs.
What the country needs is more mooley cows.
Now that I am on the subject, it may
be asked what is the best paying breed for the dairy.
My opinion is divided between the south down and the
cochin china. Some like one the best and some
the other, but as for me, give me liberty or give
me death.
There are many reforms that should
be inaugurated in the manufacture of cheese.
Why should cheese be made round? I am inclined
to the belief that the making of cheese round is a
superstition. Who had not rather buy a good square
piece of cheese, than a wedge-shaped chunk, all rind
at one end, and as thin as a Congressman’s excuse
for voting back pay at the other? Make your cheese
square and the consumer will rise up and call you
another.
Another reform that might be inaugurated
would be to veneer the cheese with building paper
or clapboards, instead of the time-honored piece of
towel. I never saw cheese cut that I didn’t
think that the cloth around it had seen service as
a bandage on some other patient. But I may have
been wrong. Another thing that does not seem
to be right, is to see so many holes in cheese.
It seems to me that solid cheese, one made by one of
the old masters, with no holes in it I
do not accuse you of cheating, but don’t you
feel a little ashamed when you see a cheese cut, and
the holes are the biggest part of it? The little
cells may be handy for the skipper, but the consumer
feels the fraud in his innermost soul.
Among the improvements made in the
manufacture of cheese I must not forget that of late
years the cheese does not resemble the grindstone as
much as it did years ago. The time has been when,
if the farmer could not find his grindstone, all he
had to do was to mortise a hole in the middle of a
cheese, and turn it and grind his scythe. Before
the invention of nitro-glycerine, it was a good day’s
work to hew off cheese enough for a meal. Time
has worked wonders in cheese.
SELLING CLAMS.
At the concert Wednesday night, the
last piece sung was a trio, by Marie Rose, Brignoli,
and Carleton. The men stood on each side of the
girl and began to jaw at her. It was in some
other language, and we could only understand by the
motion of their mouths and their actions. It seemed
as though the men were trying to sell clams to her.
First Brignoli began to whoop it up, and describe
the clams he had to sell, and tried to get her to
invest. He yelled at her, and seemed really put
out, and she was as spunky as any girl we ever saw.
When Brignoli got out of breath, Carleton began to
tell her that Brig had been lying to her, that his
clams were made of India rubber, and that she could
never digest them in the wide world, and he wound
up by telling her that she could have his clams at
ten per cent discount for cash. By this time
she was about as mad as she could be, and she pitched
into both of them, looking cross, and sung like blazes,
went away up the musical ladder to zero, and wound
up by telling them both, to their face, that she would
see them in Chicago before she would buy a condemned
clam. And then they all went off the stage as
though they had been having a regular fight, and Brignoli
acted as though he would like to eat her raw.
That’s the way it seemed to us, but we are no
musician.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA. - HIS PA GOES SKATING.
“What is that stuff on your
shirt bosom, that looks like soap grease?” said
the grocery man to the bad boy, as he came into the
grocery the morning after Christmas.
The boy looked at his shirt front,
put his finger on the stuff and smelled of his fingers,
and then said, “O, that is nothing but a little
of the turkey dressing and gravy. You see after
Pa and I got back from the roller skating rink yesterday,
Pa was all broke up and he couldn’t carve the
turkey, and I had to do it, and Pa sat in a stuffed
chair with his head tied up, and a pillow amongst
his legs, and he kept complaining that I didn’t
do it right. Gol darn a turkey any way.
I should think they would make a turkey flat on the
back, so he would lay on a greasy platter without
skating all around the table. It looks easy to
see Pa carve a turkey, but when I speared into the
bosom of that turkey, and began to saw on it, the
turkey rolled around as though it was on castors, and
it was all I could do to keep it out of Ma’s
lap. But I rasseled with it till I got off enough
white meat for Pa and Ma and dark meat enough for me,
and I dug out the dressing, but most of it flew into
my shirt bosom, cause the string that tied up the
place where the dressing was concealed about the person
of the turkey, broke prematurely, and one oyster hit
Pa in the eye, and he said I was as awkward as a cross-eyed
girl trying to kiss a man with a hair lip. If
I ever get to be the head of a family I shall carve
turkeys with a corn sheller.
“But what broke your Pa up at
the roller skating rink?” asked the grocery
man.
“O, everything broke him up.
He is split up so Ma buttons the top of his pants
to his collar button, like a bicycle rider. Well,
he had no business to have told me and my chum that
he used to be the best skater in North America, when
he was a boy. He said he skated once from Albany
to New York in an hour and eighty minutes. Me
and my chum thought if Pa was such a terror on skates
we would get him to put on a pair of roller skates
and enter him as the ‘great unknown,’ and
clean out the whole gang. We told Pa that he
must remember that roller skates were different from
ice skates, and that maybe he couldn’t skate
on them, but he said it didn’t make any difference
what they were as long as they were skates, and he
would just paralyze the whole crowd. So we got
a pair of big roller skates for him, and while we
were strapping them on, Pa looked at the skaters glide
around on the smooth wax floor just as though they
were greased. Pa looked at the skates on his
feet, after they were fastened, sort of forlorn like,
the way a horse thief does when they put shackles on
his legs, and I told him if he was afraid he couldn’t
skate with them we would take them off, but he said
he would beat anybody there was there, or bust a suspender.
Then we straightened Pa up, and pointed him towards
the middle of the room, and he said, ‘leggo,’
and we just give him a little push to start him, and
he began to go. Well, by gosh, you’d a dide
to have seen Pa try to stop. You see, you can’t
stick in your heel and stop, like you can on ice skates,
and Pa soon found that out, and he began to turn sideways,
and then he threw his arms and walked on his heels,
and he lost his hat, and his eyes began to stick out,
cause he was going right towards an iron post.
One arm caught the post and he circled around it a
few times, and then he let go and began to fall, and,
sir, he kept falling all across the room, and everybody
got out of the way, except a girl, and Pa grabbed
her by the polonaise, like a drowning man grabs at
straws, though there wasn’t any straws in her
polonaise as I know of, but Pa just pulled her along
as though she was done up in a shawl-strap, and his
feet went out from under him and he struck on his shoulders
and kept a going, with the girl dragging along like
a bundle of clothes. If Pa had had another pair
of roller skates on his shoulders, and castors on his
ears, he couldn’t have slid along any better.
Pa is a short, big man, and as he was rolling along
on his back, he looked like a sofa with castors on
being pushed across a room by a girl. Finally
Pa came to the wall and had to stop, and the girl
fell right across him, with her roller skates in his
neck, and she called him an old brute, and told him
if he didn’t let go of her polonaise she would
murder him. Just then my chum and me got there
and we amputated Pa from the girl, and lifted him
up, and told him for heaven’s sake to let us
take off the skates, cause he couldn’t skate
any more than a cow, and Pa was mad and said for us
to ‘let him alone,’ and he could skate
all right, and we let go and he struck out again.
Well, sir, I was ashamed. An old man like Pa
ought to knonv better than to try to be a boy.
This last time Pa said he was going to spread himself,
and if I am any judge of a big spread, he did spread
himself. Some how the skates had got turned around
side-ways on his feet, and his feet got to going in
different directions, and Pa’s feet were getting
so far apart that I was afraid I would have two Pa’s,
half the size, with one leg apiece.
“I tried to get him to take
up a collection of his legs, and get them in the same
ward but his arm flew around and hit me on the nose,
and I thought if he wanted to strike the best friend
he had, he could run his old legs his self. When
he began to separate I could hear the bones crack,
but maybe it was his pants, but anyway he came down
on the floor like one of these fellows in a circus
who spreads hisself, and he kept agoing and finally
he surrounded an iron post with his legs, and stopped
and looked pale, and the proprietor of the rink told
Pa if he wanted to give a flying trapeze performance
he would have to go to the gymnasium, and he couldn’t
skate on his shoulders any more, cause other skaters
were afraid of him. Then Pa said he would kick
the liver out of the proprietor of the rink, and he
got up and steaded himself, and then he tried to kick
the man, but both heels went up to wonct, and Pa turned
a back summersault and struck right on his vest in
front. I guess it knocked the breath out of him,
for he didn’t speak for a few minutes, and then
he wanted to go home, and we put him in a street car,
and he laid down on the hay and rode home. O,
the work we had to get Pa’s clothes off.
He had cricks in his back, and everywhere, and Ma
was away to one of the neighbors, to look at the presents,
and I had to put liniment on Pa, and I made a mistake
and got a bottle of furniture polish, and put it on
Pa and rubbed it in, and when Ma came home, Pa smelled
like a coffin at a charity funeral, and Ma said there
was no way of getting that varnish off of Pa till
it wore off: Pa says holidays are a condemned
nuisance anyway. He will have to stay in the
house all this week.
“You are pretty rough on the
old man,” said the grocery man, “after
he has been so kind to you and given you nice presents.”
“Nice presents nothin.
All I got was a ‘Come to Jesus’ Christmas
card, with brindle fringe, from Ma, and Pa gave me
a pair of his old suspenders, and a calender with
mottoes for every month, some quotations from scripture,
such as ‘honor thy father and mother,’
and ’evil communications corrupt two in the
bush,’ and a bird in the hand beats two pair.’
Such things don’t help a boy to be good.
What a boy wants is club skates, and seven shot revolvers,
and such things. Well, I must go and help Pa roll
over in bed, and put on a new porous plaster.
Good bye.”
TRYING TO SAVE TWO SHILLINGS.
No person ever wants to tell us again
how to save two shillings. When we started for
Chippewa Falls, to attend the celebration, we only
had a few hundred dollars along, and we felt like
saving all that was possible. Just before arriving
at Sparta, where we were to take supper, Dan McDonald
got to telling about how to save twenty-five cents
on meals at these eating houses, when traveling.
He said that all you had to do when you come out from
supper was to look like a bummer, or “traveling
man,” hand the door-keeper fifty cents and wink
twice with the left eye, and he would pass you right
out, as though you had paid seventy-five cents.
If you handed out a dollar bill, and he only gave
you back twenty-five cents, you only had to hold out
your hand and wink a couple of times, and the man
would give you the other quarter. Dan said he
always did that way, and he had saved hundreds of
dollars. He said these bummers only paid fifty
cents a meal, and there was no use of anybody else
paying more, if they had cheek enough to play it on
the landlord.
We never had anything strike us any
more reasonable than the statement of Mr. McDonald,
and we determined to try it. To a man who was
traveling a good deal lecturing, a saving of twenty-five
cents a meal was worth looking into, and we made up
our mind to begin to economize that very night.
The train stopped and we walked across the platform
as near like a bummer as possible. With our hat
on one side, we threw a cigar stub into the parlor
window, said “Hello, old tapeworm,” to
the landlord in a familiar sort of way, chucked our
hat into a chair; rushed into the dining-room, took
a seat at the head of the table, and told a girl to
cart out all she had got. The landlord looked
at us as though he thought we were one of Field, Leiter
& Co.’s bummers, his good wife looked frightened,
as though she feared we would kick a leg off the table
and spill things. However, there is no use of
describing the meal, and how we went through brook
trout and strawberry shortcake, and things. We
couldn’t help feeling sorry for the man that
was destined to furnish all that for fifty cents.
Finally we went out. We felt a sort of palpitation
of the heart when we approached the hungry-looking
man at the door, taking the money. He looked
as though he was a sick orphan trying to save money
enough to get to a water cure. Picking our teeth
with our finger, like a Chicago bummer, and pulling
our handkerchief out of our pistol pocket and blowing
our nose like a thirty-two pounder, just as we had
heard a Chicago fellow do, we handed the man fifty
cents, winked a couple of times and started to go
by. The tobacco sign standing there said, “twenty-five
cents more, please.” We looked at him,
winked, and said, “O, that will be all right.”
“Two shillings more, my friend,” said the
summer resort. We winked some more, and punched
him in the ribs with our thumb, and said, “O,
now, old tapeworm, don’t try to play it on us
boys.” And we laughed a sickly sort of
laugh. The fact of it was, we began to have doubts
about the thing working, and had a suspicion that
the twinkle in Dan McDonald’s eye meant that
he had been playing it on us. The landlord said
he should have to have two shillings more, and that
we were blocking up the thoroughfare, and we fumbled
around and found it and paid him, and went out, probably
the most disgusted excursionist that ever was.
Dan, who had watched the whole business, slapped us
on the shoulder, and said, “How did it work?”
Though not particularly hungry, we could have eaten
him raw. When we go east now, we take a lunch
along, and when the other passengers are in to supper,
we sit on the woodpile at Sparta, eat our lunch and
gaze at the fountains, talk with the brakemen, and
wonder if the landlord would know us if we should
go in and take a toothpick off the counter. Not
any more bummer for us, and no man must ever tell
us how to save two shillings on a meal.
HOW TO REACH YOUNG MEN.
“How to reach young men,”
was the topic at the young men’s prayer meeting
on Thursday. An old gentleman on the East Side
who broke a toe nail by kicking the gate post just
as the young man went down the sidewalk, would also
like to know. Bait your hook with a mighty good
looking girl that wears a sealskin cloak, and you
can reach the young men.
CRUSHING NIHILISM.
The Russian government is making an
average of four thousand arrests a day of persons
charged with nihilism. At this rate it is only
a question of time when the last of the conspirators
will be in prison, and the emperor can walk out without
fear of assassination from his wife and children, as
these will probably be all the people that will be
left.
WOMAN-DOZING A DEMOCRAT.
A fearful tale conies to us from Columbus.
A party of prominent citizens of that place took a
trip to the Dells of Wisconsin one day last week.
It was composed of ladies and gentlemen of both political
parties, and it was hoped that nothing would occur
to mar the pleasure of the excursion.
When the party visited the Dells,
Mr. Chapin, a lawyer of Democratic proclivities, went
out upon a rock overhanging a precipice, or words to
that effect, and he became so absorbed in the beauty
of the scene that he did not notice a Republican lady
who left the throng and waltzed softly up behind him.
She had blood in her eye and gum in her mouth, and
she grasped the lawyer, who is a weak man, by the
arms, and hissed in his ear:
“Hurrah for Garfield, or I will
plunge you headlong into the yawning gulf below!”
It was a trying moment. Chapin
rather enjoyed being held by a woman, but not in such
a position that, if she let go her hold to spit on
her hands, he would go a hundred feet down, and become
as flat as the Greenback party, and have to be carried
home in a basket.
In a second he thought over all the
sins of his past life, which was pretty quick work,
as anybody will admit who knows the man. He thought
of how he would be looked down upon by Gabe Bouck,
and all the fellows, if it once got out that he had
been frightened into going back on his party.
He made up his mind that he would
die before he would hurrah for Garfield, but when
the merciless woman pushed him towards the edge of
the rock, and, “Last call! Yell, or down
you go!” he opened his mouth and yelled so they
heard it in Kilbourn City:
“Hurrah for Garfield! Now lemme go!”
Though endowed with more than ordinary
eloquence, no remarks that he had ever made before
brought the applause that this did. Everybody
yelled, and the woman smiled as pleasantly as though
she had not crushed the young life out of her victim,
and left him a bleeding sacrifice on the altar of
his country, but when she had realized what she had
done her heart smote her, and she felt bad.
Chapin will never be himself again.
From that moment his proud spirit was broken, and
all during the picnic he seemed to have lost his cud.
He leaned listlessly against a tree, pale as death,
and fanned himself with a skimmer. When the party
had spread the lunch on the ground and gathered around,
sitting on the ant-hills, he sat down with them mechanically,
but his appetite was gone, and when that is gone there
is not enough of him left for a quorum.
Friends rallied around him, passed
the pickles, and drove the antmires out of a sandwich,
and handed it to him on a piece of shingle, but he
either passed or turned it down. He said he couldn’t
take a trick. Later on, when the lemonade was
brought on, the flies were skimmed off of some of it,
and a little colored water was put in to make it look
inviting, but his eyes were sot. He said they
couldn’t fool him. After what had occurred,
he didn’t feel as though any Democrat was safe.
He expected to be poisoned on account of his politics,
and all he asked was to live to get home.
Nothing was left undone to rally him,
and cause him to forget the fearful scene through
which he had passed. Only once did he partially
come to himself, and show an interest in worldly affairs,
and that was when it was found that he had sat down
on some raspberry jam with his white pants on.
When told of it, he smiled a ghastly smile, and said
they were all welcome to his share of the jam.
They tried to interest him in conversation
by drawing war maps with three-tined folks on the
jam, but he never showed that he knew what they were
about until Mr. Moak, of Watertown, took a brush, made
of cauliflower preserved in mustard, and shaded the
lines of the war map on Mr. Chapin’s trousers,
which Mr. Butterfield had drawn in the jam. Then
his artistic eye took in the incongruity of the colors,
and he gasped for breath, and said:
“Moak, that is played out. People will
notice it.”
But he relapsed again into semi-unconsciousness,
and never spoke again, not a great deal, till he got
home.
He has ordered that there be no more
borrowing of sugar and drawings of tea back and forth
between his house and that of the lady who broke his
heart, and be has announced that he will go without
saurkraut all winter rather than borrow a machine
for cutting cabbage of a woman that would destroy
the political prospects of a man who had never done
a wrong in his life.
He has written to the chairman of
the Democratic State Central Committee to suspend
judgment on his case, until he can explain how it happened
that a dyed-in-the-wood Democrat hurrahed for Garfield.
THE WRONG CORPSE.
A corpse got a good joke on the people
of Quebec the other day. It came there by express,
and was only an ordinary, every-day man, but the Kanucks
were looking for a military corpse, and supposing our
ordinary corpse to be he, they got up a Fifth avenue
funeral, and buried it with military honors.
The corpse, who didn’t know a thing about military
matters, must have many a good laugh over the mistake.
And how the military corpse must have felt, when he
came!
THE DAY WE REACHED CANADA.
D.H. Pulcifer, of Shawano, announces
that he is about to prepare a biography of all the
members of the territorial legislature and subsequent
legislatures, state officers, members of congress,
etc., and desires all men who may have been great
or may be so now, to send in the particulars.
Well, you can get our record at the adjutant general’s
office, though there is one mistake in that record.
It was in June, 1862 that we arrived in Canada, the
day before the draft.
A LIVELY TRAIN LOAD.
Last week a train load of insane persons
were removed from the Oshkosh Asylum to the Madison
Asylum. As the train was standing on the sidetrack
at Watertown Junction it created considerable curiosity.
People who have ever passed Watertown Junction have
noticed the fine old gentleman who comes into the
car with a large square basket, peddling popcorn.
He is one of the most innocent and confiding men in
the world. He is honest, and he believes that
everybody else is honest.
He came up to the depot with his basket,
and seeing the train he asked Pierce, the landlord
there, what train it was. Pierce, who is a most
diabolical person, told the old gentleman that it was
a load of members of the legislature and female lobbyists
going to Madison. With that beautiful confidence
which the pop corn man has in all persons, he believed
the story, and went into the car to sell pop corn.
Stopping at the first seat, where
a middle-aged lady was sitting alone, the pop corn
man passed out his basket and said, “fresh pop
corn.” The lady took her foot down off
the stove, looked at the man a moment with eyes glaring
and wild, and said, “It is no, it
cannot be and yet it is me long
lost Duke of Oshkosh,” and she grabbed the old
man by the necktie with one hand and pulled him down
into the seat, and began to mow away corn into her
mouth. The pop corn man blushed, looked at the
rest of the passengers to see if they were looking,
and said, as he replaced the necktie knot from under
his left ear and pushed his collar down, “Madame,
you are mistaken. I never have been a duke in
Oshkosh. I live here at the Junction.”
The woman looked at him as though she doubted his statement,
but let him go.
He proceeded to the next seat, when
a serious looking man rose up and bowed; the pop corn
man also bowed and smiled as though he might have
met him before. Taking a paper of popcorn and
putting it in his coat tail pocket, the serious man
said, “I was honestly elected President of the
United States in 1876, but was counted out by the vilest
conspiracy that ever was concocted on earth, and I
believe you are one of the conspirators,” and
he spit on his hands and looked the pop corn man in
the eye. The pop corn man said he never took
any active part in politics, and had nothing to do
with that Hayes business at all. Then the serious
man sat down and began eating the pop corn, while
two women on the other side of the car helped themselves
to the corn in the basket.
The pop corn man held out his hand
for the money, when a man two seats back came forward
and shook hands with him, saying: “They
told me you would not come, but you have come, Daniel,
and now we will fight it out. I will take this
razor, and you can arm yourself at your leisure.”
The man reached into an inside pocket of his coat,
evidently for a razor, when the pop corn man started
for the door, his eyes sticking out two inches.
Every person he passed took a paper of pop corn, one
man grabbed his coat and tore one tail off, another
took his basket away and as he rushed out on the platform
the basket was thrown at his head, and a female voice
said, “I will be ready when the carriage calls
at 8.”
As the old gentleman struck the platform
and began to arrange his toilet he met Fitzgerald,
the conductor, who asked him what was the matter.
He said Pierce told him that crowd was going to the
legislature, “but,” says he, as he picked
some pieces of paper collar out of the back of his
neck, “if those people are not delegates to
a Democratic convention, then I have been peddling
pop corn on this road ten years for nothing, and don’t
know my business.” Fitz told him they were
patients going to the Insane Asylum.
The old man thought it over a moment,
and then he picked up a coupling pin and went looking
for Pierce. He says he will kill him. Pierce
has not been out of the house since. This Pierce
is the same man that lent us a runaway horse once.
CATS ON THE FENCE.
Some idiot has invented a “cat
teaser” to put on fences to keep cats from sitting
there and singing. It consists of a three-cornered
piece of tin, nailed on the top of the fence.
We hope none of our friends will invest in the patent,
for statistics show that while cats very often sit
on fences to meditate, yet when they get it all mediated
and get ready to sing a duet, they get down off the
fence and get under a currant bush. We challenge
any cat scientist to disprove the assertion.
HOW SHARPER THAN A HOUND’S TOOTH.
Years ago we swore on a stack of red
chips that we would never own another dog. Six
promising pups that had been presented to us, blooded
setters and pointers, had gone the way of all dog
flesh, with the distemper and dog buttons, and by
falling in the cistern, and we had been bereaved via
dog misfortunes as often as John R. Bennett, of Janesville,
has been bereaved on the nomination for attorney general.
We could not look a pup in the face but it would get
sick, and so we concluded never again to own a dog.
The vow has been religiously kept
since. Men have promised us thousands of pups,
but we have never taken them. One conductor has
promised us at least seventy-five pups, but he has
always failed to get us to take one. Dog lovers
have set up nights to devise a way to induce us to
accept a dog. We held out firmly till last week.
One day we met Pierce, the Watertown Junction hotel
man, and he told us that he had a greyhound pup that
was the finest bread dog we think he said
bread dog, though it might have been sausage dog he
said anyway he told us it was blooded, and
that when it grew up to be a man that is,
figuratively speaking when it grew up to
be a dog full size, it would be the handsomest canine
in the Northwest.
We kicked on it, entirely, at first,
but when he told us hundreds of men who had seen the
pup had offered him thousands of dollars for it, but
that he had rather give it to a friend than sell it
to a stranger, we weakened, and told him to send it
in.
Well (excuse us while we
go into a corner and mutter a silent remark) it
came in on the train Monday, and was taken to the barn.
It is the confoundedest looking dog that a white man
ever set eyes on. It is about the color of putty,
and about seven feet long, though it is only six months
old. The tail is longer than a whip lash, and
when you speak sassy to that dog, the tail will begin
to curl around under him, amongst his legs, double
around over his neck and back over where the tail
originally was hitched to the dog, and then there is
tail enough left for four ordinary dogs.
If that tail was cut up into ordinary
tails, such as common dogs wear, there would be enough
for all the dogs in the Seventh Ward, with enough
left for a white wire clothes line. When he lays
down his tail curls up like a coil of telephone wire,
and if you take hold of it and wring you can hear
the dog at the central office. If that dog is
as long in proportion, when he gets his growth, and
his tail grows as much as his body, the dog will reach
from here to the Soldier’s home.
His head is about as big as a graham
gem, and runs down to a point no bigger than a cambric
needle, while his ears are about as big as a thumb
to a glove, and they hang down as though the dog didn’t
want to hear anything. How a head of that kind
can contain brains enough to cause a dog to know enough
to go in when it rains is a mystery. But he seems
to be intelligent.
If a man comes along on the sidewalk,
the dog will follow him off, follow him until he meets
another man, and then he follows him till he
meets another, and so on until he has followed the
entire population. He is not an aristocratic
dog, but will follow one person just as soon as another,
and to see him going along the street, with his tail
coiled up, apparently oblivious to every human sentiment,
it is touching.
His legs are about the size of pipe
stems, and his feet are as big as a base ball base.
He wanders around, following a boy, then a middle aged
man, then a little girl, then an old man, and finally,
about meal time, the last person he follows seems
to go by the barn and the dog wanders in and looks
for a buffalo robe or a harness tug to chew. It
does not cost anything to keep him, as he has only
eaten one trotting harness and one fox skin robe since
Monday, though it may not be right to judge of his
appetite, as he may be a little off his feed.
Pierce said he would be a nice dog
to run with a horse, or under a carriage. Why,
bless you, he won’t go within twenty feet of
a horse, and a horse would run away to look at him;
besides, he gets right under a carriage wheel, and
when the wheel runs over him he complains, and sings
Pinafore.
What under the sun that dog is ever
going to be good for is more than we know. He
is too lean and bony for sausage. A piece of that
dog as big as your finger in a sausage would ruin
a butcher. It would be a dead give away.
He looks as though he might point game, if the game
was brought to his attention, but he would be just
as liable to point a cow. He might do to stuff
and place in a front yard to frighten burglars.
If a burglar wouldn’t be frightened at that
dog nothing would scare him.
Anyway, now we have got him, we will
bring him up, though it seems as though he would resemble
a truss bridge or a refrigerator car, as much as a
dog, when he gets his growth. For fear he will
fall off a wagon track we tie a knot in his tail.
A SAFE INVESTMENT.
Up to the present time the Sun
has struggled along from infancy to middle age without
a safe in its office. It has never needed one.
It does not need one now, but custom has to do with
these things. The associations that surround
one, go far towards making these changes. When
we look at the immense safes in the office of out
neighbor, filled with bonds and mortgages, we feel
that a safe will look well. So we purchased a
sort of an iron range, with a nickle plated knob,
and a lock with as many figures on it as a tax list
or a lottery advertisement, and placed it where it
will strike the visitor on his first entrance.
Ah, what an imposing affair it is! As we lean
back in a chair and 1ook at it, and close our eyes,
we can see millions in it, in our mind. It is
a cross between Alex. Mitchell’s safe and
a child’s bank. It is not full, but it has
evidently been taking something. It is a grand
feeling to walk along the streets and feel that your
head contains the secret which opens the safe.
No one but yourself and your maker, and the maker
of the safe knows the three numbers which will cause
it to open. The numbers are safe with you, and
the All Seeing Eye you have confidence will not give
it away, so that the only show a burglar has is to
get solid with the maker of the safe.
What a piece of mechanism is the lock
of a safe! The man we bought it of gave us the
programme that opens it. You go to the dial turn
the knob, put your finger by your nose and wink.
If you leave out the wink, the safe will not open,
but we never leave out the wink. The trouble is,
if there is a lady customer in with a bill, and we
go to open the safe, we wink too many times and have
to go all over it again. Then we place the numbers
in their order, 4-11-44, and when the “four”
is exactly opposite the dipthong, we turn the knob
back three revolutions, light a cigar, and walk three
times around the room. That is to give the mechanism
in the Inside time to coalesce. Then we put the
“eleven” in its place, turn the knob forward
one revolution, and put on our hat and go out and take
a drink. That is in the programme, and we sometimes
think the inventor of the lock is interested in a
brewery. Then we come back, wipe our mustache
on the tail of a linen coat, place the figures “44”
directly over the pointer, whistle “There’s
a land that is fairer than this,” place the
right foot forward, then turn the knob, the door swings
on its hinges, and the untold wealth of the Indies
lies before us, in our alleged mind.
O, safe, are you honest? Are
you true to us? You look pure and chaste, and
your new overskirt of varnish, and your puffed ruching
of gold and blue sets you off to good advantage, but
you may not be impregnable. You have always gone
in good society, and no scandal has ever been attached
to your name. Your purity and innocence has been
remarked by all who have met you, and there are none
who would dare to intimate but that you would maintain
your reputation against any attack, but sometimes we
think we should hesitate to leave you all alone, with
the light turned down all night and over Sunday, in
the company of an eloquent, persuasive, good-looking
burglar armed with a jimmy, and we fear that his warm
hearted can of powder would strike a responsive chord
in your impulsive nature, and that you would yield
up the jewels confined to you, and your honor, your
reputation, your standing among safes would be forever
ruined. And yet we may be wrong.
But what would it profit a burglar
to gain the whole contents and wear out his soles.
If he got in that safe, he would find a package of
bills that we tried for a year to collect, and we
would give him the bills if he asked for them, and
he could save his powder. He would find one bill
of sixteen dollars, with an indorsement that one dollar
is paid, after thirteen dollars worth of shoe leather
had been worn out. And yet the burglar would
have a soft thing on cigars with that bill, for every
time he visited the doctor he would tell him when to
come again, and give him a cigar. Another thing
the burglar would find would be a protested draft
from a great Philadelphia patent medicine advertiser.
The burglar could take a tie pass that is in the safe,
and walk to Philadelphia, and trade out the twenty-five
dollar draft by taking buchu on account.
But no burglar that has any respect
for himself, we feel sure, will ever do us the injury
to scrape the paint off of that safe.
A FASHION ITEM.
A fashion item says, “The drawers
this year are made very short, and some have lace
ruffles.” Some fashion reporter has evidently
been looking over our back fence at the clothes line.
But they got awfully fooled. The shortness of
those drawers was caused by the flannel shrinking and
the “lace ruffles” the reporter noticed
is where a calf chewed them when they were hanging
out to dry last fall on Black Hawk Island, when a gun
kicked us out of a boat. Some of these fashion
reporters think they are smart.
A LECTURER SHOULD KNOW WHAT HE TALKS ABOUT.
A man down east is lecturing on “Hell,
Ingersoll, and Whisky.” If the lecturer
is at all familiar with his subjects, we wouldn’t
believe him under oath.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA GOES CALLING.
“Say, you are getting too alfired
smart,” said the grocery man to the bad boy
as he pushed him into a corner by the molasses barrel,
and took him by the neck and choked him so his eyes
stuck out. “You have driven away several
of my best customers, and now, confound you, I am going
to have your life,” and he took up a cheese
knife and began to sharpen it on his boot.
“What’s the gurgle matter?”
asked the choking boy, as the grocery man’s
finger let up on his throat a little, so he could speak.
“I haint done nothing.”
“Didn’t you hang up that
gray torn cat by the heels, in front of my store,
with the rabbits I had for sale? I didn’t
notice it until the minister called me out in front
of the store, and pointing to the rabbits, asked what
good fat cats were selling for. By crimus, this
thing has got to stop. You have got to move out
of this ward or I will.”
The boy got his breath and said it
wasn’t him that put the cat up there. He
said it was the policeman, and he and his chum saw
him do it, and he just come in to tell the grocery
man about it, and before he could speak he had his
neck nearly pulled off. The boy began to cry,
and the grocery man said he was only joking, and gave
him a box of sardines, and they made up. Then
he asked the boy how his Pa put in his New Years, and
the boy sighed and said:
“We had a sad time at our house
New Years. Pa insisted on making calls, and Ma
and me tried to prevent it, but he said he was of age,
and guessed he could make calls if he wanted to, so
he looked at the morning paper and got the names of
all the places where they were going to receive, and
he turned his paper collar, and changed ends with
his cuffs, and put some arnica on his handkerchief,
and started out. Ma told him not to drink anything,
and he said he wouldn’t, but he did. He
was full the third place he went to. O, so full.
Some men can get full and not show it, but when Pa
gets full, he gets so full his back teeth float, and
the liquor crowds his eyes out, and his mouth gets
loose and wiggles all over his face, and he laughs
all the time, and the perspiration just oozes out of
him, and his face gets red, and he walks so wide.
O, he disgraced us all. At one place he wished
the hired girl ‘a happy new year’ more
than twenty times, and hung his hat on her elbow,
and tried to put on a rubber hall mat for his over
shoes. At another place he walked up a lady’s
train, and carried away a card basket full of bananas
and oranges. Ma wanted my chum and me to follow
Pa and bring him home, and about dark we found him
in the door yard of a house where they have statues
in front of the house, and he grabbed me by the arm,
and mistook me for another caller, and insisted on
introducing me to a marble statue without any clothes
on. He said it was a friend of his, and it was
a winter picnic. He hung his hat on an evergreen,
and put his overcoat on the iron fence, and I was so
mortified I almost cried. My chum said if his
Pa made such a circus of himself he would sand bag
him. That gave me an idea, and when we got Pa
most home I went and got a paper box covered with
red paper, so it looked just like a brick, and a bottle
of tomato ketchup, and when we got Pa up on the steps
at home I hit him with the paper brick, and my chum
squirted the ketchup on his head, and we demanded
his money, and then he yelled murder, and we lit out,
and Ma and the minister, who was making a call on her,
all the afternoon, they came to the door and pulled
Pa in. He said he had been attacked by a band
of robbers, and they knocked his brains out, but he
whipped them, and then Ma saw the ketchup brains oozing
out of his head, and she screamed, and the minister
said. ‘Good heavens, he is murdered!’
and just then I came in the back door and they sent
after the doctor, and they put Pa on the lounge, and
tied up his head with a towel to keep the brains in,
and Pa began to snore, and when the doctor came in
it took them half an hour to wake him, and then he
was awful sick to his stummick, and then Ma asked
the doctor if he would live, and the doc. analyzed
the ketchup and smelled of it and told Ma he would
be all right if he had a little Worcester sauce to
put on with the ketchup, and when he said Pa would
pull through, Ma looked awful sad. Then Pa opened
his eyes and saw the minister and said that was one
of the robbers that jumped on him, and he wanted to
whip the minister, but the doc. held Pa’s arms
and Ma sat on his legs, and the minister said he had
got some other calls to make, and he wished Ma a happy
new year in the hall, much as fifteen minutes.
His happy new year to Ma is most as long as his prayers.
Well, we got Pa to bed, and when we undressed him
we found nine napkins in the bosom of his vest, that
he had picked up at the places where he had called.
He is all right this morning, but he says it is the
last time he will drink coffee when he makes New Years
calls.
“Well, then you didn’t
have much fun yourself on New Years. That’s
too bad,” said the grocery man, as he looked
at the sad eyed youth. “But you look hard.
If you were old enough I should say you had been drunk,
your eyes are red.”
“Didn’t have any fun eh?
Well, I wish I had as many dollars as I had fun.
You see, after Pa got to sleep Ma wanted me and my
chum to go to the houses that Pa had called at and
return the napkins he had kleptomaniaced, so we dressed
up and went. The first house we called at the
girls were sort of demoralized. I don’t
know as I ever saw a girl drunk, but those girls acted
queer. The callers had stopped coming, and the
girls were drinking something out of shaving cups
that looked like lather, and they said it was ‘aignogg.’
They laffed and kicked up their heels wuss nor a circus,
and their collars got unpinned, and their faces was
red, and they put their arms around me and my chum
and hugged us and asked us if we didn’t want
some of the custard. You’d a dide to see
me and my chum drink that lather. It looked just
like soap suds with nutmaig in it, but by gosh it
got in its work sudden. At first I was afraid
when the girls hugged me, but after I had drank a
couple of shaving cups full of the ‘aignogg’
I wasn’t afraid no more, and I hugged a girl
so hard she catched her breath and panted and said,
‘O, don’t.’ Then I kissed her,
and she is a great big girl, bigger’n me, but
she didn’t care. Say, did you ever kiss
a girl full of aignogg? If you did it would break
up your grocery business. You would want to waller
in bliss instead of selling mackerel. My chum
ain’t no slouch either. He was sitting
in a stuffed chair holding another New Year’s
girl, and I could hear him kiss her so it sounded like
a cutter scraping on bare ground. But the girl’s
Pa came in and said he guessed it was time to close
the place, unless they had a license for an all night
house, and me and my chum went out. But wasn’t
we sick when we got out doors. O, it seemed as
though the pegs in my boots was the only thing that
kept them down, and my chum he like to dide. He
had been to dinner and supper and I had only been
skating all day, so he had more to contend with than
I did. O, my, but that lets me out on aignogg.
I don’t know how I got home, but I got in bed
with Pa, cause Ma was called away to attend a baby
matinee in the night. I don’t know how it
is, but there never is anybody in our part of town
that has a baby but they have it in the night, and
they send for Ma. I don’t know what she
has to be sent for every time for. Ma ain’t
to blame for all the young ones in this town, but she
has got up a reputashun, and when we hear the bell
ring in the night Ma gets up and begins to put on
her clothes, and the next morning she comes in the
dining room with a shawl over her head, and says,
’its a girl and weighs ten pounds,’ or
‘a boy,’ if it’s a boy baby.
Ma was out on one of her professional engagements,
and I got in bed with Pa. I had heard Pa blame
Ma about her cold feet, so I got a piece of ice about
as big as a raisin box, just zactly like one of Ma’s
feet, and laid it right against the small of Pa’s
back. I couldn’t help laffing, but pretty
soon Pa began to squirm and he said, ’Why’n
’ell don’t you warm them feet before you
come to bed,’ and then he hauled back his leg
and kicked me clear out in the middle of the floor,
and said if he married again he would marry a woman
who had lost both her feet in a railroad accident.
Then I put the ice back in the bed with Pa and went
to my room, and in the morning Pa said he sweat more’n
a pail full in the night. Well, you must excuse
me. I have an engagement to shovel snow off the
sidewalk. But before I go, let me advise you
not to drink aignogg, and don’t sell tom cats
for rabbits,” and he got out of the door just
in time to miss the rutabaga that the grocery man
threw at him.
WHAT THE DEMOCRATS WILL DO.
The Wisconsin asks, “What
will the Democrats do?” We trust it is not betraying
a confidence reposed in us by the manager of a party,
but we can not allow our neighbor to remain in such
dense ignorance, as long as we are possessed of the
desired information. “What will the Democrats
do?” The Democrats will prove an alibi!
A SEWING MACHINE GIVEN TO THE BOSS GIRL.
In response to a request from W.T.
Vankirk, George W. Peck presented the Rock County
Agricultural Society with a sewing machine, to be given
to the “boss combination girl” of Rock
County. With the machine he sent the following
letter, which explains his meaning of a “combination
girl,” etc.:
MILWAUKEE, June 7, 1881.
W.T. VANKIRK Dear
Sir: Your letter, in reference to giving some kind
of a premium to somebody, at your County Fair, is
received, and I have been thinking it over. I
have brought my massive intellect to bear upon the
subject, with the follow result:
I ship you to-day, by express, a sewing
machine, complete, with cover, drop leaf, hemmer,
tucker, feller, drawers, and everything that a girl
wants, except corsets and tall stockings. Now,
I want you to give that to the best “combination
girl” in Rock County, with the compliments of
the Sun.
What I mean by a “combination,”
is one that in the opinion of your Committee has all
the modern improvements, and a few of the old-fashioned
faults, such as health, etc. She must be
good-looking, that is not too handsome, but just handsome
enough. You don’t want to give this machine
to any female statue, or parlor ornament, who don’t
know how to play a tune on it, or who is as cold as
a refrigerator car, and has no heart concealed about
her person. Our girl, that is, our “Fair
Girl,” that takes this machine, must be “the
boss.” She must be jolly and good-natured,
such a girl as would make the young man that married
her think that Rock County was the next door to heaven,
anyway. She must be so healthy that nature’s
roses will discount any preparation ever made by man,
and so well-formed that nothing artificial is needed
to well, Van, you know what I mean.
You want to pick out a thoroughbred,
that is, all wool, a yard wide that is,
understand me, I don’t want the girl to be a
yard wide, but just right. Your Committee don’t
want to get “mashed” on some ethereal
creature whose belt is not big enough for a dog collar.
This premium girl wants to be able to do a day’s
work, if necessary, and one there is no danger of
breaking in two if her intended should hug her.
After your Committee have got their
eyes on a few girls that they think will fill the
bill, then they want to find out what kind of girls
they are around their home. Find if they honor
their fathers and their mothers, and are helpful,
and care as much for the happiness of those around
them as they do for their own. If you find one
who is handsome as Venus I don’t
know Venus, but I have heard that she takes the cake I
say, if you find one that is perfect in everything,
but shirks her duties at home, and plays, “I
Want to Be an Angel,” on the piano, while her
mother is mending her stockings, or ironing her picnic
skirts, then let her go ahead and be an angel as quick
as she wants to, but don’t give her the machine.
You catch the idea?
Find a girl who has the elements of
a noble woman; one whose heart is so large that she
has to wear a little larger corset than some, but one
who will make her home happy, and who is a friend
to all; one who would walk further to do a good deed,
and relieve suffering, than she would to patronize
an ice cream saloon; one who would keep her mouth shut
a month before she would say an unkind word, or cause
a pang to another. Let your Committee settle
on such a girl, and she is as welcome to that machine
as possible.
Now, Van, you ought to have a Committee
appointed at once, and no one should know who the
Committee is. They should keep their eyes open
from now till the time of the Fair, and they should
compare notes once in a while. You have got some
splendid judges of girls there in Janesville, but
you better appoint married men. They are usually
more unbiased. They should not let any girl know
that she is suspected of being the premium girl, until
the judgment is rendered, so no one will be embarrassed
by feeling that she is competing for a prize.
Now, Boss, I leave the constitution
and the girls in your hands; and if this premium is
the means of creating any additional interest in your
Fair, and making people feel good natured and jolly,
I shall be amply repaid.
Your friend
GEO. W. PECK.
SHE WAS NO GENTLEMAN.
From an article in the Leader
we gather that Frank Drake, editor of the Rushford
Star, was horsewhipped by a woman who was dissatisfied
with some article of his that appeared against her,
in the Star. A woman that cowhides an
editor is no gentleman.
JOKE ON THE HAT.
Somehow, during the election excitement,
Frank Hatch happened to bet right just once.
He bet a hat, and on Monday he went to Putnam & Philbrick
and selected one of the finest silk ones. When
he went out in the street every body noticed it, and
a reception was held. They all congratulated Frank,
except Ike Usher. Ike’s hat was a year old,
and the contrast was so remarkable that Ike would
not walk on the street with Hatch. Frank said
that Ike’s hat used to be a very fine looking
hat, but at present it was a disgrace to the force.
Mr. Usher was offended, and he swore revenge.
He went to a professional drunkard on Division street,
and said that if he should happen to get drunk Monday
night and Hatch should happen to arrest him, he would
give the drunkard five dollars if the drunkard would
mash Frank’s new hat. The fellow said he
would flatten it flatter than flatness itself.
Just after dark Mr. Hatch was walking down Third street,
“Whoop, hurrah for Tilden, (hic) ’endrix.”
The remark seemed so out of place that Frank went
down there. The man was lying on the sidewalk,
and telling the barrel to roll over and not take up
all the bed. Mr. Hatch accosted the man gently,
telling him he would catch cold there, and that he
had better go with him to the city hotel. The
man said he would be counted in if he did,
and Hatch bent over him to take him by the lily white
hand, when a drunken boot came down on the top of
that hat, and drove it clean down to Frank’s
nose. Of course it could go no further. Then
the man pulled Frank down, and the hat struck the
end of a salt barrel, knocked it off, and the man
raised up and sat down on it, and kicked it into the
street. Frank got the man away, and a boy brought
his hat to the police station, just as Usher and Littlejohn
and Knutson, and all the policeman entered. It
is said that all stood on the corner over by Kevin’s
watching the arrest. The hat was a sight to behold,
as it laid in state on the safe, and all the boys
making comments on it. It looked like a six-inch
stove pipe elbow that a profane man had been attempting
to fit to a five-inch stove pipe. It looked like
some old dripping pan that had been thrown out in
the street, and had been run over by wagons. It
looked like the very dickens. And yet we have
no doubt Hatch will say this is a lie, because he
now wears a good hat, but we know the hat he now wears
he got by trading a flannel shirt to a grasshopper
sufferer, and it no more resembles the beautiful new
hat he won on election than nothing. After Hatch
went out of the office, Usher let the man “escape,”
and he is five dollars ahead, and Ike has got even
with Hatch.
THE THIRSTY GOPHER.
A Minnesota town got a fire steamer
on trial, and tested it by trying to drown out a gopher.
After working it six hours, the gopher came out to
get a drink. He would have died of thirst if
they had kept the hole closed much longer.
COLORED CONCERT TROUPES.
Sometimes it seems as though the colored
people ought to have a guardian appointed over them.
Now, you take a colored concert troupe, and though
they may have splendid voices, they do not know enough
to take advantage of their opportunities. People
go to hear them because they are colored people, and
they want to hear old-fashioned negro melodies, and
yet these mokes will tackle Italian opera and high
toned music that they don’t know how to sing.
They will sing these fancy operas
and people will not pay any attention. Along
toward the end of the programme they will sing some
old nigger song, and the house fairly goes wild and
calls them out half a dozen times. And yet they
do not know enough to make up a programme of such music
as they can sing, and such as the audience want.
They get too big, these colored people
do, and can’t strike their level. People
who have heard Kellogg, and Marie Rose, and Gerster,
are sick when a black cat with a long red dress comes
out and murders the same pieces the prima donnas have
sung. We have seen a colored girl attempt a selection
from some organ-grinder opera, and she would howl and
screech, and catch her breath and come again, and
wheel and fire vocal shrapnel, limber up her battery
and take a new position, and unlimber and send volleys
of soprano grape and cannister into the audience, and
then she would catch on to the highest note she could
reach and hang to it like a dog to a root, till you
would think they would have to throw a pail of water
on her to make her let go, and all the time she would
be biting and shaking like a terrier with a rat, and
finally give one kick at her red trail with her hind
foot, and back off the stage looking as though she
would have to be carried on a dust pan, and the people
in the audience would look at each other in pity and
never give her a cheer, when, if she had come out
and patted her leg, and put one hand up to her ear,
and sung, “Ise a Gwine to See Massa Jesus Early
in de Mornin’,” they would have split
the air wide open with cheers, and called her out five
times.
The fact is, they haven’t got sense.
There was a hungry-looking, round-shouldered,
sick-looking colored man in the same party, that was
on the programme for a violin solo. When he came
out the people looked at each other, as much as to
say, “Now we will have some fun.”
The moke struck an attitude as near Olé Bull
as he could with his number eleven feet and his hollow
chest, and played some diabolical selection from a
foreign cat opera that would have been splendid if
Wilhelmj or Olé Bull had played it, but the
colored brother couldn’t get within a mile of
the tune. He rasped his old violin for twenty
minutes and tried to look grand, and closed his eyes
and seemed to soar away to heaven, and
the audience wished to heaven he had, and when he became
exhausted and squeezed the last note out, and the audience
saw that he was in a profuse perspiration, they let
him go and did not call him back. If he had come
out and sat on the back of a chair and sawed off “The
Devil’s Dream,” or “The Arkansaw
Traveler,” that crowd would have cheered him
till he thought he was a bigger man than Grant.
But he didn’t have any sense.
MATTIE MASHES MINNESOTA.
Mrs. Mattie A. Bridge is meeting with
great success in Minnesota. In some places she
is retained until she lectures four times. She
says the heart of Minnesota is warm towards her.
We shall feel inclined to put a head on Minnesota,
if it don’t quit allowing its heart to get warm.
WHY THE FEVER DIDN’T SPREAD.
Portage City has had a sensation which,
though at one time it looked serious, turned out to
be a farce. A girl was taken sick, and a physician
was called who pronounced it a case of yellow fever,
and he made out a prescription for that disease.
Mr. Brannan, editor of the Portage Register, who lives
near, got the news, and imparted it to all whom he
met, and they in turn told it to others, and a stampede
was looked for. Fox turned the Fox House over
to Bunker, and had his trunks checked for the Hot
Springs. Corning and Jack Turner hired a wagon
to take them to Briggsville. Haertel, the brewery
man, offered to sell out his brewery and all his property
for eight hundred dollars, and he bought a ticket for
Germany. Bunker left the Fox House to run itself,
and went to Devil’s Lake. Sam. Branuan,
telegraphed to George Clinton, at Denver, not to come
home, as the yellow fever was raging, and people were
dying off like rotton sheep. And Sam got vaccinated
and went to Beaver Dam. The excitement was intense.
Men became perfectly wild, and were going to rush
off and leave the women and children to the mercies
of the dead plague. Chicago and Milwaukee bummers
could be seen at the hotels, kneeling beside their
sample cases trying to pray, but they couldn’t.
Just before the train started that was to carry away
the frightened populace, the doctor came up town and
said that the girl with the yellow fever was better,
and that she was the mother of a fine nine pound boy.
The authorities took every precaution to prevent the
spread of the yellow fever, by arresting the brakemen
whom the girl said was the cause of all the trouble.
All is quiet on the Wisconse now.
TOO PARTICULAR BY HALF.
It is one of the mottoes of THE SUN
never to publish anything that would cause a blush
to mantle the cheek of innocence, or anybody.
And yet, occasionally, a person finds fault.
Not long since a man said he liked THE SUN well enough,
only it had too much to say about patched breeches,
which was offensive to some. Well, some people
are so confounded high toned that if they were going
to have a patch put on they would have it way up on
the small of their back. Some of the best women
in the world have sat up nights to sew a patch on
their husband’s pants. Martha Washington
used to do it. But, G. Lordy, a family newspaper
must not speak of a patch. When you take patches
away from the people you strike a blow at their liberties.
Don’t be too nice.
THE WAY TO NAME CHILDREN.
The names of Indians are sometimes
so peculiar that people are made to wonder how the
red men became possessed of them. That of “Sitting
Bull,” “Crazy Horse,” “Man
Afraid of his Horses,” “Red Cloud,”
etc., cause a good deal of thought to those who
do not know how the names are given. The fact
of the matter is that after a child of the forest is
born the medicine man goes to the door and looks out,
and the first object that attracts his attention is
made use of to name the child. When the mother
of that great warrior gave birth to her child, the
medicine man looked out and saw a bull seated on its
haunches, hence the name “Sitting Bull.”
It is an evidence of our superior civilization that
we name children on a different plan, taking the name
of some eminent man or woman, some uncle or aunt to
fasten on to the unsuspecting stranger. Suppose
that the custom that is in vogue among the Indians
should be in use among us, we would have instead of
“George Washington” and “Hanner Jane,”
and such beautiful names, some of the worst jaw-breakers
that ever was. Suppose the attending physician
should go to the door after a child was born and name
it after the first object he saw. We might have
some future statesman named “Red Headed Servant
Girl with a Rubber Bag of Hot Water,” or “Bald
Headed Husband Walking Up and Down the Alley with
His Hands in His Pockets swearing this thing shall
never Happen Again.” If the doctor happened
to go to the door when the grocery delivery wagon
was there, he would name the child “Boy from
Dickson’s Grocery with a Codfish by the Tail
and a Bag of Oatmeal,” or if the ice man was
the first object the doctor saw, some beautiful girl
might go down to history with the name, “Pirate
with a Lump of Ice About as Big as a Soltaire Diamond.”
Or suppose it was about election time and the doctor
should look out, he might name a child that had a
right to grow up a minister, “Candidate for Office
so full of Bug Juice that His Back Teeth are afloat;”
or suppose he should look out and see a woman crossing
a muddy street, he might name a child “Woman
with a Sealskin Cloak and a Hole in Her Stocking going
Down Town to Buy a Red Hat.” It wouldn’t
do at all to name children the way Indians do, because
the doctors would have the whole business in their
hands, and the directories are big enough now.
AN EDITOR BURGLARIZED.
The residence of John Turner, of the
Mauston Star, was entered by burglars a few
nights since, and his clothes were stolen, containing
all his money and his railroad pass. We can imagine
an editor around bare as to legs, etcetery, and out
of money, but to be without a railroad pass must indeed
be a sad state of affairs. When burglars burgle
an editor it is a sign that confidence is restored
under Hayes’ administration. We trust that
editors throughout the State who are blessed with this
world’s goods to the extent of more than one
pair of pants, will send one pair at least to John
Turner, Mauston, Wis., by express. We are probably
as poor as any editor, but we have sent him those
alligator pants that have created such a sensation
in years gone by. It is true they are a little
bit fringy about the bottoms, and the knees are worn
through, and concealment, like a worm in the bud,
has gnawed the foundation all out of them, but in
a little town like Mauston, such things will not be
noticed. John, take them, in welcome, and when
the cold winds but you better carry bricks
in your coat tail pockets. That is the way we
wore them the last three or four years.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA DISSECTED.
“I understand your Pa has got
to drinking again like a fish,” says the grocery
man to the bad boy, as the youth came in the grocery
and took a handful of dried apples. The boy ate
a dried apple and then made up a terrible face, and
the grocery man asked him what he was trying to do
with his face. The boy caught his breath and
then said:
“Say, don’t you know any
better than to keep dried apples where a boy can get
hold of them when he has got the mumps? You will
kill some boy yet by such dum carelessness.
I thought these were sweet dried apples, but they
are sour as a boarding house keeper, and they make
me tired. Didn’t you ever have the mumps?
Gosh, but don’t it hurt though? You have
got to be darn careful when you have the mumps, and
not go out bob-sledding, or skating, or you will have
your neck swell up biggern a milk pail. Pa says
he had the mumps once when he was a boy and it broke
him all up.”
“Well, never mind the mumps,
how about your Pa spreeing it. Try one of those
pickles in the jar there, won’t you. I always
like to have a boy enjoy himself when he comes to
see me,” said the grocery man, winking to a
man who was filling an old fashioned tin box with tobacco
out of the pail, who winked back as much as to say,
“if that boy eats a pickle on top of them mumps
we will have a circus, sure.”
“You can’t play no pickle
on me, not when I have the mumps. Ma passed the
pickles to me this morning, and I took one mouthful,
and like to had the lockjaw. But Ma didn’t
do it on purpose, I guess. She never had the mumps
and didn’t know how discouraging a pickle is.
Darn if I didn’t feel as though I had been struck
in the butt of the ear with a brick. But about
Pa. He has been fuller’n a goose ever since
New Year’s day. I think its wrong for women
to tempt feeble minded persons with liquor on New
Year’s. Now me and my chum, we can take
a drink and then let it alone. We have got brain,
and know when we have got enough, but Pa, when he gets
to going don’t ever stop until he gets so sick
that he can’t keep his stummick inside of hisself.
It is getting so they look to me to brace Pa up every
time he gets on a tear, and I guess I fixed him this
time so he will never touch liquor again. I scared
him so his bald head turned gray in a single night.”
“What under the heavens have
you done to him now?” says the grocery man,
in astonishment. “I hope you haven’t
done anything you will regret in after years.”
“Regret nothing,” said
the boy, as he turned the lid of the cheese box back
and took the knife and sliced off a piece of cheese,
and took a few crackers out of a barrel, and sat down
on a soap box by the stove, “You see Ma was
annoyed to death with Pa. He would come home full,
when she had company, and lay down on the sofa and
snore, and he would smell like a distillery.
It hurt me to see Ma cry, and I told her I would break
Pa of drinking if she would let me, and she said if
I would promise not to hurt Pa to go ahead, and I
promised not to. Then I got my chum and another
boy, to help, and Pa is all right. We went down
to the place where they sell arms and legs, to folks
who have served in the army, or a saw mill, or a threshing
machine, and lose their limbs, and we borrowed some
arms and legs, and fixed up a dissecting room.
We fixed a long table in the basement, big enough
to lay Pa out on you know, and then we got false whiskers
and moustaches, and when Pa came in the house drunk
and lay down on the sofa, and got to sleep, we took
him and laid him out on the table, and took some trunk
straps, and a circingle and strapped him down to the
table. He slept right along all through it, and
we had another table with the false arms and legs
on, and we rolled up our sleeves, and smoked pipes,
just like I read that medical students do when they
cut up a man.
“Well, you’d a dide to
see Pa look at us when he woke up. I saw him open
his eyes, and then we began to talk about cutting up
dead men. We put hickery nuts in our mouths so
our voices would sound different, so he wouldn’t
know us, and was telling the other boys about what
a time we had cutting up the last man we bought.
I said he was awful tough, and when we had got his
legs off and had taken out his brain, his friends came
to the dissecting room and claimed the body, and we
had to give it up, but I saved the legs. I looked
at Pa on the table and he began to turn pale, and
he squirmed around to get up, but found he was fast.
I had pulled his shirt up under his arms, while he
was asleep, and as he began to move I took an icicle,
and in the dim light of the candles, that were sitting
on the table in beer botles, I drew the icicle across
Pa’s stummick and I said to my chum, ’Doc,
I guess we had better cut open this old duffer and
see if he died from inflamation of the stummick, from
hard drinking, as the coroner said he did.’
Pa shuddered all over when he felt the icicle going
over his bare stummick, and he said, ’For God’s
sake, gentlemen, what does this mean? I am not
dead.’
“The other boys looked at Pa
with astonishment, and I said ’Well, we bought
you for dead, and the coroner’s jury said you
were dead, and by the eternal we ain’t going
to be fooled out of a corpse when we buy one, are
we Doc?’ My chum said not if he knowed his self,
and the other students said, ’Of course he is
dead. He thinks he is alive, but he died day before
yesterday, fell dead on the street, and his folks said
he had been a nuisance and they wouldn’t claim
the corpse, and we bought it at the morgue.’
Then I drew the icicle across him again, and I said,
’I don’t know about this, doctor.
I find that blood follows the scalpel as I cut through
the cuticle. Hand me the blood sponge please.’
Pa began to wiggle around, and we looked at him, and
my chum raised his eye-lid, and looked solemn, and
Pa said, ’Hold on gentlemen. Don’t
cut into me any more, and I can explain this matter.
This is all a mistake. I was only drunk.’
We went in a corner and whispered, and Pa kept talking
all the time. He said if we would postpone the
hog killing he could send and get witnesses to prove
that he was not dead, but that he was a respectable
citizen, and had a family. After we held a consultation
I went to Pa and told him that what he said about
being alive might possibly be true, though we had our
doubts. We had found such cases before in our
practice east, where men seemed to be alive, but it
was only temporary. Before we had got them cut
up they were dead enough for all practical purposes.
Then I laid the icicle across Pa’s abdomen,
and went on to tell him that even if he was
alive it would be better for him to play that he was
dead, because he was such a nuisance to his family
that they did not want him, and I was telling him
that I had heard that in his lifetime he was very cruel
to his boy, a bright little fellow who was at the
head of his class in Sunday school and a pet wherever
he was known, when Pa interrupted me and said, ’Doctor,
please take that carving knife off my stomach, for
it makes me nervous. As for that boy of mine,
he is the condemndest little whelp in town, and he
isn’t no pet anywhere. Now, you let up on
this dissectin’ business, and I will make it
all right with you.’ We held another consultation
and then I told Pa that we did not feel that it was
doing justice to society to give up the body of a
notorious drunkard, after we had paid twenty dollars
for the corpse. If there was any hopes that he
would reform and try and lead a different life, it
would be different, and I said to the boys, ’gentlemen,
we must do our duty. Doc, you dismember that
leg, and I will attend to the stomach and the upper
part of body. He will be dead before we are done
with him. We must remember that society has some
claim on us, and not let our better natures be worked
upon by the post mortem promises of a dead
drunkard.’ Then I took my icicle and began
fumbling around the abdomen portion of Pa’s remains,
and my chum took a rough piece of ice and began to
saw his leg off, while the other boy took hold of
the leg and said he would catch it when it dropped
off. Well, Pa kicked like a steer. He said
he wanted to make one more appeal to us, and we acted
sort of impatent but we let up to hear what he had
to say. He said if we would turn him loose he
would give us ten dollars more than we paid for his
body, and that he would never drink another drop as
long as he lived. Then we whispered some more
and then told him we thought favorably of his last
proposition, but he must swear, with his hand on the
leg of a corpse we were then dissecting that he would
never drink again, and then he must be blindfolded
and be conducted several blocks away from the dissecting
room, before we could turn him loose. He said
that was all right, and so we blindfolded him, and
made him take a bloody oath, with his hand on a piece
of ice that we told him was a piece of another corpse,
and then we took him out of the house and walked him
around the block four times, and left him on a corner,
after he had promised to send the money to an address
that I gave him. We told him to stand still five
minutes after we left him, then remove the blindfold,
and go home. We watched him, from behind a board
fence, and he took off the handkerchief, looked at
the name on a street lamp, and found he was not far
from home. He started off saying ‘That’s
a pretty narrow escape old man. No more whisky
for you.’ I did not see him again until
this morning, and when I asked him where he was last
night he shuddered and said ’none of your darn
business. But I never drink any more, you remember
that.’ Ma was tickled and she told me I
was worth my weight in gold. Well, good day.
That cheese is musty.” And the boy went
and caught on a passing sleigh.
COL. INGERSOLL PRAYING.
Bob. Ingersoll is taking a rest
from his persécutions of the Creator, and is
traveling in the Yo Semite region of California.
Bob does not believe there is a God, but if he was
riding a kicking mule, down the precipice near the
big trees, and the saddle should turn over with him,
and his foot should be caught in the stirrup, after
the mule had kicked him a few times in the judgement
seat, which is the bowels, in his case, he would be
very apt to bellow like a calf, and say “O,
Lord, please unbuckle that cussed strap.”
We should like to hear Bob had met with some such accident,
just so he would recognize the foreign government
of the Lord, which at present he totally ignores.
Not that we have anything against Ingersoll.
HOW TO INVEST A THOUSAND DOLLARS.
A young man advertises in a Milwaukee
paper for a partnership. He wants to invest one
thousand dollars in some established business.
Go to La Crosse and go to betting on election.
It pays, and is an established business. There’s
millions in it.
BOYS AND CIRCUSES.
There is one thing the American people
have got to learn, and that is to give scholars in
schools a half holiday when there is a circus in town.
We know that we are in advance of many of the prominent
educators of the country when we advocate such a policy,
but sooner or later the people whose duty it is to
superintend schools will learn that we are right, and
they will have to catch up with us or resign.
In the first place, a boy is going
to attend a circus if there is one in town, and the
question before teachers and superintendents should
be, not how to prevent him from going to the circus,
but how to keep his mind on his books the day before
the circus and the day after. There have been
several million boys made into liars by school officials
attempting to prevent their going to circusses, and
we contend that it is the duty of teachers to place
as few temptations to lie as possible in the way of
boys.
If a boy knows that there will be
no school on the afternoon of circus day, he will
study like a whitehead all the forenoon, and learn
twice as much as he will in all day if he can’t
go. If he knows there is a conspiracy on foot
between his parents and the teachers to keep him from
the circus, he begins to think of some lie to get out
of school. He will be sick, or run away, or something.
He will get there if possible.
And after the first lie succeeds in getting him out
of school, he is a liar from the word go. There
is something, some sort of electricity that runs from
a boy to a circus, and all the teachers in the world
cannot break the connection. A circus is the boys’
heaven.
You may talk to him about the beautiful
gates ajar, and the angel band in heaven that plays
around the great white throne, and he can’t understand
it, but the least hint about the circus tent, with
the flap pulled to one side to get in, and the band
wagon, and the girls jumping through hoops, and the
clown, and he is onto your racket at a jump.
You may try to paralyze him by the
story of Daniel in the den of lions, and how he was
saved by faith in the power above, and the boy’s
mind will revert to the circus, where a man in tights
and spangles goes in and bosses the lions and tigers
around, and he will wonder if Daniel had a rawhide,
and backed out of the cage with his eye on the boss
lion.
At a certain age a circus can hold
over heaven or anything else in a boy’s mind,
and as long as the circus does not hurt him, why not
shut up shop a half a day and let him go? If
you keep him in school he wont learn anything, and
he will go to the circus in the evening and be up half
the night seeing the canvas men tear down the tent
and load up, and the next day he is all played out
and not worth a continental. To some it would
look foolish to dismiss school for a circus, but it
will cement a friendship between teachers and scholars
that nothing else could.
Suppose, a day or two before the circus
arrives, the teacher should say to the school:
“Now I want you kids to go through your studies
like a tramp through a boiled dinner, and when the
circus comes we will close up this ranch and all go
to the circus, and if any of you can’t raise
the money to go, leave your names on my desk and I
will see you inside the tent if I have to pawn my
shirt.”
Of course it is a male teacher we
are supposing said this. Well, don’t you
suppose those boys and girls would study? They
would fairly whoop it up. And then suppose the
teacher found forty boys that hadn’t any money
to go and he had no school funds to be used for such
a purpose.
How long would it take him to collect
the money by going around among business men who had
been boys themselves? He would go into a store
and say he was trying to raise money to take some of
the poor children to the circus, and a dozen hands
would go down into a dozen pockets in two jerks of
a continued story, and they would all chip in.
O, we are too smart. We are trying
to fire education into boys with a shot gun, when
we ought to get it into them inside of sugar coated
pills. Let us turn over a new leaf now, and show
these boys that we have got souls in us, and that
we want them to have a good time if we don’t
lay up a cent.
THE WATERS OF LA CROSSE.
We have heretofore entirely overlooked
the magnetic qualities of the La Crosse water.
It will be remembered that the Fond du Lac water is
advertised as magnetic water, and it has been said
that a knife blade, after being soaked in the water
will take up a watch key or a steel pen. That
is nothing compared to the La Crosse water. Last
week a man who had been soaked in La Crosse water,
took up a watch, key and all, and a policeman who
had been using the water took up the man, with the
watch. A pair of ice tongs, made of steel, on
being soaked in water, took up a piece of ice weighing
over a hundred pounds, and a farmer named Dawson,
after drinking the water took up a stray colt.
A young couple stopped the other evening and took
a drink of water and up Fourth street, and before
they got to Seymour’s corner they were walking
so close together that you couldn’t tell which
the bustle was on. We have never seen water that
had so much magnetism in as this. A pot of it
on a house is better than a lightning rod.
SARDINEINDIANAPOLIS.
In company with a couple of hundred
others who were firm in the belief that the Sardinapalus
troupe were under the auspices of the Young Men’s
Christian Association, we attended the performance
on Monday evening. It was heralded as coming
from Booth’s theater, N.Y., where it had a run
of four months. Most of them got away while on
the trip here, and only a few appeared. The scenery,
which was also extensively advertised, was no more
than could have been fixed up with a whitewash brush
in half a day, by home talent. The play, what
there was of it was well rendered, though many doubted
the propriety of the king calling around him a lot
of La Crosse soldiers, to hear him tell the Greek
slave how he loved her. There was much dissatisfaction
about the Greek slave. All marble statues of the
Greek slave represent her with nothing on but a trace
chain around one arm and one leg. But the party
who got up this play went behind the returns and invested
her with a white night gown, which detracted very much
from history. The “soldiers” were
picked up among the La Crosse boys, and they got tangled
up, and couldn’t form a line to save themselves,
and when they stood against the wall it was a melancholy
fact that they tickled the ballet girls in the ribs
as they passed by. This was highly wrong.
It takes the romance out of the affair to gaze upon
an Assyrian soldier, covered with armor, and carrying
a cover to a wash boiler in his hand, and to think
that he is covered with scars won in battle, and then
look at him through a glass and have him wink at you,
and you find that you have seen him thousands of times
standing on the postoffice corner, spitting tobacco
juice across the sidewalk at the hydrant. Mrs.
Sardinapalus did not appear, having gone to visit
her uncle, but “Sard.” stuck to the Greek
slave like a sand burr to a boy’s trousers.
They laid down together on a bale of paper rags and
looked at the dance. The dance was pretty good.
First there came out about a dozen girls in tights,
with skirts as short as pie crust. Their legs
were all round and well got up, showing that the sawdust
was evenly distributed, with no chance for dissatisfaction.
They capered around, and smiled at the reflection of
the red lights in the gallery upon the bald heads
before them, and kicked up like all possessed, and
then they backed up against the wings and fooled with
the La Cross Assyrians, who came down like a wolf on
the fold. Then there came out two first-class
dancers, one short, fat, plump, but mighty small,
so small that she didn’t look as though she was
big enough for a cork to a jug. But she could
dance. Well, she ought to, as she had no clothes
to bother her. Next came a brunette, evidently
of French extraction, with a face that was a protection
against assault with intent to kill, and legs of the
Gothic style. Smith said she was spavined, but
that’s a lie. She danced better than all
of them, and walked on her big toes till the audience
yelled. Then the dancers all got tangled up together,
the brunette fell over on the little blonde, stuck
her hind foot right in the air as straight as a liberty
pole struck by lightning, somebody said “Tableau,”
and the curtain went down, and the audience looked
at each other as much as to say, “Let’s
go home.” The boys in the gallery cheered,
and the curtain was rung up again, but her flag was
still there. Then they had a fighting scene,
where everybody gets mad and goes out into the dressing
room and clashes old swords together, and come back
wounded. The king, after killing up a lot ahead,
got a furlough and came in and lallygaged with the
Greek slave a spell, and then the battle was lost,
and “Sardine.” said he might as well die
for an old sheep as a lamb. So he ordered a funeral
pile built of red fire, and he got on it to be burned
up. The Greek slave said if that was the game
she wanted a hand dealt to her, as wherever “Sard.”
went she was going, as she had an insurance policy
against fire in the Northwestern Mutual. So he
invited her on to the kindling wood, and after hugging
enough to last them through perdition and
mighty good hugging it was too the pile
of slabs was touched off, the flames rolled, and “Sard.”
and the Greek slave went down to hell clasped in each
other’s embrace, and we went to the People’s
store and bought a mackerel and went home and told
our wife we had been to a democratic caucus.
We don’t know what all the other fellows told
their wives, but there has been a heap of lying, we
know that much.
INSECURE ABODES.
Four men fell out of the Oshkosh jail
the other day. If Oshkosh would only imitate
Fond du lac, and paper the county jail with wall
paper, it might become safe.
THE KNIGHT AND THE BRIDAL CHAMBER.
There was one of those things occurred
at a Chicago hotel during the conclave that is so
near a fight and yet so ridiculously laughable that
you don’t know whether you are on foot or a horseback.
Of course some of the Knights in attendance were from
the backwoods, and while they were well up in all
the secret workings of the order, they were awful “new”
in regard to city ways.
There was one Sir Knight from the
Wisconsin pineries, who had never been to a large
town before, and his freshness was the subject of remark.
He was a large-hearted gentleman, and a friend that
any person might be proud to have. But he was
fresh. He went to the Palmer House Tuesday night,
after the big ball, tired nearly to death, and registered
his name and called for a bed.
The clerk told him that he might have
to sleep on a red lounge, in a room with two other
parties, but that was the best that could be done.
He said that was all right, he “had tried to
sleep on one of them cots down to camp, but it nearly
broke his back,” and he would be mighty glad
to strike a lounge. The clerk called a bell boy
and said, “Show the gentleman to 253.”
The boy took the Knight’s keister
and went to the elevator, the door opened and the
Knight went in and began to pull off his coat, when
he looked around and saw a woman on the plush upholstered
seat of the elevator, leaning against the wall with
her head on her hand. She was dressed in ball
costume, with one of those white Oxford tie dresses
cut low in the instep, which looked, in the mussed
and bedraggled condition in which she had escaped
from the exposition ball, very much to the Knight
like a Knight shirt. The astonished pinery man
stopped pulling off his coat and turned pale.
He looked at the woman, then at the elevator boy,
whom he supposed was the bridegroom, and said:
“By gaul, they told me I would
have to sleep with a couple of other folks, but I
had no idea that I should strike a wedding party in
a cussed little bridal chamber not bigger than a hen
coop. But there ain’t nothing mean about
me, only I swow it’s pretty cramped quarters,
ain’t it, miss?” and he sat down on one
end of the seat and put the toe of one boot against
the calf of his leg, took hold of the heel with the
other hand and began to pull it off.
“Sir!” says the lady,
as she opened her eyes and began to take in the situation,
and she jumped up and glared at the Knight as though
she would eat him.
He stopped pulling on the boot heel,
looked up at the woman, as she threw a loose shawl
over her low neck shoulders, and said:
“Now don’t take on.
The book-keeper told me I could sleep on the lounge,
but you can have it, and I will turn in on the floor.
I ain’t no hog. Sometimes they think we
are a little rough up in Wausau, but we always give
the best places to the wimmen, and don’t you
forget it,” and he began tugging on the boot
again.
By this time the elevator had reached
the next floor, and as the door opened the woman shot
out of the door, and the elevator boy asked the Knight
what floor he wanted to go to. He said he “didn’t
want to go to no floor,” unless that woman wanted
the lounge, but if she was huffy, and didn’t
want to stay there, he was going to sleep on the lounge,
and he began to unbutton his vest.
Just then a dozen ladies and gentlemen
got in the elevator from the parlor floor, and they
all looked at the Knight in astonishment. Five
of the ladies sat down on the plush seat, and he looked
around at them, picked up his boots and keister and
started for the door, saying:
“O, say, this is too allfired
much. I could get along well enough with one
woman and a man, but when they palm off twelve grown
persons onto a granger, in a sweat box like this,
I had rather go to camp,” and he strode out,
to be met by a policeman and the manager of the house
and two clerks, who had been called by the lady who
got out first and who said there was a drunken man
in the elevator. They found that he was sober,
and all that ailed him was that he had not been salted,
and explanations followed and he was sent to his room
by the stairs.
The next day some of the Knights heard
the story, and it cost the Wausau man several dollars
to foot the bill at the bar, and they say he is treating
yet. Such accidents will happen in these large
towns.
SEVEN YEAR OLD HORSES.
An old farmer once said, “What
a year it must have been for colts seven years ago
this spring.” No person who has never attempted
to buy a horse can appreciate the remark, but if he
will let it be known that he wants to buy a good horse,
he will be struck with the circumstance that all the
horses that are of any particular account were born
seven years ago. Occasionally there is one that
is six years old, but they are not plenty, Now, those
of us who lived around here seven years ago did not
have our attention called to the fact that the country
was flooded with colts. There were very few twin
colts, and it was seldom that a mother had half a
dozen colts following her. Farmers and stock raisers
did not go round worrying about what they were going
to do with so many colts. The papers, if we recollect
right, were not filled with accounts of the extraordinary
number of colts born. And yet it must have been
a terrible year for colts, because there are only
six horses in Milwaukee that are over seven years
old, but one of them was found to have been pretty
well along in years when he worked in Burnham’s
brick yard in 1848, and finally the owner owned up
that he was mistaken twenty-six years. What a
mortality there must have been among horses that would
now be eight, nine or ten years old. There are
none of them left. And a year from now, when our
present stock of horses would naturally be eight years
old they will all be dead, and a new lot of seven
years old horses will take their places. It is
singular, but it is true. That is, it is true
unless horse dealers lie, and THE SUN would be slow
to charge so grave a crime upon a useful and enterprising
class of citizens. No, it cannot be, and yet,
don’t it seem peculiar that all the horses in
this broad land are seven years old this spring?
We leave the suject for the youth of the land to wonder
over,
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA JOINS A TEMPERANCE SOCIETY.
“Don’t you think my Pa
is showing his age a good deal more than usual?”
asked the bad boy of the grocery man, as he took a
smoked herring out of a box, and peeled off the skin
with a broken bladed jack-knife, and split it open
and ripped off the bone, threw the head at a cat, took
some crackers and began to eat.
“Well, I don’t know but
he does look as though he was getting old,” said
the grocery man, as he took a piece of yellow wrapping
paper and charged the boy’s poor old father
with a dozen herrings and a pound of crackers; “But
there is no wonder he is getting old. I wouldn’t
go through what your father has, the last year, for
a million dollars. I tell you, boy, when your
father is dead, and you get a step-father, and he makes
you walk the chalk mark, you will realize what a bonanza
you have fooled yourself out of by killing off your
father. The way I figure it, your father will
last about six months, and you ought to treat him
right, the little time he has to live.”
“Well, I am going to,”
said the boy, as he picked the herring bones out of
his teeth with a piece of a match that he sharpened
with his knife. “But I don’t believe
in borrowing trouble about a step-father so long before
hand. I don’t think Ma could get a man to
step into Pa’s shoes, as long as I lived, not
if she was inlaid with diamonds, and owned a brewery.
There are brave men, I know, that are on the marry,
but none of them would want to be brevet father to
a cherubim like me, except he got pretty good wages.
And then, since Pa was dissected he is going to lead
a different life, and I guess I will make a man of
him, if he holds out. We got him to join the
Good Templars last night.”
“No, you don’t tell me,”
said the grocery man, as he thought that his trade
in cider for mince pies would be cut off. “So
you got him into the Good Templars, eh?”
“Well, he thinks he has joined
the Good Templars, so it is all the same. You
see my chum and me have been going to a private gymnasium,
on the west side, kept by a Dutchman, and in the back
room he has all the tools for getting up muscle.
There, look at my arm,” said the boy, as he rolled
up his sleeve and showed a muscle about as big as
an oyster. “That is the result of training
at the gymnasium. Before I took lessons I hadn’t
any more muscle than you have got. Well, the
Dutchman was going to a dance on the south side the
other night, and he asked my chum to tend the gymnasium,
and I told Pa if he would join the Good Templars that
night there wouldn’t be many at the lodge, and
he wouldn’t be so embarrassed, and as I was
one of the officers of the lodge I would put it to
him light, and he said he would go, so my chum got
five other boys to help us put him through. So
we steered him down to the gymnasium and made him rap
on the storm door outside, and I said ‘who comes
there?’ and he said it was a pilgrim who wanted
to jine our sublime order. I asked him if he had
made up his mind to turn from the ways of a hyena,
and adopt the customs of the truly good, and he said
if he knew his own heart he had, and then I told him
to come in out of the snow and take off his pants.
He kicked a little at taking off his pants, because
it was cold out there in the storm door dog house,
but I told him they all had to do it. The princes,
potentates and paupers all had to come to it.
He asked me how it was when we initiated women, and
I told him women never took that degree. He pulled
off his pants and wanted a check for them, but I told
him the Grand Mogul would hold his clothes, and then
I blind-folded him, and with a base ball club I pounded
on the floor as I walked around the gymnasium, while
the lodge, headed by my chum, sung, ‘We won’t
go home till morning’ I stopped in front of
the ice water tank, and said, ’Grand Worthy Duke,
I bring before you a pilgrim who has drank of the
dregs until his stomach won’t hold water, and
who desires to swear off.’ The Grand Mogul
asked me if he was worthy and well qualified, and
I told him that he had been drunk more or less since
the reunion last summer, which ought to qualify him.
Then the Grand Mogul made Pa repeat the most blood-curdling
oath, in which Pa agreed, if he ever drank another
drop, to allow anybody to pull his toe-nails out with
tweezers, to have his liver dug out and fed to dogs,
his head chopped off, and his eyes removed. Then
the Mogul said he would brand the candidate on the
bare back with the initial letters of our order, ‘G.T.,’
that all might read how a brand had been snatched from
the burning. You’d a dide to see Pa flinch
when I pulled up his shirt, and got ready to brand
him.
“My chum got a piece of ice
out of the water cooler, and just as he clapped it
on Pa’s back I burned a piece of horses hoof
in the candle, and held it to Pa’s nose, and
I guess Pa actually thought it was his burning skin
that he smelled. He jumped about six feet and
said, ’Great heavens, what you dewin,’
and then he began to roll over a barrel which I had
arranged for him. Pa thought he was going down
cellar, and he hung to the barrel, but he was on top
half the time. When Pa and the barrel got through
fighting I was beside him, and I said, ’Calm
yourself, and be prepared for the ordeal that is to
follow.’ Pa asked how much of this dum
fooling there was, and said he was sorry he joined.
He said he could let licker alone without having the
skin all burned off his back. I told Pa to be
brave and not weaken, and all would-be well. He
wiped the prespiration off his face on the end of
his shirt, and we put a belt around his body and hitched
it to a tackle, and pulled him up so his feet just
off the floor, and then we talked as though we were
away off, and I told my chum to look out that Pa did
not hit the gas fixtures, and Pa actually thought
he was being hauled clear up to the roof. I could
see he was scared by the complexion of his hands and
feet, as they clawed the air. He actually sweat
so the drops fell on the floor. Bime-by we let
him down, and he was awfully relieved though his feet
were not more than two inches from the floor any of
the time. We were just going to slip Pa down a
board with slivers in to give him a realizing sense
of the rough road a reformed man has to travel, and
got him straddle of the board, when the Dutchman came
home from the dance fullern a goose, and he drove us
boys out, and we left Pa, and the Dutchman said, ’Vot
you vas doing here mit dose boys, you old duffer,
and vere vas your pants?’ and Pa pulled
off the handkerchief from his eyes, and the Dutchman
said if he didn’t get out in a holy minute he
would kick the stuffing out of him, and Pa got out.
He took his pants and put them, on in the alley, and
then we came up to Pa and told him that was the third
time the drunken Dutchman had broke up our lodge, but
we should keep on doing good until we had reformed
every drunkard in Milwaukee, and Pa said that was
right, and he would see us through, if it cost every
dollar he had. Then we took him home, and when
Ma asked if she couldn’t join the lodge, too,
Pa said, ’Now you take my advice, and don’t
you ever join no Good Templars. Your system could
not stand the racket. Say, I want you to put
some cold cream on my back.’ I think Pa
will be a different man now, don’t you?”
The grocery man said if he was that
boy’s pa for fifteen minutes he would be a different
boy or there would be a funeral, and the boy took a
handful of soft-shelled almonds and a few layer raisins
and skipped out.
THE WAY WOMEN BOSS A PILLOW.
Among the recent inventions is a pillow
holder. It is explained that the pillow holder
is for the purpose of holding a pillow while the case
is being put on. We trust this new invention
will not come into general use, as there is no sight
more beautiful to the eyes of man than to see a woman
hold a pillow in her teeth while she gently manipulates
the pillow case over it.
We do not say that a woman is beautiful
with her mouth full of pillows. No one can ever
accuse us of saying that, but there is something home-like
and old-fashioned about it that cannot be replaced
by any invention.
We know that certain over fastidious
women have long clamored for some new method of putting
on a pillow case, but these people have either lost
their teeth, or the new ones do not grasp the situation.
They have tried several new methods, such as blowing
the pillow case up, and trying to get it in before
the wind got out, and they have tried to get the pillow
in by rolling up the pillow case until the bottom
is reached, and then placing the pillow on end and
gently unrolling the pillow case, but all these schemes
have their drawbacks.
The old style of chewing one end of
the pillow, and holding it the way a retriever dog
holds a duck, till the pillow case is on, and then
spanking the pillow a couple of times on each side,
is the best, and it gives the woman’s jaws about
the only rest they get during the day.
If any invention drives this old custom
away from us, and we no more see the matrons of our
land with their hair full of feathers and their mouths
full of striped bed-ticking, we shall feel that one
of the dearest of our institutions has been ruthlessly
torn from us, and the fabric of our national supremacy
has received a sad blow, and that our liberties are
in danger.
HUNTING DOGS.
They are making everything out of
rubber now. A man has invented a hunting dog
that can be carried in the pocket. When you get
in the field, all you have to do is to blow the dog
up, and start it to going. This will be a great
saving, as hunters will not have to pay baggage men
a dollar for tying their dogs to a trunk, when they
go off hunting.
ENTERPRISING CHICAGO!
Chicago is to have a hotel built exclusively
for men. Under no circumstances will a woman
be admitted into it. There are so many men who
go to Chicago, who are liable to wink at women at the
table of the hotel, before they know their own heart,
to lead a different life, that this new hotel, without
temptation, has been decided upon. There will
only be a few old bald headed roosters and persons
with red noses and sore eyes stopping at the new hotel.
A hotel without women would be almost as cheerful as
a reform school.
A MAD MINISTER.
There is probably the maddest minister
living at Black River Falls, that can be found in
America to-day. He is a real nice man, and his
name is Burt Wheeler. He preaches good sound
sense, and everybody likes him. He has got friends
at Neillsville, and all around there. At Black
River Falls there is no license, and liquor is unknown,
while at Neillsville there is license, and one can
have benzine at every meal. The other day the
express took a jug from Neillsville to the Falls,
directed to the reverend gentleman, and on the card
attached to the jug handle was the following notice:
“Old Bourbon We have
license here, and knowing you have none in your town
we thought it but kindness to remember your wants.”
When a jug, or a keg arrives at the
Falls by express, every citizen notices it, and they
investigate, and when the jug came into the express
office the expressman winked, and in a few minutes
half the population of the darling little village
was there. They read the note on the card and
winked at each other. One man as he took a piece
of cut sugar out of a barrel, said he had long suspected
that Burt liked his toddy. Another fellow, picking
a mouthful off a codfish, remarked that you couldn’t
always tell about these confounded ministers.
Frank Cooper, the editor of the Banner, though
he looked pained when he saw the name “Old Bourbon”
on the jug, and noticed the immense size of the jug
remarked that it was the best way not to condemn a
man till the returns were all in. The reverened
gentleman was interrupted in his preparation of his
sermon by a neighboring lady who just dropped in to
tell the news, and when she sighed and told him that
his jug of whisky which he had ordered from Neillsville,
was in the express office, he could hardly believe
his ears. He had always, to the best of his knowledge
and belief, tried to lead a different life, and this
was too much too much bourbon. Scratching
out the last line that he had written, which was something
about something biting like an anaconda, and stinging
like a ready reckoner, he put on his coat and started
down town, resolved to face the multitude, conscious
of his innocence. He approached the express office
a little nervous. The crowd filled the street,
and as he passed a raftsman with red breeches on,
said he wouldn’t have such a nose as that on
him for a hundred dollars. “He is full
now,” said another, as the Reverend gentleman
put his hand on an awning post to steady himself in
the trying emergency. A man who was sitting on
a salt barrel, whittling a shingle, and who had one
trousers leg tucked in his boot, and a red sash around
him, said if it could be proved that Wheeler was a
drinking man it would be a hard blow at religion,
but he didn’t know as he cared a blank anyway.
The elder went in the express office and the crowd
fell back to give the chief mourner a chance to look
at the late lamented. There was a different expression
on every face. Some looked as though they were
glad he had been caught in the act, while others wore
a mournful expression, as though they had been suddenly
bereaved. He was pale, yet determined, and as
he read the inscription he said, so help him John
Rogers, he had never ordered any whisky, and never
drank any, and didn’t know anything about this
jug. Turning to those present he said: “This
is some horrid nightmare.” The expressman
said it was no nightmare, it was whisky. Wheeler
said if the charges were paid he would take it, and
taking the jug out doors he raised it high in the
air and dashed it upon the pavement, amid the applause
of his friends. At this point Hon. Wm. T. Price
come along, and was told what had happened. He
looked at the amber liquid oozing down between the
stones on the pavement, put his finger in some of
it, smelled of it, touched it to his tongue, and turning
to the yet pale and excited Reverend, he said:
“Wheeler, you have maintained
a noble principle, but you have destroyed four gallons
of the d dest finest maple syrup that was
ever brewed in Clark county.”
It was true, Doc. French and
Tom Reed, of Neillsville, two good friends of the
Rev. Wheeler, had sent him the syrup, knowing that
he could use it in his family, and being jokers they
had put the Bourbon card on the jug, just for fun,
with the alleged result above stated. Temperance
men should always smell of the cork, at least, before
smashing the jug. We have practiced that a good
many years, and never lost a gallon of maple syrup.
ANNA DICKINSON AS MAZEPPA!
Anna Dickinson is to go upon the stage,
and it is said that she will open in San Francisco,
in the play of “Mazeppa.” If there
is any society for the prevention of cruelty to animals
on the Pacific coast, we trust before Anna is tied
on the wild horse of Tartary, that some one will see
to it that a cushion is put on the back of the horse.
GOOD TEMPLARS ON ICE.
We like to see young Good Templars
have a hankering after cold water, bright water; but
when a Juvenile Lodge about to start on a picnic,
deliberately loads a hunk of ice belonging to The
Sun into an omnibus, we feel like reaching for
the basement of their roundabouts with a piece of
clapboard.
BOUNCED FROM CHURCH FOR DANCING.
The Presbyterian synod at Erie, Pa.,
has turned a lawyer named Donaldson out of the church.
The charge against him was not that he was a lawyer,
as might be supposed, but that he had danced a quadrille.
It does not seem to us as though there could be anything
more harmless than dancing a cold blooded quadrille.
It is a simple walk around, and is not even exercise.
Of course a man can, if he chooses, get in extra steps
enough to keep his feet warm, but we contend that
no quadrille, where they only touch hands, go down
in the middle, and alamand left, can work upon a man’s
religion enough to cause him to backslide.
If it was this new “waltz quadrille”
that Donaldson indulged in, where there is intermittant
hugging, and where the head gets to whirling, and a
man has to hang on to his partner quite considerable,
to keep from falling all over himself, and where she
looks up fondly into his eyes and as though telling
him to squeeze just as hard as it seemed necessary
for his convenience, we should not wonder so much
at the synod hauling him over the coals for cruelty
to himself, but a cold quadrille has no deviltry in
it.
We presume the wicked and perverse
Dr. Donaldson will join another church that allows
dancing judiciously administered, and may yet get to
heaven ahead of the Presbyterian synod, and he may
be elected to some high position there, as Arthur
was here, after the synod of Hayes and Sherman had
bounced him from the Custom House for dancing the great
spoils walk around.
It is often the case here, and we
do not know why it may not be in heaven, that the
ones that are turned over and shook up, and the dust
knocked out of them, and their metaphorical coat tail
filled with boots, find that the whirligig of time
has placed them above the parties who smote them,
and we can readily believe that if Donaldson gets a
first-class position of power, above the skies, he
will make it decidedly warm for his persecutors when
they come up to the desk with their gripsacks and
register and ask for a room and a bath, and a fire
escape. He will be apt to look up to the key
rack and tell them everything is full, but they can
find pretty fair accommodations at the other house,
down at the Hot Springs, on the European plan, by
Mr. Devil, formerly of Chicago.
FROZEN EARS.
“A young fellow and his girl
went out sleighing yesterday, and the lad returned
with a frozen ear. There is nothing very startling
in the simple fact of a frozen ear, but the idea is
that it was the ear next to the girl that he was foolish
enough to let freeze.” A girl that will
go out sleigh-riding with a young man and allow his
ears to freeze is no gentleman, and ought to be arrested.
Why, here in Milwaukee, on the coldest days, we have
seen a young man out riding with a girl, and his ears
were so hot they would fairly “sis,” and
there was not a man driving on the avenue but would
have changed places with the young man, and allowed
his ears to cool. Girls cannot sit too close during
this weather. The climate is rigorous.
HARD ON FOND DU LAC.
Forest street, Fond du Lac, is going
to be a great place for sparking, one of these days.
For three years all the children born on that street
have been girls. Some lay it to the artesian
well water.
THOSE BOLD BAD DRUMMERS.
About seventy-five traveling men were
snowed in at Green Bay during a late blockade, and
they were pretty lively around the hotels, having quiet
fun Friday and Saturday, and passing away the time
the best they could, some playing seven up, others
playing billiards, and others looking on. Some
of the truly good people in town thought the boys
were pretty tough, and they wore long faces and prayed
for the blockade to raise so the spruce-looking chaps
could go away.
The boys noticed that occasionally
a lantern-jawed fellow would look pious at them, as
though afraid he would be contaminated. So Sunday
morning they decided to go to church in a body.
Seventy-five of them slicked up and marched to the
Rev. Dr. Morgan’s church, where the reverend
gentleman was going to deliver a sermon on Temperance.
No minister ever had a more attentive audience, or
a more intelligent one, and when the collection plate
was passed every last one of the travelers chipped
in a silver dollar.
When the sexton had received the first
ten dollars the perspiration stood out on his forehead
as though he had been caught in something. It
was getting heavy, something that never occurred before
in the history of church collections at the Bay.
As he passed by the boys, and dollar after dollar
was added to his burden, he felt like he was at a picnic,
and when twenty-five dollars had accumulated on the
plate he had to hold it with both hands, and finally
the plate was full, and he had to go and empty it
on the table in front of the pulpit, though he was
careful to remember where he left off, so he wouldn’t
go twice to the same drummer.
As he poured the shekels out on the
table, as still as he could, every person in the audience
almost raised up to look at the pile, and there was
a smile on every face, and every eye turned to the
part of the church where sat the seventy-five solemn
looking traveling men, who never wore a smile.
The sexton looked up to the minister, who was picking
up a hymn, as much as to say, “Boss, we have
struck it rich, and I am going back to work the lead
some more.” The minister looked at the boys,
and then at the sexton as though saying, “Verily,
I would rather preach to seventy-five Milwaukee and
Chicago drummers than to own a brewery. Go, thou,
and reap some more trade dollars in my vineyard.”
The sexton went back and commenced
where he left off. He had his misgivings, thinking
maybe some of the boys would glide out in his absence,
or think better of the affair and only put in nickels
on the second heat, but the first man the sexton held
out the platter to planked down his dollar, and all
the boys followed suit, not a man “passed”
or “renigged,” and when the last drummer
had been interviewed the sexton carried the biggest
load of silver back to the table that he ever saw.
Some of the silver dollars rolled
off on the floor, and he had to put some in his coat
pockets, but he got them all, and looked around at
the congregation with a smile and wiped the perspiration
from his forehead with a bandanna handkerchief and
winked, as much as to say, “The first man that
speaks disrespectfully of a traveling man in my presence
will get thumped, and don’t you forget it.”
The minister rose up in the pulpit,
looked at the wealth on the table, and read the hymn,
“A charge to keep I have,” and the congregation
joined, the travelers swelling the glad anthem as
though they belonged to a Pinafore chorus. They
all bowed their heads while the minister, with one
eye on the dollars, pronounced the benediction, and
the services were over.
The traveling men filed out through
the smiles of the ladies and went to the hotel, while
half the congregation went forward to the anxious seat,
to “view the remains.” It is safe
to say that it will be unsafe, in the future, to speak
disparagingly of traveling men in Green Bay, as long
as the memory of that blockade Sunday remains green
with the good people there.
ANNA DICKINSON.
Anna Dickinson is going upon the stage
again and is to play male characters, such as “Hamlet,”
“Macbeth,” and “Claude Melnotte.”
We have insisted for years that Anna Dickinson was
a man, and we dare anybody to prove to the contrary.
There is one way to settle this matter, and that is
when she plays Hamlet. Let the stage manager put
a large spider in the skull of Yorick, and when Hamlet
takes up the skull and says, “Alas, poor Yorick,
I was pretty solid with him,” let the spider
crawl out of one of the eye holes onto Hamlet’s
hand, and proceed to walk up Miss Dickinson’s
sleeve. If Hamlet simply shakes the spider off,
and goes on with the funeral unconcerned, then Miss
Dickinson is a man. But if Hamlet screams bloody
murder, throws the skull at the grave digger, falls
over into the grave, tears his shirt, jumps out of
the grave and shakes his imaginary skirts, gathers
them up in his hands and begins to climb up the scenes
like a Samantha cat chased by a dog, and gets on top
of the first fly and raises Hamlet’s back and
spits, then Miss Dickinson is a woman. The country
will watch eagerly for the result of this test, which
we trust will be made at the Boston Theatre next week.
EXPEDITION IN SEARCH OF A DOUGHNUT.
“’Twas midnight’s
holy hour, and silence was brooding like a gentle spirit
o’er the still and pulseless world.”
Not a sound was heard, except Robert’s dog baying
at a sorrel haired young man and a muchmussed girl,
who were returning home from a suburban picnic.
As they passed out of hearing, and the dog was peacefully
cannibalizing on a link of sausage that had been condemned
by the board of health, owing to a piece of brass
padlock that showed through the silky nickel plating
made of fiddling string material, a soft cry of a
child was heard in an upper room of a mansion owned
by a prosperous business man. The head of the
house heard it and sat up in bed to still the small
voice, but couldn’t, when the mother of the
child said that she had forgotten to bring up anything
for the child to eat in the night, and she must go
down cellar and get a doughnut. The man said
he could never stay there and enjoy himself in bed
and think of his wife, groping around in the dark
below stairs after it. After telling him that
he would probably come up with a pickle, ehe let him
go. Carefully he got out of bed, in an angelic
frame of mind and a night shirt, and barefooted he
prepared to make the descent. As he stopped to
hold one foot in his hand, the instep of which had
struck the rocker of the baby crib, she told him the
doughnuts were in the third crock in the pantry on
the floor. He said it was one evidence of a clear
headed man, that he could walk all over his own house
in the dark. At the head of the first pair of
stairs he tripped on a baby cart and the tongue flew
up and struck him on the knee, but by hanging to the
bannisters he saved himself. At the foot of the
stairs he tumbled over a block house and broke off
a toe nail. He said it was a mean man that wouldn’t
sacrifice a few toe nails for his little baby, and
he laughed. He fell over a dining room chair,
and sat down in another, and when he got up he felt
that though he was not proud, he was stuck up, for
on his night shirt was a sticky fly paper that had
been placed in readiness to catch the unwary early
fly. After peeling off the sticky paper, and subterraneously
swearing a neat, delicate little female swear, he groped
to the cellar door, and began to go down.
Now, if there is anything a boy ought
to be punished for, it is for surreptitiously eating
a large slice of musk melon and leaving the rind on
the top stair. It tends to make a boy disliked.
The head of the family stepped with his bare feet
on the piece of melon, and sat down so quick that
it made his head swim. It made him swim all over,
and under, and everywhere. But if he sat down
soon, he got up sooner. If there is one thing
that a house cat should be taught, it is to sleep elsewhere
than on the top stair. When he fell and struck
the sleeping cat there was a crisis. He took
in the situation at once. An occasional disengaged
feline toe nail, and a squall, told him in burning
words that, while his title to the seat was contested,
it would be impolitic to wait for a commission of
unbiased judges to decide which was entitled to it.
His opponent was armed, and had possession, and he
felt that it would tend to prevent riot and bloodshed
if he quietly gave up. But he felt that while
in his present position the cat was comparatively
harmless, if he attempted to rise she would bring
the whole army and navy into action, and perhaps cripple
his resources. So he decided to jump up in a
hurry before the cat had time to think of her toe
nails much. His position was not pleasant, to
say the least, but he jumped up in a hurry, hoping
the cat would remain and continue her nap. She
was not a remaining cat and as soon as his weight
was removed from her person, she gave a yell as though
frightened, and began to walk up and down his legs,
inside of his night shirt. The question as to
how many toe nails a cat has got, has never been decided,
but he says they have a million, and he can show the
documents to prove it. She went up him as though
he was a fence post, and a dog after her, and he flew
around as though his linen was on fire, and yelled
until his wife came down to see what was the matter.
By unbuttoning the top button the cat was coaxed out,
under protest however, and after a light was lit there
was seen about the maddest man in the world. He
took a candle and went down after the doughnuts, and
after running his hand into a jar of preserved peaches,
and another of pickled pig’s feet, he struck
the right one, and after hot grease from the candle
had run down his fingers he came up with a doughnut,
and then the baby wouldn’t eat it, then he sat
down side-ways in a cushioned chair, applied arnica
and swore till daylight. A single shot was heard
in the cellar that morning, and the young life of
that cat went out. As he rode down on the street
car the next morning, people marvelled that he should
stand up on the back platform, when there were so
many vacant seats, and when a neighbor asked him to
be seated he said, with a yawn, “No thank you,
I have been sitting down a good deal during the night,”
and he looked mad. It is such things that drive
men to commit crimes.
TAKE YOUR LATIN STRAIGHT.
The school board, at its last session
adopted the following rule: “The continental
system of pronounciation shall be taught in the high
schools of La Crosse, and no other allowed except
by direction of board of education.” We
are glad the rule has been adopted, as there is no
doubt that the continental system is the best.
We have been pained beyond measure, as no doubt all
of the school board have, at hearing the scholars
pronounce Latin by ’tother system. No longer
ago than last Saturday, when we were in Mons.
Anderson’s, a girl came in and asked for a pair
of Latin corsets, by the Onalaska system of pronounciation.
The clerk, not understanding, went and got a pair
of those undershirts and drawers, complete in one
number, with no tale to be continued. The girl
blushed, the clerk did not understand, and we had
to explain by the continental system, and the girl
got her corsets, but suppose there had not been a
Latin scholar standing around there waiting for his
wife to buy a package of safty pins, what a predicament
the girl would have been in. On behalf of the
people, THE SUN thanks the board of education for adopting
the continental system of pronounciation, only they
ought to go further, and make it a crime punishable
with suicide for anybody to pronounce it in any other
way. There has been suffering enough by pronouncing
it the old way.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HE IS TOO HEALTHY.
“There, I knew you would get
into trouble,” said the grocery man to the bad
boy, as a policeman came along leading him by the ear,
the boy having an empty champagne bottle in one hand,
and a black eye. “What has he been doing
Mr. Policeman?” asked the grocery man, as the
policeman halted with the boy in front of the store.
“Well, I was going by a house
up here when this kid opened the door with a quart
bottle of champagne, and he cut the wire and fired
the cork at another boy, and the champagne went all
over the sidewalk, and some of it went on me, and
I knew there was something wrong, cause champagne is
too expensive to waste that way, and he said he was
running the shebang and if I would bring him here
you would say he was all right. If you say so
I will let him go.”
The grocery man said he had better
let the boy go, as his parents would not like to have
their little pet locked up. So the policeman let
go his ear, and he throwed the empty bottle at a coal
wagon, and after the policeman had brushed the champagne
off his coat, and smelled of his fingers, and started
off, the grocery man turned to the boy, who was peeling
a cucumber, and said:
“Now, what kind of a circus
have you been having, and what do you mean by destroying
wine that way! and, where are your folks?”
“Well, I’ll tell you.
Ma she has got the hay fever and has gone to Lake
Superior to see if she can’t stop sneezing, and
Saturday Pa said he and me would go out to Oconomowoc
and stay over Sunday, and try and recuperate our health.
Pa said it would be a good joke for me not to call
him Pa, but to act as though I was his younger brother,
and we would have a real nice time. I knowed
what he wanted. He is an old masher, that’s
what’s the matter with him, and he was going
to play himself for a batchelor. O, thunder,
I got on to his racket in a minute. He was introduced
to some of the girls and Saturday evening he danced
till the cows came home. At home he is awful
fraid of rheumatiz, and he never sweats, or sits in
a draft; but the water just poured off’n him,
and he stood in the door and let a girl fan him till
I was afraid he would freeze, and just as he was telling
a girl from Tennessee, who was joking him about being
‘a nold batch,’ that he was not sure as
he could always hold out a woman hater if he was to
be thrown into contact with the charming ladies of
the Sunny South. I pulled his coat and said, ’Pa
how do you spose Ma’s hay fever is to-night,
I’ll bet she is just sneezing the top of her
head off.’ Wall, sir, you just oughten seen
that girl and Pa. Pa looked at me as if I was
a total stranger, and told the porter if that freckled
faced boot-black belonged around the house he had better
be fired out of the ball room, and the girl said ‘the
disgustin’ thing!’ and just before they
fired me I told Pa he had better look out or he would
sweat through his liver pad.
“I went to bed and Pa staid
up till the lights were put out. He was mad when
he came to bed, but he didn’t kick me, cause
the people in the next room would hear him, but the
next morning he talked to me. He said I might
go back home Sunday night, and he would stay a day
or two. He sat around on the veranda all the
afternoon, talking with the girls, and when he would
see me coming along he would look cross. He took
a girl out boat riding, and when I asked him if I
couldn’t go along, he said he was afraid I would
get drowned, and he said if I went home there was nothing
there too good for me, and so my chum and me got to
firing bottles of champagne, and he hit me in the
eye with a cork, and I drove him out doors and was
just going to shell his earth works, when the policeman
collared me. Say, what’s good for a black
eye?”
The grocery man told him his Pa would
cure it when he got home. “What do you
think your Pa’s object was in passing himself
off for a single man at Oconomowoc?” asked the
grocery man, as he charged up the cucumber to the
boy’s father.
“That’s what beats me.
Aside from Ma’s hay fever she is one of the
healthiest women in this town. O, I suppose he
does it for his health, the way they all do when they
go to a summer resort, but it leaves a boy an orphan,
don’t it, to have such kitteny parents?”
SURE OF HEAVEN.
The only persons that are real sure
that their calling and election is sure, and that
they are going to heaven across lots, are the men who
are hung for murder. They always announce that
they have got a dead thing on it, just before the
drop falls. How encouraging it must be to children
to listen to the prayers of our ministers in churches,
who admit that they are miserable sinners, living
on God’s charity, and doubtful if they would
be allowed to sit at His right hand, and as they tell
the story of their own unworthiness the tears trickle
down their cheeks. Then let the children read
an account of a hanging bee, and see how happy the
condemned man is, how he shouts glory hallelujah,
and confesses that, though he killed his man, he is
going to heaven. A child will naturally ask, why
don’t the ministers murder somebody, and make
a dead sure thing of it?
THE NAUGHTY BUT NICE CHURCH CHOIR.
You may organize a church choir and
think you have got it down fine, and that every member
of it is pious and full of true goodness, and in such
a moment as you think not you will find that one or
more of them are full of the old Harry, and it will
break out when you least expect it. There is no
more beautiful sight to the student of nature than
a church choir. To see the members sitting together,
demure, devoted and pious looking, you think that
there is never a thought enters their mind that is
not connected with singing anthems, but sometimes
you get left.
There is one church choir in Milwaukee
that is about as near perfect as a choir can be.
It has been organized for a long time, and has never
quarreled, and the congregation swears by it.
When the choir strikes a devotional attitude it is
enough to make an ordinary Christian think of the
angel band above, only the male singers wear whiskers,
and the females wear fashionable clothes.
You would not think that this choir
played tricks on each other during the sermon, but
sometimes they do. The choir is furnished with
the numbers of the hymns that are to be sung, by the
minister, and they put a bookmark in the book at the
proper place. One morning they all got up to sing,
when the soprano turned pale, as an ace of spades
dropped out of her hymn book, the alto nearly fainted
when the queen of hearts dropped at her feet, and
the rest of the pack was distributed around in the
other books. They laid it onto the tenor, but
he swore, while the minister was preaching, that he
didn’t know one card from another.
One morning last summer, after the
tenor had been playing tricks all spring on the rest
of the choir, the soprano brought a chunk of shoemaker’s
wax to church. The tenor was arrayed like Solomon
in all his glory, with white pants, and a Seymour
coat. The tenor got up to see who the girl was
that came in with the old lady, and while he was up
the soprano put the shoemaker’s wax on the chair,
and the tenor sat down on it. They all saw it,
and they waited for the result. It was an awful
long prayer, and the church was hot, the tenor was
no iceberg himself, and shoemaker’s wax melts
at ninety eight degrees Fahrenheit.
The minister finally got to the amen,
and read a hymn, the choir then coughed and all rose
up. The chair that the tenor sat in stuck to him
like a brother, and came right along and nearly broke
his suspenders.
It was the tenor to bat, and as the
great organ struck up he pushed the chair, looked
around to see if he had saved his pants, and began
to sing, and the rest of the choir came near bursting.
The tenor was called out on three strikes by the umpire,
and the alto had to sail in, and while she was singing
the tenor began to feel of first base to see what was
the matter. When he got his hand on the shoemaker’s
warm wax his heart smote him, and he looked daggers
at the soprano, but she put on a pious look and got
her mouth ready to sing “Hold the Fort.”
Well, the tenor sat down on a white
handkerchief before he went home, and he got home
without anybody seeing him, and he has been, as the
old saying is, “laying” for the soprano
ever since to get even.
It is customary in all first-class
choirs for the male singers to furnish candy for the
lady singers, and the other day the tenor went to a
candy factory and had a peppermint lozenger made with
about half a teaspoonful of cayenne pepper in the
centre of it. On Christmas he took his lozenger
to church and concluded to get even with the soprano
if he died for it.
Candy had been passed around, and
just before the hymn was given out in which the soprano
was to sing a solo, “Nearer My God to Thee,”
the wicked wretch gave her the loaded lozenger.
She put it in her mouth and nibbed off the edges,
and was rolling it as a sweet morsel under her tongue,
when the organ struck up and they all arose.
While the choir was skirmishing on the first part
of the verse and getting scored up for the solo, she
chewed what was left of the candy and swallowed it.
Well, if a democratic torch-light
procession had marched unbidden down her throat she
couldn’t have been any more astonished.
She leaned over to pick up her handkerchief and spit
the candy out, but there was enough pepper left around
the selvage of her mouth to have pickled a peck of
chow-chow. It was her turn to sing, and as she
rose and took the book, her eyes filled with tears,
her voice trembled, her face was as red as a spanked
lobster, and the way she sung that old hymn was a caution.
With a sweet tremulo she sung, “A Charge
to Keep I Have,” and the congregation was almost
melted to tears.
As she stopped, while the organist
got in a little work, she turned her head, opened
her mouth and blew out her breath with a “whoosh,”
to cool her mouth. The audience saw her wipe a
tear away, but did not hear the sound of her voice
as she “whooshed.” She wiped out some
of the pepper with her handkerchief and sang the other
verses with a good deal of fervor, and the choir sat
down, all of the members looking at the soprano.
She called for water, the noble tenor
went and got it for her, and after she had drank a
couple of quarts, she whispered to him: “Young
man, I will get even with you for that peppermint
candy if I have to live a thousand years, and don’t
you forget it,” and then they all sat down and
looked pious, while the minister preached a most beautiful
sermon on “Faith.” We expect that
tenor will be blowed through the roof some Sunday morning,
and the congregation will wonder what he is in such
a hurry for.
SUPREME COURT JUDGES AND U.S. SENATORS.
I would call your attention to a change
that it seems to me should be made in the method of
selecting U.S. Senators and Supreme Judges.
Heretofore it has been noticeable that the men who
carried the longest pole knocked down the senatorial
persimmons. In the matter of the election of Judges
of the Supreme Court, it has been the practice to
secure men for those places at an enormous salary,
when other men would be willing to do the work and
board themselves. The suggestion I would make
is that you pass a law letting the offices of United
States Senator and Judges of the Supreme Court to
the lowest bidder. This method will be economical
and will secure to the state men who can legislate
and judge things well enough for all practical purposes.
The way times are now we must get things at panic
prices or go without.
OUR CHRISTIAN NEIGHBORS HAVE GONE.
It pains us to announce that the Young
Men’s Christian Association, which has had rooms
on two sides of our office for more than a year, has
moved away. We do not know why they moved, as
we have tried to do everything it was possible to
do for their comfort, and to cheer them in their lonely
life. That their proximity to the Sun office
has been beneficial to them we are assured, and the
closeness has not done us any hurt as we know of.
Many times when something has happened
that, had it happened in La Crosse, might have caused
us to be semi-profane, instead of giving way to the
fiery spirit within us, and whooping it up, we have
thought of our neighbors who were truly good, and
have turned the matter over to our business manager,
who would do the subject justice or burst a flue.
When the young Christians have given
a sociable, we have always put on a resigned and pious
expression and gone amongst them about the time the
good bald-headed brother brought up the pail full of
coffee, and the cheerful sister cut the cake.
No one has been more punctual at these
free feeds than we have, though we often noticed that
we never got a fair divide of the cake that was left,
when they were dividing it up to carry home for the
poor. We have been as little annoyed by our neighbors
as we could have been by anybody that might have occupied
the rooms.
It is true that at times the singing
of a church tune in there when we were writing a worldly
editorial has caused us to get tangled, but the piety
that we have smuggled into our readers through the
church music will more than atone for the wrath we
have felt at the discordant music, and we have hopes
the good brothers will not be averse to saying a good
word for us when they feel like it.
When we lent the young Christians
our sanctum as a reception room for the ladies when
they gave the winter picnic to the dry goods clerks,
we did feel a little hurt at finding so many
different kinds of hair pins on the carpet the next
morning, and the different colors of long hair on our
plush chairs and raw silk ottoman would have been a
dead give away on any other occasion, but for this,
even, we have forgiven the young Christians, though
if we ever do so again, they have got to agree to comb
the lounge and the chairs before we shall ever occupy
the rooms again.
There is nothing that is so hard to
explain as a long hair of another color, or hair pins
and blue bows and pieces of switch. They are gone
and we miss them. No more shall we hear the young
Christian slip on the golden stairs and roll down
with his boot heel pointing heavenward, while the
wail of a soul in anguish comes over the banisters,
and the brother puts his hand on his pistol pocket
and goes out the front door muttering a silent prayer,
with blood in his eyes.
No more will the young Christian faint
by the wayside as he brings back our borrowed chairs
and finds a bottle and six glasses on our centre table,
when he has been importuning us to deliver a temperance
speech in his lecture room. Never again shall
we witness the look of agony on the face of the good
brother when we refuse to give five dollars toward
helping discharged criminals to get a soft thing, while
poor people who never committed a crime and have never
been supported by the State are amongst us feeling
the pangs of hunger. No more shall we be compelled
to watch the hard looking citizens who frequent the
reading room of the association for fear they will
enter our office in the still watches of the night
and sleep on the carpet with their boots on.
They are all gone. They have
crossed the beautiful river, and have camped near
the Christian Statesman office, where all is
pure and good except the houses over on Second street,
beyond the livery stable, where they never will be
molested if they do not go there.
Will they be treated any better in
their new home than they have been with us? Will
they have that confidence in their new neighbors that
they have always seemed to have in us? Well,
we hope they may be always happy, and continue to
do good, and when they come to die and go to St. Peter’s
gate, if there is any backtalk, and they have any
trouble about getting in, the good old doorkeeper
is hereby assured that we will vouch for the true
goodness and self-sacrificing devotion of the Milwaukee
Young Men’s Christian Association, and he is
asked to pass them in and charge it up to the Sun.
BUTTERMILK BIBBERS.
The immense consumption of buttermilk
as a drink, retailed over the bars of saloons, has
caused temperance people to rejoice. It is said
that over two thousand gallons a day are sold in Milwaukee.
There is one thing about buttermilk, in its favor,
and that is, it does not intoxicate, and it takes
the place of liquor as a beverage. A man may drink
a quart of buttermilk, and while he may feel like
a calf that has been sucking, and want to stand in
a fence corner and bleat, or kick up his heels and
run around a pasture, he does not become intoxicated
and throw a beer keg through a saloon window.
Another thing, buttermilk does not
cause the nose to become red, and the consumer’s
breath does not smell like the next day after a sangerfest.
The complexion of the nose of a buttermilk drinker
assumes a pale hue which is enchanting, and while
his breath may smell like a baby that has nursed too
much and got sour, the smell does not debar his entrance
to a temperance society.
FISHING FOR PIECES OF WOMEN.
There are lots of ludicrous scenes
to be observed on the railroads and conductors are
loaded with stories that would cause a marble monument
to keep its sides a laughing. Some day we are
going to borrow a conductor, and take him out in the
woods, and place a revolver to his head and make him
deliver a lot of stories. The other day as conductor
Fred Underwood’s train from Chicago, arrived
on the trestle work on the south side, the whistle
blew, the air break was touched off, and the train
came up standing so quick that a woman lost her false
teeth in the sleeper, and everybody’s hair stood
up like a mule’s ears. Every window had
a head out, and when the conductor got out on the
platform he saw the engineer and fireman on the ends
of the ties looking down into the mud and water, shading
their eyes as though looking for the eclipse.
There, sticking out of the mud were
two human legs, and as one leg had a piece of listing
around it, just above the veal, the conductor knew,
instinctively, that the surface indications showed
that there was a woman in there. Then he thought
that the engine had probably struck a female, and
tore her all to pieces, and of course he knew that
the company would expect him to bring home enough
for a mess, or a funeral. Spitting on his hands
he called a brakeman with a transom hook out of the
sleeper, to fish with, they rolled up their trousers
and waded in, after telling a porter to bring a blanket
to put the pieces in. The brakeman got there first
and took hold of one foot, when the conductor got
hold of the brakeman’s coat tail and pulled.
The passengers turned away sick, expecting to see the
mangled remains brought to the surface. They pulled,
and directly the balance of the deceased came up.
It was an Irish lady, with a tin pail, who had been
on the way to take her husband’s dinner to him,
and she stood on one side to let the train pass, and
had lost her balance and fallen into the mud.
As her head came out of the mud, she squirted water
out of her mouth, kicked the brakeman in the ear and
said,
“Lave go of me, I am a dacent woman!”
The conductor asked her if she was hurt.
“Hurted is it,” said she,
“Ivery bone in my body is kilt intirely, and
I have lost me tay cup,” and she looked in her
tin pail in distress.
After vainly trying to get the conductor
to wade in and search for her “tay cup,”
she permitted them to assist her into the car, where
an old doctor from Racine volunteered to examine her
to see if she was mortally injured. He put his
hand on her shoulder and asked her if she was in any
pain.
“Divil the pain, except the
loss of me tay cup,” said she, “and kape
yer owld hands off me, for I am a dacent woman.”
She shook herself in the car and got
mud all over everybody, and finally took her pail
and jumped off at a crossing before arriving at the
depot. As the train came into the depot ten minutes
late, and the conductor jumped off, all mud from head
to foot, as though he had been playing spaniel and
retrieving a wounded duck, Supt. Atkins looked
at his clothes and said, “Where in
have you been all the time?” The conductor took
a wisp of straw to wipe himself off, and as he threw
it under a car he said he had been in the artificial
propagation of the human race. In fact he had
been engaged in the noble work of raising woman to
a higher sphere. He was allowed to go on probation
and wash himself. The brakeman went down there
the next day and was fishing in the same hole.
He said he didn’t know but there might be more
woman in there, but they say he was after the “tay
cup.”
NEARLY BROKE UP THE BALL.
A party of well meaning young people
from Ripon nearly broke up a dance at Hazen’s
cheese factory, out in the country a spell ago.
The people around there are quiet, sober country people,
who confine themselves in dancing, to plain quadrilles
and country dances, with an occasional monnie musk,
or a plain waltz. These young Ripon people are
on the dance bigger than a wolf, and they have learned
all the Boston dips, and Saratoga bends, and Newport
colic dances, and everything new. There is one
dance they have learned which is peculiar to say the
least. It is a species of waltz, but the couple
get together so odd that a person who sees it for the
first time just leans against something and fans himself.
When the music strikes up a waltz the young man opens
his arms and doubles himself up like a boy with the
cholera infantum, his hind leg cramps and his head
lops over on one side, and he looks sick, his back
humps up like a case of chronic inflammatory rheumatism,
and he is ready. The girl who is with him, when
he begins to have spasms, at once seems to go into
a trance. Her back gets up like a cat, she bends
over towards him, her forward leg gets out of joint
at the knee, her neck takes a cramp, her mouth opens
and she lolls, her eyes roll like a steer that has
turned the yoke, and just before she dies she falls
into the arms of the deceased and they are ready.
For a moment they stand and squirm like angle-worms
on a hook, and froth at the mouth, and look, as they
stand there, like a pile driver that has been run
into by an engine. They teeter up and down a little,
and then fly off on a tangent, and they flop around
in unexpected places among the other dancers, jump
like a box car, bump against other couples, and at
every bump they are driven closer together, until
they are so near that it does seem as though they
will have to be pried apart with a handspike; they
look into each other’s eyes as though they would
bite, and they keep going around till their backs
are broke. Well, a party of these kind of dancers
went to the cheese factory where the country people
were gathered, and after dancing a few quadrilles,
the fiddlers struck up an old fashioned waltz.
While the visiting dancers were going into spasms to
get ready to wade in, the floor filled with the country
couples, who were waltzing around old fashioned, when
all of a sudden those Ripon people began to work.
They flopped across the cheese factory, knocked down
a couple from Pickett’s Corners, caromed on
a fellow and his girl from Brandon and sent them against
a barrel of lemonade, glanced across the hall and
struck an old lady amidships that had just started
to call her girl off the floor because she was afraid
the girl would catch those Ripon cramps, knocked her
under a bench, where she lay and called for her husband
Isaiah, to come and pick her up in a basket. In
less than two minutes all the other dancers hauled
off, and stood on benches and looked at them.
Some of the country girls hid their heads and said
they wanted to go home. The visitors slid around
the hall, caught each other on the fly, run the bases,
and come under the wire neck and neck, just as the
man who played second fiddle fell over the base viol
in a dead faint, and the man that played the piccalo
rolled under the music stand, striken with apoplexy.
The manager of the dance called a constable who was
present, and told him to arrest the party, and handcuff
them and take them to the Oshkosh insane asylum, where
they had escaped. The young men explained that
they were not crazy, and that it was only a new kind
of dance, and they were reluctantly allowed to remain,
on condition that they “wouldn’t cut up
any more of them city monkey shines, not afore folks.”
SUMMER RESORTING.
The other day a business man who has
one of the nicest houses in the nicest ward in the
city, and who has horses and carriages in plenty, and
who usually looks as clean as though just out of a
band box and as happy as a schoolma’am at a
vacation picnic, got on a street car near the depot,
a picture of a total wreck. He had on a long linen
duster, the collar tucked down under the neck band
of his shirt, which had no collar on, his cuffs were
sticking out of his coat pocket, his eyes looked heavy,
and where the dirt had come off with the perspiration
he looked pale and he was cross as a bear.
A friend who was on the car, on the
way up town, after a day’s work, with a clean
shirt on, a white vest and a general look of coolness,
accosted the traveler as follows:
“Been summer resorting, I hear?”
The dirty-looking man crossed his
legs with a painful effort, as though his drawers
stuck to his legs and almost peeled the back off, and
answered:
“Yes, I have been out two weeks.
I have struck ten different hotels, and if you ever
hear of my leaving town again during the hot weather,
you can take my head for a soft thing,” and he
wiped a cinder out of his eye with what was once a
clean handkerchief.
“Had a good, cool time, I suppose,
and enjoyed yourself,” said the man who had
not been out of town.
“Cool time, hell,” said
the man, who has a pew in two churches, as he kicked
his limp satchel of dirty clothes under the car seat.
“I had rather been sentenced to the House of
Correction for a month.”
“Why, what’s the trouble?”
“Well, there is no trouble,
for people who like that kind of fun, but this lets
me out. I do not blame people who live in Southern
States for coming North, because they enjoy things
as a luxury that we who live in Wisconsin have as
a regular diet, but for a Chicago or Milwaukee man
to go into the country to swelter and be kept awake
nights is bald lunancy. Why, since I have been
out I have slept in a room a size smaller than the
closet my wife keeps her linen in, with one window
that brought in air from a laundry, and I slept on
a cot that shut up like a jack-knife and always caught
me in the hinge where it hurt.
“At another hotel, I had a broken-handled
pitcher of water that had been used to rinse clothes
in, and I can show you the indigo on my neck.
I had a piece of soap that smelled like a tannery,
and if the towel was not a recent damp diaper than
I have never raised six children.
“At one hotel I was the first
man at the table, and two families came in and were
waited on before the Senegambian would look at me,
and after an hour and thirty minutes I got a chance
to order some roast beef and baked potatoes, but the
perspiring, thick-headed pirate brought me some boiled
mutton and potatoes that looked as though they had
been put in a wash-tub and mashed by treading on them
barefooted. I paid twenty-five cents for a lemonade
made of water and vinegar, with a piece of something
on top that might be lemon peel, and it might be pumpkin
rind.
“The only night’s rest
I got was one night when I slept in a car seat.
At the hotel the regular guests were kept awake till
12 o’clock by number six headed boys and girls
dancing until midnight to the music of a professional
piano boxer, and then for two hours the young folks
sat on the stairs and yelled and laughed, and after
that the girls went to bed and talked two hours more,
while the boys went and got drunk and sang ‘Allegezan
and Kalamazoo.’
“Why, at one place I was woke
up at 3 o’clock in the morning by what I thought
was a chariot race in the hall outside, but it was
only a lot of young bloods rolling ten pins down by
the rooms, using empty wine bottles for pins and China
cuspidores for balls. I would have gone out and
shot enough drunken galoots for a mess, only I was
afraid a cuspidore would carom on my jaw. Talk
about rest, I would rather go to a boiler factory.
“Say, I don’t know as
you would believe it, but at one place I sent some
shirts and things to be washed, and they sent to my
room a lot of female underclothes, and when I kicked
about it to the landlord he said I would have to wear
them, as they had no time to rectify mistakes.
He said the season was short and they had to get in
their work, and he charged me Fifth Avenue Hotel prices
with a face that was child-like and bland, when he
knew I had been wiping on diapers for two days in place
of towels.
“But I must get off here and
see if I can find water enough to bathe all over.
I will see you down town after I bury these clothes.”
And the sticky, cross man got off
swearing at summer hotels and pirates. We don’t
see where he could have been traveling.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA JOKES HIM.
“What on earth is that you have
got on your upper lip?” said the grocery man
to the bad boy, as he came in and began to peel a rutabaga,
and his upper lip hung down over his teeth, and was
covered with something that looked like shoemaker’s
wax, “You look as though you had been digging
potatoes with your nose.”
“O, that is some of Pa’s
darn smartness. I asked him if he knew anything
that would make a boy’s moustache grow, and he
told me the best thing he ever tried was tar, and
for me to rub it on thick when I went to bed, and
wash it off in the morning. I put it on last night,
and by gosh I can’t wash it off. Pa told
me all I had to do was to use a scouring brick, and
it would come off, and I used the brick, and it took
the skin off, and the tar is there yet, and say, does
my lip look very bad?”
The grocery man told him it was the
worst looking lip he ever saw, but he could cure it
by rubbing a little cayenne pepper in the tar.
He said the tar would neutralize the pepper, and the
pepper would loosen the tar, and act as a cooling
lotion to the lacerated lip. The boy went to a
can of pepper behind the counter, and stuck his finger
in and rubbed a lot of it on his lip, and then his
hair began to raise, and he began to cry, and rushed
to the water-pail and ran his face into the water to
wash off the pepper. The grocery man laughed,
and when the boy had got the pepper washed off, and
had resumed his rutabaga, he said:
“That seals your fate.
No man ever trifles with the feelings of the bold
buccanner of the Spanish main, without living to rue
it. I will lay for you, old man, and don’t
you forget it. Pa thought he was smart when he
got me to put tar on my lip, to bring my moustache
out, and to-day he lays on a bed of pain, and to-morrow
your turn will come. You will regret that you
did not get down on your knees and beg my pardon.
You will be sorry that you did not prescribe cold
cream for my bruised lip, instead of cayenne pepper.
Beware, you base twelve ounces to the pound huckster,
you gimlet-eyed seller of dog sausage, you sanded
sugar idiot, you small potato three card monte sleight
of hand rotten egg fiend, you villain that sells smoked
sturgeon and dogfish for smoked halibut. The avenger
is on your track.”
“Look here, young man, don’t
you threaten me, or I will take you by the ear and
walk you through green fields, and beside still waters
to the front door and kick your pistol pocket clear
around so you can wear it for a watch pocket in your
vest. No boy can frighten me by crimus. But
tell me, how did you get even with your Pa?”
“Well, give me a glass of cider
and we will be friends and I will tell you. Thanks!
Gosh, but that cider is made out of mouldy dried apples
and sewer water,” and he took a handful of layer
raisins off the top of a box to take the taste out
of his mouth, and while the grocer charged a peck of
rutabagas, a gallon of cider and two pounds of raisins
to the boy’s Pa, the boy proceeded:
“You see, Pa likes a joke the
best of anybody you ever saw, if it is on somebody
else, but he kicks like a steer when it is on him.
I asked him this morning if it wouldn’t be a
good joke to put some soft soap on the front step,
so the letter-carrier would slip up and spill hisself,
and Pa said it would be elegant. Pa is a Democrat,
and he thinks that anything that will make it unpleasant
for Republican office holders, is legitimate, and
he encouraged me to paralyze the letter-carrier.
The letter-carrier is as old a man as Pa, and I didn’t
want to humiliate him, but I just wanted Pa to give
his consent, so he couldn’t kick if he got caught
in his own trap. You see? Well, this morning
the minister and two of the deacons called on Pa,
to have a talk with him about his actions in church,
on two or three occasions, when he pulled out the pack
of cards with his handkerchief, and played the music
box, and they had a pretty hot time in the back parlor,
and finally they settled it, and were going to sing
a hymn, when Pa handed them a little hymn book, and
the minister opened it and turned pale and said, ‘what’s
this?’ and they looked at it, and it was a book
of Hoyle’s games instead of a hymn book.
Gosh, wasn’t the minister mad! He had started
to read a hymn and he quit after he had read two lines
where it said, ’In a game of four-handed euchre,
never trump your partner’s ace, but rely on
the ace to take the trick on suit.’ Pa was
trying to explain how the book came to be there, when
the minister and the deacons started out, and then
I poured the two quart tin pail full of soft soap
on the front step. It was this white soap, just
the color of the step, and when I got it spread I
went down in the basement. The visitors came
out and Pa was trying to explain to them, about Hoyle,
when one of the deacons stepped on the soap and his
feet flew up and he struck on his pants and slid down
the steps. The minister said ’great heavens,
deacon, are you hurt? let me assist you,’ and
he took two quick steps, and you have seen these fellows
in a nigger show that kick each other head over heels
and fall on their ears, and stand on their heads and
turn around like a top. The minister’s
feet slipped and the next I saw he was standing on
his head in his hat, and his legs were sort of wilted
and fell limp by his side, and he fell over on his
stomach. You talk about spreading the gospel
in heathen lands. It is nothing to the way you
can spread it with two quarts of soft soap. The
minister didn’t look pious a bit, when he was
trying to catch the railing he looked as though he
wanted to murder every man on earth, but it may be
he was tired.
“Well, Pa he was paralyzed,
and he and the other deacon rushed out to pick up
the minister and the first old man, and when they struck
the steps they went kiting. Pa’s feet somehow
slipped backwards, and he turned a summersault and
struck full length on his back, and one heel was across
the minister’s neck, and he slid down the steps,
and the other deacon fell all over the other three,
and Pa swore at them, and it was the worst looking
lot of pious people I ever saw. I think if the
minister had been in the woods somewhere, where nobody
could have heard him, he would have used language.
They all seemed mad at each other. The hired girl
told Ma there was three tramps out on the sidewalk
fighting Pa, and Ma she took the broom and started
to help Pa, and I tried to stop Ma, ’cause her
constitution is not very strong and I didn’t
want her to do any flying trapeze business, but I
couldn’t stop her, and she went out with the
broom and a towel tied around her head. Well,
I don’t know where Ma did strike, but when she
came in she said she had palpitation of the heart,
but that was not the place where she put the arnica.
O, but she did go through the air like a bullet
through cheese, and when she went down the steps a-bumpity-bump,
I felt sorry for Ma. The minister had got so he
could set up on the sidewalk, with his back against
the lower step, when Ma came sliding down, and one
of the heels of her gaiters hit the minister in the
hair, and the other foot went right through between
his arm and his side, and the broom liked to pushed
his teeth down his throat. But he was not mad
at Ma. As soon as he see it was Ma he said, ’Why,
sister, the wicked stand in slippery places, don’t
they?’ and Ma she was mad and said for him to
let go her stocking, and then Pa was mad and he said,
’look-a-here you sky-pilot, this thing has gone
far enough,’ and then a policeman came along
and first he thought they were all drunk, but he found
they were respectable, and he got a chip and scraped
the soap off of them, and they went home, and Pa and
Ma they got in the house some way, and just then the
letter-carrier came along, but he didn’t have
any letters for us, and he didn’t come onto
the steps, and then I went up stairs and I said, ’Pa,
don’t you think it is real mean, after you and
I fixed the soap on the steps for the letter-carrier,
he didn’t come on the step at all,’ and
Pa was scraping the soap off his pants with a piece
of shingle, and the hired girl was putting liniment
on Ma, and heating it in for palpitation of the
heart, and Pa said, ’You dam idjut, no more of
this, or I’ll maul the liver out of you,’
and I asked him if he didn’t think soft soap
would help a moustache to grow, and he picked up Ma’s
work-basket and threw it at my head, as I went down
stairs, and I came over here. Don’t you
think my Pa is unreasonable to get mad at a little
joke that he planned himself?”
The grocery man said he didn’t
know, and the boy went out with a pair of skates over
his shoulder, and the grocery man is wondering what
joke the boy will play on him to get even for the
cayenne pepper.
GATHERED WAISTS!
Andrews’ Bazar says:
“Gathered waists are very much worn.”
If the men would gather the waists carefully they
would not be worn so much. Some men go to work
gathering a waist just as they would go to work washing
sheep, or raking and binding. They ought to gather
as though it was eggs done up in a funnel-shaped brown
paper at a grocery.
CHURCH KENO.
While the most of our traveling men,
our commercial tourists, are nice Christian gentlemen,
there is occasionally one that is as full of the old
Nick as an egg at this time of year is full of malaria.
There was one of them stopped at a country town a
few nights ago where there was a church fair.
He is a blonde, good-natured looking, serious talking
chap, and having stopped at that town every month
for a dozen years, everybody knows him. He always
chips in towards a collection, a wake or a rooster
fight, and the town swears by him.
He attended the fair and a jolly little
sister of the church, a married lady, took him by
the hand and led him through green fields, where the
girls sold him ten-cent chances in saw dust dolls,
and beside still waters, where a girl sold him sweetened
water with a sour stomach, for lemonade, from Rebecca’s
well. The sister finally stood beside him while
the deacon was reading off numbers. They were
drawing a quilt, and as the numbers were drawn all
were anxious to know who drew it. Finally, after
several numbers were drawn it was announced by the
deacon that number nineteen drew the quilt and the
little sister turned to the traveling man and said,
“My! that is my number. I have drawn it.
What shall I do?” “Hold up your ticket
and shout keno,” said he.
The little deaconess did not stop
to think that there might be guile lurking in the
traveling man, but being full of joy at drawing the
quilt, and ice cream because the traveling man bought
it, she rushed into the crowd towards the deacon,
holding her number, and shouted so they could hear
it all over the house, “Keno!”
If a bank had burst in the building
there couldn’t have been so much astonishment.
The deacon turned pale and looked at the poor little
sister as though she had fallen from grace, and all
the church people looked sadly at her, while the worldly
minded people snickered. The little woman saw
that she had got her foot into something, and she blushed
and backed out, and asked the traveling man what “keno”
meant. He said he didn’t know exactly,
but he had always seen people, when they won anything
at that game, yell “keno.” She isn’t
exactly clear yet what “keno” is, but
she says she has sworn off taking advice from pious
looking traveling men. They call her “Little
Keno” now.
THE OLD SWEET SONGS.
A Boston girl sings: “What
is home without a mother,” while the old lady
is mending her daughter’s stockings. There
is something sweet about those old songs.
FAILURE OF A SOLID INSTITUTION.
We are astonished to see that a Boston
dealer in canned goods has failed. If there is
one branch of business that ought to be solid it is
that of canning fruits and things, for there must
be the almightiest profit on it that there is on anything.
It must be remembered that the stuff is canned when
it is not salable in its natural state.
If the canners took tomatoes, for
instance, when they first came around, at half a dollar
for six, and canned them, there would be some excuse
for charging twenty-five cents for a tin thing full,
but they wait until the vines are so full of tomatoes
that the producer will pay the cartage if you will
haul them away, and then the tomatoes are dipped into
hot water so the skin will drop off and they are chucked
into cans that cost two cents each, and you pay two
shillings for them, when you get hungry for tomatoes.
The same way with peas, and peaches, and everything.
Did you ever try to eat canned peas?
They are always old back numbers that are as hard
and tasteless as chips, and are canned after they have
been dried for seed. We bought a can of peas
once for two shillings and couldn’t crack them
with a nut cracker. But they were not a dead loss,
as we used them the next fall for buck shot.
Actually, we shot a coon with a charge of those peas,
and he came down and struck the water, and died of
the cholera morbus the next day.
Talk of canned peaches; in the course
of a brilliant career of forty years we have never
seen only six cans of peaches that were worth the powder
to blast them open. A man that will invent a
can opener that will split open one of these pale,
sickly, hard hearted canned peaches, that swim around
in a pint of slippery elm juice in a tin can, has got
a fortune. And they have got to canning pumpkin,
and charging money for it.
Why, for a dollar, a canning firm
can buy pumpkins enough to fill all the tin cans that
they can make in a year, and yet they charge a fellow
twenty cents for a can of pumpkin, and then the canning
establishment fails. It must be that some raw
pumpkin has soured on the hands of the Boston firm,
or may be, and now we thing we are on the right track
to ferret out the failure, it may be that the canning
of Boston baked beans is what caused the stoppage.
We had read of Boston baked beans
since school days, and had never seen any till four
years ago, when we went to a picnic and bought a can
to take along. We knew how baked beans ought
to be cooked from years of experience, but supposed
the Boston bean must hold over every other bean, so
when the can was opened and we found that every bean
was separate from every other bean, and seemed to
be out on its own recognizance, and that they were
as hard as a flint, we gave them to the children to
play marbles with, and soured on Boston baked beans.
Probably it was canning Boston beans that broke up
the canning establishment.
REGISTRY OF ELECTORS.
The registry law has proved a conspicuous
failure, inasmuch as it has taken ten years of persistent
efforts by its use to make a change in the admistration.
I would suggest that you amend the registry law by
providing that all qualified voters have their ears
punched, immediately after voting, by the inspectors
of elections, the same as conductors punch tickets.
This method will obviate the difficulties heretofore
experienced, and check illegal voting and prevent
repeating.
ABOUT HELL.
An item is going the rounds of the
papers, to illustrate how large the sun is, and how
hot it is, which asserts that if an icicle a million
miles long, and a hundred thousand miles through,
should be thrust into one of the burning cavities
of the sun, it would be melted in the hundredth part
of a second, and that it would not cause as much “sissing”
as a drop of water on a hot griddle.
By this comparison we can realize
that the sun is a big thing, and we can form some
idea of what kind of a place it would be to pass the
summer months. In contemplating the terrible
heat of the sun, we are led to wonder why those whose
duty it is to preach a hell, hereafter, have not argued
that the sun is the place where sinners will go to
when they die.
It is not our desire to inaugurate
any reform in religious matters, but we realize what
a discouraging thing it must be for preachers to preach
hell and have nothing to show for it. As the
business is now done, they are compelled to draw upon
their imagination for a place of endless punishment,
and a great many people, who would be frightened out
of their boots if the minister could show them hell
as he sees it, look upon his talk as a sort of dime
novel romance.
They want something tangible on which
they can base their belief, and while the ministers
do everything in their power to encourage sinners by
picturing to them the lake of fire and brimstone, where
boat-riding is out of the question unless you paddle
around in a cauldron kettle, it seems as though their
labors would be lightened if they could point to the
sun, on a hot day in August, and say to the wicked
man that unless he gets down on his knees and says
his “Now I lay me,” and repents and is
sprinkled, and chips in pretty flush towards the running
expenses of the church, and stands his assessments
like a thoroughbred, that he will wake up some morning,
and find himself in the sun, blistered from Genesis
to Revelations, thirsty as a harvest hand and not
a brewery within a million miles, begging for a zinc
ulster to cool his parched hind legs.
Such an argument, with an illustration
right on the blackboard of the sky, in plain sight,
would strike terror to the sinner, and he would want
to come into the fold too quick. What
the religion of this country wants, to make it take
the cake, is a hell that the wayfaring man, though
a Democrat or a Greenbacker, can see with the naked
eye. The way it is now, the sinner, if he wants
to find out anything about the hereafter, has to take
it second handed, from some minister or deacon who
has not seen it himself, but has got his idea of it
from some other fellow who maybe dreamed it out.
Some deacon tells a sinner all about
the orthodox hell, and the sinner does not know whether
to believe him or not. The deacon may have lied
to the sinner some time in a horse trade, or in selling
him goods, and beat him, and how does he know but
the same deacon is playing a brace game on him on
the hereafter, or playing him for a sardine.
Now, if the people who advance these
ideas of heaven or hell, had a license to point to
the moon, the nice, cool moon, as heaven, which would
be plausible, to say the least, and say that it was
heaven, and prove it, and could prove that the sun
was the other place, which looks reasonable, according
to all we have heard about ’tother place, the
moon would be so full there would not be standing
room, and they would have to turn Republicans away,
while the sun would be playing to empty benches, and
there would only be a few editors there who got in
on passes.
Of course, during a cold winter, when
the thermometer was forty or fifty degrees below zero,
and everybody was blocked in, and coal was up to seventeen
dollars a ton, the cause of religion would not prosper
as much as it would in summer, because when you talked
to a sinner about leading a different life or he would
go to the sun, he would look at his coal pile and
say that he didn’t care a continental how soon
he got there, but these discouragements would not
be any greater than some that the truly good people
have to contend with now, and the average the year
round would be largely in favor of going to the moon.
The moon is very popular now, even,
and if it is properly advertised as a celestial paradise,
where only good people could get their work in, and
where the wicked could not enter on any terms, there
would be a great desire to take the straight and narrow
way to the moon, and the path to the wicked sun would
be grown over with sand burs, and scorched with lava,
and few would care to take passage by that route.
Anyway, this thing is worth looking into.
PREPARING FOR WAR.
The Sun is no alarmist, but
it can see in recent events what it believes to be
a preparation for war. All of the manufactories
of fire arms and cartridges are working night and
day, and the Oneida community have just received an
order to immediately can 24,000 cans of baked beans.
When the war will break out we do not know, but all
this fixed amunition is not being fixed for no 4th
of July. It is trouble.
A TONY SLAUGHTER HOUSE.
A Milwaukee paper copies what THE
SUN said about killing hogs while under the influence
of chloroform, at Keine & Wilson’s packing house,
and intimates that it is all a lie. Have we lived
to this age to have our word doubted by a Milwaukee
editor? This is too much. Why, bless the
dear man, the half has not been told. The firm
we speak of is desirous of building up a trade for
gilt edged pork and hams, so every improvement known
to the trade is inaugurated. We did not think
it necessary to describe the whole process, but now
that our word is doubted, it is necessary to do so.
When the late lamented hog is transferred from the
parlor where he was chloroformed, his body is gently,
yet firmly placed in a gold lined tank, filled with
boiling Florida water and cologne, where the body remains
until the bristles become loose, when it is transferred
to a table covered with purple velvet, and the bristles
are removed by the gentlemanly ushers, dressed in
the fashions of the time of George III, armed with
gold candle sticks, studded with diamonds. Then
the body is taken by easy stages, into the presence
of the intestine transporter, who reclines upon a
downy couch. He raises up, brushes a particle
of dust from his sleeve, and with a silver knife cuts
the hog from Dan to Beersheba, and the patent insides
are received on a silver salver, and divided among
attendant maidens. The inside of the hog is washed
with bay rum, and sweet majorum is put in. Then
the hog is removed and cut up. The portions salted
are salted for keeps, and the hams and bacon are smoked
in a room filled with incense, and when the smoked
meat comes out it is good enough for a king, or a
queen, or a Milwaukee editor. Lie, indeed!
We should like to see ourselves lying for one hog.
AN ARM THAT IS NOT RELIABLE.
A young fellow about nineteen, who
is going with his first girl, and who lives on the
West Side, has got the symptoms awfully. He just
thinks of nothing else but his girl, and when he can
be with her, which is seldom, on account
of the old folks. he is there, and when
he cannot be there, he is there or thereabouts, in
his mind. He had been trying for three months
to think of something to give his girl for a Christmas
present, but he couldn’t make up his mind what
article would cause her to think of him the most,
so the day before Christmas he unbosomed himself to
his employer, and asked his advice as to the proper
article to give. The old man is bald-headed and
mean. “You want to give her something that
will be a constant reminder of you?” “Yes,”
he said, “that was what was the matter.”
“Does she have any corns?” asked the old
wretch. The boy said he had never inquired into
the condition of her feet, and wanted to know what
corns had to do with it. The old man said that
if she had corns, a pair of shoes about two sizes
too small would cause her mind to dwell on him a good
deal. The boy said shoes wouldn’t do.
The old man hesitated a moment, scratched his head,
and finally said:
“I have it! I suppose,
sir, when you are alone with her, in the parlor, you
put your arm around her waist; do you not, sir?”
The young man blushed, and said that
was about the size of it.
“I presume she enjoys that part of the discourse,
eh?”
The boy said that, as near as he could
tell, by the way she acted, she was not opposed to
being held up.
“Then, sir, I can tell you of
an article that will make her think of you in that
position all the time, from the moment she gets up
in the morning till she retires.”
“Is there any attachment to
it that will make her dream of me all night?”
asked the boy.
“No, sir! Don’t be a hog,”
said the bad man.
“Then what is it?”
The old man said one word, “Corset!”
The young man was delighted, and he went to a store
to buy a nice corset.
“What size do you want?” asked the girl
who waited on him.
That was a puzzler. He didn’t
know they came in sizes. He was about to tell
her to pick out the smallest size, when he happened
to think of something.
“Take a tape measure and measure my arm; that
will just fit.”
The girl looked wise as though she
had been there herself, found that it was a twenty-two
inch corset the boy wanted, and he went home and wrote
a note and sent it with the corset to the girl.
He didn’t hear anything about it till the following
Sunday, when he called on her. She received him
coldly, and handed him the corset, saying, with a tear
in her eye, that she had never expected to be insulted
by him. He told her he had no intention of insulting
her; that he could think of nothing that would cause
her to think of the gentle pressure of his arm around
her waist but a corset, but if she felt insulted he
would take his leave, give the corset to some poor
family, and go drown himself.
He was about to go away, when she
burst out crying, and sobbed out the following words,
wet with salt brine.
“It was v-v-v-very thoughtful
of y-y-you, but I couldn’t feel it!
It is f-f-four sizes too b-b-big! Why didn’t
you get number eight? You are silent, you cannot
answer, enough?”
They instinctively found their way
to the sofa; mutual explanation followed; he measured
her waist again; saw where he had made a mistake by
his fingers lapping over on the first turn, and he
vowed, by the beard of the prophet, he would change
it for another, if she had not worn it and got it
soiled. They are better now.
THE BOY AND THE GOAT.
A man on King Street gave a boy a
goat the other day, and he tied a rope around its
neck to lead it home. The boy wanted to go through
the gate, but as the goat concluded to jump over the
fence and pull the boy through between the pickets,
he let the goat have its own way. The boy got
through the fence in instalments, leaving his shirt
collar and one pants leg on the pickets, the goat
dragged him out into the middle of the street, and
then there occurred a sanguinary encounter to see whether
the boy or the goat should boss the moving. At
one time the spectators thought the goat would take
the boy home. The animal used the boy for a cultivator,
and they tore up the street like hands working on
the road, till the goat slipped the rope over his
head, and then the boy gathered himself up by the
armful, and went and told his mother that he got his
rope back anyway. She combed him with a piece
of barrel.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA GETS MAD!
“I was down to the drug store
this morning and saw your Ma buying a lot of court-plaster,
enough to make a shirt I should think. What’s
she doing with so much court-plaster?” asked
the grocery man of the bad boy, as he came in and
pulled off his boots by the stove and emptied out a
lot of snow that had collected as he walked through
a drift, which melted and made a bad smell.
“O, I guess she was going to
patch Pa up so he will hold water. Pa’s
temper got him into the worst muss you ever see, last
night. If that museum was here now they would
hire Pa and exhibit him as the tattooed man.
I tell you, I have got too old to be mauled as though
I was a kid, and any man who attacks me from this
out, wants to have his peace made with the insurance
companies, and know that his calling and election is
sure, because I am a bad man and don’t you forget
it.” And the boy pulled on his boots and
looked so cross and desperate that the grocer-man asked
him if he wouldn’t try a little new cider.
“Good heavens!” said the
grocery man, as the boy swallowed the cider, and his
face resumed its natural look, and the piratical frown
disappeared with the cider. “You have not
stabbed your father have you? I have feared that
one thing would bring on another, with you, and that
you would yet be hung.”
“Naw, I haven’t stabbed
him. It was another cat that stabbed him.
You see, Pa wants me to do all the work around the
house. The other day he bought a load of kindling
wood, and told me to carry it into the basement.
I had not been educated up to kindling wood, and I
didn’t do it. When supper time came, and
Pa found that I had not carried in the kindling wood,
he had a hot box, and told me if that wood was not
in when he came back from the lodge, that he would
warm my jacket. Well, I tried to hire some one
to carry it in, and got a man to promise to come in
the morning and carry it in and take his pay in groceries,
and I was going to buy the groceries here and have
them charged to Pa. But that wouldn’t help
me out that night. I knew when Pa came home he
would search for me. So I slept in the back hall
on a cot. But I didn’t want Pa to have all
his trouble for nothing, so I borrowed an old torn
cat that my chum’s old maid aunt owns, and put
the cat in my bed. I thought if Pa came into my
room after me, and found that by his unkindness I
had changed to a torn cat, he would be sorry.
That is the biggest cat you ever see, and the worst
fighter in our ward. It isn’t afraid of
anything, and can whip a New Foundland dog quicker
than you could put sand in a barrel of sugar.
Well, about eleven o’clock I heard Pa tumbing
over the kindling wood, and I knew by the remark he
made as the wood slid around under him, that there
was going to be a cat fight real quick. He came
up to Ma’s room, and sounded Ma as to whether
Hennery had retired to his virtuous couch. Pa
is awful sarcastic when he tries to be. I could
hear him take off his clothes, and hear him say, as
he picked up a trunk strap, ’I guess I will go
up to his room and watch the smile on his face, as
he dreams of angels. I yearn to press him to
my aching bosom.’ I thought to myself, mebbe
you won’t yearn so much directly. He come
up stairs, and I could hear him breathing hard.
I looked around the corner and could see he just had
on his shirt and pants, and his suspenders were hanging
down, and his bald head shown like a calcium light
just before it explodes. Pa went into my room,
and up to the bed, and I could hear him say, ’Come
out here and bring in that kindling wood or I will
start a fire on your base burner with this strap.’
And then there was a yowling such as I never heard
before, and Pa said, ‘Helen Blazes,’ and
the furniture in my room began to fall around and
break. O, my! I think Pa took the
torn cat right by the neck, the way he does me, and
that left the cat’s feet free to get in their
work. By the way the cat squawled as though it
was being choked I know Pa had him by the neck.
I suppose the cat thought Pa was a whole flock of New
Foundland dogs, and the cat had a record on dogs,
and it kicked awful. Pa’s shirt was no
protection at all in a cat fight, and the cat just
walked all around Pa’s stomach, and Pa yelled
‘police,’ and ‘fire,’ and ’turn
on the hose,’ and he called Ma, and the cat
yowled. If Pa had had presence of mind enough
to have dropped the cat, or rolled it up in the mattrass,
it would have been all right, but a man always gets
rattled in time of danger, and he held on to the cat
and started down stairs yelling murder, and he met
Ma coming up.
“I guess Ma’s night cap
or something frightened the cat more, cause he stabbed
Ma on the night-shirt with one hind foot, and Ma said
’mercy on us,’ and she went back, and
Pa stumbled on a hand-sled that was on the stairs,
and they all fell down, and the cat got away and went
down in the coal bin and yowled all night. Pa
and Ma went into their room, and I guess they annointed
themselves with vasaline, and Pond’s extract,
and I went and got into my bed, cause it was cold
out in the hall, and the cat had warmed my bed as
well as it had warmed Pa. It was all I could do
to go to sleep, with Pa and Ma talking all night,
and this morning I came down the back stairs, and
haven’t been to breakfast, cause I don’t
want to see Pa when he is vexed. You let the
man that carries in the kindling wood have six shillings
worth of groceries, and charge them to Pa. I have
passed the kindling wood period in a boy’s life,
and have arrived at the coal period. I will carry
in coal, but I draw the line at kindling wood.”
“Well, you are a cruel, bad
boy,” said the grocery man, as he went to the
book and charged the six shillings.
“O, I don’t know.
I think Pa is cruel. A man who will take a poor
kitty by the neck, that hasn’t done any harm,
and tries to chastise the poor thing with a trunk
strap, ought to be looked after by the humane society.
And if it is cruel to take a cat by the neck, how
much more cruel is it to take a boy by the neck, that
had diphtheria only a few years ago, and whose throat
is tender? Say, I guess I will accept your invitation
to take breakfast with you,” and the boy cut
off a piece of bologna and helped himself to the crackers,
and while the grocery man was out shoveling off the
snow from the sidewalk, the boy filled his pockets
with raisins and loaf sugar, and then went out to
watch the man carry in his kindling wood.
SPURIOUS TRIPE.
Another thing that is being largely
counterfeited is tripe. Parties who buy tripe
cannot be too careful. There is a manufactory
that can make tripe so natural that no person on earth
can detect the deception. They take a large sheet
of rubber about a sixteenth of an inch thick for a
background, and by a process only known to themselves
veneer it with a Turkish towel, and put it in brine
to soak. The unsuspecting boarding house keeper,
or restaurant man buys it and cooks it, and the boarder
or transient guest calls for tripe. A piece is
cut off the damnable tripe with a pair of shears used
in a tin shop for cutting sheet iron, and it is handed
to the victim. He tries to cut it, and fails;
he tries to gnaw it off, and if he succeeds in getting
a mouthful, that settles him. He leaves his tripe
on his plate, and it is gathered up and sewed on the
original piece, and is kept for another banquet.
“CASH.”
On circus day W.H.H. Cash, the
great railroad monopolist of New Lisbon, was in the
city. He had just made a few hundred thousand
dollars on a railroad contract, and he decided to
expend large sums of money in buying dry goods.
He went into one of our stores and was passing along
up the floor, when a black-eyed girl with a dimple
in her chin, pearly teeth, red pouting lips, who was
behind the counter, shouted, “cash, here!”
Mr. Cash turned to her, a smile illuminating his face
as big as a horse collar. He is one of the most
modest men in the world, and as he extended his great
big horny hand to the girl, a blush covered his face,
and the perspiration stood in great beads on his forehead.
“How do yeu dew?” said Cash, as she seemed
to shrink back in a frightened manner. They gazed
at each other a moment, in astonishment, when another
girl, perhaps a little better looking, further on,
said, “Here, Cash, quick!” He at once made
up his mind that she was the one that had spoken to
him the first time, so he said, “Beg your pardon,
miss,” to the black-eyed girl, and went on to
where the other girl was wrapping up a corset in a
base ball undershirt. As he approached her she
smiled, supposing he wanted to buy something.
He thought she knew him, and he sat down on a stool
and put out his hand and said, “How have you
been?” She didn’t seem to shake very much,
but asked him if there was anything she could show
him. He thought may be it was against the rules
for the clerks to speak to anybody, unless they were
buying something, so he said, “Yes, of course.
Show me corsets, stockings, anything, gaul dumbed
if I care what.” She was just beginning
to look upon him as though she thought he had escaped,
when a little blonde on the other side of the store,
as sweet as honey, shouted, “Cash, Cash, I need
thee every hour. Come a running.” To
say that Cash was astonished, is drawing it mild.
He knew that they all wanted him, but he couldn’t
make out how they seemed to know his name. He
looked at the little blonde a minute, trying to think
where he had met her, when he decided to go over and
ask her. On the way over he thought she resembled
a girl that used to live in Portage. He went
up to her, and with a smile that was childlike and
bland, he said, “Why, how are you, Samantha?”
The little blonde looked daggers at him. “Didn’t
you use to wait on tables there at the Fox House,
at Portage?” The girl picked up a roll of paper
cambric, and was about to brain him, when the floor
walker came along, and asked what was the matter.
Cash explained that since he came into the store, three
or four girls had yelled to him, and he couldn’t
place them. “There,” says he, as
another girl yelled “Cash,” “there’s
another of ’em wants me,” and he was going
to where she was, when the floor walker asked him if
his name was Cash. “You bet your liver
it is,” said Cash. It was then explained
to him that the girls were calling cash boys.
He thought it over a minute and said, “Sold,
by the great baldheaded Elijah. Won’t you
go down and take something? Invite all of them.
The girls can take soda. I’ll be gaul blasted
if I ever had such a rig played on me.”
And he went out into the glare of the sunlight, with
his hat pulled down over his eyes, and just then the
circus procession came along, and he followed off the
elephants. There are lots of worse men than Cash.
TO WHAT VILE USES MAY WE COME.
A dispatch from Chicago, says that
three men were shot on “a boat used for the
vilest purposes.” We never knew that the
newspapers were printed on boats there in Chicago.
THE ADVENT PREACHER AND THE BALLOON.
There occasionally occurs an accident
in this world that will make a person laugh though
the laughing may border on the sacrilegious. For
instance, there is not a Christian but will smile at
the ignorance of the Advent preacher up in Jackson
county who, when he saw the balloon of King, the balloonist,
going through the air, thought it was the second coming
of Christ, and got down on his knees and shouted to
King, who was throwing out a sand bag, while his companion
was opening a bottle of export beer, “O, Jesus,
do not pass me by.”
And yet it is wrong to laugh at the
poor man, who took an advertising agent for a Chicago
clothing store for the Savior, who he supposed was
making his second farewell tour. The minister
had been preaching the second coming of Christ until
he looked for him every minute. He would have
been as apt to think, living as he did in the back
woods, that a fellow riding a bicycle, with his hair
and legs parted in the middle, along the country road,
was the object of his search.
We should pity the poor man for his
ignorance, we who believe that when Christ does
come he will come in the old-fashioned way, and not
in a palace car, or straddle of the basket of a balloon.
But we can’t help wondering what the Adventist
must have thought, when he appealed to his Savior,
as he supposed, and the balloonist shied a sand bag
at him and the other fellow in the basket threw out
a beer bottle and asked, “Where in
are we?”
The Adventist must have thought that
the Savior of mankind was traveling in mighty queer
company, or that he had taken the other fellow along
as a frightful example. And what could the Adventist
have thought when he saw a message thrown out of the
balloon, and went with trembling limbs and beating
heart to pick it up, believing that it was a command
from on high to sinners, and found that it was nothing
but a hand bill for a Chicago hand-me-down clothing
store.
He must have come to the conclusion
that the Son of Man had got pretty low down to take
a job of bill posting for a reversible ulster and paper
collar bazar. It must have been food
for reflection for the Advent preacher, as he picked
up the empty beer bottle, shied at him from the chariot
that he supposed carried to earth the Redeemer of man.
He must have wondered if some Milwaukee brewer had
not gone to heaven and opened a brewery.
Of course we who are intelligent,
and would know a balloon if we saw it, would not have
had any such thoughts, but we must remember that this
poor Advent preacher thought that the day had come
that had been promised so long, and that Christ was
going to make a landing in a strong Republican county.
We may laugh at the Adventist’s disappointment
that the balloon did not tie up to a stump and take
him on board, but it was a serious matter to him.
He had been waiting for the wagon,
full of hope, and when it came, and he saw the helmet
on King’s head and thought it was a crown of
glory, his heart beat with joy, and he plead in piteous
accents not to be passed by, and the confounded gas
bag went on and landed in a cranberry marsh, and the
poor, foolish, weak, short-sighted man had to get in
his work mighty lively to dodge the sand bags, beer
bottles, and rolls of clothing store posters.
The Adventist would have been justified
in renouncing his religion and joining the Democratic
party. It is sad, indeed.
MR. PECK’S SUNDAY LECTURE.
The papers all around here are saying
that I have a new Sunday Lecture, with a bad title.
The way of it was this. A man in a neighboring
city telegraphed me to know if I would deliver a “Sunday
Lecture,” and telling me to choose my subject,
and answer by telegraph. I thought it was some
joke of the boys. The idea of me delivering a
Sunday lecture was ridiculous, so, in a moment of
thoughtlessness I telegraphed back, “What in
the d do you take me for?”
I supposed that that would be enough to inform the
man that I was not in the business. What do you
suppose he did? He telegraphed back to me as
follows: “All right. We have advertised
you for Sunday. Subject, ‘What the d
do you take me for.’” You can judge something
of my surprise and indignation.
That is how it was.
RELIGION AND FISH.
Newspaper reports of the proceedings
of the Sunday School Association encamped on Lake
Monona, at Madison, give about as many particulars
of big catches of fish as of sinners. The delegates
divide their time catching sinners on spoon-hooks
and bringing pickerel to repentance. Some of the
good men hurry up their prayers, and while the “Amen”
is leaving their lips they snatch a fish-pole in one
hand and a baking-powder box full of angle worms in
the other, and light out for the Beautiful Beyond,
where the rock bass turn up sideways, and the wicked
cease from troubling.
Discussions on how to bring up children
in the the way they should go are broken into by a
deacon with his nose peeled coining up the bank with
a string of perch in one hand, a broken fish-pole
in the other, and a pair of dropsical pantaloons dripping
dirty water into his shoes.
It is said to be a beautiful sight
to see a truly good man offering up supplications
from under a wide-brimmed fishing hat, and as he talks
of the worm that never, or hardly ever dies, red angle
worms that have dug out of the piece of paper in which
they were rolled up are crawling out of his vest pocket.
The good brothers compare notes of good places to do
missionary work, where sinners are so thick you can
knock them down with a club, and then they get boats
and row to some place on the lake where a local liar
has told them the fish are just sitting around on their
haunches waiting for some one to throw in a hook.
This mixing religion with fishing
for black bass and pickerel is a good thing for religion,
and not a bad thing for the fish. Let these Christian
statesmen get “mashed” on the sport of
catching fish, and they will have more charity for
the poor man who, after working hard twelve hours a
day for six days, goes out on a lake Sunday and soaks
a worm in the water and appeases the appetite of a
few of God’s hungry pike, and gets dinner for
himself in the bargain. While arguing that it
is wrong to fish on Sunday, they will be brought right
close to the fish, and can see better than before,
that if a poor man is rowing a boat across a lake on
Sunday, and his hook hangs over the stern, with a piece
of liver on, and a fish that nature has made hungry
tries to steal his line and pole and liver, it is
a duty he owes to society to take that fish by the
gills, put it in the boat and reason with it, and
try to show it that in leaving its devotions on a
Sunday and snapping at a poor man’s only hook,
it was setting a bad example.
These Sunday school people will have
a nice time, and do a great amount of good, if the
fish continue to bite, and they can go home with their
hearts full of the grace of God, their stomachs full
of fish, their teeth full of bones; and if they fall
out of the boats, and their suspenders hold out, they
may catch a basin full of eels in the basement of their
pantaloons. But we trust they will not try to
compete with the local sports in telling fish stories.
That would break up a whole Sunday school system.
THE POLITICAL OUTLOOK.
When you see an article in the editorial
columns of a paper headed, “The Political Outlook,”
look at the bottom line, and if it says “sold
by all druggists,” don’t read it.
There is such an article going the rounds, which is
an advertisement of a patent medicine. It is a
counterfeit well calculated to deceive. Don’t
read a political article unless the owner’s
name is blown in the bottle.
ROPE LADDERS.
The law to compel hotel keepers to
provide rope ladders for every room above the second
floor, is said not to be enforced, though it should
be by all means. The law ought to be amended
so as to compel guests to get up once or twice during
the night and run up or down the rope ladder, outside
the window, in their night clothes, so as to be in
practice in case of fire. When every room is
provided with rope ladders there will be lots of fun.
Those men who invariably blow out the gas, will probably
think they have got to come down stairs on the rope
ladder in the morning, and it will take an extra clerk
to stand in the alleys around a hotel, with a shot
gun, to keep impecunious guests from going away from
the tavern via rope ladder. And then imagine
an Oshkosh man in a Milwaukee hotel, his head full
of big schemes, and his skin full of beer. He
has been on a “bum,” and is nervous, and
on being shown to his room he sees the rope ladder
coiled up under the window, ready to spring upon him.
He stares at it, and the cold sweat stands all over
him. The rope ladder returns his gaze, and seems
to move and to crawl towards his feet. For a moment
he is powerless to move. His hair stands on end,
his heart ceases to beat, cold and warm chills follow
each other down his trousers legs and he clutches
at the air, his eyes start from their sockets, and
just as the rope ladder is about to wind around him,
and crush his life out, he regains strength enough
to rush down stairs head over appetite, and tell the
clerk about the menagerie up stairs. O, there
is going to be fun with these rope ladders, sure.
A DOCTOR OF LAWS.
A doctor at Ashland is also a Justice
of the Peace, and when he is called to visit a house
he don’t know whether he is to physic or to marry.
Several times he has been called out in the night,
to the country, and he supposed some one must be awful
sick, and he took a cart load of medicines, only to
find somebody wanted marrying. He has been fooled
so much that when he is called out now he carries
a pill-bag and a copy of the statutes, and tells them
to take their choice.
He was called to one house and found
a girl who seemed feverish. She was sitting up
in a chair, dressed nicely, but he saw at once that
the fatal flush was on her cheek, and her eyes looked
peculiar. He felt of her pulse, and it was beating
at the rate of two hundred a minute. He asked
her to run out her tongue, and she run out eight or
nine inches of the lower end of it. It was covered
with a black coating, and he shook his head and looked
sad. She had never been married any before, and
supposed that it was necessary for a Justice who was
going to marry a couple to know all about their physical
condition, so she kept quiet and answered questions.
She did not tell him that she had
been eating huckleberry pie, so he laid the coating
on her tongue to some disease that was undermining
her constitution. He put his ear on her chest
and listened to the beating of her heart, and shook
his head again. He asked her if she had been exposed
to any contagious disease. She didn’t know
what a contagious disease was, but on the hypothesis
that he had reference to sparking, she blushed and
said she had, but only two evenings, because John had
only just got back from the woods where he had been
chopping, and she had to sit up with him.
The doctor got out his pill bags and
made some quinine powders, and gave her some medicine
in two tumblers, to be taken alternately, and told
her to soak her feet and go to bed, and put a hot mustard
plaster on her chest, and some onions around her neck.
She was mad, and flared right up,
and said she wasn’t very well posted, and lived
in the country, but if she knew her own heart she would
not play such a trick as that on a new husband.
The doctor got mad, and asked her
if she thought he didn’t understand his business;
and he was about to go and let her die, when the bridegroom
came in and told him to go ahead with the marrying.
The doc. said that altered the case. He said
next time he came he should know what to bring, and
then she blushed, and told him he was an old fool
anyway, but he pronounced them man and wife, and said
the prescription would be five dollars, the same as
though there had been somebody sick.
But the doc. had cheek. Just
as he was leaving he asked the bridegroom if he didn’t
want to ride up to Ashland with him, it was only eighteen
miles, and the ride would be lonesome, but the bride
said not if the court knew herself, and the bridegroom
said now he was there he guessed he would stay.
He said he didn’t care much about going to Ashland
anyway.
COMFORTING COMPENSATIONS.
If a farmer’s wheat is killed
by rain, he is consoled by the fact that rain is just
what his corn needs. If his cattle die of disease,
his consolation lies in the hope that pork will bring
a good price. If boys steal his watermelons,
he knows by experience that they will have the cholera
morbus. So everything that is unpleasant
has its compensation.
LAY UP APPLES IN HEAVEN.
They tell a good story at Portage
City, at the expense of Senator Barden, or a minister,
we don’t know which. Barden had a lot of
apples sent him last fall, and he was anxious to sell
them, before winter set in. One day he thought
of a new minister that had settled in Portage, so he
made up his mind to take him up a couple of barrels,
supposing that when he went to heaven and saw the
big ledger opened, there would be a credit about as
follows:
L.W. BARDEN,
in acc’t with Providence,
1876.
Oc. By two bbls. apples, @ $3 $6.
" " " drayage .
-----
Total $6.30
Barden loaded them on a dray, and
got on it, with his pants in his boots, and went up
to deliver them himself. He stopped at the minister’s
gate, and hurried the apples off and rolled them inside
the gate, and tried to get away before the minister
had time to thank him. Just as he was about to
drive away the door opened and the man of God came
out, and says he:
“Look here! You put them apples in the
cellar!”
Barden told him he was in something
of a hurry, and really he could not spare the time.
The minister raised his voice to a sort of “auction
pitch,” and said:
“Here, now. You don’t
know your business, Mr. Drayman. You roll them
apples into the cellar, or I won’t accept them.”
The senator was by this time as mad
as senators usually get. He jumped off the dray,
threw the two barrels of apples on, and drove off,
saying he didn’t care a continental dam if the
minister eat dried apples all winter. And he
took them back to his store, and it is safe to say
that he will not give many more apples to that minister.
MORAL: Never despise a
man because he wears a ragged coat, for he may be
a senatorial granger angel in the disguise of a drayman.
And you may have to fill up on turnips instead of
apples.
ONE OF BEECHER’S CONVERTS.
Since Beecher, the great revivalist,
was here, and spoke so eloquently on the fall of man,
and the need of making arrangements for the future,
I have become a changed man. It hurts me to lie
now, and when anything hurts, then I quit. It
is wrong to lie, and a man who follows it up will
come to some bad end.
BUYING A STONE CRUSHER.
The proceedings of the council of
the city of Milwaukee shows that the aldermen are
about to buy a stone crusher, to be run by steam, for
the purpose of crushing stones to be used on the streets.
If the city has never indulged in the luxury of a
stone crusher, it should interview some city that
has owned one, before it closes a contract with any
party that wants to sell one. Every party that
owns one does want to sell it. Statistics show
that. The first city in Wisconsin that bought
one was Madison. The city owned it for a year
or two, and after that no man that was in the council
when it was bought could ever get in it again.
The mayor that winked at the purchase of the stone
crusher was defeated, and there was trouble.
No person would ever say what was the matter, but you
say “stone crusher” to a citizen of Madison,
and he would reach his right hand around to his pistol
pocket, and the conversation would cease.
La Crosse heard that Madison had a
stone crusher, and so she wanted one. La Crosse
is bound to have anything that any other town has,
whether it is a railroad, an insane asylum, or a speckled
hen. La Crosse could have bought Madison’s
stone crusher at a discount, but she wanted one new,
with the paint all on, fresh. Second-hand stone
crusher? Not any for La Crosse. So the city
ordered a brand new one, right from the mint, at an
expense of about $5,000.
The idea was that it would be about
as big as a straw cutter, or a job press, and people
were anxious to see it work.
Finally the city was notified that
one train of cars loaded with the stone crusher had
arrived, with red flags on, betokening extra trains
running wild behind, and the city was told to come
down to the depot and pay the first installment of
freight, and take the stone crusher away that
part of it that had arrived. The aldermen went
down and took an inventory of the hardware, and some
of them went and jumped in the river. At a cent
a pound one can buy a good deal of cast iron for five
thousand dollars. The city bonded itself, and
paid the freight, and during the spring all of the
trains loaded with the stone crusher arrived.
It was argued that the only way to get the stone crusher
up to the city building would be to give the railroad
the right of way up town, right through Main street.
Some were in favor of letting the
railroad company keep it for freight, but the company
threatened to get out an injunction on the city.
Finally a man who took contracts to move brick buildings
agreed to move it up town on shares, and during the
summer the most of it was got up there and corded
up on some vacant lots. If all the cast iron in
it came out of one mine it must have been an immense
mine. People would look at it and weep.
Every alderman swore he voted against buying it.
Occasionally some one in the council would suggest
that the stone crusher be taken out to the bluffs,
a couple of miles, and set to work, when another one
would move, to amend by inserting a clause that the
bluffs be moved into the city to be crushed, as it
would save expense. Then the matter would drop.
For three years that stone crusher stood there, and
it never crushed a pebble. New mayors and aldermen
were elected, and every day they passed that crusher,
but they never spoke to it. Finally a job was
put up to get rid of it. There was a man there
who owned a stone quarry, and it occurred to somebody
to sell it to him. He was a truly good man, and
did not believe there were any bad men in the world,
who would kanoodle him with a stone crusher.
A committee was appointed to sell it to him. The
committee was composed of men who had traded horses,
sold lightning rods, and been insurance agents, and
when they told the poor man that the city had noticed
that he was a deserving man, that they had decided
to help him along, and would sell him that stone crusher,
and he could pay for it in crushed stone, and the
city would pay him in cash half a dollar more than
the stone was worth, he said he would take it.
They got it on to him by buying crushed stone of him
and paying cash for it.
We have never heard whether the man
lived or not, and have never heard whether the city
bought any stone of him, but the city got rid of it,
and then had a celebration. Why, they figured
it up, and the thing could crush enough stone in twenty-four
hours to pave the streets a foot thick all over town
and thirteen miles in the country. To run it a
week would bankrupt the State of Wisconsin, It could
go up to the stone quarry and tunnel a hole right
through the hill. It was the biggest elephant
that ever a city drew in a legalized lottery.
Milwaukee will make money if she does not buy a stone
crusher, not as long as it can buy stone in the rough,
and have it crushed by tramps, at nothing a day.
MERRIE CHRISTMAS.
What proportion of the people who
wish each other merry Christmas, do you suppose think
of the reason that the day is a holiday? Not one
in a thousand. Do the young fellows who put on
a clean shirt and go down town and play pool all day,
and drink yellow stuff out of a shaving cup, and get
chalk on their fingers, and eat liver sausage, think
that Christ died to save them? No! All they
think of is the prospect of sticking some other fellow
for the game. Do the hundreds of thousands of
people who get up a big feed, and gormandize, think
of Christ, or the poor all about them who have little
to eat to-day, and little prospect of more to eat to-morrow?
Many of them do not think of the poor, or of anything
else except to prospect upon how much they will hold
and not get sick.
THE DIFFERENCE IN HORSES.
There has been a great change in livery
horses within the last twenty years. Years ago,
if a young fellow wanted to take his girl out riding,
and expected to enjoy himself, he had to hire an old
horse, the worst in the livery stable, that would
drive itself, or he never could get his arm around
his girl to save him. If he took a decent looking
team, to put on style, he had to hang on to the lines
with both hands, and if he even took his eyes off
the team to look at the suffering girl beside him,
with his mouth, the chances were that the team would
jump over a ditch, or run away, at the concussion.
Riding out with girls was shorn of much of its pleasure
in those days.
We knew a young man that was going
to put one arm around his girl if he did not lay up
a cent, and it cost him over three hundred dollars.
The team ran away, the buggy was wrecked, one horse
was killed, the girl had her hind leg broken, and
the girl’s father kicked the young man all over
the orchard, and broke the mainspring of his watch.
It got so that the livery rig a young
man drove was an index to his thoughts. If he
had a stylish team that was right up on the bit, and
full of vinegar, and he braced himself and pulled
for all that was out, and the girl sat back in the
corner of the buggy, looking as though she should
faint away if a horse got his tail over a line, then
people said that couple was all right, and there was
no danger that they would be on familiar terms.
But if they started out with a slow
old horse that looked as though all he wanted was
to be left alone, however innocent the party might
look, people knew just as well as though they had
seen it, that when they got out on the road, or when
night came on, that fellow’s arm would steal
around her waist, and she would snug up to him, and Oh,
pshaw, you have heard it before.
Well, late years the livery men have
“got onto the racket,” as they say at
the church sociables, They have found that horses
that know their business are in demand, and so horses
are trained for this purpose. They are trained
on purpose for out-door sparking. It is not an
uncommon thing to see a young fellow drive up to the
house where his girl lives with a team that is just
tearing things. They prance, and champ the bit,
and the young man seems to pull on them as though
his liver was coming out. The horses will hardly
stand still long enough for the girl to get in, and
then they start off and seem to split the air wide
open, and the neighbors say, “Them children
will get all smashed up one of these days.”
The girl’s mother and father
see the team start, and their minds experience a relief
as they reflect that “as long as John drives
that frisky team there can’t be no hugging a
going on.” The girl’s older sister
sighs and says, “That’s so,” and
goes to her room and laughs right out loud.
It would be instructive to the scientists
to watch that team for a few miles. The horses
fairly foam, before they get out of town, but striking
the country road, the fiery steeds come down to a walk,
and they mope along as though they had always worked
on a hearse. The shady woods are reached, and
the carriage scarcely moves, and the horses seem to
be walking in their sleep. The lines are loose
on the dash board, and the left arm of the driver
is around the pretty girl, and they are talking low.
It is not necessary to talk loud, as they are so near
each other that the faintest whisper can be heard.
But a change comes over them.
A carriage appears in front, coming towards them.
It may be someone that knows them. The young man
picks up the lines, and the horses are in the air,
and as they pass the other carriage it almost seems
as though the team is running away, and the girl that
was in sweet repose a moment before acts as though
she wanted to get out. After passing the intruder
the walk and conversation are continued.
If you meet the party on the Whitefish
Bay road at 10 o’clock at night, the horses
are walking as quietly as oxen, and they never wake
up until coming into town, and then he pulls up the
team and drives through the town like a cyclone, and
when he drives up to the house the old man is on the
steps, and he thinks John must be awful tired trying
to hold that team. And he is.
It is thought by some that horses
have no intelligence, but a team that knows enough
to take in a sporadic case of buggy sparking has got
sense. These teams come high, but the boys have
to have them.
BASE INGRATITUDE.
I remember once of offering a lady
from Eau Claire a slice of bread and a half
of a red onion in a railroad car. She looked hungry,
and yet she said she didn’t care to eat.
Thinking she had a delicacy about accepting food at
the hands of one who was almost a stranger to her,
I turned the bread and onion into her lap, and said
she was entirely welcome to it. What did she
do? Instead of eating it, and thanking me, she
threw it out of the window, and went and sat by the
stove. I was never so offended in my life.
That woman may see the time she will want that onion,
and I would see her almost perish of starvation before
she could have any more of my onion.
THE DIFFERENCE.
One of the great female writers on
dress reform, in trying to illustrate how terrible
the female dress is, says:
“Take a man and pin three or
four table cloths about him, fastened back with elastic,
and looped up with ribbons, draw all his hair to the
middle of his head and tie it tight, and hairpin on
five pounds of other hair and a big bow of ribbon.
Keep the front locks on pins all night, and let them
tickle his eyes all day, pinch his waist into a corset,
and give him gloves a size too small, and shoes the
same, and a hat that will not stay on without torturing
elastic, and a little lace veil to blind his eyes
whenever he goes out to walk, and he will know what
a woman’s dress is.”
Now you think you have done it, don’t
you sis? Why, bless you, that toggery would be
heaven compared to what a man has to contend with.
Take a woman and put a pair of men’s four shilling
drawers on her that are so tight that when they get
damp, from perspiration, sis, they stick so you can’t
cross your legs without an abrasion of the skin, the
buckle in the back turning a somersault and sticking
its points into your spinal meningitis; put on an
undershirt that draws across the chest so you feel
as though you must cut a hole in it, or two, and which
is so short that it works up under your arms, and
allows the starched upper shirt to sand paper around
and file off the skin until you wish it was night,
the tail of which will not stay tucked more than half
a block, though you tuck, and tuck, and tuck; and
then fasten a collar made of sheet zinc, two sizes
too small for you, around your neck, put on vest and
coat, and liver pad and lung pad and stomach pad,
and a porous plaster, and a chemise shirt between
the two others, and rub on some liniment, and put a
bunch of keys and a jack-knife and a button hook,
and a pocket-book and a pistol and a plug of tobacco
in your pockets, so they will chafe your person, and
then go and drink a few whiskey cocktails, and walk
around in the sun with tight boots on, sis, and then
you will know what a man’s dress is.
Come to figure it up, it is about
an even thing, sis, isn’t it?
THOSE STEP LADDERS!
There has got to be a law passed to
punish the hardware dealers for selling those step
ladders that shut up like a jack-knife. A Ninth
Street woman got onto one the other afternoon when
it looked as though there was going to be a frost,
to take her ivies down and carry them in the house.
We don’t care how handsome a woman is naturally,
you put a towel around her head and put her up on
a step ladder about seven feet high, with a tomahawk
in her left hand, trying to draw a big nail out of
a post on a veranda, and she looks like thunder.
This woman did. Her husband tried to get her
to let him do the work, but she said a man never knew
how to do anything, anyway. So he sat down on
the steps to see how it would turn out. She said
afterwards that he kicked the ladder, but however that
may be, there was an earthquake, and when he looked
up the air was filled with calico, toweling, striped
stockings, polonaise, trailing arbutus, red petticoats,
store hair and step ladder. He said the step ladder
struck the veranda last, but as he picked her off
of it, it seemed as though it must have lit first.
He said the step ladder must have kicked up. In
coming down she run one leg through the baby wagon,
and the other through some flower pots, and a boy
who was passing along said he guess she had been to
the turning school.
WONDERS OF THE STAGE.
There is no person in the world who
is easier to overlook the inconsistencies that show
themselves on the stage at theatres than we are, but
once in a while there is something so glaring that
it pains us. We have seen actors fight a duel
in a piece of woods far away from any town, on the
stage, and when one of them fell, pierced to the heart
with a sword, we have noticed that he fell on a Brussels
carpet. That is all wrong, but we have stood
it manfully.
We have seen a woman on the stage
who was so beautiful that we could be easily mashed
if we had any heart left to spare. Her eyes were
of that heavenly color that has been written about
heretofore, and her smile as sweet as ever was seen,
but behind the scenes, through the wings, we have
seen her trying to dig the cork out of a beer bottle
with a pair of shears, and ask a supe, in harsh tones,
where the cork-screw was, while she spread mustard
on a piece of cheese, and finally drank the beer from
the bottle, and spit the pieces of cork out on the
floor, sitting astride of a stage chair, and her boot
heels up on the top round, her trail rolled up into
a ball, wrong side out, showing dirt from forty different
stage floors.
These things hurt. But the worst
thing that has ever occurred to knock the romance
out of us, was to see a girl in the second act, after
“twelve years is supposed to elapse,”
with the same pair of red stockings on that she wore
in the first act, twelve years before. Now, what
kind of a way is that? It does not stand to reason
that a girl would wear the same pair of stockings
twelve years. Even if she had them washed once
in six months, they would be worn out. People
notice these things.
What the actresses of this country
need is to change their stockings. To wear them
twelve years even in their minds, shows an inattention
to the details and probabilities, of a play, that
must do the actresses an injury, if not give them
corns. Let theatre-goers insist that the stockings
be changed oftener, in these plays that sometimes cover
half a century, and the stockings will not become
moth-eaten. Girls, look to the little details.
Look to the stockings, as your audiences do, and you
will see how it is yourselves.
HOW FARMERS MAY GET RICH.
The artificial propagation of fish
has attracted much attention of late years, and the
success of experiments has shown that every farmer
that has a stream of water on his land can raise fish
enough to get rich in five years, four months and
twenty-one days.
A CASE OF PARALYSIS.
About as mean a trick as we ever heard
of was perpetrated by a doctor at Hudson last Sunday.
The victim was a justice of the peace named Evans.
Mr. Evans is a man who has the alfiredest biggest
feet east of St. Paul, and when he gets a new pair
of shoes it is an event that has its effect on the
leather market.
Last winter he advertised for sealed
proposals to erect a pair of shoes for him, and when
the bids were opened it was found that a local architect
in leather had secured the contract, and after mortgaging
his house to a Milwaukee tannery, and borrowing some
money on his diamonds of his “uncle,”
John Comstock, who keeps a pawnbrokery there, he broke
ground for the shoes.
Owing to the snow blockade and the
freshets, and the trouble to get hands who would work
on the dome, there were several delays, and Judge Evans
was at one time inclined to cancel the contract, and
put some strings in box cars and wear them in place
of shoes, but sympathy for the contractor, who had
his little awl invested in the material and labor,
induced him to put up with the delay.
On Saturday the shoes were completed,
all except laying the floor and putting on a couple
of bay windows for corns and conservatories for bunions,
and the judge concluded to wear them on Sunday.
He put them on, but got the right one on the left
foot, and the left one on the right foot. As
he walked down town the right foot was continually
getting on the left side, and he stumbled over himself,
and he felt pains in his feet. The judge was
frightened in a minute. He is afraid of paralysis,
all the boys know it, and when he told a wicked Republican
named Spencer how his feet felt, that degraded man
told the judge that it was one of the surest symptoms
of paralysis in the world, and advised him to hunt
a doctor.
The judge pranced off, interfering
at every step, skinning his shins, and found Dr. Hoyt.
The doctor is one of the worst men in the world, and
when he saw how the shoes were put on he told the judge
that his case was hopeless unless something was done
immediately. The judge turned pale, the sweat
poured out of him, and taking out his purse he gave
the doctor five dollars and asked him what he should
do. The doctor felt his pulse, looked at his
tongue, listened at his heart, shook his head, and
then told the judge that he would be a dead man in
less than sixty years if he didn’t change his
shoes.
The judge looked down at the vast
expanse of leather, both sections pointing inwardly,
and said, “Well, dam a fool,” and “changed
cars” at the junction. As he got them on
the right feet, and hired a raftsman to tie them up
for him, he said he would get even with the doctor
if he had to catch the small pox. O, we suppose
they have more fun in some of these country towns
than you can shake a stick at.
WE WILL CELEBRATE.
With so many new holidays, and so
many new people, it is hardly to be wondered at that
the day of all days, the day that should be dearest
to the heart of every American, is in danger of being
passed over in silence, and were it not for the fire
cracker, that begins to get in its work about the
first of June, in many instances this Anniversary of
American Independence would be passed without the
customary mouth shootzen-fest from alleged orators,
but when the small boy begins to stir around and clandestinely
look down the muzzle of the always loaded fire cracker,
the patriotism of the boys still begins to assert
itself, the old man’s eyes begin to snap, and
he talks to his neighbor about how they used to celebrate
when he was a boy, the stuff begins to work over the
neighborhood, the village catches it, the country begins.
DOGS AND HUMAN BEINGS!
Lorillard, the New York tobacco man,
had a poodle dog stolen, and has offered a reward
of five hundred dollars for the arrest of the thief,
and he informs a reporter that he will spend $10,000,
if necessary, for the capture and conviction of the
thief. [Applause.]
The applause marked in there will
be from human skye terriers, who have forgotten that
only a few weeks ago several hundred girls, who had
been working in Lorillard’s factory, went on
a strike because as they allege, they were treated
like dogs. We doubt if they were treated as well
as this poodle was treated. We doubt, in case
one of these poor, virtuous girls was kidnapped, if
the great Lorillard would have offered as big a reward
for the conviction of the human thief, as he has for
the conviction of the person who has eloped with his
poodle.
We hope that the aristocracy of this
country will never get to valuing a dog higher than
it does a human being. When it gets so that a
rich person would not permit a poodle to do the work
in a tobacco factory that a poor girl does to support
a sick mother, hell had better be opened for summer
boarders. When girls work ten hours a day stripping
nasty tobacco, and find at the end of the week that
the fines for speaking are larger than the wages,
and the fines go for the conviction of thieves who
steal the girl’s master’s dog, no one
need come around here lecturing at a dollar a head
and telling us there is no hell.
When a poor girl, who has gone creeping
to her work at daylight, looks out of the window at
noon to see her master’s carriage go by, in which
there is a five hundred dollar dog with a hundred
dollar blanket on, and a collar set with diamonds,
lolling on satin cushions, and the girl is fined ten
cents for looking out of, the window, you don’t
want to fool away any time trying to get us to go
to a heaven where such heartless employers are expected.
It is seldom the Sun gets on
its ear, but it can say with great fervency, “Damn
a man that will work poor girls like slaves, and pay
them next to nothing, and spend ten thousand dollars
to catch a dog-thief!” If these sentiments are
sinful, and for expressing them we are a candidate
for fire and brimstone, it is all right, and the devil
can stoke up and make up our bunk when he hears that
we are on the through train.
It seems now though we
may change our mind the first day at the fire as
though we had rather be in hades with a hundred million
people who have always done the square thing, than
to be in any heaven that will pass a man in who has
starved the poor and paid ten thousand dollars to catch
a dog-thief. We could have a confounded sight
better time, even if we had our ulster all burned
off. It would be worth the price of admission
to stand with our back to the fire, and as we began
to smell woolen burning near the pistol pocket, to
make up faces at the ten-thousand-dollar-dog millionaires
that were putting on style at the other place.
AN ODOROUS BOHEMIAN.
A Bohemian on the train last night
had some cheese in his vest pocket that was too ripe,
and the conductor had to disinfect the car, and order
the Bohemian to be quarantined before the train would
be allowed to enter the city. Cheese is all right
in its place, but it don’t want to be allowed
to lay above ground too long after it has departed
this life. If farmers will pay a little attention
to cheese in its different stages, much trouble can
be avoided. In union there is strength. So
there is in a smoking car.
TRAGEDY ON THE STAGE.
The tendency of the stage is to present
practical, everyday affairs in plays, and those are
the most successful which are the most natural.
The shoeing of a horse on the stage in a play attracts
the attention of the audience wonderfully, and draws
well. The inner workings of a brewery, or a mill,
is a big card, but there is hardly enough tragedy about
it. If they could run a man or two through the
wheel, and have them cut up into hash, or have them
drowned in a beer vat, audiences could applaud as they
do when eight or nine persons are stabbed, poisoned
or beheaded in the Hamlets and Three Richards, where
corpses are piled up on top of each other.
What the people want is a compromise
between old tragedy and new comedy. Now, if some
manager could have a love play, where the heroine goes
into a slaughter house to talk love to the butcher,
instead of a blacksmith shop or a brewery, it would
take. A scene could be set for a slaughter house,
with all the paraphernalia for killing cattle, and
supe butchers to stand around the star butcher with
cleavers and knives.
The star butcher could sit on a barrel
of pigs’ feet, or a pile of heads and horns,
and soliloquize over his unrequitted love, as he sharpened
a butcher knife on his boot. The hour for slaughtering
having arrived, cattle could be driven upon the stage,
the star could knock down a steer and cut its throat,
and hang it up by the hind legs and skin it, with the
audience looking on breathlessly.
As he was about to cut open the body
of the dead animal, the orchestra could suddenly break
the stillness, and the heroine could waltz out from
behind a lot of dried meat hanging up at one side,
dressed in a lavender satin princess dress, en
train, with a white reception hat with ostrich
feathers, and, wading through the blood of the steer
on the carpet, shout, “Stay your hand, Reginald!”
The star butcher could stop, wipe
his knife on his apron, motion to the supe butchers
to leave, and he would take three strides through the
blood and hair, to the side of the heroine, take her
by the wrist with his bloody hand, and shout, “What
wiltest thou, Mary Anderson de Montmorence?”
Then they could sit down on a box of intestines and
liver and things and talk it over, and the curtain
could go down with the heroine swooning in the arms
of the butcher.
Seven years could elapse between that
act and the next, and a scene could be laid in a boarding
house, and some of the same beef could be on the table,
and all that. Of course we do not desire to go
into details. We are no play writer, but we know
what takes. People have got tired of imitation
blood on the stage. They kick on seeing a man
killed in one act, and come out as good as new in
the next. Any good play writer can take the cue
from this article and give the country a play that
will take the biscuit.
Imagine John McCullough, or Barrett,
instead of killing Roman supes with night gowns on,
and bare legs, killing a Texas steer. There’s
where you would get the worth of your money.
It would make them show the metal within them, and
they would have to dance around to keep from getting
a horn in their trousers. It does not require
any pluck to go out behind the scenes with a sword
and kill enough supes for a mess.
GRANITE HEAD CHEESE.
A few years ago there was some excitement
at Grand Rapids over the discovery of a bed or quarry
of granite. Some of it was taken out, from the
top of the quarry, and polished, and proved to be as
fine as any that is imported. Further working
of the quarry, however, has developed a strange thing.
The further they go down the softer it is, and it has
been learned that the quarry is all head cheese, such
as is sold by butchers. On top it is petrified,
and polishes very nicely, but a little below it is
nice and fresh, and can be cut out with a knife, all
ready for the table. A friend in Milwaukee, who
has an uncle living at Grand Rapids, has furnished
us with a quantity of it, some of which we have eaten,
and were it not for the fact that we know it came
from the quarry, it would be hard to convince us that
it was not concocted out of the remains of a butcher
shop. The people up there talk of running Hon.
J.N. Brundage for Congress, on the head cheese
ticket, in order that he may use his influence to get
head cheese adopted as an army ration, and also as
currency with which to wipe out the national debt.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA AN INVENTOR.
“Ha! Ha! Now I have
got you,” said the grocery man to the had boy,
the other morning, as he came in and jumped upon the
counter and tied the end of a ball of twine to the
tail of a dog, and “sicked” the dog on
another dog that was following a passing sleigh, causing
the twine to pay out until the whole ball was scattered
along the block. “Condemn you, I’ve
a notion to choke the liver out of you. Who tied
that twine to the dog’s tail?”
The boy choked up with emotion, and
the tears came into his eyes, and he said he didn’t
know anything about the twine or the dog. He said
he noticed the dog come in, and wag his tail around
the twine, but he supposed the dog was a friend of
the family, and did not disturb him. “Everybody
lays everything that is done to me,” said the
boy, as he put his handkerchief to his nose, “and,
they will be sorry for it when I die. I have
a good notion to poison myself by eating some of your
glucose sugar.”
“Yes, and you do about everything
that is mean. The other day a lady came in and
told me to send up to her house, some of my country
sausage, done up in muslin bags, and while she was
examining it she noticed something hard inside the
bags, and asked me what it was, and I opened it, and
I hope to die if there wasn’t a little brass
padlock and a piece of red morocco dog collar imbedded
in the sausage. Now how do you suppose that got
in there?” and the grocery man looked savage.
The boy looked interested, and put
on an expression as though in deep thought, and finally
said, “I suppose the farmer that put up the sausage
did not strain the dog meat. Sausage meat ought
to be strained.”
The grocery man pulled in about half
a block of twine, after the dog had run against a
fence and broke it, and told the boy he knew perfectly
well how the brass padlock came to be in the sausage,
but thinking it was safer to have the good will of
the boy than the ill will, he offered him a handful
of prunes.
“No,” said the boy, “I
have swore off on mouldy prunes. I am no kinder-garden
any more. For years I have eaten rotten peaches
around this store, and everything you couldn’t
sell, but I have turned over a new leaf now, and after
this nothing is too good for me. Since Pa has
got to be an inventor, we are going to live high.”
“What’s your Pa invented?
I saw a hearse and three hacks go up on your street
the other day and I thought may be you had killed your
Pa.”
“Not much. There will be
more than three hacks when I kill Pa, and don’t
you forget it. Well, sir, Pa has struck a fortune,
if he can make the thing work. He has got an
idea about coal stoves that will bring him several
million dollars, if he gets a royalty of five dollars
on every cook stove in the world. His idea is
to have a coal stove on castors with the pipe made
to telescope out and in, and rubber hose for one joint,
so you can pull the stove all around the room and
warm any particular place. Well, sir, to hear
Pa tell about it, you would think it would revolutionize
the country, and maybe it will when he gets it perfected,
but he came near burning the house up, and scared us
half to death this morning, and burned his shirt off,
and he is all covered with cotton with sweet oil on,
and he smells like salad dressing.
“You see Pa had a pipe made
and some castors put on our coal stove, and he tied
a rope to the hearth of the stove, and had me put in
some kindling wood and coal last night, so he could
draw the stove up to the bed and light the fire without
getting up. Ma told him he would put his foot
in it, and he told her to dry up, and let him run
the stove business. He said it took a man with
brain to run a patent right, and Ma she pulled the
clothes over her head and let Pa do the fire act.
She has been building the fires for twenty years,
and thought she would let Pa see how good it was.
Well, Pa pulled the stove to the bed, and touched off
the kindling wood. I guess maybe I got a bundle
of kindling wood that the hired girl had put kerosene
on, cause it blazed up awful and smoked, and the blaze
bursted out the doors and windows of the stove, and
Pa yelled fire, and I jumped out of bed and rushed
in and he was the scartest man you ever see, and you’d
a dide to see how he kicked when I threw a pail of
water on his legs and put his shirt out. Ma did
not get burned, but she was pretty wet, and she told
Pa she would pay five dollars royalty on that stove
and take the castors off and let it remain stationary.
Pa says he will make it work if he burns the house
down. I think it was real mean in Pa to get mad
at me because I threw cold water on him instead of
warm water, to put his shirt out. If I had waited
till I could heat water to the right temperature I
would have been an orphan and Pa would have been a
burnt offering. But some men always kick at everything.
Pa has given up business entirely and says he shall
devote the remainder of his life curing himself of
the different troubles that I get him into. He
has retained a doctor by the year, and he buys liniment
by the gallon.
“What was it about your folks
getting up in the middle of the night to eat?
The hired girl was over here after some soap the other
morning, and she said she was going to leave your
house.”
“Well, that was a picnic.
Pa said he wanted breakfast earlier than we was in
the habit of having it, and he said I might see to
it that the house was awake early enough. The
other night I awoke with the awfulest pain you ever
heard of. It was that night that you give me and
my chum the bottle of pickled oysters that had begun
to work. Well, I could’t sleep, and I thought
I would call the hired girls, and they got up and got
breakfast to going, and then I rapped on Pa’s
and Ma’s door and told them the breakfast was
getting cold, and they got up and came down. We
ate breakfast by gas light, and Pa yawned and said
it made a man feel good to get up and get ready for
work before daylight, the way he used to on the farm,
and Ma she yawned and agreed with Pa, ’cause
she has to, or have a row. After breakfast we
sat around for an hour, and Pa said it was a long
time getting daylight, and bimeby Pa looked at his
watch. When he began to pull out his watch I
lit out and hid in the storeroom, and pretty soon I
heard Pa and Ma come up stairs and go to bed, and then
the hired girls, they went to bed, and when it was
all still, and the pain had stopped inside of my clothes,
I went to bed, and I looked to see what time it was
and it was two o’clock in the morning. We
got dinner at eight o’clock in the morning,
and Pa said he guessed he would call up the house after
this, so I have lost another job, and it was all on
account of that bottle of pickled oysters you gave
me. My chum says he had colic too, but he didn’t
call up his folks. It was all he could do to get
up himself. Why don’t you give away something
that is not spiled?”
The groceryman said he guessed he
knew what to give away, and the boy went out and hung
up a sign in front of the grocery, that he had made
on wrapping paper with red chalk, which read, “Rotten
eggs, good enough for custard pies, for 18 cents a
dozen.”
A GOOD LAND ENOUGH.
This land of the free is good enough,
if we make it good, and if we make it bad, it is just
as bad as any country under the sun. It all depends
on how the people act.
THE WOODCOCK.
It is a rainy day, and nothing has
occurred of a local nature, that is, nothing of a
hair standing nature, so we will just spoil a few sheets
of paper relating, in a Sunday School book style,
the circumstances of an excursion after woodcock,
the other day, indulged in by W.C. Root, the
Wisconsin amateur Bogardus, Jennings McDonald, Captain
of a breech-loading steamboat, and the subscriber.
In the first place, it may be well to state that the
woodcock, or “Timber Doodle,” as Prof.
Agassiz calls it, is a game bird. We know it
is a game bird, because they charge a dollar apiece
for them in New York. The meat is about as sweet
as deceased cow’s liver, but they are worth
a dollar apiece. The “Timber Doodle”
is a patriotic bird, because he gets ripe on the 4th
of July. He is about the size of a doughnut,
with a long bill, like a lawyer.
We took passage per skiff at twelve
o’clock. If there was one drawback, it
was the fact that the oar-locks of the boat had been
mislaid. After consuming an hour in not finding
them, Frank Hatch became discouraged at seeing us
lay around the levee, so he tied the oars on with tarred
rope and we got off, three of us besides the other
dogs. The water was so high that we crossed Barron’s
island, only having to get out and pull the boat over
two or three sand-bars and a raft or two. Every
time we got out to pull the boat, the dogs would get
out to look for woodcock, around the stumps, and when
they got in the boat would be full of water and mud,
and of course we had our best clothes on. Did
it ever occur to you how much water a dog could carry
in his hair? A dog is worse than a sponge.
An ordinary dog, with luck, can fill a skiff with
water at two jumps. Not, however, with us in
the boat to bail out the water. The woodcock’s
tail sticks up like a sore thumb. We are thus
particular to describe the woodcock, so if you ever
see one you can go right away from him. Woodcock
and mosquitoes are in “cahoots.” While
the woodcock bores in the ground for snakes and other
feed that makes him fat and worth a dollar in New
York, the mosquito stands on the ramparts and talks
to the boys.
Well, speaking about woodcock, after
riding five miles, through bushes, brambles and things,
we got out of the boat and only had to walk a couple
of miles to get where the birds were. Right here
we wish to state that we shouldn’t have gone
after the woodcock at all, only everybody said it was
such fun. Root showed us a picture of a woodcock
in a book, and if that didn’t convince us, the
fact that a small boy came in town and sold three
dozen, did. Then we wanted to go. There never
has been a year when woodcock were so plenty at places
we didn’t visit. The most fun was at a
ditch which was about a foot wider than any of us could
jump. Root gave his gun to McDonald and plunged
in. Then McDonald threw a gun to Root. It
hit him on the thumb-nail and dropped in the ditch
out of sight. Mc. thought it was Root’s
gun, and he apologized to Root for throwing it so
carelessly. Root supposed it was Mc.’s gun,
and he apologized for not catching it. We never
saw men more polite in the world. Mc. started
to jump across, when a dog got between his legs, and
both went in up to their knees. You never can
jump as well with a dog tangled up amongst your legs.
The dog looked at Jennings as though he wanted to swear.
We waded through the ditch and only got two feet wet.
The rest of them had more than that wet.
But about the woodcock. This
is, kind reader, purely a woodcock story, and more
or less must be said about the dollar bird. But
this is neither here nor there. It was over in
the Root river bottoms. Finally we got on the
woodcock ground and went to work. Talk about mosquitoes!
There was no end to them. We ought not to say
that, either, because there are spots on our person
that just fit the end of a mosquito. There was
an end to them. If you never saw mosquitoes in
convention, you want to go over there. And right
here we will give a recipe for keeping mosquitoes from
biting. You take some cedar oil and put on your
coat collar, if you are a man, and if you are a woman
put it on that gingerbread work around your neck, and
a mosquito will come up and sing to you and get all
ready to take toll, when she will smell that oil.
She is the sickest mosquito you ever saw. She
turns over on her back and sends her husband for the
nearest doctor. We had a bottle of cedar oil,
and if Jennings hadn’t left it hanging up in
Hogan’s store in his coat, we should have made
those mosquitoes sick. As it was they did it
to us. There isn’t a spot on us as big as
a billiard table but what you can find artesian wells
made by mosquitoes.
Woodcock sell higher in the market
than any other bird. Lots of people that never
saw them eat snakes, eat them. When they get up
to fly they talk Bohemian, and get behind a bush.
You shoot right into the bush, and if you kill one
you think you are a good shot. Talk about getting
tired. You walk around in the woods several miles,
with mosquitoes getting acquainted with you, and all
the time your nerves strung up in anticipation of
seeing a dollar bill fly up, and if you don’t
sleep without rocking, we are no prophet. The
sport, however, is exhilerating, and we are glad we
went. We are glad because it learned us one thing,
and that is, if we ever want a woodcock real bad,
it will be cheaper, easier, and better to buy it.
It will be inferred that we did not see a woodcock.
Such is the case.
But we made the blackbirds sick.
A BALD-HEADED MAN MOST CRAZY.
Last Wednesday the bell to our telephone
rung violently at 8 o’clock in the morning,
and when we put our ear to the earaphone, and our mouth
to the mouthaphone, and asked what was the matter,
a still small voice, evidently that of a lady, said,
“Julia has got worms, doctor.”
We were somewhat taken back, but supposing
Julia was going fishing, we were just going to tell
her not to forget to spit on her bait, when a male
voice said, “O, go to the devil, will you?”
We couldn’t tell whose voice it was, but it
sounded like the clerk at the Plankinton House, and
we sat down.
There is no man who will go further
to accommodate a friend than we will, but by the great
ethereal there are some things we will not do to please
anybody. As we sat and meditated, the bell rang
once more, and then we knew the wires had got tangled,
and that we were going to have trouble all day.
It was a busy day, too, and to have a bell ringing
beside one’s ear all day is no fun.
The telephone is a blessed thing when
it is healthy, but when its liver is out of order
it is the worst nuisance on record. When it is
out of order that way you can hear lots of conversation
that you are not entitled to. For instance, we
answered the bell after it had rung several times,
and a sweet little female voice said, “Are you
going to receive to-morrow?” We answered that
we were going to receive all the time. Then she
asked what made us so hoarse? We told her that
we had sat in a draft from the bank, and it made the
cold chills run over us to pay it. That seemed
to be satisfactory, and then she began to tell us
what she was going to wear, and asked if we thought
it was going to be too cold to wear a low neck dress
and elbow sleeves. We told her that was what we
were going to wear, and then she began to complain
that her new dress was too tight in various places
that she mentioned, and when the boys picked us up
off the floor and bathed our temples, and we told
them to take her away, they thought we were crazy.
If we have done wrong in talking with
a total strangers who took us for a lady friend, we
are willing to die. We couldn’t help it.
For an hour we would not answer the constant ringing
of the bell, but finally the bell fluttered as though
a tiny bird had lit upon the wire and was shaking its
plumage. It was not a ring, but it was a tune,
as though an angel, about eighteen years old, a blonde
angel, was handling the other end of the transmitter,
and we felt as though it was wrong for us to sit and
keep her in suspense, when she was evidently dying
to pour into our auricular appendage remarks that
we ought to hear.
And still the bell did flut.
We went to the cornucopia, put our ear to the toddy
stick and said, “What ailest thou darling, why
dost thy hand tremble? Whisper all thou feelest
to thine old baldy.” Then there came over
the wire and into our mansard by a side window the
following touching remarks: “Matter enough.
I have been ringing here till I have blistered my
hands. We have got to have ten car loads of hogs
by day after to-morrow or shut down.” Then
there was a stuttering, and then another voice said,
“Go over to Loomis’ pawn shop. A man
shot in” and another voice broke
in singing, “The sweet by and by, we shall meet
on that beautiful” and another voice
said “girl I ever saw. She was
riding with a duffer, and wiped her nose as I drove
by in the street car, and I think she is struck after
me.”
It was evident that the telephone
was drunk, and we went out in the hall and wrote on
a barrel all the afternoon, and gave it full possession
of the office.
CONVENIENT CURRENCY.
What we want is a currency that every
farmer can issue for himself. A law should be
passed making the products of the farm a legal tender
for all debts, public and private, including duties
on imports, interest on the public debt, and contributions
for charitable purposes. Then we shall have a
new money table about as follows:
Ten ears of corn make one cent.
Ten cucumbers make one dime.
Ten watermelons make one dollar.
Ten bushels of wheat make one eagle.
THE GOSPEL CAR.
Because there are cars for the luxurious,
and smoking cars for those who delight in tobacco,
some of the religious people of Connecticut are
petitioning the railroad companies to fit up “Gospel
cars.” Instead of the card tables, they
want an organ and piano, they want the seats arranged
facing the centre of the car, so they can have
a full view of whoever may conduct the services; instead
of spittoons they will have a carpet, and instead of
cards they want Bibles and Gospel song books. Chicago
News.
There is an idea for you. Let
some railroad company; fit up a Gospel car according
to the above prescription, and run it, and the porter
on that car would be the most lonesome individual
on the train. The Gospel hymn books would in
a year appear as new as do now the Bibles that are
put up in all cars. Of the millions of people
who ride in the trains, many of them pious Christians,
who has ever seen a man or woman take a Bible off
the iron rack and read it a single minute? And
yet you can often see ministers and other professing
Christians in the smoking car, puffing a cigar and
reading a daily paper.
Why, it is all they can do to get
a congregation in a church on Sunday; and does any
one suppose that when men and women are traveling for
business or pleasure and they do not travel
for anything else that they are going into
a “Gospel car” to listen to some sky pirate
who has been picked up for the purpose, talk about
the prospects of landing the cargo in heaven?
Not much!
The women are too much engaged looking
after their baggage, and keeping the cinders out of
their eyes, and keeping the children’s heads
out of the window, and keeping their fingers from
being jammed, to look out for their immortal souls.
And the men are too much absorbed in the object of
their trip to listen to gospel truths. They are
thinking about whether they will be able to get a
room at the hotel, or whether they will have to sleep
on a cot.
Nobody can sing gospel songs on a
car, with their throats full of cinders, and their
eyes full of dust, and the chances are if anybody
should strike up, “A charge to keep I have,”
some pious sinner who was trying to take a nap in
the corner of the gospel car would say:
“O, go and hire a hall!”
It would be necessary to make an extra
charge of half a dollar to those who occupied the
gospel car, the same as is charged on the parlor car,
and you wouldn’t get two persons on an average
train full that would put up a nickel.
Why, we know a Wisconsin Christian,
worth a million dollars, who, when he comes up from
Chicago to the place where he lives, hangs up his overcoat
in the parlor car, and then goes into the forward car
and rides till the whistle blows for his town, when
he goes in and gets his coat and never says thirty-five
cents to the conductor, or ten cents to the porter.
Do you think a gospel car would catch him for half
a dollar? He would see you in Hades first.
The best way is to take a little eighteen-carat
religion along into the smoking car, or any other
car you may happen to be in.
A man as we understand
religion from those who have had it does
not have to howl to the accompaniment of an asthmatic
organ, pumped by a female with a cinder in her eye
and smut on her nose, in order to enjoy religion,
and he does not have to be in the exclusive company
of other pious people to get the worth of his money.
There is a great deal of religion in sitting in a
smoking car, smoking dog-leg tobacco in a briar-wood
pipe, and seeing happy faces in the smoke that curls
up faces of those you have made happy by
kind words, good deeds, or half a dollar put where
it will drive away hunger, instead of paying it out
for a reserved seat in a gospel car. Take the
half dollar you would pay for a seat in a gospel car
and go into the smoker, and find some poor emigrant
that is going west to grow up with the country, after
having been beaten out of his money at Castle Garden,
and give it to him, and see if the look of thankfulness
and joy does not make you feel better than to listen
to a discussion in the gospel car, as to wheiher the
children of Israel went through the Red Sea with life-preservers,
or wore rubber hunting boots.
Take your gospel-car half dollar and
buy a vegetable ivory rattle of the train boy, and
give it to the sick emigrant mother’s pale baby,
and you make four persons happy the baby,
the mother, the train boy and yourself.
We know a man who gave a dollar to
a prisoner on the way to State prison, to buy tobacco
with, who has enjoyed more good square religion over
it than he could get out of all the chin music and
saw-filing singing he could hear in a gospel car in
ten years. The prisoner was a bad man from Oshkosh,
who was in a caboose in charge of the sheriff, on the
way to Waupun. The attention of the citizen was
called to the prisoner by his repulsive appearance,
and his general don’t-care-a-damative appearance.
The citizen asked the prisoner how he was fixed for
money to buy tobacco with in prison. He said
he hadn’t a cent, and he knew it would be the
worst punishment he could have to go without tobacco.
The citizen gave him the dollar and said:
“Now, every time you take a
chew of tobacco in prison, just make up your mind
to be square when you get out.”
The prisoner reached out his hand-cuffed
hands to take the dollar, the hands trembling so that
the chains rattled and a great tear as big as a shirt-button
appeared in one eye the other eye had been
gouged out while “having some fun with the boys”
at Oshkosh and his lips trembled as he
said:
“So help me God, I will!”
That man has been boss of a gang of
hands in the pinery for two winters, and has a farm
paid for on the Central Railroad, and is “square.”
That is the kind of practical religion
a worldly man can occasionally practice without having
a gospel car.
BANKS AND BANKING.
The subject of banking has engrossed
the attention of your excellent Governor for, lo!
these many weeks, and he is constrained to say that
some radical changes must be made in the method of
receiving deposits by banks, where an equivalent is
not rendered, of His Excellency will be compelled
to emerge from his present aristocratic quarters and
take up his abode in the poor-house. I would
call your attention to the practice certain banks
have of issuing checks in lieu of cash. If these
checks were available at the groceries it would be
better than it is. Banks have got in a habit of
issuing a species of ivory button in receipt for the
green coin of the realm which is only good at the
counter of the bank. These checks are not issued
by the National Banks, but by the State Banks, denominated
“Keno” and “Faro.” I
would not charge that there is “skullduggery”
or “shenanagen” going on in these institutions,
as the president of one of them informed me, confidentially,
that he dealt on the “square,” but it is
a noticeable fact that the dividends received by those
who do business with the banks, are almost, as it
were, imperceptible. I trust that you will cause
this branch of industry to be thoroughly investigated,
and report by bill or otherwise. Our finances
should be beyond suspicion of dishonesty.
LARGE MOUTHS ABE FASHIONABLE.
The fashion papers, which are authority
on the styles, claim that ladies with large mouths
are all the fashion now, and that those whose mouths
are small and rosebud like are all out of style.
It is singular the freaks that are taken by fashion.
Years ago a red-headed girl, with a mouth like a slice
cut out of a muskmelon, would have been laughed at,
and now such a girl is worth going miles to see.
It is easier to color the hair red,
and be in fashion, than it is to enlarge the mouth,
though a mouth that has any give to it can be helped
by the constant application of a glove stretcher during
the day, and by holding the cover to a tin blacking
box while sleeping. What in the world the leaders
of fashion wanted to declare large mouths the style
for, the heavens only can tell.
Take a pretty face and mortise about
a third of it for mouth, and it seems to us as though
it is a great waste of raw material. There is
no use that a large mouth can be put to that a small
mouth would not do better, unless it is used for a
pigeon hole to file away old sets of false teeth.
They can’t certainly, be any better for kissing.
You all remember the traveling man
who attended the church fair at Kalamazoo, where one
of the sisters would give a kiss for ten cents.
He went up and paid his ten cents, and was about to
kiss her when he noticed that her mouth was one of
those large, open face, cylinder escapement, to be
continued mouths. It commenced at the chin and
went about four chains and three links in a northwesterly
direction, then around by her ear, across under the
nose and back by the other ear to the place of beginning,
and containing twelve acres, more or less.
The traveling man said he was only
a poor orphan, and had a family to support, and if
he never came out alive it would be a great hardship
upon those dependent upon him for support, and he
asked her as a special favor that she take her hand
and take a reef in one side of the mouth so it would
be smaller. She consented, and puckered in a handful
of what would have been cheek, had it not been mouth.
He looked at her again and found that the mouth had
become a very one-sided affair, and he said he had
just one more favor to ask.
He was not a man that was counted
hard to suit when he was at home in Chicago, but he
would always feel as though he had got his money’s
worth, and go away with pleasanter recollections of
Kalamazoo, if she would kindly take her other hand
and draw the other side of her mouth together, and
he would be content to take his ten cents’ worth
out of what was left unemployed.
This was too much, and she gave him
a terrible look, and returned him his ten cents, saying,
“Do you think, sir, because you are a Chicago
drummer, that for ten cents you can take a kiss right
out of the best part of it? Go! Get thee
to a nunnery,” and he went and bought a lemonade
with the money.
We would not advise any lady whose
mouth is small to worry about this new fashion, and
try to enlarge the one nature has given her. Large
mouths will have their run in a few brief months and
will be much sought after by the followers of fashion,
but in a short time the little ones that pout, and
look cunning, will come to the front and the large
ones will be for rent. The best kind of a mouth
to have is a middling sized one, that has a dimple
by its sides, which is always in style.
INTERNAL IMPROVEMENTS.
Under this heading I can think of
nothing that appears more appropriate than the subject
of the artificial propagation of fish. It is a
subject that has arrested the attention of many of
the ablest minds of the country, and the results of
experiments have been thus far so satisfactory that
it is almost safe to predict that within the next ten
centuries every man, however poor, may pick bull-heads
off of his crab apple vines and gather his winter
supply of fresh shad from his sweet potato trees at
less than fifty cents a pound. The experiments
that have been made in our own state warrant us in
going largely into the fish business. A year ago
a quantity of fish seeds were sub soil plowed into
the ice of Lake Mendota, and to-day I am informed
that boarders at the hotels there have all the fish
to eat that any reasonable man could desire. The
expense is small and the returns are enormous.
It is estimated that from the six quarts of fish seeds
that were planted in the lake there are now ready for
the market at least 11,000,000 car loads of brain-producing
food, if you spit on your bait when you go fishing.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND HIS PA - HIS PA GETS BOXED.
“You don’t want to buy
a good parrot, do you?” said the bad boy to the
grocery man as he put his wet mittens on the top of
the stove to dry, and kept his back to the stove so
he could watch the grocery man, and be prepared for
a kick, if the man should remember the rotten egg sign
that the boy put up in front of the grocery last week.
“Naw, I don’t want no
parrot. I had rather have a fool boy around than
a parrot. But what’s the matter with your
Ma’s parrot? I thought she wouldn’t
part with him for anything.”
“Well, she wouldn’t until
Wednesday night, but now she says she will not have
him around, and I may have half I can get for him.
She told me to go to some saloon or some disreputable
place and sell him, and I thought maybe he would about
suit you,” and the boy broke into a bunch of
celery, and took out a few tender stalks and rubbed
them on a codfish to salt them, and began to bite
the stalks, while he held the sole of one wet boot
up against the stove to dry it, making a smell of burned
leather that came near turning the stomach of the
cigar sign.
“Look-a-here boy, don’t
you call this a disreputable place. Some of the
best people in this town come here,” said the
grocery man as he held up the cheese knife and grated
his teeth as though he would like to jab it into the
youth.
“O, that’s all right,
they come here ’cause you trust; but you make
up what you lose by charging it to other people.
Pa will make it hot for you the last of the week.
He has been looking over your bill, and comparing it
with the hired girl, and she says we haven’t
ever had a prune, or a dried apple, or a raisin, or
any cinnamon, or crackers and cheese out of your store,
and he says you are worse than the James brothers,
and that you used to be a three card monte man, and
he will have you arrested for highway robbery, but
you can settle that with Pa. I like you, because
you are no ordinary sneak thief, you are a high-toned,
gentlemanly sort of a bilk, and wouldn’t take
anything you couldn’t lift. O, keep your
seat, and don’t get excited. It does a
man good to hear the truth from one who has got the
nerve to tell it.
“But about the parrot.
Ma has been away from home for a week, having a high
old time in Chicago, going to theatres and things,
and while she was gone, I guess the hired girl or
somebody learned the parrot some new things to say.
A parrot that can only say ‘Polly wants a cracker,’
don’t amount to anything what we
need is new style parrots that can converse on the
topics of the day, and say things original. Well,
when Ma got back I guess her conscience hurt her for
the way she had been carrying on in Chicago, and so
when she heard the basement of the church was being
frescoed, she invited the committee to hold the Wednesday
evening prayer meeting at our house. First, there
were four people came, and Ma asked Pa to stay to
make up a quorum, and Pa said seeing he had two pair,
he guessed he would stay in, and if Ma would deal
him a queen he would have a full hand. I don’t
know what Pa meant, but he plays draw poker sometimes.
Anyway there was eleven people came including the minister,
and after they had talked about the neighbors a spell,
and Ma had showed the women a new tidy she had worked
for the heathen, with a motto on it which Pa had taught
her: ’A contrite heart beats a bob-tailed
flush,’ and Pa had talked to the
men about a religious silver mine he was selling stock
in, which he advised them as a friend to buy for the
glory of the church, they all went in the back parlor
and the minister lead in prayer. He got down
on his knees right under the parrot’s cage, and
you’d a dide to see Polly hang on to the wires
of the cage with one foot, and drop an apple core
on the minister’s head. Ma shook her handkerchief
at Polly, and looked sassy, and Polly got up on the
perch, and as the minister got warmed up and began
to raise the roof, Polly said, ‘O, dry up.’
The minister had his eyes shut, but he opened one
of them a little and looked at Pa. Pa was tickled
at the parrot, but when the minister looked at Pa as
though it was him that was making irreverent remarks,
Pa was mad.
“The minister got to the ‘amen,’
and Polly shook hisself and said ’What you giving
us?’ and the minister got up and brushed the
bird seed off his knees, and he looked mad. I
thought Ma would sink with mortification, and I was
sitting on a piano stool looking as pious as a Sunday
school superintendent the Sunday before he skips out
with the bank’s funds; and Ma looked at me as
though she thought it was me that had been tampering
with the parrot. Gosh, I never said a word to
that parrot, and I can prove it by my chum.
“Well, the minister asked one
of the sisters if she wouldn’t pray, and she
wasn’t engaged, so she said with pleasure, and
she kneeled down, but she corked herself, cause she
got one knee on a cast-iron dumb bell that I had been
practising with. She said ‘O my,’
in a disgusted sort of a way, and then she began to
pray for the reformation of the youth of the land,
and asked for the spirit to descend on the household,
and particularly on the boy that was such a care and
anxiety to his parents, and just then Polly said ‘O,
pull down your vest.’ Well, you’d
a dide to see that woman look at me. The parrot
cage was partly behind the window curtin, and they
couldn’t see it, and she thought it was me.
She looked at Ma as though she was wondering why she
didn’t hit me with a poker, but she went on,
and Polly said ‘wipe off your chin,’ and
then the lady got through and got up, and told Ma
it must be a great trial to have an idiotic child,
and then Ma she was mad, and said it wasn’t half
so bad as it was to be a kleptomaniac, and then the
woman got up and said she wouldn’t stay no longer,
and Pa said to me to take that parrot outdoors, and
that seemed to make them all good natured again.
Ma said to take the parrot and give it to the poor.
I took the cage and pointed my finger at the parrot
and it looked at the woman and said ‘old catamaran,’
and the woman tried to look pious and resigned, but
she couldn’t. As I was going out the door
the parrot ruffed up his feathers and said ’Dammit,
set ’em up,’ and I hurried out with the
cage for fear he would say something bad, and the folks
all held up their hands and said it was scandalous.
Say, I wonder if a parrot can go to hell with the
rest of the community. Well, I put the parrot
in the woodshed, and after they all had their innings,
except Pa, who acted as umpire, the meeting broke
up, and Ma says it is the last time she will have
that gang at her house.
“That must have been where your
Pa got his black eye,” said the grocery man,
as he charged the bunch of celery to the boy’s
Pa. “Did the minister hit him, or was it
one of the sisters?”
“O, he didn’t get his
black eye at prayer meeting!” said the boy, as
he took his mittens off the stove, and rubbed them
to take the stiffening out. “It was from
boxing. Pa told my chum and me that it was no
harm to learn to box, cause we could defend ourselves,
and he said he used to be a holy terror with the boxing
gloves when he was a boy, and he has been giving us
lessons. Well, he is no slouch, now I tell you,
and handles himself pretty well for a church member.
I read in the paper how Zack Chandler played it on
Conkling by getting Jem Mace, the prize fighter, to
knock him silly, and I asked Pa if he wouldn’t
let me bring a poor boy who had no father to teach
him boxing, to our house to learn to box, and Pa said
certainly, fetch him along. He said he would be
glad to do anything for a poor orphan. So I went
down in the Third ward and got an Irish boy by the
name of Duffy, who can knock the socks off any boy
in the ward. He fit a prize fight once.
It would have made you laugh to see Pa telling him
how to hold his hands and how to guard his face.
He told Duffy not to be afraid, but strike right out
and hit for keeps. Duffy said he was afraid Pa
would get mad if he hit him, and Pa said, ’nonsense,
boy, knock me down if you can, and I will laugh ha!
ha!’ Well, Duffy he hauled back and gave Pa
one on the nose, and another in both eyes, and cuffed
him on the ear and punched him in the stomach, and
lammed him in the mouth and made his teeth bleed,
and then he gave him a side winder in both eyes, and
Pa pulled off his boxing gloves and grabbed a chair,
and we adjourned and went down stairs as though there
was a panic. I haven’t seen Pa since.
Was his eye very black?”
“Black, I should say so,”
said the grocery man. “And his nose seemed
to be trying to look into his left ear. He was
at the market buying beefsteak to put on it.”
“O, beefsteak is no account.
I must go and see him and tell him that an oyster
is the best thing for a black eye. Well, I must
go. A boy has a pretty hard time running a house
the way it should be run,” and the boy went
out and hung up a sign in front of the grocery:
“Frowy Butter a Speshulty.”
CHRISTMAS TREES.
There is too much dress parade about
Christmas. Too many Christmas trees where rich
children get club skates, and gold napkin rings, and
poor children get pop corn strung on a string, and
cornucopias full of peppermint candy.
THE BOB-TAILED BADGER.
The last legislature, having nothing
else to do, passed a law providing for a change in
the coat-of-arms of the State. There was no change
particularly, except to move the plows and shovels
around a little, put on a few more bars of pig lead,
put a new-fashioned necktie on the sailor who holds
the rope, the emblem of lynch law, tuck the miner’s
breeches into his boots a little further, and amputate
the tail of the badger. We do not care for the
other changes, as they were only intended to give the
engraver a job, but when an irresponsible legislature
amputates the tail of the badger, the emblem of the
Democratic party, that crawls into a hole and pulls
the hole in after him, it touches us in our patriotism.
The badger, as nature made him, is
a noble bird, and though he resembles a skunk too
much to be very proud of, they had no right to cut
off his tail and stick it up like a sore thumb.
As it is now the new comer to our Garden of Eden will
not know whether our emblem is a Scotch terrier, smelling
into the archives of the State for a rat, or a defalcation,
or a sic semper Americanus scunch. We
do not complain that the sailor with a Pinafore shirt
on, on the new coat-of-arms, is made to resemble Senator
Cameron, or that the miner looks like Senator Sawyer.
These things are of minor importance, but the docking
of that badger’s tail, and setting it up like
a bob-tail horse, is an outrage upon every citizen
of the State, and when the Democrats get into power,
that tail shall be restored to its normal condition
if it takes all the blood and treasure in the State,
and this work of the Republican incendiaries shall
be undone. The idea of Wisconsin appearing among
the galaxy of States with a bob-tailed badger is repugnant
to all our finer feelings.
TERROR IN CHURCH.
A ridiculous scene occurred at Palmyra,
the other day. The furnace in the basement of
the church is reached by a trap door, which is right
beside the pulpit. There was a new preacher there
from abroad, and he did not know anything about the
trap door, and the sexton went down there to fix the
fire, before the new minister arrived. The minister
had just got warmed up in his sermon, and was picturing
to his hearers hell in all its heat. He had got
excited and told of the lake of burning brimstone below,
where the devil was the stoker, and where the heat
was ten thousand times hotter than a political campaign,
and where the souls of the wicked would roast, and
fry, and stew until the place froze over.
Wiping the perspiration from his face,
he said, pointing, to the floor, “Ah, my friends,
look down into that seething, burning lake, and ”
Just at this point the trap door raised a little, and
the sexton’s face, with coal smut all over it,
appeared. He wanted to come up and hear the sermon.
If hell had broke loose, the new minister
could not have been more astonished. He stepped
back, grasped his manuscript, and was just about to
jump from the pulpit, when a deacon on the front seat
said, “It’s all right, brother; he has
only been down below to see about the fire.”
The sexton came up and shut down the trap door, the
color came back to the face of the minister, and he
went on, though the incident seemed to take the tuck
all out of him.
A traveling man who happened to be
at the church tells us that he knows the minister
was scared, for he sweat so that the perspiration run
right down on the carpet and made a puddle as though
a dipper of water had been tipped over there.
The minister says he was not scared, but we don’t
see how he could help it.
FISH HATCHING IN WISCONSIN.
I would suggest that you permit the
subject of the artificial hatching of fish to engage
your attention, and that you appropriate several dollars
to purchase whale’s eggs, vegetable oysters
and mock turtle seeds. The hatching of fish is
easy, and any man can soon learn it; and it is a branch
of industry that many who are now out of employment,
owing to circumstances beyond their control, will
be glad to avail themselves of. How, I ask you,
could means better be adapted to the ends than for
the retiring officers of our State to go to setting
on fish eggs?
TRAINS WITHOUT CONDUCTORS.
Since the introduction of the patent
air brake on passenger trains, by which brakemen have
been dispensed with, a number of patent right men have
been studying up some contrivance to do away with conductors.
All have failed except one, and that fortunate inventor
is Col. Johnson, of the Railroad Eating House,
Milwaukee. He has been engaged for two years on
this patent, and has got it so near completed that
he has filed a caveat at the Patent Office, and as
his rights are secured, it can do no harm to describe
the invention, as it is destined to work quite a revolution
in the railroad business. It has been Col.
Johnson’s idea that an arrangement could be
made so that an engineer of a train could have the
whole train under his charge, to stop it, start it,
collect fares, and bounce impecunious passengers,
from his position on the engine, and do it all by
steam, wind and water. A series of pneumatic tubes
run from the door of each car to the engine, with
speaking tubes. A passenger gets on the platform,
and through the speaking tube asks the engineer what
the fare is to such a place. The answer is returned,
the fare is put in the hopper of the pneumatic tube,
it goes to the engineer, he pulls a string, the door
flies open and the passenger enters. Not the least
important part of the machinery is the patent “aeolian
bouncer,” as it is called. A pair of ice
tongs are placed so as to grasp the passenger by the
seat of the pants or the polonaise, as the case may
be, when he or she gets on the platform. These
tongs are connected with the air brakes, in such a
manner that by the engineer’s touching a spring
the whole force of the compressed air takes possession
of the tongs, and the passenger is snatched bald-headed,
metaphorically speaking. For instance, a passenger
gets on the platform at Portage, and the ice tongs
grasp him or her securely. If he or she pays
the fare, the door is opened, the tongs release their
hold, and the person is allowed to enter. But
if the engineer should find that they had no money,
or that their pass had run out, and they were trying
to beat their way, he would pull the string and they
would be lifted back on the depot steps and stood
on their heads, raised in the air and made to see
stars. Col. Johnson has been offered a fabulous
sum for his patent, but he has not decided whether
to sell or lease it. A trial trip was made at
Milwaukee, the other day, and though the machine was
not perfect, the experiment was not altogether a failure.
A car was arranged with the apparatus, and went out
to the Soldier’s Home. Col. Johnson
and a number of prominent railroad men were on board.
They got a veteran soldier and a Polack waman to allow
the machine to experiment on them. The machine
took hold of the soldier and the engineer jerked.
The man had one leg torn off, and the seat of his
overcoat was ruined. He wouldn’t try again,
so they let the woman step on the platform. The
engineer turned it the wrong way, and the car seemed
full of compressed air, and a smell of limberger cheese
pervaded the premises. When the smoke cleared
off the woman was not to be found. After voting
the machine a success the party started for Milwaukee.
On nearing the city a pair of wooden shoes were seen
in the air coming down, and they lit in the the canal
by the tannery. A pair of corsets struck on Plankinton’s
packing house, and sections of spinal cord, and one
leg of a pair of red drawers came down on the Soldier’s
home, and hair was found on the top of the car.
It is thought the engineer loaded the air bouncer
too heavy, and that it kicked. However, Col.
Johnson was not discouraged, and will soon have his
patent on all cars. The husband of the Polack
woman wanted Johnson to pay him three dollars, but
he said he didn’t want to buy the woman.
All he wanted was to hire her, anyway. Col.
Johnson is a great inventor. It was he that invented
the stomach pump, and the automatic candle enunciator,
for awakening guests in the night to take early trains.
The latter he sold to Mr. Williams, of Prairie du
Chien, for a large amount and took his pay in trade.
RAISING ELEPHANTS.
Why not go to raising elephants?
A good elephant will sell for eight thousand dollars.
A pair of elephants can be bought by a community of
farmers pooling their issues and getting a start, and
in a few years every farm can be a menagerie of it
own, and every year we can rake in from eight to twenty-four
thousand dollars from the sale of surplus elephants.
It may be said that elephants are hearty feeders, and
that they would go through an ordinary farmer in a
short time. Well, they can be turned out into
the highway to browse, and earn their own living.
This elephant theory is a good one, and any man that
is good on figures can sit down and figure up a profit
in a year sufficient to go into bankruptcy.
THE POWER OF ELOQUENCE.
A justice of the peace at Menasha,
wanted to kill Pratt, the editor of the Press.
The matter has been compromised, however. Pratt
got the justice cornered up, and delivered one of
the speeches to him that he delivered during the campaign
last fall, and the justice got on his knees and said,
“Pratt, this thing is all right, I surrender.”
A TRYING SITUATION.
It was along in the winter, and the
prominent church members were having a business meeting
in the basement of the church to devise ways and means
to pay for the pulpit furniture. The question
of an oyster sociable had been decided, and they got
to talking about oysters, and one old deaconess asked
a deacon if he didn’t think raw oysters would
go further at a sociable, than stewed oysters.
He said he thought raw oysters would
go further, but they wouldn’t be as satisfying.
And then he went on to tell how far a raw oyster went
once with him. He said he was at a swell dinner
party with a lady on each side of him, and he was
trying to talk to both of them, or carry on two conversations,
on two different subjects at the same time.
They had some shell oysters, and he
took up one on a fork a large, fat one and
was about to put it in his mouth, when the lady on
his left called his attention, and when the cold fork
struck his teeth, and no oyster on it, he felt as
though it had escaped, but he made no sign. He
went on talking with the lady as though nothing had
happened. He glanced down at his shirt bosom,
and was at once on the trail of the oyster, though
the insect had got about two minutes start of him.
It had gone down his vest under the waistband of his
clothing, and he was powerless to arrest its progress.
He said he never felt how powerless
he was until he tried to grab that oyster by placing
his hand on his person, outside his clothes; then,
as the oyster slipped around from one place to another,
he felt that man was only a poor, weak creature.
The oyster, he observed, had very
cold feet, and the more he tried to be calm and collected,
the more the oyster seemed to walk around among his
vitals.
He says he does not know whether the
ladies noticed the oyster when it started on its travels
or not, but he thought, as he leaned back and tried
to loosen up his clothing, so it would hurry down toward
his shoes, that they winked at each other, though
they might have been winking at something else.
The oyster seemed to be real spry
until it got out of reach, and then it got to going
slow as the slikery covering wore off, and by the time
it had worked into his trousers leg, it was going
very slow, though it remained cold to the last, and
he hailed the arrival of that oyster into the heel
of his stocking with more delight than he did the raising
of the American flag over Vicksburg, after the long
siege.
THE GIDDY GIRLS QUARREL.
A dispatch from Brooklyn states that
at the conclusion of a performance at the theatre,
Fanny Davenport’s wardrobe was attached by Anna
Dickinson and the remark is made that Fanny will contest
the matter. Well, we should think she would.
What girl would sit down silently and allow another
to attach her wardrobe without contesting? It
is no light thing for an actress to have her wardrobe
attached after the theatre is out. Of course
Fanny could throw something over her, a piece of scenery,
or a curtain, and go to her hotel, but how would she
look? Miss Davenport always looked well with
her wardrobe on, but it may have been all in the wardrobe.
Without a wardrobe she may look very plain and unattractive.
Anna Dickinson has done very wrong.
She has struck Fanny in a vital part. An actress
with a wardrobe is one of the noblest works of nature.
She is the next thing to an honest man, which is the
noblest work, though we do not say it boastingly.
We say she is next to an honest man, with a wardrobe,
but if she has no wardrobe it is not right. However,
we will change the subject before it gets too deep
for us.
Now, the question is, what is Anna
Dickinson going to do with Fanny’s wardrobe?
She may think Fanny’s talent goes with it, but
if she will carefully search the pockets she will
find that Fanny retains her talent, and has probably
hid it under a bushel, or an umbrella, or something,
before this time. Anna cannot wear Fanny’s
wardrobe to play on the stage, because she is not
bigger than a banana, while Fanny is nearly six feet
long, from tip to tip. If Anna should come out
on a stage with the Davenport wardrobe, the boys would
throw rolls of cotton batting at her.
Fanny’s dress, accustomed to
so much talent, would have to be stuffed full of stuff.
There would be room enough in Fanny’s dress,
if Anna had it on, as we remember the two, to put
in a feather bed, eleven rolls of cotton batting,
twelve pounds of bird seed, four rubber air cushions,
two dozen towels, two brass bird cages, a bundle of
old papers, a sack of bran and a bale of hay.
That is, in different places. Of course all this
truck wouldn’t go in the dress in any one given
locality. If Anna should put on Fanny’s
dress, and have it filled up so it would look any
way decent, and attempt to go to Canada, she would
be arrested for smuggling.
Why, if Dickinson should put on a
pair of Davenport’s stockings, now for instance,
it would be necessary to get out a search warrant to
find her. She could pin the tops of them at her
throat with a brooch, and her whole frame would not
fill one stocking half as well as they have been filled
before being attached, and Anna would look like a Santa
Claus present of a crying doll, hung on to a mantel
piece.
Fanny Davenport is one of the handsomest
and splendidest formed women on the American stage,
and a perfect lady, while Dickinson, who succeeds to
her old clothes through the law, is small, not handsome,
and a quarrelsome female who thinks she has a mission.
The people of this country had rather see Fanny Davenport
without any wardrobe to speak of than to see Dickinson
with clothes enough to start a second hand store.
THE UNIVERSAL OBJECT.
The object that every man has in view,
whether he be farmer, mechanic, preacher, editor,
or tramp, is to make money.
THE MISTAKE ABOUT IT.
There is nothing that is more touching
than the gallantry of men, total strangers, to a lady
who has met with an accident. Any man who has
a heart in him, who sees a lady whose apparel has
become disarranged in such a manner that she cannot
see it, will, though she be a total stranger, tell
her of her misfortune, so she can fix up and not be
stared at. But sometimes these efforts to do
a kindly action are not appreciated, and men get fooled.
This was illustrated at Watertown
last week. People have no doubt noticed that
one of the late fashions among women is to wear at
the bottom of the dress a strip of red, which goes
clear around. To the initiated it looks real
nice, but a man who is not posted in the fashions would
swear that the woman’s petticoat was dropping
off, and if she was not notified, and allowed to fix
it, she would soon be in a terrible fix on the street.
It was a week ago Monday that a lady
from Oshkosh was at Watertown on a visit, and she
wore a black silk dress with a red strip on the bottom.
As she walked across the bridge Mr. Calvin Cheeney,
a gentleman whose heart is in the right place, saw
what he supposed would soon be a terrible accident,
which would tend to embarrass the lady, so he stepped
up to her in the politest manner possible, took off
his hat and said:
“Excuse me, madame, but
I think your wearing apparel is becoming disarranged.
You might step right into Clark’s, here, and
fix it,” and he pointed to the bottom of her
dress.
She gave him a look which froze his
blood, and shaking her dress out she went on.
He said it was the last time he would ever try to help
a woman in distress.
She sailed along down to a grocery
store and stopped to look at some grapes, when the
practiced eye of Hon. Peter Brook saw that something
was wrong. To think is to act with Peter, and
he at once said:
“Miss, your petticoat seems
to be dropping off. You can go in the store and
get behind that box of codfish and fix it if you want
to.”
Now that was a kind thing for Peter
to do, and an act that any gentleman might be proud
of, but he was amazed at her when she told him to mind
his own business, and she would attend to her own
petticoat, and she marched off just a trifle mad.
She went into the postoffice to mail
a postal card, just as Mr. Moak, the postmaster, came
out of his private office with Hon. L.B. Caswell,
the congressman. Mr. Moak, without the aid of
his glasses, saw that there was liable to be trouble,
so he asked Caswell to excuse him a moment, and turning
to the delivery window where she was asking the clerk
what time the mail came in, he said:
“I beg a thousand pardons,
madame. It ill becomes a stranger to speak
to one so fair without an introduction, but I believe
that I am not violating the civil service rules laid
down by Mr. Hayes for the guidance of postmasters
when I tell you, lady, that something has broke loose
and that the red garment that you fain would hide
from the gaze of the world has asserted itself and
appears to the naked eye about two chains and three
links below your dress. I am going abroad, to
visit Joe Lindon, the independent candidate for sheriff,
and you can step into the back office and take a reef
in it.”
He did not see the look of fire in
her eyes as he went out, because he was not looking
at her eye. She passed out, and Doc Spaulding,
who has got a heart in him as big as a box car, saw
it, and touching his broad brimmed felt hat he said,
in a whisper:
“Madame, you better drop into
a millinery store and fasten up your ”
But she passed him on a run, and was
just going into a hardware store, with her hand on
her pistol pocket, when Jule Keyes happened along.
Now, Jule would consider himself a horse thief if he
should allow a woman to go along the street with anything
the matter with her clothes, and he not warn her of
the consequences, so he stopped and told her that she
must excuse him, a perfect stranger, for mentioning
her petticoat, but the fact was that it was coming
off.
By this time the woman was mad.
She bought a pistol and started for the depot, firmly
resolved to kill the first man that molested her.
She did not meet anybody until she arrived at the
Junction, and she sat down in the depot to rest before
the train came.
Pierce, the hotel man, is one of the
most noticin’ persons anywhere, and she hadn’t
been seated a York minute before his eye caught the
discrepancy in her apparel.
He tried to get the telegraph operator
and the expressman to go and tell her about it, but
they wouldn’t, so he went and took a seat near
her.
“It is a warm day, madame,”
said Pierce, looking at the red strip at the bottom
of her dress.
She drew her pistol, cocked it, and
pointed it at Pierce, who was trembling in every leg,
and said:
“Look-a-here, you young cuss.
I have had half a dozen grown persons down town tell
me my petticoat was coming off, and I have stood it
because I thought they were old enough to know what
they were talking about, but when it comes to boys
of your age coming around thinking they know all about
women’s clothes it is too much, and the shooting
is going to commence.”
Mr. Pierce made one bound and reached
the door, and then got behind a white greyhound and
waited for her to go away, which she soon did.
As she was stepping on the car the conductor, Jake
Sazerowski, said to her:
“Your apparel, madame,
seems to be demoralized,” but she rushed into
the car, and was seen no more.
Since then these gentlemen have all
learned that the fashion calls for a red strip at
the bottom of a dress, and they will make no more mistakes.
But they were all serious enough, and their interference
was prompted by pure kindness of heart, and not from
any wicked thoughts.
A NEW SPARKING SCHEME.
A number of fathers who have daughters,
have formed a society, the object of which is to charge
young men who visit the girls, for meals, gas, wear
and tear of furniture, etc. There has been
so much sparking going on which did not mean business,
that the organization has seemed necessary.
EFFECTS OF MINERAL WATER.
A woman from Milwaukee, stopping at
Sparta for the summer, had a serious accident the
other day. She had her dress pinned back so tight
that the exclamation point where she was vaccinated
on the left arm was plainly visible, and as she stooped
over at the artesian well to dip up a cup full of
physic, a little dog belonging to a lady from Pilot
Knob took hold of her striped stocking and shook it,
thinking it was a blue racer. The lady was overcome
with heat and sank down on the damp ground, and the
result was congestion of the dog, for when she got
up she kicked that dog over the Court house and sprained
her stocking. It is said that beautiful and healthful
summer resort is fast filling up and everybody swears
it is the most enjoyable place on the continent.
It is certainly the cheapest for us La Crosse folks
to go. We don’t know of a place where, for
the money invested, one can have so much fun and get
so much health. You can leave La Crosse at 5:45,
and arrive at Sparta at 6:20, after a delightful ride
of thirty miles, and you will enjoy a race, your train
beating the Northwestern train, and running like lightning.
If you have a pass, or sit on the hind platform, it
will cost you nothing. You can walk down town,
at small expense. You want to take supper before
leaving home, if economy is what you are seeking in
addition to health. Go to Condit, at the Warner
House, and talk as though you were looking for a place
to send your family, and he will hitch up and drive
you all over town. Tell Doc. Nichols you
never tried a Turkish bath, but that you are troubled
with hypochondria and often wish you were dead, and
that if you were sure the baths would help you, you
would come down and take them regular. He will
put you through for nothing, and give you a cigar.
Then you can get a tooth pick at Condit’s and
put your thumb under your vest and go to the springs
and talk loud about railroad stocks and bonds and speculating
in wheat. (It takes two to do it up right. Frank
Hatch and the writer are going down some night to
“do” the watering place). Then you
can swell around till half past ten, and sneak off
to the depot on foot and come home, and your pocket
book will be just as empty as when you started, unless
you get a subscriber, and you will have added bloom
to your cheek, and had a high old time, and next winter
you can talk about the delightful time you passed
at Sparta last summer during the heated term.
Let’s get up a party and go down some night.
WHAT THE COUNTRY NEEDS.
What the country needs is a melon
from which the incendiary ingredients have been removed.
It seems to me that by proper care, when the melon
is growing on the vines, the cholera morbus
can be decreased, at least, the same as the cranberry
has been improved, by cultivation. The experiment
of planting homeopathic pills in the hill with the
melon has been tried, but homeopathy, while perhaps
good in certain cases, does not seem to reach the
seat of disease in the watermelon. What I would
advise, and the advice is free to all, is that a porous
plaster be placed upon watermelons, just as they are
begining to ripen, with a view to draw out the cholera
morbus. A mustard plaster might have the
same effect, but the porous plaster seems to me to
be the article to fill a want long felt. If, by
this means, a breed of watermelon can be raised that
will not strike terror to the heart of the consumer,
this agricultural address will not have been delivered
in vain.
THE MAN FROM DUBUQUE.
Last week, a young man from the country
west of here came in on the evening train and walked
up to Grand avenue, with a fresh looking young woman
hanging on to one handle of a satchel while he held
the other. They turned into the Plankinton House,
and with a wild light in his eye the man went to the
book and registered his name and that of the lady with
him.
While the clerk was picking out a
couple of rooms that were near together, the man looked
around at the colored man who had the satchel, and
as the clerk said, “Show the gentleman to No
65 and the lady to 67,” he said, “Hold
on, ’squire! One room will do.”
On being shown to the room, the bridegroom
came right out with the bell boy and appeared at the
office. Picking out a benevolent looking gentleman,
with a good place to raise hair on his head, who was
behind the counter, the groom said:
“Say, can a man enjoy religion in this house?”
Mr. White said a man could if he brought
it with him. They had none on hand to issue out
to guests, but they never interfered with those who
had it when they arrived.
“Why,” says the manager
of the house, “has anybody interfered with your
devotions here?”
“No, not here,” said the
man, wiping his forehead with a red handkerchief.
“But they have at Dubuque. I’ll tell
you how it was. I was married a couple of days
ago, and night before last I put up at a Dubuque hotel.
My wife never had been married before any at all,
and she is timid, and thinks everybody is watching
us, and making fun of us! She jumps at the slightest
sound.
“Well, we went to our room in
the afternoon, and she began to cry, and said if she
wasn’t married she never would be the longest
day she lived. I sort of put my arm around her,
and was just telling her that everybody had to get
married, when there was a knock on the door, and she
jumped more than thirty feet.
“You see that finger. Well,
a pin in her belt stuck clear through, and came near
making me faint away. I held my finger in my mouth,
and telling her the house was not on fire, I went
to the door and there was a porter there who wanted
to know if I wanted any more coal on the fire.
I drove him away, and sat down in a big rocking chair
with my wife in my lap, and was stroking her hair
and telling her that if she would forgive me for marrying
I never would do so again, and trying to make her feel
more at home, when there came another knock at the
door, and she jumped clear across the room and knocked
over a water pitcher.
“This seal ring on my finger
caught in her frizzes and I’ll be cussed if
the whole top of her head didn’t come off.
I was a little flurried and went to the door, and
a chambermaid was there with an armful of towels and
she handed me a couple and went off. My wife came
into camp again, and began to cry and accuse me of
pulling her hair, when I went up to her and put my
arm around her waist, and was just going to kiss her,
just as any man would be justified in kissing his
wife under the circumstances, when she screamed murder
and fell against the bureau.
“I looked around and the door
had opened, and there was a colored man coming into
the room with a kerosene lamp, and he chuckled and
said he begged my pardon. Now, I am a man that
don’t let my temper get away with me, but as
it was three hours before dark I didn’t see what
was the use of a lamp, and I told him to get out of
there. Before 6 o’clock that evening there
had been twenty raps at the door, and we got sick.
My wife said she would not stay in that house for
a million dollars. So we started for Milwaukee.
“I tried to get a little sleep
on the cars, but every little while a conductor would
wake me up and roll me over in the seat to look at
my ticket, and brakemen would run against my legs
in the aisle of the car, and shout the names of stations
till I was sorry I ever left home. Now, I want
to have rest and quietude. Can I have it here?”
The manager told him to go to his
room, and if he wanted any coal or ice water to ring
for it, and if anybody knocked at his door without
being sent for, to begin shooting bullets through
the door. That settled it, and when the parties
returned to Iowa they said this country was a mighty
sight different from Dubuque.
A PLEA FOR THE BULL HEAD.
The late meeting of the State Fish
Commissioners at Milwaukee was an important event,
and the discussions the wise men indulged in will be
valuable additions to the literature of the country,
and future readers of profane history will rise up
and call them blessed. It seems that the action
of the Milwaukee common council in withdrawing the
use of the water works from the commissioners, will
put a stop to the hatching of whitefish. This
is as it should be. The white fish is an aristocratic
bird, that will not bite a hook, and the propagation
of this species of fish is wholly in the interest
of wealthy owners of fishing tugs, who have nets.
By strict attention to business they can catch all
the whitefish out of the lake a little faster than
the State machine can put them in. Poor people
cannot get a smell of whitefish. The same may
be said of brook trout. While they will bite
a hook, it requires more machinery to catch them than
ordinary people can possess without mortgaging a house.
A man has got to have a morocco book of expensive
flies, a fifteen dollar bamboo jointed rod, a three
dollar trout basket with a hole mortised in the top,
a corduroy suit made in the latest style, top boots
of the Wellington pattern, with red tassels in the
straps, and a flask of Otard brandy in a side pocket.
Unless a man is got up in that style, a speckled trout
will see him in Chicago, first, and then it won’t
bite. The brook trout is even more aristocratic
than the whitefish, and should not be propagated at
public expense.
But there are fish that should be
propagated in the interest of the people. There
is a species of fish that never looks at the clothes
of the man who throws in the bait, a fish that takes
whatever is thrown to it, and when once hold of the
hook never tries to shake a friend, but submits to
the inevitable, crosses its legs and says “Now
I lay me,” and comes out on the bank and seems
to enjoy being taken. It is a fish that is a
friend of the poor, and one that will sacrifice itself
in the interest of humanity. This is the fish
that the State should adopt as its trade mark, and
cultivate friendly relations with, and stand by.
We allude to the bullhead.
The bullhead never went back on a
friend. To catch the bullhead it is not necessary
to tempt his appetite with porter house steak, or to
display an expensive lot of fishing tackle. A
pin hook, a piece of liver, and a cistern pole, is
all the capital required to catch a bullhead.
He lays upon the bottom of a stream or pond in the
mud, thinking. There is no fish that does more
thinking or has a better head for grasping great questions,
or chunks of liver than the bullhead. His brain
is large, his heart beats for humanity, and if he
can’t get liver, a piece of a tin tomato can
will make a meal for him. It is an interesting
study to watch a boy catch a bullhead. The boy
knows where the bullhead congregates, and when he throws
in his hook it is dollars to buttons that “in
the near future” he will get a bite. The
bullhead is democratic in all its instincts. If
the boy’s shirt is sleeveless, his hat crownless,
and his pants a bottomless pit, the bullhead will
bite just as well as though the boy is dressed in purple
and fine linen, with knee breeches and plaid stockings.
The bull head seems to be dozing bulldozing
we might say on the muddy bottom, and a
stranger might say that he would not bite. But
wait. There is a movement of his continuation,
and his cow-catcher moves gently toward the piece of
liver. He does not wait to smell of it, and canvas
in his mind whether the liver is fresh. It makes
no difference to him. He argues that here is a
family out of meat. “My country calls and
I must go,” says the bullhead to himself, and
he opens his mouth and the liver disappears.
It is not certain that the boy will
think of his bait for half an hour, but the bullhead
is in no hurry. He lays in the mud and proceeds
to digest the liver. He realizes that his days
will not be long in the land, or water, more properly
speaking, and he argues if he swallows the bait and
digests it before the boy pulls him out, he will be
just so much ahead. Finally the boy thinks of
his bait, and pulls it out, and the bullhead is landed
on the bank, and the boy cuts him open to get the hook
out. Some fish only take the bait gingerly, and
are only caught around the selvage of the mouth, and
they are comparatively easy to dislodge. Not so
with the bullhead. He says if liver is a good
thing you can’t have too much of it, and it
tastes good all the way down. The boy gets down
on his knees to dissect the bullhead, and get his
hook, and it may be that the boy swears. It would
not be astonishing, though he must feel, when he gets
his hook out of the hidden recesses of the bullhead,
like the minister that took up a collection and didn’t
get a cent, though he expressed his thanks at getting
his hat back. There is one drawback to the bullhead,
and that is his horns. We doubt if a boy ever
descended into the patent insides of a bullhead, to
mine for Limerick hooks, that did not, before his
work was done, run a horn into his vital parts.
But the boy seems to expect it, and the bullhead enjoys
it. We have seen a bullhead lay on the bank and
become dry, and to all appearances dead to all that
was going on, and when the boy sat down on him and
got a horn in his elbow, and yelled murder, the bullhead
would grin from ear to ear, and wag his tail as though
applauding for an end core.
The bullhead never complains.
We have seen a boy take a dull knife and proceed to
follow a fish line down a bullhead from his head to
the end of his subsequent anatomy, and all the time
there would be an expression of sweet peace on the
countenance of the bullhead, as though he enjoyed
it. If we were preparing a picture representing
“Resignation,” for a chromo to give to
subscribers, and wished to represent a scene of suffering
in which the sufferer was light hearted, and seemed
to recognize that all was for the best, we should
take for the subject a bullhead, with a boy searching
with a knife for a long lost fish hook.
The bullhead is a fish that has no
scales, but in lieu thereof is a fine India rubber
skin, that is as far ahead of fiddle string material
for strength and durability as possible. The
meat of the bullhead is not as choice as that of the
mackerel, but it fills up a stomach just as well,
and the Sun insists that the fish commissioners
shall drop the hatching of aristocratic fish and give
the bullhead a chance. There’s millions
in it.
WHY NOT RAISE WOLVES?
You devote a good deal of time and
labor to the raising of sheep, and what do you get
for it. The best sheep cannot lay more than eight
pounds of wool in a season, and even if you get fifty
cents a pound for it, you have not got any great bonanza.
Now, the state encourages the raising of wolves, by
offering a bounty of ten dollars for a piece of skin
off the head of each wolf. It does not cost any
more to raise a wolf than it does to raise a sheep,
and while sheep rarely raise more than two lambs a
year, a pair of good wolves are liable to raise twenty
young ones in the course of a year, if it is a good
year for wolves. In addition to the encouragement
offered by the state, many counties give as much more,
so that one wolf scalp will bring more money than
five sheep. You will readily see that our wise
legislators are offering inducements to you that you
should be thankful for. You can establish a wolf
orchard on any farm, and with a pair of good wolves
to start on, there is millions in it.
THE SUDDEN FIRE-WORKS AT RACINE.
One of those Fourth of July accidents
that are always looked for but seldom occur, happened
at Racine, Monday night, which struck terror to the
hearts and other portions of the bodies of many eminent
citizens, and that none were killed we can all thank
Providence, who tempers the fire-works to the sweaty
citizen in his shirt sleeves. The enterprizing
citizens had contributed a large sum of money, which
had been judiciously expended in all kinds of fire-works,
and one side of the public square was given up to
the display.
Thousands of citizens had gathered
there, from city and country, and bright Roman candles
shone o’er fair men and brave women, and sixteen
thousand nine hundred and twelve hearts beat happy,
while music arose with its voluptuous swell, and soft
eyes looked love to eyes which spake again, or words
to that effect. At least that was what a young
fellow from Racine told us, who was here to see a
specialist to have a splinter from a rocket stick
removed from his ear.
A few pieces had been shot off, a
few bunches of crackers had had their tails tied together
and been hung over a wire clothes line, like cats,
to fight it out, and the crowd was holding its breath
for the next boom, when there was an explosion; the
earth seemed to tremble, and the air was full of all
kinds of fire-works. The whole supply of fire-works
had become ignited, and were blowing off where they
listeth, without regard to anybody’s feelings.
The crowd became panic stricken, and
there never was another such a scene, and never will
be until the last great day, when a few thousand people
suddenly find that they have got into hell, by mistake,
when they thought they were ticketed through to the
other place. It was perfectly awful. Prominent
citizens who usually display great pluck, became fearfully
rattled.
A man named Martindale, a railroad
man who weighs over two hundred pounds, was standing
near a telegraph pole, and as the firing commenced
he climbed up the pole as easy as a squirrel would
climb a tree, and when it was over they had to get
a fire ladder to get him down; as his pants had got
caught over the glass telegraph knob, and he had forgotten
the combination, and besides he said he didn’t
want to take off his clothes up there and come down,
even if it was dark, because it would be just
his luck to have some one fire off a Roman candle when
he got down.
The Hon. Norton J. Field was another
man who lost his nerve. He was explaining to
some ladies one of the pieces that was to be fired
off, which was an allegorical picture representing
the revolution, when the whole business blew up.
He thought at the time, that the explosion was in
the programme, and was just reassuring the ladies,
by telling them it reminded him of battle scenes he
had witnessed when he was on the military committee
in the assembly, when he noticed a girl near him whose
polonaise had caught fire, and he rushed up to her,
caught her by the dress, intending, with his cool
hands, to put out the fire.
The girl felt some one feeling, as
she supposed, for her pocket-book, and she started
to run, yelling, “pickpocket,” and left
the burning polonaise in Mr. Field’s hands.
He blushed, and was about to explain to his lady friends
how the best of us are liable to have our motives misconstrued,
when somebody threw a box of four dozen of those large
firecrackers right at his feet, and they were all
on fire. Ten of them exploded at once, and he
grabbed the polonaise in one hand and his burning coat
tail in the other, and started west on a run.
The steward of the Gideon’s
Band Club House, at Burlington, said he arrived there
at daylight on the morning of the 5th, and he still
held the pieces of dress, but the whole back of his
coat was burned off, and the suspenders just held
by a thread. He said the comet struck the earth
at Racine, at 9:30 the night before, and knocked the
town into the lake, and he and another fellow were
all that escaped.
The narrowest escape was that of young
Mr. Oberman. He is a small man, all except his
heart and feet, and when the air began to fill with
patriotic missiles, he started to run. On passing
the News office he had to jump over an old
coal stove that stood there, and while he was in the
air, six feet from the sidewalk, a sky rocket stick
passed through his coat tail and pinned him to the
building, where he hung suspended, while other rocket
sticks were striking all around him, Roman candle colored
balls were falling on his unprotected head, etc.
and one of these nigger chasers that run all over
the ground, climbed up the side of the building and
tried to get in his pants pocket.
Mr. Oberman begged Mr. Wright, the
postmaster, to cut him down, but Mr. Wright, who was
using both hands and his voice trying to disengage
a package of pin-wheels from the back portion of his
coat, which were on fire and throwing out colored
sparks, said he hadn’t got time, as he was going
down to the river to take a sitz bath for his health.
The man that keeps the hotel next
door to the News office came out with a pail
of water, yelled “fire,” and threw the
water on Mr. Curt Treat’s head. Mr. Treat
was very much vexed, and told the hotel man if he couldn’t
tell the difference between an auburn haired young
man and a pin-wheel, he’d better go and hire
somebody that could. Friends of Mr. Treat say
that he would be justified in going into the hotel
and ordering a bottle of pop, and then refusing to
pay for it, as the water took all the starch out of
his shirt.
Those who saw the explosion say it
was one of the most magnificent, yet awful and terrible
sights ever witnessed, and the only wonder is that
somebody was not hurt. What added to the terror
of the scene was when they went to the artesian well
to get water to put out the fire and found that the
well had ceased flowing. On investigation they
found that Mr. Sage, the assembly man, had crawled
into the pipe.
By the way, Mr. Oberman finally got
down from his terrible position by the aid of the
editor of the Journal, to whom Mr. Oberman promised
coal enough to run his engine for a year. Very
few men displayed any coolness except Mr. Treat and
Mr. Sage.
LA CROSSE NEBECUDNEZZER WATER.
It is the great ambition of our life
to bring to the notice of the people of the world
the curative powers of the La Crosse water, that all
who may be suffering from any disease, however complicated,
may be cured, and all men may become healthy, and
women too, and doctors will have to go out harvesting.
The La Crosse artesian well, was begun last fall, and
completed as soon as the contractor found he couldn’t
make any money at it. It was rumored that he
struck granite, and in fact several little specks
of granite were found in the stuff that come from the
hole, but it is pretty generally believed now that
the granite particles got in from the top, unknown
to the contractor. The water came to within ten
feet of the surface, and struck. It never would
come any further, and the world would have remained
in ignorance of its curative powers, only for Powers,
who put in a hydraulic ram, and the blockade was broken,
the water now flows to the surface, and all is well.
Attention was first called to the
curative powers of the water, by a singular incident.
A teamster whose duty it was to haul stone, was in
the habit of stopping at the well to water his mules.
One of the mules was in a sad state. He was blind
in one eye, had a spavin, a ringbone, the heaves,
his liver was torpid, his lungs were badly affected,
and his friends feared that he was not long for the
stone quarry. He had no family. Soon after
the mule began to drink the water, the driver noticed
a great change come over him. Previously he had
seemed resigned to his fate, but latterly he was ambitious.
One day while playfully mashing the mule over the
head with a sled stake, the driver noticed that a new
eye had grown in the place of the former cavity, and
as the mule kicked him with more than his accustomed
vigor, he noticed that the spavin and ring bone were
gone, and the former plaintive melody of his voice
gave place to a bray that resembled the whistle of
the Alex. Mitchell. When it was known that
the mule had been cured, others tried the water, men
who had never drank it before, until to-day there
are thousands who will testify to the benefits arising
from its use. We could give the names of many
who have been snatched from the grave the
La Crosse water is a regular body snatcher but
we will first give an analysis of the water.
Believing that the water was destined
to play a prominent part in solving the great question
of how to euchre death, we sent a quantity of it to
the eminent Prof. Alonzo Brown, M.D.V.S. of Jefferson,
Wis., with a letter of transmittal authorizing him
to analyze it thoroughly, and give us the result,
at our expense. The following is Prof. Brown’s
analysis:
LABRATORY JEFFERSON LIVERY STABLE,
August 3, 1877.
Lieut. GEO. W. PECK,
4th Wis. Cavalry,
Dear Sir:
Yours of July 25th, received.
I should have attended to the water before, but have
had several cases of blind staggers in my barn, which
has kept me busy. I have examined the water by
every process known to science, and pronounce it bully.
I took it apart at my leisure, and find that it contains
to one U.S. washtub full, of 741 cubic inches, the
following stuff:
Chloride, of Sodium, (common salt).............2 sacks.
Chloride of Pilgarlic.....................40,021 grains.
Bicarbonate of erysipelas.................11,602 "
Bicarbonate of pie plant...................2,071 "
Blue pills................................21,011 "
Bicarbonate of soda water (vanilla.)......17,201 "
Sulphate of Potasalager beer..............61,399 "
Bicarbonate corrugated iron...............18,020 grains.
Mustang Liniment.............................240 "
Boneset and summer savory.................10,210 "
Dow’s Liver Cure, (6 bottles for $1.).....16,297 "
Bromide of Alcock’s Porous Plaster........22,222 "
Flouride of Pain Killer (for cucumbers,).....055 "
Paris green..................................001 "
Spruce gum and Vinegar Bitters...............075 "
In submitting this analysis permit
me to say that I find traces of mock turtle soup,
and India Rubber. I consider the La Crosse Nebecudnezzer
water the most comprehensive water that I have ever
analyzed, and I would recommend it for any disease
that human beings or animals may have.
Very Respectfully,
ALONZO BROWN,
Prof. of Chemistry in Jefferson Livery
stable, and late Veterinary Surgeon 4th Wis.
Cavalry.
We have known Mr. Brown long and well,
and his statement in regard to the water can be relied
upon. Citizens should retain a copy of this analysis
for future reference.
Mr. E.W. Keyes, of Madison, writing
under date of August 1st, says: “The La
Crosse water you sent me has caused an entire new crop
of hair to grow upon my head. I had been bald
for years, and offered five hundred dollars, for any
medicine that would cause hair to grow. Enclosed
find five hundred dollars, and send me more water.
I want to try it on Murphey, of the Sentinel.
I think it would be a good joke on Murphey.”
But wait till we get all the letters
written from prominent men who have been cured.
THE INFIDEL AND HIS SILVER MINE.
It is announced in the papers that
Colonel Ingersoll, the dollar-a-ticket infidel, has
struck it rich in a silver mine, and is now worth a
million dollars. Here is another evidence of
the goodness of God. Ingersoll has treated God
with the greatest contempt, called him all the names
he could think of, called him a liar, a heartless
wretch, and stood on a stump and dared God to knock
a chip off his shoulder, and instead of God’s
letting him have one below the belt and knocking seven
kinds of cold victuals out of him, God gives him a
pointer on a silver mine, and the infidel rakes in
a cool million, and laughs in his sleeve, while thousands
of poor workers in the vineyard are depending for
a livelihood on collections that pan out more gun
wads and brass pants buttons to the ton of ore than
they do silver.
This may be all right, and we hope
it is, and we don’t want to give any advice
on anybody else’s business, but it would please
Christians a good deal better to see that bold man
taken by the slack of the pants and lifted into the
poor house, while the silver he has had fall to him
was distributed among the charitable societies, mission
schools and churches, so a minister could get his
salary and buy a new pair of trousers to replace those
that he has worn the knees out of kneeling down on
the rough floor to pray.
It is mighty poor consolation to the
ladies of a church society to give sociables,
ice creameries, strawberry festivals and all kinds
of things to raise money to buy a carpet for a church
or lecture room, and wash their own dishes than hear
that some infidel who is around the country calling
God a pirate and horse thief, at a dollar a head, to
full houses, has miraculously struck a million dollar
silver mine.
To the toiling minister who prays
without ceasing, and eats codfish and buys clothes
at a second hand store, it looks pretty rough to see
Bob Ingersoll steered onto a million dollar silver
mine. But it may be all right, and we presume
it is. Maybe God has got the hook in Bob’s
mouth, and is letting him play around the way a fisherman
does a black bass, and when he thinks he is running
the whole business, and flops around and scares the
other fish, it is possible Bob may be reeled in, and
he will find himself on the bottom of the boat with
a finger and thumb in his gills, and a big boot on
his paunch, and he will be compelled to disgorge the
hook and the bait and all, and he will lay there and
try to flop out of the boat, and wonder what kind
of a game that is being played on him.
Everything turns out right some time,
and from what we have heard of God, off and on, we
don’t believe he is going to let no ordinary
man, bald-headed and appoplectic, carry off all the
persimmons, and put his fingers to his nose and dare
the ruler of the universe to tread on the tail of
his coat.
Bob Ingersoll has got the bulge on
all the Christians now, and draws more water than
anybody, but He who knows the sparrow’s fall
has no doubt got an eye on the fat rascal, and some
day will close two or three fingers around Bob’s
throat, when his eyes will stick out so you can hang
your hat on them, and he will blat like a calf and
get down on his knees and say:
“Please, Mr. God, don’t
choke so, and I will take it all back and go around
and tell the boys that I am the almightiest liar that
ever charged a dollar a head to listen to the escaping
wind from a biown-up bladder. O, good God, don’t
hurt me so. My neck is all chafed.”
And then he will die, and God will
continue business at the old stand.
THE LEGEND OF THE LAKE.
Every noted place of resort has an
Indian legend, and the first thing I did after getting
my dinner was to look up the legendist. I wanted
to hear how it was that the Indian had ceased to frequent
this spot. So in looking for the boss legendist
I struck Judge Lamoreaux, of Dodge county, who had
been herewith a party of friends, Mr. Hayes, and Mr.
Van Brunt, with all their wives. They had been
searching for ferns and legends and they had a car
load. The Judge had heard of the legend, and he
took me one side, and with tears in his eyes related
to me the horrible story just as he had received it
from an Indian named O’Flanegan, who sells relics
in the shape of rye. If I can control my emotion
long enough to write it, it will be a big thing for
history.
Years ago an Indian chief who lived
in a dog tent and caught rattlesnakes for a side show,
had a daughter, a beautiful maiden, about the color
and odor of smoked bacon, and she wore a red blanket
cut biased, and a tilter, under a polonaise made over
from her last year’s striped silk. She
was the belliest squaw in the hills, and took the premium
at all the county fairs, and she could shoot a deer
equal to any buck Indian. Her name was Hiawasamantha,
and she had two lovers, a Frenchman and a young Indian.
In figuring up the returns there was some doubt as
to who was elected, so the father of the girl decided
to go behind the returns, and settle it by a commission.
There was an eagle’s nest half way up the rocks,
with young eagles in it, and the old chief said that
the one that got there first and brought him a young
eagle, should have the squaw. The Frenchman climbed
up the back stairs and got there ahead of the Indian,
when the young Indian drew from his trousers leg a
bar of railroad iron and drove it to the hilt in the
breast of the Frenchman, not, however, till the Frenchman
had drawn from his pistol pocket a 300 ton Krupp gun
and sent a solid shot weighing 280 pounds crashing
into the skull of the Indian, and both rolled to the
bottom of the bluff, dead. Dr. Hall, of Baraboo,
was called, and he probed for the ball, but could not
find it, and neither could he get the bar of railroad
iron out of the Frenchman, and so they were buried
on the spot where now stands the Cliff House.
The squaw looked around for another fellow, but they
all had other engagements, the excursion train having
arrived from La Crosse, and so she went up on a crag
and said, “Big Injun me,” and jumped off
and was dashed into 1,347 pieces, and the wedding
was broke up. Pieces of the squaw can now be
found among the rocks, petrified, but retaining the
odor of the ancient tribe. I got a piece of her,
evidently a piece broken off her ear, which retains
its shade perfectly, and will long be a reminder of
my visit to Devil’s Lake. (P.S. Disreputable
parties are selling pieces of stuff purporting to
be genuine remains of this beauteous maiden, but they
are base imitations. None genuine unless the trade
mark is stamped on them.)
GEOLOGICAL SURVEY.
The Geological Survey is being prosecuted
as well as could be expected with the limited means
at the hands of the searchers in the bowels of the
earth. They have already found, I am informed,
that the earth on which we live, and move, and have
a being, is composed largely of dirt. The discovery
of this fact is alone worth the price of admission.
This great discovery, which will be of such value
to the future historian, has only cost the state the
insignificant sum of $8,280. Rather than remain
in ignorance of this astonishing fact, I would willingly
pay the money myself out of the public
treasury. It is rumored that parties employed
by the State to dive down into the ground and bring
up sand in their claws, have discovered symptoms that
the world was at one time sick to its stomach, and
threw up divers and sundry kinds of rocks and things,
and there is a probability that lead ore may be discovered.
This will be valuable to make bullets in case of a
war with Oshkosh. In peace it is always best
to prepare for war, and I trust you will lend your
countenance to the able men who are investigating
the Lower Silurian age.
FOOLING WITH THE BIBLE.
Reports from the stationers show that
there is no demand at all for the revised edition
of the Bible, and had it not been for the newspapers
publishing the whole affair there would have been very
few persons that took the trouble to even glance at
it, and it is believed that not one reader of the
daily papers in a hundred read any of the Bible, and
not one in ten thousand read all of it which was published.
Who originated this scheme of revising the Bible we
do not know, but whoever it was made a miscue.
There was no one suffering particularly for a revision
of the Bible. It was good enough as it was.
No literary sharp of the present day has got any license
to change anything in the Bible.
Why, the cheeky ghouls have actually
altered over the Lord’s Prayer, cut it biased,
and thrown the parts about giving us this day our daily
bread into the rag bag. How do they know that
the Lord said more than he wanted to in that prayer?
He wanted that daily bread in there, or He never would
have put it in. The only wonder is that those
revisers did not insert strawberry shortcake and ice
cream in place of daily bread. Some of these
ministers who are writing speeches for the Lord think
they are smart. They have fooled with Christ’s
sermon on the Mount until He couldn’t tell it
if He was to meet it in the Chicago Times.
This thing has gone on long enough,
and we want a stop put to it. We have kept still
about the piracy that has been going on in the Bible
because people who are better than we are have seemed
to endorse it, but now we are sick of it, and if there
is going to be an annual clerical picnic to cut gashes
in the Bible and stick new precepts and examples on
where they will do the most hurt, we shall lock up
our old Bible where the critters can’t get at
it and throw the first book agent down stairs head
first that tries to shove off on to us one of these
new-fangled, go-as-you-please Bibles, with all the
modern improvements, and hell left out.
Now, where was there a popular demand
to have hell left out of the Bible? Were there
any petitions from the people sent up to this self-constituted
legislature of pinchbeck ministers, praying to have
hell abolished, and “hades” inserted?
Not a petition. And what is this hades? Where
is it? Nobody knows. They have taken away
our orthodox hell, that has stood by us since we first
went to Sunday school, and given us a hades. Half
of us wouldn’t know a hades if we should see
it dead in the road, but they couldn’t fool
us any on hell.
No, these revisers have done more
harm to religion than they could have done by preaching
all their lives. They have opened the ball, and
now, every time a second-class dominie gets out of
a job, he is going to cut and slash into the Bible.
He will think up lots of things that will sound better
than some things that are in there, and by and by we
shall have our Bibles as we do our almanacs, annually,
with weather probabilities on the margins.
This is all wrong. Infidels will
laugh at us, and say our old Bible is worn out, and
out of style, and tell us to have our measure taken
for a new one every fall and spring, as we do for
our clothes. If this revision is a good thing,
why won’t another one be better? The woods
are full of preachers who think they could go to work
and improve the Bible, and if we don’t shut
down on this thing, they will take a hand in it.
If a man hauls down the American flag, we shoot him
on the spot; and now we suggest that if any man mutilates
the Bible, we run an umbrella into him and spread it.
The old Bible just filled the bill,
and we hope every new one that is printed will lay
on the shelves and get sour. This revision of
the Bible is believed to be the work of an incendiary.
It is a scheme got up by British book publishers to
make money out of pious people. It is on the
same principle that speculators get up a corner on
pork or wheat. They got revision, and printed
Bibles enough to supply the world, and would not let
out one for love or money. None were genuine unless
the name of this British firm was blown in the bottle.
Millions of Bibles were shipped to
this country by the firm that was “long”
on Bibles, and they were to be thrown on the market
suddenly, after being locked up and guarded by the
police until the people were made hungry for Bibles.
The edition was advertised like a
circus, and doors were to be opened at six o’clock
in the morning. American publishers who wanted
to publish the Bible, too, got compositors ready to
rush out a cheap Bible within twelve hours, and the
Britons, who were running the corner on the Word of
God, called these American publishers pirates.
The idea of men being pirates for printing a Bible,
which should be as free as salvation. The newspapers
that had the Bibles telegraphed to them from the east,
were also pirates.
O, the revision is a three-card monte
speculation; that is all it is.
A BLACK BEAR AT ONALASKA.
A black bear was brought into town
for sale on Friday, having been killed by Tom Rand,
near Onalaska. He killed it with a little rifle
that didn’t look big enough to hurt a hen.
If bears are so sociable as to come within sight of
La Crosse to be killed, it will be a good excuse for
husbands to stay at home nights.
ANOTHER DEAD FAILURE.
Again we are called upon to apologize
to our readers for advertising what we had reason
to expect would occur at the time advertised, but which
failed to show up. We allude to the end of the
world which was to have taken place last Sunday.
It is with humility that we confess that we were again
misled into believing that the long postponed event
would take place, and with others we got our things
together that we intended to take along, only to be
compelled to unpack them Monday morning.
Now this thing is played out, and
the next time any party advertises that the world
will come to an end, we shall take no stock in it.
And then it will be just our luck to have the thing
come to an end, when we are not prepared. There
is the worst sort of mismanagement about this business
somewhere, and we are not sure but it is best to allow
God to go ahead and attend to the closing up of earthly
affairs, and give these fellows that figure out the
end of all things with a slate and pencil the grand
bounce.
It is a dead loss to this country
of millions of dollars every time there is a prediction
that the world will come to an end, because there are
lots of men who quit business weeks beforehand and
do not try to earn a living but go lunching around.
We lost over fifteen dollars’ worth of advertising
last week from people who thought if the thing was
going up the flue on Sunday there was no use of advertising
any more, and we refused twenty dollars’ worth
more because we thought if that was the last paper
we were going to get out we might as knock off work
Friday and Saturday and go and catch a string of perch.
The people have been fooled about this thing enough,
and the first man that comes around with any more predictions
ought to be arrested.
People have got enough to worry about,
paying taxes, and buying strawberries and sugar, to
can, without feeling that if they get a tax receipt
the money will be a dead loss, or if they put up a
cellar full of canned fruit the world will tip over
on it and break every jar and bust every tin can.
Hereafter we propose to go right along
as though the world was going to stay right side up,
have our hair cut, and try and behave, and then if
old mother earth shoots off into space without any
warning we will take our chances with the rest in
catching on to the corner of some passing star and
throw our leg over and get acquainted with the people
there, and maybe start a funny paper and split the
star wide open.
THE GLORIOUS FOURTH OF JULY.
On this great day we are accustomed
to leave our business to hired men, and burn with
patriotism, and ginger pop, fill ourselves with patriotic
ferver, and beer, shout the battle cry of freedom,
and go home when the day is over with our eye-winkers
burned off, and to sleep with a consciousness that
a great duty has been performed, and that we have got
bank notes to pay on the morrow. For three hundred
and sixty-four days in the year our patriotism is
corked up and wired down, and all we can do is to
work, and acquire age and strength. On the 4th
of July we cut the wire, the cork that holds our patriotism
flies out, and we bubble and sparkle and steam, and
make things howl. We hold in as long as we can,
but when we get the harness off, and are turned into
the pasture, we make a picnic of ourselves, with music
all along the line.
THE USES OF THE PAPER BAG.
A First Ward man was told by his wife
to bring home a quart of oysters on New Year’s
night, to fry for supper. He drank a few prescriptions
of egg nog, and then took a paper bag full of selects
and started for home. He stopped at two or three
saloons, and the bag began to melt, and when he left
the last saloon the bottom fell out of the bag and
the oysters were on the sidewalk.
We will leave the man there, gazing
upon the wreck, and take the reader to the residence
where he is expected.
A red-faced woman is putting the finishing
touches to the supper table, and wondering why her
husband does not come with the oysters. Presently
a noise as of a lead pencil in the key-hole salutes
her ear, and she goes to the and opens it, and finds
him taking the pencil out of the key-hole. Not
seeing any oysters, she asks him if he has forgotten
the oysters.
“Forgot noth(hic)ing,” says he.
He walks up to the table and asks
for a plate, which is given him by the unsuspicious
wife.
“Damsaccident you ever(hic)see,”
said the truly good man, as he brought his hand out
of his overcoat pocket, with four oysters, a little
smoking tobacce, and a piece of cigar-stub.
“Slipperysoystersev(hic)er was,”
said he, as he run his hands down in the other pocket,
bringing up five oysters, a piece of envelope, and
a piece of wire that was used as a bail to the pail.
“Got all my pock(hic)ets full,”
said he, as he took a large oyster out of his vest
pocket. Then he began to go down in his pants
pocket, and finding a hole in it, he said:
“Six big oys(hic)ters gone down
my trousers leg. S’posi’ll find them
in my boot,” and he sat down to pull off his
boot, when the lady took the plate of oysters and
other stuff into the kitchen and threw them in the
swill, and then she put him to bed, and all the time
he was trying to tell her how the bag busted just
as he was in front of All Saints Ca(hic)thedral.
THE UNIVERSALIST BATH.
Mr. E.H. Lane is canvassing the
city for the Universalist Bath. We don’t
know why it should be called a “Universalist
Bath,” as it more nearly resembles a Baptist
Bath, as we remember it. The bath is a queer thing,
consisting of an India rubber hop sack, fastened to
an immense ox bow. The ends are placed on to
chairs, the water put in, and you get in and hippotamus
and take a complete bath from Dan to Beersheba in a
tea cup full of water.
KILLING BIG GAME.
The conductors on the St. Paul railroad
are most all good sports with a shot gun. There
is Howard and Clason, and Russell, who never tire of
talking of the millions of chickens, ducks, wild turkeys
and so forth that they have killed. They have
tried to get Conductor Green interested in field sports,
but he always said the game was not big enough for
him. He said he had his opinion men that would
surround a little chicken with spike tailed dogs,
and then kill it and call it sport. What he wanted
was big game. Nothing less than a bear would
do him. Last week the owners of the cinnamon
bear that was brought down from the Yellowstone, decided
to have it killed, and some one told them to get Green
to kill it, as he was an old bear hunter from the
Rocky Mountains. Green said he was rusty on bears,
not having had a tussel with a grizzly in several years,
but if they couldn’t get anybody else to chance
the bear he would make hash of it. So they went
down to the ice house where the bear was. Green
said he didn’t want anybody to go in with him,
because they might get hurt. He put on Clason’s
hunting suit, took a carving knife in his teeth and
a revolver in his hand, and went in and looked the
bear in the eye. The bear knew Green meant business,
and he began to feel around for his ticket. The
conductor advanced to within eleven feet of the bear
when all at once the animal sprang at him, growling
and showing his teeth. Green’s first impulse
was to pull the bell rope, and order the cuss to get
out of the ice house, but he saw the bear coming through
the air towards him, and there was not four hours
to lose, so he drew the revolver, took aim at the
bear’s left eye, and pulled. There was a
puff of smoke, and the bear fell lifeless at his feet.
Placing the animal in his game sack, he wiped the
blood from his knife and said to some men who stood
outside, their faces ashy pale: “Always
shoot bears in the left eye.” The men were
pleased to see him come out alive and they shook him
warmly by the hand. The other conductors, the
shooters, are jealous of Green, and they are telling
how he killed the bear by going up in the loft of the
ice house and falling on him, and one conductor says
Green shot the bear with a crow bar through a knot
hole. Another said the bear had all four of his
legs tied and that a dose of poison was administered
through a syringe, attached to a pole, while another
says that the bear died from fright. All these
stories are the result of jealousy. The bear was
killed just as we say, and there are few men that
would tackle him that is, few men aside
from conductors.
THE MULE NOT THE EAGLE.
The bird that should have been selected
as the emblem of our country, the bird of patience,
forbearance, perseverance, and the bird of terror when
aroused, is the mule. There is no bird that combines
more virtues to the square foot than the mule.
With the mule emblazoned on our banners, we should
be a terror to every foe. We are a nation of uncomplaining
hard workers. We mean to do the fair thing by
everybody. We plod along, doing as we would be
done by. So does the mule. As a nation we
occasionally stick our ears forward, and fan flies
off of our forehead. So does the mule. We
allow parties to get on and ride as long as they behave
themselves. So do does the mule. But when
any nation sticks spurs in our flanks, and tickles
our heels with a straw, we come down stiff-legged in
front, our ears look to the beautiful beyond, our voice
is cut loose, and is still for war, and our subsequent
end plays the snare drum on anything that gets in
reach of us, and strikes terror to the hearts of all
tyrants. So does the mule.
OUR BLUE-COATED DOG POISONERS.
“Papa, the cruel policeman has
murdered little Gip? He sneaked up and frowed
a nice piece of meat to Gip, and Gip he eated it, and
fanked the policeman with his tail, and runned after
him and teased for more, but the policeman fought
Gip had enough, and then Gip stopped and looked sorry
he had eaten it, and pretty soon he laid down and
died, and the policeman laughed and went off feeling
good. If Dan Sheenan was the policeman any more
he wouldn’t poison my dog, would he, pa?”
The above was the greeting the bald-headed
Sun man received on Thursday, and a pair of
four-year-old brown eyes were full enough of tears
to break the heart of a policeman of many years’
standing, and the little, crushed master of the dead
King Charles spaniel went to sleep sobbing and believing
that policemen were the greatest blot upon the civilization
of the nineteenth century.
Here was a little fellow that had
from the day he first stood on his feet after the
scarlet fever had left him alive, been allowing his
heart to become entwined with love for that poor little
dog. For nearly a year the dog had been ready
to play with the child when everybody else was tired
out, and never once had the dog been cross or backed
out of a romp, and the laughter and the barking has
many a time been the only sound of happiness in the
neighborhood.
If the boy slept too long after dinner,
the dog went and rooted around him as much as to say,
“Look a here, Mr. Roy, you can’t play this
on your partner any longer. You get up here and
we will have a high old time, and don’t you
forget it.” And pretty soon the sound of
baby feet and dog’s toe nails would be heard
on the stairs, and the circus would commence.
If the dog slept too long of an afternoon,
the boy would hunt him out, take hold of his tail
with one hand and an ear with the other, and lug him
into the parlor, saying, “Gip, too much sleep
is what is ruining the dogs in this country.
Now, brace up and play horse with me.” And
then there was fun.
Well, it is all over; but while we
write there is a little fellow sleeping on a tear-stained
pillow, dreaming, perhaps of a heaven where the woods
are full of King Charles’ spaniel dogs, and a
door-keeper stands with a club to keep out policemen.
And still we cannot blame policemen it is
the law that is to blame the wise men who
go to the legislature, and make months with one day
too much, pass laws that a dog shall be muzzled and
wear a brass check, or he is liable to go mad.
Statistics show that not one dog in a million ever
goes mad and that they are more liable to go mad in
winter than in summer; but several hundred years ago
somebody said that summer was “dog days,”
and the law makers of this enlightened nineteenth
century still insist on a wire muzzle at a season of
the year when a dog wants air and water, and wants
his tongue out.
So we compel our guardians of the
peace to go around assassinating dogs. Men, who
as citizens, would cut their hands off before they
would injure a neighbor’s property, or speak
harsh to his dog, when they hire out to the city must
stifle all feelings of humanity, and descend to the
level of Paris scavengers. We compel them to
do this. If they would get on their ears and
say to the city of Milwaukee, “We will guard
your city, and protect you from insult, and die for
you if it becomes necessary; but we will see you in
hades before we go around assassinating dogs,”
we as people, would think more of them, and perhaps
build them a decent station house to rest in.
A HOT BOX AT A PICNIC.
An Oshkosh young man started for a
picnic in a buggy with two girls, and when they got
half way they got a hot box to the hind wheel of the
buggy, and they remained there all the afternoon pouring
water on the wheel, missing the picnic. There
is nothing that will cause a hot box in a buggy so
quick as going to a picnic with girls. Particularly
is this the case when one has two girls. No young
man should ever take two girls to a picnic. He
may think one cannot have too much of a good thing,
and that he holds over the most of the boys who have
only one girl, but before the picnic is over he will
note the look of satisfaction on the faces of the
other boys as they stray off in the vernal shade, and
he will look around at his two girls as though his
stomach was overloaded. We don’t care how
attractive the girls are, or how enterprising a boy
he is, or how expansive or far-reaching a mind he
has, he cannot do justice to the subject if he has
two girls. There will be a certain clashing of
interests that no young boy in his goslinghood, as
most boys are when they take two girls to a picnic,
has the diplomacy to prevent. Now, this may seem
a trifling thing to write about and for a great pious
paper to publish, but there is more at the bottom
of it than is generally believed. If we start
the youth of the land out right in the first place
they are all right, but if they start out by taking
two girls to a picnic, their whole lives are liable
to become acidulated, and they will grow up hating
themselves. If a young man is good natured and
tries to do the fair thing, and a picnic is got up,
and the rest of the boys are liable to play it on him.
There is always some old back number of a girl who
has no fellow, who wants to go, and the boys, after
they all get girls and buggies engaged, will canvass
among themselves to see who shall take this extra girl,
and it always falls to the good-natured young man.
He says of course there is room for three in the buggy.
Sometimes he thinks may be this old girl can be utilized
to drive the horse, and then he can converse with his
own sweet girl with both hands, but in such a moment
as ye think not, he finds out that the extra girl
is afraid of horses, dare not drive, and really requires
some holding to keep her nerves quiet. The young
man begins to realize by this time that life is one
great disappointment. He tries to drive with
one hand, and consoles his good girl, who is a little
cross at the turn affairs have taken, with the other,
but it is a failure, and finally his good girl says
she will drive, and then he has to put an arm around
them both, which will give more or less dissatisfaction
the best way you can fix it. If we had a boy
that didn’t seem to have any more sense than
to make a hat rack of himself to hang girls on in a
buggy, we should labor with him, and tell him of the
agonies we had experienced in youth, when the boys
palmed off two girls on us to take to a country picnic,
and we believe we can do no greater favor to the young
men who are just entering the picnic of life than to
impress upon them the importance of doing one thing
at a time, and doing it well. Start right at
first, and life will be one continued picnic buggy
ride, but if your mind is divided in youth you will
always be looking for hot boxes and annoyance.
CAMP MEETINGS IN THE DARK OF THE MOON.
A Dartford man, who has been attending
a camp meeting at that place, inquires of the Brandon
Times why it is that camp meetings are always
held when the moon does not shine. The Times
man gives it up and refers the question to the Sun.
We give it up.
It does not seem as though managers
of camp meetings deliberately consult the almanac
in order to pick out a week for camp meeting in the
dark of the moon, though such meetings are always
held when the moon is of no account. If they
do, then there is a reason for it. It is well
known that pickerel bite best in the dark of the moon,
and it is barely possible that sinners “catch
on” better at that time.
There may be something in the atmosphere,
in the dark of the moon, that makes a camp meeting
more enjoyable. Certainly brethren and sisterin’
can mingle as well if not better when there is no
glaring moon to molest and make them afraid, and they
can relate their experience as well as though it was
too light.
The prayers of the righteous avail
as much in the darkness of the closet as they do in
an exposition building, with an electric light, and
as long as sinners will do many things which they
ought not to do, and undo many things that they never
ought to have done, the dark of the moon is probably
the most healthy.
PALACE CATTLE CARS.
The papers are publishing accounts
of the arrival east of a train of palace cattle cars,
and illustrating how much better the cattle feel after
a trip in one of these cars, than cattle did when they
made the journey in the ordinary cattle cars.
As we understand it the cars are fitted
up in the most gorgeous manner, in mahogany and rosewood,
and the upholstering is something perfectly grand,
and never before undertaken except in the palaces of
the old world.
As you enter the car there is a reception
room, with a few chairs, a lounge and an ottoman,
and a Texas steer gently waves you to a seat with
his horns, while he switches off your hat with his
tail. If there is any particular cow, or steer,
or ox, that you wish to see, you give your card to
the attendant steer, and he excuses himself and trots
off to find the one you desire to see. You do
not have long to wait, for the animal courteously
rises, humps up his or her back, stretches, yawns,
and with the remark, “the galoot wants to interview
me, probably, and I wish he would keep away,”
the particular one sought for comes to the reception
room and puts out its front foot for a shake, smiles
and says, “Glad you came. Was afraid you
would let us go away and not call.”
Then the cow or steer sits down on
its haunches and the conversation flows in easy channels.
You ask how they like the country, and if they have
good times, and if they are not hard worked, and all
that; and they yawn and say the country is splendid
at this season of the year, and that when passing
along the road they feel as though they would like
to get out in some meadow, and eat grass and switch
flies.
The steer asks the visitor if he does
not want to look through the car, when he says he
would like to if it is not too much trouble. The
steer says it is no trouble at all, at the same time
shaking his horns as though he was mad, and kicking
some of the gilding off of a stateroom.
“This,” says the steer
who is doing the honors, “is the stateroom occupied
by old Brindle, who is being shipped from St. Joseph,
Mo. Brindle weighs 1,600 on foot Brindle,
get up and show yourself to the gentleman.”
Brindle kicks off the red blanket,
rolls her eyes in a lazy sort of way, bellows, and
stands up in the berth, humps up her back so it raises
the upper berth and causes a heifer that is trying
to sleep off a debauch of bran mash, to kick like
a steer, and then looks at the interviewer as much
as to say, “O, go on now and give us a rest.”
Brindle turns her head to a fountain that is near,
in which Apollinaris water is flowing, perfumed with
new mown hay, drinks, turns her head and licks her
back, and stops and thinks, and then looking around
as much as to say, “Gentlemen, you will have
to excuse me,” lays down with her head on a pillow,
pulls the coverlid over her and begins to snore.
The attendant steer steers the visitor
along the next apartment, which is a large one, filled
with cattle in all positions. One is lying in
a hammock, with her feet on the window, reading the
Chicago Times article on Oleomargarine, or
Bull Butter, at intervals stopping the reading to
curse the writer, who claims that oleomargarine is
an unlawful preparation, containing deleterious substances.
A party of four oxen are seated around
a table playing seven-up for the drinks, and as the
attendant steer passes along, a speckled ox with one
horn broken, orders four pails full of Waukesha water
with a dash of oatmeal in it, “and make it hot,”
says the ox, as he counts up high, low, jack and the
game.
Passing the card players the visitor
notices an upright piano, and asks what that is for,
and the attendant steer says they are all fond of
music, and asks if he would not like to near some of
the cattle play. He says he would, and the steer
calls out a white cow who is sketching, and asks her
to warble a few notes. The cow seats herself on
her haunches on the piano stool, after saying she
has such a cold she can’t sing, and, besides,
has left her notes at home in the pasture. Turning
over a few leaves with her forward hoof, she finds
something familiar, and proceeds to walk on the piano
keys with her forward feet and bellow, “Meet
me in the slaughter house when the due bill falls,”
or something of that kind, when the visitor says he
has got to go up to the stock yards and attend a reception
of Colorado cattle, and he lights out.
We should think these parlor cattle
cars would be a success, and that cattle would enjoy
them very much. It is said that parties desiring
to charter these cars for excursions for human beings,
can be accommodated at any time when they are not
needed to transport cattle, if they will give bonds
to return them in as good order as they find them.
GEORGE WASHINGTON.
He could not tell a lie, George couldn’t.
Washington, it is probable, never knew what it was
to stow away a schooner of beer, and history makes
no mention that he ever, on any pretext, eat limberger
cheese. At least no mention was made of it in
his farewell address. He never was President of
a savings bank. Washington never lectured.
He never edited a newspaper. He could not tell
a lie at the rates editors charge. No he was a
good man, with none of the small vices that are so
prevalent these days.
BROKE UP A PRAYER MEETING.
A few months ago the spectacle presented
itself of a very respectable lady of the Seventh ward
wearing a black eye. There never was a case of
ante-election that was any more perfect than the one
this lady carried.
We have seen millions of black eyes
in our time, some of which were observed in a mirror,
but we never saw one that suggested a row any plainer
than the one the Seventh ward lady wore. It was
cut biased, that being the latest style of black eye,
and was fluted with purple and orange shade, and trimmed
with the same. Probably we never should have known
about the black eye had not the lady asked, as she
held her hand over one eye, if there was any truth
in the story that a raw oyster would cure a black
eye. She came to us as an expert.
When we told her that a piece of beef-steak
was worth two oysters she uncovered the eye.
It looked as though painted by one of the old masters.
Rather than have anybody think she
had been having a row, she explained how it happened.
She was sitting with her husband and little girl in
the parlor, and while, the two were reading the little
one disappeared. The mother went to the girl’s
room on tiptoe, to see if she was asleep. She
found the girl with all her dolls on the floor having
a dolls’ prayer meeting. She had them all
down on their knees and would let them pray one at
a time, then sing. One of the dolls that squeaked
when pressed on the stomach was the leader of the
singing, and the little girl bossed the job.
There was one old maid doll that the little girl seemed
to be disgusted with because the doll talked too much,
and she would say:
“There, Miss, you sit down and
let some of the other sisters get in a word edgeways.
Sister Perkins, won’t you relate your experience?”
After listening to this for a few
moments the mother heard the girl say:
“Now, Polly, you pass the collection
plate, and no one must put in lozengers, and then
we will all go to the dancing school.”
The whole thing was so ridiculous
that the mother attempted to rush down stairs three
at a time, to have her husband come up to the prayer
meeting, when she stubbed herself on a stair rod,
and well, she got the black eye on the
journey down stairs, though what hit her she will probably
never know. But she said when she began to roll
down stairs she felt in her innermost soul as though
she had broke up that prayer meeting prematurely.
THE DOG LAW.
The dog law is as foolish as the anti-treating
law, and if it were not enforced, no harm would be
done. Our legislators have to pass about so many
laws anyway, and we should use our judgment about enforcing
them.
LUNCH ON THE CARS.
There is nothing that so gives a man
away as to open a satchel and take out a lunch.
I have been riding on the cars and have made the acquaintance
of people who would listen to my stories, and take
in every word as gospel truth. They would seem
to hang on my words with pleasure, and be apparently
glad they had become acquainted with one who combined
so many graces of mind and person, and they would
gather around so as not to miss a single lie that
I might tell. And yet when I took a paper parcel
out of my valise and opened up a lunch, consisting
of bread and onions, and sausage and sweitzer cheese,
they would draw coldly away from me and sit in the
farther part of the car, and appear never to have known
me.