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<br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/><br/></div>
<h1> BALED HAY </h1>
<h2> By Bill Nye </h2>
<h4>
A Drier Book than Walt Whitman's "Leaves o' Grass."
</h4>
<h4>
Author of "Bill Nye and Boomerang," "Forty Liars and Other Lies,"
"Goose-Neck Smith," "How Came Your Eye Out, and Your Nose Not Skun?" Etc.,
Etc., Etc.
</h4>
<h3> <i>Heap cold day when Melican man no lite em blook</i>.AH SIN. </h3>
<h2> Illustrated by F. Opper, of "Puck" </h2>
<h4>
Chicago. New York, San Francisco:
</h4>
<h4>
Belford, Clarke & Co
</h4>
<h3> 1884 </h3>
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<h5>
<SPAN href="images/cover.jpg"><i>Original</i></SPAN>
</h5>
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<hr />
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p><b>CONTENTS</b></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0001"> DEDICATION. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> BALED HAY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> GREELEY AID RUM. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> ABOUT SAW MILLS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> EXPERIMENTS WITH OLD CHEESE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> THE RAG-CARPET. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> ONE KIND OF A BOY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE CHAMPION MEAN MAN. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> FRATERNAL SPARRING. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> CHIPETA'S ADDRESS TO THE UTES. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> BILL NYE'S CAT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> AUTUMN THOUGHTS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> THE MAN WHO INTERRUPTS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> THE ROCKY MOUKTAIN COW. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> PRESERVING EGGS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> HUMAN' NATURE ON THE HALF-SHELL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> TOO CONTIGUOUS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> THE AMENDE HONORABLE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> JOAQUIN AND JUNIATA. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> SOME VAGUE THOUGHTS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> THE YOUMORIST. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> MY CABINET. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> HEALTH FOOD. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0024"> PINES FOE HIS OLD HOME </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> ONE TOUCH OF NATURE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> HOW TO PUT UP A STOVE-PIPE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> FUN OF BEING A PUBLISHER. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0028"> LINGERIE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029"> FRUIT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030"> THE BONE OF CONTENTION. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0031"> CONGRATULATORY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032"> THE AGONY IS OVER. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033"> OSTRICH CAVALRY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0034"> AN ELECTRIC BELT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0035"> THE ANNUAL WAIL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0036"> HE WAS NOT A BURGLAR. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0037"> BEST ON, BLESSED MEMORY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0038"> GENIUS AND WHISKY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0039"> THE TWO-HEADED GIRL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0040"> THE CULTIVATION OF GUM. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0041"> WE HAVE REASONED IT OUT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0042"> CARVING SCHOOLS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0043"> DIGNITY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0044"> ALWAYS BOOM AT THE TOP. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0045"> INACCURATE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0046"> THE WESTERN "CHAP." </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0047"> AN INCIDENT OF THE CAMPAIGN. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0048"> WHY DO THEY DO IT? </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0049"> TWO STYLES. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0050"> GOSHALLHEMLOCK SALVE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0051"> THE STAGE BALD-HEAD. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0052"> FATHERLY WORDS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0053"> THE GOOD TIME COMING. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0054"> MANIA FOR MARKING CLOTHES. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0055"> REGARDING THE NOSE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0056"> SOMETHING TOO MUCH OF THIS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0057"> COLOR BLINDNESS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0058"> IS DUELING MURDER? </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0059"> HEAP GONE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0060"> THE EDITORIAL LAMP. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0061"> DIFFICULT TO IDENTIFY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0062"> THE MAROON SAUSAGE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0063"> TESTIMONIALS OF REGARD. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0064"> THE CHINESE COMPOSITOR </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0065"> SNOWED UNDER </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0066"> ROUGH ON OSCAR. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0067"> THE POSTAL CARD. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0068"> WHY WE ARE NOT GAY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0069"> SCIENTIFIC. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0070"> THE REVELATION RACKET IN UTAH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0071"> SAGE BRUSH TONIC. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0072"> LAME FROM HIS BERTH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0073"> THE PUBLIC PRINTER. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0075"> SAD DESTRUCTION. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0076"> THE IMMEDIATE REVOLTER </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0077"> THE SECRET OF HEALTH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0078"> HOUSEHOLD RECIPES. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0079"> WHAT IS LITERATURE? </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0080"> THE PREVIOUS HOTEL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0081"> ANECDOTE OF SPOTTED TAIL. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0082"> THE ZEALOUS VOTER. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0083"> HOW TO PRESERVE TEETH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0084"> MR. BEECHER'S BRAIN. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0085"> OH, NO! </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0086"> THE MARCH OF CIVILIZATION. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0087"> AN UNCLOUDED WELCOME. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0088"> THE PILLOW-SHAM HOLDER. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0089"> SOMETHING FRESH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0090"> YANKED TO ETERNITY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0091"> WHY WE SHED THE SCALDING. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0092"> ANOTHER SUGGESTION. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0093"> PISCATORIAL AND EDITORIAL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0094"> ANOTHER FEATHERED SONGSTER </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0096"> ABOUT THE OSTRICH </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0098"> TOO MUCH GOD AND NO FLOUR. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0099"> WE ARE GETTING CYNICAL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0100"> ASK US SOMETHING DIFFICULT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0101"> THE MIMIC STAGE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0102"> DECLINE OF AMERICAN HUMOR </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0103"> CHICAGO CUSTOM HOUSE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0104"> FOREIGN OPINION </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0105"> THEY HAVE CURBED THEIR WOE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0106"> HUNG BY REQUEST. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0107"> THE MELVILLES. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0108"> MENDING BROKEN NECKS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0109"> ARE YOU A MORMON? </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0110"> CAUTION. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0111"> POISONS AND THEIR ANECDOTES. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0112"> CORRESPONDENCE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0113"> WHAT THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY NEEDS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0114"> TABLE MANNERS OF CHILDREN. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0115"> WHAT IT MEANT. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0116"> VOTERS IN UTAH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0117"> INCONGRUITY </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0118"> RIDING DOWN A MOUNTAIN. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0119"> CORRALED HIM. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0120"> FIRMNESS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0121"> PUT IN A SUMP. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0122"> MINING AS A SCIENCE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0123"> DRAWBACKS OF ROYALTY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0124"> ENGLISH HUMOR </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0125"> ABOUT THE AUTOPSY. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0126"> DON'T LIKE OUR STYLE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0127"> MR. T. WILSON. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0128"> ETIQUETTE OF THE NAPKIN </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0129"> AN INFERNAL MACHINE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0130"> THE CODFISH. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0131"> HIS AGED MOTHER. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0132"> BUSINESS LETTERS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0133"> DANGER OF GARDENING. </SPAN></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DEDICATION. </h2>
<h3> TO MY WIFE: </h3>
<p>Who has courteously and heroically laughed at my feeble and emaciated
jokes, even when she did not feel like it; who has again and again started
up and agitated successfully the flagging and reluctant applause, who has
courageously held my coat through this trying ordeal, and who, even now,
as I write this, is in the front yard warning people to keep off the
premises until I have another lucid interval,</p>
<p>This Volume is Affectionately Inscribed,</p>
<h3> BY THE </h3>
<h3> AUTHOR. </h3>
<h3> PIAZZA TO THE THIRD VOLUME. </h3>
<p>There can really be no excuse for this last book of trite and beautiful
sayings. I do not attempt, in any way, to palliate this great wrong. I
would not do so even if I had an idea what palliate meant.</p>
<p>It will, however, add one more to the series of books for which I am to
blame, and the pleasure of travel will be very much enhanced, for me, at
least.</p>
<p>There is one friend I always meet on the trains when I travel. He is the
news agent. He comes to me with my own books in his arms, and tells me
over and over again of their merits. He means it, too. What object could
he have in coming to me, not knowing who I am, and telling me of their
great worth? Why would he talk that way to me if he did not really feel
it?</p>
<p>That is one reason I travel so much. When 1 get gloomy and heartsick, I
like to get on a train and be assured once more, by a total stranger, that
my books have never been successfully imitated.</p>
<p>Some authors like to have a tall man, with a glazed grip-sack, and whose
breath is stronger than his intellect, selling their works; but I do not
prefer that way.</p>
<p>I like the candor and ingenuousness of the train-boy. He does not come to
the front door while you are at prayers, and ring the bell till the
hat-rack falls down, and then try to sell you a book containing 2,000
receipts for the blind staggers. He leans gently over you as you look out
the car window, and he puts some pecan meats in your hand, and thus wins
your trusting heart. Then he sells you a book, and takes an interest in
you.</p>
<p>This book will go to swell the newsboy's armful, and if there be any
excuse, under the sun, for its publication, aside from the royalty; that
is it.</p>
<p>I have taken great care to thoroughly eradicate anything that would have
the appearance of poetry in this work, and there is not a thought or
suggestion contained in it that would soil the most delicate fabric.</p>
<p>Do not read it all at once, however, in order to see whether he married
the girl or not. Take a little at a time, and it will cure gloom on the "<i>similia
simili-bus curanter</i>" principle. If you read it all at once, and it
gives you the heaves, I am glad of it, and you deserve it. I will not bind
myself to write the obituary of such people.</p>
<p>Hudson, Wis., Sept, 5,1883.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BALED HAY </h2>
<h3> A NOVEL NOVELETTE </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> NEVER wrote a
novel, because I always thought it required more of a mashed-rasp-berry
imagination than I could muster, but I was the business manager, once, for
a year and a half, of a little two-bit novelette that has never been
published.</p>
<p>I now propose to publish it, because I cannot keep it to myself any
longer.</p>
<p>Allow me, therefore, to reminisce.</p>
<p>Harry Bevans was an old schoolmate of mine in the days of and although
Bevans was not his sure-enough name, it will answer for the purposes
herein set forth. At the time of which I now speak he was more bashful
than a book agent, and was trying to promote a cream-colored mustache and
buff "Donegals" on the side.</p>
<p>Suffice it to say that he was madly in love with Fanny Buttonhook, and too
bashful to say so by telephone.</p>
<p>Her name wasn't Buttonhook, but I will admit it for the sake of argument.
Harry lived over at Kalamazoo, we will say, and Fanny at Oshkosh. These
were not the exact names of the towns, but I desire to bewilder the public
a little in order to avoid any harassing disclosures in the future. It is
always well enough, I find, to deal gently will those who are alive and
moderately muscular.</p>
<p>Young Bevans was not specially afraid of old man Buttonhook, or his wife.
He didn't dread the enraged parent worth a cent. He wasn't afraid of
anybody under the cerulean dome, in fact, except Miss Buttonhook; but when
she sailed down the main street, Harry lowered his colors and dodged into
the first place he found open, whether it was a millinery store or a
livery stable.</p>
<p>Once, in an unguarded moment, he passed so near her that the gentle south
wind caught up the cherry ribbon that Miss Buttonhook wore at her throat,
and slapped Mr. Bevans across the cheek with it before he knew what ailed
him. There was a little vision of straw hat, brown hair, and
pink-and-white cuticle, as it were, a delicate odor of violets, the
"swish" of a summer silk, and my friend, Mr. Bevans, put his hand to his
head, like a man who has a sun-stroke, and fell into a drug store and a
state of wild mash, ruin and helpless chaos.</p>
<p>His bashfulness was not seated nor chronic. It was the varioloid, and
didn't hurt him only when Miss Buttonhook was present, or in sight. He was
polite and chatty with other girls, and even dared to be blithe and gay
sometimes, too, but when Frances loomed up in the distance, he would climb
a rail fence nine feet high to evade her.</p>
<p>He told me once that he wished I would erect the frame-work of a letter to
Fanny, in which he desired to ask that he might open up a correspondence
with her. He would copy and mail it, he said, and he was sure that I,
being a disinterested party, would be perfectly calm.</p>
<p>I wrote a letter for him, of which I was moderately proud. It would melt
the point on a lightning rod, it seemed to me, for it was just as full of
gentleness and poetic soothe as it could be, and Tupper, Webster's
Dictionary and my scrap-book had to give down first rate. Still it was
manly and square-toed. It was another man's confession, and I made it
bulge out with frankness and candor.</p>
<p>As luck would have it, I went over to Oshkosh about the time Harry's prize
epistle reached that metropolis, and having been a confidant of Miss B's
from early childhood, I had the pleasure of reading Bev's letter, and
advising the young lady about the correspondence.</p>
<p>Finally a bright thought struck her. She went over to an easy chair, and
sat down on her foot, coolly proposing that I should outline a letter
replying to Harry's, in a reserved and rather frigid manner, yet bidding
him dare to hope that if his orthography and punctuation continued
correct, he might write occasionally, though it must be considered
entirely <i>sub rosa</i> and abnormally <i>entre nous</i> on account of
"Pa."</p>
<p>By the way, "Pa" was a druggist, and one of the salts of the earth—Epsom
salts, of course.</p>
<p>I agreed to write the letter, swore never to reveal the secret workings of
the order, the grips, explanations, passwords and signals, and then wrote
her a nice, demure, startled-fawn letter, as brief as the collar to a
party dress, and as solemn as the Declaration of Independence.</p>
<p>Then I said good-by, and returned to my own home, which was neither in
Kalamazoo nor Oshkosh. There I received a flat letter from 'William Henry
Bevans, inclosing one from Fanny, and asking for suggestions as to a
reply. Her letter was in Miss Buttonhook's best vein. I remember having
written it myself.</p>
<p>Well, to cut a long story short, every other week I wrote a letter for
Fanny, and on intervening weeks I wrote one for the lover at Kalamazoo. By
keeping copies of all letters written, I had a record showing where I was,
and avoided saying the same pleasant things twice.</p>
<p>Thus the short, sweet summer scooted past. The weeks were filled with
gladness, and their memory even now comes back to me, like a
wood-violet-scented vision. A wood-violet-scented vision comes high, but
it is necessary in this place.</p>
<p>Toward winter the correspondence grew a little tedious, owing to the fact
that I had a large, and tropical boil on the back of my neck, which
refused to declare its intentions or come to a focus for three weeks. In
looking over the letters of both lovers yesterday, I could tell by the
tone of each just where this boil began to grow up, as it were, between
two fond hearts.</p>
<p>This feeling grew till the middle of December, when there was a red-hot
quarrel. It was exciting and spirited, and after I had alternately
flattered myself first from Kalamazoo and then from Oshkosh, it was a
genuine luxury to have a row with myself through the medium of the United
States mails.</p>
<p>Then I made up and got reconciled. I thought it would be best to secure
harmony before the holidays so that Harry could go over to Oshkosh and
spend Christmas. I therefore wrote a letter for Harry in which he said he
had, no doubt, been hasty, and he was sorry. It should not occur again.
The days had been like weary ages since their quarrel, he said—vicariously,
of course—and the light had been shut out of his erstwhile joyous
life. Death would be a luxury unless she forgave him, and Hades would be
one long, sweet picnic and lawn festival unless she blessed him with her
smile.</p>
<p>You can judge how an old newspaper reporter, with a scarlet imagination,
would naturally dash the color into another man's picture of humility and
woe.</p>
<p>She replied—by proxy—that he was not to blame. It was her
waspish temper and cruel thoughtlessness. She wished he would come over
and take dinner with them on Christmas day and she would tell him how
sorry she was. When the man admits that he's a brute and the woman says
she's sorry, it behooves the eagle eye of the casual spectator to look up
into the blue sky for a quarter of an hour, till the reconciliation has
had a chance and the brute has been given time to wipe a damp sob from his
coat-collar.</p>
<p>I was invited to the Christmas dinner. As a successful reversible
amanuensis I thought I deserved it. I was proud and happy. I had passed
through a lover's quarrel and sailed in with whitewinged peace on time,
and now I reckoned that the second joint, with an irregular fragment of
cranberry jelly, and some of the dressing, and a little of the white meat
please, was nothing more than right.</p>
<p>Mr. Bevans forgot to be bashful twice during the day, and even smiled once
also. He began to get acquainted with Fanny after dinner, and praised her
beautiful letters. She blushed clear up under her "wave," and returned the
compliment.</p>
<p>That was natural. When he praised her letters I did not wonder, and when
she praised his I admitted that she was eminently correct. I never
witnessed better taste on the part of two young and trusting hearts.</p>
<p>After Christmas I thought they would both feel like buying a manual and
doing their own writing, but they did not dare to do so evidently. They
seemed to be afraid the change would be detected, so I piloted them into
the middle of the succeeding fall, and then introduced the crisis into
both their lives.</p>
<p>It was a success.</p>
<p>I felt about as well as though I were to be cut down myself, and married
off in the very prime of life. Fanny wore the usual clothing adopted by
young ladies who are about to be sacrificed to a great horrid man. I
cannot give the exact description of her trousseau, but she looked like a
hazel-eyed angel, with a freckle on the bridge of her nose. The groom
looked a little scared, and moved his gloved hands as though they weighed
twenty-one pounds apiece.</p>
<p>However, it's all over now. I was up there recently to see them. They are
quite happy. Not too happy, but just happy enough. They call their oldest
son Birdie. I wanted them to call him William, but they were headstrong
and named him Birdie. That wounded my pride, and so I called him Earlie
Birdie.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> GREELEY AID RUM. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HEN I visit
Greeley I am asked over and over again as to the practical workings of
woman suffrage in Wyoming, and when I go back to Wyoming I am asked how
prohibition works practically in Greeley, Col. By telling varied and
pleasing lies about both I manage to have a good deal of fun, and also
keep the two elements on the anxious seat.</p>
<p>There are two sides to both questions, and some day when I get time and
have convalesced a little more, I am going to write a large book relating
to these two matters. At present I just want to say a word about the
colony which bears the name of the Tribune philosopher, and nestles so
lovingly at the chilly feet of the Rocky mountains. As I write, Greeley is
apparently an oasis in the desert. It looks like a fertile island dropped
down from heaven in a boundless stretch of buffalo grass, sage hens and
cunning little prairie dogs. And yet you could not come here as a
stranger, and within the colonial barbed wire fence, procure a bite of
cold rum if you were President of the United States, with a rattlesnake
bite as large as an Easter egg concealed about your person. You can,
however, become acquainted, if you are of a social nature and keep your
eyes open.</p>
<p>I do not say this because I have been thirsty these few past weeks and
just dropped on the game, as Aristotle would say, but just to prove that
men are like boys, and when you tell them they can't have any particular
thing, that is the thing they are apt to desire with a feverish yearn.
That is why the thirstful man in Maine drinks from the gas fixture; why
the Kansas drinkist gets his out of a rain-water barrel, and why other
miracles too numerous to mention are performed.</p>
<p>Whisky is more bulky and annoying to carry about in the coat-tail pocket
than a plug of tobacco, but there have been cases where it was
successfully done. I was shown yesterday a little corner that would hold
six or eight bushels. It was in the wash-room of a hotel, and was about
half full. So were the men who came there, for before night the entire
place was filled with empty whisky bottles of every size, shape and smell.
The little fat bottle with the odor of gin and livery stable was there,
and the large flat bottle that you get at Evans, four miles away,
generally filled with something that tastes like tincture of capsicum,
spirits of ammonia and lingering death, is also represented in this great
congress of cosmopolitan bottles sucked dry and the cork gnawed half up.</p>
<p>When I came to Greeley, I was still following the course of treatment
prescribed by my Laramie City physician, and with the rest, I was required
to force down three adult doses of brandy per day. He used to taste the
prescription at times to see if it had been properly compounded. Shortly
after my arrival here I ran out of this remedy and asked a friend to go
and get the bottle refilled. He was a man not familiar with Greeley in its
moisture-producing capacity, and he was unable to procure the vile demon
in the town for love or wealth. The druggist even did not keep it, and
although he met crowds of men with tears in their eyes and breath like a
veteran bung-starter, he had to go to Evans for the required opiate. This
I use externally, now, on the vagrant dog who comes to me to be fondled
and who goes away with his hair off. Central Colorado is full of partially
bald dogs who have wiped their wet, cold noses on me, not wisely but too
well.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ABOUT SAW MILLS. </h2>
<h3> River Falls, Wis., May 80. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> HAVE just
returned from a trip up the North Wisconsin railway, where I went to catch
a string of codfish, and anything else that might be contagious. The trip
was a pleasant one and productive of great good in many ways. I am
hardening myself to railway traveling, like Timberline Jones' man, so that
I can stand the return journey to Laramie in July.</p>
<p>Northern Wisconsin is the place where the "foreign lumber" comes from
which we use in Laramie in the erection of our palatial residences. I
visited the mill last week that furnished the lumber used in the Oasis
hotel at Greeley. They yank a big wet log into that mill and turn it into
cash as quick as a railroad man can draw his salary out of the pay car.
The log is held on a carriage by means of iron dogs while it is being
worked into lumber. These iron dogs are not like those we see on the front
steps of a brown stone house occasionally. They are another breed of dogs.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0027.jpg" alt="0027 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0027.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>The managing editor of the mill lays out the log in his mind, and works it
into dimension stuff, shingle holts, slabs, edgings, two by fours, two by
eights, two by sixes, etc., so as to use the goods to the best advantage,
just as a woman takes a dress pattern and cuts it so she won't have to
piece the front breadths, and will still have enough left to make a
polonaise for the last-summer gown.</p>
<p>I stood there for a long time watching the various saws and listening to
their monotonous growl, and wishing that I had been born a successful
timber thief instead of a poor boy without a rag to my back.</p>
<p>At one of these mills, not long ago, a man backed up to get away from the
carriage, and thoughtlessly backed against a large saw that was revolving
at the rate of about 200 times a minute. The saw took a large chew of
tobacco from the plug he had in his pistol pocket, and then began on him.</p>
<p>But there's no use going into details. Such things are not cheerful. They
gathered him up out of the sawdust and put him in a nail keg and carried
him away, but he did not speak again. Life was quite extinct. Whether it
was the nervous shock that killed him, or the concussion of the cold saw
against his liver that killed him, no one ever knew.</p>
<p>The mill shut down a couple of hours so that the head sawyer could file
his saw, and then work was resumed once more.</p>
<p>We should learn from this never to lean on the buzz saw when it moveth
itself aright.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> EXPERIMENTS WITH OLD CHEESE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> RECENT article in
a dairy paper is entitled, "Experiments with Old Cheese." We have
experimented some on the venerable cheese, too. One plan is to administer
chloroform first, then perform the operation while the cheese is under its
influence. This renders the experiment entirely painless, and at the same
time it is more apt to keep quiet. After the operation the cheese may be
driven a few miles in the open air, which will do away with the effects of
the chloroform.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE RAG-CARPET. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>ITH the threatened
eruption of the rag carpet as a kind of venerable successor to the genuine
Boston-made Turkish rug, there comes a wail on the part of the male
portion of humanity, and a protest on the part of all health-loving
humanity.</p>
<p>I rise at this moment as the self-appointed representative of poor,
down-trodden and long-suffering man. Already lady friends are looking with
avaricious and covetous eyes on my spring suit, and, in fancy,
constructing a stripe of navy blue, while some other man's spring clothes
are already spotted for the "hit-or-miss" stripe of this time-honored
humbug.</p>
<p>It does seem to me that there is enough sorrowing toil going for nothing
already; enough of back ache and delirium, without tearing the shirts off
a man's back to sew into a big ball, and then weave into a rag carpet made
to breathe death and disease, with its prehistoric perspiration and its
modern drug store dyes.</p>
<p>The rug now commonly known as the Turkish prayer rug, has a sad, worn
look, but it does not come up to the rag carpet of the dear old home.</p>
<p>Around it there clusters, perhaps, a tradition of an Oriental falsehood,
but the rag carpet of the dear old home, rich in association, is an
heir-loom that passes down from generation to generation, like the horse
blanket of forgotten years or the ragbag of the dear, dead past. Here is
found the stripe of all-wool delaine that was worn by one who is now in
the golden hence, or, stricken with the Dakota fever, living in the
squatter's home; and there is the fragment of underclothes prematurely
jerked from the back of the husband and father before the silver of a
century had crept into his hair. There is no question but the dear old rag
carpet, with poisonous greens and sickly yellows and brindle browns and
doubtful blacks, is a big thing. It looks kind of modest and unpretending,
and yet speaks of the dead past, and smells of the antique and the garret.</p>
<p>It represents the long months when aching fingers first sewed the
garments, then the first dash of gravy on the front breadth, the maddening
cry, the wild effort to efface it with benzine, the sorrowful defeat, the
dusty grease-spot standing like a pork-gravy plaque upon the face of the
past, the glad relinquishment of the garment, the attack of the rag-carpet
fiend upon it, the hurried crash as it was torn into shreds and sewn
together, then the mad plunge of the dust-powdered mass into the reeking
bath of Paris green or copperas, then the weaver's gentle racket, and at
last the pale, consumptive, freckled, sickly panorama of outrageous
coloring, offending the eye, the nose, the thorax and the larynx, to be
trodden under feet of men, and to yield up its precious dose of destroying
poisons from generation even unto generation.</p>
<p>It is not a thing of beauty, for it looks like the colored engraving of a
mortified lung. It is not economical, for the same time devoted to
knocking out the brains of frogs and collecting their hams for the
metropolitan market would yield infinitely more; and it is not worth much
as an heirloom, for within the same time a mortgage may be placed upon the
old homestead which will pass down from father to son, even to nations yet
unborn, and attract more attention in the courts than all the rag carpets
that it would require to span the broad, spangled dome of heaven.</p>
<p>I often wonder that Oscar Wilde, the pale patron of the good, the true and
the beautiful, did not rise in his might and knock the essential warp and
filling out of the rag carpet. Oscar did not do right, or he would have
stood up in his funny clothes and fought for reform at so much per fight.
While he made fun of the Chicago water works, a grateful public would have
buried him in cut flowers if, instead, he had warped it to the rag carpet
and the approaching dude.</p>
<h3> A TRYING SITUATION. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE are a great
many things in life which go to atone for the disappointments and sorrows
which one meets," but when a young man's rival takes the fair Matilda to
see the baseball game, and sits under an umbrella beside her, and is at
the height of enjoyment, and gets the benefit of a "hot ball" in the pit
of his stomach, there is a nameless joy settles down in the heart of the
lonesome young man, such as the world can neither give nor take away.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ONE KIND OF A BOY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> AM always sorry
to see a youth get irritated and pack up his clothes, in the heat of
debate, and leave the home nest. His future is a little doubtful, and it
is hard to prognosticate whether he will fracture limestone for the
streets of a great city, or become President of the United States; but
there is a beautiful and luminous life ahead of him in comparison with
that of the boy who obstinately refuses to leave the home nest.</p>
<p>The boy who cannot summon the moral courage some day to uncoil the
tendrils of his heart from the clustering idols of the household, to
grapple with outrageous fortune, ought to be taken by the ear and led away
out into the great untried realm of space.</p>
<p>While the great world throbs on, he sighs and refuses to throb. While
other young men put on their seal-brown overalls and wrench the laurel
wreath and other vegetables from cruel fate, the youth who dangles near
the old nest, and eats the hard-earned groceries of his father, shivers on
the brink of life's great current and sheds the scalding tear.</p>
<p>He is the young-man-afraid-of-the-sawbuck, the human being with the
unlaundried spinal column. The only vital question that may be said to
agitate his pseudo brain is, whether he shall marry and bring his wife to
the home nest, or marry and tear loose from his parents to live with his
father-in-law. Finally he settles it and compromises by living alternately
with each.</p>
<p>How the old folks yearn to see him. How their aged eyes light up when he
comes with his growing family to devour everything in sight and yawn
through the space between meals. This is the heyday of his life; the high
noon of the boy who never ventured to ride the yearling colt, or to be
yanked through the shimmering sunlight at the tail of a two-year-old. He
never dared to have any fun because he might bump his nose and make it
bleed on his clean clothes. He never surreptitiously cut the copper wire
off the lightning rod to snare suckers with, and he never went in swimming
because the great, rude boys might duck him or paint him with mud. He
shunned the green apple of boyhood, and did not slide down hill because he
would have to pull his sled back to the top again.</p>
<p>Now, he borrows other people's newspapers, eats the provisions of others,
and sits on the counter of the grocery till the proprietor calls him a
counter irritant.</p>
<p>There can be nothing more un-American than this flabby polyp, this
one-horse tadpole that never becomes a frog. The average American would
rather burst up in business six times in four years, and settle for nine
cents on the dollar, than to lead such a life. He would rather be an
active bankrupt than a weak and bilious barnacle on the clam-shell of
home.</p>
<p>The true American would rather work himself into luxury or the lunatic
asylum than to hang like a great wart upon the face of nature. This young
man is not in accordance with the Yankee schedule, and yet I do not want
to say that he belongs to any other nation. Foreign powers may have been
wrong; trans-Atlantic nations may have erred, and the system of European
government may have been erroneous, but I would not come out and charge
them with this horrible responsibility. They never harmed me, and I will
not tarnish their fair fame with this grave indictment.</p>
<p>He will breathe a certain amount of atmosphere, and absorb a given amount
of feed for a few years, and then the full-grown biped will leave the home
nest at last. The undertaker will come and get him and take what there is
left of him out to the cemetery. That will be all. There can be no deep
abiding sorrow for him here; public buildings will not be draped in
mourning, and you can get your mail at the usual hour when he dies. The
band will not play a sadder strain because the fag-end of a human failure
has tapered down to death, and the soft and shapeless features are still.
You will have no trouble getting a draft cashed on that day, and the giddy
throng will join the picnic as they had made arrangements to do.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CHAMPION MEAN MAN. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>ARAMIE has the
champion mean man. He has a Sunday handkerchief made to order with scarlet
spots on it, which he sticks up to his nose just before the plate starts
round, and leaves the church like a house on fire. So after he has
squeezed out the usual amount of gospel, he slips around the corner and
goes home ten cents ahead, and has his self-adjusting nose-bleed
handkerchief for another trip.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FRATERNAL SPARRING. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> HAVE just
returned from a little two-handed tournament with the gloves. I have
filled my nose with cotton waste so that I shall not soak this sketch in
gore as I write.</p>
<p>I needed a little healthful exercise and was looking for something that
would be full of vigorous enthusiasm, and at the same time promote the
healthful flow of blood to the muscles. This was rather difficult. I tried
most everything, but failed. Being a sociable being (joke) I wanted other
people to help me exercise, or go along with me when I exercised. Some men
can go away to a desert isle and have fun with dumb-bells and a horizontal
bar, but to me it would seem dull and commonplace after a while, and I
would yearn for more humanity.</p>
<p>Two of us finally concluded to play billiards; but we were only amateurs
and the owner intimated that he would want the table for Fourth of July,
so we broke off in the middle of the first game and I paid for it.</p>
<p>Then a younger brother said he had a set of boxing-gloves in his room, and
although I was the taller and had longer arms, he would hold up as long
its he could., and I might hammer him until I gained strength and finally
got well.</p>
<p>I accepted this offer because I had often regretted that I had not made
myself familiar with this art, and also because I knew it would create a
thrill of interest and fire me with ambition, and that's what a
hollow-eyed invalid needs to put him on the road to recovery.</p>
<p>The boxing-glove is a large fat mitten, with an abnormal thumb and a
string at the wrist by which you tie it on, so that when you feed it to
your adversary he cannot swallow it and choke himself. I had never seen
any boxing-gloves before, but my brother said they were soft and wouldn't
hurt anybody. So we took off some of our raiment and put them on. Then we
shook hands. I can remember distinctly yet that we shook hands. That was
to show that we were friendly and would not slay each other.</p>
<p>My brother is a great deal younger than I am and so I warned him not to
get excited and come for me with anything that would look like wild and
ungovernable fury, because I might, in the heat of debate, pile his jaw up
on his forehead and fill his ear full of sore thumb. He said that was all
right and he would try to be cool and collected.</p>
<p>Then we put our right toes together and I told him to be on his guard. At
that moment I dealt him a terrific blow aimed at his nose, but through a
clerical error of mine it went over his shoulder and spent itself in the
wall of the room, shattering a small holly-wood bracket, for which I paid
him $3.75 afterward. I did not wish to buy the bracket because I had two
at home, but he was arbitrary about it and I bought it.</p>
<p>We then took another athletic posture, and in two seconds the air was full
of poulticed thumb and buckskin mitten. I soon detected a chance to put
one in where my brother could smell of it, but I never knew just where it
struck, for at that moment I ran up against something with the pit of my
stomach that made me throw up the sponge along with some other groceries,
the names of which I cannot now recall.</p>
<p>My brother then proposed that we take off the gloves, but I thought I had
not sufficiently punished him, and that another round would complete the
conquest, which was then almost within my grasp. I took a bismuth powder
and squared myself, but in warding off a left-hander, I forgot about my
adversary's right and ran my nose into the middle of his boxing-glove.
Fearing that I had injured him, I retreated rapidly on my elbows and
shoulder-blades to the corner of the room, thus giving him ample time to
recover. By this means my younger brother's features were saved, and are
to-day as symmetrical as my own.</p>
<p>I can still cough up pieces of boxing-gloves, and when I close my eyes I
can see calcium lights and blue phosphorescent gleams across the horizon;
but I am thoroughly convinced that there is no physical exercise which
yields the same amount of health and elastic vigor to the puncher that the
manly art does. To the punchee, also, it affords a large wad of glad
surprises and nose bleed, which cannot be hurtful to those who hanker for
the pleasing nervous shock, the spinal jar and the pyrotechnic concussion.</p>
<p>That is why I shall continue the exercises after I have practiced with a
mule or a cow-catcher two or three weeks, and feel a little more
confidence in myself.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHIPETA'S ADDRESS TO THE UTES. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>EOPLE of my tribe!
the sorrowing widow of the dead Ouray speaks to you. She comes to you, not
as the squaw of the dead chieftain, to rouse you to war and victory, but
to weep with you over the loss of her people and the greed of the pale
face.</p>
<p>The fair Colorado, over whose Rocky mountains we have roamed and hunted in
the olden time, is now overrun by the silver-plated Senator and the
soft-eyed dude.</p>
<p>We are driven to a small corner of the earth to die, while the oppressor
digs gopher holes in the green grass and sells them to the speculator of
the great cities toward the rising sun.</p>
<p>Through the long, cold winter my people have passed, in want and cold,
while the conqueror of the peaceful Ute has worn $250 night-shirts and
filled his pale skin with pie.</p>
<p>Chipeta addresses you as the weeping squaw of a great man whose bones will
one day nourish the cucumber vine. Ouray now sleeps beneath the brown
grass of the canyon, where the soft spring winds may stir the dead leaves,
and the young coyote may come and monkey o'er his grave. Ouray was
ignorant in the ways of the pale face. He could not go to Congress, for he
was not a citizen of the United States. He had not taken out his second
papers. He was a simple child of the forest, but he stuck to Chipeta. He
loved Chipeta like a hired man. That is why the widowed squaw weeps over
him.</p>
<p>A few more years and I shall join Ouray—my chief, Ouray the big
Injun from away up the gulch. His heart is still open to me. Chipeta could
trust him, even among tire smiling maidens of her tribe. Ouray was true.
There was no funny business in his nature. He loved not the garb of the
pale face, but won my heart while he wore a saddle-blanket and a look of
woe.</p>
<p>Chipeta looks to the north and the south, and all about are the graves of
her people. The refinement of the oppressor has come, with its divorce and
schools and gin cocktails and flour bread and fall elections, and we
linger here like a boil on the neck of a fat man.</p>
<p>Even while I talk to you, the damp winds of April are sighing through my
vertebras, and I've got more pains in my back than a conservatory.</p>
<p>Weep with the widowed Chipeta. Bow your heads and howl, for our harps are
hung on the willows and our wild goose is cooked.</p>
<p>Who will be left to mourn at Chipeta's grave? None but the starving
pappooses of my nation. We stand in the gray mist of spring like dead
burdocks in the field of the honest farmer, and the chilly winds of
departing winter make us hump and gather like a burnt boot.</p>
<p>All we can do is to wail. We are the red-skinned wailers from Wailtown.</p>
<p>Colorado is no more the home of the Ute. It is the dwelling place of the
bonanza Senator, who doesn't know the difference between the plan of
salvation and the previous question.</p>
<p>Chipeta cannot vote. Chipeta cannot pay taxes to a great nation, but you
will be apt to hear her gentle voice, and her mellow racket will fill the
air till her tongue is cold, and they tuck the buffalo robe about her and
plant her by the side of her dead chieftain, where the south wind and the
sage hen are singing.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0046.jpg" alt="0046 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0046.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BILL NYE'S CAT. </h2>
<h3> (BY PERMISSION.) </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> AM not fond of
cats, as a general rule. I never yearned to have one around the house. My
idea always was, that I could have trouble enough in a legitimate way
without adding a cat to my woes. With a belligerent cook and a communistic
laundress, it seems to me most anybody ought to be unhappy enough without
a cat.</p>
<p>I never owned one until a tramp cat came to our house one day during the
present autumn, and tearfully asked to be loved. He didn't have anything
in his make-up that was calculated to win anybody's love, but he seemed
contented with a little affection,—one ear was gone and his tail was
bald for six inches at the end, and he was otherwise well calculated to
win confidence and sympathy. Though we could not be madly in love with
him, we decided to be friends, and give him a chance to win the general
respect.</p>
<p>Everything would have turned out all right if the bobtail waif had not
been a little given to investigation. He wanted to know more about the
great world in which he lived, so he began by inspecting my house. He got
into the store-room closet and found a place where the carpenter had not
completed his job. This is a feature of the Laramie artisan's style. He
leaves little places in unobserved corners generally, so that he can come
back some day and finish it at an additional cost of fifty dollars. This
cat observed that he could enter at this point and go all over the
imposing structure between the flooring and the ceiling. He proceeded to
do so.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p>We will now suppose that a period of two days has passed. The wide halls
and spacious façades of the Nye mansion are still. The lights in the
banquet-hall are extinguished, and the ice-cream freezer is hushed to rest
in the wood-sned. A soft and tearful yowl, deepened into a regular
ring-tail-peeler, splits the solemn night in twain. Nobody seemed to know
where it came from.</p>
<p>I rose softly and went to where the sound had seemed to well up from. It
was not there.</p>
<p>I stood on a piece of cracker in the diningroom a moment, waiting for it
to come again. This time it came from the boudoir of our French artist in
soup-bone symphonies and pie—Mademoiselle Bridget O'Dooley. I went
there and opened the door softly, so as to let the cat out without
disturbing the giant mind-that had worn itself out during the day in the
kitchen, bestowing a dry shampoo to the china.</p>
<p>Then I changed my mind and came out. Several articles of vertu, beside
Bridget, followed me with some degree of vigor.</p>
<p>The next time the tramp cat yowled he seemed to be in the recesses of the
bath-room. I went down stairs and investigated. In doing so I drove my
superior toe into my foot, out of sight, with a door that I encountered.
My wife joined me in the search. She could not do much, but she aided me a
thousand times by her counsel. If it had not been for her mature advice I
might have lost much of the invigorating exercise of that memorable night.</p>
<p>Toward morning we discovered that the cat was between the floor of the
children's play-room and the ceiling of the dining-room. We tried till
daylight to persuade the cat to come out and get acquainted, but he would
not.</p>
<p>At last we decided that the quickest way to get the poor little thing out
was to let him die in there, and then we could tear up that portion of the
house and get him out. While he lived we couldn't keep him still long
enough to tear a hole in the house and get at him.</p>
<p>It was a little unpleasant for a day or two waiting for death to come to
his relief, for he seemed to die hard, but at last the unearthly midnight
yowl was still. The plaintive little voice ceased to vibrate on the still
and pulseless air. Later, we found, however, that he was not dead. In a
lucid interval he had discovered the hole in the store-room where he
entered, and, as we found afterward a gallon of coal-oil spilled in a
barrel of cut loaf-sugar, we concluded that he had escaped by that route.</p>
<p>That was the only time that I ever kept a cat, and I didn't do it then
because I was suffering for something to fondle. I've got a good deal of
surplus affection, I know, but I don't have to spread it out over a
stump-tail orphan cat.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AUTUMN THOUGHTS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>N the Rocky
mountains now the eternal whiteness is stealing down toward the foot-hills
and the brown mantle of October hangs softly on the swelling divide, while
along the winding streams, cottonwood and willow are turned to gold, and
the deep green of the solemn pines lies farther back against the soft blue
of the autumn sky. The sigh of the approaching storm is heard at eventide,
and the hostile Indian comes into the reservation to get some arnica for
his chilblain, and to heal up the old feeling of intolerance on the part,
of the pale face.</p>
<p>He leaves the glorious picture of mountain and glen; the wide sweep of
magnificent nature, where a thousand gorgeous dyes are spread over the
remains of the dead summer, and folding his tepee, he steals into the home
of the white man that he may be once more at peace with the world.</p>
<p>The hectic of the dying year saddens and depresses him, for is it not an
emblem to him of the death of his race? Is it not to him an assurance that
in the golden ultimately, the red man will be sought for on the face of
the earth and he will not be able to represent. He will not be there
either in person or by proxy. Here and there may be found the little
silent mounds with some glass beads and teeth in them, but the silent
warrior with the Roman nose will not be there.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0051.jpg" alt="0051 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0051.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>The Indian agent will have a large, conservative cemetery on his hands,
and the brave warrior will be marching single file through the corridors
of the hence.</p>
<p>At this moment he does not look romantic. Clothed in a coffee sack and a
little brief authority, he would not make a good vignette on a $5 bill.
His wife, too, looks careworn, and the old glad light is not in her eye.
Pier gunny-sack dolman is not what it once was, and her beautifully arched
foot has spread out over the reservation more than it used to. Her step
has lost its old elasticity, and so have her suspenders.</p>
<p>Autumn brings to her nothing but regret for the past and hopelessness for
the future. The cold and cruel winter will bring her nothing but bitter
memories and condemned government grub. The solemn hush of nature and the
gorgeous coloring of the forest do not awake a thrill in her wild heart.
She cares not for the dead summer or the mellow mist of the grand old
mountains.</p>
<p>She doesn't care two cents. She knows that no sealskin sacque will come to
her on the Christmas trees, and the glad welcome of the placid and select
oyster is not for her.</p>
<p>Is it surprising, then, that to this decaying belle of an old family the
sparkle of hope is unknown? Can we wonder, as we contemplate her history,
that to her the soldier pantaloons of last year, and the bullwhacker's
straw hat of '79, are obnoxious?</p>
<p>She is like her sex, and her joy is fractured by the knowledge that her
moccasins are down at the heel, and her stockings existing in the realms
of fancy. We should not look with scorn upon Mrs. Rise-up-William-Riley,
for hope is dead in her breast, and the wigwam is desolate in the
sage-brush.</p>
<p>Daughter of a great nation, we are not mad at you. You are not to be
blamed because the republican party has busted your crust. We do not hate
you because you eat your steak-rare and wear your own hair. It is your own
right to do so if you wish. Brace up, therefore, and take a tumble, as it
were, and try to be cheerful. We will not massacre you if you will not
massacre us. All we want is peace, and you can wear what you like, only
wear something, if you please, when you come into our society. We do not
ask you to conform strictly to our false and peculiar costumes, but wear
something to protect you from the chilling blasts of winter and you will
win our respect. You needn't mingle in our society much if you do not
choose to, but wrap yourself up in most any kind of clothing that will
silence the tongue of slander, and try to quit drinking. You would get
along first-rate if you would only let liquor alone. Do not try to drown
your sorrows in the flowing bowl. It's expensive and unsatisfactory. Take
our advice and swear off. We have tried it, and we know what we are
talking about.</p>
<p>You have a glorious future before you, if you will cease to drink the
vintage of the pale face, and monkey with petty larceny. Look at
Pocahontas and Mrs. Tecumseh. They didn't drink. They were women of no
more ability than you have, but they were high-toned, and they got there,
Eli. Now they are known to history along with Cornwallis and Payne. You
can do the same if you choose to. Do not be content to lead a yellow dog
around by a string and get inebriated, but rise up out of the alkali dust,
and resolve that you will shun the demon of drink.</p>
<p>You ought to be ashamed of yourself.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE MAN WHO INTERRUPTS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> DO not, as a
rule, thirst for the blood of my fellow-man. I am willing that the law
should in all ordinary cases take its course, but when we begin to discuss
the man who breaks into a conversation and ruins it with his own
irrelevant ideas, regardless of the feelings of humanity, I am not a law
and order man. The spirit of the "Red Vigilanter" is roused in my breast
and I hunger for the blood of that man.</p>
<p>Interrupters are of two classes: First, the common plug who thinks aloud,
and whose conversation wanders with his so-called mind. He breaks into the
saddest and sweetest of sentiment, and the choicest and most tearful of
pathos, with the remorseless ignorance that marks a stump-tail cow in a
dahlia bed. He is the bull in my china shop, the wormwood in my wine, and
the kerosene in my maple syrup. I am shy in conversation, and my
unfettered flights of poesy and sentiment are rare, but this man is always
near to mar all with a remark, or a marginal note, or a story or a bit of
politics, ready to bust my beautiful dream and make me wish that his name
might be carved on a marble slab in some quiet cemetery, far away.</p>
<p>Dear reader, did you ever meet this man—or his wife? Did you ever
strike some beautiful thought and begin to reel it off to your friends
only to be shut off in the middle of a sentence by this choice and banner
idiot of conversation? If so, come and sit by me, and you may pour your
woes into my ear, and I in turn will pour a few gallons into your
listening ear.</p>
<p>I do not care to talk more than my share of the time, but I would be glad
to arrive at a conclusion just to see how it would seem. I would be so
pleased and so joyous to follow up an anecdote till I had reached the
"nub," as it were, to chase argument home to conviction, and to clinch
assertion with authority and evidence.</p>
<p>The second class of interrupters is even worse. It consists of the man—and,
I am pained to state, his wife also—who see the general drift of
your remarks and finish out your story, your gem of thought or your
argument. It is very seldom that they do this as you would do it yourself,
but they are kind and thoughtful and their services are always at hand. No
matter how busy they may be, they will leave their own work and fly to
your aid. With the light of sympathy in their eyes, they rush into the
conversation, and, partaking of your own zeal, they take the words from
your mouth, and cheerfully suck the juice out of your joke, handing back
the rind and hoping for reward. That is where they get left, so far as I
am concerned. I am almost always ready to repay rudeness with rudeness,
and cold preserved gall with such acrid sarcasm as I may be able to secure
at the moment. No one will ever know how I yearn for the blood of the
interrupter. At night I camp on his trail, and all the day I thirst for
his warm life's current. In my dreams I am cutting his scalp loose with a
case-knife, while my fingers are twined in his clustering hair. I walk
over him and promenade across his abdomen as I slumber. I hear his ribs
crack, and I see his tongue hang over his shoulder as he smiles death's
mirthful smile.</p>
<p>I do not interrupt a man no more than I would tell him he lied. I give him
a chance to win applause or decomposed eggs from the audience, according
to what he has to say, and according to the profundity of his profund. All
I want is a similar chance and room according to my strength. Common
decency ought to govern conversation without its being necessary to hire
an umpire armed with a four-foot club, to announce who is at the bat and
who is on deck.</p>
<p>It is only once in a week or two that the angel troubles the waters and
stirs up the depths of my conversational powers, and then the chances are
that some leprous old nasty toad who has been hanging on the brink of
decent society for two weeks, slides in with a low kerplunk, and my fair
blossom of thought that has been trying for weeks to bloom, withers and
goes to seed, while the man with the chilled steel and copper-riveted
brow, and a wad of self-esteem on his intellectual balcony as big as an
inkstand, walks slowly away to think of some other dazzling gem, and thus
be ready to bust my beautiful phantom, and tear out my high-priced bulbs
of fancy the next time I open my mouth.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE ROCKY MOUKTAIN COW. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE attention of
the Rocky Mountain Detective Association is respectfully called to a large
bay cow, who is hanging around this place under an assumed name. She has
no visible means of support, and has been seen trying to catch the
combination to the safes of several of our business men here. She has also
stolen into our lot several times and eaten two or three lengths of
stovepipe that we neglected to lock up.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PRESERVING EGGS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Scientific
American gives this as an excellent mode of preserving eggs: "Take fresh,
ones, put a dozen or more into a small willow basket, and immerse this for
five seconds in boiling water, containing about five pounds of common
brown sugar per gallon, then pack, when cool, small ends down, in an
intimate mixture of one part of finely powdered charcoal and two of dry
bran. In this way they will last six months or more. The scalding water
causes the formation of a thin skin of hard albumen near the inner surface
of the shell, and the sugar of syrup closes all the pores."</p>
<p>The Scientific American neglects, however, to add that when you open them
six months after they were picked and preserved, the safest way is to open
them out in the alley with a revolver, at sixteen paces. When you have
succeeded in opening one, you can jump on a fleet horse and get out of the
country before the nut brown flavor catches up with you.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HUMAN' NATURE ON THE HALF-SHELL. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> AM up here in
River Falls, Wisconsin, and patiently waiting for the snow-banks to wilt
away and gentle spring to come again. Gentle spring, as I go to press,
hath not yet loomed up. Nothing in fact hath loomed up, as yet, save the
great Dakota boom. Everybody, from the servant girl with the symphony in
smut on her face and the boundless waste of freckles athwart her nose, up
to the normal school graduate, with enough knowledge to start a grist mill
for the gods, has "a claim" in the promised land, the great wild goose
orchard and tadpole aquarium of the new Northwest.</p>
<p>The honest farmer deserts his farm, around which clusters a thousand
memories of the past, and buckling on his web feet, he flees to the frog
ponds of the great northern watershed, to make a "tree claim," and be
happy.</p>
<p>Such is life. We battle on bravely for years, cutting out white-oak grubs,
and squashing army worms on a shingle, in order that we may dwell beneath
our own vine and plum tree, and then we sell and take wings toward a wild,
unknown country, where land is dirt cheap, where the wicked cease from
troubling and the weary are at rest.</p>
<p>That is where we get left, if I may be allowed an Americanism, or whatever
it is. We are never at rest. The more we emigrate the more worthless,
unsatisfied and trifling we become. I have seen the same family go through
Laramie City six times because they knew not of contentment. The first
time they went west in a Pullman car "for their health." The husband
rashly told a sad-eyed man that he lied, and in a little while the sun was
obscured by loose teeth and hair. The ground was torn up and vegetation
was killed where the discussion was held.</p>
<p>Then the family went home to Toledo. They went in a day coach and said a
Pullman car was full of malaria and death. Their relatives made sport of
them and lifted up their yawp and yawped at them insomuch that the
yawpness thereof was as the town caucus for might. Then the tourists on
the following spring packed up two pillows, and a pink comforter, and a
change of raiment, and gat them onto the emigrant train and journeyed into
the land which is called Arizona, where the tarantula climbeth up on the
innerside of the pantaloon and tickleth the limb of the pilgrim as he
journeyeth, and behold he getteth in his work, and the leg of that man is
greater than it was aforetime, even like unto the leg of a piano.</p>
<h3> A FRIGID ROUTE. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE'S no doubt
but that the Fort Collins route to the North Park, is a good, practicable
route, but the only man who has started out over it this spring fetched up
in the New Jerusalem.</p>
<p>The trouble with that line of travel is, that the temperature is too
short. The summer on the Fort Collins route is noted mainly for its
brevity. It lasts about as long as an ordinary eclipse of the sun.</p>
<p>The man who undertook to go over the road this spring on snow shoes, with
a load consisting of ten cents' worth of fine cut tobacco, has not been
heard from yet at either end of the line, and he is supposed to have
perished, or else he is still in search of an open polar sea.</p>
<p>It is hoped that dog days will bring him to the surface, but if the winter
comes on as early this fall as there are grave reasons to fear, a man
couldn't get over the divide in the short space of time which will
intervene between Decoration day and Christmas.</p>
<p>We hate to discourage people who have an idea of going over the Fort
Collins road to North Park, but would suggest that preparations be made in
advance for about five hundred St. Bernard dogs and a large supply of
arctic whisky, to be placed on file where it can be got at without a
moment's delay.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TOO CONTIGUOUS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE is a firm on
Coyote creek, in New Jersey, that would like to advertise in <i>The
Boomerang</i>, and the members of the firm are evidently good square men,
although they are not large. They lack about four feet in stature of being
large enough to come within the range of our vision.</p>
<p>They have got more pure gall to the superficial foot than anybody we ever
heard of. It seems that the house has a lot of vermifuge to feed plants,
and a bedbug tonic that it wants to bring before the public, and it wants
us to devote a quarter of a column every day to the merits of these bug
and worm discouragers, and then take our pay out of tickets in the drawing
of a brindle dog next spring.</p>
<p>We might as well come right out end state that we are not publishing this
paper for our health, nor because we like to loll around in luxury all day
in the voluptuous office of the staff. We have mercenary motives, and we
can't work off wheezy parlor organs and patent corn plasters and threshing
machines very well. We desire the scads. We can use them in our business,
and we are gathering them in just as fast as we can. At the present time
we are pretty well supplied with rectangular churns and stem-winding mouse
traps. We do not need them, It takes too much time to hypothecate them.</p>
<p>In closing, we will add, that New Jersey people will not be charged much
more for advertising space than Wyoming people. We have made special rates
so that we can give the patrons of the East almost as good terms as our
home advertisers.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE AMENDE HONORABLE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T is rather
interesting to watch the manner by which old customs have been slightly
changed and handed down from age to age. Peculiarities of old traditions
still linger among us, and are forked over to posterity like a wappy-jawed
teapot or a long-time mortgage.. No one can explain it, but the fact still
remains patent that some of the oddities of our ancestors continue to
appear from time to time, clothed in the changing costumes of the
prevailing fashion.</p>
<p>Along with these choice antiquities, and carrying the nut-brown flavor of
the dead and relentless years, comes the amende honorable. From the
original amende in which the offender appeared in public clothed only in a
cotton-flannel shirt, and with a rope about his neck as an evidence a
formal recantation, down to this day when (sometimes) the pale editor, in
a stickful of type, admits that "his informant was in error," the amende
honorable has marched along with the easy tread of time. The blue-eyed
moulder of public opinion, with one suspender hanging down at his side,
and writing on a sheet of news-copy paper, has a more extensive costume,
perhaps, than the old-time offender who bowed in the dust in the midst of
the great populace, and with a halter under his ear admitted his offense,
but he does not feel any more cheerful over it.</p>
<p>I have been called upon several times to make the amende honorable, and I
admit that it is not an occasion of mirth and merriment. People who come
into the editorial office to invest in a retraction are generally very
healthy, and have a stiff, reserved manner that no cheerfulness of
hospitality can soften..</p>
<p>I remember of an accident of this kind which occurred last summer in my
office, while I was writing something scathing. A large map with an air of
profound perspiration about him, and a plaid flannel shirt, stepped into
the middle of the room, and breathed in the air that I was not using. He
said he would give me four minutes in which to retract, and pulled out a
watch by which to ascertain the exact time.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0067.jpg" alt="0067 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0067.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>I asked him if he would not allow me a moment or two to go over to the
telegraph office and to wire my parents of my awful death. He said I could
walk out of that door when I walked over his dead body. Then I waited a
long time, until he told me my time was up, and asked what I was waiting
for. I told him I was waiting for him to die, so that I could walk over
his dead body. How could I walk over a corpse until life was extinct?</p>
<p>He stood and looked at me first in astonishment, afterward in pity.
Finally tears welled up in his eyes, and plowed their way down his brown
and grimy face. Then he said that I need not fear him. "You are safe,"
said he. "A youth who is so patient and so cheerful as you are—who
would wait for a healthy man to die so that you could meander over his
pulseless remnants, ought not to die a violent death. A soft-eyed seraph
like you, who is no more conversant with the ways of this world than that,
ought to be put in a glass vial of alcohol and preserved. I came up here
to kill you and throw you into the rain-water barrel, but now that I know
what a patient disposition you have, I shudder to think of the crime I was
about to commit."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> JOAQUIN AND JUNIATA. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>OAQUIN MILLER has
just published a new book called "The Shadows of Shasta." It is based on
the Hiawatha, Blue Juniata romance, which the average poet seems competent
to yank loose from the history of the sore-eyed savage at all times.</p>
<p>Whenever a dead-beat poet strikes bedrock and don't have shekels enough to
buy a bowl of soup, he writes an inspired ode to the unfettered
horse-thief of the west.</p>
<p>It is all right so far as we know. If the poet will wear out the
smoke-tanned child of the forest writing poetry about him, and then if the
child of the forest will rise up in his death struggle and mash the
never-dying soul out of the white-livered poet, everything will be O.K.,
and we will pay the funeral expenses.</p>
<p>If it could be so arranged that the poet and the bright Alfarita bug-eater
and the bilious wild-eyed bard of the backwoods could be shut up in a
corral for six weeks together, with nothing to eat but each other, it
would be a big thing for humanity. We said once that we wouldn't dictate
to this administration, but let it flicker along alone. We just throw out
the above as a suggestion, however, hoping that it will not be ignored.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SOME VAGUE THOUGHTS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>PRING, gentle,
touchful, tuneful, breezeful, soothful spring is here. It has not been
here more than twenty minutes, and my arctics stand where I can reach them
in case it should change its mind.</p>
<p>The bobolink sits on the basswood vines, and the thrush in the gooseberry
tree is as melodious as a hired man. The robin is building his nest—or
rather her nest, I should say, perhaps—in the boughs of the old
willow that was last year busted by thunder—I beg your pardon—by
lightning, I should say. The speckled calf dines teat-a-teat with his
mother, and strawberries are like a baldheaded man's brow—they come
high, but we can't get along without them.</p>
<p>I never was more tickled to meet gentle spring than I am now. It stirs up
my drug-soaked remains, and warms the genial current of life considerably.
I frolicked around in the grass this afternoon and filled my pockets full
of 1000-legged worms, and other little mementoes of the season. The little
hare-foot boy now comes forth and walks with a cautious tread at first,
like a blind horse; but toward the golden autumn the backs of his feet
will look like a warty toad, and there will be big cracks in them, and one
toe will be wrapped up in part of a bed quilt, and he will show it with
pride to crowded houses.</p>
<p>Last night I lay awake for several hours thinking about Mr. Sherrod and
how long we had been separated, and I was wondering how many weary days
would have to elapse before we would again look into each other's eyes and
hold each other by the hand, when the loud and violent concussion of a
revolver shot near West Main street and Cascade avenue rent the sable robe
of night. I rose and lit the gas to see if I had been hit. Then I examined
my pockets to see if I had been robbed of my led pencil and season pass. I
found that I had not.</p>
<p>This morning I learned that a young doctor, who had been watching his own
house from a distance during the evening, had discovered that, taking
advantage of the husband's absence, a blonde dry goods clerk had called to
see the crooked but lonely wife. The doctor waited until the young man had
been in the house long enough to get pretty well acquainted, and then he
went in himself to see that the youth was making himself perfectly
comfortable.</p>
<p>There was a wild dash toward the window, made by a blonde man with his
pantaloons in his hand, the spatter of a bullet in the wall over the young
man's head and then all was still for a moment save the low sob of a woman
with her head covered up by the bed clothes. Then the two men clinched and
the doctor injected the barrel of a thirty-two self-cocker up the bridge
of the young man's nose, knocked him under the wash stand, yanked him out
by the hem of his garment and jarred him into the coal bucket, kicked him
up on a corner bracket and then swept the quivering ruins into the street
with a stub-broom. He then lit the chandelier and told his sobbing wife
that she wasn't just the temperament for him and he was afraid that their
paths might diverge. He didn't care much for company and society while she
seemed to yearn for such things constantly. He came right out and admitted
that he was of a nervous temperament and quick tempered. He loved her, but
he had such an irritable, fiery disposition that he guessed he would have
to excuse her; so he escorted her out to the gate and told her where the
best hotel was, came in, drove out the cat, blew out the light and
retired.</p>
<p>Some men seem almost like brutes in their treatment of their wives. They
come home at some eccentric hour of the night, and because they have to
sleep on the lounge, they get mad and try to shoot holes in the
lambrequins, and look at their wives in a harsh, rude tone of voice. I
tell you it's tough.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE YOUMORIST. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>ou are an
youmorist, are you not?" queried a long-billed pelican addressing a
thoughtful, mental athlete, on the Milwaukee & St. Paul road the other
day.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," said the sorrowful man, brushing away a tear. "I am an
youmorist. I am not very much so, but still I can see that I am drifting
that way. And yet I was once joyous and happy as you are. Only a few years
ago, before I was exposed to this malady, I was as blithe as a speckled
yearling, and recked not of aught—nor anything else, either. Now my
whole life is blasted. I do not dare to eat pie or preserves, and no one
tells funny stories when I am near. They regard me as a professional, and
when I get in sight the 'scrub nine' close up and wait for me to entertain
the crowd and waddle around the ring."</p>
<p>"What do you mean by that?" murmured the purple-nosed interrogation point.</p>
<p>"Mean? Why, I mean that whether I'm drawing a salary or not, I'm expected
to be the 'life of the party.' I don't want to be the life of the party. I
want to let some one else be the life of the party. I want to get up the
reputation of being as cross as a bear with a sore head. I want people to
watch their children for fear I'll swallow them. I want to take my
low-cut-evening-dress smile and put it in the bureau drawer, and tell the
world I've got a cancer in my stomach, and the heaves and hypochondria,
and a malignant case of leprosy."</p>
<p>"Do you mean to say that you do not feel facetious all the time, and that
you get weary of being an youmorist?"</p>
<p>"Yes, hungry interlocutor. Yes, low-browed student, yes. I am not always
tickled. Did you ever have a large, angry, and abnormally protuberent boil
somewhere on your person where it seemed to be in the way? Did you ever
have such a boil as a traveling companion, and then get introduced to
people as an youmorist? You have not? Well, then, you do not know all
there is of suffering in this sorrow-streaked world. When wealthy people
die why don't they endow a cast-iron castle with a draw-bridge to it and
call it the youmorists' retreat? Why don't they do some good with their
money instead of fooling it away on those who are comparatively happy?"</p>
<p>"But how did you come to git to be an youmorist?"</p>
<p>"Well, I don't know. I blame my parents some. They might have prevented it
if they'd taken it in time, but they didn't. They let it run on till it
got established, and now its no use to go to the Hot Springs or to the
mountains, or have an operation performed. You let a man get the name of
being an youmorist and he doesn't dare to register at the hotels, and he
has to travel anonymously, and mark his clothes with his wife's name, or
the public will lynch him if he doesn't say something youmorous.</p>
<p>"Where is your boy to-night?" continued the gloomy humorist. "Do you know
where he is? Is he at home under your watchful eye, or is he away
somewhere nailing the handles on his first little joke? Parent, beware.
Teach your boy to beware. Watch him night and day, or all at once, when he
is beyond your jurisdiction, he will grow pale. He will have a far-away
look in his eye, and the bright, rosy lad will have become the
flatchested, joyless youmorist.</p>
<p>"It's hard to speak unkindly of our parents, but mingled with my own
remorse I shall always murmur to myself, and ask over and over, why did
not my parents rescue me while they could? Why did they allow my chubby
little feet to waddle down to the dangerous ground on which the sad-eyed
youmorist must forever stand?</p>
<p>"Partner, do not forget what I have said to-day. 'Whether your child be a
son or daughter, it matters not. Discourage the first sign of approaching
humor. It is easier to bust the backbone of the first little, tender
jokelet that sticks its head through the virgin soil, than it is to allow
the slimy folds of your son's youmorous lecture to be wrapped about you,
and to bring your gray hairs with sorrow to the grave."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MY CABINET. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> HAVE made a small
collection of wild, western things during the past seven years, and have
put them together, hoping some day, when I get feeble, to travel with the
aggregation and erect a large monument of kopecks for my executors,
administrators and assigns forever.</p>
<p>Beginning with the skull of old Hi-lo-Jack-and-the-game, a Sioux brave,
the collection takes in my wonderful bird, known as the Walk-up-the-creek,
and another <i>vara avis</i>, with carnivorous bill and web feet, which
has astonished everyone except the taxidermist and myself. An old grizzly
bear hunter—who has plowed corn all his life and don't know a coyote
from a Maverick steer—looked at it last fall and pronounced it a
"kingfisher," said he had killed one like it a year ago. Then I knew that
he was a pilgrim and a stranger, and that he had bought his buckskin coat
and bead-trimmed moccasins at Niagara Falls, for the bird is constructed
of an eagle's head, a canvas back duck's bust and feet, with the balance
sage hen and baled hay.</p>
<p>Last fall I desired to add to my rare collection a large hornet's nest. I
had an embalmed tarantula and her porcelain-lined nest, and I desired to
add to these the gray and airy home of the hornet. I procured one of the
large size after cold weather and hung it in my cabinet by a string. I
forgot about it until this spring. When warm weather came, something
reminded me of it. I think it was a hornet. He jogged my memory in some
way and called my attention to it. Memory is not located where I thought
it was. It seemed as though whenever he touched me he awakened a memory—a
warm memory with a red place all around it.</p>
<p>Then some more hornets came and began to rake up old personalities. I
remember that one of them lit on my upper lip. He thought it was a
rosebud. When he went away it looked like a gladiola bulb. I wrapped a wet
sheet around it to take out the warmth and reduce the swelling so that I
could go through the folding doors and tell my wife about it.</p>
<p>Hornets lit ah over me and walked around on my person. I did not dare to
scrape them off because they are so sensitive. You have to be very guarded
in your conduct toward a hornet.</p>
<p>I remember once while I was watching the busy little hornet gathering
honey and June bugs from the bosom of a rose, years ago, I stirred him up
with a club, more as a practical joke than anything else, and he came and
lit in my sunny hair—that was when I wore my own hair and he walked
around through my gleaming tresses quite awhile, making tracks as large as
a watermelon all over my head. If he hadn't run out of tracks my head
would have looked like a load of summer squashes. I remember I had to
thump my head against the smoke-house in order to smash him, and I had to
comb him out with a fine comb, and wear a waste-paper basket two weeks for
a hat.</p>
<p>Much has been said of the hornet, but he has an odd, quaint way after all,
that is forever new.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HEALTH FOOD. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HILE trying to
reconstruct a telescoped spine and put some new copper rivets in the
lumbar vertebrae, this spring, I have had occasion to thoroughly
investigate the subject of so-called health food, such as gruels, beef tea
inundations, toasts, oat meal mush, bran mash, soups, condition powders,
graham gem, ground feed, pepsin, laudable mush, and other hen feed usually
poked into the invalid who is too weak to defend himself.</p>
<p>Of course it stands to reason that the reluctant and fluttering spirit may
not be won back to earth, and joy once more beam in the leaden eye unless
due care be taken relative to the food by means of which nature may be
made to assert herself.</p>
<p>I do not care to say to the world through the columns of the Free Press,
that we may woo from eternity the trembling life with pie. Welsh rabbit
and other wild game will not do at first. But I think I am speaking the
sentiments of a large and emaciated constituency when I say, that there is
getting to be a strong feeling against oat meal submerged in milk and in
favor of strawberry short cake.</p>
<p>I almost ate myself into an early grave in April by flying into the face
of Providence and demoralizing old Gastric with oat meal. I ate oat meal
two weeks, and at the end of that time my friends were telegraphed for,
but before it was too late, I threw off the shackles that bound me. With a
desperation born of a terrible apprehension, I rose and shook off the
fatal oat meal habit and began to eat beefsteak. At first life hung
trembling in the balance and there was no change in the quotations of
beef, but later on there was a slight, delicate bloom on the wan cheek,
and range cattle that had barely escaped a long, severe winter on the
plains, began to apprehend a new danger and to seek the secluded canyons
of the inaccessible mountains.</p>
<p>I often thought while I was eating health food and waiting for death, how
the doctor and other invited guests at the post mortem would start back in
amazement to find the remnants of an eminent man filled with bran!</p>
<p>Through all the painful hours of the long, long night and the eventless
day, while the mad throng rushed onward like a great river toward
eternity's ocean, this thought was uppermost in my mind. I tried to get
the physician to promise that he would not expose me, and show the world
what a hollow mockery I had been, and how I had deceived my best friends.
I told him the whole truth, and asked him to spare my family the
humiliation of knowing that though I might have led a blameless life, my
sunny exterior was only a thin covering for bran and shorts and middlings,
cracked wheat and pearl barley.</p>
<p>I dreamed last night of being in a large city where the streets were paved
with dry toast, and the buildings were roofed with toast, and the soil was
bran and oat meal, and the water was beef tea and gruel. All at once it
came over me that I had solved the great mystery of death, and had been
consigned to a place of eternal punishment. The thought was horrible! A
million eternities in a city built of dry toast and oat meal! A home for
never-ending cycles of ages, where the principal hotel and the post-office
building and the opera house were all built of toast, and the fire
department squirted gruel at the devouring element forever!</p>
<p>It was only a dream, but it has made me more thoughtful, and people notice
that I am not so giddy as I was.</p>
<h3> A NEW POET. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> NEW and dazzling
literary star has risen above the horizon, and is just about to shoot
athwart the starry vault of poesy. How wisely are all things ordered, and
how promptly does the new star begin to beam, upon the decline of the old.</p>
<p>Hardly had the sweet singer of Michigan commenced to wane and to flicker,
when, rising above the western hills, the glad light of the rising star is
seen, and adown the canyons and gulches of the Rocky mountains comes the
melodious cadences of the poet of the Greeley Eye.</p>
<p>Couched in the rough terms of the west; robed in the untutored language of
the Michael Angelo slang of the miner and the cowboy, the poet at first
twitters a little on a bough far up the canyon, gradually waking the
echoes, until the song is taken up and handed back by every rock and crag
along the rugged ramparts of the mighty mountain barrier.</p>
<p>Listen to the opening stanza of "The Dying Cowboy and the Preacher:"</p>
<p>``So, old gospel shark, they tell me I must die;</p>
<p>``That the wheels of life's wagon have rolled into their last rut,</p>
<p>``Well, I will "pass in my checks" without a whimper or a cry,</p>
<p>``And die as I have lived—"a hard nut."=</p>
<p>This is no time-worn simile, no hackneyed illustration or bald-headed
decrepit comparison, but a new, fresh illustration that appeals to the
western character, and lifts the very soul out of the kinks, as it were.</p>
<p>"Wheels of life's wagon have rolled into their last rut."</p>
<p>Ah! how true to nature and yet how grand. How broad and sweeping. How
melodious and yet how real. Hone but the true poet would have thought to
compare the close of life to the sudden and unfortunate chuck of the off
hind wheel of a lumber wagon into a rut.</p>
<p>In fancy we can see it all. We hear the low, sad kerplunk of the wheel,
the loud burst of earnest, logical profanity, and then all is still.</p>
<p>How and then the swish of a mule's tail through the air, or the sigh of
the rawhide as it shimmers and hurtles through the silent air, and then a
calm falls upon the scene. Anon, the driver bangs the mule that is
ostensibly pulling his daylights out, but who is, in fact, humping up like
an angle worm, without pulling a pound.</p>
<p>Then the poet comes to the close of the cowboy's career in this style:</p>
<p>```"Do I repent?" No—of nothing present or past;</p>
<p>```So skip, old preach, on gospel pap I won't be fed;</p>
<p>```My breath comes hard; I—am going—but—I—am game
to</p>
<p>`````the—last.</p>
<p>```And reckless of the future, as the present, the cowboy was</p>
<p>`````dead.=</p>
<p>If we could write poetry like that, do you think we would plod along the
dreary pathway of the journalist? Do you suppose that if we had the
heaven-born gift of song to such a degree that we could take hold of the
hearts of millions and warble two or three little ditties like that, or
write an effigy before breakfast, or construct an ionic, anapestic twitter
like the foregoing, that we would carry in our own coal, and trim our own
lamps, and wear a shirt two weeks at a time?</p>
<p>No, sir, he would hie us away to Europe or Salt Lake, and let our hair
grow long, and we would write some obituary truck that would make people
disgusted with life, and they would sigh for death that they might leave
their insurance and their obituaries to their survivors.</p>
<h3> A WORD IN SELF-DEFENSE. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T might be well in
closing to say a word in defense of myself.</p>
<p>The varied and uniformly erroneous notions expressed recently as to my
plans for the future, naturally call for some kind of an expression on
this point over my own signature. In the first place, it devolves upon me
to regain my health in full if it takes fourteen years. I shall not,
therefore, "publish a book,"</p>
<p>"prepare an youmorous lecture,"</p>
<p>"visit Florida,"</p>
<p>"probate the estate of Lydia E. Pinkham, deceased," nor make any other
grand break till I have once more the old vigor and elasticity, and
gurgling laugh of other days.</p>
<p>In the meantime, let it be remembered that my home is in Laramie City, and
that unless the common council pass an ordinance against it, I shall
return in July if I can make the trip between snow storms, and evade the
peculiarities of a tardy and reluctant spring. Bill Nye.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PINES FOE HIS OLD HOME </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>OM FAGAN, of this
city, has a wild horse that don't seem to take to the rush and hurry and
turmoil of a metropolis. He has been so accustomed to the glad, free air
of the plains and mountains that the hampered and false life of a
throbbing city, with its myriad industries, makes him nervous and unhappy.
He sighs for the boundless prairie and the pure breath of the lifegiving
mountain atmosphere. So taciturn is he in fact, and so cursed by
homesickness and weariness of an artificial and unnatural horse society
here in Laramie, that he refuses to eat anything and is gradually pining
away. Sometimes he takes a light lunch out of Mr. Fagan's arm, but for
days and days he utterly loathes food. He also loathes those who try to go
into the stable and fondle him. He isn't apparently very much on the
fondle. He don't yearn for human society, but seems to want to be by
himself and think it over.</p>
<p>The wild horse in stories soon learns to love his master and stay by him
and carry him through flood or fire, and generally knows more than the
Cyclopedia Brittanica; but this horse is not the historical horse that
they put into wild Arabian falsehoods. He is just a plain, unassuming wild
horse of Wyoming descent, whose pedigree is slightly clouded, and who is
sensitive on the question of his ancestry. All he wants is just to be let
alone, and most everybody has decided that he is right. They came do that
conclusion after they had soaked their persons in arnica and glued
themselves together with poultices.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0089.jpg" alt="0089 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0089.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>Perhaps, after a while, he will conclude to eat hay and grow up with the
country, but now he sighs for his native bunch-grass and the buffalo
wallow wherein he has heretofore made his lair. We don't wonder much,
though, that a horse who has lived in the country should be a little
rattled here when he finds the electric light, and bicycles, and lawn
mowers, and Uncle Tom's Cabin troupes, and baled hay at $20 per ton. It
makes him as wild and skittish as it does an eighteen-year-old girl the
first time she comes into town, and for the first time is met by the blare
of trumpets, and the oriental wealth of the circus with its deformed
camels and uniformed tramps driving its miles of cages with no animals in
them. The great natural world and the giddy maelstrom of seething,
perspiring humanity, peculiar to the city world, are two separate and
distinct existences.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ONE TOUCH OF NATURE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">U</span>P in Polk county,
Wisconsin, not long ago, a man who had lost eight children by diphtheria,
while the ninth hovered between life and death with the same disease, went
to the-health officer of the town and asked aid to prevent the spread of
the terrible scourge. The health officer was cool and collected. He did
not get excited over the anguish of the father whose last child was at
that moment hovering upon the outskirts of immortality. He calmly
investigated the matter, and never for a moment lost sight of the fact
that he was a town officer and a professed Christian.</p>
<p>"You ask aid, I understand," said he, "to prevent the spread of the
disease, and also that the town shall assist you in procuring new and
necessary clothing to replace that which you have been compelled to burn
in order to stop the further inroads of diphtheria. Am I right?" The poor
man answered affirmatively.</p>
<p>"May I ask if your boys who died were Christian boys, and whether they
improved their gospel opportunities and attended the Sabbath school, or
whether they were profane and given over to Sabbath-breaking?"</p>
<p>The bereft father said that his boys had never made a profession of
Christianity; that they were hardly old enough to do so, and that they
might have missed some gospel opportunities owing to the fact that they
were poor, and hadn't clothes fit to wear to Sabbath school. Possibly,
too, they had met with wicked companions, and had been taught to swear; he
could not say but they might have sworn, although he thought they would
have turned out to be good boys had they lived.</p>
<p>"I am sorry that the case is so bad," said the health officer. "I am led
to believe that God has seen fit to visit you with affliction in order to
express His Divine disapproval of profanity, and I cannot help you. It ill
becomes us poor, weak worms of the dust to meddle with the just judgments
of God. Whether as an individual or as a <i>quasi corporation</i>, it is
well to allow the Almighty to work out His great plan of salvation, and to
avoid all carnal interference with the works of God."</p>
<p>The old man went back to his desolated home and to the bedside of his only
living child. I met him yesterday and he told me all about it.</p>
<p>"I am not a professor of religion," said he, "but I tell you, Mr. Nye, I
can't believe that this board of health has used me right. Somehow I ain't
worried about my little fellers that is gone.</p>
<p>"They was little fellers, anyway, and they wasn't posted on the plan of
salvation, but they was always kind and they always minded me and their
mother. If God is using diphtheria agin perfanity this season they didn't
know it. They was too young to know about it and I was too poor to take
the papers, so I didn't know it nuther. I just thought that Christ was
partial to kids like mine, just the same as He used to be 2,000 years ago
when the country was new. I admit that my little shavers never went to
Sabbath school much, and I wasn't scholar enough to throw much light onto
God's system of retribution, but I told 'em to behave themselves, and they
did, and we had a good deal of fun together—me and the boys—and
they was so bright, and square, and cute that I didn't see how they could
fall under divine wrath, and I don't believe they did.</p>
<p>"I could tell you lots of smart little things that they used to do, Mr.
Nye, but they wa'n't mean and cussed. They was just frolicky and gay
sometimes because they felt good. I don't believe God had it in for 'em
bekuz they was like other boys, do you? Fer if I thought so it would kind
o' harden me and the old lady and make us sour on all creation.</p>
<p>"Mind you, I don't kick because I'm left alone here in the woods, and the
sun don't seem to shine, and the birds seems a little backward about
singin' this spring, and the house is so quiet, and she is still all the
time and cries in the night when she thinks I am asleep. All that is
tough, Mr. Nye—tough as old Harry, too—but its so, and I ain't
murmurin', but when the board of health says to me that the Ruler of the
Universe is makin' a tower of Northern Wisconsin, mowin' down little boys
with sore throat because they say 'gosh,' I can't believe it.</p>
<p>"I know that people who ain't familiar with the facts will shake their
heads and say that I am a child of wrath, but I can't help it, All I can
do is to go up there under the trees where them little graves is, and
think how all-fired pleasant to me them little, short lives was, and how
every one of them little fellers was welcome when he come, poor as I was,
and how I rastled with poor crops and pine stumps to buy cloze for 'em,
and didn't care a cent for style as long as they was well. That's the kind
of heretic I am, and if God is like a father that settles it, He wouldn't
wipe out my family just to establish discipline, I don't believe. The plan
of creation must be on a bigger scale than that, it seems to me, or else
it's more or less of a fizzle.</p>
<p>"That board of health is better read than I am. It takes the papers and
can add up figures, and do lots of things that I can't do; but when them
fellers tell me that they represent the town of Balsam Lake and the
Kingdom of Heaven, my morbid curiosity is aroused, and I want to see the
stiffykits of election."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HOW TO PUT UP A STOVE-PIPE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">P</span>UTTING up
stove-pipe is easy enough, if you only go at it right. In the morning,
breakfast on some light, nutritious diet, and drink two cups of hot
coffee; after which put on a suit of old clothes—or new ones, if you
can get them on time—put on an old pair of buckskin gloves, and,
when everything is ripe for the fatal blow, go and get a good hardware man
who understands his business. If this rule be strictly adhered to, the
gorgeous eighteen-karat-stem-winding profanity of the present day may be
very largely diminished, and the world made better.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FUN OF BEING A PUBLISHER. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>EING a publisher
is not all sunshine, joy and johnny-jump-ups, although the gentle and
tractable reader may at times think so.</p>
<p>A letter was received two years ago by the publishers of this book, on the
outside of which was the request to the "P. Master of Chicago to give to
the most reliable man in Chicago and oblige."</p>
<p>The P. Master thereupon gave the letter to Messrs. Belford, Clarke &
Co., who have sent it to me as a literary curiosity. I want it to go down
to posterity, so I put it in this great work. I simply change the names,
and where words are too obscure, doctor them up a little:</p>
<p>Butler, Bates county, Mo., Jan. the 2, 1881.</p>
<p>I have a novle fresh and pure from the pen, wich I would like to be
examined by you. I wish to bring it before the public the ensuing summer.</p>
<p>I have wrote a good deal for the press, and always with great success. I
wrote once an article on the growth of pie plant wich was copied fur and
wide. You may have heard of me through my poem on "The Cold, Damp Sea or
the Murmuring Wave and its Sad Kerplunk."</p>
<p>I dashed it off one summer day for the Scabtown <i>Herald</i>.</p>
<p>In it, I enter the fair field of fancy and with exquisite word-painting, I
lead the reader on and on till he forgets that breakfast is ready, and
follows the thrilling career of Algonquin and his own fair-haired Sciataca
through page after page of delirious joy and poetic rithum.</p>
<p>In this novle, I have wove a woof of possibilities, criss-crossed with
pictures of my own wild, unfettered fancy, which makes it a work at once
truthful and yet sufficiently unnatural to make it egorly sot for by the
great reading world.</p>
<p>The plot of the novle is this:</p>
<p>Algonquin is a poor artist, who paints lovely sunsets and things, nights,
and cuts cordwood during the day, struggling to win a competence so that
he can sue for the hand of Sciataca, the wealthy daughter of a plumber.</p>
<p>She does not love him much, and treats him coldly; but he perseveres till
one of his exquisite pictures is egorly snapt up by a wealthy man at $2.
The man afterwards turns out to be Sciataca's pa.</p>
<p>He says unkind things of Algonquin, and intimates that he is a better
artist in four-foot wood than he is as a sunset man. He says that
Algonquin is more of a Michael Angelo in basswood than anywhere else, and
puts a wet blanket on Sciataca's love for Algonquin.</p>
<p>Then Sciataca grows colder than ever to Algonquin, and engages herself to
a wealthy journalist.</p>
<p>Just as the wedding is about to take place, Algonquin finds that he is by
birth an Ohio man. Sciataca repents and marries her first love. He secures
the appointment of governor of Wyoming, and they remove to Cheyenne.</p>
<p>Then there are many little bursts of pictureskness and other things that I
would like to see in print.</p>
<p>I send also a picture of myself which I would like to have in the book.
Tell the artist to tone down the freckles so that the features may be seen
by the observer, and put on a diamond pin, so that it will have the
appearance of wealth, which the author of a book generally wears.</p>
<p>It is not wrote very good, but that won't make any difference when it is
in print.</p>
<p>When the reading public begins to devour it, and the scads come rolling
in, you can deduct enough for to pay your expenses of printing and
pressing, and send me the balance by post-office money order. Please get
it on the market as soon as possible, as I need a Swiss muzzlin and some
other togs suitable to my position in liturary circles. Yours truly,
Luella Blinker.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LINGERIE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> LADY'S underwear
is politely spoken of as "lingerie," but the great horrid man crawls into
his decrepit last year's undershirt every Monday morning, and swears
because his new underclothes are so "lingerie" about making their
appearance.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FRUIT. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> CLASS of croakers
that one meets with everywhere, have steadily maintained that fruit cannot
be raised in this Territory. In conversation with a small boy yesterday,
we learned that this is not true. It is very simple and easy to do, even
in this rigorous climate. He showed us how it is done. He has a small and
delicately constructed harpoon with a tail to it—the apparatus
attached to a long string. He goes into the nearest market, and while the
clerk is cutting out some choice steaks for the man with the store teeth,
the boy throws his harpoon and hauls in on the string. In this way he
raises all kinds of fruit, not only for his own use, but he has some to
sell.</p>
<p>He showed us some that he raised. It was as good as any of the fruit that
we buy here, only that there was a little hole on one side, but that don't
hurt the fruit for immediate use. He "puts some down," but don't can or
dry any. He says that he applies his where he feels the worst. When he
feels as though a Greening or a Bellflower would help him, he goes out and
picks it. He showed us a string with a grappling hook attached, on which
he had raised a bushel of assorted fruit this fall, and it wasn't a very
good string, either.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE BONE OF CONTENTION. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>WO self-accused
humorists of Ohio have had a fight over the authorship of the facetious
phenomenon and laugh-jerking success, "Who ever saw a tree box?" The bone
of contention between these two gigantic minds, evidently, is not their
funny-bone.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CONGRATULATORY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> CANNOT close this
letter without writing my congratulations to Mr. Raymond, of <i>Tribune</i>,
upon the position of Notary Public, which he has secured. True merit
cannot long go unrewarded. I, too, am a Notary Public. So is Patterson of
the Georgetown <i>Miner</i>. And yet we were all once poor boys, unknown
and unrecognized. Patterson was the son of a wealthy editor in Michigan,
who wished "Sniktau" to be a minister of the everlasting gospel, but
"Snik." knew that he was destined to enter upon a wider and more important
field. He devoted himself to the study of profanity in all its various
branches, until now he can swear more men, and do a bigger
"so-help-me-God" business than any other go-as-you-please affidavit man in
Colorado.</p>
<p>I have held my office through a part of the administration of Grant, and
all of the Hayes administration, so far, and all through the countless
political changes of the territorial administration. I state this with a
pardonable pride. It shows it was not the result of political influence or
party, but was the natural outgrowth of official rectitude and just
dealing toward all. When a man comes before me to make affidavit or to
acknowledge a deed, I recognize no party, no friend. They are all served
alike and charged alike.</p>
<p>I was appointed to this high official position under the administration of
Governor Thayer. At that time C. O. D. French was secretary. I had to
lubricate the wheels of government before I could catch on, as it were. C.
O. D. French wanted $5. I sent it to him. I wrote him that when the people
seemed determined to foist upon me the high official honor of Notary
Public, the paltry sum of $5 should not stand in the way. I have held the
position ever since. Political enemies have endeavored to tear to pieces
my record, both officially and socially, but through evil and good report,
I have still held it.</p>
<p>The nation to-day looks to her notaries public for her crowning glory and
successful future. In their hands rest the might and the grandeur and the
glory which, like a halo, in the years to come, will encircle the brow of
Columbia. I feel the responsibility that rests upon me, and I tremble with
the mighty weight of weal or woe for a great nation which hangs upon my
every official act. I presume Mr. Raymond feels the same way. He ought,
certainly, for the eyes of a great republic watch us with feverish
anxiety. It is an awful position to be placed in. Let those who tread the
lower walks of life envy not the brain-and-nerve-destroying position of
the notary public, whose every movement is portentous, and great with its
burden of good or ill for nations unborn. That is what is making an old
man of me before my time, and sprinkling my strawberry blonde hair with
gray.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE AGONY IS OVER. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T has occurred to
us that the destruction of timber near the Continental Divide, in
Colorado, which is also called, "The Backbone of the Continent," will
naturally be a severe blow to the lumber region of Colorado.</p>
<p>We began studying on this joke last summer, and have wrestled prayerfully
with it ever since, with the above result. Do not think, O gay,
lighthearted reader, that these jokes are spontaneous, and that mirth is
pumped out of the recesses of the editor's brain as a grocer pumps coal
oil out of a tin tank. They come with fasting and sadness, and vexation of
spirit, and groanings that cannot be uttered, and weeping and gnashing of
teeth. Now that we are over this joke safely, no doubt that we shall begin
to flesh up again.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> OSTRICH CAVALRY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE question of
mounting the United States cavalry upon ostriches, as a matter of economy,
is being agitated on the strength of their easy propagation in Arizona and
New Mexico. There being now one hundred and seventeen of these birds in
that region, the result of the increase from nine of them imported several
years ago. However successful ostrich farming may be in and of itself, we
cannot speak too highly of the feasibility of using the bird for cavalry
purposes. It is an established fact that the ostrich is very swift and
will live for days without food, and be verier viceable all the time.</p>
<p>A detachment of ostrich cavalry could light out across the enemy's country
like the wind, and easily distance an equal force mounted upon horses, and
after several days' march, instead of a weary, worn, and jaded-out lot of
horses, there would be a flock of ostriches, hungry but in good spirits,
and the quartermasters could issue some empty bottles, and some sardine
boxes, and some government socks, and an old blue overcoat or two, and the
irons from an old ambulance, to each bird; and at evening, while the white
tents were glimmering in the twilight, the birds would lie in a little
knot chewing their cud constantly, and snoring in a subdued way that would
shake the earth for miles around.</p>
<p>One great difficulty would be to keep a sufficient guard around the arms
and ammunition to prevent the cavalry from eating them up. Think of a half
dozen ostriches breaking into an inclosure while the guard was asleep, or
off duty, and devouring fifteen or twenty rounds of ammunition in one
night, or stealing into the place where the artillery was encamped, and
filling themselves up with shells and round shot, and Greek fire and
gatling guns.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AN ELECTRIC BELT. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> CHEYENNE man who
was once mildly struck by lightning, calls it an "electric belt."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE ANNUAL WAIL </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>S usual, the
regular fall wail of the eastern press on the Indian question, charging
that the Indians never committed any depredations unless grossly abused,
has arrived. We are unpacking it this morning and marking the price on it.
Some of it is on manifold, and the remainder on ordinary telegraph paper.
It will be closed out very cheap. Parties wishing to supply boarding
schools with essays and compositions, cannot do better than to apply at
once. We are selling Boston lots, with large brass-mounted words, at two
and three cents per pound. Every package draws a prize of a two-pound can
of baked beans. If large orders are received from any one person, we will
set up the wail and start it to running, free of cost. It may be attached
to any newspaper in a few minutes, and the merest child can readily
understand it. It is very simple. But it is not as simple as the tallowy
poultice on the average eastern paper, who grinds them out at $4 per week,
and found.</p>
<p>We also have some old wails, two or three years old—and older—that
have never been used, which we will sell very low. Old Sioux wails, Modoc
wails, etc., etc. They do not seem to meet with a ready sale in the west,
and we rather suspect it's because we are too near the scene of the Indian
troubles. Parties who have been shot at, scalped, or had their wives and
children massacred by the Indians, do not buy eastern wails.</p>
<p>Eastern wails are meant for the eastern market, and if we can get this old
stock off our hands, we will hereafter treat the Indian question in our
plain, matter of fact way.</p>
<p>The namby-pamby style of Indian editorial and molasses-candy-gush that New
Englanders are now taking in, makes us tired. Life is too short. It is but
a span. Only as a tale that has been told. Just like the coming of a
guest, who gets his meal ticket punched, grabs a tooth pick, and skins
out.</p>
<p>Then why do we fool away the golden years that the Creator has given us
for mental improvement and spiritual elevation, in trying to fill up the
enlightened masses with an inferior article of taffy?</p>
<p>Every man who knows enough to feed himself out of a maple trough, knows,
or ought to know, that the Indian is treacherous, dishonest, diabolical
and devilish in the extreme, and that he is only waiting the opportunity
to spread out a little juvenile hell over the fair face of nature if you
give him one-sixteenth of a chance. He will wear pants and comb his hair,
and pray and be a class leader at the agency for fifty-nine years, if he
knows that in the summer of the sixtieth year he can murder a few Colorado
settlers and beat out the brains of the industrious farmers.</p>
<p>Industry is the foe of the red man. He is a warrior. He has royal blood in
his veins, and the vermin of the Montezumas dance the German over his
filthy carcass. That's the kind of a hair pin he is. He never works.
Nobody but Chinamen and plebians ever work.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HE WAS NOT A BURGLAR. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE young man who
was seen climbing in a window on Center street yesterday, was not a
burglar as some might suppose, but on the contrary he was a man whose wife
had left the keys to the house lying on the mantel, and locked them in by
means of a spring lock on the front door. He did not climb in the window
because he preferred that way, but because the door unlocked better from
the inside.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BEST ON, BLESSED MEMORY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>NE of the
attractions of life at the Cheyenne Indian agency, is the reserved seat
ticket to the regular slaughter-house matinee. The agency butchers kill at
the rate of ten bullocks per hour while at work, and so great was the rush
to the slaughter-pens for the internal economy of the slaughtered animals,
that Major Love found it necessary to erect a box-office and gate, where
none but those holding tickets could enter and provide themselves with
these delicacies.</p>
<p>This is not a sensation, it is the plain truth, and we desire to call the
attention of those who love and admire the Indian at a distance of 2,000
miles, and to the aesthetic love for the beautiful which prompts the
crooked-fanged and dusky bride of old Fly-up-the-Creek to rob the
soap-grease man and the glue factory, that she may make a Cheyenne
holiday. As a matter of fact, common decency will not permit us to enter
into a discussion of this matter. Firstly, it would not be fit for the
high order of readers who are now paying their money for <i>The Boomerang</i>;
and secondly, the Indian maiden at the present moment stands on a lofty
crag of the Rocky mountains, beautiful in her wild simplicity, wearing the
fringed garments of her tribe. To the sentimentalist she appears outlined
against the glorious sky of the new west, wearing a coronet of eagle's
feathers, and a health-corset trimmed with fantastic bead-work and
wonderful and impossible designs in savage art.</p>
<p>Shall we then rush in and with ruthless hand shatter this beautiful
picture? Shall we portray her as she appears on her return from the great
slaughter-house benefit and moral aggregation of digestive mementoes?
Shall we draw a picture of her clothed in a horse-blanket, with a necklace
of the false teeth of the pale face, and her coarse unkempt hair hanging
over her smoky features and clinging to her warty, bony neck? No, no. Far
be it from us to destroy the lovely vision of copper-colored grace and
smoke-tanned beauty, which the freckled student of the effete east has
erected in the rose-hued chambers of fancy. Let her dwell there as the
plump-limbed princess of a brave people. Let her adorn the hat-rack of his
imagination—proud, beautiful, grand, gloomy and peculiar—while
as a matter of fact she is at that moment leaving the vestibule of the
slaughter-house, conveying in the soiled lap-robe—which is her sole
adornment—the mangled lungs of a Texas steer.</p>
<p>No man shall ever say that we have busted the beautiful Cigar Sign Vision
that he has erected in his memory. Let the graceful Indian queen that has
lived on in his heart ever since he studied history and saw the graphic
picture of the landing of Columbus, in which Columbus is just unsheathing
his bread knife, and the stage Indians are fleeing to the tall brush; let
her, we say, still live on. The ruthless hand that writes nothing but
everlasting truth, and the stub pencil that yanks the cloak of the false
and artificial from cold and perhaps unpalatable fact, null spare this
little imaginary Indian maiden with a back-comb and gold garters. Let her
withstand the onward march of centuries while the true Indian maiden eats
the fricasseed locust of the plains and wears the cavalry pants of
progress. We may be rough and thoughtless many times, but we cannot come
forward and ruthlessly shatter the red goddess at whose shrine the
far-away student of Black-hawk and other fourth-reader warriors, worship.</p>
<p>As we said, we decline to pull the cloak from the true Indian maiden of
to-day and show her as she is. That cloak may be all she has on, and no
gentleman will be rude even to the daughter of Old Bob-Tail-Flush, the
Cheyenne brave.</p>
<h3> A JUDICIAL WARBLER </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ACOB BEESON BLAIR,
who has been recently renominated as associate justice of the Supreme
Court of Wyoming, and judge of the second judicial district, with his
headquarters at this place, is one of the most able and consistent
officials that Wyoming ever had. I might go further and say that he stands
at the head of them all. A year ago, as an evidence of his popularity, I
will say that he was unanimously nominated to represent the Territory in
Congress, which nomination he gracefully declined. He has put his spare
capital into mines, and shown that he is a resident of Wyoming, and not of
the classic halls of Washington, or the sea-beat shores of "Maryland, my
Maryland."</p>
<p>Two years ago I had the pleasure of making a trip to the mines on Douglas
creek, or, as it was then called, Last Chance, in company with Judge Blair
and Delegate Downey, owners of the Keystone gold mine in that district.
The party also included Governor Hoyt, Assayer Murphy, Postmaster Hayford,
and several other prominent men. Judge Brown and Sheriff Boswell were also
in the party at the mine. Judge Blair is, by natural choice, a Methodist,
and renewed our spiritual strength throughout the trip in a way that was
indeed pleasant and profitable. The Judge sings in a soft, subdued kind of
a way that makes the walls of the firmament crack, and the heavens roll
together like a scroll. When he sings—=</p>
<p>```How tedious and tasteless the hours</p>
<p>````When Jesus no longer I see,=</p>
<p>the coyotes and jack-rabbits within a radius of seventy-five miles, hunt
their respective holes, and remain there till the danger has passed.</p>
<p>Looking at the Judge as he sits on the bench singeing the road agent for
ten years in solitary confinement, one would not think he could warble so
when he gets into the mountains. But he can. He is a regular prima donna,
so to speak.</p>
<p>When he starts to sing, the sound is like an Æolian harp, sighing through
the pine forests and dying away upon the silent air. Gradually it swells
into the wild melody of the hotel gong.</p>
<h3> A FIRE AT A BALL. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>OWN at Gunnison
last week a large, select ball was given in a hall, one end of which was
partitioned off for sleeping rooms. A young man who slept in one of these
rooms, and who felt grieved because he had not been invited, and had to
roll around and suffer while the glad throng tripped the light bombastic
toe, at last discovered a knot-hole in the partition through which he
could watch the giddy multitude. While peeping through the knot-hole, he
discovered that one of the dancers, who had an aperture in the heel of his
shoe and another in his sock to correspond, was standing by the wall with
the ventilated foot near the knot-hole. It was but the work of a moment to
hold a candle against this exposed heel until the thick epidermis had been
heated red hot. Then there was a wail that rent the battlements above and
drowned the blasts of the music. There was a wild scared cry of "fire": a
frightened throng rushing hither and thither, and then, where mirth and
music and rum had gladdened the eye and reddened the cheek a moment ago,
all was still save the low convulsive titter of a scantily clad man, as he
lay on the floor of his donjon tower and dug his nails in the floor.</p>
<h3> A LITTLE PUFF. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>OME time ago the
Cheyenne <i>Sun</i> noticed that Judge Crosby, known to Colorado and
Wyoming people quite well, was making strenuous efforts, with some show of
success, to obtain the appointment of Associate Justice of the Supreme
Court of Wyoming. Since that, I have noticed with great sorrow that the
President, in his youthful thoughtlessness and juvenile independence, has
appointed another man for the position.</p>
<p>I speak of this because so many Colorado and Wyoming people knew Mr.
Crosby and had an interest in him, as I might say. Some of us only knew
him fifty cents worth, while others knew him for various amounts up to $5
and $10. He was an earnest, unflagging and industrious borrower. When
times were dull he used to borrow of me. Then I would throw up my hands
and let him go through me. It was not a hazardous act at all on my part.</p>
<p>The Judge knew everybody, and everybody knew him, and seemed nervous when
they saw him, for fear that the regular assessment was about to be made.
Every few days he wanted "to buy a pair of socks," but he never bought
them. Forty or fifty of us got together and compared notes the other day.
We ascertained that not less than $100 had been contributed to the Crosby
Sock Fund during his stay here, and yet the old man wore the same socks to
Washington that he had worn in the San Juan country. A like amount was
also contributed to the Wash Bill Fund, and still he never had any washing
done. We often wondered why so much money was squandered on laundry
expenses, and yet, that he should have the general perspective and spicy
fragrance of a Mormon emigrant train. He used to come into my office and
be sociable with me because he was a journalist. It surprised me at first
to meet a journalist who never changed his shirt. I thought that
journalists, as a rule, wore diamond studs and had to be looked at through
smoked glass.</p>
<p>He liked me. He told me so one day when we were alone, and after I had
promised to tell no one. Then he asked me for a quarter. I told him I had
nothing less than a fifty-cent piece. He said he would go and get it
changed. I said it would be a shame for an old man, and lame at that, to
go out and get it changed; so I said I would go. I went out and played
thirteen of my eternal revolving games of billiards, and about dusk went
back to the office whistling a merry roundelay, knowing that he had
starved out and gone away. I found him at my desk, where he had written to
every Senator and Representative in Congress, and every man who had ever
been a Senator or Representative in Congress; likewise every man, woman
and child who ever expected to be a Senator or a Representative in
Congress; also, to every superintendent and passenger agent of every known
line of railway, for a pass to every known point of the civilized world,
and this correspondence he had used my letter heads, and envelopes and
stamps, and he wasn't done either. He was just getting animated and
warming up to his work, and perspiring so that I had to open the hall door
and burn some old gum overshoes and other disinfectants before I could
breathe.</p>
<p>A large society is being formed here and in Cheyenne, called the "Crosby
Sufferer Aid Association." It is for the purpose of furnishing speedy
relief to the sufferers from the Crosby outbreak. We desire the
cooperation and assistance of Colorado philanthropists, and will, so far
as possible, furnish relief to Colorado sufferers from the great scourge.</p>
<p>Later.—Henry Rothschild Crosby, Esq., passed through here a few
evenings since, on his way to Evanston, Wyoming, where he takes charge of
his office as receiver of public moneys for the western land office.</p>
<p>Henry seems to feel as though I had not stood by him through his political
struggle at Washington. At least I learn from other parties that he does
not seem to hunger and thirst after my genial society, and thinks that
what little influence I may have had, has not been used in his interest.</p>
<p>That is where Henry hit the nail on the head, with that far-sighted
statesmanship and clear, unerring logic for which he is so remarkable.</p>
<p>I do not blame those who were instrumental in securing his appointment,
remember. Not at all. No doubt I would have done the same thing if I had
been in Washington all winter, and Henry had hovered around me for
breakfast, and for lunch, and for dinner, and for supper, and for between
meals, and for picnics, and had borrowed my money, and my overcoat, and my
meal ticket, and my bath ticket, and my pool checks, and my socks, and my
<i>robs de nuit</i>, and my tooth brush, and my gas and writing materials
and stationery; but it should be born in mind that I am a resident of
Wyoming. I have property here and it behooves me to do and say what I can
for the interests of our people. I may have to borrow some things myself
some day and I don't want to find, then, that they have all been borrowed.</p>
<p>Let Hank stand back a little while and give the other boys a chance.</p>
<p>[Note.—In order to give the gentle reader an idea of Mr. Crosby's
personal appearance, I have consented to draw a picture of him myself. It
isn't very pretty, but it is horribly accurate. It is so life-like, that
it seems as though I could almost detect his maroon-colored breath.—B.
N]</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0122.jpg" alt="0122 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0122.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> GENIUS AND WHISKY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> SEE in a recent
issue of the <i>Sun</i> a short article clipped from a Sidney paper,
relative to William Henry Harrison, which brings to my mind fresh
recollections of the long ago. I knew William too. I knew him for a small
amount which I wish I had now, to give to suffering Ireland. He came upon
me in the prime of summer time and said he was a newspaper man. That
always gets me. When a man says to me that he is a newspaper man, and
proves it by showing the usual discouraging state of resources and
liabilities, I always come forward with the collateral.</p>
<p>William wanted to go into the mountains and recover his exhausted
nerve-force, and build up his brain-power with our dry, bracing air. He
knew Mr. Foley, who was then working a claim in Last Chance, so he went
out there to tone up his exhausted energies. He went out there, and after
a few weeks a note came in from the man with the historical cognomen,
asking me to send him a gallon of best Old Crow. I went to my guide book
and encyclopoedia and ascertained that this was a kind of drink. I then
purchased the amount and sent it on.</p>
<p>Mr. Foley said that William stayed by the jug till it was dry, and then he
came into town. I met him on the street and asked him how his intellect
seemed after his picnic in the mountains. He said she was all right now,
and he felt just as though he could do the entire staff work on the New
York <i>Herald</i> for two weeks and not sweat a hair. But he didn't pay
for the Old Crow. It slipped his mind. When time hung heavy on my hands, I
used to write William a note and cheerfully dun him for the amount. I
would also ask him how his intellect seemed by this time, and also make
other little jocular remarks. But he has never forwarded the amount. If
the bill had been for pantaloons, or grub, or other luxuries, I might have
excused him, but when I loan a man money for a staple like whisky. I don't
think it's asking too much to hope that in the flight of time it would be
paid back. However, I can't help it now. It's about time that another
bogus journalist should put in an appearance. I have a few dollars ahead,
and I am yearning to lay out the sum on struggling genius.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE TWO-HEADED GIRL </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE cultivated
two-headed girl has visited the west. It is very rare that a town the size
of Laramie experiences the rare treat of witnessing anything so enjoyable.
In addition to the mental feast which such a thing affords, one goes away
feeling better—feeling that life has more in it to live for, and is
not after all such a vale of tears as he had at times believed it.</p>
<p>Through the trials and disappointments of this earthly pilgrimage, the
soul is at times cast down and discouraged. Man struggles against
ill-fortune and unlooked-for woes, year after year, until he becomes
misanthropical and soured, but when a two-headed girl comes along and he
sees her it cheers him up. She speaks to his better nature in two
different languages at one and the same time, and at one price.</p>
<p>When I went to the show I felt gloomy and apprehensive. The eighteenth
ballot had been taken and the bulletins seemed to have a tiresome
sameness. The future of the republic was not encouraging. I felt as
though, if I could get first cost for the blasted thing, I would sell it.</p>
<p>I had also been breaking in a pair of new boots that day, and spectators
had been betting wildly on the boots, while I had no backers at three
o'clock in the afternoon, and had nearly decided to withdraw on the last
ballot. I went to the entertainment feeling as though I should criticise
it severely.</p>
<p>The two-headed girl is not beautiful. Neither one of her, in fact, is
handsome. There is quite a similarity between the two, probably because
they have been in each other's society a great deal and have adopted the
same ways.</p>
<p>She is an Ethiopian by descent and natural choice, being about the same
complexion as Frank Miller's oil blacking, price ten cents.</p>
<p>She was at one time a poor slave, but by her winning ways and genuine
integrity and genius, she has won her way to the hearts of the American
people. She has thoroughly demonstrated the fact that two heads are better
than one.</p>
<p>A good sized audience welcomed this popular favorite. When she came
forward to the footlights and made her two-ply bow she was greeted by
round after round of applause from the <i>elite</i> of the city.</p>
<p>I felt pleased and gratified. The fact that a recent course of scientific
lectures here was attended by from fifteen to thirty people, and the
present brilliant success of the two-headed girl proved to me, beyond a
doubt, that we live in an age of thought and philosophical progress.</p>
<p>Science may be all right in its place, but does it make the world better?
Does it make a permanent improvement on the minds and thoughts of the
listener? Do we go away from such a lecture feeling that we have made a
grand stride toward a glad emancipation from the mental thraldom of
ignorance and superstition? Do people want to be assailed, year after
year, with a nebular theory, and the Professor Huxley theory of natural
selections and things of that nature?</p>
<p>No! 1,000 times no!</p>
<p>They need to be led on quietly by an appeal to their better natures. They
need to witness a first-class bureau of monstrosities, such as men with
heads as big as a band wagon, women with two heads, Cardiff giants, men
with limbs bristling out all over them like the velvety bloom on a prickly
pear.</p>
<p>When I get a little leisure, and can attend to it,</p>
<p>I am going to organize a grand constellation of living wonders of this
kind, and make thirteen or fourteen hundred farewell tours with it, not so
much to make money, but to meet a long-felt, want of the American people
for something which will give a higher mental tone to the tastes of those
who never lag in their tireless march toward perfection.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CULTIVATION OF GUM. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>N idea has
occurred to us, that, situated as we are at a considerable elevation, and
being comparatively out of the line of tropical growth, we should try to
propagate plants that will withstand the severe winter and the sudden and
sometimes fatal surprise of spring. Plants in this locality worry along
very well through the winter in a kind of semi-unconscious state, but when
spring drops down on them about the Fourth of July they are not prepared
for it, and they yield to the severe nervous shock and pass with a gentle
gliding motion up the flume.</p>
<p>This has suggested to our mind the practicability of cultivating the
chewing-gum plant. We advance this thought with some timidity, knowing
that our enemies will use all these novel and untried ideas against us in
a presidential campaign; but the good of the country is what we are after
and we do not want to be misunderstood.</p>
<p>Chewing-gum is rapidly advancing in price, and the demand is far beyond
the supply. The call for gum is co-extensive with the onward move of
education. They may be said to go hand in hand. Wherever institutions of
learning are found, there you will see the tall, graceful form of the
chewing-gum tree rising toward heaven with its branches extending toward
all humanity.</p>
<p>Here, in Wyoming, we could easily propagate this plant. It is hardy and
don't seem to care whether winter lingers in the lap of spring or not. We
have the figures, also, to substantiate this article. We will figure on
the basis of twenty boxes of gum to the plant—and this is a very low
estimate, indeed—then the plants may easily be three feet apart.
This would be 3,097,600 plants to the acre, or 61,952,000 boxes,
containing 100 chews in each box, or 6,195,200,000 chews to the acre. We
have a million acres that could be used in this way, which would yield in
a good year 6,195,200,000,000,000 chews at one cent each.</p>
<p>The reader will see at a glance that this is no wild romantic notion on
our part, but a terrible reality. Wyoming could easily supply the present
demand and wag the jaws of nations yet unborn. It makes us tired to think
of it.</p>
<p>Of course, anything like this will meet with strong opposition on the part
of those who have no faith in enterprises, but let a joint stock company
be formed with sufficient capital to purchase the tools and gum seed, and
we will be responsible for the result. Very likely the ordinary spruce gum
(made of lard and resin) would be best as an experiment, after which the
prize-package gum plant could be tried.</p>
<p>These experiments could be followed up with a trial of the gum drop, gum
overshoe, gum arabic and other varieties of gum. Doctor Hayford would be a
good man to take hold of this. Col. Donnellan says, however, that he don't
think it is practical. No use of enlarging on this subject—it will
never be tried. Probably the town is full of people who are willing to
chew the gum, but wouldn't raise a hand toward starting a gum orchard. We
are sick and tired of pointing out different avenues to wealth only to be
laughed at and ridiculed.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WE HAVE REASONED IT OUT. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> HOME magazine
comes to us this week, in which we find the following, connected with a
society article. After alluding to the young men of the nineteenth
century, and their peculiarities, it continues: "In fact, many of the more
fashionable strains are all black, except the distinctive white feet and
snout, so noticeable at this epoch in our history."</p>
<p>This, it would seem, will make a radical change in the prevailing young
man. With white feet and white snout, the masher must also be black aside
from those features. This will add the charm of extreme novelty to our
social gatherings, and furnish sufficient excuse for a man like us, with
blonde rind and strawberry blonde feet, staying at home, with the ban of
society and a loose smoking jacket on him.</p>
<p>Farther on, this peculiar essay says: "He is noted for his wonderfully
fine blood, the bone is fine, the hair thin, the carcass long but broad,
straight and deep-sided, with smooth skin, susceptible to no mange or
other skin diseases."</p>
<p>We almost busted our capacity trying to figure out this startler in the
fashion line, and wore ourself down to a mere geometrical line in our
endeavor to fathom this thing when, yesterday, in reading an article in
the same paper entitled, "The Berkshire Hog," we discovered that the
sentences above referred to had evidently been omitted by the foreman, and
put in the society article. It is unnecessary to state that a blessed calm
has settled down in the heart of this end of <i>The Boomerang</i>. Time,
at last, makes all things size up in proper shape. Blessed be the time
which matures the human mind and the promissory note.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CARVING SCHOOLS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HEY are agitating
the matter of instituting carving schools in the east, so that the rising
generation will be able to pass down through the corridors of time without
its lap full of dressing and its bosom laden with gravy and remorse. The
students at this school will wear barbed-wire masks while practicing.
These masks will be similar to those worn by German students, who slice
each other up while obtaining an education.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0043" id="link2H_4_0043"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DIGNITY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>OLONEL INGERSOLL
said, at Omaha the other day, that he hated a dignified man and that he
never knew one who had a particle of sense; that such men never learned,
and were constantly forgetting something.</p>
<p>Josh Billings says that gravity is no more the sign of mental strength
than a paper collar is the evidence of a shirt.</p>
<p>This leads us to say that the man who ranks as a dignified snoozer, and
banks on winning wealth and a deathless name through this one source of
strength, is in the most unenviable position of any one we know. Dignity
does not draw. It answers in place of intellectual tone for twenty
minutes, but after awhile it fails to get there. Dignity works all right
in a wooden Indian or a drum major, but the man who desires to draw a
salary through life and to be sure of a visible means of support, will do
well to make some other provision than a haughty look and the air of
patronage. Colonel Ingersoll may be wrong in the matter of future
punishment, but his head is pretty level on the dignity question. Dignity
works all right with a man who is worth a million dollars and has some
doubts about his suspenders; but the man who is to get a large sum of
money before he dies, and get married and accomplish some good, must place
himself before his fellow men in the attitude of one who has ideas that
are not too lonely and isolated.</p>
<p>Let us therefore aim higher than simply to appear cold and austere. Let us
study to aid in the advancement of humanity and the increase of baled
information. Let us struggle to advance and improve the world, even though
in doing so we may get into ungraceful positions and at times look
otherwise than pretty. Thus shall we get over the ground, and though we
may do it in the eccentric style of the camel, we will get there, as we
said before, and we will have camped and eaten our supper while the
graceful and dignified pedestrian lingers along the trail.</p>
<p>Works, not good clothes and dignity, are the grand hailing sign, and he
who halts and refuses to jump over an obstacle because he may not do it so
as to appear as graceful as a gazelle, will not arrive until the
festivities are over.</p>
<h3> A SNORT OF AGONY. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>UR attention has
been called to a remark made by the New York <i>Tribune</i>, which would
intimate that the journal referred to didn't like Acting-Postmaster F.
Hatton, and characterizing the editor of The Boomerang as a "journalistic
pal" of General Hatton's. We certainly regret that circumstances have made
it necessary for us to rebuke the <i>Tribune</i> and speak, harshly to it.
Frank Hatton may be a journalistic pal of ours. Perhaps so. We would be
glad to class him as a journalistic pal of ours, even though he may not
have married rich. We think just as much of General Hatton as though he
had married wealthy. We can't all marry rich and travel over the country,
and edit our papers vicariously. That is something that can only happen to
the blessed few.</p>
<p>It would be nice for us to go to Europe and have our <i>pro tem.</i>
editor at home working for $20 per week, and telegraphing us every few
minutes to know whether he should support Cornell or Folger. The pleasure
of being an editor is greatly enhanced by such privileges, and we often
feel that if we could get away from the hot, close office of The
Boomerang, and roam around over Scandahoovia and the Bosphorus, and mould
the policy of <i>The Boomerang</i> by telegraph, and wear a cork helmet
and tight pants, we would be far happier. Still it may be that Whitelaw
Reid is no happier with his high priced wife and his own record of crime,
than we are in our simplicity here in the wild and rugged west, as we
write little epics for our one-horse paper, and borrow tobacco of the
foreman.</p>
<p>It is not all of life to live, nor all of death to die. We should live for
a purpose, Mr. Reid, not aimlessly like a blind Indian, 200 miles from the
reservation at Christmas-tide.</p>
<p>Now, Mr. Reid, if you will just tell Mr. Nicholson, when you get back
home, that in referring to us as a journalistic pal of Frank Hatton he has
exceeded his authority, we will feel grateful to you—and so will Mr.
Hatton. If you don't do it, we shall be called upon to stop the <i>Tribune</i>,
and subscribe for <i>Harper's Weekly</i>. This we should dislike to do
very much, because we have taken the <i>Tribune</i> for years. We used to
take it when the editor stayed at home and wrote for it. Our father used
to take the <i>Tribune</i>, too. He is the editor of the Omaha <i>Republican</i>,
and needs a good New York paper, but he has quit taking the <i>Tribune</i>.
He said he must withdraw his patronage from a paper that is edited by a
tourist. All the Nyes will now stop taking the <i>Tribune</i>, and all
subscribe for some other dreary paper. We don't know just whether it will
be <i>Harper's Weekly</i>, or the <i>Shroud</i>.</p>
<p>Later.—Mr. Reid went through here on Tuesday, and told us that he
might have been wrong in referring to us as a journalistic pal of Frank
Hatton, and in fact did not know that the <i>Tribune</i> had said so. He
simply told Nicholson to kind of generally go for the administration, and
turn over a great man every morning with his scathing pen, and probably
Nicholson had kind of run out of great men, and tackled the North American
Indian fighter of <i>The Boomerang</i>. Mr. Reid also said, as he rubbed
some camphor ice on his nose, and borrowed a dollar from his wife to buy
his supper here, that when he got back to New York, he was going to write
some pieces for the <i>Tribune</i> himself. He was afraid he couldn't
trust Nicholson, and the paper had now got where it needed an editor right
by it all the time. He said also that he couldn't afford to be wakened up
forty times a night to write telegrams to New York, telling the <i>Tribune</i>
who to indorse for governor. It was a nuisance, he said, to stand at the
center of a way station telegraph office, in his sun-flower night shirt,
and write telegrams to Nicholson, telling him who to sass the next
morning. Once, he said, he telegraphed him to dismember a journalistic pal
of Frank Hatton's, and the operator made a mistake. So the next morning
the <i>Tribune</i> had a regular old ring-tail peeler of an editorial,
which planted one of Mr. Reid's special friends in an early grave. So we
may know from this that moulding the course of a great paper by means of
red messages, is fraught with some unpleasant features.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0137.jpg" alt="0137 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0137.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0044" id="link2H_4_0044"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ALWAYS BOOM AT THE TOP. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUNG man, do not
stand lounging on the threshold of the glorious future, while the coming
years are big with possibilities, but take off your coat and spit on your
hands and win the wealth which the world will yield you. You may not be
able to write a beautiful poem, and die of starvation; but you can go to
work humbly as a porter and buy a whisk broom, and wear people's clothes
out with it, and in five years you can go to Europe in your own special
car. As the strawberry said to the box, "there is always room at the top."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0045" id="link2H_4_0045"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> INACCURATE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>NCE more has
Laramie been, slandered and traduced. Once more our free and peculiar
style has been spoken lightly of and our pride trailed in the dust.</p>
<p>Last week the <i>Police Gazette</i>, an illustrated family journal of
great merit, appeared with a half page steel engraving, executed by one of
the old masters, representing two Laramie girls on horseback yanking a fly
drummer along the street at a gallop, because he tried to make a mash on
them and they did not yearn for his love.</p>
<p>There are two or three little errors in the illustration, to which we
desire to call the attention of the eastern reader of Michael Angelo
masterpieces that appear in the Police Gazette. First, the saloon or
hurdy-gurdy shown in the left foreground is not the exact representation
of any building in Laramie, and the dobe pig pens and A tents of which the
town seems to be composed, are not true to nature.</p>
<p>Again, the streets do not look like the streets of Laramie. They look more
like the public thoroughfares of Tie City or Jerusalem. Then the girls do
not look like Laramie girls, and we are acquainted with all the girls in
town, and consider ourself a judge of those matters. The girls in this
illustration look too much as though they had mingled a great deal with
the people of the world. They do not have that shy, frightened and pure
look that they ought to have. They appear to be that kind of girls that
one finds in the crowded metropolis under the gas light, yearning to get
acquainted with some one.</p>
<p>There are several features of the illustration which we detect as
erroneous, and among the rest we might mention, casually, that the
incident illustrated never occurred here at all. Aside from these little
irregularities above named, the picture is no doubt a correct one. We
realize fully that times get dull even in New York sometimes, and it is
necessary, occasionally, to draw on the imagination, but the <i>Gazette</i>
artist ought to pick up some hard town like Cheyenne, and let us alone
awhile.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0046" id="link2H_4_0046"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE WESTERN "CHAP." </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>EW know how
voraciously we go for anything in the fashion line. Many of our exchanges
are fashion magazines, and nothing is read with such avidity as these
highly pictorial aggregations of literature. If there are going to be any
changes in the male wardrobe this winter, it behooves us to know what they
are. We intend to do so. It is our high prerogative and glorious privilege
to live in a land of information. If we do not provide ourself with a few,
it is our own fault. Man has spanned the ocean with an electric cable, and
runs his street cars with another cable that puts people out of their
misery as quick as a giant-powder caramel in a man's chest-protector,
under certain circumstances. Science has done almost everything for us,
except to pay our debts without leaning toward repudiation. We are making
rapid strides in the line of progression. That is, the scientists are.
Every little while you can hear a scientist burst a basting thread off his
overalls, while making a stride.</p>
<p>It is equally true that we are marching rapidly along in the line of
fashion. Change, unceasing change, is the war cry, and he who undertakes
to go through the winter with the stage costumes of the previous winter,
will find, as Voltaire once said, that it is a cold day.</p>
<p>We look with great concern upon the rapid changes which a few weeks have
made. The full voluptuous swell and broad cincha of the chaparajo have
given place to the tight pantaletts with feathers on them, conveying the
idea that they cannot be removed until death, or an earthquake shall
occur..</p>
<p>"Chaps," as they are vulgarly called, deserve more than a passing notice.
They are made of leather with fronts of dog-skin with the hair on. The
inside breadths are of calf or sheep-skin, made plain, but trimmed down
the side seam with buckskin bugles and oil-tanned bric-a-brac of the time
of Michael Angelo Kelley. On the front are plain pockets used for holding
the ball programme and the "pop." The pop is a little design in nickel and
steel, which is often used as an inhaler. It clears out the head, and
leaves the nasal passages and phrenological chart out on the sidewalk,
where pure air is abundant. "Chaps" are rather attractive while the wearer
is on horseback, or walking toward you, but when he chasses and "all waltz
to places," you discern that the seat of the garment has been postponed <i>sine
die</i>. This, at first, induces a pang in the breast of the beholder.
Later, however, you become accustomed to the barren and perhaps even stern
demeanor of the wearer. You gradually gain control of yourself and master
your raging desire to rush up and pin the garment together. The dance goes
on. The <i>elite</i> take an adult's dose of ice-cream and other
refreshments; the leader of the mad waltz glides down the hall with his
mediæval "chaps," swishing along as he sails; the violin gives a last
shriek; the superior fiddle rips the robe of night wide open, with a
parting bzzzzt; the mad frolic is over, and $5 have gone into the dim and
unfrequented freight depot of the frog-pond-environed past.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0047" id="link2H_4_0047"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AN INCIDENT OF THE CAMPAIGN. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">C</span>OLONEL THOMAS
JUNIUS DAYTON entered the democratic headquarters on Second street, a few
nights ago, having been largely engaged, previously, in talking over the
political situation, with sugar in it. The first person he saw on
entering, was an individual in the back part of the room, writing.</p>
<p>Colonel Dayton ordered him out.</p>
<p>The man would not go, maintaining that he had a right to meet together in
democratic headquarters as often as he desired. The Colonel still insisted
that he was an outsider and could have nothing in common with the
patriotic band of bourbons whose stamping ground he had thus entered.</p>
<p>Finally the excitement became so great that a man was called in to umpire
the game and sponge off the hostiles, but before blood was shed a
peacemaker asked Colonel Dayton what the matter was with him.</p>
<p>"This man is a Democrat. I've known him for years. What's the reason you
don't want him in here?"</p>
<p>"That's all right," said the Colonel, with his eyes starting from their
sockets with indignation, "you people can be easily fooled. I cannot. I
know him to be a spy in our camp. I have smelled his breath and find he is
not up in the Ohio degree. I have also discovered him to be able to read
and write. He cannot answer a single democratic test. He is a bogus
bourbon, and my sentiments are that he should be gently but firmly fired.
If the band will play something in D that is kind of tremulous, I will
take off my coat and throw the gentleman over into a vacant lot. I think I
know a Democrat when I see him. Perhaps you do not. He cannot respond to a
single grand hailing sign. He hasn't the cancelled internal revenue stamp
on his nose, and his breath lacks that spicy election odor which we know
so well. Away with him! Fling his palpitating remains over the drawbridge
and walk on him. Spread him out on the ramparts and jam him into the
culverin. Those are my sentiments. We want no electroplate Democrats here.
This is the stronghold of the highly aesthetic and excessively <i>bon-ton</i>,
Andrew Jackson peeler, and if justice cannot be done to this usurper by
the party, I shall have to go out and get an infirm hoe handle and
administer about $9 worth of rebuke myself."</p>
<p>He went out after the hoe handle, and while absent, the stranger said he
didn't want to be the cause of any ill feeling, or to stand in the way of
the prosperity of his party, so he would not remain. He put on his hat and
stole out into the night, a quiet martyr to the blind rage of Colonel
Dayton, and has not since been seen.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0048" id="link2H_4_0048"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WHY DO THEY DO IT? </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">B</span>EN HILL, died,
after suffering intolerable anguish from a tobacco cancer, caused by
excessive smoking. The consumers of the western-made cigar are now and
then getting a nice little dose of leprosy from the Chinese constructed
cigars of San Francisco, and yet people go right on inviting the most
horrible diseases known to science, by smoking, and smoking to excess. Why
do they do it? It is one of those deep, dark mysteries that nothing but
death can unravel. We cannot fathom it, that's certain. (Give us a light,
please.)</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0049" id="link2H_4_0049"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TWO STYLES. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>NE of the
peculiarities of correspondence is witnessed at this office every day, to
which we desire to call the attention of our growing girls and boys, who
ought to know that there is a long way and a short way of saying things on
paper; a right way and a wrong way to express thoughts on a postal card,
just as there is in conversation. We all admire the business man who is
terse and to the point, and we dislike the man who hangs on to the door
knob as though life was a never-ending summer dream, and refuses to say
good-bye. It's so with correspondence. In touching upon the letters
received at this office, we refer to a car load received at this office
during the past year, relating to sample copies. Still they are a good
specimen of the different styles of doing the same thing.</p>
<p>For instance, here is a line which tells the story in brief, without
wearing out your eyes and days by ponderous phrases and useless verbiage.
"Useless verbiage and frothy surplusage" is a synonym which we discovered
in '75, while excavating for the purpose of laying the foundations of our
imposing residence up the gulch. Persons using the same will please fork
over ten per cent of the gross receipts:</p>
<p><i>"Bangor, Maine, 11-10-82.</i></p>
<p><i>"Find 10c for which send sample copy Boomerang to above address. Yours,
etc.,</i></p>
<p><i>"Thomas Billings."</i></p>
<p>Some would have said "please" find inclosed ten cents. That is not
absolutely necessary. If you put ten cents in the letter that covers all
seeming lack of politeness and it's all right. If, however, you are out of
a job, and have nothing else to do but to write for sample copies of
papers, and wait for the department at Washington to allow you a pension,
you might say, "Please find inclosed," etc., otherwise the ten cents will
make it all right.</p>
<p>Here's another style, which evinces a peculiarity we do not admire. It
bespeaks the man who thinks that life and its associations are given us in
order to wear out the time, waiting patiently meanwhile for Gabriel to
render his little overture.</p>
<p>It occurs to us that life is real, life is earnest, and so forth. We
cannot sit here in the gathering gloom and read four pages of a letter,
which only expresses what ought to have been expressed in four lines. We
feel that we are here to do the greatest good to the greatest-number, and
we dislike the correspondent who hangs on to the literary door knob, so to
speak, and absorbs our time, which is worth $5.35 per hour.</p>
<p>Here we go—</p>
<p>"New Centreville, Wis., Nov. 8, 1882.</p>
<p>"Mr. William Nye, esq., Laramie City, Wyoming:</p>
<p>"Dear Sir:—I have often saw in our home papers little pieces cut out
of your paper The Larmy Boomerang, yet I have never saw the paper itself.
I hardly pick up a paper, from the Fireside. Friend to the Christian at
Work, that I do not see something or a nother from your faseshus pen and
credited to <i>The Boomerang</i>. I have asked our bookstore for a copy of
the paper, and he said go to grass, there wasn't no such perioddickle in
existence. He is a liar; but I did not tell him so because I am just
recovering from a case of that kind now, which swelled both eyes shet and
placed me under the doctor's care.</p>
<p>"It was the result of a campaign lie, and at this moment I do not remember
whether it was the other man or me which told it. Things got confused and
I am not clear on the matter now.</p>
<p>"I send ten cents in postage stamps, hoping you will favor me with a
speciment copy of <i>The Boomerang</i> and I may suscribe. I send postage
stamps because they are more convenient to me, and I suppose that you can
use them all right as you must have a good deal of writing to do. I intend
to read the paper thorrow and give my folks the benefit also. I love to
read humerrus pieces to my children and my wife and hear their gurgly
laugh well up like a bobollink's. I now take an estern paper which is
gloomy in its tendencies, and I call it the Morg. It looks at the dark
side of life and costs $3 a year and postage.</p>
<p>"So send the speciment if you please and I will probbly suscribe for The
Boomerang, as I have saw a good many extrax from it in our papers here and
I have not as yet saw your paper."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0050" id="link2H_4_0050"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> GOSHALLHEMLOCK SALVE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE bullwacking,
mule-skinning proprieter of a life-giving salve wants us to advertise for
him, and to state that, with his Goshallhemlock salve he "can cure all
chronicle diseases whatever."</p>
<p>"We would do it if we could, sweet being; but owing to the fullness of the
paper and the foreman, we must turn you cruelly away.</p>
<p>"Yours truly,</p>
<p>"James Letson."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0051" id="link2H_4_0051"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE STAGE BALD-HEAD. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>OST everyone, who
was not born blind, knows that the stage bald-head is a delusion and a
snare. The only all-wool, yard-wide bald-head we remember on the American
stage, is that of Dunstan Kirke as worn by the veteran Couldock.</p>
<p>Effie Ellsler wears her own hair and so does Couldock, but Couldock wears
his the most. It is the most worn anyhow.</p>
<p>What we started out to say, is, that the stage bald-head and the average
stage whiskers make us weary with life. The stage bald-head is generally
made of the internal economy of a cow, dried so that it shines, and cut to
fit the head as tightly as a potatoe sack would naturally fit a billiard
cue. It is generally about four shades whiter than the red face of the
wearer, or <i>vice versa</i>. We do not know which is the worst violation
of eternal fitness, the red-faced man who wears a deathly white bald-head,
or the pale young actor who wears a florid roof on his intellect.
Sometimes in starring through the country and playing ten or fifteen
hundred engagements, a bald-head gets soiled. We notice that when a show
gets to Laramie the chances are that the bald-head of the leading old man
is so soiled that he really needs a sheep-dip shampoo. Another feature of
this accessory of the stage is its singular failure to fit. It is either a
little short at both ends, or it hangs over the skull in large festoons,
and wens and warts, in such a way as to make the audience believe that the
wearer has dropsy of the brain.</p>
<p>You can never get a stage bald-head near enough like nature to fool the
average house-fly. A fly knows in two moments whether it is the genuine,
or only a base imitation, and the bald-head of the theatre fills him with
nausea and disgust. Nature, at all times hard to imitate, preserves her
bald head as she does her sunny skies and deep blue seas, far beyond the
reach of the weak, fallible, human imitator. Baldness is like fame, it
cannot be purchased. It must be acquired. Some men may be born bald, some
may acquire baldness, and others may have baldness thrust upon them, but
they generally acquire it.</p>
<p>"The stage beard is also rather dizzy, as a rule. It looks as much like a
beard that grew there, as a cow's tail would if tied to the bronze dog on
the front porch. When you tie a heavy black beard on a young actor, whose
whole soul would be churned up if he smoked a full-fledged cigar, he looks
about as savage as a bowl of mush and milk struck with a club."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0052" id="link2H_4_0052"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FATHERLY WORDS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>. W. P., writes:—"I
am a young man twenty-five years old. I am in love with a young lady of
seventeen. Her mind being very different from mine, I have not told her of
my love, nor asked to call on her. I thought her so giddy that she did not
want any steady company. She is a great lover of amusement. She is a
perfect lady in her deportment, although she is more like a child of
fourteen than a young lady of seventeen. I think she is very pretty, but
she seems to enjoy flirting to the greatest extent. One evening at a party
I asked her to promenade with me, and she would not do it. I then asked
her to allow me to bring her refreshments, which she would not do. I then
asked her to let me take her home when she was ready to go, and the answer
was, 'No, I will not do any such thing,' and turning round she left me. I
have met her several times since. She always bows to me. Everywhere she
meets me she recognizes me pleasantly. How, did I do wrong in asking her
those privileges at the party, I having no introduction to her? I am still
in love with her."</p>
<p>After she had refused to promenade with you, and had declined to permit
you to bring her refreshments, it was pressing matters rather too far for
you to ask her to allow you to accompany her home "whenever she was ready
to go." Still, as she treats you kindly whenever you meet, it is evident
that you did not offend her very deeply. Perhaps she sees that you love
her, and does not wish to discourage you.</p>
<p>You were, no doubt, a little previous in trying to get acquainted with the
young lady. She may be giddy, but she has just about sized you up in
shape, and no doubt, if you keep on trying to love her without her
knowledge or consent, she will hit you with something, and put a Swiss
sunset over your eye. Do not yearn to win her affections all at once. Give
her twenty or thirty years in which to see your merits. You will have more
to entitle you to her respect by that time, no doubt. During that time you
may rise to be president and win a deathless name.</p>
<p>The main thing you have to look out for now, however, is to restrain
yourself from marrying people who do not want to marry you. That style of
freshness will, in thirty or forty years, wear away. If it does not,
probably the vigorous big brother of some young lady of seventeen, will
consign you to the silent tomb. Do not try to promenade with a young lady
unless she gives her consent. Do not marry anyone against her wishes. Give
the girl a chance. She will appreciate it, and even though she may not
marry you, she will permit you to sit on the fence and watch her when she
goes to marry some one else. Do not be despondent. Be courageous, and some
day, perhaps, you will get there. At present the horizon is a little bit
foggy.</p>
<p>As you say, she may be so giddy that she doesn't want steady company.
There is a glimmer of hope in that. She may be waiting till she gets over
the agony and annoyance of teething before she looks seriously into the
matters of matrimony. If that should turn out to be the case we are not
surprised. Give her a chance to grow up, and in the meantime, go and learn
the organ grinder's profession and fix yourself so that you can provide
for a family. Sometimes a girl only seventeen years old is able to discern
that a young intellectual giant like you is not going to make a dazzling
success of life as a husband. Brace up and try to forget your sorrow, N.
W. P., and you may be happy yet.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0053" id="link2H_4_0053"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE GOOD TIME COMING. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>NGORA cloth is a
Parisian novelty. Shaggy woolen goods are all the rage, and this Angora
cloth is a perfect type of shaggy materials. It is a soft, downy article,
like the fur of an Angora cat. Very showy toilets are of Angora cloth,
trimmed with velvet applique work to form passementerie.</p>
<p>Angora cloth may be fashionable, but the odor of the Angora goat is losing
favor. A herd of these goats crossed the Sierra Nevadas during the autumn,
and as soon as they got over the range, we knew it at Laramie just as well
as we knew of the earthquake shock on the 7th instant.</p>
<p>The Angora goat is very quiet in other respects; but as a fragrant shrub,
he certainly demands attention. A little band of Angora goats has been
quartered in Laramie City lately, and though they have been well behaved,
they have made them have opened the casement to let in the glorious air of
heaven. In letting in the glorious air of heaven, we have in several
instances let in a good deal of the mohair industry and some seductive
fragrance.</p>
<p>There is a glowing prospect that within the next year a bone fertilizer
mill, a soap emporium and a glue factory will have been started here; and
now, with the Angora goat looming up in the distance with his
molasses-candy horns, his erect, but tremulous and undecided tail piercing
the atmosphere, and the seductive odor peculiar to this fowl, we feel that
life in Wyoming will not, after all, be a hollow mockery. Heretofore we
have been compelled to worry along with polygamy and the odor of the
alkali flat; but times are changing now, and we will one day have all the
wonderful and complicated smells of Chicago at our door. Then will the
desert indeed blossom as the rose, and the mountain lion and "Billy the
Kid" will lie down together.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0054" id="link2H_4_0054"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MANIA FOR MARKING CLOTHES. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE most quiet,
unobtrusive man I ever knew," said Buck Bramel to a Boomekang man, "was a
young fellow who went into North Park in an early day from the Salmon
river. He was also reserved and taciturn among the miners, and never made
any suggestions if he could avoid it. He was also the most thoughtful man
about other people's comfort I ever knew.</p>
<p>"I went into the cabin one day where he was lying on the bed, and told him
I had decided to go into Laramie for a couple of weeks to do some trading.
I put my valise down on the floor and was going out, when he asked me if
my clothes were marked. I told him that I never marked my clothes. If the
washerwoman wanted to mix up my wardrobe with that of a female seminary, I
would have to stand it, I supposed.</p>
<p>"He thought I ought to mark my clothes before I went away, and said he
would attend to it for me. So he took down his revolver and put three
shots through the valise.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0161.jpg" alt="0161 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0161.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>"After that a coolness sprang up between us, and the warm friendship that
had existed so long was more or less busted. After that he marked a man's
clothes over in Leadville in the same way, only the man had them on at the
time. He seemed to have a mania on that subject, and as they had no
insanity experts at Leadville in those days, they thought the most
economical way to examine his brain would be to hang him, and then send
the brain to New York in a baking powder can.</p>
<p>"So they hung him one night to the bough of a sighing mountain pine.</p>
<p>"The autopsy was, of course, crude; but they sawed open his head and
scooped out the brain with a long handled spoon and sent it on to New
York. By some mistake or other it got mixed up with some sample specimens
of ore from 'The Brindle Tom Cat' discovery, and was sent to the assayer
in New York instead of the insanity smelter and refiner, as was intended.</p>
<p>"The result was that the assayer wrote a very touching and grieved letter
to the boys, saying that he was an old man anyway, and he wished they
would consider his gray hairs and not try to palm off their old groceries
on him. He might have made errors in his assays, perhaps—all men
were more or less liable to mistakes—but he flattered himself that
he could still distinguish between a piece of blossom rock and a can of
decomposed lobster salad, even if it was in a baking-powder can. He hoped
they would not try to be facetious at his expense any more, but use him as
they would like to be treated themselves when they got old and began to
totter down toward the silent tomb.</p>
<p>"This is why we never knew to a dead moral certainty, whether he was O. K.
in the upper story, or not."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0055" id="link2H_4_0055"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> REGARDING THE NOSE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE annals of
surgery contain many cases where the nose has been cut or torn off, and
being replaced has grown fast again, recovering its jeopardized functions.
One of the earliest, 1680, is related by the surgeon (Fioraventi) who
happened to be near by when a man's nose, having been cut off, had fallen
in the sand. He remarks that he took it up, washed it, replaced it, and
that it grew together.</p>
<p>Still, this is a little bit hazardous, and in warm weather the nose might
refuse to catch on. It would be mortifying in the extreme to have the nose
drop off in a dish of ice-cream at a large banquet. Not only would it be
disagreeable to the owner of the nose, but to those who sat near him.</p>
<p>He adds the address of the owner of the repaired nose, and requests any
doubter to go and examine for himself. Régnault, in the <i>Gazette
Salutaire</i>, 1714, tells of a patient whose nose was bitten off by a
smuggler. The owner of the nose wrapped it in a bit of cloth and sought
Régnault, who, "although the part was cold, reset it, and it became
attached."</p>
<p>This is another instance where, by being sufficiently previous, the nose
was secured and handed down to future generations. Yet, as we said before,
it is a little bit risky, and a nose of that character cannot be relied
upon at all times. After a nose has once seceded it cannot be expected to
still adhere to the old constitution with such loyalty as prior to that
change.</p>
<p>Although these cases call for more credulity than most of us have to
spare, yet later cases, published in trustworthy journals, would seem to
corroborate this. In the <i>Clinical Annals</i> and <i>Medical Gazette</i>,
of Heidelberg, 1830, there are sixteen similar cases cited by the surgeon
(Dr. Hofacker) who was appointed by the senate to attend the duels of the
students.</p>
<p>It seems that during these duels it is not uncommon for a student to slice
off the nose of his adversary, and lay it on the table until the duel is
over. After that the surgeon puts it on with mucilage and it never misses
a meal, but keeps right on growing.</p>
<p>The wax nose is attractive, but in a warm room it is apt to get excited
and wander down into the mustache, or it may stray away under the collar,
and when the proprietor goes to wipe this feature he does not wipe
anything but space. A gold nose that opens on one side and is engraved,
with hunter case and key wind, is attractive, especially on a bright day.
The coin-silver nose is very well in its way, but rather commonplace
unless designed to match the tea service and the knives and forks. In that
case, good taste is repaid by admiration and pleasure on the part of the
guest.</p>
<p>The <i>papier-maché</i> nose is durable and less liable to become cold and
disagreeable. It is also lighter and not liable to season crack.</p>
<p>False noses are made of <i>papier-maché</i>, leather, gold, silver and
wax. These last are fitted to spectacles or springs, and are difficult to
distinguish from a true nose.</p>
<p>Tycho Brahe lost his nose in a duel and wore a golden one, which he
attached to his face with cement, which he always carried about.</p>
<p>This was a good scheme, as it found him always prepared for accidents. He
could, at any moment, repair to a dressing room, or even slide into an
alley where he could avoid the prying gaze of the vulgar world, and glue
his nose on. Of course he ran the risk of getting it on crooked and a
little out of line with his other features, but this would naturally only
attract attention and fix the minds of those with whom he might be called
upon to converse. A man with his nose glued on wrong side up, could hold
the attention of an audience for hours, when any other man would seem
tedious and uninteresting.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0056" id="link2H_4_0056"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SOMETHING TOO MUCH OF THIS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Pawnee
Republican, of the 13th, innocently and impertinently, remarks: "Fred Nye,
father of Bill Aye, the humorist, is the editor of the Omaha <i>Republican,
vice</i>Datus Brooks, gone to Europe."—<i>Omaha Herald.</i></p>
<p>Will the press of the country please provide us with a few more parents?
Old Jim Nye and several other valuable fathers of ours having already
clomb the golden elevator, we now feel like a comparative orphan. The time
was when we could hold a reunion of our parents and have a pretty big
time, but it's a mighty lonely thing to stand on the shores of time and
see your parents whittled down to three or four young men no bigger than
Fred Aye, of the <i>Republican</i>.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0057" id="link2H_4_0057"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> COLOR BLINDNESS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE <i>Paper World</i>
says there's no use talking, the newspaper men of the press are to-day
becoming more and more "color blind." In other words, they have lost that
subtle flavor of description for which the public yearns. They have missed
that wonderful spice and aroma of narration which is the life of all
newspaper work.</p>
<p>We do not take this to ourself at all, but we desire before we say one
word, to make a few remarks. <i>The Boomerang</i> has been charged with
erring on the other side and coloring things a little too high. Sir Garnet
Wolseley, in a private letter to us during the late Egyptian assault and
battery, stated that if we erred at all it was on the highly colored side.</p>
<p>There is an excuse for lack of spice and all that sort of thing in the
newspaper world. The men who write for our dailies, as a rule, have to
write about two miles per day, and they ought not to be kicked if it is
not as interesting as "Uncle Tom's Cabin," or "Leaves o' Grass."</p>
<p>We have done some 900 miles of writing ourself during our short, sharp and
decisive career, and we know what we are talking about. Those things we
wrote at a time when we were spreading our graceful characters over ten
acres of paper per day, were not thrilling. They did not catch the public
eye, but were just naturally consigned to oblivion's bottomless maw.</p>
<p>Read that last sentence twice; it will do you no harm.</p>
<p>The public, it seems to us, has created a false standard of merit for the
newspaper. People take a big daily and pay $10 per year for it because it
is the biggest paper in the world, and then don't read a quarter of it.
They are doing a smart thing, no doubt, but it is killing the feverish
young men with throbbing brains, who are doing the work. Would you
consider that a large pair of shoes or a large wife should be sought for
just because you can get more material for the same price? Not much, Mary
Ann!</p>
<p>Excellence is what we seek, not bulk. Write better things and less of
them, and you will do better, and the public will be pleased to see the
change.</p>
<p>Should anyone who reads these words be suffering from an insatiable hunger
for a paper that aims at elegance of diction, high-toned logic and pink
cambric sentiment, at a moderate price, he will do well to call at this
office and look over our goods. Samples sent free on application, to any
part of the United States or Europe. We refer to Herbert Spencer, the
Laramie National Bank, and the postmaster of this city, as to our
reputation for truth and veracity.</p>
<h3> A LITTLE PREVIOUS. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>PEAKING of
elections and returns, brings back to our memory the time when it was
pretty close in a certain congressional district in Wisconsin, where W. T.
Price is now putting up a job on the Democrats.</p>
<p>In those days returns didn't come in by telegraph, but on horseback and on
foot, and it was annoying to wait for figures by which to determine the
result. At Hudson the politicians had made a pretty close estimate, but
were waiting, one evening after election, at a saloon on Buckeye street,
for something definite from Eau Claire county. The session was very dull,
and to cheer up the little Spartan hand some one suggested that old Judge
Wetherby ought to "set 'em up." Judge Wetherby was a staunch old Democrat
and had rigidly treated himself for twenty years, and just as rigidly
refused to treat anybody else. The result was that he had secured a
vigorous bloom on his own nose, but had never put the glass to his
neighbor's lips. He intimated on this occasion, however, that if he could
get encouraging news from Eau Claire for the Democrats, he would turn
loose. The party waited until midnight, and had just decided to go home,
when a travel-worn horseman rode up to the door. He was very reticent, and
as he was a stranger, no one seemed to want to open up a conversation with
him, till at last Judge Wetherby, who couldn't keep the great question of
politics out of his mind, asked him what part of the country he had come
from. "Just got in from Eau Claire county," was the reply.</p>
<p>"How did Eau Claire county go?" was the Judge's next question. "O, I don't
pay no attention to politics, but they told me it went 453 majority for
the Democrats."</p>
<p>Thereupon the judge threw his hat in the air and for the first and last
time in his life, treated the entire crowd of Republicans and Democrats
alike. It was very late when he went home, also very late when he got down
town the next day.</p>
<p>When he did come down he was surprised to find a Republican brass band
out, and the news all over the city that the Republican candidate had been
elected by several hundred majority. In the afternoon he learned that Hod
Taylor, now clergyman to Marseilles, had hired a tramp to ride into the
Buckeye saloon the previous evening and report as stated, in order to
bring about a good state of feeling on the Judge's part. Judge Wetherby,
since that time, is regarded as the most skeptical Democrat in that
congressional district, and even if he were to be assured over and over
again that his party was victorious, he would still doubt. It is such
things as these that go a long way toward encouraging a feeling of
distrust between the parties, and causes politicians to be looked upon
with great mistrust..</p>
<p>Although Mr. Taylor is now in France attending to the affairs of his
government, and trying to become familiar with the French language, he
often pauses in his work as the memory of this little incident comes over
his mind, and a hot tear falls on the report he is making out to send on
to the Secretary of State at Washington. Can it be that his hard heart is
at last touched with remorse?</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0058" id="link2H_4_0058"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> IS DUELING MURDER? </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>OMEBODY wants to
know whether dueling is murder, and we reply in clarion tones that it
depends largely on how fatal it is. Dueling with monogram note paper, at a
distance of 1,200 yards, is not murder.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0059" id="link2H_4_0059"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HEAP GONE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>NOTHER land-mark
of Laramie has gone. Another wreck has been strewn upon the sands of time.
Another gay bark has gone to pieces upon the cruel rocks, and above the
broken spars and jib-boom, and foretop gallant royal mainbrace, and
spanker-boom euchre deck, the cold, damp tide is moaning.</p>
<p>We refer to L. W. Shroeder, who recently left this place incog., also in
debt, largely, to various people of this gay and festive metropolis.</p>
<p>Laramie has been the home, at various times, of some of the most classical
dead-beats of modern times; but Shroeder was the noblest, the most grand
and colossal of dead-beats that has ever visited our shores. Born with
unusual abilities in this direction, he early learned how to enlarge and
improve upon the talents thus bestowed upon him, and here in Laramie, he
soon won a place at the front as a man who purchased everything and paid
for nothing. He had a way of approaching the grocer and the merchant that
was well calculated to deceive, and he did, in several instances, make
representations, which we now learn, were false.</p>
<p>He was, by profession, a carpenter and joiner, having learned the art
while cutting cordwood on the Missouri bottoms, near Omaha, for the
Collins Brothers. Here he rapidly won his way to the front rank, by
erecting some of the most commanding architectural ruins of which modern
wood assassination can boast. He would take a hatchet and a buck-saw and
carve out his fortune anywhere in the world, and it wouldn't cost him a
cent. He filled this whole trans-Missouri country with his fame, and his
promissory notes, and then skinned out and left us here to mourn.</p>
<p>Good-bye, Shroeder. Wherever you go, we will remember you and hope that
you may succeed in piling up a monument of indebtedness as you did here.
You were industrious and untiring in your efforts to become a great
financial wreck, and success has crowned your efforts. We will not grudge
you the glory that coagulates about your massive brow.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0060" id="link2H_4_0060"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE EDITORIAL LAMP. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE is something
unique about an editor's lamp that, enables most anyone to select it from
a large number of other lamps. It is <i>sui generis</i> and extremely
original. The large metropolitan papers use gas in the editorial rooms,
and make up for the loss of the kerosene lamp by furnishing their offices
with some other article of furniture that is equally attractive.</p>
<p><i>The Boomerang</i> lamp, especially during the election, has had its
intensity wonderfully softened and toned down through various causes. You
can take most any other lamp and trim the wick so that it will burn
squarely and not smoke; but the editorial lamp is peculiar in this
respect. The wick gets so it will burn straight when you find that it does
not burn the oil. Then you get it filled and put in a new wick.
Experimenting with this you get your fingers perfumed with coal oil, and
spill some in your lap. Then you turn it up so you can see, and as you get
a flow of thought you look up to find that you have smutted up your
chimney, and you murmur something that you are glad no one is near to
hear. When our life-record is made up and handed down to posterity, if a
generous people will kindly overlook the remarks we have made over our
lamp, and also the little extemporaneous statements made at picnics, we
will do as much for the public and make this thing as near even as
possible.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0061" id="link2H_4_0061"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DIFFICULT TO IDENTIFY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> DEAD fisherman
was taken to the San Francisco morgue the other day, with nothing by which
to identify him but his fish fine. There may be features of difference
between fish lines, but as a rule there is a long, tame sweep of monotony
about them which confuses the authorities in tracing a man's antecedents.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0062" id="link2H_4_0062"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE MAROON SAUSAGE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE maroon sausage
will be in favor this winter, as was the case last season in our best
circles. It will be caught up at the end and tied in a plain knot with
strings of the same.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0063" id="link2H_4_0063"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TESTIMONIALS OF REGARD. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">F</span>RIDAY was a large
day in the office of this paper. A delegation, consisting of Ed. Walsh and
J. J. Clarke, train dispatchers of this division of the Union Pacific
road, waited on the editor hereof with two tokens of their esteem. One,
consisting of a bird that had been taxidermed at Wyoming station by the
agent, Mr. Gulliher, the great corn-canner of the west, aided by another
man who has, up to this date, evaded the authorities. As soon as he is
captured, his name will be given to the public. The bird is mainly
constructed on the duck plan, with web feet and spike tail. The material
gave out, however, and the artist was obliged to complete the bird by
putting an eagle's head on him. This gives the winged king of birds a low,
squatty and plebian cast of countenance, and bothers the naturalist in
determining its class and in diagnosing the case. With the piercing, keen
eye of the eagle, and the huge Roman nose peculiar to that bird, coupled
with the pose of the duck, we have a magnificent combination in the way of
an ornithological specimen. Science would be tickled to death to wrestle
with this feathered anomaly.</p>
<p>The eagle looks as though he would like to soar first-rate if it were not
for circumstances over which he has no control, while the other portions
of his person would suggest that he would be glad to paddle around an hour
or two in the yielding-mud. We have placed this singular circumstance
where he can look down upon us in a reproachful way, while we write
abstruse articles upon the contiguity of the hence.</p>
<p>The same committee also presented a bottle of what purported to be ginger
ale. It was wrapped up in a newspaper, and the cork was held in place by a
piece of copper wire. As we do not drink anything whatever now, we
presented it to the composing room, and told the boys to sail in and have
a grand debauch.</p>
<p>Generosity is always rewarded, sooner or later. The office boy took it
into the composing room and partially opened it. Then it opened itself,
with a loud report that shook the dome of <i>The Boomerang</i> office, and
pied a long article on yellow fever in Texas. Almost immediately after it
opened itself, it escaped into space. At least it filled the space box of
one of the cases full.</p>
<p>There was only about a spoonful left in the bottle, and no one felt as
though he wanted to rob the rest, so it stands there yet. If Mr. Gulliher
could put up his goods in such shape as to avoid this high degree of
effervescence, he would succeed; but in canning corn and bottling beer, he
has so far put too much vigor into the goods, and when you open them, they
escape almost immediately.</p>
<p>While we are grateful for the kind and thoughtful spirit shown, we regret
that we were unable to test the merits of the beverage without collecting
it from the sky, where it now is.</p>
<p>It looks to us as though some day Mr. Gulliher, while engaged in canning
and bottling some of his gaseous goods, would be lifted over into the
middle of the holidays, and we warn him against being too reckless, or he
will certainly meander through the atmosphere sometime, and the place that
knew him once will know him no more forever.</p>
<p>About two o'clock the following special was received:</p>
<p>[Special to the Boomerang.]</p>
<p>"[D. H. acct. charity.]</p>
<p>"Wyoming, October 27.</p>
<p>"Dear Bill Nye:</p>
<p>"We made the run from Laramie to Wyoming in one hour. Gulliher says, do
not open that bottle; it might go off. He sent you the wrong bottle by
mistake. It is a preparation for annihilating tramps, and produces instant
dissolution. We, after careful inquiry and rigid investigation, find that
the bird is filled with dynamite, nitroglycerine, etc.—in fact is an
'infernal machine,' and is set to go off at 3:30 this P.M."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0064" id="link2H_4_0064"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CHINESE COMPOSITOR </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Chinese
compositor cannot sit at his case as our printers do, but must walk from
one case to another constantly, as the characters needed cover such a
large number, that they cannot be put into anything like the space used in
the English newspaper office. In setting up an ordinary piece of
manuscript, the Chinese printer will waltz up and down the room for a few
moments, and then go down stairs for a line of lower case. Then he takes
the elevator and goes up into the third story after some caps, and then
goes out into the woodshed for a handful of astonishers.</p>
<p>The successful Chinese compositor doesn't need to be so very intelligent,
but he must be a good pedestrian. He may work and walk around over the
building all day to set up a stick full, and then half the people in this
county couldn't read it, after all.</p>
<p>"Clarke, Potter and Walsh."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0065" id="link2H_4_0065"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SNOWED UNDER </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span> E have met the
enemy, and we are his'n.</p>
<p>We have made our remarks, and we are now ready to listen to the gentleman
from New York. We could have dug out, perhaps, and explained about New
York, but when almost every state in the Union rose up and made certain
statements yesterday, we found that the job of explaining this matter
thoroughly, would be wearisome and require a great deal of time.</p>
<p>We do not blame the Democracy for this. We are a little surprised,
however, and grieved. It will interfere with our wardrobe this winter.
With an overcoat on Wyoming, a plug hat on Iowa, a pair of pantaloons on
Pennsylvania, and boots on the general result, it looks now as though we
would probably go through the winter wrapped in a bed-quilt, and profound
meditation.</p>
<p>We intended to publish an extra this morning, but the news was of such a
character, that we thought we would get along without it. What was the use
of publishing an extra with a Republican majority only in Red Buttes.</p>
<p>The cause of this great Democratic freshet in New York yesterday—but
why go into details, we all have an idea why it was so. The number of
votes would seem to indicate that there was a tendency toward Democracy
throughout the State.</p>
<p>Now, in Pennsylvania, if you will look over the returns carefully—but
why should we take up your valuable time offering an explanation of a
political matter of the past.</p>
<p>Under the circumstances some would go and yield to the soothing influences
of the maddening bowl, but we do not advise that. It would only furnish
temporary relief, and the recoil would be unpleasant.</p>
<p>We resume our arduous duties with a feeling of extreme <i>ennui</i>, and
with that sense of surprise and astonishment that a man does who has had a
large brick block fall on him when he was not expecting it. Although we
feel a little lonely to-day—having met but a few Republicans on the
street, who were obliged to come out and do their marketing—we still
hope for the future.</p>
<p>The grand old Republican party—</p>
<p>But that's what we said last week. It sounds hollow now and meaningless,
somehow, because our voice is a little hoarse, and we are snowed under so
deep that it is difficult for us to enunciate.</p>
<p>Now about those bets. If the parties to whom we owe bets—and we owe
most everybody—will just agree to take the stakes, and not go into
details; not stop to ask us about the state of our mind, and talk about
how it was done, we don't care. We don't wish to have this thing explained
at all. We are not of an inquiring turn of mind. Just plain facts are good
enough for us, without any harrowing details. In the meantime we are going
to work to earn some more money to bet on the next election. Judge Folger,
and others, come over and see us when you have time, and we will talk this
matter over. Mr. B. Butler, we wish we had your longevity. With a robust
constitution, we find that most any man can wear out cruel fate and get
there at last. We do not feel so angry as we do grieved and surprised. We
are pained to see the American people thus betray our confidence, and
throw a large wardrobe into the hands of the relentless foe.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0066" id="link2H_4_0066"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ROUGH ON OSCAR. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>OMEBODY shook a
log-cabin bed-quilt at Oscar Wilde, when he was in this country, and it
knocked him so crazy for two days, that a man had to lead him around town
by a bed-cord to prevent him from butting his head against a lump of
oat-meal mush, and scattering his brains all over the Union.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0067" id="link2H_4_0067"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE POSTAL CARD. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>O one denies that
the postal card is a great thing, and yet it makes most people mad to get
one This is because we naturally feel sensitive about having our
correspondence open to the eye of the postmaster and postal clerk. Yet
they do not read them. Postal employés hate a postal card as cordially as
anyone else. If they were banished and had nothing to read but a package
of postal cards, or a foreign book of statistics, they would read the
statistics. This wild hunger for postal cards on the part of postmasters
is all a myth. When the writer don't care who sees his message, that
knocks the curiosity out of those who handle those messages. A man who
would read a postal card without being compelled to by some stringent
statute, must be a little deranged. When you receive one, you say, "Here's
a message of so little importance that the writer didn't care who saw it.
I don't care much for it, myself." Then you look it over and lay it away
and forget it. Do you think that the postmaster is going to wear out his
young life in devouring literature that the sendee don't feel proud of
when he receives it? Hay, nay.</p>
<p>During our official experience we have been placed where we could have
read postal cards time and again, and no one but the All-seeing Eye would
have detected it; but we have controlled ourself and closed our eyes to
the written message, refusing to take advantage of the confidence reposed
in us by our government, and those who thus trusted us with their secrets.
All over our great land every moment of the day or night these little
cards are being silently scattered, breathing loving words inscribed with
a hard lead pencil, and shedding information upon sundered hearts, and
they are as safe as though they had never been breathed.</p>
<p>They are safer, in most instances, because they cannot be read by anybody
in the whole world.</p>
<p>That is why it irritates us to have some one open up a conversation by
saying, "You remember what that fellow wrote me from Cheyenne on that
postal card of the 25th, and how he rounded me up for not sending him
those goods?" Now we can't keep all those things in our head. It requires
too much of a strain to do it on the salary we receive. A man with a very
large salary and a tenacious memory might keep run of the postal
correspondence in a small office, but we cannot do it. We are not
accustomed to it, and it rattles and excites us.</p>
<h3> A CARD. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> HAVE just
received a letter from my friend, Bill Nye, of The Laramie City Boomerang,
wherein he informs me that he is engaged to the beautiful and accomplished
Lydia E. Pinkham, of "Vegetable Compounds" fame, and that the wedding will
take place on next Christmas. To be sure, I am expected at the wedding,
and I'll be on hand, if I can secure a clean shirt by that time, and the
roads ain't too bad. But I'm somewhat at a loss what to get as a suitable
present, as Bill informs me in a postscript to his letter, that gifts of
bibles, albums, nickel-plated pickle dishes, chromos with frames, and the
like, will not be in order, as it is utterly impossible to pawn articles
of this kind in Laramie City.—<i>The Bohemian</i>.</p>
<p>We are sorry that the above letter, which we dashed off in a careless
moment, has been placed before the public, as later developments have
entirely changed the aspect of the matter; the engagement between ourself
and Lydia having been rudely broken by the young lady herself. She has
returned the solitaire filled ring, and henceforth we can be nothing more
to each other than friends. The promise which bade fair to yield so much
joy in the future has been ruthlessly yanked asunder, and two young hearts
must bleed through the coming years. Far be it from us to say aught that
would reflect upon the record of Miss Pinkham.</p>
<p>It would only imperil her chances in the future, and deny her the sweet
satisfaction of gathering in another guileless sucker like us. The truth,
however, cannot be evaded, that Lydia is no longer young. She is now in
the sere and yellow leaf. The gurgle of girlhood, and the romping careless
grace of her childhood, are matters of ancient history alone.</p>
<p>We might go on and tell how one thing brought on another, till the quarrel
occurred, and hot words and an assault and battery led to this
estrangement, but we will not do it. It would be wrong for a great, strong
man to take advantage of his strength and the public press, to speak
disparagingly of a young thing like Lyd. No matter how unreasonably she
may have treated us, we are dumb and silent on this point. Journalists who
have been invited, and have purchased costly wedding presents, may ship
the presents <i>by</i> express, prepaid, and we will accept them, and
struggle along with our first great heart trouble, while Lydia goes on in
her mad career.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0068" id="link2H_4_0068"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WHY WE ARE NOT GAY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T was the policy
of this paper, from its inception, whatever that is, to frown upon and
discourage fraud wherever the latter has shown its hideous front. In doing
so, we have simply done our duty, and our reward has been great, partially
in the shape of money, and partially in the shape of conscious rectitude
and new subscribers.</p>
<p>We shall continue this course until we are able to take a trip to Europe,
or until some large man comes into the office with a masked battery and
blows us out through the window into the mellow haze of an eternal summer
time.</p>
<p>We have been waiting until the present time for about 100,000 shade trees
in this town to grow, and as they seem to be a little reluctant about
doing so, and the season being now far advanced, we feel safe in saying
that they are dead. They were purchased a year ago of a nursery that
purported to be O. K., and up to that time no one had ever breathed a word
against it. Now, however, unless those trees are replaced, we shall be
compelled to publish the name of that nursery in large, glaring type, to
the world. The trees looked a little under the weather when they arrived,
but we thought we could bring them out by nursing them. They stood up in
the spring breeze like a seed wart, however, and refused to leave. They
are still obstinate. The agent concluded to leave, but the trees did not.
We feel hurt about it, because people come here from a distance and laugh
at our hoe-handle forest. They speak jeeringly of our wilderness of
deceased elms, and sneer at our defunct magnolias. We hate to cast a
reflection on the house, but we also dislike to be played for Chinamen
when we are no such thing.</p>
<p>We prefer to sit in the shade of the luxuriant telegraph pole, and stroll
at set of sun amid the umbrageous shadows of the barbed wire fence,
through which the sunlight glints and glitters to and fro.</p>
<p>Nothing saddens us like death in any form, and 100,000 dead trees
scattered through the city, sticking their limbs up into the atmosphere
like a variety actress, bears down upon us with the leaden weight of an
ever-present gloom.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0069" id="link2H_4_0069"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SCIENTIFIC. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Boomerang
reporter, sent ont to find the North Pole, eighteen months ago, has just
been heard from. An exploring party recently found portions of his remains
in latitude 4-11-44, longitude sou'est by sou' from the pole, and near the
remains the following fragment of a diary:</p>
<p>July 1,1881.—Have just been out searching for a sunstroke and signs
of a thaw. Saw nothing but ice floe and snow as far as the eye could
reach. Think we will have snow this evening unless the wind changes.</p>
<p>July 2.—Spent the forenoon exploring to the northwest for right of
way for a new equatorial and North Pole railroad that I think would be of
immense value to commerce. The grade is easy, and the expense would be
slight. Ate my last dog to-day. Had intended him for the 4th, but got too
hungry, and ate him raw with vinegar; I wish I was at home eating
Boomerang paste.</p>
<p>July 3.—We had quite a frost last night, and it looks this morning
as though the corn and small fruits must have suffered. It is now two
weeks since the last of the crew died and left me alone. Ate the leather
ends of my suspenders to-day for dinner. I did not need the suspenders,
anyway, for by tightening up my pants I find they will stay on all right,
and I don't look for any ladies to call, so that even if my pants came off
by some oversight or other, nobody would be shocked.</p>
<p>July 4.—Saved up some tar roofing and a bottle of mucilage for my
Fourth of July dinner, and gorged myself to-day. The exercises were very
poorly attended and the celebration rather a failure. It is clouding up in
the west, and I'm afraid we're going to have snow. Seems to me we're
having an all-fired late spring here this year.</p>
<p>July 5.—Didn't drink a drop yesterday. It was the quietest Fourth I
ever put in. I never felt so little remorse over the way I celebrated as I
do to-day. I didn't do a thing yesterday that I was ashamed of except to
eat the remainder of a box of shoe blacking for supper. To-day I ate my
last boot-heel, stewed. Looks as though we might have a hard winter.</p>
<p>July 6.—Feel a little apprehension about something to eat. My credit
is all right here, but there is no competition, and prices are therefore
very high. Ice, however, is still firm. This would be a good ice-cream
country if there were any demand, but the country is so sparsely settled
that a man feels as lonesome here as a green-backer at a presidential
election. Ate a pound of cotton waste soaked in machine oil, to-day. There
is nothing left for to-morrow but ice-water and an old pocket-book for
dinner. Looks as though we might have snow.</p>
<p>July 7.—This is a good, cool place to spend the summer if provisions
were more plenty. I am wearing a seal-skin undershirt with three woolen
overshirts and two bear-skin vests, to-day, and when the dew begins to
fall, I have to put on my buffalo ulster to keep off the night air. I wish
I was home. It seems pretty lonesome here since the other boys died. I do
not know what I will get for dinner to-morrow, unless the neighbors bring
in something. A big bear is coming down the hatchway, as I write. I wish I
could eat him. It would be the first square meal for two months. It is,
however, a little mixed whether I will eat him or he eat me. It will be a
cold day for me if he—————</p>
<p>Here the diary breaks off abruptly, and from the chewed up appearance of
the book, we are led to entertain a horrible fear as to his safety.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0191.jpg" alt="0191 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0191.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0070" id="link2H_4_0070"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE REVELATION RACKET IN UTAH. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>UR esteemed and
extremely connubial contemporary, the <i>Deseret News</i>, says in a
recent editorial:</p>
<p>"The Latter day Saints will rejoice to learn that the' vacancies which
have existed in the quorums of the twelve apostles and the first seven
presidents of seventies are now filled. During the conference recently
held, Elder Abram H. Cannon was unanimously chosen to be one of the first
seven presidents of seventies, and he was ordained to that office on
Monday, October 9th. Subsequently, the Lord, by revelation through His
servant, Prest. John Taylor, designated by name, Brothers George Teasdale
and Heber J. Grant, to be ordained to the apostleship, and Brother Seymour
B. Young to fill the remaining vacancy in the presidency of the seventies.
These brethren were ordained on Monday, October 16th, the two apostles,
under the hands of the first presidency and twelve, and the other under
the hands of the twelve and the presidency of the seventies."</p>
<p>Now, that's a convenient system of politics and civil service. When there
is a vacancy, the president, John Taylor, goes into his closet and has a
revelation which settles it all right. If the man appointed vicariously by
the Lord is not in every way satisfactory, he may be discharged by the
same process. Instead, therefore, of being required to rally a large force
of his friends to aid him in getting an appointment, the aspirant arranges
solely with the party who runs the revelation business. It will be seen at
a glance, therefore, that the man who can get the job of revelating in
Zion, has it pretty much his own way. We would not care who made the laws
of Utah if we could do its revelating at so much per revelate.</p>
<p>Think of the power it gives a man in a community of blind believers.
Imagine, if you please, the glorious possibilities in store for the man
who can successfully reveal the word of the Lord in an easy,
extemporaneous manner on five minutes notice.</p>
<p>This prerogative does not confine itself to politics alone. The impromptu
revelator of the Jordan has revelations when he wants to evade the payment
of a bill. He gets a divine order also if he desires to marry a beautiful
maid or seal the new school ma'am to himself. He has a leverage which he
can bring to bear upon the people of his diocese at all times, even more
potent than the press, and it does not possess the drawbacks that a
newspaper does. You can run an aggressive paper if you want to in this
country, and up to the time of the funeral you have a pretty active and
enjoyable time, but after the grave has been filled up with the clods of
the valley and your widow has drawn her insurance, you naturally ask,
"What is the advantage to be gained by this fearless style of journalism?"</p>
<p>Still, even the inspired racket has its drawbacks. Last year, a little
incident occurred in a Mormon family down in southern Utah, which weighed
about nine pounds, and when the <i>ex officio</i> husband, who had been
absent two years, returned, he acted kind of wild and surprised, somehow,
and as he went through the daily round of his work he could be seen
counting his fingers back and forth and looking at the almanac, and adding
up little amounts on the side of the barn with a piece of red chalk.</p>
<p>Finally, one of the inspired mob of that part of the vineyard thought it
was about time to get a revelation and go down there, so he did so. He
sailed up to the <i>de facto</i> husband and <i>quasi</i> parent and
solemnly straightened up some little irregularities as to dates, but the
revelation was received with disdain, and the revelator was sent home in
an old ore sack and buried in a peach basket.</p>
<p>Sometimes there is, even in Utah, a manifestation of such irreverence and
open hostility to the church that it makes us shudder.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0071" id="link2H_4_0071"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SAGE BRUSH TONIC. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>E have a scheme on
hand which we believe will be even more remunerative than the newspaper
business, if successfully carried out. It is to construct a national
remedy and joy-to-the-world tonic, composed of the carefully expressed
juice of our Rocky mountain tropical herb, known as the sage brush. Sage
brush is known to possess wonderful medicinal properties. It is bitter
enough to act as a tonic and to convey the idea of great strength. Our
idea would be to have our portrait on each bottle, to attract attention
and aid in effecting a cure. We have noticed that the homeliest men
succeed best as patent medicine inventors, and this would be right in our
hand.</p>
<p>The tonic could be erected at a cost of three cents per bottle, delivered
on the cars here, and after we got fairly to going we might probably
reduce even that price. At one dollar per bottle, we could realize a
living profit, and still do mankind a favor and turn loose a boon to
suffering humanity. It will make the hair grow, as everyone knows, and it
will stir up a torpid liver equally well. It just loves to get after
anything that is dormant. It might even help the Democratic party, if it
had a chance.</p>
<p>Our plan would be to advertise liberally, for we know the advantages of
judicious advertising. Only last week a man on South C street had three
cows to sell, which fact he set forth in this paper at the usual rates.
Before he went to bed that evening the cows were sold and people were
filing in the front gate like a row of men at the general delivery of the
postoffice. The next morning a large mob of people was found camped out in
front of the house, and the railroad was giving excursion rates to those
who wanted to come in from the country to buy these cows that had been
sold the day before.</p>
<p>We just quote this to show how advertising stirs the mighty deep and wakes
people up. We would make propositions to our brethren of the press by
which they could make some money out of the ad, too, instead of telling
them to put it in the middle of the telegraph page, surrounded by pure
reading matter, daily and weekly till forbid and pay when we get ready.</p>
<p>Publishers will find that we are not that kind of people. We shall aim to
do the square thing, and will throw in an electrotype, showing us just
discovering the sage brush, and exclaiming "Eureka," while we prance
around like a Zulu on the war path. Underneath this we will write, "Yours
for Health," or words to that effect, and everything will be pleasant and
nice.</p>
<p>The Sage Brush Tonic will be made of two grades, one will be for
prohibition states and the other for states where prohibition is not in
general use. The prohibition tonic will contain, in addition to the sage
brush, a small amount of tansy and Jamaica ginger, to give it a bead and
prevent it from fermenting. A trial bottle will be sent to subscribers of
this paper, also a fitting little poem to be read at the funeral. We will
also publish death notice of those using the tonic, at one-half rates.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0072" id="link2H_4_0072"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> LAME FROM HIS BERTH. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> SAD-EYED man, the
other night, fell out of his bed into the aisle of a Pullman car and
skinned his knee. He now claims that he was lame from his berth. When he
passes Carbon he will be hung by request.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0073" id="link2H_4_0073"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE PUBLIC PRINTER. </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0074" id="link2H_4_0074"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<p></p>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">V</span>ERY few of the
great mass of humanity know who makes the beautiful</p>
<p>public document, with its plain, black binding and wealth of statistics.
Few stop to think that hidden away from the great work-a-day world, with
eyelids heavy and red, and with finger-nails black with antimony, toiling
on at his case hour after hour, the public printer, during the sessions of
Congress, is setting up the thrilling chapters of the Congressional
Record, and between times yanking the Washington press backward and
forward, with his suspenders hanging down, as he prints this beautiful
sea-side library of song.</p>
<p>We are too prone to read that which gives us pleasure without thought of
the labor necessary to its creation. We glide gaily through the
Congressional Record, pleased with its more attractive features, viz: its
ayes and noes—little recking that Sterling P. Rounds, the public
printer, stands in the subdued gaslight with his stick half full, trying
to decipher the manuscript of some reticent representative, whose speech
was yesterday delivered to the janitor as he polished the porcelain
cuspidor of Congress.</p>
<p>This is a day and age of the world when men take that which comes to them,
and do not stop to investigate the pain and toil it costs. They never
inquire into the mystery of manufacture, or try to learn the details of
its construction. Most of our libraries are replete with books which we
have received at the hands of a generous government, and yet we treat
those volumes with scorn and contumely. We jeer at the footsore bugologist
who has chased the large, green worm from tree to tree, in order that we
may be wise. We speak sneeringly of the man who stuffs the woodtick, and
paints the gaudy wings of the squash-bug that we may know how often she
orates.</p>
<p>Year after year the entomologist treads the same weary road with his
bait-box tied to his waist, wooing to his laboratory the army-worm and the
sheep-scab larvæ in order that we, poor particles on the surface of the
great earth, may know how these minute creatures rise, flourish and decay.</p>
<p>Then the public printer throws in his case, rubs his finger and thumb over
a lump of alum, takes a chew of tobacco, and puts in type these words of
wisdom from the lips of gray-bearded savants, that knowledge may be
scattered over the broad republic. Patiently he goes on with the click of
type, anon in an absorbed way, while we, gay, thoughtless mortals, wear
out the long summer day at a basket picnic, with deft fingers selecting
the large red ant from our cold ham.</p>
<p>Thus these books are made which come to us wrapped in manilla and franked
by the man we voted for last fall. Beautiful lithographs, illustrating the
different stages of hog cholera, deck their pages. Rich oil paintings of
gaudy tobacco worms chase each other from preface to errata. Magnificent
chromos of the foot and mouth disease appeal to us from page after page,
and statistics boil out between them, showing what per cent of invalid or
convalescent animals was sent abroad, and what per cent was worked into
oleomargarine and pressed corn beef.</p>
<p>And what becomes of all this wealth of information—this mammoth
aggregation of costly knowledge?</p>
<p>Cast ruthlessly away by a trifling, shallow, frivolous and freckle-minded
race!</p>
<p>It is no more than right that Sterling P. Rounds should know this. How it
will gall his proud heart to know how his beautiful books, and his chatty
and spicy Congressional Record are treated by a jeering, heartless throng!
Do you suppose that I would perspire over doubtful copy night after night,
and then tread a job printing press all the next day printing books at
which the bloodless, soulless public sneered, and the broad-browed talent
of a cruel generation spit upon? Not exactly.</p>
<p>I have a moderate amount of patience and self-control, but I am free to
say right here before the world, that if I had been in Mr. Rounds' place,
and had at great cost erected a scientific work upon "The Rise and Fall of
Botts in America," and a flippant nation of scoffers had utilized that
volume to press autumn leaves and scraggly ferns in, I would rise in my
proud might and mash the forms with a mallet, I would jerk the lever of
the Washington press into the middle of the effulgent hence. I would kick
over my case, wipe the roller on the frescoed walls, and feed my
statistics, to the hungry flames.</p>
<p>No publisher has ever been treated more shabbily; no compositor has, in
the history of literature, been more rudely disregarded and derided.</p>
<p>Think of this, dear reader, when you look carelessly over the brief but
wonderful career of the hop-louse, or with apparent <i>ennui</i> dawdle
through the treatise on colic among silk-worms, and facial neuralgia among
fowls.</p>
<p>This will not only please Mr. Rounds, the young and struggling compositor,
but it will gratify and encourage all the friends of American progress and
the lovers of learning throughout our whole land.</p>
<h3> A REPRODUCTIVE COMET. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>N exchange
remarks: "The present comet in the eastern sky, which can be distinctly
seen by everyone at early morning, is certainly the most remarkable one of
the modern comets. Professor Lewis Swift, director of the Warner
observatory, Rochester, New York, states that the comet grazed the sun so
closely as to cause great disturbance, so much so, that it has divided
into no less than eight separate parts, all of which can be distinctly
seen by a good telescope. There is only one other instance on record,
where a comet has divided, that one being Biella's comet of 1846, which
separated into two parts. Applications have been made to Mr. H. H. Warner,
by parties who have noticed these cometary offshoots, claiming the $200
prize for each one of them. Whether the great comet will continue to
produce a brood of smaller comets remains to be seen."</p>
<p>It is certainly to be hoped that it will not. If the comet is going to
multiply and replenish the earth, the average inhabitant had better
proceed in the direction of the tall timber.</p>
<p>It excites and rattles us a good deal now to look out for what comets we
have on hand; but that is mild, compared with what we will experience if
the heavens are to be filled every spring with new laid comets, and comets
that haven't got their eyes open yet. Our astronomers are able to figure
on the old parent comets, and they know when to look for them, too; but if
twins are to burst upon our vision occasionally, and little bob-tail
orphan comets are to float around through space, we will have to kind of
get up and seek out another solar system, where we will be safe from this
comet foundling asylum.</p>
<p>Instead of the calm sky of night, flooded with the glorious effulgence of
the silvery moon, surrounded by the twinkling stars, the coming sky will
be one grand Fourth of July exhibit of fireworks, with a thousand little
disobedient comets coming from the four corners of heaven in search of the
milky way.</p>
<p>Possibly science may be wrong. We have known science to make bad little
breaks of that kind, and when it advertised a particular show to come off,
it was delayed by a wreck on the main track, or something of that kind, so
that people were disappointed. Let us hope that this is the case now, and
that the comets now loafing around through space with their coat tails on
fire will not become parents. It would be scandalous.</p>
<h3> A LITTLE VAGUE. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> TALL,
pleasant-looking gentleman, with quick, restless eyes, and the air of a
man who had been in a newspaper office before, dropped into The Boomerang
science department yesterday, and asked the pale, scholarly blossom, who
sat writing an epic on the alarming prevalence of pip and its future as a
national evil, if he could be permitted to read the <i>Deseret News</i>.</p>
<p>The scientist said certainly, and after a long and weary tussle got the
Mormon placque out of the ruins.</p>
<p>"I used to be foreman on the <i>Deseret News</i>," said the gentleman with
the penetrating eye; "I worked on the News two years, and had a case on
the <i>Tribune</i>. I've been foreman of thirty-seven papers during my
life, but my most unfortunate experience was on the <i>Deseret News</i>. I
wanted the paper just now to see if they were still running an ad. that I
had some trouble with when I was there.</p>
<p>"It was a contract we had with Dr. Balshazzer to advertise his Blue Eyed
Forget-me Not Perfume, Dr. Balshazzer's Red Tar Worm Buster, and Dr.
Balshazzer's Baled Brain Food and Tolurockandryeandcodliveroil. The Blue
Eyed Forget-me Not Perfume was to go solid in long primer, following pure
reading matter eod in daily and eowtf weekly. The Red Tar Worm Buster was
to go in nonpareil leaded, 192I.T.thFth98weow3mo, and repeat; and the
Baled Brain Food and Tolurock-andryecodliveroil was a six-inch electrotype
to go in on third page, following pure original humorous matter, with six
full head lines d&weod oct9tf, set in reading type similar to copy;
these to be inserted between pure religious news, with no other
advertising within four miles of the electro, or the reading notices.</p>
<p>"At the same time we were running old Monkeywrench's Kidney Scraper on the
same kind of a contract. The business manager did not remember this when
we took the contract, so that as soon as we began to run the two there was
a collision between the Tolurockandryeandcodliver-oil and the Kidney
Scraper right off. I spoke to the business manager about it, and he was
puzzled. He didn't exactly know what it was best to do under the
circumstances, and he hated to lose old Balshazzer's whole trade, for he
wouldn't run any of his ads unless he would take them all according to his
contract.</p>
<p>"We tried to get him to let us run the BlueEyed Forget-me Not Perfume,
lapr9d&wly deod&wly 10:2t-eowtf; the Bed Tar Worm Buster, dol3 4t
da22tf aprlo-ly dol3tf, and the Brain Food and Tolurockandryecodliveroil
mchl8*ly jun4dtf&dangl8@gft>*&Sylds30tf&rsvpeod$, but he
wouldn't do it.</p>
<p>"I displayed his ad. top of column adjoining humorous column with three
line readers and astonishers without advertising marks or signs according
to copy and instructions to foreman, all omissions or errors to be subject
to fine and imprisonment. They were to go pdq $eoy*Octp&s* and they
were to be double leaded and headed with italic caps. Still I said it had
been some time since I saw the contract and I had been suffering with
brain fever six months in jail and possibly my memory might be defective.
I would go over it again and see if I was right.</p>
<p>"The electrophones were to be blown in the bottle and the readers were to
be set in lower case slugs with guarantee of good faith and Rough on Rats
would not die in the house. Use Pinkham's Sozodont for itching, freckles,
bunions and croup. It saved my life. My good woman, why are you bilious
with em quads in solid minion. Eureka Jumbo Baking Powder will not crack
or fade in any climate sent on three months trial in leaded brevier quoins
and all wool column rules warranted to cure rheumatism and army worms or
money refunded. To be adjoining selected miscellany or fancy brass dashes
marked eodsyld&w*!*?—" At this moment a dark browed man came in
and told us that the young man was his charge and on his way to Mount
Pleasant asylum for the insane and that we would have to excuse the
intrusion. After subscribing for the paper and asking us if we had heard
from Ohio, he went.</p>
<p>The scientist said afterward that he found it difficult to follow the
young man in some of his statements and that he was just going to ask him
to go over that again and say it slower, when the Mount Pleasant man came
in and interrupted the flow of conversation.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0075" id="link2H_4_0075"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SAD DESTRUCTION. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE came very
near being a holocaust in this office on Monday. An absent-minded
candidate for the legislature lit his cigar and gently threw the match in
the waste basket. Shortly after that we felt a grateful warmth stealing up
our back and melting the rubber in our suspenders. The fire was promptly
put under control by our editorial fire department, but the basket is no
longer fit to hold a large word.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0076" id="link2H_4_0076"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE IMMEDIATE REVOLTER </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>YOMING has
recently been a great sufferer, mainly through the carrying of revolvers
in the caboose of the overalls. There is no more need of carrying a
revolver in Wyoming than there is of carrying an upright piano in the coat
tail pocket. Those who carry revolvers generally die by the revolver, and
he who agitates the six-shooter, by the six-shooter shall his blood be
shed. When a man carries a gun he does so because he has said or done
something for which he expects to be attacked, so it is safe to say that
when a man goes about our peaceful streets, loaded, he has been doing
some, little trick or other, and has in advance prepared himself for a
Smith-&-Wesson matinee. The other class of men who suffer from the
revolver comprises the white-livered and effeminate parties who ought to
be arrested for wearing men's clothes, and who never shoot anybody except
by accident. Fortunately they sometimes shoot themselves, and then the
fool-killer puts his coat on and rests half an hour. We have been writing
these things and obituaries alternately for several years, and yet there
is no falling off in the mortality. For every man who is righteously
slain, there are about a million law-abiding men, women and children
murdered. Eternity's parquette is filled with people who got there by the
self-cocking revolver route.</p>
<p>A man works twenty years to become known as a scholar, a newspaper man and
a gentleman, while the illiterate murderer springs into immediate
notoriety in a day, and the widow of his victim cannot even get her life
insurance. These things are what make people misanthropic and tenacious of
their belief in a hell.</p>
<p>If revolvers could not be sold for less than $500 a piece, with a
guarantee on the part of the vendee, signed by good sureties, that he
would support the widows and orphans, you would see more longevity lying
around loose, and western cemeteries would cease to roll up such mighty
majorities.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0077" id="link2H_4_0077"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE SECRET OF HEALTH. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>EALTH journals are
now asserting, that to maintain a sound constitution you should lie only
on the right side. The health journals may mean well enough; but what are
you going to do if you are editing a Democratic paper?</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0078" id="link2H_4_0078"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HOUSEHOLD RECIPES. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>O remove oils,
varnishes, resins, tar, oyster soup, currant jelly, and other selections
from the bill of fare, use benzine, soap and chloroform cautiously with
whitewash brush and garden hose. Then hang on wood pile to remove the
pungent effluvia of the benzine.</p>
<p>To clean ceilings that have been smoked by kerosene lamps, or the
fragrance from fried salt pork, remove the ceiling, wash thoroughly with
borax, turpentine and rain water, then hang on the clothes line to dry.
Afterward pulverize and spread over the pie plant bed for spring wear.</p>
<p>To remove starch and roughness from flatirons, hold the iron on a large
grindstone for twenty minutes or so, then wipe off carefully with a rag.
To make this effective, the grindstone should be in motion while the iron
is applied. Should the iron still stick to the goods when in use, spit on
it.</p>
<p>To soften water for household purposes, put in an ounce of quicklime in a
certain quantity of water. If it is not sufficient, use less water or more
quicklime. Should the immediate lime continue to remain deliberate, lay
the water down on a stone and pound it with a base ball club.</p>
<p>To give relief to a burn, apply the white of an egg. The yolk of the egg
may be eaten or placed on the shirt bosom, according to the taste of the
person. If the burn should occur on a lady, she may omit the last
instruction.</p>
<p>To wash black silk stockings, prepare a tub of lather, composed of tepid
rain water and white soap, with a little ammonia. Then stand in the tub
till dinner is ready. Roll in a cloth to dry. Do not wring, but press the
water out. This will necessitate the removal of the stockings.</p>
<p>If your hands are badly chapped, wet them in warm water, rub them all over
with Indian meal, then put on a coat of glycerine and keep them in your
pockets for ten days. If you have no pockets convenient, insert them in
the pocket of a friend.</p>
<p>An excellent liniment for toothache or neuralgia, is made of sassafras,
oil of organum and a half ounce of tincture of capsicum, with half a pint
of alcohol. Soak nine yards of red flannel in this mixture, wrap it around
the head and then insert the head in a haystack till death comes to your
relief.</p>
<p>To remove scars or scratches from the limbs of a piano, bathe the limb in
a solution of tepid water and tincture of sweet oil. Then apply a strip of
court plaster, and put the piano out on the lawn for the children to play
horse with.</p>
<p>Woolen goods may be nicely washed if you put half an ox gall into two
gallons of tepid water. It might be well to put the goods in the water
also. If the mixture is not strong enough, put in another ox gall. Should
this fail to do the work, put in the entire ox, reserving the tail for
soup. The ox gall is comparatively useless for soup, and should not be
preserved as an article of diet.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0079" id="link2H_4_0079"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WHAT IS LITERATURE? </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> SQUASH-NOSED
scientist from away up the creek, asks, "What is literature!" Cast your
eye over these logic-imbued columns, you sun-dried savant from the remote
precincts. Drink at the never-failing Boomerang springs of forgotten lore,
you dropsical wart of a false and erroneous civilization. Read our
"Address to the Duke of Stinking Water," or the "Ode to the Busted Snoot
of a Shattered Venus DeMilo," if you want to fill up your thirsty soul
with high-priced literature. Don't go around hungering for literary pie
while your eyes are closed and your capacious ears are filled with bales
of hay.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0080" id="link2H_4_0080"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE PREVIOUS HOTEL. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>OWN at Nathrop,
Colorado, there is a large, new, and fine hotel, where no guest ever ate
or slept. It stands there near the South Park track like the ghost of some
nice, clean country inn. The reader will naturally ask if the house is
haunted, that no one stops at the very attractive hotel in a country where
good hotels are rare. No, it is not that. It in not haunted so much as it
would like to be. Though it is a fine hotel, there is no town nearer it
than Buena Vista, and no one is going to do business at Buena Yista and go
up to Nathrop on a hand-car for his meals.</p>
<p>It is a case where a smart aleck of a man built a hotel, and asked his
fellow citizens to come and form a town around him and make him rich. Mr.
Nathrop was rather an impulsive man, and one day he said something that
reflected on another impulsive man, and when people came and looked for
Nathrop, they found that his body was tangled up in the sage brush, and
his soul was marching on.</p>
<p>The hotel was just completed, and the ladders, and the handsome lime
barrels, and hods, and old nail kegs, and fragments of laths, and pieces
of bricks, and scaffolds, and all those things that go to make life
desirable, are still there adorning the hotel and the front yard; but
there is no handsome man with a waxed mustache inside at the desk, shaking
his head sadly when he is asked for a room, and looking at you with that
high-born pity and contempt for your pleading, that the hotel clerk—heir
apparent to the universe—always keeps for those who go to him with
humility.</p>
<p>There is no Senegambian, with a whisk broom, waiting to brush your clothes
off your back, and leave you arrayed in a birth-mark and the earache, at
twenty-five cents per brush. There is no young, fair masher, strutting up
and down the piazza, trying to look brainy and capable of a thought. It is
only a hollow mockery, for the chamber-maid with the large slop-pail does
not come at daylight to pound on your door, and try to get in and fix up
your room, and wake you up, and frighten you to death with her shocking
chaos of wart-environed and freckle-frescoed beauty.</p>
<p>There the new hotel will, no doubt, stand for ages, while a little way
off, in his quiet grave, the proprietor, laid to rest in an old linen
handkerchief, is sleeping away the years till he shall be awakened by the
last grand reveille. There's no use talking, it's tough.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0081" id="link2H_4_0081"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ANECDOTE OF SPOTTED TAIL. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE popularity of
the above-named chieftain dates from a very trifling little incident, as
did that of many other men who are now great.</p>
<p>Spotted Tail had never won much distinction up to that time, except as the
owner of an appetite, in the presence of which his tribe stood in dumb and
terrible awe.</p>
<p>During the early days of what is now the great throbbing and ambitious
west, the tribe camped near Fort Sedgwick, and Big Mouth, a chief of some
importance, used to go over to the post regularly for the purpose of
filling his brindle hide full of "Fort Sedgwick Bloom of Youth."</p>
<p>As a consequence of Big Mouth's fatal yearning for liquid damnation, he
generally got impudent, and openly announced on the parade ground that he
could lick the entire regular army. This used to offend some of the
blood-scarred heroes who had just arrived from West Point, and in the heat
of debate they would warm the venerable warrior about two feet below the
back of his neck with the fiat of their sabers.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0219.jpg" alt="0219 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0219.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>This was a gross insult to Big Mouth, and he went back to the camp, where
he found Spotted Tail eating a mule that had died of inflammatory
rheumatism. Big Mouth tearfully told the wild epicure of the way he had
been treated, and asked for a council of war. Spot picked his teeth with a
tent pin, and then told the defeated relic of a mighty race that if he
would quit strong drink, he would be subjected to fewer insults.</p>
<p>Big Mouth then got irritated, and told S. Tail that his remarks showed
that he was standing, in with the aggressor, and was no friend to his
people.</p>
<p>Spotted Tail said that Mr. B. Mouth was a liar, by yon high heaven, and
before there was time to think it over, he took a butcher knife, about
four feet long, from its scabbard and cut Mr. Big Mouth plumb in two just
between the umbilicus and the watch pocket.</p>
<p>As the reader who is familiar with anatomy has already surmised, Big Mouth
died from the effects of this wound, and Spotted Tail was at once looked
upon as the Moses of his tribe. He readily rose to prominence, and by his
strict attention to the duties of his office, made for himself a name as a
warrior and a pie biter, at which the world turned pale.</p>
<p>This should teach us the importance of taking the tide at its flood, which
leads on to fortune, and to lay low when there is a hen on, as Benjamin
Franklin has so truly said.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0082" id="link2H_4_0082"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE ZEALOUS VOTER. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>PEAKING of New
York politics," said Judge Hildreth, of Cummings, the other day, "they
have a cheerful way of doing business in Gotham, and at first it rather
surprised me. I went into New York a short time before election, and a
Democratic friend told me I had better go and get registered so I could
'wote.' I did so, for I hate to lose the divine right of suffrage, even
when I'm a good way from home.</p>
<p>"When election day came around, I went over to the polls in a body, in the
afternoon, but they wouldn't let me vote. I told them I was registered all
right, and that I had a right and must exercise it the same as any other
Democrat in this enlightened land, but they swore at me and entreated me
roughly, and told me to go there myself, and that I had already voted once
and couldn't do it any more. I had always thought that New York was prone
to vigilance and industry in the suffrage business, and early and often
was what I supposed was the grand hailing sign. It made me mad, therefore,
to have the city get so virtuous all at once that it couldn't even let me
vote once.</p>
<p>"I was irritated and extremely ill-natured when I went back to Mr.
McGinnis, and told him. of the great trouble I had had with the judges of
election, and I denounced New York politics with a great deal of fervor.</p>
<p>"Mr. McGinnis said it was all right.</p>
<p>"'That's aizy enough to me, George. Give me something difficult. Sit down
and rist yoursilf. Don't get excited and talk so loud. I know'd yez was
out lasht night wid the byes and you didn't feel like gettin' up airly to
go to the polls, so I got wan av the byes to go over and wote your name.
That's all roight, come here 'nd have someding.'</p>
<p>"I saw at a glance that New York people were attending to these things
thoroughly and carefully, and since that when I hear that 'a full vote
hasn't been polled in New York city' for some unknown cause, I do not
think it is true. I look upon the statement with great reserve, for I
believe they vote people there who have been dead for centuries, and
people who have not yet arrived in this country, nor even expressed a
desire to come over. I am almost positive that they are still voting the
bones of old A. T. Stewart up in the doubtful wards, and as soon as
Charlie Ross is entitled to vote, he will most assuredly be permitted to
represent.</p>
<p>"Why, there's one ward there where they vote the theatre ghosts and the
spirit of Hamlet's father hasn't missed an election for a hundred years."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0083" id="link2H_4_0083"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HOW TO PRESERVE TEETH </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span> FIND," said an
old man to a Boomerang reporter, yesterday, "that there is absolutely no
limit to the durability of the teeth, if they are properly taken care of.
I never drink hot drinks, always brush my teeth morning and evening, avoid
all acids whatever, and although I am 65 years old, my teeth are as good
as ever they were."</p>
<p>"And that is all you do to preserve your teeth, is it?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir; that's all—barring, perhaps, the fact that I put them in
a glass of soft water nights."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0084" id="link2H_4_0084"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MR. BEECHER'S BRAIN. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>R. BEECHER, has
raked in $2,000,000 with his brain. A good, tall, bulging brow, and a
brain that will give down like that, are rather to be chosen than a blind
lead, and an easy running cerebellum, than a stone quarry with a silent
but firm skunk in it.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0085" id="link2H_4_0085"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> OH, NO! </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE telephone line
between Cheyenne and Laramie City will soon be in operation. It won't
work, however. It may be a success for a time, but sooner or later Bill
Nye will set his lopsided jaws at work in front of the transmitter, and
pour a few quarts of untutored lies into the contribution box, which does
service as a part of the telephone machine. Then the wires will be yanked
off the poles, a hissing torrent of prevarication will blow the battery
jars clean over into Utah, and the listener at the Cheyenne end will be
gathered up in a basket. Weeping friends will hold a funeral over a pair
of old boots and a fragment of shoulder blade—the remains of the
departed Cheyennese. It is a weird and pixycal thing to be a natural born
liar, but there are times when a robust lie will successfully defy the
unanimous inventive genius of the age."—<i>Sun</i>.</p>
<p>Oh, do not say those cruel words, kind friend. Do not throw it up to us
that we are weird and pixycal. Oh, believe us, kind sir, we may have done
wrong, but we never did that. We know that election is approaching, and
all sorts of bygone crookedness is raked up at that time, even when a man
is not a candidate for office, but we ask the public to scan our record
and see if the charge made by the <i>Sun</i> is true. It may be that years
ago we escaped justice and fled to the west under an assumed name, but no
man ever before charged us with being weird and pixycal. We have been in
all kinds of society, perhaps, and mingled with people who were our
inferiors, having been pulled by the police once while visiting a
Democratic caucus, but that was our misfortune, not our fault. We were not
a member of the caucus and were therefore discharged, but even little
things like that ought to be forgotten.</p>
<p>As for entering any one's apartments and committing a pixycal crime, we
state now without fear of successful contradiction, that it is not so. It
is no sign because a man in an unguarded moment entered the Rock Creek
eating house and gave way to his emotions, that he is a person to be
shunned. It was hunger, and not love for the questionable, that made us go
there. It is not because we are by nature weird or pixycal, for we are
not. We are not angry over this charge. It just simply hurts and grieves
us. It comes too, at a time when we are trying to lead a different life,
and while others are trying to lend us every aid and encouragement. We
have many friends in Cheyenne who want to see us come up and take higher
ground, but how can we do so if the press lends its influence against us.
That's just the way we feel about it. If the public prints try to put us
down and crush us in this manner, we will probably get desperate and be
just as weird and pixycal as we can be.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0086" id="link2H_4_0086"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE MARCH OF CIVILIZATION. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>POKANE IKE," the
Indian who killed a doctor last summer for failing to cure his child, has
been hanged. This shows the onward march of civilization, and vouchsafes
to us the time when a doctor's life will be in less danger than that of
his patient.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0087" id="link2H_4_0087"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AN UNCLOUDED WELCOME. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>.P. WILLIS once
said: "The sweetest thing in life is the unclouded welcome of a wife."
This is true, indeed, but when her welcome is clouded with an atmosphere
of angry words and coal scuttles, there is something about it that makes a
man want to go out in the woodshed and sleep on the ice-chest.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0088" id="link2H_4_0088"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE PILLOW-SHAM HOLDER. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>OME enemy to
mankind has recently invented an infernal machine known as the pillow-sham
holder, which is attached to the head of the bedstead and works with a
spiral spring. It is a kind of refined towel-rack on which you hang your
pillow-shams at night so they wont get busted by the man of the house. The
man of the house generally gets the pillow-shams down under his feet when
he undresses and polishes off his cunning little toes on the lace poultice
on which his wife prides herself. This pillow-sham holder saves all this.
You just yank your pillow-sham off the bed and hang it on this high-toned
sham holder, where it rests all night. At least that's the intention.
After a little while, however, the spring gets weak, and the holder
buckles to, or caves in, or whatever you may call it, at the most
unexpected moment. The slightest movement on the part of the occupant of
the bed, turns loose the pillow-sham holder, and the slumberer gets it
across the bridge of his or her nose, as the case may be. Sometimes the
vibration caused by a midnight snore, will unhinge this weapon of the
devil, and it will whack the sleeper across the features in a way that
scares him almost to death. If you think it is a glad surprise to get a
lick across the perceptive faculties in the middle of a sound slumber,
when you are dreaming of elysium and high-priced peris and such things as
that, just try the death-dealing pillow-sham holder, and then report in
writing to the chairman of the executive committee. It is well calculated
to fill the soul with horror and amaze. A raven-black Saratoga wave,
hanging on the back of a chair, has been known to turn white in a single
night as the result of the sudden kerflummix of one of these cheerful
articles of furniture.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0089" id="link2H_4_0089"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> SOMETHING FRESH. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>UR Saturday
dispatches announce that an infernal machine had just been received at the
office of Chief Justice Field, and later on, Justice Field, who was in
Wyoming Saturday, said to a reporter that the machine was one that was
sent to him in 1866, and that last week he sent it down to a gun factory
to have the powder taken out, as he wished to stuff it and preserve it
among the archives.</p>
<p>With the aid of the telegraph and the facilities of the Associated Press,
it does seem as though we were living in an age of almost miraculous
possibilities. Here is an instance where an infernal machine is sent to a
prominent man, and in less than sixteen years the news is flashed to the
four quarters of the globe like lightning. How long will it be before the
whole bloody history of the war of the rebellion will be sent to every
hamlet in the land? How long before the safe arrival of the ark, and the
losses occasioned by the deluge, will be given to us in dollars and cents?</p>
<p>People don't fully realize the advantages we possess in this glorious
nineteenth century. They take all these things as a matter of course, and
forget how the palpitating brain palps for them, and how the quivering
nerve quivs on and on through the silent night in order that humanity may
keep informed in relation to ancient history.</p>
<h3> A BAKEFOOTED GODDESS. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HERE'S one little
national matter that has been neglected about long enough, it seems to us.
If the goddess of liberty is allowed to go barefoot for another century,
her delicate toes will spread out over this nation like the shadow of a
great woe.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0090" id="link2H_4_0090"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> YANKED TO ETERNITY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>NCE, when a
section-crew came down the mountain on the South Park road, from Alpine
Tunnel to Buena Vista, a very singular thing occurred, which has never
been given to the public. Every one who knows anything at all, knows that
riding down that mountain on a push-car, descending at the rate of over
200 feet to the mile, means utter destruction, unless the brake is on.
This brake is nothing more nor less then a piece of scantling, which is
applied between one of the wheels and the car-bed, in such a way as to
produce great friction.</p>
<p>The section-crew referred to, got on at Hancock with their bronzed and
glowing hides as full of arsenic and rain-water as they could possibly
hold. Being recklessly drunk, they enjoyed the accumulated velocity of the
car wonderfully, until the section boss lost the break off the car, and
then there was a slight feeling of anxiety. The car at last acquired a
velocity like that of a young and frolicsome bob-tailed comet turned loose
in space. The boys began to get nervous at last, and asked each other what
should be done.</p>
<p>There seemed to be absolutely nothing to do but to shoot onward into the
golden presently.</p>
<p>All at once the section boss thought of something. He was drunk, but the
deadly peril of the moment suggested an idea. There was a rope on the car
which would do to tie to something heavy and cast off for an anchor. The
idea was only partially successful, however, for there was nothing to tie
to but a spike hammer. This was tried but it wouldn't work. Then it was
decided to tie it to some one of the crew and cast him loose in order to
save the lives of those who remained. It was a glorious opportunity. It
was a heroic thing to do. It was like Arnold Winklered's great sacrifice,
by which victory was gained by filling his own system full of lances and
making a toothpick holder of himself, in order that his comrades might
break through the ranks of their foes.</p>
<p>George O'Malley, the section boss, said that he was willing that Patsy
McBride should snatch the laurels from outrageous fortune and bind them on
his brow, but Mr. McBride said he didn't care much for the encomiums of
the world. He hadn't lost any encomiums, and didn't want to trade his
liver for two dollars' worth of damaged laurels.</p>
<p>Everyone declined. All seemed willing to go down into history without any
ten-line pay-local, and wanted someone else to get the effulgence.
Finally, it was decided that a man by the name of Christian Christianson
was the man to tie to. He had the asthma anyhow, and life wasn't much of
an object to him, so they said that, although he declined, he must take
the nomination, as he was in the hands of his friends.</p>
<p>So they tied the rope around Christian and cast anchor.</p>
<h3> ****** </h3>
<p>The car slowed up and at last stopped still. The plan had succeeded. Five
happy wives greeted their husbands that night as they returned from the
jaws of destruction. Christian Christianson did not return. The days may
come and the days may go, but Christian's wife will look up toward the
summit' of the snow-crowned mountains in vain.</p>
<p>He will never entirely return. He has done so partially, of course, but
there are still missing fragments of him, and it looks as though he must
have lost his life.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0091" id="link2H_4_0091"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WHY WE SHED THE SCALDING. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>N justice to
ourself we desire to state that the Cheyenne <i>Sun</i> has villified us
and placed us in a false position before the public. It has stated that
while at Rock Creek station, in the early part of the week, we were taken
for a peanutter, and otherwise ill-treated at the railroad eating corral
and omelette emporium, and that in consequence of such treatment we shed
great scalding tears as large as watermelons. This is not true. We did
shed the tears as above set forth, but not because of ill-treatment on the
part of the eating-house proprietor.</p>
<p>It was the presence of death that broke our heart and opened the fountains
of our great deep, so to speak. When we poured the glucose syrup on our
pancakes, the stiff and cold remains of a large beetle and two cunning
little twin cockroaches fell out into our plate, and lay there hushed in
an eternal repose.</p>
<p>Death to us is all powerful. The King of Terrors is to us the mighty
sovereign before whom we must all bow, from the mighty emperor down to the
meanest slave, from the railroad superintendent, riding in his special
car, down to the humblest humorist, all alike must some day curl up and
die. This saddens us at all times, but more peculiarly so when Death, with
his relentless lawn mower, has gathered in the young and innocent. This
was the case where two little twin cockroaches, whose lives had been
unspotted, and whose years had been unclouded by wrong and selfishness,
were called upon to meet death together. In the stillness of the night,
when others slept, these affectionate little twins crept into the glucose
syrup and died.</p>
<p>We hope no one will misrepresent this matter. We did weep, and we are not
ashamed to own it. We sat there and sobbed until the tablecloth was wet
for four feet, and the venerable ham was floating around in tears. It was
not for ourself, however, that we wept. No unkindness on the part of an
eating-house ever provoked such a tornado of woe. We just weep when we see
death and are brought in close contact with it. And we were not the only
one that shed tears. Dickinson and Warren wept, strong men as they were.
Even the butter wept. Strong as it was it could not control its emotions.</p>
<p>We don't very often answer a newspaper attack, but when we are accused of
weeping till people have to take off their boots and wring out their
socks, we want the public to know what it is for.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0092" id="link2H_4_0092"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ANOTHER SUGGESTION. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>E were surprised
and grieved to see, on Monday evening, a man in the dress circle at the
performance of Hazel Kirke at Blackburn's Grand Opera House, who had
communed with the maddening bowl till he was considerably elated. When
Pitticus made a good hit, or Hazel struck a moist lead, and everybody wept
softly on the carpet, this man furnished a war-whoop that not only annoyed
the audience, but seemed also to break up the actors a little. Later, he
got more quiet, and at last went to sleep and slid out of his chair on the
floor. It is such little episodes as these that make strangers
dissatisfied with the glorious west. When you go to see something touchful
on the stage, you do not care to have your finer feelings ruffled by the
yells of a man who has got a corner on delirium tremens.</p>
<p>It is also humiliating to our citizens to be pulled up off the floor by
the coat-collar and steered out the door by a policeman.</p>
<p>We hope that as progress is more plainly visible in Wyoming, and as we get
more and more refined, such things will be of less and less frequent
occurrence, till a man can go to see a theatrical performance with just as
much comfort as he would in New York and other eastern towns.</p>
<p>Another point while we are discussing the performance of Hazel Kirke.
There were some present on Monday night, sitting hack in the third
balcony, who need a theatrical guide to aid them in discovering which are
the places to weep and which to gurgle.</p>
<p>It was a little embarrassing to Miss Ellsler to make a grand dramatic hit
that was supposed to yank loose a freshet of woe, to be greeted with a
snort of demoniac laughter from the rear of the grand opera house.</p>
<p>It seemed to unnerve her and surprise her, but she kept her balance and
her head. When death and ruin, and shame and dishonor, were pictured in
their tragic horror, the wild, unfettered humorist of a crude civilization
fairly yelled with delight. He thought that the tomb and such things were
intended to be synonymous with the minstrel show and the circus. He
thought that old Dunstan Kirke was there with his sightless eyes to give
Laramie the grandest, riproaringest tempest of mirth that she had ever
experienced. That is why we say that we will never have a successful
performance in the theatrical line, till some of this class are provided
with laugh-and-cry guide books.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0093" id="link2H_4_0093"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PISCATORIAL AND EDITORIAL </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> CORRESPONDENT of
the New York <i>Post</i> says that the codfish frequents "the table lands
of the sea." The codfish, no doubt, does this to secure as nearly as
possible a dry, bracing atmosphere. This pure air of the submarine table
lands gives to the codfish that breadth of chest and depth of lungs which
we have always noticed.</p>
<p>The glad, free smile of the codfish is largely attributed to the
exhilaration of this oceanic altitoodleum.</p>
<p>The correspondent further says, that "the cod subsists largely on the sea
cherry." Those who have not had the pleasure of seeing the codfish climb
the sea cherry tree in search of food, or clubbing the fruit from the
heavily-laden branches with chunks of coral, have missed a very fine
sight.</p>
<p>The codfish, when at home rambling through the submarine forests, does not
wear his vest unbuttoned, as he does while loafing around the grocery
stores of the United States.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0094" id="link2H_4_0094"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ANOTHER FEATHERED SONGSTER </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> FORT STEELE
taxidermist has presented this office with a stuffed bird of prey about
nine feet high, which we have put up in <i>The Boomerang</i> office, and
hereby return thanks for. It is a kind of a cross between a dodo and a
meander-up-the-creek. Its neck is long, like the right of way to a
railway, and its legs need some sawdust to make them look healthy. Those
who subscribe for the paper, can look at this great work of art free.</p>
<p>This bird is noted for its brief and horizontal alimentary canal. It has
no devious digestive arrangements, but contents itself with an economical
and unostentatious trunk-line of digestion so simple that any child can
understand it. He (or she, as the case may be) in his (or her) stocking
feet can easily look over into next fall, and when standing in our office,
peers down at us from over the stove-pipe in a reproachful way that fills
us with remorse.</p>
<p>We have labeled it "The Democrat Wading Up Salt Creek" and filed it away
near the skull of an Indian that we killed years ago when we got mad and
wiped out a whole tribe. The geological name of this bird we do not at
this moment recall, but it is one of those sorrowful-looking fowls that
stick their legs out behind when they fly, and are not good for food.</p>
<p>Parties wishing to see the bird, and subscribe for the <i>Home Journal</i>
can obtain an audience by kicking three times on the last hall door on the
left and throwing two dollars through the transom.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0096" id="link2H_4_0096"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ABOUT THE OSTRICH </h2>
<p></p>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span> HERE is some
prospect of ostrich farming developing into quite an industry in the
southwest, and it will sometime be a cold day when the simple-minded
rustic of that region will not have ostrich on toast if he wants it.
Ostrich farming, however, will always have its drawbacks. The hen ostrich
is not a good layer as a rule, only laying two eggs per annum, which,
being about the size of a porcelain wash bowl, make her so proud that she
takes the balance of the year for the purpose of convalescing.</p>
<p>The ostrich is chiefly valuable for the plumage which he wears, and which,
when introduced into the world of commerce, makes the husband almost wish
that he were dead.</p>
<p>Probably the ostrich will not come into general use as an article of food,
few people caring for it, as the meat is coarse, and the gizzard full of
old hardware, and relics of wrecked trains and old irons left where there
has been a fire.</p>
<p>Carving the ostrich is not so difficult as carving the quail, because the
joints are larger and one can find them with less trouble. Still, the bird
takes up a great deal of room at the table, and the best circles are not
using them.</p>
<p>The ostrich does not set She don't have time. She does not squat down over
something and insist on hatching it out if it takes all summer, but she
just lays a couple of porcelain cuspidors in the hot sand when she feels
like it, and then goes away to the seaside to quiet her shattered nerves.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0098" id="link2H_4_0098"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TOO MUCH GOD AND NO FLOUR. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>LD CHIEF
POCOTELLO, now at the Fort Hall agency, in answer to an inquiry relative
to the true Christian character of a former Indian agent at that place,
gave in very terse language the most accurate description of a hypocrite
that was ever given to the public. "Ugh! Too much God and no flour."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0099" id="link2H_4_0099"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WE ARE GETTING CYNICAL </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T begins to look
now as though Major F. G. Wilson, who stopped here a short time last week
and week before, might be a gentleman in disguise. He has done several
things since he left here, that look to a man up a tree like something
irregular and peculiar. The major has not only prevaricated, but he has
done so in such a way as to beat his friends and to make them yearn for
his person in order that they may kick him over into the inky night of
space. He has represented himself as confidential adviser and literary
tourist of several prominent New York, Chicago, Omaha and Tie Siding
dailies, and had such good documents to show in proof of his identity in
that capacity that he has received many courtesies which, as an ordinary
American dead-beat, he might have experienced great difficulty in
securing. We simply state this in order to put our esteemed contemporaries
on their guard, so that they will not let him spit in their overshoes and
enjoy himself as he did here. He wears a white hat on his head and a
crooked tooth in the piazza of his mouth. This pearly fang he uses to
masticate and reduce little delicate irregular fragments of plug tobacco,
which he borrows of people who have time to listen to the silvery tinkle
of his bazoo.</p>
<p>When last seen he was headed west, and will probably strike Eureka,
Nevada, in a week or two. His mission seems to be mainly to make people
feel a goneness in their exchequer, and to distribute tobacco dados over
the office stoves of our great land. He is a man who writes long letters
to the New York <i>Herald</i> that are never printed. His freshly blown
nose is red, but his newspaper articles are not. He claims to represent
the Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association lately, too. The company
represents the Insurance and he attends to the Mutual Reserve Fund. He has
mutually reserved all the funds he could get hold of since he struck the
west, besides mutually reserving enough strong drink to eat a hole through
the Ames monument.</p>
<p>Such men as Major Wilson make us suspicious of humanity, and very likely
the next man who comes along here and represents that he is a great man,
and wants five dollars on his well-rounded figure and fair fame will have
to be identified. We have helped forty or fifty such men to make a bridal
tour of Wyoming and now we are going to saw off and quit. When a great
journalist comes into this office again with an internal revenue tax on
his breath and nineteen dollars back on his baggage, we will probably pick
up a fifty pound chunk of North Park quartz and spread his intellectual
faculties around this building till it looks like the Custer massacre.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0100" id="link2H_4_0100"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ASK US SOMETHING DIFFICULT. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HAT becomes of our
bodies?" asks a soft eyed scientist, and we answer in stentorian tones,
that they get inside of a red flannel undershirt as the maple turns to
crimson and the sassafras to gold. Ask us something difficult, ethereal
being, if you want to see us get up and claw for our library of public
documents.</p>
<h3> A MINING EXPERIMENT </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> MILD-EYED youth,
wearing a dessert-spoon hat and polka-dot socks, went into Middle Park the
other day and claimed to be a mining expert. The boys inveigled him into
driving a stick of giant powder into a drill-hole at the bottom of a shaft
with an old axe, and now they are trying to get him out of the ground with
ammonia and a tooth-brush.</p>
<h3> A NEW INDUSTRY. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE want column of
the Chicago <i>News</i> for October 10th has the following: "Twelve
frightful examples' wanted, to travel with Scott Marble's new drama and
appear in the realistic bar-room scene of the 'Drunkard's Daughter.'
Arthur G. Cambridge, dramatic agent, 75 South Clark street."</p>
<p>This throws open a field of usefulness to a class of men who hitherto have
seen no prospect whatever for the future. It brings within the reach of
such men a business which, requiring no capital, still gives the actor
much time to do as he chooses. Beauty often wins for itself a place in the
great theatrical world, but it is rare that the tomato nose and the watery
eye secure a salary for their proprietors. Business must be picking up
when the wiggly legs and danger-signal nose will bring so much per week
and railroad fare. Perhaps prohibition has got the "frightful example"
business down to where it commands the notice of the world because of its
seldom condition.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0101" id="link2H_4_0101"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE MIMIC STAGE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>T the performance
of "The Phoenix" here, the other night, there was a very affecting place
where the play is transferred very quickly from a street scene to the
elegant apartments of Mr. Blackburn, the heavy villain. The street scene
had to be raised out of the way, and the effect of the transition was
somewhat marred by the reluctance of the scenery in rolling up out of the
way. It got about half way up, and stopped there in an undecided manner,
which annoyed the heavy villain a good deal. He started to make some
blood-curdling remarks about Mr. Bludsoe, and had got pretty well warmed
up when the scenery came down with a bang on the stage. The artist who
pulls up the curtain and fills the hall lamps, then pulled the scene up so
as to show the villain's feet for fifteen or twenty minutes, but he
couldn't get it any farther. It seemed that the clothes line, by which the
elaborate scenery is operated, got tangled up some way, and this caused
the delay. After that another effort was made, and this time the street
scene rolled up to about the third story of a brick hotel shown in the
foreground, and stopped there, while the clarionet and first violin
continued a kind of sad tremulo. Then a dark hand, with a wart on one
finger and an oriental dollar store ring on another, came out from behind
the wings and began to wind the clothes-line carefully around the pole at
the foot of the scene. The villain then proceeded with his soliloquy,
while the street scene hung by one corner in such a way as to make a large
warehouse on the corner of the street stand at an angle of about
forty-five degrees.</p>
<p>Laramie will never feel perfectly happy until these little hitches are
dispensed with. Supposing that at some place in the play, where the
heroine is speaking soft and low to her lover and the proper moment has
arrived for her to pillow her sunny head upon his bosom, that street scene
should fetch loose, and come down with such momentum as to knock the
lovers over into the arms of the bass-viol player. Or suppose that in some
death-bed act this same scene, loaded with a telegraph pole at the bottom,
should settle down all at once in such a way as to leave the death-bed out
on the corner of Monroe and Clark streets, in front of a candy store.</p>
<p>Modern stage mechanism has now reached such a degree of perfection that
the stage carpenter does not go up on a step ladder, in the middle of a
play, and nail the corner of a scene to a stick of 2x4 scantling, while a
duel is going on near the step ladder. In all the larger theatres and
opera houses, now, they are not doing that way.</p>
<p>Of course little incidents occur, however, even on the best stages, and
where the whole thing works all right. For instance, the other day, a
young actor, who was kneeling to a beautiful heiress down east, got a
little too far front, and some scenery, which was to come together in the
middle of the stage to pianissimo music, shut him outside and divided the
tableau in two, leaving the young actor apparently kneeling at the foot of
a street lamp, as though he might be hunting for a half a dollar that he
had just dropped on the sidewalk.</p>
<p>There was a play in New York, not long ago, in which there was a kind of
military parade introduced, and the leader of a file of soldiers had his
instructions to march three times around the stage to martial music, and
then file off at the left, the whole column, of course, following him.
After marching once around, the stage manager was surprised to see the
leader deliberately wheel, and walk off the stage, at the left, with the
whole battalion following at his heels. The manager went to him and abused
him shamefully for his haste, and told him he had a mind to discharge him;
but the talented hack driver, who thus acted as the military leader, and
who had over-played himself by marching off the stage ahead of time, said:</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0014" id="linkimage-0014"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0249.jpg" alt="0249 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0249.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>"Well, confound it, you can discharge me if you want to, but what was a
man to do? Would you have me march around three times when my military
pants were coming off, and I knew it? Military pride, pomp, parade, and
circumstance, are all right; but it can be overdone. A military squadron,
detachment, or whatever it is, can make more of a parade, under certain
circumstances, than is advertised. I didn't want to give people more show
than they paid for, and I ask you to put yourself in my place. When a man
is paid three dollars a week to play a Roman soldier, would you have him
play the Greek slave? No, sir; I guess I know what I'm hired to play, and
I'm going to play it. When you want me to play Adam in the Garden of Eden,
just give me my fig leaf and salary enough to make it interesting, and I
will try and properly interpret the character for you, or refund the money
at the door."</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0102" id="link2H_4_0102"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DECLINE OF AMERICAN HUMOR </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>EAR,
mellow-voiced, starry-eyed reader, did you ever see something about "the
decline of American humor?" Well, we got a gob of American humor,
yesterday, written by a yahoo with pale pink hair, which was entitled
"Marriage in Mormondom on the Tontine Plan." Well, we declined it. Decline
of American humor. <i>Sabe?</i></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0103" id="link2H_4_0103"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHICAGO CUSTOM HOUSE </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Chicago custom
house and post office, built from designs by Oscar Wild, and other delirum
tremens artists, is getting wiggly, and bids fair to some day fall down
and scrunch about 500 United States employes into the great billowy sea of
the eternal hence. It is a sick looking structure, with little gothic
warts on top, and red window sashes, and little half-grown smoke houses
sprouting out of it in different places. It is grand, gloomy and peculiar,
and looks as though it might be cursed with an inward pain.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0104" id="link2H_4_0104"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FOREIGN OPINION </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>E are indebted to
Fred J. Prouting, correspondent of the foreign and British newspaper
press, for a copy of the London <i>Daily</i> of the 9th inst., containing
the following editorial notice:</p>
<p>"If ever celebrity were attained unexpectedly, most assuredly it was that
thrust upon Bill Nye by Truthful James. It is just possible, however, that
the innumerable readers of Mr. Bret Harte's 'Heathen Chinee' may have
imagined Bill Nye and Ah Sin to be purely mythical personages. So far as
the former is concerned, any such conclusion now appears to have been
erroneous. Bill Nye is no more a phantom than any other journalist,
although the name of the organ which he 'runs' savors more of fiction than
of fact. But there is no doubt about the matter, for the Washington
correspondent of the New York <i>Tribune</i> telegraphed on the 29th
instant, that Bill Nye had accepted a post under the government. He has
lately been domiciled in Laramie City, Wyoming territory, and is editor of
The Daily Boomerang. In reference to Acting-Postmaster-Gen. Hatton's
appointment of him as postmaster at Laramie City, the opponent of Ah Sin
writes an extremely humorous letter, 'extending' his thanks, and advising
his chief of his opinion that his 'appointment is a triumph of eternal
truth over error and wrong.' Nye continues: 'It is one of the epochs, I
may say, in the nation's onward march toward political purity and
perfection. I don't know when I have noticed any stride in the affairs of
state which has so thoroughly impressed me with its wisdom.' In this quiet
strain of banter, Bill Nye continues to the end of his letter, which
suggests the opinion that whatever the official qualifications of the new
postmaster may be, the inhabitants of Laramie City must have a very
readable newspaper in The Daily Boomerang."</p>
<p>While thanking our London contemporary for its gentle and harmless
remarks, we desire to correct an erroneous impression that the seems to
have as to our general style: The British press has in some way arrived at
the conclusion that the editor of this fashion-guide and mental lighthouse
on the rocky shores of time (terms cash), is a party with wild tangled
hair, and an like a tongue of flame.</p>
<p>That is not the case, and therefore our English co-worker in the great
field of journalism is, no doubt, laboring under a popular
misapprehension. Could the editor of the <i>News</i> look in upon us as we
pull down tome after tome of forgotten lore in our study; or, with a glad
smile, glance hurriedly over the postal card in transit through our
postoffice, he would see, not as he supposes, a wild and cruel slayer of
his fellow men, but a thoughtful, scholarly and choice fragment of modern
architecture, with lines of care about the firmly chiseled mouth, and with
the subdued and chastened air of a man who has run for the legislature and
failed to get there, Eli.</p>
<p>The London <i>News</i> is an older paper than ours, and we therefore
recognize the value of its kind notice. <i>The Boomerang</i> is a young
paper, and has therefore only begun fairly to do much damage as a national
misfortune, but the time is not far distant, when, from Greenland's icy
mountains to India's coral strand, we propose to search out suffering
humanity and make death easier and more desirable, by introducing this
choice malady.</p>
<p>Regarding the postoffice, we wish to state that we shall aim to make it a
great financial success, and furnish mail at all times to all who desire
it, whether they have any or not. We shall be pretty busy, of course,
attending to the office during the day, and writing scathing editorials
during the night, but we will try to snatch a moment now and then to write
a few letters for those who have been inquiring sadly and hopelessly for
letters during the past ten years. It is, indeed, a dark and dreary world
to the man who has looked in at the same general delivery window nine
times a day for ten years, and yet never received a letter, nor even a
confidential postal card from a commercial man, stating that on the 5th of
the following month he would strike the town with a new and attractive
line of samples.</p>
<p>We should early learn to find put such suffering as that, and if we are in
the postoffice department we may be the means of much good by putting new
envelopes on our own dunning letters and mailing them to the suffering and
distressed. Let us, in our abundance, remember those who have not been
dunned for many a weary year. It will do them good, and we will not feel
the loss.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0105" id="link2H_4_0105"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THEY HAVE CURBED THEIR WOE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HEY say that
Brigham Young's grave is looking as bare and desolate as a boulevard now.
At first, while her grief was fresh, his widow used to march out there
five abreast, and just naturally deluge the grave with scalding tears, and
at that time the green grass grew luxuriantly, and the pig-weed waved in
the soft summer air; but as she learned to control her emotions, the
humidity of the atmosphere disappeared, and grief's grand irrigation
failed to give down. We should learn from this that the man who flatters
himself that in marrying a whole precinct during life, he is piling up for
the future a large invoice of ungovernable woe, is liable to get left. The
prophet's tomb looks to-day like a deserted buffalo wallow, while his
widow has dried her tears, and is trying to make a mash on the Utah
commission. Such is life in the far west, and such the fitting resting
place of a red-headed old galvanized prophet, who marries a squint-eyed
fly-up-the-creek, and afterward gets a special revelation requiring him to
marry a female mass-meeting. Let us be thankful for what we have, instead
of yearning for a great wealth of wife. Then the life insurance will not
have to be scattered so, and our friends will be spared the humiliating
spectacle of a bereft and sorrowing herd of widow, turned loose by the
cold hand of death to monkey o'er our tomb.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0106" id="link2H_4_0106"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HUNG BY REQUEST. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HIS county has had
two hemp carnivals during the past few weeks, and it begins to look like
old times again. In each case the murder was unprovoked, and the victim a
quiet gentleman. That is why there was a popular feeling against the
murderer, and a spontaneous ropestretching benefit as a result. While we
deplore the existence of a state of affairs that would warrant these
little expressions of feeling, we cannot come right out and condemn the
exercises which followed.</p>
<p>The more we read the political record of the candidate for office, as set
forth in opposing journals, the more we feel that there are already few
enough good men in this country, so that we do not care to spare any of
them. If, therefore, the mischievous bad man is permitted to thin them out
this way, the day is not distant when we won't have good men enough to run
the newspapers, to say nothing of other avocations.</p>
<p>We know that eastern people will speak of us as a ferocious tribe on the
Wyoming reservation, but we desire to call the attention of our more
law-abiding brethren to the fact that there has been in the past year a
lynching in almost every state in the Union, to say nothing of several
hundred cases where there should have been. Do you suppose Wyoming young
ladies would consent to play the waltz known as "Under the Elms," composed
by Walter Malley, if Walter had been as frolicsome here as he was down on
the Atlantic coast? Scarcely. We may be the creatures of impulse here, but
not that kind of impulse.</p>
<p>Minneapolis hung a man during the past year, and so did Bloomington and
other high-toned towns, and shall we, because we are poor and lonely, be
denied this poor boon? We hope not. Because we have left the East and
moved out here to make some money and build up a new country, shall we be
refused the privileges we would have enjoyed if we had remained in the
states. We trow not.</p>
<p>A telegraph pole with a remains hanging on it is not a cheerful sight, but
it has a tendency to annoy and mentally disturb those who contemplate the
violent death of some good man. It unnerves the brave assassin and makes
him restless and apprehensive. Death is always depressing, but it is
doubly so when it has that purple and suffocated appearance which is
noticeable in the features of the early fall fruit of the telegraph pole.
Lately, we will state, however, the telegraph pole has fallen into
disfavor, and is not much used, owing to a rumor which gained circulation
some time ago, to the effect that Jay Gould intended to charge the
vigilance committee rent.</p>
<h3> A COLORED GREEK SLATE. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> NUDE colored
woman, as wild as a gorilla, startling the people of the Marvel section of
Missouri. She has been seen several times, and the last time threw a young
lady, who was horseback riding, into hysteria, and with a grunt—not
unlike that of a wild hog—jumped up and ran into the forest. At the
time of her discovery she was burrowing into the side of the road,
catching and eating crawfish, which she ate claws, hide and all. She is
very black, and foams at the mouth when angry, like a wild animal at bay.
She is probably a colored Greek slave in search of an umbrella and the
remainder of her wardrobe. Still, she may be a brunette society belle, who
went in swimming where a mud-turtle caught her by the pink toe, and the
nervous shock has unsettled her mind.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0107" id="link2H_4_0107"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE MELVILLES. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>N exchange says
that Mrs. Melville has become deranged through excess of joy over the
unexpected return of her husband. Another one says that it is thought that
Lieutenant Melville is off his basement as a result of exposure to the
vigorous and bracing air of the north pole. Still another says that Mr.
Melville was always mean and hateful toward his wife, and that when he was
at home, she had to do her own washing and wind the clock herself. From
the different stories now floating about relative to the Melville family,
we are led to believe that he is a kind and considerate husband, pleasant
and good-natured toward his wife—while asleep; and that she is a
kind, beautiful and accomplished wife—when she is sober. How many of
our best wives are falling victims to the alcoholic habit recently! How
sad to think that, as husbands, we will soon be left to wait and watch and
vigil through the long, weary night for that one to return who promised us
on the nuptial day that she would protect and love us. Ah, what a silent,
but seductive foe to the husband is rum! How it creeps into the home
circle and snatches the wife in the full blush and bloom of womanhood,
while the pale, sad-eyed husband sits at the sewing machine and barely
makes enough to keep the little ones from want.</p>
<p>No one can fully realize, but he who has been there, so to speak, the
terrible shock that Mr. Melville received on the first evening that his
wife came staggering home. No one can tell how the pain froze his
throbbing gizzard, or how he shuddered in the darkness, and filled the
pillow-sham full of sobs when he first knew that she had got it up her
nose. Ah, what a picture of woe we see before us. There in the solemn
night, robed in? long, plainly constructed garment of pure white, buttoned
at the throat in a negligent manner, stands Mr. Melville with his bare,
tall brow glistening in the flickering rays of a kerosene lamp, which he
holds in his hand, while on the front porch stands the wife who a few
years ago promised to defend and protect him. She is a little unsteady on
her feet, and her hat is out of plumb. She tries to be facetious, and asks
him if that is where Mr. Melville lives. He looks at her coldly and says
it is, but unfortunately it is not an inebriate's home and refuge for the
budge demolisher. Then he bursts into tears, and his sobs shake the entire
ranch. But we draw a curtain over the scene.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/><br/></p>
<p>A year later he may be discovered about two miles southwest of the north
pole. Cool, but happy. He is trying to forget his woe. He smells like
sperm-oil and looks like a bald-headed sausage, but the woe of drink is
forgotten.'</p>
<p>How sad that he has returned and suffered again. What a mistake that he
did not remain where, instead of his wife's coolness, he would have had
only that of nature to contend against.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0108" id="link2H_4_0108"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MENDING BROKEN NECKS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HEY have
successfully set a boy's broken neck, in Connecticut, and now it looks as
though the only way to kill a man is to take him about 200 miles from any
physician, and run him through a Hoe Perfecting Press. If this thing
continues, they will some day put some electricity into Pharaoh's daughter
and engage her as a ballet-dancer, along with other tender pullets of her
own age.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0109" id="link2H_4_0109"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ARE YOU A MORMON? </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>E are indebted to
Elder Wilkins, of Logan, Utah, first-assistant-general-tooly-muck-a-hi Z.
C. M. I. and Z. W. of T. U. O. M. and B. company, and president of the
cache stake of Zion, constituting last in the quorum of seventies, for the
late edition of the Mormon Guide and Hand Book of the Endowment House. It
is a very pleasant work to read, and makes the whole endowment scheme as
clear to the average mind as though he had been through it personally.</p>
<p>Pictures of the endowment chemiloon and Z. C. M. I. bib are given to show
the novice exactly how they appear to the unclothed and unregenerate
vision. The convert, it seems, first goes to the desk, on entering, and
registers. Then she leaves her every-day clothes in the baggage room and
gets a check for them. The next thing on the programme is a bath, called
the farewell bath, because it is the last one taken by the endowment
victim.</p>
<p>The convert is then anointed with machine oil from a cow's horn, after
which she is named something, supposed to be the celestial cognomen. Then
comes the endowment robe, which is a combination arrangement that don't
look pretty. After that, the apprentice to polygamy goes into an impromptu
garden of Eden, where the apple business is gone through with. A
thick-necked path-master from Logan takes the character of Adam, and a
pale-haired livery stable keeper from Salt Lake acts as the ruler of the
universe. This is not making light of a sacred subject. It is just the
simple, plain, horrible truth.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0015" id="linkimage-0015"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0265.jpg" alt="0265 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0265.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>The creation of the world is thus gone through with by these blatant
priests of Latter Day bogus sanctity, and the exercises are continued
after this fashion through all their disgusting details. We have no time
or inclination to enlarge upon them. Truth is sometimes nauseating,
especially while discussing the Mormon problem.</p>
<p>If Brigham Young had lived, he would have helped out his church by a
revelation that would have knocked the daylights out of polygamy; but as
it is now, John Taylor, with his characteristic stubborness, will not
attend to it, his revelation machine being somewhat out of whack, as Oscar
Wilde would say, so that the anointing with the so-called sanctified
lubricant will continue till the United States sits down on the whole
grand farce.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0110" id="link2H_4_0110"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CAUTION. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> MAN is going
about the streets of Laramie claiming to be John the Baptist. He has light
hair and chin whiskers, is stout built and looks like a farmer. We desire
to warn those of our readers who may be inclined to trust him, that he is
not what he purports to be. We have taken great pains to look the matter
up, and find, as a result of our research, that John the Baptist is dead.</p>
<h3> A BLOW TO THE GOVERNMENT </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>T the October term
of the district court we shall resign the office of United States
Commissioner for this judicial district, an office which we have held so
long, and with such great credit to ourself. Fearing that in the hurry and
rush of other business our contemporaries might overlook the matter, we
have consented to mention, briefly, the fact that at the opening of court,
Judge Blair will be called upon to accept the resignation of one of our
most tried and true officials, who has for so long held up this corner of
the great national fabric.</p>
<p>It has been our solemn duty to examine the greaser who sold liquor to our
red brother, and filled him up with the deadly juice of the sour-mash
tree. It has devolved upon us to singe the soft-eyed lad who stole baled
hay from the reservation, and it has also been our glorious privilege to
examine, in a preliminary manner, the absent-minded party who gathered
unto himself the U. S. mule.</p>
<p>We have attempted to resign before, but failed. One reason was, that it
was a novel proceeding in Wyoming, and no one seemed to know how to go to
work at it. No one had ever resigned before, and the matter had to be
hunted up and the law thoroughly understood.</p>
<p>The office is one of great profit, as we have said before. It brings
wealth into the coffers of the U. S. Commissioner in a way that is well
calculated to turn the head of most people. We have, however, succeeded in
controlling ourself, and have so far suppressed that beastly pride which
wealth engenders. With a salary of $7.25 per annum, and lead pencils, we
have-steadily refused to go to Europe, preferring rather to plod along
here in the wild west, although we may never see the beauties of a foreign
shore.</p>
<p>Official duty was at all times weighing upon our mind like a leaden load.
Oft in the stilly night we have been wakened by the oppressing thought
that, perhaps at that moment, on some distant reservation, some pale-faced
villain might be selling valley-tan to the gentle, untutored Indian brave,
and it has tortured us and robbed us of slumber and joy. Now it is a
relief to know that very soon we shall be free from this great
responsibility. If an Indian gets drunk on the reservation, or a
time-honored government mule is stolen, we shall not be expected to get up
in the night and administer swift and terrible justice to the offender.
Old-man-with-a-torpid-liver can go as drunk as he pleases on the
reservation. It does not come under our jurisdiction any more. We can
sleep now nights while some other man peels his coat, and acts as the
United States nemesis for this diocese.</p>
<p>Sometime during the ensuing week we will turn over the lead pencil and the
blotting paper of the office to our successor. We leave the Indian
temperance movement in his hands. The United States mule, kleptomaniac
also, we leave with him. With a clear conscience and an unliquidated claim
against the government for $9.55, the earnings of the past two years, we
turn over the office, knowing that although we have sacrificed our health,
we have never evaded our duty, no matter how dangerous or disagreeable.</p>
<p>Yet we do not ask for any gold-headed cane as a mark of esteem on the part
of the government. We have a watch that does very well for us, so that a
testimonial consisting of a gold watch, costing $250, would be
unnecessary. Any little trinket of that kind would, of course, show how
ready the department of justice is to appreciate the work of an efficient
officer, but we do not look for it, nor ask it. A thoroughly fumigated and
disinfected conscience is all we want. That is enough for us. Do not call
out the band. Just let us retire from the office quietly and
unostentatiously. As regards the United States Commissionership, we retire
to private life. In the bosom of our family we will forget the turbulent
voyage of official life through which we have passed, and as we monkey
with the children around our hearthstone, we will shut our eyes to the
official suffering that is going on on all around us.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0111" id="link2H_4_0111"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> POISONS AND THEIR ANECDOTES. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>N amateur
scientist sends us a long article written with a purple pencil on both
sides of twelve sheets of legal cap, and entitled "Poisons and Their
Anecdotes."</p>
<p>Will the soft-eyed mullet-head please call and get it, also a lick over
the eye with a hot stove leg, and greatly oblige the weary throbbing brain
that, moulds the scientific course of this paper?</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0112" id="link2H_4_0112"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CORRESPONDENCE. </h2>
<h3> Cheyenne, September 6, 1882. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE party,
consisting of Governor Hale and wife, Secretary Morgan and wife, President
Slack, of the "Wyoming Press Association, and wife, Mr. Baird and myself,
started out of Laramie, about 8:30 last evening, and excurted along over
the hill with some hesitation, arriving here this morning at four o'clock.
The engine at first slipped an eccentric on Dale Creek bridge, and we
remained there some time, delayed but happy. Then, as the night wore away
and the gray dawn came down over the broad and mellow sweep of plain to
the eastward, an engine ahead of us on a freight train blew off her
monkey-wrench, and we were delayed in the neighborhood of Hazzard several
more hours. Hazzard is a thriving town on the eastern slope of the
mountains, with glorious possibilities for a town site. With gas and
waterworks and a city debt of $200,000, Hazzard will some day attract
notice from the civilized world. If her vast deposits of sand and alkali
could be brought to the notice of capital, Hazzard would some day take
rank with such cities as Wilcox and Tie City.</p>
<p>Still we had a good deal of fun. We heard that Whitelaw Reid, of the New
York was on board, and we sent the porter into the other car after him.
Mr. Reid did not behave as we thought he would at first. We had presumed
that he was cold and distant in his manners, but he is not. As soon as the
first embarrassment of meeting us was over, he sailed right in and did all
the talking himself, just as any cultivated gentleman would. He told us
all about New York politics and how he was fighting the machine, at the
same time, however, casually dropping a remark or two that led us to
conclude that it was only one machine that didn't want another one to win.
He is a tall, rather fine-looking man, with a Grecian nose and long, dark
hair, which he does up in tin foil at night. I told him that I was grieved
to know that his hired man had, inadvertently no doubt, referred to me in
a manner that gave the American people an idea that I was a good deal
bigger man than I really was. I asked him whether he wanted to apologize
then and there or be thrown over Dale Creek bridge into the rip-snorting
torrent below.</p>
<p>He said he didn't believe that such a remark had been made, but if it had
he would go home and kill the man who wrote it, if that would poultice up
my wounded heart. I said it would. If he would just mail me the remains of
the man who made the remark, not necessarily for publication, but as a
guarantee of good faith, it would be all right.</p>
<p>We talked all night, and incurred the everlasting displeasure of a fat man
from San Francisco, who told the porter he wanted his money back because
he hadn't slept any all night. He seemed mad because we were having a
little harmless conversation among ourselves, and when the clock in the
steeple struck four he rolled over in his berth, gave a large groan and
then got up and dressed. Some people are so morbidly nervous that they
cannot sleep on a train, and they naturally get cross and say
ungentlemanly things. This man said some things while he was dressing and
buttoning his suspenders, that made my blood run cold. A man who has no
better control of his temper than that, ought not to travel at all. He
just simply makes a North American side-show of himself.</p>
<p>Cheyenne is very greatly improved since I was here last. The building up
of the corner opposite the Inter Ocean hotel has added greatly to the
attractiveness of the Magic City, and other work is being done which
enhances the beauty of the city very much. F. E. Warren is one of the most
enterprising and thoroughly vigorous western business men I ever knew. He
is an anomaly, I might say. When I say he is an anomaly, I do not mean to
reflect upon him in any way, though I do not know the meaning of the word.
I simply mean that he is the chief grand rustle of a very rustling city.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0113" id="link2H_4_0113"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WHAT THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY NEEDS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE candidate for
county commissioner, on the Democratic ticket, of Sweetwater county, keeps
a drug store, and when a little girl burned her arm against the cook
stove, and her father went after a package of Russia salve, the genial
Bourbon gave her a box of "Rough on Rats." What the Democratic party
needs, is not so much a new platform, but a carload of assorted brains
that some female seminary had left over.</p>
<h3> A LETTER FROM LEADVILLE. </h3>
<p>Leadville, Colorado, Sept. 10.</p>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HIS morning we
rose at 4:30, and rode from Buena Vista to Leadville, arriving at the
Clarendon for breakfast. Our party has been reduced in one way and another
until there are only eight here to-day. Secretary Morgan and family
remained at Buena Vista on account of the illness of Misa Lillie Morgan,
who suffers severely from sea-sickness on the mountain railroads.</p>
<p>One thing I have not mentioned, and an incident certainly worthy of note,
was the sudden decision of our president, E. A. Slack, on Friday, to
remain at a little station on the South Parle road, above Como, while the
party continued on to Buena Vista. Mr. Slack is a man of iron will and
sudden impulses, as all who know him are aware. He got in a car at the
station referred to, and under the impression that it belonged to our
train, remained in it till he got impatient about something, and asked a
man who came in with a broom, why we were making such a stop at that
station. The man said that this car had been side-tracked, and the train
had gone sometime ago.</p>
<p>Then Mr. Slack made the rash remark that he would remain there until the
next train. He acts readily in an emergency, and he saw at a glance that
the best thing that he could do would be to just stay there, and examine
the country until he could get the next train. He telegraphed us that the
fare was so high on our train that he would see if he couldn't get better
rates on the following day. In the meantime, he struck Superintendent
Egbert's special car, and rode around over the country till morning, while
our party took in Buena Vista. The city is but two years old, but very
thriving, and has 2,500 to 3,000 population. At the depot we were met by
Agent Smith, of the South Park road, who had secured rooms for us at the
Grand Park hotel. He had also arranged for carriages to take us out to
Cottonwood Hot Springs, about six miles up Cottonwood creek, where we took
supper. We found a first-class sixty-four room hotel there, with hot
baths, and everything comfortable and neat. The proprietors are Messrs.
Stafford and Hartenstein—the latter having been a medical student
under Dr. Agnew. After a good-supper we returned to Buena Vista, where the
home military company, under Captain Johnson, led by the Buena Yista band,
serenaded us. I responded in a brief but telling speech, which I would
give here if I had not forgotten what it was. Some of the other members of
the party wanted to make the speech, but I said no, it would not be right.
I was representing the president, Mr. Slack, and wearing his overcoat, and
therefore it would devolve on me to make the grand opening remarks. It was
the greatest effort of my life, and town lots in Buena Vista depreciated
fifty per cent.</p>
<p>We found A. D. Butler, formerly of Cheyenne, now at Buena Vista, also Tom
Campbell, well known to Laramie people, doing well at the new city, and a
prospective member of the Colorado legislature. George Marion, formerly of
Laramie, is also at Buena Vista, engaged in the retail bridge trade. We
also met Messrs. Leonard, of the and Kennedy, of the <i>Herald</i>, who
treated us the whitest kind. Mr. Leonard and wife went with us yesterday
over to Gunnison City. Billy Butler, formerly of Laramie, is now at Buena
Vista, successfully engaged in mining.</p>
<p>Yesterday we put in the most happy day of the entire trip. Under the very
kind and thoughtful guidance of Superintendent E. Wilbur, of the Gunnison
division of the South Park road, we went over the mountain to Gunnison and
through the wonderful Alpine tunnel, the highest railroad point in the
United States, and with its approaches 2,600 feet long. When you pass
through the tunnel the brakeman makes you close your window and take in
your head. He does this for two reasons: first, you can't see anything if
you look out, and secondly, the company don't like to hire an extra man to
go through the tunnel twice a day and wipe the remains of tourists off the
walls.</p>
<p>The newsboy told me that a tourist from Philadelphia once tried to wipe
his nose on the Alpine tunnel, while the train was in motion, and when
they got through into daylight, and his companions told him to take in his
head, he couldn't do it—because it was half a mile behind examining
the formation of the tunnel. Later, it was found that the man was dead.
The passengers said that they noticed a kind of crunching noise while
going through the tunnel that sounded like the smashing of false teeth,
but they paid no attention to it.</p>
<p>Mr. Wilbur afterward told me that there had never been a passenger killed
on the road, so I may have been misled by this newsboy. Still, he didn't
look like a boy who would trifle with a man's feelings in that way.</p>
<p>However, I will leave the remainder of the Gunnison trip for another
letter, as this is already too long.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0114" id="link2H_4_0114"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> TABLE MANNERS OF CHILDREN. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">Y</span>OUNG children who
have to wait till older people have eaten all there is in the house,
should not open the dining-room door during the meal and ask the host if
he is going to eat all day. It makes the company feel ill at ease, and
lays up wrath in the parents' heart.</p>
<p>Children should not appear displeased with the regular courses at dinner,
and then fill up on pie. Eat the less expensive food first, and then
organize a picnic in the preserves afterward.</p>
<p>Do not close out the last of your soup by taking the plate in your mouth
and pouring the liquid down your childish neck. You might spill it on your
bosom, and it enlarges and distorts the mouth unnecessarily.</p>
<p>When asked what part of the fowl you prefer, do not say you will take the
part that goes over the fence last. This remark is very humorous, but the
rising generation ought to originate some new table jokes that will be
worthy of the age in which we live.</p>
<p>Children should early learn the use of the fork, and how to handle it.
This knowledge can be acquired by allowing them to pry up the carpet tacks
with this instrument, and other little exercises, such as the parent mind
may suggest.</p>
<p>The child should be taught at once not to wave his bread around over the
table, while in conversation, or to fill his mouth full of potatoes, and
then converse in a rich tone of voice with some one out in the yard. He
might get his dinner down his trochea and cause his parents great anxiety.</p>
<p>In picking up a plate or saucer filled with soup or with moist food, the
child should be taught not to parboil his thumb in the contents of the
dish, and to avoid swallowing soup bones or other indigestible debris.</p>
<p>Toothpicks are generally the last course, and children should not be
permitted to pick their teeth and kick the table through the other
exercises. While grace is being said at table, children should know that
it is a breach of good breeding to smouge fruit cake just because their
parents' heads are bowed down, and their attention for the moment turned
in another direction. Children ought not to be permitted to find fault
with the dinner, or fool with the cat while they are eating. Boys should,
before going to the table, empty all the frogs and grasshoppers out of
their pockets, or those insects might crawl out during the festivities,
and jump into the gravy.</p>
<p>If a fly wades into your jelly up to his gambrels, do not mash him with
your spoon before all the guests, as death is at all times depressing to
those who are at dinner, and retards digestion. Take the fly out
carefully, with what naturally adheres to his person, and wipe him on the
table cloth. It will demonstrate your perfect command of yourself, and
afford much amusement for the company. Do not stand up in your chair and
try to spear a roll with your fork. It is not good manners to do so, and
you might slip and bust your crust, by so doing. Say "thank you," and
"much obliged," and "beg pardon," wherever you can work in these remarks,
as it throws people off their guard, and gives you an opportunity to get
in your work on the pastry and other bric-a-brac near you at the time.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0115" id="link2H_4_0115"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> WHAT IT MEANT. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HEN Billy Boot was
a little boy, he was of a philosophical and investigating turn of mind,
and wanted to know almost everything. He also desired to know it
immediately. He could not wait for time to develop his intellect, but he
crowded things and wore out the patience of his father, a learned savant,
who was president of a livery stable in Chicago.</p>
<p>One day Billy ran across the grand hailing sign, which is generally
represented as a tapeworm in the beak of the American eagle, on which is
inscribed "E Pluribus Unum." Billy, of course, asked his father what "E
Pluribus Unum" meant. He wanted to gather in all the knowledge he could,
so that when he came out west he could associate with some of our best
men.</p>
<p><br/><br/><SPAN name="linkimage-0016" id="linkimage-0016"> </SPAN></p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/0283.jpg" alt="0283 " width-obs="100%" /><br/></div>
<h5>
<SPAN href="images/0283.jpg"><ANTIMG src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </SPAN>
</h5>
<p>"I admire your strong appetite for knowledge, Billy," said Mr. Root; "you
have a morbid craving for cold hunks of ancient history and cyclopedia
that does my soul good; and I am glad, too, that you come to your father
to get accurate data for your collection. That is right. Your father will
always lay aside his work at any time and gorge your young mind with
knowledge that will be as useful to you as a farrow cow. 'E Pluri-bus
Unum' is an old Greek inscription that has been handed down from
generation to generation, preserved in brine, and signifies that 'the tail
goes with the hide.'"</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0116" id="link2H_4_0116"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> VOTERS IN UTAH. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HIS is the form of
the oath required of voters in Utah under the new law:</p>
<p>Territory of Utah, County of Salt Lake. I ——————
being first duly sworn (or affirmed), depose and say that I am over
twenty-one years of age, and have resided in the territory of Utah for six
months, and in the precinct of ————— one
month immediately preceding the date thereof, and (if a male) am a native
born or naturalized (as the case may be) citizen of the United States and
a tax payer in this territory. (Or, if a female) I am native born, or
naturalized, or the widow or daughter (as the case may be) of a native
born or naturalized citizen of the United States. And I do further
solemnly swear (or affirm) that I am not a bigamist or polygamist; that I
am not a violater of the laws of the United States prohibiting bigamy or
polygamy; that I do not live or cohabit with more than one woman in the
marriage relation, nor does any relation exist between me and any woman
which has been entered into or continued in violation of said laws of the
United States, prohibiting bigamy or polygamy, (and if a woman) that I am
not the wife of a polygamist, nor have I entered into any relation with
any man in violation of the laws of the United States concerning polygamy
or bigamy.</p>
<p>Subscribed and sworn to before me this ——— day of
—————, 1882. Registration Officer —————
Precinct.</p>
<p>It will be seen that at the next election some of the brethren and sisters
in Zion will be disfranchised unless they do some pretty tall swearing.
This is a terrible state of affairs, and the whole civilized world will
feel badly to know that some of our people are going to be left out in the
cold, cold world with no voice and no vote just because they have been too
zealous in the wedlock business.</p>
<p>Matrimony is a glorious thing, but it can be overdone. A man can become a
victim to the nuptial habit just the same as he can the opium habit. It
then assumes entire control over him, and he has to be chained up or
paralyzed with a club, or he would marry all creation. This law,
therefore, is salutary in its operations. It is intended as a gentle check
on those who have allowed themselves to become matrimony's maniacs. If we
marry one of the daughters of a family, and are happy over it, is that any
reason why we should marry the other daughters and the old lady and the
colored cook? We think not. It is natural for man to acquire railroads and
promissory notes and houses and lands, but he should not undertake to
acquire a corner on the wife trade.</p>
<p>Hence we say the law is just and must be permitted to take its course,
even though it may disfranchise many of the most prominent pelicans of the
Mormon church. Matrimony in Utah has been allowed to run riot, as it were.
The cruel and relentless hand of this hydra-headed monster has been laid
upon the youngest and the fairest of the Mormon people.</p>
<p>Matrimony has broken out there in a large family in some instances, and
has not even spared the widowed and toothless mother. It generally seeks
its prey among the youngest and fairest, but in Utah it has not spared
even the old and the infirm. Like a cruel epidemic, it has at first raked
in the blooming maidens of Mormondom and at last spotted the lantern jawed
dregs of foreign female emigration. In one community, this great scourge
entered and took all the women under forty-five, and then got into a block
where there were nineteen old women who didn't average a tooth apiece, and
swept them away like a cyclone.</p>
<p>People who do not know anything of this great evil, can have no knowledge
of it. Those who have not investigated this question have certainly failed
to look into it. We cannot find out about this question without
ascertaining something of it.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0117" id="link2H_4_0117"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> INCONGRUITY </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>UR attention has
been called recently to an illustration by Hopkins in a work called Forty
Liars, in which a miner is represented as sliding down a mountain in a
gold pan with a handle on it. Mr. Hopkins, no doubt, labors under a wrong
impression of some kind, relative to the gold pan. He seems to consider
the gold pan and the frying pan as synonymous. In this he is wrong.</p>
<p>The gold pan is a large low pan without a handle and made of very
different metal from a skillet or frying pan.</p>
<p>The artist should study as far as possible to imitate nature and not make
a fool of himself. Some artists consider it funny to represent a farmer
milking a cow on the wrong side. They also show the same farmer, later on,
plowing with a plow that turns the furrow over to the left, another
eccentricity of genius. There are many little things like this that the
artist should look into more closely so as not to bust up the eternal
fitness of things.</p>
<p>We presume that Mr Hopkins would represent a gang of miners working a
placer with giant powder and washing out smelting ore in a tin dipper. Its
pretty hard, though, for an artist who never saw a mining camp, to sit and
watch a New York beer tournament and draw pictures of life in a mining
camp, and people ought not to expect too much.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0118" id="link2H_4_0118"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> RIDING DOWN A MOUNTAIN. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">G</span>UNNISON CITY is
one of the peculiarities of a mining boom. It spreads out and slops over
the plain like a huge camp meeting, but without shape or beauty.</p>
<p>The plains there are red and sandy; the trees are not nearer than the
foot-hills; and the city, which claims 5,000 inhabitants, though 3,000
would, no doubt, be more accurate, is composed of a wide area of ground,
with scattering houses that look lonely in the midst of the desolation.
Mining in Colorado, this season, has not advanced with the wonderful
impetus which characterized it in previous years. Wherever you go, you
hear first one reason, and then another, why good mines are not being
worked. There is trouble among the stock-holders; a game of freeze out;
lack of capital to put in proper machinery, or excessive railroad
freights, to pay which virtually paralyzes the reduction of ore owned by
men too poor to erect the expensive works necessary to the realization of
profit from the mines.</p>
<p>Returning from Gunnison City, now, you rise at a rate of over 200 feet to
the mile, zig-zagging up the almost perpendicular mountain, near the
summit of which is the Alpine tunnel. As you near the tunnel, there is a
perpendicular and sometimes even a jutting wall above you, hundreds of
feet at your right, while far below you, on your left, is a yellow streak,
which at first you take to be an old mountain trail, but which you soon
discover is the circuitous track over which you have just come.</p>
<p>Near here, while the road was being built, a fine span of horses balked on
the grade, and like all balky horses, proceeded to back off the road. The
owner got out of the wagon, and told them they could keep that thing up if
they wanted to, but he could not endorse their policy. They kept backing
off until the wagon went over the brink, and then there was a little
scratching of loose stones, the kaleidoscope of legs and hoofs, a little
rush and rumble, and the world was wealthier by one less balky team. The
owner never went down to see where they went to, or how they lit. He was
afraid they would not survive their injuries, so he did not go down there.
Later, the carrion crows and turkey buzzards indicated where the
refractory team had landed; and deep in the mountain gorge the white bones
lie amid the wreck of a lumber wagon, as monuments of equine folly.</p>
<p>On Saturday evening we had the pleasure of riding down the dizzy grade
from Hancock, a distance of eighteen miles, at which time we descended a
mile perpendicularly in a push car, with Superintendent Wilbur as
conductor and engineer. A push car is a plain flat-car, about as big as a
dining-table, with four wheels, and nothing to propel it but gravity, and
nothing to stop it but a sharpened piece of two-by-four scantling. Hancock
is near the Alpine tunnel, at the summit of the mountains, about 11,000
feet high. Secretary Morgan, Mrs. Morgan, with their little daughter
Gertrude; E. A. Slack, of the <i>Sun</i>, Frank Clark, of the <i>Leader</i>,
Superintendent Wilbur and ourself, constituted the party.</p>
<p>At first everybody was a little nervous with the accumulating velocity of
the car, and the yawning abyss below us; but later we got more accustomed
to it, and the solemn grandeur of the green pine-covered canons, the lofty
snow-covered peaks, apparently so near us; and the rushing, foaming
torrent far below us, were all we saw. Like lightning we rounded the sharp
curves where the road seemed to hang over instant destruction, and we held
our breath as we thought that, like Dutch Charlie and other great men,
only a piece of two-by-four scantling stood between us and death.</p>
<p>Again and again the abrupt curve loomed up ahead, and below us, while we
flew along the narrow gauge at such a pace that we were almost sure the
car would, leave the track before it would round such a point, and each
time the two-by-four went down on the drive wheel with a pressure that
sent up volumes of blue smoke.</p>
<p>It was a wild, grand ride—so wild and grand in fact that even yet we
wake up at night with a start from a dream in which the same party is
riding down that canon at lightning speed, and Mr. Wilbur, in a
thoughtless moment, has dropped his pine brake overboard!</p>
<p>Shades of Sam Patch, but wouldn't it scatter the average excurter over
southern Colorado if such a thing should happen some day! Why, the woods
would be full of them, and for years to come, the prospector along Chalk
Creek Canon would find pyrites of editorial poverty, and indications of
collar buttons, and fragments of Archimedean levers, and other mementoes
of the great editorial hegira of 1882.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0119" id="link2H_4_0119"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CORRALED HIM. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">L</span>AST May Sheriff
Boswell received a postal card from a man up near Fort McKinney,
describing a pair of horses that had just been stolen and asking that Mr.
Boswell would keep his eye peeled for the thief and arrest him on sight.</p>
<p>Last week the sheriff discovered the identical team with color, brands and
everything to correspond. He told the driver that he would have to turn
over that team and come along to the bastile. The man stoutly protested
his innocence and claimed that he owned the team, but Boswell laughed him
to scorn and said he often got such games of talk as that when he arrested
horse thieves.</p>
<p>Just as they were going down into the damp corridors, Judge Blair met the
criminal, recognized him at once and called him by name. It seems that he
was the man who had originally written Boswell, and having found his
horses he had neglected to inform him. Thus, when he came to town four
months afterward, he got snatched. You not only have to call the officer's
attention to a larceny in this country, but it is absolutely necessary
that you call off the sleuth hound of eternal justice when you have found
the property, or you will be gathered in unless you can identify yourself.
Boswell's initials are N. K., and now the boys call him Nemesis K.
Boswell.</p>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE London <i>Lancet</i>
upsets the popular theory that abundant hair is a sign of bodily or mental
strength. The fact is, it says, that notwithstanding the Samson precedent,
the Chinese, who are the most enduring of all races, are mostly bald; and
as to the supposition that long and thick hair is a sign of
intellectuality, all antiquity, all madhouses and all common observation
are against it. The easily-wheedled Esau was hairy. The mighty Caesar was
bald. Long haired men are generally weak and fanatical, and men with scant
hair are the philosophers, and soldiers, and statesmen, of the world.
Oscar Wilde, Theodore Tilton, and others of the long-haired fraternity,
should read these statements with soulful and heart-yearning delight.</p>
<p>Will the editor of the <i>Lancet</i> please step over to the saloon,
opposite the royal palace, and take something at our expense? Pard, we
shake with you. Count us in also. Reckon us along with Cæsar, and Elijah,
and Aristotle, please. Though young, we can show more polished intellect
to the superficial foot than many who have lived longer than we have.</p>
<p>Will the editor of the <i>Lancet</i> please put our name on his list of
subscribers and send the bill to us? What we want is a good, live paper
that knows something, and isn't afraid to say it.</p>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>E were pained to
see a large mule brought into town yesterday with his side worn away until
it looked very thin. It looked as though the pensive mule had laid down to
think over his past life, and being in the company of seven other
able-bodied mules, all of whom were attached to a government freight wagon
going down a mountain, this, particular animal, while wrapped in a brown
study, had been pulled several miles with so much unction, as it were,
that when the train stopped it was found that this large and highly
accomplished mule had worn his side off so thin that you could see his
inmost thoughts.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0120" id="link2H_4_0120"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> FIRMNESS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>HEN we saw him, he
looked as though, if he had his life to live over again, he would select a
different time to ponder over his previous history. Sometimes a mule's
firmness causes his teetotal and everlasting overthrow.</p>
<p>Firmness is a good thing in its place, but we should early learn that to
be firm, we need not stand up against a cyclone till our eternal economy
is blown into the tops of the neighboring trees. Moral courage is a good
thing, but it is useless unless you have a liver to go along with it.
Sometimes a man is required to lay down his life for his principles, but
the cases where he is expected to lay down his digester on the altar of
his belief, are comparatively seldom.</p>
<p>We may often learn a valuable lesson from the stubborn mule, and guard
against the too protruberant use of our own ideas in opposition to other
powers against which it is useless to contend. It may be wrong for giant
powder to blow the top of a man's head off without cause, but repealed
contests have proved that even when giant powder is in the wrong, it is
eventually victorious.</p>
<p>Let us, therefore, while reasonably fixed in our purpose, avoid the
display of a degree of firmness which will scatter us around over two
school districts, and confuse the coroner in his inquest.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0121" id="link2H_4_0121"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PUT IN A SUMP. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE president of
the North Park and Vandaliar Mining Company not long ago got a letter from
the superintendent which closed by saying that everything was working
splendidly. The ore body was increasing, and the quality and richness of
the rock improving with every foot. He also added that he had constructed
a sump in the mine.</p>
<p>The president having spent most of his life in military and political
affairs, had never found it necessary to use a sump, and so he didn't know
to a dead moral certainty what it was that the superintendent had put in.</p>
<p>He hoped, however, that the expense would not cripple the company, and
that by handling it carefully, they might escape damage from an explosion
of the sump at an unlooked-for time.</p>
<p>He proceeded, however, to examine the unabridged, and found that it meant
a cistern, which is constructed at the bottom of a mine for the purpose of
collecting the water, and from which it is pumped.</p>
<p>The president, having posted himself, concluded to go and have a little
conversation with one of the directors, who is a druggist in the city, and
see if he knew the nature of a sump.</p>
<p>The president, in answer to the questions of the director relative to the
latest news from the mine, said that it was looking better all the time,
and that the superintendent had constructed a sump.</p>
<p>The director never blinked his eye. He acted like a man who has lived on
sumps all his life.</p>
<p>"Do you know what a sump is?" asked the president. "Why, of course,
anybody knows what a sump is. It's the place where they collect water from
a mine, and pump it from, to free the mine from water. A man who don't
know what a sump is, don't know his business, that's all I've got to say."</p>
<p>The president looked hurt about something. He hadn't looked for the
conversation to assume just exactly the shape that it had. Finally he
said, "Well you needn't point your withering sarcasm at me. I know what a
sump is. I just wanted to see whether a man who had been in the pill
business all his life, knew what a sump was. I knew you claimed to know
almost everything, but I didn't believe you was up on that word. Now, if
it's a proper question, I'd like to know just how long you have been so
all-fired fluent about mining terms."</p>
<p>Then the director said that there was no use in putting on airs, and
swelling up with pride over a little thing like that. He, for one, didn't
propose to crow over other men who had not had the advantages that he had,
and he would be frank with the president, and admit that an hour ago he
didn't know the difference between a sump and a certiorari.</p>
<p>It seems that a passenger, who had come in on the same coach that brought
in the superintendent's letter, had casually dropped the remark to the
director that Smith had put a sump in the "Endomile," and the director had
lit out for a dictionary without loss of time, so that when the two great
miners got together, they were both proud and confident. Each was proud
because he knew what a sump was, and confident that the other one didn't
know.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0122" id="link2H_4_0122"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MINING AS A SCIENCE </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE study of mining
as a science is one which brings with it a quiet joy, which the novice
knows nothing of. In Morrison's Mining Eights we find the following:</p>
<p>"If all classes of lode deposits are to be regarded as legally identical,
it follows that where a vein is pinched for a considerable distance, it is
lost to the owner; if its apex is found in the slide, it can not be
located as a lode.</p>
<p>"The distinction which would relieve these points would be to allow the
dip to such lodes Only as have a <i>perpendicular base</i> and are not on
the nature of <i>stratigraphical deposits!</i> all the inconsistencies
apparent from the previous paragraph are the sequence to any other ruling.</p>
<p>"If it be alleged that such holdings are not applicable to fissure veins,
at once a distinction is made between the two classes of veins in their
consideration under the act; and if a single distinction in their legal
status be admitted, no reason can be alleged against further distinctions
with reference to their essential points at difference."</p>
<p>How, few who have not toiled over the long and wearisome works upon mining
as a legal branch of human knowledge, would care a cold, dead clam,
whether such lodes as have perpendicular bases, or those which have
stratigraphical deposits, are to be allowed under the law in relation to
pinched out or intersecting veins.</p>
<p>But to the student, whose whole life is wrapped up in the investigation of
this beautiful mystery, these logical sequences break upon his mind with a
beautiful effulgence that fills him with unstratified and purely igneous
or nomicaseous joy.</p>
<p>Reading farther in the thrilling work, above referred to, we find this
little garland of fragrant literary wood violets:</p>
<p>"Another point to be guarded against in the conveyance of a segregated
portion of a claim on a fissure vein, is, that a line drawn at right
angles to the side lines at the surface, and which is intended as the
dividing fine between the part retained and the part sold, may, when
carried vertically downward, cut off the vein on its dip in such a way as
to divide it, for instance, at the surface. It begins 'at the west end of
discovery shaft,' it may leave the bottom of such shaft entirely in the
west fraction of the lode within a comparatively few feet of sinking. Such
result, or a similar result, will invariably occur where the vein has a
dip, unless the end lines are at an exact right angle to the strike of the
vein."</p>
<p>Now, however, supposing that, for the sake of argument, the above be true;
but, in addition thereto, a segregation of non-metallic vertically
heterogeneous quartzite in non-conformity to presupposed notions of
horizontal deposits of mineral in place should be agatized and truncated
with diverging lines meeting at the point of intersection and disappearing
with the pinched veins or departing from known proximity in company with
the dividends, we have then to consider whether a winze coming in at this
juncture and pinching out the assessments, would thereby invalidate
tertiary flux, and thereby, in the light of a close legal examination of
the slide, bar out the placer or riparian rights of contesting parties,
or, if so, why in thunder should it not, or at least, what could be done
about it in case the same or a totally different set of surrounding
circumstances should or should not take place?</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0123" id="link2H_4_0123"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DRAWBACKS OF ROYALTY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T seems from our
late dispatches that the prevailing assassin has made his appearance in
England, and has fired at Her Royal Tallness, the Queen. The dispatch does
not say why the man fired at Victoria, but the chances are that she at
some time in a careless moment refused him the appointment of Book-keeper
to the Queen's Livery Stable Extraordinary, or neglected to confirm his
nomination to the position as Usher Plenipotentiary to the Royal Bath Room
and Knight of the Queen's Cuspidor.</p>
<p>Royalty gets it in the nose every day or two, and yet after the family has
hung onto the salary for several centuries it does not occur to the
average king that he could strike a job as humorist on some London paper,
at about the same salary and with none of the annoyances. The most of
those people who have worn a great, heavy cast iron crown, with diamonds
on it as big as a peanut, have become so attached to it that they can't
swear off in a moment.</p>
<p>We do not see where the orchestra comes in on a thing like that. The
average American would rather sell mining stock, and get wealthy without a
tail on his name and his hair all worn off with a crown two sizes too
large for him, than to be King of the Cannibal Islands with a missionary
baby on toast twice a day.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0124" id="link2H_4_0124"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ENGLISH HUMOR </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE London <i>Spectator</i>
says that "the humor of the United States, if closely examined, will be
found to depend in a great measure on the ascendancy which the principle
of utility has gained over the imaginations of a rather imaginative
people." The humor of England, if closely examined, will be found just
about ready to drop over the picket fence into the arena, but never quite
making connections. If we scan the English literary horizon, we will find
the humorist up a tall tree, depending from a sharp knot thereof by the
slack of his overalls. He is just out of sight at the time you look in
that direction. He always has a man working in his place, however. The man
who works in his place is just paring down the half sole, and newly
pegging a joke, that has recently been sent in by the foreman for repairs.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0125" id="link2H_4_0125"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ABOUT THE AUTOPSY. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">W</span>E have been
carefully reading and investigating the report of Dr. Lamb, relative to
the anatomical condition of the late remnants of Charles J. Gluiteau, and
also a partial or minority report furnished by the other two doctors, who
got on their ear at the time of the autopsy. We are permitted to print the
fragment of a private letter addressed personally to the editor from one
of these gentlemen, whose name we are not permitted to use. He says:</p>
<p>"We found the late lamented, and after looking him over thoroughly, and
removing what works he had inside of him, agreed, almost at once, that he
was dead. This was the only point upon which we agreed.</p>
<p>"Shortly after we began to remove the internal economy of the deceased,
some little discussion arose between Doc Lamb and myself about the
extravasation of blood in the right pectoralis and the peculiar position
of the dewflicker on the dome of the diaphragm. I made a suggestion about
the causes that had led to this, stating, in my opinion, the pericarditis
had crossed the median line and congested the dewdad.</p>
<p>"He said it was no such thing, and that I didn't know the difference
between a malpighian capsule and an abdominal viscera.</p>
<p>"That insulted me, but I held my temper, going on with my work, removing
the gall-bladder and other things, as though nothing had been said.</p>
<p>"By and by, Lamb said I'd better quit fooling with the pancreas, and come
and help him. Then he advanced a tom-fool theory about an adhesion of the
dura mater to the jib-boom, or some medical rot or other, and I told him
that I thought he was wrong, and I didn't believe deceased had any dura
mater. Lamb flared up then, and struck at me with a bloody towel. I then
grabbed a fragment of liver, and pasted him in the nose. I don't allow any
sawbone upstart to impose on me, if I know it. He then called me a very
opprobrious epithet, indeed, and struck me in the eye with a kidney. Then
the fight became disgraceful, and by the time we got through, the late
lamented was considerably scattered. Here lay a second-hand lobe of liver,
while over there was the apex of a lung hanging on a gas fixture. It was a
pretty lively scrimmage, and made quite a feeling between us. I still
think, however, that I was right in standing up for my theory, and when an
old pelican like Lamb thinks he can scare me into St. Vitus' dance, he
fools himself. The fact is, he don't know a gall-bladder from the gout,
and he couldn't tell a lobulated tumor from the side of a house. I told
him so, too, while I was putting some court plaster on my nose, after he
pasted me with an old prison bedstead. Lamb would get along better with me
if he would curb his violent temper. I guess he thought so, too, when I
broke his false teeth and jammed them so far back into his oesophagus that
he got blue in the face. I never allow a secondhand horse doctor to impose
on me, if I know it, and it is time Doc Lamb took a grand aborescent
tumble to himself."</p>
<h3> A FEW CALM WORDS. </h3>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> LONDON paper
tells how when a certain Dean of Chester was all ready to perform a
marriage between persons of high standing, the bride was very late. When
she reached the altar, to the question, "Wilt thou take this man?" she
replied in most distinct tones, "I will not." On retiring with the Dean to
the vestry, she explained that her late arrival was not her fault, and
that the bridegroom had accosted her on her arrival at the church with, "G—d
d——n you, if this is the way you begin you'll find it to to
your cost when you're my wife."</p>
<p>That was no way to open up a honeymoon. They are not doing that way
recently, and in the bon ton and dishabille select and etcetera society of
the more metropolitan cities, such a remark would at once be considered as
outre and Corpus Christi.</p>
<p>The groom should stop and consider that sometimes the most annoying
accidents occur to a young lady in dressing. Suppose for instance that in
stooping over to button her shoe she breaks a spoke in her corset and has
to send it to the blacksmith shop, do you think that the groom is
justified in kicking over the altar and dragging his affianced up the
aisle by the hair of the head? We would rather suggest that he would not.
There are other distressing accidents which may happen at such a time to
the prospective bride, but we forbear to enter into the harrowing details.
No man with the finer feelings of a gentleman will ever knock his new wife
down in the church and tramp on her, until he knows to a reasonable degree
of certainty that he is right. It may be annoying, of course, to the groom
to stand and look out of the window for half an hour while the bride is
allaying the hemorrhage of a pimple on her nose with a powder puff, but
then, great hemlock! if a man can't endure that and smile, how will he
behave when the clothesline falls down and the baby gets a kernel of corn
up its nose?</p>
<p>These are questions which naturally occur to the candid and thinking mind
and command our attention. The groom who would swear at his wife for being
a few minutes late at the altar, would kill her and throw her stiffened
remains over into the sheep corral if she allowed the twins to eat
crackers in his bed and scatter the crumbs over his couch.</p>
<p>Let us look these matters calmly in the face, and not allow ourselves to
drift away into space.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0126" id="link2H_4_0126"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DON'T LIKE OUR STYLE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span> SCAR WILDE closes
his remarks about America thus: "But it is in the decay of manners that
the thoughtful and well-bred American has cause for regret. I have
repeatedly said this, but I am told in reply: 'We are still a young
country, and you must not be too severe upon us.' 'Yes,' I answer, 'but
when your country was still younger, it's manners were better. They have
never been equal since to what they were in Washington's time, a man whose
manners were irreproachable. I believe a most serious problem for the
American people to consider, is the cultivation of better manners among
its people. It is the most noticeable, the most painful defect in American
civilization." Yes, Oscar, you are, in a measure, correct. Our manners are
a little decayed. So also were the eggs with which you were greeted in
some of our cities. That may have given you a wrong impression as to our
manners and their state of health. We just want to straighten out any
little error of judgment on your part as to American customs, and to
impress upon your mind the fact that the decayed article which, in most
cases you considered our miasma-impregnated etiquette, was what is known
among savants as decayed cabbage.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0127" id="link2H_4_0127"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> MR. T. WILSON. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE gentleman above
referred to has accomplished one of the most remarkable feats known to
modern science. Though uneducated, and perhaps inexperienced, he has
attracted toward himself the notice of the world.</p>
<p>Though he was once a poor boy, unnoticed and unknown, he has risen to the
proud eminence from which, with pride, and covered with glory and sore
places, he may survey the civilized world. He entered upon an argument
with Mr. Sullivan, knowing the mental strength and powers of his
adversary, and yet he never flinched. He stood up before his powerful
antagonist, and acquired a national reputation, and a large octagonal
breadth of black and blue intellect, which are the envy and admiration of
50,000,000 people.</p>
<p>This should be a convincing argument to our growing youth of the
possibilities in store for the earnest, untiring and enthusiastic thumper.
It is an example of the wonderful triumph of mind over matter. It shows
how certain intellectual developments may be acquired almost
instantaneously. It demonstrates at once that phrenological protuberances
may be grown more rapidly and more spontaneously than the scientist has
ever been willing to admit.</p>
<p>A few weeks ago, Tug Wilson was as obscure as the greenback party. Now he
is known from ocean to ocean, and his fame is as universal as is that of
Dr. Tanner, the starvation prima donna of the world. Few men have the
intellectual stamina to withstand the strain of such an argument as he
did, but he left the arena with a collection of knobs and arnica
clustering around his brow, which he justly merited, and the world will
not grudge him this meagre acquisition. It was due to his own exertions
and his own prowess, and there is no American so mean as to wrest it from
him.</p>
<p>Thousands of our own boys, who to-day are spearing frogs, or bathing in
the rivers of their native land and parading on the shingly beach with no
clothes on to speak of, are left to choose between such a career of
usefulness and greatness of brow, and the hum-drum life of a bilious
student and pale, sad congressman. Will you rise to the proud pinnacle of
fame as a pugilist, boys, or will you plug along as a sorrowing,
overworked statesman? Now, in the spring-time of your lives, choose
between the two, and abide the consequences.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0128" id="link2H_4_0128"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ETIQUETTE OF THE NAPKIN </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>T has been stated,
and very truly too, that the law of the napkin is but vaguely understood
It may be said, however, on the start, that custom and good breeding have
uttered the decree that it is in poor taste to put the napkin in the
pocket and carry it away.</p>
<p>The rule of etiquette is becoming more and more thoroughly established,
that the napkin should be left at the house of the host or hostess, after
dinner.</p>
<p>There has been a good deal of discussion, also, upon the matter of folding
the napkin after dinner, and whether it should be so disposed of, or
negligently tossed into the gravy boat. If, however, it can be folded
easily, and without attracting too much attention and prolonging the
session for several hours, it should be so arranged, and placed beside the
plate, where it may be easily found by the hostess, and returned to her
neighbor from whom she borrowed it for the occasion. If, however, the lady
of the house is not doing her own work, the napkin may be carefully jammed
into a globular wad, and fired under the table, to convey the idea of
utter recklessness and pampered abandon.</p>
<p>The use of the finger bowl is also a subject of much importance to the bon
ton guest who gorges himself at the expense of his friends.</p>
<p>The custom of drinking out of the finger bowl, though not entirely
obsolete, has been limited to the extent that good breeding does not now
permit the guest to quaff the water from his finger howl, unless he does
so prior to using it as a finger bowl.</p>
<p>Thus it will be seen that social customs are slowly but surely cutting
down and circumscribing the rights and privileges of the masses.</p>
<p>At the court of Eugenie, the customs of the table were very rigid, and the
most prominent guest of H. R. H. was liable to get the G. B. if he spread
his napkin on his lap, and cut his egg in two with a carving knife. The
custom was that the napkin should be hung on one knee, and the egg busted
at the big end and scooped out with a spoon.</p>
<p>A prominent American, at her table, one day, in an unguarded moment,
shattered the shell of a soft-boiled egg with his knife, and, while prying
it apart, both thumbs were erroneously jammed into the true inwardness of
the fruit with so much momentum that the juice took him in the eye, thus
blinding him and maddening him to such a degree, that he got up and threw
the remnants into the bosom of the hired man plenipotentiary, who stood
near the table, scratching his ear with a tray. As may readily be
supposed, there was a painful interim during which it was hard to tell for
five or six minutes whether the prominent American or the hired man would
come out on top; but at last the American, with the egg in his eye, got
the ear of the high-priced hired man in among his back teeth, and the
honor of our beloved flag was vindicated.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0129" id="link2H_4_0129"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> AN INFERNAL MACHINE. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> SINGULAR thing
occurred in England the other day, and in view of its truth, and also in
order that the American side of the affair may be shown in the correct
light, we give the facts as they occurred, having obtained our information
directly from the parties who were implicated in the affair. We hesitate
to take hold of the subject, but our duty to the American people demands
some action, and we do not falter.</p>
<p>During the past winter there arrived in London a suspicious-looking
metallic box, with a peculiar thumb-screw or button on the top. It was
sent by mail, and was addressed to a prominent land owner. This gentleman
had been on the watch for some explosive machine for some time, and when
it was brought to him, he at once turned it over to the authorities for
investigation. The police force, detective force and chemists were called
in, and requested to ascertain the nature of the infernal machine, and, if
possible, where it came from.</p>
<p>Experts examined the box, and, with the aid of a cord attached to the
suspicious button on top, pulled open the metallic box without explosion.
The substance contained therein, was of a dark color, with a strong smell
of ammonia. All kinds of tests were made by the experts, in order to
ascertain of what kind of combustible it was composed. The odor was
carefully noted, as well as the taste, and then there was a careful
chemical analysis made, which was barren of result. In the midst of the
general alarm, the London papers, with large scare-heads and astonishers,
gave full and elaborate reports of the attempt upon the life of a
prominent man, through the agency of a new and very peculiar machine,
loaded with an explosive, of which scientists could gain no knowledge or
information whatever.</p>
<p>It looked as though the assassin was far in advance of science, or at
least of professional chemists, and the matter was about to be given up in
despair, when the following letter arrived from San Antonio, Texas, United
States of America:</p>
<p>"My Dear Sir:—I sent you by a recent mail, prepaid, a small metallic
box of bat guano, from the caves of Texas, for analysis and experiment.
Please acknowledge receipt of saine.</p>
<p>"Morton Frewen."</p>
<p>Then the experts went home. They felt as though science had done all it
could in this case, and they needed rest, and perfect calm, and change of
scene. They hadn't seen their families for some time, and they wanted to
go home and get acquainted with their wives. They didn't ask for any pay
for their services. They just said it was in the interest of science, and
they couldn't have the heart to charge anything for it. One chemist
started off without his umbrella, and never went back after it.</p>
<p>When he got home he was troubled with nausea, and they had to feed him on
cracker toast for several weeks.</p>
<p>We tell this incident simply to vindicate America. The London papers did
not give all the proceedings, and we feel it our duty to place the United
States upon a square footing with England in this matter. Of course it is
a little tough on the experts, but when we know our duty to our
magnificent country and the land that gave us birth, there is no earthly
power we fear, no terrestrial snoozer who can deter us from its
performance.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0130" id="link2H_4_0130"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CODFISH. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HIS tropical bird
very seldom wings his way so far west as Wyoming. He loves the sea breezes
and humid atmosphere of the Atlantic ocean, and when isolated in this
mountain clime, pines for his native home.</p>
<p>The codfish cannot sing, but is prized for his beautiful plumage and
seductive odor.</p>
<p>The codfish of commerce is devoid of digestive apparatus, and is more or
less permeated with salt.</p>
<p>Codfish on toast is not as expensive as quail on toast.</p>
<p>The codfish ball is made of the shattered remains of the adult codfish,
mixed with the tropical Irish potato of commerce.</p>
<p>The codfish has a great wealth of glad, unfettered smile. When he laughs
at anything, he has that same wide waste of mirth and back teeth that Mr.
Talmage has. The Wyoming codfish is generally dead. Death, in most cases,
is the result of exposure and loss of appetite. No one can look at the
codfish of commerce, and not shed a tear. Far from home, with his system
filled with salt, while his internal economy is gone, there is an air of
sadness and homesickness and briny hopelessness about him that no one can
see unmoved.</p>
<p>It is in our home life, however, that the codfish makes himself felt and
remembered. When he enters our household, we feel his all pervading
presence, like the perfume of wood violets, or the seductive odor of a
dead mouse in the piano.</p>
<p>Friends may visit us and go away, to be forgotten with the advent of a new
face; but the cold, calm, silent corpse of the codfish cannot be
forgotten. Its chastened influence permeates the entire ranch. It steals
into the parlor, like an unbidden guest, and flavors the costly curtains
and the high-priced lambrequins. It enters the dark closet and dallies
lovingly with your swallowtail coat. It goes into your sleeping apartment,
and makes its home in your glove box and your handkerchief case.</p>
<p>That is why we say that it is a solemn thing to take the life of a
codfish. We would not do it. We would pass him by, a thousand times, no
matter how ferocious he might be, rather than take his life, and have our
once happy home haunted forever by his unholy presence.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0131" id="link2H_4_0131"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HIS AGED MOTHER. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>N exchange says
that "the James boys had a morose and ugly disposition." This may be
regarded as authentic. The James boys were not only morose, but they were
at times irritable and even boorish. Some of their acts would seem to
savor of the most coarse and rude of impulses. Jesse James at different
times killed over fifty men. This would show that his disposition must
have been soured by some great sorrow. A person who fills the New
Jerusalem with people, or kills a majority of the republican voters of a
precinct, or the entire board of directors of a national bank, or who
remorselessly kills all the first-class passengers on a through train,
just because he feels crochety and disagreeable, must be morose and sullen
in his disposition. No man, who is healthy and full of animal spirits,
could massacre the ablebodied voters of a whole village, unless he felt
cross and taciturn naturally.</p>
<p>There should have been a post mortem examination of Mr. James to determine
what was the matter with him. We were in favor of a post mortem
examination of Mr. James twelve years ago, but there seemed to be a
feeling of reluctance on the part of the authorities about holding it. No
one seemed to doubt the propriety of such a movement, but there was a kind
of vague hesitation by the proper officials on account of his mother.
There has been a vast amount of thoughtfulness manifested by the Missouri
people on behalf of Jesse's mother. For nearly twenty years they have put
off the post mortem examination of Mr. James, because they knew that his
mother would feel wretched and gloomy when she saw her son with his vitals
in one market basket, and his vertebræ in another. The American people
hate like sin to step in between a mother and her child, and create
unpleasant sensations.</p>
<p>Mr. Pinkerton was the most considerate. At first he said he would hold an
autopsy on Mr. James right away, but it consumed so much time holding
autopsies on his detectives, that he postponed Jesse's post mortem for a
long time. He also hoped that after the lapse of years, may be, Mr. James
would become enfeebled so that he could steal up behind him, some night,
and stun him with a Chicago pie; but Jesse seemed vigorous, up to a late
date, and out of respect for his aged mother, the Chicago sleuth hounds of
justice have spared him.</p>
<p>Detectives are sometimes considered hardhearted and unloving in their
natures, but this is not the case. Very few of them can bear to witness
the shedding of blood, especially their own blood. Sometimes they find it
necessary to kill a man in order to restore peace to the country, but they
very rarely kill a man like James. This is partly due to the fact that
they hate to cut a man like that right down, before he has a chance to
repent. They are prone to give him probation, and yet another chance to
turn. Still, there are lots of mean, harsh, unthinking people who do not
give the detectives credit for this.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0132" id="link2H_4_0132"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> BUSINESS LETTERS. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>LL business
letters, as a rule, demand some kind of an answer, especially those
containing money. To neglect the reply to a letter is an insult, unless
the letter failed to contain a stamp. In your reply, first acknowledge the
receipt of the letter, then the receipt of the money, whatever it is.</p>
<p>Letters asking for money or the payment of a bill, may be postponed from
time to time if necessary. No man should reply to such a letter while
angry. If the amount is small and you are moderately hot, wait two days.
If the sum is quite large and you are tempted to write an insulting
letter, wait two weeks, or until you have thoroughly cooled down.</p>
<p>Business letters should be written on plain, neat paper, with your name
and business neatly printed at the top by the Boomekang job printer.</p>
<p>Letters from railroad companies referring to important improvements, etc.,
etc., should contain pass, not for publication, but as a guarantee of good
faith.</p>
<p>Neat and beautiful penmanship is very desirable in business
correspondence, but it is most important that you should not spell God
with a little g or codfish with a k. Ornamental penmanship is good, but it
will not take the cuss off if you don't know how to spell.</p>
<p>Read your letter over carefully after you have written it, if you can; if
not, send it with an apology about the rush of business.</p>
<p>In ordering goods, state whether you will remit soon or whether the
account should be placed in the refrigerator.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0133" id="link2H_4_0133"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> DANGER OF GARDENING. </h2>
<p class="pfirst">
<span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span> COLORADO book
agent writes us about as follows: "For some time past it has been my
desire to insure my life for the benefit of my family, but I knew the
public sentiment so well that I feared it could not be done. I knew that
there was a deep and bitter enmity against book agents, which I found had
pervaded the insurance world to such an extent that I would be unable to
obtain insurance at a reasonable premium.</p>
<p>"The popular belief is that book agents are shot on sight and their
mangled bodies thrown into the tall grass or fed to the coyotes.</p>
<p>"I found, however, that I could get my life insured for two thousand
dollars by paying a premium of twelve dollars per year, as a book agent.
This was far better than anything I had ever looked for. The question
arose as to whether I worked in my garden or not, and I was forced to
admit that I did. It ought to reduce the premium if a man works in his
garden, and thus, by short periods of vigorous exercise, prolongs his
life, but it don't seem to be that way. They charged me an additional
three dollars on the premium, because I toiled a little among my pet
rutabagas.</p>
<p>"I don't know what the theory is about this matter. Perhaps the company
labors under the impression that a thousand-legged worm might crawl into
my ear and kill me, or a purple-top turnip might explode and knock my
brains out.</p>
<p>"Of course, in the midst of life we are in death, but I always used to
think I was safer mashing my squash-bugs and hoeing my blue-eyed beans
than when I was on the road, dodging bulldogs and selling books.</p>
<p>"Perhaps some amateur gardener, in a careless moment, at some time or
other, has been stabbed in the diaphragm by a murderous radish, or a
watermelon may have stolen up to some man, in years gone by, and brained
him with part of a picket fence. There must be statistics somewhere by
which the insurance companies have arrived at this high rate on gardeners.
If you know anything of this matter, I wish you would write me, for if
hoeing sweet corn and cultivating string beans is going to sock me into an
early grave I want to know it."</p>
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