Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 89, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 4, 1876 Page: 2 of 8
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HeArtS*& Khti
in mM-winter, • feat to which the
toughest Russian couriers vfura Bwqual.
Two who attempted it were fWwptiff
as herring and left dead in the drifts.
Captain Burnaby had no particular
business in Khiva, and might easily
have waited on warmer wreathe., but
the perils and hardships of the journey
held out a temptation which he was
unable to resist. He dropped in on the
astonished Khan muffled in sheep-
skins like one of the Scythians
of Tomyris, and, as he measures
six feet four in his stockings,
the effect on the mind of that wintei -
nwUhfl cwJLcmm out withitAtuLM
upon the floor. The Doctor gathered
tnefll ttp witB ft very red face, and while
he was arranging them in his hand, he
Berber Desert, giving the amazed Arabs
occasional exhibitions of. his strength*
4t Korosko, in the presence eLa great
ilp^r of sheiks, he brokers two . _Jp „
tfcf Uusket of the oldest .and ground a moment later, the man wink-
most powerful of those chief- »d at him again. Then he winked sev-
tains, whioh had been handed oral times, and finally he came over,
man
: at him.
in bis seat
* He turn-:
l his head away, but upon looking
ound a moment later, the man wink-
been
him to experiment oh; but instead of
admiring the feat, the sordid Arabs
pronounced it black art, and insisted
.................. the
oh payment for the ruined Weapon.
This proposition was finally acceded to,
the Captain telling down the stipulated
lasti
hound potentate must have been pro-
digious. Emotions Of an anxious char-
acter were likewise excited in the pre-
cincts of official Russian bureaus by this
spectral and gigantic apparition hover-
ing inexplicable along the far Asian
frontier. A hint to the British Foreign
Office procured Captain Burnaby’s
summary recall, after which he speed-
ily loomed colossal along Pall Mall,
towering above the “oiled and curled
Assyrian bulls” of that thoroughfare as
Saul of Tarsus above his fellows, and
moving With the stride of Magog.
Captain Burnaby’s winter journey to
Khiva, remarkable as it was, would not
certainly have constituted him a me-
tropolian lion. It was only one among
many spirited and daring adventures of
travel, all of which put together, how-
ever, did not make of him a Burton or
a Burcklnvrdt, a Schweinfurth or a
Schlageutweidt. His journeyings,
plucky as they were, never meant any
thing except to go from one place to
another as hurriedly and over as many
obstacles and through as many difficul-
ties as possible. But he had been a
famous amateur athlete, and was re-
puted to have attained his ambitious
purpose of becoming the strongest man
! in the world. His arm around the
biceps measured 17 iuches, and seemed
to be woven yf whipcord. lie used to
knock about Tom Paddock, Nat Lang-
ham. Bob Travers and the rest of the
crack pugilists, as if they had been the
dummies of a boxing-room. The Sam-
son of the Alhambra, whose mighty
strength has long been the sport of the
London Philistines, could not stand be-
fore him. He bent down the arm of
that herculean person as if it had been
the arm of a virgin of three lustres. At
Aldershot his plaything was a dumb-
bell weighing 170 pounds, which he
held at arm’s length, shot straight above
his head to the limit of his reach, and
toyed with it as if it had been an orange.
One day a horse-dealer arrived at the
cavalry barracks, having in charge two
ponies which had been purcha-ed for
number of coins, twisting the last one
asunder as if it had been a macaroon.
H« desired to retain a broken half of
this as a souvenir, but the penurious
sheik refused, insisting stubbornly on
both moieties. The Arabs thought their
visitor possessed, and seemed Joyful at
his departure. His Khiven journey,
just finished, winds up the tale of his
achievements and brings him back to
the metropolis and the cavalry barracks
a full-grown social lion of the smaller
sort, who will be heard of and seen in
all the fashionable saloas of the season,
but who by the next will very likely
have shed his claws and mane and re-
lapsed into an enormous and prema-
turely worn-out sub-officer of the caval
ry service, with little of achievement to
fall back upon, except a few daring and
foolhardy escapades, undertaken with
no sufficient purpose, and carried
through with the force of
restless and uneasy vanity which would
rather astonish the world than serve it.
This evidently immensely gifted young
man seems to have overdone every
thing, and it will be a wonder if he does
not learn that he has wasted his rich
patrimony of strength and vigor almost
before he lias arrived at its ful1 inherit-
ance. The revolt of his body forcing
him upon the lenten diet! of water-ice
was the natural sequel of the tremendous
and sustained strain which he had put
upon it. Any clever doctor could have
told him that his break-down was the
sign of organic injury, subtle and grave,
which he had brought upon himself by
overdriving his machinery. A similar
harm is said to have come to young
Cook, stroke-oar at Yale in the inter-
university contest at Saratoga, and
which comes with unobserved frequency
to less conspicuous boating, boxing and
walking men who commit the folly of
overtraining. Captain Fred Bur-
naby’s future career, it is likely,
as well possibly as Mr. Cook’s,
will serve mainly to emphasize
the unwisdom of binning the candle at
both ends, and, obedient to the merest
suggestions of vanity, using up in a few
years the strength which nature intend-
Some of Captain Burna- | ed {0. be distributed over seven vigor-
Her Majesty,
by’s brotl*r officers led them up-stairs !J"
to his rooms, but the obstinate little 1,1
beasts refused to be led down again.
So ifie Captain took one under each
arm and carried them down like rab-
bits. In addition to his groat strength
he had all sorts of skill. He could
fonce better than the master-of-arms,
and readily disarmed the greatest
swordsmen in Europe. He could run,
jump, vault, swim and row faster, fur-
ther, higher and more powerful than
any body else. All at once his stomach
gave out. He had trained too line. He
could digest nothing whatever except
Roman punch, width, as tne judicious
reader is wware, is a watery, half-con-
gealed preparation of sub-acid flavor*
containing about as much nourishment
as so much snow. He could not live on
this, so he went io his doctor. His
doctor recommended strict abstinence I
from dumb-bells and oiher athletic ap-
paratus, and exercise and immediate !
travel. He went to Spain. He was al- ]
ready master of most of the modern
ons decades. If his lionsliip of a season
1 he drawing-rooms of the British
capital is any compensation for an un-
timely overthrow of his powers, he is
certainly well entitled to it. We have
told the story of him for the benetit of
ambitious young collegians, some of
whom are apt to try to put up dumb-
bells loo big for them, and carry oxen
up stairs while they ought to content
themselves with taek'ing calve , and we
hope that they will lay il well and wisely
to heart.—New York World.
Stage RJfficr Killed.
and sitting down by the side of the
Doctor, he said:
“ I say, pardner, what’s your little
game?”
“Idon’t understand you, sir,” re-
plied the Doctor.
“Oh, you needn’t mind me,” said
the man. “ I’m doing a little of that
thing myself. Now, how do you work
it?”
“What do you mean? How do I
work what?”
“ Oh, you know well enough. What
do you skin ’em on?”
“ Skin them! Skin who? Really,
sir, your remarks are incomprehensible
to me.”
“ Now; see here, I understand the
whole thing. You’re hunting up some-
body to play seven-up with, and you
intend to beat ’em out of their money.
Now, don’t you P”
You don’t know whom you are talk-
ing to.”
“ Now, I’ll tell you what I’ll do.
There’s no man on this earth that kin
turn jacks faster’n I kin; and less you
and me start up a game on sonic of
these fellers, and I’ll run three or four
jacks up my sleeve, with a couple of
aces maybe, and when we get to town
we’ll divide the profits and go down
and get roaring drunk al .the tavern. Is
it a bargain?”
“You are a scoundrel, sir!” exclaim-
ed the Doctor. “Let me change my
seat if you please.”
“Won’t do it? Won’t club in with
me and try a few games?”
“ Certainly not, sir.”
“ Won’t lend me them jacks to put in
my sleeve?”
“You seem to forget that I am a cler-
gyman, sir.”
“A eler— Oh, no. You don’t mean
to say that—that—you ain’t a preacher;
now, honest, are you?”
Yes, sir, I am. I am the Rev. Dr.
P.”
“Too bad! too bad! Believe me, if I
didn’t think you were one of tliosb fel-
lows who play cards on the cars to
gouge green Horns out of their money.
You look like one anyway, now don’t
you? Ami what are you doing with
that pack, old man. hey? Would you
mind if I showed you how to run ’em
over so’s when you play they can’t fool
you? I’ll do it for nothing.”
Then Dr. Potts went into the hind car
and got off at the next station. When
he got home he gave that boy of his a
couple of extra Hoggings in order to ease
his feelings.—Philadelphia Bulletin.
at®®
eard
rady
an asked
fer, replied:
“ No, sir, I don’t. There’s nothing
arp scythe to cut grass.
rou)r new-fangled notions
—sell you
to such as want them.”
He went home with a scythe yester-
day forenoon. The grass was in fine
condition, and he never felt better in
his life. He threw off his coat, whis-
tled like the farmer who surveys the
dewy meadow, and then went in. The
grass fell in showers for about a minute,
and then waited while the scythe cut
the penstock hose in two. The wife
and son came out and denied leaving
the hose there, and after some han
words the mower cut a now swath. It
wasn’t a viery long one, owing to the
fact that the point of the scythe entered
a cherry tree. Some boys leaned over
the fence and asked who cut the favor-
ite cherry tree, but there was no reply.
After pulling and tugging for a while
the scythe was extracted, and the man
crossed to the other side of the yard and
cut a swath along the fence. There weie
only 84 pickets in the fence. That’s the
reason the scythe didn’t chip into any
more. It was a beautiful swath, how-
ever, and it encouraged the mower to
renewed exertions. It wasn’t long be*
fore he turned up three bottles, four
oyster cans, a coil of wire, live or six
ciothes-p:ns and a lot of rag carpet.
When he struck an old stove cover he
leaned against the house to sharpen up.
The second pass he made he sharpened
up his thumb. The third pass passed
the scythe over into the back yard,
where it out three lines out of the
•lothes reel and nearly stabbed the
hired girl in the heel.
“Nevertheless,” explained the citi-
zen, as he stood at his gate with his
thumb rolled up in tho largest part of
an old shirt, “1 claim that a scythe has
many advantages over a lot of cog-
wheels and handles. I have ridden up
and down on tho street cars so long
that I am a little out of practice.”—De-
troit Free Press.
rs hpme, intercepted
Saturday Night:
i, May 8, *78.-1 must
peculiar treatment of.
ed States. In Brazil,
_ ____now, we confine that unfor-
tunate class in asylums and submit tliem
to such humane treatment as will liti-
gate their calamity If it dods nor im-
prove tbeir mental condition, but in
this country asylums have been abol-
ished and idiots are treated to An exer-
cise called “base ball.” All flo not
play it at once, of course.* A great
body of them go into some open lot and
“ nine” are selected to play against an-
other so-called “nine,” white the re-
maining idiots sit and stand around,
uttering incoherent gibberish mean-
while and indulging in idiotic yells at
frequent intervals. I v
I went out to what
they call the “ base-ball grounds” the
other day, and found at least 20,000
people congregated there. They were
of all ages, sizes, sexes, and conditions,
and all more or less demented. From
»
my observations that day I can not say
‘ h
“Pull Down Your Vest.”
Old Acquaintances Meeting at the Cen-
tennial.
The Exhibit,ion grounds have already
become noted because of the frequency
with which visitors meet friends and
even relatives whom they have lost
sight of for many years. Thi ■ morning,
in one of the pleasant corners of Agri-
cultural Hal1 1
hard-handed and bronze-cheeked men,
evidently farmers, who stood about a
fence-puet-hole boring machine. They
were all dressed in whet somebody lias
D. D. French, of Milwaukee, says of
the phrase “pull down your vest,” that
it is not new but has been revived lately.
I first heard it about twenty years ago.
Linooln and Douglas were campaign-
ing it for Congress. I was something
of a politician then, and went to the
meetings whenever I got a chance—in
my wild days, you know. My! How
Douglas used to throw himself. Car-
penter’s now here. When he’d get off a
particularly line passage—all eloquence,
fire and gesture—the buttons to his vest
would pop off like periods all along
through his sentences. When he’d get
through and was sitting down and rak-
ing back his hair, the boys would howl,
“Bully for you, little fellow! Full
down your vest.” Then Lincoln’s
lank form would rise up, like an in-
terjection point, and the crowd would
be still.
that I was favorably impressed witl
base-ball treatment for the feeble-
minded. I think the old-fashioned
asylum, with its attending discipline,
is better for them.
I would like to describe “ base-ball”
if I could,but it is so foolish a perform-
ance that it is difficult for a sensible
man to convey an intelligible idea of it
to readers in the full possession of their
intellects. Suffice it to say that it con-
sists mainly in one man flinging a ball
at another, who makes a wild and oft-
times fruitless effort to hit it witli a
club. The former is called a “pitcher.”*
He takes the ball in his hand, scrutin-
izes it carefully to make sure that it
isn’t a cod-fish ball, then glances up at
tho clouds to see if it is likely to rain,
then casts his eye around at the infirm
intellects who are watching him so in-
tensely from the benches, looks intently
at the ground as if selecting some good
depot to sit down, then wheeling sud-
denly on his heel lie spins the ball with
a swift, jerking motion towards the
man with the bat. You can not imagine
the frantic yells I hat crowd of i mpaired
mental constitutions sends up if the bat-
ter hits the ball and sends it spinning a
long distance, particularly if it isn’t
captured by the nimble idiots who run
after it before he can run around a given
circle. 1 was curious to know whether
or not this exercise was pecuniarily
profitable to those who participated in
it, and I asked the afore-mentioned
base-ball reporter, “ Do these unfor-
tunate creatures who play base-ball
ever make any thing?” aim he replied,
“ Oh, yes, they make their home-base
occasionally.” Poor fellows, i should
think they would make home base
enough, but of course they can’t help it.
They were bom so, for the most part,
though I am told that base-ball idiocy
is contagious and on the increase.
tv
Remarkably Even Sailing.
Last Thursday night when the stage . ______________... .....
from Hamilton to Fiocho had arrived at \ called -store clodies,” and, with their
wives, were listening most attentively
to a dried-up little old man, who ex-
pktined the merits of he machine, and
a point 65 miles from Hamilton, a man
suddenly sprang from the sagebrush
and ordered the driver to “ pass down
the box,” supplementing the order with
another to drive ahead as soon as he
had handed down the treasure recepta-
cle. The driver passed down the box
as directed, and stated
„ — —------ — ------------------to the robber
European languages, but not content i that there was a bad place in the road
with even that wide range of lingual
accomplishments, he tackled the
Spanish and subjugated it forth-
with. In a very brief season he
had learned to ask for the wrong thing
with a confident fluency which com-
pletely bewildered and turned topsy-
turvy the grave and inelastic peninsular
intellect. He then went to South Amer-
just ahead, whioh he wished to examine
before pa-sing over. Phil. Barnhart,
Wells, Fargo & Co.’s messenger, slipped
out of the opposite side of the coach,
and passing around him, joined in the
conversation. The robber’s attention
was thus diverted, and in the darkness
Barnhart raised his shotgun, and dis-‘
charged both barrels. The horses,
ica, where he lassoed ostriches and | frightened at the report, wheeled and
wild cattle, and astonished the tawny ; ran back to the first station. The mes-
Gauchos with his powers. On a second j senger packed up the treasure-box and
visit to Spain lie was shut up in Barce- i returned afoot to the same point. The
Iona during a siege, where his immense j next morning the dead body of the rob-
anatom nrau im nlotol tr rvonotrutn/l Ltt I...,. ....... f....___ I J J1.. J ___i. 11 ,
system was completely penetrated by | her was found, riddled with bullets.-
thi " ..........“
the garlic with which the cuisine of j Eureka (Nev.) Sentinel, May 14.
that ancient municipality is invariably j
surcharged. Afterwards he was a cor-1 ""
respondent of the Times at the Carlist
headquarters, where he captivated the
heart of Don Carlos by throwing a don-
key over the garden-wall of a convent.
The animal fell among the mins, who
naturally conjectured it to be the evil
one, a surmise which was for the mo-
ment strengthened by the tremendous
braying of the creature and the rapid
vibration of his ears, which gave its
head the look of a windmill. Pieturn-
ing to England after getting tired of the
hardships of the Carlist headquarters, he
took up the study of Russian and Arabic,
doubtless with some reference to his
contemplated Eastern journeyings. In
the interval between his return and his
winter journey to the Oxus lie made a
Among the curiosities in Fulton Mar-
ket, New York, is a stickleback, com-
fortably living in an aquarium. The
peculiarity of this little fish is its custom
of building a nest of bits of vegetable-
matter, in which the female deposits
her spawn. The nest is fixed at the
bottom of the stream, among the
aquatic plants. The male watches over
it with jealous care, fanning it with its
tins to secure purity of the water and
exclude sediment, if any of the young
escapes, he takes it in his mouth and
replaces it in the nest, as other stickle-
backs are prowling near, ready to de-
vour the helpless young. The horned
pout and sunfish of American streams
also build nests along the margin of
That two ships should leave San
___o__ Francisco together, and arrive at Liver-
noticed three or four [ pool together, after sailing a distance
of 17,000 miles, is a nautical instance
sufficiently rare to call for special refer-
ence. These ships were both American
—one, the J. B. Brown, Oapt. Keanet,
and the other the Southern Cross, Cant.
Ballard. They left San Francisco, side
by side, December 31, 1875, for Liver-
r —— .... ...........v, ...... | pool, and arrived in the Mersey, April
informed them, with an air of an ora- 26, at the same time. The Southern
ele, hat “ a fence io be a fence should be
hoi.se hi ,ii, i og safe, and bull strong,”
and that “ the fences of this ’ere coun-
try, sir, have cost more than ad the
houses, churches, a>ul skipping.” Af-
ter carefully examining the machine,
and duly praising its merits, one of the
men, a tall, thin, long-spoken Western
farmer, began to tell about some fence-
posts that he had on his farm which had
stood Mr 20 years, and were still sound.
At this a Jolly-faced little.old fellow,
dressed i i a blue coat, buttoned up to
his chin, nodding to his neighbor in a
friendly way, and smiling pleasantly,
Cross was built at East Boston, and the
J. B. Brown at Kennebunkport. The
passage was a good average, l hough the
time has frequently been beaten.—New
York Shipping-List.
— That truth is ofte n stranger than
fiction is once more exemplified by the
formation of the “Bible Earth League
of Christians” in London, under 'the
leadership of a Mr. Fitzgerald, who
purposes to upset theNewtonism system
by proving that the earth is fiat. The
promoter pleads I hat “ the work of sur-
veys, and obtaining other incontro-
vertible proof that the earth is not a ro-
tating revolving globe, will be neces-
sarily expensive, and can only be effect-
ed by liberal contributions of Chris-
tians.” The Bible Earth Monthly will
cost six shillings yearly, payable in ad-
vance.
\
—Miss Colenso, daughter of the
heretical Bishop of Natal, is publishing
a novel in the Natal Colonist.
Tilt MARKET'S.
v. NEW YORK, May 31, -:<;.
HO™7v* eStCerB...... *7i0 '*U ~‘
SHEEP
-Unshorn.
Shorn.
CCK1II NT CAROLS.
By our pastor perplex.,
How shall wo determine?
said: “ Well, now. t hat’s not bad, but,
would you believe it, 1 have on my place
a well-post that has stood for nigh on 80 I
years, and is just as sound as new oak?” ;
‘Well, now,-that is’markable,” said!
the Western man. “Yes,” continued!
“Watch mi l pray," says the text;
“Go to step,” says tiler sermon.
— Boclon Globe.
I Backward, turn backward, OTime, in thy flight,
Make us boys again just for to-night;
Just for to-night, being boys, don’t work ua,
Jiutvive us a quarter to go to the circus.
* —St. Louis Republican.
And now the lively mop doth dance
Along the parlor floor;
And on all sides flitting round
I lie wash-rags wildly soar
All! will tlie cold potatoes last
For it} e and evermore?
—Cleveland Leader.
COTTON—Middling.......
I- LOOK—Good to Choice...
WHEAT—No. 2 Chicago.
COHN—Western Mixed
OATS—Western Mixed.. .
PORK—Now Mess..........
7.(0
4,ill
5.30
1.20
35
19.70
COTTON—Middling" U,Ub‘
If IT IF I/1 /Urnri l ix >?.
8,00
7.00
nv
5.75
1.21
GO
4S
10.75
BEEF CATTLE—Choice.....
Good to I’rinic......
Cows and Heifers
Corn-fed Texans..
HOGS—Slapping.....
sHEEP—Coiimon to Choice
* nil) K—Choice Country.....
A AX......
WHEA.
ASictions very lore long time sin- bore,
ko of t tie IiIiip cnor “hut the fnnniost I Which the physicians really MBmodtohMoheri
“me nine < oat, out tne iunmest And though she weighed 400 pounds or more
tiling about that post IS, that tho top of Lightly she waltzed down to Jordan’s shore,’
it is alive and has branches springing ! And went up in the golden elevator.
• . . .... .. Gone to me t Daniel Lambert,
from it in r.ll directions.” While he
was telling this apparently simple little
story, 1 noticed that the wife of the
Western man regarded him with an
earnestness which was altogether out
of proportion to the interest of the nar-
rative. As he, concluded, she asked
him, “Where he you from, sir?”
“ From Newton, New -Jersey, mam,”
was the reply. “And is your name
Sam B-?” questioned the lady.
“ Mercy me, of course it is, and who are
you?” exclaimed tlie little man. “Mary
Ann T-—, that used to be,” replied
she, and then the little New Jersey
—Louisville Courier-Journal.
May is a skim-milk month,
When feebly does tlie pulse stir;
’Taint warm enough for a calico coat,
And you feel like a fool in an ulster.
—Exchange.
Kid No. 2.
SLrl ” No. 3.L.L""
COUN-No.lM.xed...
OATS-No. 2.............
UYK-No. 2................
TIMOTHY lEBD. ........
TOBACCO—Planter's Bugs
KAY-SafiS? £“'
BUTTE K—Choice DahJ." ' "
5.1X1
4.45
3,10
4.25
6.50
2.50
S.i-0
4.91
1.37
C
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1.19 ,ft
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in,
5.12>,
4.85
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4.40
5.90
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5.40
1.40
1.20
42
JS*
POKE—Standard Mess.....
LARI)—Steim..,. ......
WOOL—Tut wuMted-Choice
ljnw&Hhe<j tombing.
BEEVES-jtative Stwrl011
Cows......
HOG,3.....
BEKVES-tommoBtoChmM
iLOufcfc^'j^-
WHEAT
—Besides the branches now required born-No. 211 .‘N°-8’’
Tr n firtit nrrnrl** nmintv nnri \ ll,n \ Tw w.- o ••
for a first grade county certificate,
Wisconsin demands from her teachers
in return for an unlimited State certifi-
cate English literature and the rudi-
ments of botany, zoology, chemistry,
geology, political economy, and mental
philosophy. Applicants for this grade
must present satisfactory evidence of
farmer nut his arm around the neck of I successful teaching for at least nine
dash into Central Africa to look after ponds, and the care and watchfulness
Gordon or Stanley, journeying as far as ; which they bestow upon their eggs and
the Sobat River, where be met the I yonngshow a seeming intelligence rare
former. It was at this place that he j among fishes.
that little Western woman and kissed
her as if he meant it. Then the pair!
explained to the good-humored hut j
somewhat astonished husband that Sam
years.
—T lie health of Gen. Joseph Hooker,
who lias for some time been at the Hot
was a cousin, and had been an old play- Springs in Arkansas, has not improved.
02 a
63
2.25 *
2.60
4.50 *
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10.50 ft
l7.50
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19.50
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Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 4, No. 89, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 4, 1876, newspaper, June 4, 1876; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth722280/m1/2/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.