ARTEMUS TO LINCOLN. SELECTIONS FROM THE WRITINGS OF ARTEMUS WARD. Be Fay Visit to the President Elect at Sprlngdelil, Ilia., and Load Him Vp with Chunk of Homely Wisdom The Crowd of Ofllce Seeker. tOopyrishtod and r.tihltalid by special arrange ment with Q, W. Dillingham, New York, pub taller. VIIL INTERVIEW WITH PRESIDENT LINCOLN. HAV no politics. Nary a one. I'm not in the bisincss. If I was, I spose I should holler versUTrusly in the streets at nite and go home to Betsy June smellin of coul ile and cin, in tho inoniin. I should go to the Poles nrly. I should Btay there all day. I should see to it that my nabers was thar. I should git ciir rip?s to take the kripples, tho infirm and tho indignant thar. I should be on gunrd agin frauds and sich. I should le on the look out for the infamiw liso of tho enemy, got up jest be4 elecshun for per litical elfeck. When all was over and my eandydate was elected, I should move heving & erth so to speak until I got orfiee, which if I didn't git a orfiee I should turn round and aboozo tho Administra tion with all my mite and maine. But Tm not in tho bisncss. I'm in a far more respectful bisnisa nor what pollcrtics is. I wouldn't giv two cents to be a Con gresser. The wuss insult I ever received was when sertin citizens of Baldinsville axed mo to ran f at tho Legislator. Sez I, "My friends, dostest think Fd stoop to that there?" They turned as white as a sheet. I spoke in my most orfullost tones, & they knowd I wasn't to ho tri fled with. They slunked out of site to onct. There4, havin no politics, I made bold . to visit Ole Abe at his huiustid in Spring field. I found the old feller in his par ler, surrounded by a perfeck swarm of orfiee seekers. Knowin he had been capting of a fiat boat on the roarin Mis sissippy I thought Td address him in sailor lingo, so sez T, "Old Abe, ahoy! Let out yer main-suls, reef hum the fore castle & throw yer jibpoop over-board. Shiver my timbers, my hearty!" N. B. This is ginuine mariner langwidge. I know, becawz I've seen sailor plays acted out by them New York theater fellers. Old Abe lockt up quite cross & sez, "Send in yer petition by & by. I can't possibly look at it now. Indeed, I can't It's onpossible, sir!" "Mr. Linkin, who do you spect I air?" sed I. "A orfice-seeker, to bo sure," sed he. "Wall, sir," Bed I, "you's never more mistaken in your lifo. You hain't gut a orfiss I'd take under no circumstances, rm A. Ward. Wax figgers is my per feshun. I'm the father of Twins, and they look like me both of them. I cum to pay a friendly visit to the President eleck of the United States. If so be you wants to see me, say so if not, say so, & Tm orf like a jug handle," "Mr. Ward, sit down. I am glad to see you, Sir." "Repose in Abraham's Buzzum!" sod one of the orfiee seekers, his idee bein to git orf a goak at my expense. "Wall," sez I, "ef you fellers repose in that there Buzzum thare'll be mity poor nussin for sum of your' whereupon Old Abe buttoned his weskit clear up and blusht like a maidin of sweet 10. Jest at this pint of the conversation another swarm of orfiee seekers arrove & cum pilin into the parler. Sum wanted post orfices, sum wanted collectorships, sum wautid furrin missions, and all wanted Bumthin. I thought Old Abe would go crazy. He hadn't more than had time to shake hands with 'em, before another tremenjis crowd cum porein onto his premises. Ilia house and dooryard was now perfeckly overflowed with orfiee seekers, all clameruas for a iinincjit in terview with Old Abe. One man from Ohio, who had about seven inches of corn whisky into him, mistook me for Old Abe and addrest me as "The Pra- nayne Flower of the WestP' Thinks I you want a offisa pretty bad. Anothor man with a gold heded cane and a red nose told Old Abe he was a seckind Washington & the Pride of the Bound liss West." Sez I, "Square, you wouldn't take a small post-offias if you could git it, would you- Sea ae, "a patrit is abuv them things, BtrT "There's a putty big crop of patrits this season, aint there, Squire?" see I, when another crowd of offlaa seekers pored in. The house, door yard, barn & wooaanea was now all full, and when another crowd com I told 'em not to go awiy for want of room as the hog-pen still empty. One patrit from a Wit ill town in Michygan went upon top the houae, got into the chimney and slid o.iv.-n into the parler where Old Abe v. w endevexing to keep the hungry pack of orfiee seekers from chawin in op a'l-.-e without benefit of clergy. The ttu.it he reached the fireplace he jmnpt ;, brnsht the soot out of his evf. and 7cjd: "Don't make eny pintment at w opon-villa postomss tut you ve xead y papers. AU the reapectfol men in r town m snexs to thai there ocky Burnt!" "Good QodT cried Old Abe, "they upon mg fjoax thimnpys, and from the bowels of the rearth!" IIo hadn't more'n got thom cords otft of his delikit month before two fat offiss seukors from Wisconsin, in tndeverin to crawl atween his legs for the pnrpuss of applyin for the tollgate ship at MLlwawky, upsot the President eleck, and he would hev gone Bprawlin Into the fire place if I hadn't caught him in these arms. But I hadn't more'n stood him up strate before another man cum crashin down tho chimnoy, his head strikiu me vilently ngin the inards and prostratin my voluptoous fonu onto the floor. "Mr. Linkiu," shouted tho infat ooated being, "my papers is signed by every clergyman in our town, and like wise the Bkoolmastor!" "Sez 1, "you egrojis ass," gittin tip & brushin tho dust from my eyes, "I'll sign your papers with this bunch of bones, if you don't bo a little more keor ful how you make my bread basket a depot in tho futer. IIow do you like that air perfumery?" bps I. shuving my fist under his nose. "Them's the kind of papers I'll give you! Them's the papers you want!" "But I workt hard for the ticket; I toiled night and day! Tho patrit should be rewarded!" "Virtoo," sed I, hoi din' tho infatoo ated man by tho coat collar, "virtoo, sir, is its own reward. Look at me!" IIo did look nt me, and qualed 1x4 my gase. "The fact is," I continued, look in' round on tho hungry crowd, "thero is scarcely a ofils for every ile lamp car- rid round duriu this canipane. I wish tharo was. I wish thare was furrin mis sions to bo filled on varis lonely Islands where cppydemics rago incessantly, and if I was in Old Abe's place I'd send every mother's son of you to them. What air yon hero for? I continnerod, warmin up considerable, "can't you giv Abo a minit's peace? Don't you see he s womd most to death? Go home, you miserable men, go homo & till the sile! Go to peddlin tinware go to chop pin wood go to bilin sopo stuff sas sengcrs black boots git a clerkship on sum respectable manure cart go round as original Swiss Bell Ring ers beeum 'origcnal and only' Camp bell Minstrels go to lecturia at CO dollars n nite imbark in tho peanut bizness write for the Ijcihjcr saw off your legs and go round giviu concerts, with tuchin appeals to a charitable pub lic, printed on your handbills anything for an honest living, but don't como round hero drivin' Old Abe crazy by your outrajis cuttings np! Go home. Stand not upon tho order of your goin', but go to onct! Ef in five uiimts from this time," sez I, pullin' out my new sixteen dollar huntin cased watch and brandishin it before their eyes, "Ef in five n units from this time a single solo of you remains on these here premises, 1 11 go out to my cage near by, and let my Boy Constructor loose! & ef he gita amung you, you'll think old Solferino has cum again and no mistake!" You ought to hev seen them scamper, Mr. Fair. They run orf as tho Satnn hisself was arter them with a red hot ten pronged pitchfork. Ia five minita the premises was clear. "How kin I ever repay you, Mr. Ward, for your kindness?" sed Old Abe, advancin and shakin me warmly by the nana, "How kin I ever repay you, sir?' "By gmn the whole country a good, sound administration. By poerin' ile upon the troubled waturs, North and South. By pursooin' a putriotic, firm, and just course, and then if any State wants to secede, let em Sesesh! "How 'bout my Cabinit, Mister Ward?" eed Abo. "Fill it up with Showmen, sir! Show men is devoid of politics. They hain't got any principles. They know how to cater for the public. They know what the public wants, North & South. Show men, sir, is honest men. Ef you doubt their literary ability look at their post ers, aud see small bills! Ef you want a Cuuiuit as is a Cabinit fill it up with showmen, but don't call on me. The moral wax figger perfeshun mustn't be permitted to go down while there's a drop of blood in these vainst A. Linkin, I wish you well! Ef Powers or Walcutt wus to pick out a model for a beautiful man, I scarcely think they'd sculp you; but ef you do the fair thing by your country you'll make as putty a angel as nty of us! A. Linkin, use the talent which Nature has put into you judishus ly and firmly, and all will be well! A. Linkin, adoo!" He shook me cordyully by the hand we exchanged picters, so we could gaze upon each other's liniments, when far away from one another heat tho helium of the ship of State, and I at the helium of the show bizness admittance only 15 cents. THE SHOW BUSINESS AND LECTURES. I feel that the Show Bizness, which Ive stroven to ornymeut, is bein usurpt by Poplar Lecture, as thay air kalled, tho ia my pinion thay air poplar hum bugs. Individoouls, who git hard up, embark in the lecturin biznia. They cram theirselves with hi-eoundin frazis. frizzle up their hare, git trustid for a soot of black close and cum out to lectur at 60 dollers a pop. Thay aint over Btockt with branes, but thay hav brass enuii to make Buffishunt kittles to bile all the sope that will be required by the ensooin sixteen ginerashuna, Peple flock to beer urn in krowds. The men go be cawz its poplar, & the wimin folks go to see wnat otner wimin folks have on. When its over the lecturer gore & ra gales hisself with oysters and sich. while the people say "What a rhnrmin lector that air was," etaettery etsettery. when 0 out of 10 of am don't have no moore idee of what the lecturer sed than mv kangaroo has of the serunth speer of hewn. Thare'a moore infrurmaahan to be got out of a well conducted nooapa per price S sent than thare is oat of ten poplar lectures at S3 or SO dollars a pop, as the kase maybe. These sac people, hare in mind, stick up their noski at moral wax figgers & aagaahus beesta. Thay say these thing is low. Gents, it greeves my hart ia my old age, when Fmis "the Sheer & ytAerleeT (to cote tram my ia frftffrtr Hi'ft-th) to see that the Show biaane k pretty xoacfa ptade oat; he msuiu I enaQ chance it agamjn uteuptxog. COLUMBUSCIUTICISED. ANOTHER VIEW OF AMERICA'S DIS COVERER BY A. P. DUNLOP. A Few rialn Word About III Treat ment of Mia Carlb Race Inerntlttiile I'ar KxcpIIviicd llarlerlng Slave for Privilege Ferdinand and Imibrllii Take the Halt A Khcs Kxterinlnatrd. There is one fact worthy of note in the coming four hundredth yenr cele liiation of the discovery of the Ameri can continent, namely, that not one sin gle t-pecimen of the nice Columbus dis covered will be on hand to defend him- s'lf, w rites A. P. Diinlop in the ,S"((nr- day lievtew. Not alone lias the Ciivib been wiped from the fit Co of tho earth, hut the eldest inhabitants of tho West Indian Islands have not seen a half breed even of that rnce, nor do anv of them remember having been tuld that they existed in the time of their fathers or grandfathers, Coin minis writes of these people ns the best he hml ever seen, and snys they received him with overwhelming kindness Ho snys, ton, that they were numerous, and thut everv island from San Salvador to Santo Domingo was thickly inhabited. Could one of these guileless savagos arise to say a few words nt the opening of the World's Fuir he might somewhat disarrange the mantle of glory which the Saxon. Celtic, and Teutonic races have so prettily arranged around (he historic figures of Christopher Coin minis and (jneen Isalielhi. The gentle savage might first ii sk why the mighty people of North America were ccluliruliug the advent of a mini who had nothing what ever to do with the discovery of hut is now the United States. He would have no record of his own ponple who have not even left a (race of their existence behind them hut he might have looked into the enemy's camp for information, and there he would find whether proved or not that Mr. Columbus was said bv his son Ferdinand to have been a pirat.1, or the deceuduut of one, who was constantly on the move, and who, in the fifteenth century, isited the home of the Vikinirs. and there heard the story of the discovery of Vuiehind. lie could readily reconcile Mr. Co lumlilis's wnv of d ling things bv au thenticated (lispnti bus from L'oliimlius to "Their Iliuhnesaes, " Isabella and Feidinaud, by leading u copy of n letter, now in the Spanish archives, in which the discoverer informs "Their Highnesses" that he w its trented as n brother ly these savage people, that they gave freely all they had and cond.icted linn to their goM mines. J lie C.rih miglilthen read the latter pin t of the dispatch, evidently written as soon as Culiiiulnis returned from the gold milKS, and sng,e.Hs "how ensy it would he to overcnuiu this un armed people and send them ns slaves to Spain. Repudiating Columbus as a discov erer, he might, on the auspicious occa sion, go even further, by usking why Coliiiiibu-i or Isabella should be a linireil or held up as examples for the youth of the lundr The Republican party might also be told that no two persons in the world's history ever went into a slave specula tion more deliberately. Columbus tempted the cupidity of the Queen with untold treasures as a return tor her in vestment, and in hi first letter is a re quest for Bhips loaded with provisions, to come "licensed for the (rulllc of slaves." Did he get them? The an swer now iu the Madrid archives is: "Their highnesses will soud the ves sel . " If the written nccount of these Span ish pirates be correct, the Curib onitor might say that 12 years nfter Columbus arrived in tho West Indies not one of this prosperous race was alive, mid he could w ith truth point to the accounts left by the Dominican friar, La Casa, who wrote thot 40,000 of them were killed on the Lucauyan group inside of a very hort time either by the sword or the hibh of the slave drivers. The native West Indian might sum up his iirgu iieut by saying that us au ex ample of deliberate treachery und cold blooded cruelty and hypocrisy, the world's history has no parallel to Chris topher Columhii, who exterminated a race that he himself says received him as "one sent from heaven, " nor to his side partner, who went into the real estate and slave specul tion w ith a bur l, cold greed for gold, and then permitted the discoverer to eud bis miserable life as a J auijer The MoAUialsr'a MhxIiii. I was here simply carrying out the axiom to keep cue's friendships in re pair. I daily comment to my cook ou the performance of the previous day, The highest cultivation in social man ners enables a person to conceal from the world his real feelings. He can go through auy annoyance as if it were a pleasure. The success of the dinner depends as much upon the company as the cook. Discordant elements people invited al phabetically, or to pay off debts are fatal. You must never be able to see the tails of your dress coat; if you do, dis card the coat When you entertain do it in an easy, natural way, as if it was an everyday occurrence, not the event of your life; but do it well. Learn how to do it; never be ashamed to learn, A gentleman can always walk, but he can not afford to have a shabby equip age. It is well to be in with the nobs who are born to their position, but the sup port of the swells is more advantageous, for society is sustained and carried on by the swells, the nobs looking quietly on and accepting the position, feeling that they are there by divine right; but they do not make fashionable sooiety or carry it on. A nob can be a swell if he chooses L e., if he will spend the money but for his social existence this is un necessary. A nob is like a poet nasoi tur non fit; not so a swell he creates himself, Moral Men should not attempt to do what is not ia them. TUB CON8TMITION CURE. l'rofeaior Kooh'f IHncovorr and How II Wa I.d to Malta lb Though Professor Koch, of Berlin, can not be said to have discovered his method of curing consumption through chance, as some say was the caso with Jenner's invention of vaccination for Smallpox, it is still interesting to notice how much he was indebted to good fortune in the lieginning of bis investi gations. Dr. Emmerich, of Munich, i-i the authority for the following anec dote: "Professor Koch noticed once that when a piece of cooked potato is ex posed to the atmosphere for a couple of hours, and then placed in a damp at mosphere under a glass cover to pre vent drying after several days a num ber of infinitesimal round white specks or drops will ni par on it, each ono ap parently diffoi iug from the other. Mi croscopic investigation shows that every one of these specks consists of a panic tilnr species of micro oragaiiistus, which arise from-seeds that have fallen on the potato from the air, and have here found a favorable ground for further generation. Each seed by itself multi plies on the particular spot of the bard potato substance on which it has hap pened to drop, without having the menus of combining with others. "l'lins, their can be nothing like inter bree.ling, and, theref re, pure cells that is, each consisting of a number of bacteria belongiii.; to one isolated renins, must arise side by side. Very pr perly Professor Koch considered tins n re markable plieno nenon. For if in the place of the potato the surface of some nutritious fluid were exposed to the air, doubtleiKsly sends for future organisms would also drop on it. l!ut in a fluid the movable bacteria would mingle to gether, aud at the samo time also set the originally immovable ones into motion, so that uu infinite variety of breeds, a chaos of mixed forms ami specie-i, would ensnp, I ut nowhere any pure and specific bacteria cells. "What, then, nsked he, is tho radical difference between the fruitful soil which the potato offers for mic'i organ isms and that of the nutritious fluid ? None, mielv, I ut (hat one is solid, aud thus hindersiiny commingling of genei :i, while on the other hand there can be no question of their lasting i-epnrntiou in a Mibstrnt urn of no irreater density than that of fluids. "Professor Koch umlei sto 1 how to apply the lesson ho had leained from these results to his further experiments in breeding pine bacteria cells in hard and transparent substances, which ulti mately le, to the brilliant successes ho has achieved now and before this. In addition to this he has Kn l y enough to apply all modern uvu'l rovi'iionts in apparatus, instruments', and 'Hie methods of using them, as well as the advance made iu the use of microscopic and lighting processes, to Ids special brunch of hiicleriologic investigation. Uy this alone he has succeeded iu making for himself u name in medicine. Now, if it prove true that he has discovered a safe and rational remedy agaiust luhorculoaia and incipient consumption, lie has made himself nn immortal name in history." Horl.'B About Mm wall Jiu k-on. Apropos of tho deuili of General Cad mus Wilcox, 1 recall some characteris tic anecdotes concerni gSlouowall Jack sou which he was in tin- lml.it of relat ing. When Jackson first entered West Point he was regarded us a remarkably stupid and green youth. General Whit ing, who afterward served in the Con federate army, was tlieu a cadet iu the class above Jackcou's, and was ap pointed to nsk him soino questions in mathematics, iu accordance with the custom which then prevailed at the military academy. , Whiting thought him ut first remarkably dull, but noticed thut ho studied aud worked with dogged persistency. The class of which Wilcox and Whiting were members was gradu ated just prior to the Mexican war. Several of the young officers were in Washington on their way to Mexico, and ou 1 1 io night of their arrival they were invited to go w ith Jefferson Davis, then a member of the House, to a recep tion given at the White House. Later both Davis nnd T. J. Jackson turned their faces toward the Rio Grande. At the close of the war Jackson ranked every memlr of his class and was a brevet major aud was stationed on Gov ernor's Island, near New York. Whit iug, Wilcox, und a number of young of ficers were visiting New York, and when several brother officers from Governor's Island called ou them Whiting ashed: "What has become of Tom Jackson; how is he gelling on ?" "Badly, badly," replied the officer; eiuce he has stopped fighting he has taken to fiddling. He came over to this city a few weeks ago and bought a fiddle, several bows, and a pile of rosin. You w ill remember at West Point there was no music in his soul, no poetry, no relaxation, nothing but hard applica tion to his text books. So his new fad makes it awful for us. Every minute he cau spare he devotes to practicing on the fiddle, and the sounds wbioh fill the barracks iu his vicinity are beyond description; almost beyond endurance. " "Be patient," said Whiting with a smile; "If 'Tom' Jackson is determined to muster his violin you will listen to a second Pnganinl before he gives it up, " Put Whiting's prediction was not verified, Jackson never became a musician. New York Tribune. A Dandy of Otbar Days. From a newspaper printed in the year 1770 is the following description of a dandy: "A few days ago a macaroni made his appearance in the Assembly rooms at Whitehaven, dressed in a mixed silk coat, pink satin waistooat and breeches covered with an elegant silk net, white silk stockings with pink clocks, pink satin shoes and large pearl buttons; a mushroom colored stock, covered with point lace, hair dressed re markably high and stuck full of pearl pins," That's So. 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