2 SiSlocum and the Census Taker. T AP ! ItAP 1 11 AP I upon the door of XX, our sanctum. "Come in!" from the occupant of the same, no other than oursclf. The rappist opened the door and entered. He was a strapping fellow, nix feet two in his boots.and" hip enough to eat us," had the diet been to his miud and he lblt so inclined ; and we arc no morsel. He was armed, our visitor was, with a huge port-folio, and an ink-bottle, in lieu of a red,' red rose, adorned the lapped of his coat. We looked iuto the face of our visitor, and ho looked into the face of the "other feller." What he thought of us we don't know; what we thought of him he probably didn't care a continental red. A grin, semi-sardonic in character, parted his lips, the upper of which a grizzled moustache adorned. That grin we interpreted thus: "I've got you dead to rights, young feller hived you you can't escape." There certainly was no escape for us, whatever his mission, with him between . us and the door ; but we had a table, at which we were seated, between hiin and ourself, whatever protection that would have afforded. With our eyes still fixed upon his, looked down upon us from their towering height, we ejaculated, " Well, sir, your pleasure ?" though we had not the look of one bound on a pleasure excursion. A voice of double bass, that sounded as though it came from the regions below answered our query : " I've come to take your census." Thereupon he took a chair, took a sent at the table opposite us, took out a hand kerchief and wiped his face, and took a glass of wat;r a pitcher of which soothing beverage stood upon the table. Ho was right on the take. Wo have no doubt that ho would have taken a glass of old rye, and a good stiff one, had we invited him, which we did not do, for three good reasons: In the first place,, it didn't oc cur to us to invite him;' in the second place, we had no old rye on hat:d ; in the third place, we wouldn't have invited him to take hold of it if wo had had any, our hospitality in that line not extending to entire strangers at least not until an introduction has been gone through with. xlccovcring from the aqueous indul gence, which must have astonished his stomach we were convinced, he opened his portfolio, exposing a quantity of blank forms, ruled in columns, at the head of each of which appeared printed matter. " So you are one of the census chaps, ch?" we queried. The double-bass voice said, after its proprietor had taken a pen from out his pocket, and uncorked his ink-bottle : " Yes ; and now let's get into the cen sus business." "All right. Go ahead; lmt pray don't incense us," we returned. The joke was lost.its fragrance wasted on the desert air. The census-taker didn't perceive said joke, so intent was he upon the census, and that did incense us. "Lctmosiy to you beforo I com mence," said the deep-toned voice, " that if you refuse to answer any question this blank calls fort or if you lie to me, you do so at the rate of thirty dollars for each refusal and lie. So talk quick, speak the truth and shame the devil, unless you have more money than you know what to do with, and wish to help extinguish the national debt by lying." " Thirty dollars a lie, eh? What al lowance for speaking the truth ? Any ?" " No." " No drawbacks, eh ? What sort of a way is this to encourage truth-telling? Slap goes down thirty dollars against us if we lie a little from delicacy, but not one cent to our credit for the many truths we may tell ! This is crow for us and turkey for Uncle Samuel every time." " You must look at it in another light, sir," said the hoarse-voiced census-taker. " Lying in this matter is a luxury. If you see fit to indulge in it, pay for it, that's all. What's your name?" " Slokum," we replied, seeing that ho was bent upon commencing the inter view. S-l-o-c " " We don't see it, we k it." broke we in upon him as he proceeded letter by letter with our cognomen in the columu headad, " Names." Slokum with a k," we added, with heavy emphasis on the It. "Oh, k,eh? K-u or is it o ?" ho queried, looking up at us. " You are correct ; u is right," wo re turned. " What's the nam you lead off with ?" " Si for short; Silaa in full. " Any auxilary names ?" " Nary an auxiliary." " What year was you born in the day of the month ?" " On the glorious Fourth I Fourth of July, lS7b" " Lie number one," gTowled the double bass voice, and down went straight mark in the column headed "Lies." " Hold up 1" we exclaimed. Allow us to correct that statement. Any witness on the stand has that privilege. We were thinking of oor country's natal day, the annivcrsaay of which is so close at hand." " Fourth of July, 1820, was the day of our birth." lie made an X of the straight, murk, and Slid, "Excused." " Were you born at homo or abroad ? I mean, were you born iu this country or in a foreign land ?" " No, sir." He looked up at us, as much as to say, explain. " We first saw daylight on the raging main," we volunteered. " Where's that?" he asked, and added, " I'm a little lame, in geography." We thought so too, and that he was deficient in poetry, also; so came down to hard pan. " At sea we were born. Upon the deep and dark blue rolling sea, llio wind blowing a gale from the nor' nor' west, the waves running mountains high, every thing closed, furled, the ship lying head to the wind, the cook's mate washed over board " " There, that'll do. No matter about the cook's mate, or any other man. How old are you ? 1 forgot that." " Thirty-one the coining 4th of July," Down it went he not appearing to notice anything out of the wvy in the reckoning. " Occupation ? 0, seaman I forgot born at sea." We made no objections to being class ed as an old salt, though we couldn't see how being born at sea made us a seaman; on the principle, we suppose, that, bom in a stable, we should have been a horse. " Rlack or white V he queried. " White," we roared out, and somewhat savagely. He looked at us sharply. We admit that we are no blonde, but a brunette of the deepest dye; still we profess to bo of the quality known as the Caucasion The census taker appeared to be in doubt, but at length marked " W" against our name. " Married or otherwise," was his next question. " Otherwise considerably," we answered. " Old batch or widower ?" " Not any." C. T, looked up at us. Evidently he was puzzled. " How's that?" he queried. "What are you ?" " Divorced," wo returned. " Divorced, ch ?" " Yes, that's the fashion nowadays, you know ; and one might as well be out of the world as out of tho fashion," said we, laughing. " What was tho little unpleasantness?" ho asked' evidently interested in our mat rimonial affairs. We felt confident he was getting beyond tho range of ques tions allowed him by law to ask, and knew very well that it was none of his business what tho littte " unpleasantness" was, as he termed it; still wo didn't object to let ting him know all about it, if it would amuse him. " Incompatibility of temper, in one in stance, was tho 'little unpleasantness,' " said we. " Iu another, incompatibility of tastes. Iu tho third instance " " Thunder ! three divorces ?" he que ried, breaking in upon us. "Three! Seven, man," said we in re turn. " S-e-v-e-n-d-i-vorces! whew!" he ex claimed, slightly astonished, wo thought. Placing his elbows on toe table, he laid his thumbs along his lower jaw, and thus supporting his he-jd, looked at us with all the eyes he had; by "which expression we mean to convey the idea that ho looked .at us thoroughly, 'intently, searchingly, with his two eyes. At length ho said in a voico heavier, deeeper, hoarser than ever; " I believe that statement to bo a d d lie, Bir." " Your sizo protects you, sir," said we calmly. " Do you mean to stand to that state ment, sir?" ho asked. " What, that your size" " No, thorn seven divorces." "Yes sir." " Won't you take off a divorce?" " Not a divorce," we said firmly, lie said no more on the subject, but made four straight marks in the lie column. " What are you doing?" we asked, anxiously. 1 " I'll allow you three divorces, but I ' am blowed if I allow seven. Four, I mark down as lies," ho said brutally. " As we said before, your size protects you, .sir," said we in a freezing manner. " What pursuit are you engaged iu ?" ho grullly asked. " Inasmuch as you put us down as a seaman, wo prrsumo we arc engaged in nautical pursuits, otherwise wo should have said that we are in pursuit of hap piness, like all mortals, missing ic." He dropped oil himself at the mention of "seaman." " So 1 did seamen. That was a queer mistake on my part. What is your busi ness anyhow ? How docs your iucouie come in ?" ' From our rhntnix m Enpntjnfl. " W hat's them?" inquired tlie C. T., rather perplexed. 'Castles in Spain." "Castles in Spain, ch ? How many castles have you in Spain?" " Oh, they are innumerable. We build them daily." "Say, look here young feller; this thing's been going on long enough," roar od out the C. T. " Your castles aro cas tles in the air, I fancy. Refusal to an swer and a lie." Two marks went down against us at thirty dollars a mark. " Ar;- you the airent of the Slokum family?" asked the 0. T. ' Sole agent for the United States and Canada; also Europe, Asia, Africa, and outlaying places." " llow many docs the family consist of, sir?" " One. You see tho entire family. One ami indivisable. Look at him." " No brothers and sisters, fathers and mothers, eh ?" " Druthers and sisters-in-law, lots of 'cm, we had, and seven mothers-in-law but escaped them .by divorce, and are happy." Four marks one hundred and twenty dollars went down agaiust us in the lie column. We uttered no remon strance, but let the C. T. take our census in his own way, satisfied that ho would do so anyhow. " Cot any horses, cattle, or live stock of any kind ?" " Yes ; .have a hawser, a colt, a ram, two calves, six kids, a deer, a number of hares, and well we believe that's about all the live st ick we possess." " What's the horse ?" " What horse?" " Didn't you just say you had a horse, sir?" " Yes, we said wo had a hawser h-a-w s-o-r." " Go on, young feller, if you think you can afford to pay for the amusement," said the C. T., " sarkastic." " You mentioned a colt, I believe," he continued. " Yes, and here it is," we said, display ing a small-sized Col't. " ll'm ! Well, don't let it go off. I know the pace of that breed of colts it's a killing one. How about that ram, and the calves?" " The ram is of tho hydraulic strain, and the calves here they are, just below our knees. Here are our kids," and we showed him 'three pair of Alexander breed. " As for the hairs, our head is at your service if you wish to count them." " We'll lump them. 13ut how about the deer ?" "We decline to answer any ques tions about her while she continues to reign iu this bosom, and is so dear to us." " She must be a reindeer," said the. C. T., with a hoarse laugh. It was the first joke he was guilty of. Rut as we put it riirht into his mouth, he deserved no credit therefor. " Sec hero, young feller," he said stern ly, " these yarns about your cattle, and live stock generally, are not exactly lies, they aro evasions, and will bo charged against you as deliberate lies, at thirty dollars a head. Your troop of hares will cost you fifteen hundred dollars only, as I shall place but fifty marks against you on account of these animals. You havo about one huudred and twenty-five lies charged to your account, thus far, and if every body does only a twentieth part as as well, tho national debt will be lied out of existence, with a dollar or two to spare." At this moment we experienced a tre mendous shock, and heard a heavy fall and crash. Upon looking about us, we found ourself on tho floor Burroundedby water and tho fragments of a pitcher. We had fallen asleep and dreamed all this, and in capsizing had carried the pitcher of water down with. The pitch er was a dead loss to us, but then, our fines for lying were all settled at one foil BWOOJ). AN ADVENTURE WITH PIRATES. I KNEW I had wounded the deer; for 1 could see its blood upon the bushes through which it had rushed after receiving the shot. I thought of going back for my horse beforo pursuing it. L had left him tied to a tree some two or three hundred yards back, the better to approach the game. While hes itating, I noticed clear sky through tho timber on three sides right, left and in front. This could be caused only by the river, as the whole bottom-land was cover ed with a thick Cottonwood forest. It must be a bend in the stream, forming a sort of peninsula, with au isthmus of not nioro than a hundred yards in width, my position being about midway between the rccurvings of the river. In this case the buck would be in a trap, and could not get back into the bottom-land without passing me within shot. His only alter native would be to take to the water, which he might do, or might not. As it was the broad Mississippi, he likely would not; but, in any case, the horse would bo of no use there; and hastily reloading, I walked on. I had no difficulty in taking up the trail of the stricken animal. Under tho shad ow of the moss-trcllised trees, tlie soil was damp, and tho " slot" was conspicious the more so, that the antlered monarch of the forest evidently had been laboring in his flight. Once again I saw gouts of blood upon tho palmettos, brushed off from his bleeding flanks, as he ran through them. 1 soon reached the edge of the river, and there saw his hoofmarks in tho mud that selvedgcd the sloping bank. There were no return tracks ; therefore he had taken to the river. It was the Missis sippi' as 1 have said, but not the main stream. At a glance, I saw it was a "cut off" a small, wooded island interposing itself between me and the great "Father of Waters." Deyond doubt, the deer had swain off to the island, there, equal ly beyond doubt, as I supposed, to lie down and die. He was a splendid buck, with not less than a dozen " tines" upon his antlers I had noticed this whilo drawing a bead upon him. I wanted him for a trophy, and was determined to havo him. Uut how ? tho branch stream, though not over a hundred yards in width, was of rapid turbulent current. Stripped, 1 could swim it, though not comfortably, or carry a dry gun certainly not to bring back with mo the carcass of a large doer. The horns, perhaps I might. Detter the trophy than nothing. I had half made up my mind to strip andswimto the is'and, when I bethought me of a boat, though of a little hope of there being any near. Along the river for miles there was no habitation. I had hunted there before and know it. For all tiiis by a - sort of involuntary inspiration, I glanced inter rogatively around, with my eyes sweep ing whatever of water-surface was in sight. There was a boat in sight, but it was a 'flat,' a regular " broad-horn," and, of course, unavailable fur my purpose. It was far out in tho main-stream, beyond the wooded islet, which it had already passed. As I set my eyes upon it, it was just running a jotting point below; and as its great steering oar disappeared from my sight, I could make out on the stern beneath, painted iu rudely-shaped letters the name, " Nancy." The Nancy could be of no use to me; and at once dismissing her from my mind, I was about to cominenco stripping, when a canoe, shooting round tho upper end of the islet, came right down the cut-off. There wero two men in it. They were iu their shirt-sleeves red shirts, at that, a good deal soiled and i'aded. Their features wero shaded by broad-brimed wool hats, also the worse for wear. I did not stop to scrutinize either their dress or features, but at once hailed them. " I want to cross over to tho island ; will you take me." " What d'ye want to cross thar for ?" " l'vo wounded a deer a fino buck, lie has swum there, lie is dying or dead before this.' I want to get him. Tho man who handled the paddies, caused tho stroko to be suspended. " What will yo give"? was the interro gation, promptly put. " A dollar, I replied. " D n yer dollar 1 say two and we'll do it. You expect us to take ye back to the bank after yo've pot yu'r don't ye?" "Certainly." " That will take some time, an' we hain't any to lose. Say two shiners, an' we'll gi'o yo half an hour." ",Agrccd ; two dollars." As 1 said this, I plunged my hand into the pocket of my hunting-coat, and drew forth a fistfull of gold and silver coin' so as to secure them to tho gargain, by showing I was able to keep my part of flu; stipulation. I saw that they were impatient, and I was determined to get possession of my stag and his splendid antlers. Tho canoe a tolerably well-shaped "dug-out" was paddled, stem foremost towards the bank ; and as it approached I noticed, in small lettering imder the name "Nancy." Ry this I knew it wae the " tender" of the flat-boat I had seen sweep down stream , which accounted for its occupants being pressed as to time. I made ho remark about this, but stepped in taking a seat in the stern, which was surrendered to me by him who had hitherto occupied it ; he scramb ling up closer to the paddler at the bow. "Half an hour, stranger." he said, reminding me of the stipulated time. " We've agreed to gi'o ye that. Ef we are longer, wo must chargo more. A dol lar for everyden minutes." " All right!" I said, taking out my, watch to make note of the time. It was a gold ease repeater, worth, with tlie chain, at least two hundred dol lars. After returning it to its fob, and look ing into the faces of the two men, I felt a little regretful at having shown it ; as also of having made display of my lose coin some three hundred dollars I car ried in gold and silver pieces. Two more rascally sets of features I never saw in juxtaposition, and it "was difficult to say which set was the more expressive of true penitentiary type. After all, thought I, they arebut boatman whom it may not bo fair to judge cither by their looks or general exterior. I had no time to reflect. In -less than five minutes the canoe struck the shore of tho islet, and I jumped out to look after my deer,on the tracks of which I came, at the spot where we mado lau ding. ; Under the excitement of soon bring ing my hunt to a successful conclusion 1 paid little heed to aught else, though ; on parting from tho canoe, I could not help noticing that tlie two boatman held a hurried consultation in whispers, while otic of them stepped ashore al ter me, say ing he would go along, and if need be, give me assistance. I made no objection, but kept on, my whole thoughts occupied in tracing the stag. The islet was not over three acres in extent, covered with an undergrowth of palmettoes. I knew the deer must bo among them ; and I was not long discov ering the coveted antler, rising above the fan-shaped fronds, th ,ir owner lying concealed beneath, on what would no doubt have been his deathbed, had no one ever come near him. To hasten it I raised my rifle, and taking aim at his heart which was still feebly beating,! fired. There seemed to be two cracks simul taneously : but that might have been caus ed by the recoil of my gun, which appear ed to bust iu my hands ; I could not tell thcn,for,af'ter pulling tho trigger,I became insensible. When consciousness returned, I found myself alone, lying along tho ground with a terrible aching iu the head. Rais ing my hand to the spot, 1 felt an abras uro at tho back part of my skull, with a piece of tho scalp missing. On return ing my hand before my eyes, I saw my fingers were reddened with blood. My senses gradually growing clearer, I gazed around, and soon perceived that I was alone, lying among tho palmet toes. Staggering to my feet, I looked still further, and saw, at some distance, the dead body of the deer. I remember hav ing fired the shot that must have killed it. Rut my gun that I supposed to have burst in my hands where was that? It was not there either lock, stock or bar rel. And my watch, worth two hundred dollars ; and tho odd threo hundred iu coin, I had carried in my pocket? All gone, and along with them, the two cauoe nien who had ferried mo across to tho island. For a time I felt perplexed; but not for long. With my fast-clearing con sciousness camo the eclaircisscnicnt of all that had transpired. 1 had heard two cracks one 1 knew to bo my own gun the other, I now conceived must have been a pistol, whose bullet, intended to pass through my brain, had only glanced off from the thickest part of my posterior skull, rendering me for tho timo insensi ble, and to all appearance dead. This was fortunate, cIbo a second shot might haye