Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 February 1880 — Page 6

OLD SOAKERS

The Tricks They Practice to Procure Drinks.

Tlio Manner in Which They Beat Bartenders and Other*.

From the Cincinnati Commercial. Persons who visit saloons where liquor is sold can not have failed to notice hanging about such places the shabby genteel man, who is sure to be present and on the alert.

An observant person will otten find himself wondering how it is that the shabby fellow supports himself, as he is never seen at work, and appears never to be away from the bar-room lie haunts.

What is the mission of such a being? He is a study for the student of human nature.

How can that be? Watch him and learn. The sole obect, aim and purpose of the shabby gent is to get a drink without paying for it.

He doesn't care at whose expense that drink is procured, so he swallows it. He will devote days and weeks of time to evolving plans and schemes to wheedle a glass of whisky out of somebody a6 soon as possible. The same amount of energy exerted in an honest calling would make the fellow rich every year.

The soaker knows the habits of well-to-do drinking men, and it is his perfect knowledge on this score that gains him many a drink.

MISTAKES.''

For instance A half dozen young fellows, all talking and laughing and joking, will enter a saloon late at night, and the bar tender receives orders lor six different kinds of drinks at once. The mixer of liquors sets up the half dozen drinks, and maybe they will be all right and maybe they will not. Because it is just as likely as not that when one of the party tastes his, he will shove it back and say:

That's a gin cocktail. I didn't order a gin cocktail. I want a whiskey. Beg pardon, sir, my mistake. I ll make you a whiskey cocktail in a second. Only a mistake, sir, I assure you," says the bartender, and he sets the gin cocktail under the bar and makes the proper mixture.

If the soaker can only get a cocktail the first thing in the morning he is happy, but they retail at fifteen cents a piece. Five cents is as much as the soaker ever has at one time, but he mu&t have a cocktail to begin the day on. With speculation in his eye and the nickel in his fist, he starts out on his early round. As »oon as he gets inside of a saloon, the first question he asks the bartender is

Have you got any mistakes this morning The dispenser of liquids looks under the bar, and if there is a second-hand mixed drink there he answers in the affirmative the 6oaker hands over the nickel with one hand, fires the mistake down his throat with the other, and shakes himself all over with eyery indication of the utmost delight, after which he possesses himself of the morning paper until he can strike another drink sans price and sans money.

THE UMBRELLA DODGE.

Nearly all the saloons are pseudo-pawn-shops, for the reason that men when suffering for a drink will "put up' valuables for the required, or rather desired, liquor.

The soaker borrows or otherwise gets hold of a nice silk umbrella, and marching into a saloon goes up to the bar-ten-der for a smile. Says he: "I'm just getting* off a big tear, my friend,- and I'm in agony for some brandy. I haven't got any money, but I thought I'd ask you if you would allow me to put up this umbrella for a drink. I am not a beat, and I want to be square with you. If you don't do business that way say so, and there will be no harm done."

As the fellow looks rather genteel and makes his appeal before ordering the drink, the bar-tender of course hasn't the heart to refuse him a brandy on a fine silk umbrella, especially as he may never call for it again, and the pizen is set out. The soaker pours out a nailer, turns it into himself and remarks: "We understand each other, do we? I told you I had no money, and you agreed to allow me to put up my umbrella for a drink, did you not?" "Yes, sir," replies the bar-tender. "All right, here 6he goes. I will now put her up," and suiting the action to the word the soaker hoists his parasol, and, with a pleasant "Good morning," hustles himself out, a drink ahead and his capital unimpaired.

LOOKING FOR A FRIEND.

Along comes a blear-eyed bloat, rubbing his hands and shaking his shoulders trying to appear cold. "Hello, old man, let me have a rouser, will yon I've been out with the boys and got all broke up. Give me a healthlift to get me straight. Seen anything of Sancho Pedro this morning Said he'd meet here. We got separated. You know Sancho, don't you Fellow about my size, only he's got a cast in his eye. Why, certainly, you know Sancho. He's lame. He walks this way, you know, limps with his right leg and sort o' stoops when he steps."

During the conversation with the bartender the soaker gets his drink under his vest, and while he is feeling for his money to pay for it, he works toward the door, showing the bar-keeper how his friend Sancho Pedro walks. This gives him an cxcuse to get within reach of the portal, and once there, away skips the beat free from harm so far as the cheated saloonist is concerned.

A PI EST.

One of the most pestiferous bummers that infest bar-rooms is the fellow who steps up to the bar along with a party of, imbibers whom he doesn't know who do not know him.

This is an old trick. The bar- tend doesn't know but what he belongs to the party, and sets glasses out for him with the rest. He makes sure of his nip, and. of course, it is taken out of the bill of the one who treats. The chances are that

the gentleman who pays for the drinks does not stay to reckon the amount due for the drinks, nor does he count the change received from the man behind the bar. These fellows sometimes get so bold that they will denounce the party in the most vigorous manner if any body detects them in their mean little schemes and objections are made to paying for their extraneous drinks.

Often they will impudently inform a stranger that they propose to drink with him, and sometimes a refusal leads to a fight.

In first-class saloons these fellows are not tolerated when they are known, but they always manage to get their work in before they are fired out. In some ealoons they are encouraged for the purpose of increasing business, and are protected by the saloonist if a kick is made against paying for their drinks.

THE DICE.

Another trick these leeches have is to politely ask any body that offers to throw dice if there is any objection to joining the game, and they always win.

Sometimes these fellows become so desperate that they will rush into a barroom, order a big drink, gulp it down and coolly acknowledge that they haven't a cent in the world. But this can not be repeated by the same man at one saloon, as it would require a good deal of walking to follow it as a steady business. It is not so popular *a6 other schemes.

THE LOQUACIOUS BEAT.

Another 6tyle of soaker is the fellow, who was once well-to-do. or held an office, and is well acquainted among bartenders. He is a good talker, and depends upon his gilt of gab to obtain his liquor gratis. lie works on the saloonist'e sympathy. Entering the bar-room he will spin off some piece of news and get the man's interest aroused, «nd then suddenly begins to talk about some thing else, representing that he was attacked by ft party of roughs, who tried to thump him. He will go on telling about his wrongs and working on his listener' good nature, but doesn't refer to the ex citing news he started in with.

The liquor-seller wants to hear the finale of the first story, and requests the soaker to finish it. Mr. Soaker remarks that it makes him dry to talk, and the result is a drink, gladly given, to elicit the aforsaid exciting news. The soaker with a genuine iteiii knows how to work the reporter?, and he will get many a drink from them before he renders the real nub of his 6tory.

TOM THUMB ONCE MORE,

THE OLD DWARF EXHIBITING HIMSELF AT TEN GENTS A HEAD. From the New York Sun.

Gen. Tom Thumb is in New York professionally for the first time in several years. He is part of an assortment of curiosities which may be viewed in a lump at the American Dime Museum, in the Bowery for ten cents. Ye rs ago the General would have considered him self slighted, if not belittled, had he been put on exhibition where the entrance fee was less than a quarter of a dollar By exhibiting himself at that rate, and higher rates in many countries, he became rich. He retired, sought the atmosphere of an aristocratic New England locality, and spent his summers afloat in a pleasure Tacht. He was fond of good living, and he grew large around. Although his height did not increase, he appeared less diminutive than he used to. and the growing of a "Yankee beard" made him look much less like a miniature man. The General spent a great deal of money, and by and by he ceased to own his yacht. He appeared among his neighbors on foot and in public conveyances, and seemed to be losing the consciousness of being a curiosity.

The sease of his smallness seemed to wholly depart from him, and he could 6tep up to the legs of a stalwart New Englander, tap him on the knee, and say "Come inside and take something, young feller," in a matter-of-fact tone, like any other citizen. But it seems that the New York sight-seers are as ready to acknowledge him a curiosity as they were before he had ever put aside any of his exclusheneks. "Yes," said the General, yesterday, "I can now be 8een by anybody for ten cents. That 6eems to be a coma down, doesn't it? I was never before exhibited for less than a quarter."

The General was talking to the reporter, and as he 6at beside his pretty little wife upon apiece of furniture that looked as though it might have been abstracted from a doll's house, but which was really a very diminutive sofa, he did not seem to have lessened his value by decreasing in stature. He had grown stout, but his rotundity seemed to make him appear shorter than formerly. "Oh you need not look at me so closely," he continued. "I am as well worth seeing as I ever was. I was reluctant enough to ccme here at first, but I was persuaded at last, and I have found out that it was about the wisest thing I ever did. You see times have changed, and high prices will not do any longer. A million dollars a week can't be made on the road now, and if a man can fill a house like this half a dozen times a day, why, the fcest thing he can do is to come here. We are shown here six or seven times every day, and each time there is no standing room left two minutes after we come on the stage. At first people did not believe that we were really here, but now they are beginning to understand that the announcement is genuine and that they can see us for ten cents, and so they crowd in every day. "I am attending strictly to business now. I have given up my yacht. I was eorrv to do so, for I am very fond ot cruising, and I think I may say without boasting that I was not a bad sailor but I yielded to persuasion and fold my craft." Here the General looked a little reproachfully at his wife, and that little lady, placed on the defensive, exclaimed: "The best thing for him to do with the yacht was to sell it. He is hardly ever at home at all events, and when he had the vessel he never spent a day quietly in the house. When he was not travelling about the country under an engagement he was awav c-a.'' "Well," said the General, in tones indicative of submissin struggling with doubt, "perhaps it was best to sell it."

TOE TERKE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

YOUNG WOMEN GYMNASTS.

Classen at Their Exercises.—Tlie Costumes that They Wear.

Calisthenics to a Musical Accompani ment—What the Master Says.

Frora the New York Sun.

Murray Hill is producing a large crop of female athletics, whose muscles are being developed, not in the ball-room but in the gymnasium. A Sun reporter saw twenty or thirty of these young people at their exercise the other ay, in the new gymnasium of Henry Gebhard, at Fifth avenue and Forty-fifth street. Mr. Gebhard is well known in this city as an instructor of young women in light gymnastics for as far back as 1857 he introduced the practice of calisthenics to New Yorkers. His fir6t gymnasium was in the old Stuyvesant Institute, between Bleecker and Amitv streets, in Broadway then he went to' Twentysecond street and Fifth avenue, later to the Mott Memorial building and last summer he erected the building which he now occupies. It is well fitted for its purposes. Rows of light Indian clubs, dumb bells and wands line the walls. Trapezes, rings, horizontal bars, parallel bars, vaulting bars, vaulting hor&e6, and ladders are provided.

The members of the clas6 ranged in size from a little girl, possibly three feet tall, to full-grown young women. All were clad in short dresses of blue flannel, with trousers of the 6ame materials. Some of the younger girls wore very short dresses. The taste ot the wearers was manifest in the trimming of the suits, some of them being elaborately braided and embroidered. There was a piano in one corner of the room, and a young woman played accompaniments to some of the exercises, notably those in which clubs and wands were used. The dumbbells, of wood, were each encircled by little strings of brass bells, and their jingling as the girls went through the graceful exercises made a pretty accompani ment. These light gymnastics difered but little from the usual calisthenic exercises. The main object of the teacher seemed to be to give constant motion to the pupils, without producing anything like monotony. He succeeded, and the pupils seemed to enjoy the movements greatly Then they marched and skipped and hopped until their round cheek6 glowed with a color. The most interesting of the exercises were those in jumping and vaulting. The largest of the pupils showed a deal of agility. They ran swiftly and gracefully and jumped a string that was gradually raised until some of the more active clared it at the height of four feet from the floor. In vaulting the wooden horse the rls showed strength and activity of limb. Beginning by simply breasting the wooden steed, they advanced by degrees, jumping to a kneeling posi tion in the saddle, then to their feet it the saddle, and finally went right over the horse. The trapeze and ring exercises were naturally simple, consisting of swinging by the hands, but the strength displayed was considerable. One miss displayed her round white arms by going up a pair of nearly perpendicular bars, hand over hand, to the height of nearly fifteen feet. In bhort, the young ladies showed that they had developed much muscle and attained great facility in the use of their limbs.

Mr. Gebhard is an enthusiast in the matter of female physical culture. He said: "Motion is the great law of the universe, and when it ceases life ceases, for the degree of life may be measured by the amount of normal motion. Therefore when the life forces run low, the natural and mo6t effectual method of invigorating thtse forces is found in motion. You know that Plato calls him a cripple who cultivates his mind alone and suffers the body to languish through inactivity or sloth. Yet the Americans have hitherto appeared ignorant of these facts. Now there is an evident increase of knowledge and interest in a physical culture, especially among women, and where I had one pupil twenty years ago, I have twenty now. But do not think that I advocate gymnastics simply for health. They are conducive to beauty. In light gymnastics is found not only exercise which brings into vigorous and graceful play every part of the body, but an accuracy and definitness of movement that demands the closest attention and arouses an unfailing interest, as well as mirthprovoking games and (ludicrous position. The children, delighted with its rapidity and variety of motttnent,and theaccompaniment of lively music, pronounce it as good as play. The young lady, already deep in the dissipations of fashionable life, recovers the bloom ar.d sparkle of iier girlhood, and discovers in the graceful march, the fine carriage and light, springing step she has sought in vainin the dancing-school and parlor. The student, whose bloodless cheek and brilliant eye betray the wasting away of life's vital forces, snatches an hour from his books, and is prepaid fourfold by the fresh vigor that surges through the whole system and culminates in the rested brain. Even the invalid, dying by inches of stagnation, too weak to put up the heavy dumb-bells or climb the ladders, finds in the slender wand and light bells a subtle something that sends the blood in tingling currents to his finger ends. Briefly, this system combnes abundant exercises with useful instruction and great amusement. Now, if you would have sinews of wire and nerves like a sunbeam, muscles like an athlete, and blood as&<^red and spark-i ling as raie old wine, brains of first quality and body of the highest order, a will strong as tempered steel, and a heart in the right place, practice gymnastics."

Mr. Gebhard has especial pupils of delicate health for whom he has especial exercises which he claims are based on scientific and physiological principles, and which, he says, have resulted in many cures. Among the patrons of Mr. Gebhard's school are Mrs. W. W. Astor, Mrs. August Belmont, Mrs. S. L. M. Barlow, Mrs. Edward Cooper, Mrs. B. W. Cutting, Mrs. L. L. Delafield, Mrs. Pierre Lorillard, Mrs. L. P. Morgan, Mrs. Gen. F. Smith, Mrs. Paran Stevens and Mrs. R. Winthrop.

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On the Kansas Pacnfls

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Write for Pree Illustrated Catalogue.

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