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SAVANNAH DAILY HERALD.
VOLUM E I.)
iVo. ay. j
ifje
18 TORLISEED ,
EVERY EVENING, SUNDAYS EXCEPTED,
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STRANGE STORY OF AN OLD
FRENCH SKIN-ENAMELER.
The following eccentric story of a
Parisian notoriety is extracted from the
latest number of Bentley's London Mis
cellany. Its author is alleged to be Sir
Lawrence Wraxelles, the most fertile
and felicitous translator of light litera
ture living. Sir Lawrence was a poor
paragraphist some years ago, but by
tact, ability and perseverance had ac
quired quite a fortune, when, by the
death of au uncle, he succeeded to a
Baronet’s title. This is his narrative—
“Some days ago, the sands of summer
were running into autumn, and the ma
roon leaves in the garden, of the Luxem
bourg were turning to gold. My friend
Mene and myself took a cabriolet for
the yare at Mount Purnasse, and set our
faces toward Versailles. Mene is the
moat industrious chronicler of the demi
monde. He has been as diligent as Frois
sart to follow up the gay and beautiful
favorites of the Casino and the quartier
ol the Madelaine, and his little volumes
upon Rigolboche, Alice and Finete, &c.,
have had tremendous sales, both in
JeuUleton and in binding. He has cor
responded with the Independence Beige
for eighteen years, and been four times
ordered out of France; but his cheerful
good humor aud grotesque persistence
invariably lead to nis recall. He has a
passion for hunting up all the current
aud doubtful celebrities, and as readily
ingratiates himself with them. I had
before accompanied him to the dwelling
ot Bene, the rat tamer; Duval, the
bouillon king; Armand, the scout of the
sewers: Martin, the venerable concierge
of the Morgue; Pfeiffer, the bell-ringer
of the Notre Dame; Chauiere, the bird
stuffer, and Maugiu, the itinerant crayon
dealer; but the person to whose abode
we were at present bound exceeded
them , all in strangeness. It was no
other than old Jared, the head of the
nostrum venders, whose name and riches
are upon every iip, and whose person is
as original as his history.
We dismounted at Belie Veu, climbed
the steep drive, lined on either side with
neat cottages, in one of which dwelt Tom
Moore, when Bankrupt, and sat beneath
the same maples where he had sat to hear
Irving read him the first chapter of Brace
bridge, Hall ; entered the chateau, whose
beautiful giouuds were projected by Le
Notre, the only gardener who ever made
the adjustment of landscapes an art, and
rounding the famous stone chateau,
where dwelt so long Madame de Mainte
non and the beautiful belles of Loraine;
passed the screaming peacocks, the
guides and don key -drivers, and descend
ed into the picturesque village. When
this chateau was a battlement castle,ten
anted by the proud seigneurs of Mendon,
the philosophic and satiric priest, Rabe
l iis, was the rector of the parish church.
The edifice in which he ministered is still
extant; the building which tradition in
dicated as his abode, was the object of
our excursion.
SAVANNAH, GA., MONDAY EVENING, FEB. 13, 1865.
It stands quite at the end of a narrow
and sinuous street, and the taste of its
present eccentric owner has so perver
ted it.that it is quite as grotesque and in
comprehensible as himself. The tall,yel
low walls, pierced with narrow’, lancet
shaped windows, uplift the steep slate
roof, so characteristic of the renaissance
architecture, and high in the air waves
upon the lightning-rod, the effigy of two
heads, which, without assistance,l should
never have understood.
The obliging Mene informed is c, how
ever, that in those two heads lay the se
cret of old Jared's prosperity. One of
them was oddly outlined, and even from
its windy perch seemed horribly contort
ed. The other wras a counterfeit presen
timent of the same face, but more come
ly, ovular and radiant. They represent
ed, as I was. told, Jared deformed and
Jared rejuvenated, but only the most er
ratic man in the world could have thought
of epitomizing his life in a weather vane.
Y/e passed under a gateway of high
arches counterfeiting depay, and saw at
the end of the garden the strange pro
prietor himself. If Jared in his rejuve
nescence was so hideous, what must he
have been in his deformity ? was my
mental exclamation. A fail* face, even
ruddy in its complexion, was covered
with a shaggy wig, which reached
over his shoulders, while beneath his
twisted and knotted eye-brows peered
two small and burning orbs sufficiently
intense and wild in their expression to
recall the legend of Barbe BlUe and
Robert de la Marck. The head was
monstrous in its proportion, while the
body beneath it was short and humped,
and the limbs which ambled nervously
forward to receive us, were of the con
sistence of the slightest apricot trees
which studdied the lawn.
This uncouth and dwarfed figure,
then, was Jules Jared, the first nostrum
vender living.
Passing over the story of a very re
markable interview, the article in Bent
ley then says of Jared's history :
He was originally a medical student
in the Rue Quartre Vents, and might
have been practicing in some pigmy
village of Gascony to-day, had he not
reached the very common experience of
love. The object of his regard was the
daughter of Joubest, the surgeon, and
one oi' the medical faculty. She treat
him, as did everybody else* with marked
derision ; and once when he ventured to
show her some attention, named him
olive de la eaumure, (pickled olive.) —
Thenceforth the object of his existence
seemed to lie to beautify himself, and he
made the composition of cosmetics his
whole study. Every recipe, ancient or
modern, he consulted, experimented
with chemicals, made distillations from
botanical juices, and to prosecute his
researches with more privacy, bought
the little hermitage of Villobon, in the
of Mendon, with some
'money bequeathed him, and devoted
day and nignt to his laboratory. The
village people considered him crazy, the
more so as he was once heard to say he
would be the landlord ol the whole
commune.
However, by hook or crook, he at last
finished his researches. Whether the
fresh country air, abstinence and regu
lar habits accounted for it, or, as he as
serted, his new cosmetic, he had certain
ly greatly improved. His complexion
was particularly brilliant, no longer cov
ed with unsightly pimples, and dark
as an Algerine’s, but variably pale and
red. He. suddenly appeared in Palis as
the proprietor of a great Email of Ena
mel, but might have lived and died un
noticed notwithstanding its bruited vir
tues, had he not resorted to shrewd
means of advertising it. He hired a num
ber of the best coiffeurs, to make appli
cation of it upon their patrons. Those
who tested it were pleased and demand
ed it again. The liair-dressers, to satis-
fy call?, were then compelled to purchase
of Jared at his own prices, lie thus
raised sufficient means to le&se half-a
dozen of the best stands in Paris, and
made each of them a depot for his
Email. Everybody, male or female,
coming in to undergo, curling, or shav
ing, was tempted to try the wondrous
Email de Jared. Very soon the furore
extended to the torettes. Then in natural
order, it embraced the court. N© Paris
ian woman who could afford it, neglect
ed to apply the marvelous cosmetic.
Whatever pleases France is coveted
by all the continent, and thus as his pre
paration became known over Europe,
the adventurous chemist prepared it,
buying up- the shops of the hair dress
ers. Two or three court trials, in one
of which the Empress .was concerned,
redounded in his profit. Ilis odd life
and person were so many advertise
ments. He was introduced in comic
songs at the Eldorado, burlesqued in the
paitfSt. Martin pantomimes, dances at
the Prado were named in his honor. In
a word, he made good the threat of
owning the village of Mendon, and the
lady who had laughed at him, as much
for sensation as for love or ambition. —
While Mene and Jared were, talking to
gether, I wondered in my own mind if
such a character could exist out of
France, if in our sober England any one
in a walk so lowly could rise to similar
eminence. But the old conjuror divin
ing my thoughts, informed me that his
monthly receipts for the Email de Paris
from London alone were six thousand
pounds sterling. 8o all our English
complexions, it "seems, are not unaided,
the gift of Nature.
The fortune of Jared is estimated at
present at three millions of francs. —
With this sum of money a splendid es
tate, a beautiful wife, and a reputation
as wide as the continent, who would not
be the inventor of an Email ?” -
LATE DATES FROM AUGUSTA.
We have received copies of the Au
gusta Constitutionalist, and Chronicle
and Sentinel. They contain little news.
They seem to be discussing the Peace
movement with a good deal of acerbity
on both sides. We present below a few
extracts from the papers of inter
est :
Tiie Feeling Elsewhere. — Some
people have been foolish enough to sup
pose that the peace feeling in the Con
federacy is confined to North Carolina
and Georgia. The idea is a most absurd
one. The people in every section of the
Confederacy are longing for an honor
able peace. A large number of the
soldiers in the army we are told have the
sime feeling. We also notice that
papers in various sections have com
menced talking plainly about peace
since the commissioners have been sent
to Washington. At one time to talk of
this matter was considered by some par
ties as treason, but the public opinion
has changed rapidly. A more healthy
state of affairs exists. The people are
beginning to reflect. Reason is begin
ning to resume her sway. Day isbreak
i Kg.
Tiie Situation in Mississippi.— The
Mississippi papers state that the people
living along the line of the Memphis and
Charleston railroad, east of Corinth, are
in very destitute circumstances. Both
armies have been destroying their prop
erty for two years. They have been
robbed of negroes, stock, farming im
plements, etc. Many have been left
without anything whatever save their
homes. The Brookhaven, Miss., Tele
graph speaks thus of the situation in that
section of the State :
In connection with the lawlessness in
this region, which seems to be increas
ing, we would advise each citizen to act j
as his own watchman, and when occa-1
sicn calls, to promptly use gun, pistol or
blunderbuss. A case occurred a few days*
ago, a short distance from town, whiefib
shows what one determined man ean dc*
in the face of lawless violence. We
have not obtained the particulars, but the*
report is that a certain old man had
horse stolen, and with the assistance ofc
a neighbor, traced and recovered ifc—
Those who had possession of the animal •
made some threats against both tho old
man and his neighbor, which were part
ly executed afterwards by an assault on
the old man when alone/ He was badly
beaten and lelt for dead. on the fields.
The same night seven men called at the
neighbor’s house under pretence of get
ting supper. What occurred, or how it
occurred, we do net pretend to say, aa.
we hate not information, but the next
morning two dead men and four horses
with saddle bags, etc., were found in the
yard. We omitted to say that the neigh
bor was not one of the dead men.
tePEOIAL TO THE COUJMJUTB FNQCIREB]
Mariana, Jan. 20.— The enemy*: one
hundred strong, came up to Rice’s
Bluff on the 28th, capturing Lieut. Har
risons command and forty wagons,. amP
then left. The enemy was again re
ported yesterday advancing on Rice's
Bluff. Capt. Dunham, commanding at
Chattahoochee, leaves this morning <4*
the steamer with all his available forces •
for Rice's Bluff; also with the <
force from Mariana, to points the
river, to qheck the enemy’s m.vrements. •
The number of the advancir enemy it*-
not known. It is (hey cam©
up from Apalachicola r a sraa n boats,
built by them at St. Vi* a(Wntte Island.
“Se De Lay, the Appeal's Augusta
correspondent, say thQ Bank of Ten
nessee, whose bfyfeg asS efs, etc.* have
been tor some 1 in that city, wiff soorr
be on the win again: Colonel'John A*
Fisher, the Cashier,has provided himself
with seve\ a i mu i e teams to transport his
heavy Ifoggagc. He sa} 7 s also that.cotton
is beir,g freely shipped from August aj-.i
compliance with Gen. ff ill’s Older,though
it goes against the grain of many, who
Lad calculated how much they would
realize in greenbacks from the kfngfy*
staple, when Gen. Sherman comes.
• Uhree Yankee Papers in Georgia.—.
There are now published ‘three Yan
kee papers in Georgia— two in Savannah
the (Yankee) Republican, and the Daily
Herald, and one in Augusta, the Chron
icle and Sentinel. The two in Savan
nah do no harm, because they are not
permitted to circulate , through our
mails. The one in Augusta is sapping
the foundations of our Government/ by,
skillful demagogism, because our au :
thorities have too mu eh regard for the
* freedom of the press” to suppress it.—
W on't Morse have a fine time when his
brothers get to Augusta.— Countryman,.
Fighting Commenced.— Gentlemen
who arrived from below last evening
state that heavy skirmishing was going
on all day at .Mcßride’s Bridge, about
seventeen' miles from Graham’s Turn
Out. Graham’s Turn Out is seventeen
miles this side of Branchyille. O.u* in
formant did not learn the result of, the.
| fight. - ;
Wis have already published the an*
nouncement that the noted rebel caval
ry leader General Reddy had abandoned
the rebel service and applied for the
pardon of the national.government. We
have now the statement that' ttvo othec.
generals, who have for some time been,
prominent in the Western rebel armies—
Chalmers and Morrow—have followed
his example, aijd are awaiting replies to
their applications to be permitted to rer
tnrn to their allegiance to the Union.
jfc,‘Brick ’ Pomeroy says, ‘Tn this sec
tion, the whiskey is so weak, since thu
war-tax struck it, that It & run in cant
die-moulds, frozen and sold by the
stick r
f PRICE
\Five Cents*..