LONG SAM LUCAS Palate - American popular musicpopmusic.mtsu.edu/lucas/Long_SamLucas.pdf · 1 LONG...

1
1 LONG SAM Negro "MY ON OF LAU G H T E R 1 be name of Sam Lucas haa been MM t.i sonjura with for more than thirty rears There are men to-da- y high in the rank of business, leaders in public afTnirs. who will tell you that they'd rather j (lone 11. times 01 a r,n the great big they've Minstrels rame to town all the. . . . ,..... had many a time with long Ham I.ucae that; ke the prescription of the greatest d v r on earth. by," said one these men recently, the test of his kind were only black- smiths compared with Sam Lucas. He was all artist " That's no mean praise for a negro minstrel, The explanation ie that Ham Lucas is something more. He ie a gentle-ma- in his instinct and hie learing. He rrakes music and poetry simple both f em, but sweet and sincere-- as natu- ral v lis he breathes. He ie a bom actor. Fin !y and best all. he has a great, rich joyous laugh that is like a burst of sunshine. One ought to hear Sam laujas tell his himself. It needs his Virginia telescopes. Higher " . 1 U LL'CAS FROM A RIXENT arrnt and his irresistible laugh; his mai nei ol an old school gentleman ' - touches delicious mimicry Spite that accent he wasn't born down South, b it in Washington Court House, Ohio, sixty-eigh- t years ago last August, ton h ive to have his word for it that it 'i- - so long ago. Nothing else could make von lieheve When you ask him how he managed to get that accent anvwhere outside of Dixieland he says genially: '! can tell you in one minute Three or fo' hundred ouliiid people been had come up to Ohio befo' I horn. They were as South- ern as a cotton plantation. I grew up among so i suppose I couldn't help talkin the way they did. Tiwies were mighty different then from what they " now, We didn't have schools. 1 Used to go across the fields at night to a lady that taught me my letters and I rr,ade out somehow to learn to read and 1 ' B it 1 never any real eduoa- - 'As for music poetry, well' My eouldn't have whistled a tune if it hs-- i mtlSii tnm AM Bvni da. him his life. But did love Mv mother used hut 'twas only likethla, you know saving back and forth in good old "etlng fashion, Sam sings: Lawd He -- sent His an gel Ml my. how well I remember it The ght we had a sort of trough in it and a wick hangin' out end." With his in for acting everything out, Ham - newspaper, indicates tho wick, - ' beside him, settles himself. ! ' sayi Naow, than, you ohlllan, ' thsr an' behave yn'aelves. I'm dn my knittln'. My Lawd! I got dis hyar knittln' 'lone las' He reaches for a clove lving on a t.'lh fa dat I In dm a stili oil! nun- - was em. he was tin lil hv ir him and "knits" witR such naf limlcry that the whole ecene conies you, Than he begins a droning hvmn. One lino, luiother. the more slowly, his head droops, s rloaa, Mammy is asleep Ihii ns wit h a start n' straight, at us children tool" - Sam. "An wo sittin' not to smile, though we're almost ' ith laugh inside An' then she . aln: 'l) Irfiwd lie sent '" mammy dozos and again she with accuaing ovee fixed on her ing She waves her knitting at the ii kanlnnlsb, ial yog Chilian eettin' dar fo'? Oil o hyar! Yogo out an' pick up ' laughs bis big joyous laugh over Mis and so do you; for Mghl hero j the secret of Sam Lucas's power, lie has gone through life laugh-aa- d he has never had laugh alone. LUCAS Minstrelsy GRANDFATHER'S CLOCK" SINGER LOOKS SACK THIRTY YEARS When he got to be a barber in St. louis it. was harder for him than for anybody elee to ehave customers because his cli- entele waa In a chronic etate of broad grin. No wonder that when Cullender s ninetv-nin- of laughs Georgia of of of to patrons of the barber shop said to Sam: "Why don't you go and lie a minstrel yourself?" That was in 1871, when Sam was 2 yearn old. He lacked just half an inch of being six feet tall, but he was to thin that he looked nearer seven feet than six. His face too was long and narrow, "a regular horse face." he declares, and the widest thing about was his laugh. Also it didn't seem possible that he hadn't twice as many joints as tnoet folks have. To get a little ahead of the story, ask any old tinier if he remembers seeing Sam Lucas cach an imaginary fly high up on a piece of stage scenery. First he crouched against the painted wall hestealthily rose and rose kept on rising, open ing up joint after joint as if he were made itTv rich of ami higher he I SAM PHOTOGRAPH. and In r.f it. had and had and father "St notwlthatandin'. irrepressible ami 1110 there recollection, him Then and stretched, till his audience thought he would never stop. And when he flnslly did ren.'li his Utmost extension, standing n tiptoe of his long feet, with his long arm and his long fingers almost up to the real siaje flies, he looked as if he could tickle a giraffe under the chin Sam Lucas's flyoitching is a tradition of stage funny business. It was in 1S7S that Charlie Callander, after Sam had written to offer hie services. sent word to the aspiring hsrber to meet the show at Leavenworth, Kan pronns ing him a trial at tl a week. He was t. sing in a quartette, and as he had already begun to make up eonge on hie own ac count he took some of these along with him. "An' maybe I wasn't proud when I had my first rehearsal, tho rest o' the com- pany sitting out in the regular seats an' watchin' me You see I'd had my music arranged with parts for the orchestra, which was something nobody in that show had ever thought o' doin ' They'd1 just stand up hefo' he orchestra an' hum, Teedle dee dee dee. Tumty turn ty turn.' An' when I handed round my ecores I could seo the other members o' the com pany nudgin' each other an' saying' My gracious! That fellow must be some- thing great.' " He wasn't really great at singing. At least he hadn't a wonderful voice. But he had something much better. He could make up words that went to the hearts or the funny bones of an audi- ence. And he could make up melodies that haunted their memories. He has several scores of songs to his credit If you have ever hummed "My Grand-father- 's Clock" you have repeated a melody which first sang itself in Sam Lucas's imagination. If you have over said "Kvery day'll be Sunday by and by" you have echoed a song Sam Lucas wrote. If you have saiii "Carve dat pos- sum!" you have him to thank for the phraae. Ho could write songs aid sing them; he could dance; he could wear the funniest comedian to appear with a hat not much larger than a collar button .perched on one corner of his long head. He could devise funny business that made you laugh beoauee it was just so plain foolish, fine of programmes In which he was afterward at the of the list was divided into two parts. In the first the per formers, who wore all the usual plantation stunts. "Rut we wanted to make the second Miht refined,'' say a Sam, "an' of cohso wo had lo have some explanation of how-al- l the plantation darkies could edu- cation. So I hit on plan of sendln' 'em to Canada fo' that purpose. The end of the first act showed us all ready to start north. Rundles! Y'ou never saw such big bundles -- ae big as that table nn' bigger. Everybody was totin'f those lun1let round with 'nn. Every- body except tne! I had mv bundles Oh my, yes! One in each hand; one red, ami one white. Rut they weren't RIOTS than thou I two InohM long, Ohi my!' And how he does laugh. "Von eouldn't have neon 'cm if they hadn't had Ootof on 'em Foolish? Perhaps, hut sober Judges and tired blMilMM men roared over just etirtii foolish tlOM when Sum LUOM It and carried it out. "I jest had to see folks laugh!" he says. "If I oamoonto the stage an Wf a man sittin' down in front readin' a newspaper I never rested till I marie hint Stop. I I'd work harder than n bricklayer to make that man laugh. An' if 1 eouldn't have I'll never forget one time we t, laved down Kast somewhere; down in Maine. I think it was Why. the show was over a little after (1 o'clock! We never got an encore Not a single encore. An' 1 went down into the house when the janitor was goin' round tlirnln' out the lights an' I says: " 'What kind of n town is this, r.nyway? The rple here don't stem to know-ho- to clgp their two hands together nohow" " They dassent.' says the janitor. When a good show cotnea to this town we don't allow no noise. No. sir' 11 they made any noise we'd send 'em to jail in two minutes!' " It was in 1x73 that Sam jin-- 'he Callander aggregation at the k Horn of the Ml!, One yew lab r he was at the top. I said to mystlt," he tells JfOU, "that 1 didn't have u good enough vole" to make any great success that wav. So mads up a specialty act an l rehears? I it with a banjo player In the company and when we'd ,t t it psttsol I ays to Mr, rallendor ih it I d got 1111 'his ft", and I'd like to p'tt i on if it was agreeable to him. So he said All Sam; next matinee we plajf you can try it an' see how it goes.' ' I. went s well that it stayed; stayed in the bill regularly and I got a raise of salary to i:, n wcck That wasn't very much acoordln' to present notions, but Mr. Cal lender paid all our expenses, anl I went on woikin'. though it never was like work 1 0 111 '. no er in a',', the years I've been at it Folks hive always siid to mo 'Sum. do you really have as much fun as you look like you're bavin' '' nd 1 can tell you honestly that if I ever did go onto 1 he stage foe! in' kind of down in the mouth, as 'most anybody's bound to do once in a while, 1 never went off feellrt' that way. I don't know whether other folks bad as much fun as I did, I certainly hope they did. "Well, about a veal alter 1 mined the show Charlie White started the White's! Georgts Minstrels. Callender hoi made! such a hit with his that everybody began to imitate him. and all the companies had a 'Georgia' tacked on somewhere. White got our bel man Rob Htgllt, to go ' with him. but the rest of us stuck by Callender. Rob had been one of our mis and when he went 1 got the chance to take his plice. Well, then it wc-easy- . I gol t?0 a week and was at the top of the hill. 1 was writln' new songs all the time- - " he Interrupts himself "When I say I was wrltin' those srirgs I'm perhaps glvin' you a wrong Impres- sion I was OOmpOSln' them words and music both B it I couldn't write the down I d sing them to a man thit knew how 10 put the notes down But they were my songs, ill llshcd over my name, See!" ami he brings out a pile of sheet music moM f them having on the tills page pi lure of Satn ucas resplendent In frock coat, lewelled ecrf-- ' pm and low waistcoat. II- - regard, it Inif wistfully, hair satirically "That's the Som I.UCSa that thollghj he was almost the blggi 1 man on earth, he says. "You see. nftl while I found that the le. ding n n v ith the other shows were getting HOfl a week, while 1 was getting only tin; so lift Mr Callender land went with the Hyere sitor Talk of the top o' the wave! That's where I rode then and where I thought I'd al-- 1 ways lie rldln' Mv pnekete were full of, money an' I thought there'd always be j more where that came fi many clothes aa nc ivina rnuinn huh. an' they sav he can't count his there's; so many of 'em. I thought oouia " anyinina: at. pretty nearly could too Why. i d ought to been killed for some ' the things I did. I remembet one time In JJoStot when had a new song. You hen. when ths people get to know you an' like yon, whv it don't matter what you do; they'll Huns 11 s gnai 11 miwi " nn-- j"" because voii do it. An' a Wl en my turn 'would come, it was Jest walk onto the stage! 'Hi'' says the audience; ,t's Sam Lucas'' and it was all shoutin' aft. r that remember my song that time was like this: How kind to his wife is the younc married man. When his mother-in-la- l at home' At his quiet behavior his comrades nil grUb When Ins mother Is at home! "And then I forgot what came next! So 1 just went mi: rt ei fc When hi nun her in lajf is a home! "And so on. 1 OUght to been killed But it was Sam Lucas' They didn't know or care what I did Ml they Wanted was to see me and I Slippt se really w as a sight. I didn't often play tricks like that one though. I had a new song so often perhaps I was bound to forget one once in a while. I suppose the most famous song I ever sang was 'My Grand- father's Clock.' And it's the song I didn't get credit for either. I don't be lieve the true story of that song is kn wn to many people. "It was written when I Was with the livers Sisters and this was how it hap-pene- d I was here in KaW York ami went around one 'lay to see u man named Henry Work, tin man that wrote 'Wake, Ni, odeums" .lust as 1 was about, to leave he pulled out a paper and said: Here, Sam; here's the first verse for 11 song. I wrote this one but I can't seem to make anything mor it of it. Maybe can.' It was the first verse of Grandfather's clock.' My clothes on the stage He was the flrsl I Uy grandfather's clonk was tall for Hie the top negroes, did gel the too. right, too shelf. So It stood ninety vears on the floor. It was taller hy hall than the old man him- self Though It Weighed not a penny weleht more It was bought mi the mom of ths day 'hat he waft born id was always his treasure and pride but ii si op hmI -- hurt never n so again, V lien the old man died "I read it and took it away with me. but 1 didn't do anything With ii lor some time, Than one morning w hen we were out on Hie road I got up from the hroak-fus- l bible at He- hotel where wo were stopping and as I turned around there in the corner stoixi a regular grand- father's clock just like the one iu the verse Mr. Work had given me." ssmaw lsSBfflsS'fflf!aV' nmsm f -- zst.-l ?. a .SAM LL'CAS FROM PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN 30 YEARS AGO. And right here, if you happen to be Sam Lucas's home, he will step out into the dining room where a tall dock con- veniently occupies one corner and show you just how he stood on tbnt long ago morning, his hand resting on the table while he looked the old timepiece over and imagined its story. Ho wrote the two other verses- - one telling how the lock was the old man s servant; it never wasted time, there was never a frown on its face, its hands never hung by its side and el! that it asked at the end of the week was to be wound tip for another seven days work Th last verse WSS the one that described the old roan's death. Y know." says Sam, "that folks are superstitious when a clock strikes more than 1' ought to They think it's a bad - gn; somebody gran' die. So 1 wrote about the alarm ringin' when it had been dumb for ninety vears n' th neigh- bors all said jest what thev would have sail if they'd been the neighbors I'd known; they said deilh was comin' fo that house. An' the clock struck twenty-four- - that meant the whole round of a life, you see and then it stopped And the old man died Rememlicr the chorus' Ninety ers without slumbering Tick, toi k : tick, toes ' Hi life seconds numbering, Tlnk toe1, tick tork' had stop4d short never stain, When tl, eld man died. I . A at ' 10 I as 3 it it to so "I nlwavs loved thai chorus " and Sam picks up ,1 guiti-- r and sings it softly, deli- cately, lovingly "Yes, 1 wrote that and wrote the music I mean I made it up V..u . , , Ii 1 . . v. m, i,r. jm 'a t,ii ,nn pi I niim ine sou - ii.ii'H to ir v, ors ana no punnsnoa i it as his but wirh my pictu- - on the front of it. n picture of me standin' with my nll.n- - An n VO .. Jl.,1,..'. I never gora en! for it. except that I had 11 hig success lingln' It before rnxbody else did The royalties Mr Work received from that song amounted to thousands of dollars " If Sam Lucas had not slrendv been famous the singing of that song would have mede him so He had imitators by the score And then in 178 he turned j another leaf in his career He became the first co'ored man to play the part of I'nrlr 7'om. first with a company in Cln- - cinnat I. th n for 11 mont h With a flrt class j company in Roston He went on the road with this company, playing among other places in Mrs Harriet Beeeher Rtowe'i noma town Mrs. Stowe witnessed the performance and wrote to the manage-- I ment saying that Sam Lucas came nearer to portraying her idea of I'nclr Turn than any other actor she had seen In the past "The trouble with most white actors." says Sal earnestly, "is that they play Pne Torn like they would play Hnmlfi or h'inn Richarri '1 hey make him Straighten himself up an' look his marstcr in 1110 eye an say si the top ot his yolos 'You may kill me if yon likel Rut 1 won't do this thing! No! Never'!' Why." and Sam Shakss his head gently and smiles w ith the assurance of knowledge, "slaves didn't talk thai w'ay to their marater, shoutin' defiance and proclaimin' what they wouldn't do. as if they were sayin' they were just as good or better than their marstcr " Ami thru he shows you I'rrlr Trim as he should be played, and you subscribe yOll , l.n snot I.. Itiipripl Reedier Slou-e'- verdict "Yes." he muses, "it does seem Wonder- ful when I look back now an' think how-jes- t a few years made such a mighty fine feathered bird out of me. I'll never for- get the first tinie 1 went back to Washing ton Court House after I'd got to the top o' that wave I waetsllln' you about. Clothes! You never saw such clothes as I had on! An' 1 guess everybody from miles around was at the deppo to see w hat was like White folks, too. My, yes! I guess there was more white folks than black there. An' they crowded round nie so I thought I 'd never get uptown without bavin' my fine clothes torn off me. They'd call out ; " Shin! Don't you 'member iiow I baek fence? Don't you 'member, Ham? she'd sit an' look at me an' say m & BSjBjBJBBJHajMCLJ"- " 'Son, how come you fo' to do It "And I'd tell her about the barber shop M' how the minstrels came and so on. An' then she'd say: " An' you say you done wrote all dem songs No. I don' want ter heah dem. My Ian'! All dem songs! Well, you might jus' sing me one of 'em. Jee' one of 'em.' "But it wasn't always like that. The colored preachers used to call me de debbll' and warn everybody not to come near our show I always used to go to huroh on Sunday an' many 's the time the preacher has leaned over the pulpit and -- aid: Ham puts the preacher before your eyes as he gets up and bulwarks j himself behind a chair instead of a pulpit Mah hiedren, de dehbil is hyar in our midst dis' mawnin' Not cawntent wid notice dat he was he is hyar himself, in our midst.' " An' me." laughs Sam. bein' there with the intention of givin' them not lees than two dollars'" Oh. oh. oh! how Sam laughs! And how ' before you know it. you find yourself laughing as if you were a whole year's mirth in arrears What are you laughing iat? Oh well -- and then you look again at this long gentleman in waiting on the Spirit of Fun; and he laughs; and a person might as well be asked why he gets the smallpox or the grip as for you to be asked why you laugh when Sam Lucas does. Not that it's all hilarity with htm. He is full of kindliness, generous and affec- tionate recollections of people with whom he has been associated. Bck the early days of his career, when he was with the Callender show the "three Frohman hoys were with it, too. "Daniel, the oldest." says Sam, "was our advance agent, this was- - well, he did a good many things: he used to hill the town, take tickets and so on. And Charlie, he was a little boy then; jest a boy. you know, that used to run errands an' do 'most any little odd job. He was a sort of favor- ite with me an' many's the time I've taken him to my room an' seen to it that he looked nice to go into the din in' room. I'd look him over an' I'd say: No, no! that collar ain't clean enough. We gotta put on a bran' clean one!' You know how hoys are about things like that. An' when his hair needed OUttuV I'd do It, because you see I was a barber. Times certainly have changed, haven't they?" says Sam. with this time a little smile, not the big. contagious laugh. When you ask him in what part of ihe country he has found the warmest wel-- I conic, he hardly knows what to say. Now, 'there's the middle Woet. What fun he's had out there! He wrote a song one time called "And We Ought to Be Thankful for That." When the show would reach a tow n Sam would pick up some item of local interest and before ntght he would have a new verse to that song. He struck one Indiana town where the bank cashier, who had posed as particularly pious, had recently skipped to Canada w ith the bank funds. That night Sam's local verse told about "our bank cashier" and ended: He's skipped with the hoodie Hut he's left us the hank 111l we ought to be thankful for that1 Well, welll Everybody in town that wasn't already at the show thought there was a riot when the applause broke loose. That's the way the middle West took to Sam. Hut he didn't have to go out there to tlnd friends. He played in Boston nineteen straight years without going outside the town! And he went to England ami stayed seven years over there. " And I never lost a day," says Ham. In modern slang, that's some recoid. When it was made he was playing in "variety" companies which later were known as vaudeville. In the earlierdays. when he was with the (leorgia Minstrels and the Hyers Sisters, there was just one part of the country where they wore put to inconvenience. That was the South. There they couldn't stay at hotels but had to be distributed among the colored folks living in the town. In later years this difficulty was overcome by taking a special car and living in that. Southern audiences were an rigm, jne wnitc used to ban' you bread an' j.m over the glaS let tne coiorea people nave both PIOUS, An' when I got home to my mother Tt other times," says Bam, "colored folks had to be satisfied with the gallery." New Tork Palate Dull to Tea Lots of It Drunk Here, but the Finer Qtialities Somewhat Neglected Points for the Tea Buyer Tea drinking has become so much'more j from ping pong It "takes a better roll general in this country within the last ten und has a leaner appearance." In other years that the new luw forbidding the tm- - words, it Iooko pretty, so they buy portation of colored varieties of tea has' It has been especially popular In theSouth, aused greater Interest than would have been possible in the ons. It is still true that most tea drinkers know next to t nothing about what they are drinking. They will swallow almost any amber oolored liquid provided it Is poured out of a teapot. Nine-tenth- s of them so disguise the flavor, if there is any. with rum or lemon or both that it would be almost a crime to give them tine tea anyway. They where tea the States have taken an of good tea certain certain Vork. instance, near to know three or four and ir they milting preference for Formosa tea j ask for anything In particular they men as they allow themselvee to express, t'on of these names. The one quoted above describes It sa ' Apparently they think that they ask In and eaaily the moat for breakfast or Ceylon tea of teas." Fooohow they are exhibiting the discrimination have delicate cup, but less body than the a connoisseur. They do not seem to I'ormosas It evident that one person realize "F.nglish breakfast" a tiade ,ni(tht prefer Foochows and ror-- ; namo for Congo teas and that these are lriOWUI It depends on the person's own 'of many gradee and can be at taste from 30 cents a pound up. thirty lp-stat- e New York buys more Japan cent kind Is just as much an English break- - teas than any other Ro do the West fast as the one that costs ten times as ftnd the Northwest, Most of ths much. England Statoa take the black tesa. The will be only too glad if the States used almost gs American people can be roused to correct clusively the green teas until recent years this ignorance. The more farseeing of ow arp changing to welcome the new law with its es- - black. ' tabllshment of official standards because Ind)a tw wmch arB fa Eng- - they believe that it result in raising Und, are just, winning a foothold. the quality of tea used in the United States. There are two ways of judging tea One is what the experts call style. The other, in their phrase, is by the cup-- ; ping quality. The two do always go together and it is a fact that many Amer quality prefers which general come "delicate another bought experts called their Ceylon on other hand, ican housewives buy their tea chiefly delicate seem to have some peculiar leoause has style. affinity for lemon rum They as well Style means form. M India tw are divided grades lee.ves.are and a pleasing as Broken Orange Pekoe, Orange tint. To Becure this alluring shade it has Pp)oe pekoe and Pekoe-Souchon- been the of the exporters to add These Rre trade namee.it be under-colorin- g or facing making a glossy tooi Orange Pekoe tea may come from tinted leaf. For instance, there is one Ceylon or it may come from Assam or district in Japan which produces, as one In The original Orange expert says, "the most teas coming pekoe, which waa a China tea. does not Trom that country; but they lack fine cup- - exjt jn country to-da-y. ping the liquor very often being These grsdee sre claseilled according to grassy the tip and the fineness of the leaf, the it is some or these stylish Broken Orange being the (meet varieties that the are brewed an(j tne Souchongs the coarsest, which drive consumers to declare that An(j Tet here person who they taste as made of hay. tea buys simply on may be mistaken, coloring longer allowed this matter por per U that It mielsed-o- f style in appearance will not cut so much ins to judge either the Ceylon or figure. And if in addition housewives in(1ia teas by the Pekoe tips, many of can be taught to the cupping quali- - thB coarM leaf teas flneet of various teas they, will be surprised flavors. And there are the Paeklums to And badly they have managed ,orie 0f the South China the tea buying the past. lower grades of breakfast!, which It would be a revelation to tnem to sit ar described as "the most stylish In down at the testing tahle of expert j of all China black tea, the leaf tea buyer. Perhaps they been drink-- ; heing small and evenly made. The something they tolerated, t),r Krart show many tine. They Yet the tea taster, with nis array 01 steam-Itt- g cups, may find one that holds real delight for them. Which one would be depends on the woman. Ask any expert what is the best tea and he will reply without a moment heeitation that it is entirely a matter of taste. Unless some enterprising installs tea tasting table for the education of his customers the best thing forlhe ,hp tea wmle it ig fired and after-t- o do to buy a samples of teas ward ar separated hy sifting. and conduct a tasting experiment of her own She must brew a dozen cups simul- taneously, one from sample. She must a spoonful each In turn. Then let her scoop out with her spoon the leaves at the bottom of the cup and hold them to her nose'to the aroma. Why. there are teas that smell scarcely more alike than roses and vio- lets do! And just as one prefers roses to violet, so there some one tea that will be the most pleasing to each individual. This is the only really satisfactory way of finding the one best brand for your persons! taste. It can t he done so well, and certainly not half so quickly, by trying a pound of one kind and then half pound of another and then half a pound of another, and so on indefin- itely. By the time one reachee the fourth kind one wouldn't be aide to remember how the first tasted. Of course one run through the whole list of teas. There are scores of brands. can buy tea for 35 cents a pound or one can IS a pound for it The most popular brands at retail for AO cents to II .1 pound.. There are certain main distinctions trfat every lea drinker should learn, ann in learning these he.will probably arrive a. a decision as to his own of brand. There useo to be an impression all green teas were colored and all black teas were uneolorod. That was not cor- rect. There were unoolored green teas and there were "faced" black teas. Rut there was some foundation for that im- pression. Most of the colorert teas were grrm teas. Many of them were the cheaper grades which were colored ana faced lo cover up their defects. There will In no more of that under the new That is why the dealers nofsi 111111 pstipia arc going to learn at last t,. buy tea for its not for its appearance in the package. .lapan teas will be .most affected by the new law. Japan's and some of the China teas. pan fired Japan teas Will now look what have been known to the trade as sun dried, having nn green shade. I'ingsuey gunpowder Will Is' dinl gray. It was a bright green. These Pingaueya, by the way. are 11 good example of tin mistaken principle on which many Americans have bought tea. They one of the two gent ral Varieties of China gn'cn tea. the other Isdng the Moyunee 'I bis is the way they are described by an "MoyUne and I'ingsuey leas are nividca inio gunpowder. Imperial, Young and Hyson skin; the different names de- noting the styie and make of the leaf. Refore the new law wen. into effect Ping- aueya were bright and Moyunes a dull grav. In the future the Moyunes will retain this color end the PlngSUeys will be more like them "The latter will still tak" 11 better roll and have a cleaner appearance, especially j the lower grades but the Moyunes have more character, n. ay and uav,.r in tie cup However, HooohOWS (similar but finer variety than first crop PlngBlleSl and first crop Pingsiieys are quite iu Ihe cup and far outclass the later Ping- siieys. which become quite metallic in the drink." These are the distinctions which com- petent housewives oilgh; to be finding out for themselves, but probably not one in of them knows Pingsuey wim for years a neglected bev erage It is only reoently that South- ern appreciable quantity judged from lta cupping It is rather interesting, by the way, that tastes prevail In aeo-tio- New for black teas, especially Formosas. renin under the head of Oolongs. 1 he experts about as ad- - names, a one if flavor English tea fragrant Oolongs a of Is that is The kind Nsw The Southern have lnpy gradually them popuiar will by not get The better gradee are said to have both body and aroma are the "Burgundy of teas," because they are rich and heavy. Probably that is the rea- son the English almost Invariably take cream In tea. teas, the are and it or color and The Into prettily rolled of known custom must matter, DarjeeUng India. stylish j tnig quality, in flavor." Possibly from Pekoe beverages again the if With style no the ex declare le the ae study poseees the ties how Congoua. their in English ap- - an prance have bet- ing have barely white it a grocer a each sip from elose person half half a needn't One pay sell from choice that law The like olive form expert: Hyson green in a delicate They are handsome, but lack body and charac ter " Apparently it Is true among teas as among human beings that "handsome is ae handsome does." The real tea lover has a rather tolerant contempt for what are known ae scented teas The fragrance is not natural but is imparted by flowers, seeds or roots. In eom districts these are placed with housewife being is dozen 1 Generally is quality, t hundred the scenting material is spread over the tea when it is ready for racking, one pound of blossoms to a hundred pounds of tea, and allowed to remain for a dav Then it is removed end the chest of tea is fastened up. Flowerv Pekoe is an example of these scented teas. It is a white, velvety tipped leaf and is used for "styling" other teas. "These varieties have little merit in the cup." says the ex pert, "being without body or character. They are used chiefly for blending in black teas, and even then should be used sparinglv, perhaps one pound of scented to twenty of the black " Not onlv does each country snd each district of each country produce a tea peculiar to itself, but the different pick- ings from the same bushes are unlike. Onlv the voting terminal leavee are taken. These are nipped off bv hand, three or four at a time. They are not picked until a plant is about five vears old. Then they are collected, generally three times a year, until the hush loses its vitality. In China the first picking is in April or May and as a rule produces the beet a The second comes a month or two later and is the largest crop The third is in August or September and is inferior to the other two In India and Ceylon, owing to the cli- mate, there are from twelve to sixteen pickings running through the whole vear The Oolongs, unlike the other Chit a teas, are best In Ihe second picking, the summer crop And the autumn picking is heller man ine tnirn pickings of other varieties .lava teas, grown by the Dutch from ecls imported into .lava from India and Ceylon, have not made much headway In this country They are graded In the same wav as India's and Ceylon's. England is ilie chief market for Java teas, used there for blending with lndias snd Ceylons The medium and lower grades ere considered ae com- paring favorably with the same class ,,f lndias and Ceylons, but the higher grades are not equal to those of the parent Stocks The evperi who has been quoted throughout this article gives the follow- ing rule for telling to which of the three general classes tea belongs" S"If von find, after sleeping your tea for shout live minutes, that the leaves ate of a brownish shade it is a black tea. If they are wholly greenish it Is a green tea Hut if hey are greenish only iu the middle and brown around ihe margins il is an Oolong. " The quality should be judged entirely on ttie cup. Al a given price a better cupping Ira can be ittlained without stylo, aa Style adds to the market value without adding lo the cup merit There an' between 300 and 800 cups of lea to the pound; so that at l a (xuind a cup of tea coal s less i han half a ent In New Vork, according to thedealers, public taste is slowly being educated to appreciate and to demand a better quality of tea 'The quantity used has increased immensely within the past decade 'Ten years ago a tea room venture was foregone failure. Now a pretty nearly a certain section arouno Fifth avenue is fairly spattered with tea rooms anil most ol them manage to keep going. Hair a dnr.en hotels have elaborate glMfflUtlU lei arrango'iio"'' and clubs and evfn offices have sel una samovar. Afternoon ',,' became ImevltsuHe when the dinner hour passed the 7 o'clock mark When 'hat function of dinner crept up 1 s "'clock, afternoon tea the life saving institution which it U in England. So New Yorkers have iumpo.1 the quantity of tea they drink to a pretty high figure, while they have remained almost Indifferent, at any rate humbly uncomplaining, as to itaquahty. That' tea tasting table at the grocers would hilp R lot. Failing that, it would he a fine thing if a programme with the motto, "Every housewife her own tea taster!" could "be inaugurated.

Transcript of LONG SAM LUCAS Palate - American popular musicpopmusic.mtsu.edu/lucas/Long_SamLucas.pdf · 1 LONG...

Page 1: LONG SAM LUCAS Palate - American popular musicpopmusic.mtsu.edu/lucas/Long_SamLucas.pdf · 1 LONG SAM Negro "MY ON OF LAU G H T E R 1 be name of Sam Lucas haa been MM t.i sonjura

1

LONG SAMNegro

"MY

ON OF LAU G H T E R

1 be name of Sam Lucas haa been MM

t.i sonjura with for more than thirtyrears There are men to-da- y high inthe rank of business, leaders in publicafTnirs. who will tell you that they'd ratherj (lone 11. times 01 a

r,n the great big they've Minstrels rame to town all the. . . . ,.....had many a time with long Ham I.ucaethat; ke the prescription of the greatestd v r on earth.

by," said one these men recently,the test of his kind were only black-

smiths compared with Sam Lucas. Hewas all artist "

That's no mean praise for a negrominstrel, The explanation ie that HamLucas is something more. He ie a gentle-ma-

in his instinct and hie learing.He rrakes music and poetry simple both

f em, but sweet and sincere-- as natu-ral v lis he breathes. He ie a bom actor.Fin !y and best all. he has a great,rich joyous laugh that is like a burst ofsunshine.

One ought to hear Sam laujas tell hishimself. It needs his Virginia telescopes. Higher

" .1 U

LL'CAS FROM A RIXENT

arrnt and his irresistible laugh; hismai nei ol an old school gentleman' - touches delicious mimicrySpite that accent he wasn't born downSouth, b it in Washington Court House,Ohio, sixty-eigh- t years ago last August,ton h ive to have his word for it that it'i- - so long ago. Nothing else couldmake von lieheve When you askhim how he managed to get that accentanvwhere outside of Dixieland he saysgenially:

'! can tell you in one minute Threeor fo' hundred ouliiid people been

had come up to Ohiobefo' I horn. They were as South-ern as a cotton plantation. I grew upamong so i suppose I couldn't helptalkin the way they did. Tiwies weremighty different then from what they

" now, We didn't have schools. 1

Used to go across the fields at night toa lady that taught me my letters andI rr,ade out somehow to learn to read and

1 ' B it 1 never any real eduoa- -

'As for music poetry, well' Myeouldn't have whistled a tune if it

hs-- i

mtlSii

tnmAM

Bvni

da.

him his life. But did loveMv mother used

hut 'twas only likethla, you knowsaving back and forth in good old

"etlng fashion, Sam sings:Lawd He -- sent His an gel

Ml my. how well I remember it Theght we had a sort of trough

in it and a wick hangin' outend." With his infor acting everything out, Ham

- newspaper, indicates tho wick,- ' beside him, settles himself.

! ' sayi Naow, than, you ohlllan,' thsr an' behave yn'aelves. I'm

dn my knittln'. My Lawd! I

got dis hyar knittln' 'lone las'He reaches for a clove lving on a

t.'lh

fa

dat

I In

dm

astili

oil! nun- -

was

em.

he

was tin

lil

hv

ir him and "knits" witR such naflimlcry that the whole ecene conies

you, Than he begins a droninghvmn. One lino, luiother. the

more slowly, his head droops,s rloaa, Mammy is asleep Ihii

ns wit h a startn' straight, at us children tool"

- Sam. "An wo sittin' notto smile, though we're almost

' ith laugh inside An' then she. aln: 'l) Irfiwd lie sent '"mammy dozos and again she

with accuaing ovee fixed on hering She waves her knitting at theii kanlnnlsb,ial yog Chilian eettin' dar fo'? Oil

o hyar! Yogo out an' pick up

' laughs bis big joyous laugh overMis and so do you; forMghl hero j the secret of Sam Lucas'spower, lie has gone through life laugh-aa- d

he has never had laugh alone.

LUCASMinstrelsy

GRANDFATHER'S CLOCK" SINGER LOOKS

SACK THIRTY YEARSWhen he got to be a barber in St. louisit. was harder for him than for anybodyelee to ehave customers because his cli-

entele waa In a chronic etate of broadgrin. No wonder that when Cullender s

ninetv-nin-of laughs Georgia

of

of

of

to

patrons of the barber shop said to Sam:"Why don't you go and lie a minstrel

yourself?" That was in 1871, when Samwas 2 yearn old. He lacked just half aninch of being six feet tall, but he was tothin that he looked nearer seven feet thansix. His face too was long and narrow,"a regular horse face." he declares, andthe widest thing about was his laugh.Also it didn't seem possible that he hadn'ttwice as many joints as tnoet folks have.

To get a little ahead of the story, askany old tinier if he remembers seeing SamLucas cach an imaginary fly high up on apiece of stage scenery. First he crouchedagainst the painted wall hestealthilyrose and rose kept on rising, opening up joint after joint as if he were made

itTv rich of ami higher he

I

SAM PHOTOGRAPH.

andIn

r.f

it.

hadand

had

andfather

"Stnotwlthatandin'.

irrepressible

ami

1110

there

recollection,

him

Thenand

stretched, till his audience thought hewould never stop. And when he flnsllydid ren.'li his Utmost extension, standing

n tiptoe of his long feet, with his longarm and his long fingers almost up to thereal siaje flies, he looked as if he couldtickle a giraffe under the chin SamLucas's flyoitching is a tradition of stagefunny business.

It was in 1S7S that Charlie Callander,after Sam had written to offer hie services.sent word to the aspiring hsrber to meetthe show at Leavenworth, Kan pronnsing him a trial at tl a week. He was t.

sing in a quartette, and as he had alreadybegun to make up eonge on hie own ac

count he took some of these along withhim.

"An' maybe I wasn't proud when I hadmy first rehearsal, tho rest o' the com-

pany sitting out in the regular seats an'watchin' me You see I'd had my musicarranged with parts for the orchestra,which was something nobody in that showhad ever thought o' doin ' They'd1 juststand up hefo' he orchestra an' hum,Teedle dee dee dee. Tumty turn ty turn.'An' when I handed round my ecores I

could seo the other members o' the company nudgin' each other an' saying'My gracious! That fellow must be some-

thing great.' "

He wasn't really great at singing. Atleast he hadn't a wonderful voice. Buthe had something much better. Hecould make up words that went to thehearts or the funny bones of an audi-ence. And he could make up melodiesthat haunted their memories. He hasseveral scores of songs to his credit Ifyou have ever hummed "My Grand-father- 's

Clock" you have repeated amelody which first sang itself in SamLucas's imagination. If you have oversaid "Kvery day'll be Sunday by andby" you have echoed a song Sam Lucaswrote. If you have saiii "Carve dat pos-

sum!" you have him to thank for thephraae.

Ho could write songs aid sing them; hecould dance; he could wear the funniest

comedian to appear with a hat not muchlarger than a collar button .perched onone corner of his long head. He coulddevise funny business that made youlaugh beoauee it was just so plain foolish,fine of programmes In which he wasafterward at the of the list was dividedinto two parts. In the first the performers, who wore allthe usual plantation stunts.

"Rut we wanted to make the secondMiht refined,'' say a Sam, "an' of cohso wo

had lo have some explanation of how-al- l

the plantation darkies could edu-

cation. So I hit on plan of sendln''em to Canada fo' that purpose. Theend of the first act showed us all readyto start north. Rundles! Y'ou neversaw such big bundles -- ae big as that

table nn' bigger. Everybody was totin'fthose lun1let round with 'nn. Every-body except tne! I had mv bundlesOh my, yes! One in each hand; one red,ami one white. Rut they weren't RIOTS

than thou I two InohM long, Ohi my!'And how he does laugh. "Von eouldn'thave neon 'cm if they hadn't had Ootofon 'em

Foolish? Perhaps, hut sober Judgesand tired blMilMM men roared over justetirtii foolish tlOM when Sum LUOM

It and carried it out."I jest had to see folks laugh!" he says.

"If I oamoonto the stage an Wf a mansittin' down in front readin' a newspaper I

never rested till I marie hint Stop. I

I'd work harder than n bricklayer to makethat man laugh. An' if 1 eouldn't have

I'll never forget one time we t, laved downKast somewhere; down in Maine. I thinkit was Why. the show was over a littleafter (1 o'clock! We never got an encoreNot a single encore. An' 1 went downinto the house when the janitor was goin'round tlirnln' out the lights an' I says:

" 'What kind of n town is this, r.nyway?The rple here don't stem to know-ho-

to clgp their two hands togethernohow"

" They dassent.' says the janitor.When a good show cotnea to this town

we don't allow no noise. No. sir' 11

they made any noise we'd send 'em tojail in two minutes!' "

It was in 1x73 that Sam jin-- 'heCallander aggregation at the k Horn

of the Ml!, One yew lab r he was at thetop.

I said to mystlt," he tells JfOU, "that1 didn't have u good enough vole" tomake any great success that wav. So

mads up a specialty act an l rehears? I

it with a banjo player In the companyand when we'd ,t t it psttsol I ays to Mr,

rallendor ih it I d got 1111 'his ft", andI'd like to p'tt i on if it was agreeableto him. So he said All Sam;next matinee we plajf you can try it an'see how it goes.'

' I. went s well that it stayed; stayedin the bill regularly and I got a raiseof salary to i:, n wcck That wasn'tvery much acoordln' to present notions,but Mr. Cal lender paid all our expenses,anl I went on woikin'. though it neverwas like work 1 0 111 '. no er in a',', the yearsI've been at it Folks hive always siidto mo 'Sum. do you really have as muchfun as you look like you're bavin' '' nd1 can tell you honestly that if I ever didgo onto 1 he stage foe! in' kind of downin the mouth, as 'most anybody's boundto do once in a while, 1 never went off

feellrt' that way. I don't know whetherother folks bad as much fun as I did, I

certainly hope they did."Well, about a veal alter 1 mined the

show Charlie White started the White's!Georgts Minstrels. Callender hoi made!such a hit with his that everybody beganto imitate him. and all the companieshad a 'Georgia' tacked on somewhere.White got our bel man Rob Htgllt, to go '

with him. but the rest of us stuck byCallender. Rob had been one of our

mis and when he went 1 got the chanceto take his plice. Well, then it wc-easy- .

I gol t?0 a week and was at thetop of the hill. 1 was writln' new songsall the time- - " he Interrupts himself"When I say I was wrltin' those srirgsI'm perhaps glvin' you a wrong Impres-sion I was OOmpOSln' them words andmusic both B it I couldn't write the

down I d sing them to a manthit knew how 10 put the notes downBut they were my songs, ill llshcd overmy name, See!" ami he brings out a

pile of sheet music moM f them havingon the tills page pi lure of Satn ucasresplendent In frock coat, lewelled ecrf-- 'pm and low waistcoat. II- - regard, it

Inif wistfully, hair satirically"That's the Som I.UCSa that thollghj

he was almost the blggi 1 man on earth,he says. "You see. nftl while I foundthat the le. ding n n v ith the other showswere getting HOfl a week, while 1 wasgetting only tin; so lift Mr Callender

land went with the Hyere sitor Talkof the top o' the wave! That's where I

rode then and where I thought I'd al-- 1

ways lie rldln' Mv pnekete were full of,money an' I thought there'd always be j

more where that came fimany clothes aa nc ivina rnuinn huh.an' they sav he can't count his there's;so many of 'em.

I thought oouia " anyinina: at.pretty nearly could too Why. i d oughtto been killed for some ' the things I did.I remembet one time In JJoStot whenhad a new song. You hen. when thspeople get to know you an' like yon,whv it don't matter what you do; they'llHuns 11 s gnai 11 miwi " nn-- j""because voii do it. An' a Wl en my turn

'would come, it was Jest walk onto thestage! 'Hi'' says the audience; ,t's SamLucas'' and it was all shoutin' aft. r that

remember my song that time was likethis:How kind to his wife is the younc married

man.When his mother-in-la- l at home'

At his quiet behavior his comrades nil grUbWhen Ins mother Is at home!

"And then I forgot what came next!So 1 just went mi:

rt eifc When hi nun her in lajf is a home!

"And so on. 1 OUght to been killedBut it was Sam Lucas' They didn'tknow or care what I did Ml they Wantedwas to see me and I Slippt se really w asa sight. I didn't often play tricks likethat one though. I had a new song sooften perhaps I was bound to forget oneonce in a while. I suppose the mostfamous song I ever sang was 'My Grand-

father's Clock.' And it's the song I

didn't get credit for either. I don't be

lieve the true story of that song is kn wnto many people.

"It was written when I Was with thelivers Sisters and this was how it hap-pene- d

I was here in KaW York amiwent around one 'lay to see u man namedHenry Work, tin man that wrote 'Wake,Ni, odeums" .lust as 1 was about, to leavehe pulled out a paper and said: Here,Sam; here's the first verse for 11 song. I

wrote this one but I can't seem to makeanything mor it of it. Maybecan.' It was the first verse of

Grandfather's clock.'My

clothes on the stage He was the flrsl I Uy grandfather's clonk was tall for Hie

thetop

negroes, did

gelthe

too.

right,

tooshelf.

So It stood ninety vears on the floor.It was taller hy hall than the old man him-

selfThough It Weighed not a penny weleht

moreIt was bought mi the mom of ths day 'hat

he waft bornid was always his treasure and pride

but ii si op hmI -- hurt never n so again,V lien the old man died"I read it and took it away with me.

but 1 didn't do anything With ii lor sometime, Than one morning w hen we wereout on Hie road I got up from the hroak-fus- l

bible at He- hotel where wo werestopping and as I turned around therein the corner stoixi a regular grand-father's clock just like the one iu theverse Mr. Work had given me."

ssmaw

lsSBfflsS'fflf!aV'

nmsm

f -- zst.-l ?. a

.SAM LL'CAS FROM PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN 30 YEARS AGO.

And right here, if you happen to beSam Lucas's home, he will step out intothe dining room where a tall dock con-

veniently occupies one corner and showyou just how he stood on tbnt long agomorning, his hand resting on the tablewhile he looked the old timepiece overand imagined its story. Ho wrote thetwo other verses- - one telling how the

lock was the old man s servant; it neverwasted time, there was never a frown onits face, its hands never hung by its sideand el! that it asked at the end of theweek was to be wound tip for anotherseven days work Th last verse WSS

the one that described the old roan'sdeath.

Y know." says Sam, "that folks aresuperstitious when a clock strikes morethan 1' ought to They think it's a bad- gn; somebody gran' die. So 1 wroteabout the alarm ringin' when it had beendumb for ninety vears n' th neigh-bors all said jest what thev would havesail if they'd been the neighbors I'dknown; they said deilh was comin' fothat house. An' the clock struck twenty-four- -

that meant the whole round of alife, you see and then it stopped Andthe old man died Rememlicr the chorus'

Ninety ers without slumberingTick, toi k : tick, toes '

Hi life seconds numbering,Tlnk toe1, tick tork'

had stop4d short never stain,When tl, eld man died.

I

.

A

at

'

10

I as 3 it it to so

"I nlwavs loved thai chorus " and Sampicks up ,1 guiti-- r and sings it softly, deli-cately, lovingly "Yes, 1 wrote that and

wrote the music I mean I made it upV..u . , , Ii 1 . . v.

m, i,r. jm 'a t,ii ,nn pi I niim inesou - ii.ii'H to ir v, ors ana no punnsnoa

i it as his but wirh my pictu- - on the frontof it. n picture of me standin' with mynll.n- - An n VO .. Jl.,1,..'.I never gora en! for it. except that I had11 hig success lingln' It before rnxbodyelse did The royalties Mr Work receivedfrom that song amounted to thousandsof dollars "

If Sam Lucas had not slrendv beenfamous the singing of that song wouldhave mede him so He had imitators bythe score And then in 178 he turned

j another leaf in his career He becamethe first co'ored man to play the part ofI'nrlr 7'om. first with a company in Cln- -

cinnat I. t h n for 11 mont h With a flrt classj company in Roston He went on the roadwith this company, playing among otherplaces in Mrs Harriet Beeeher Rtowe'inoma town Mrs. Stowe witnessed theperformance and wrote to the manage-- I

ment saying that Sam Lucas came nearerto portraying her idea of I'nclr Turn thanany other actor she had seen In the past

"The trouble with most white actors."says Sal earnestly, "is that they playPne Torn like they would play Hnmlfior h'inn Richarri '1 hey make himStraighten himself up an' look his marstcrin 1110 eye an say si the top ot his yolos'You may kill me if yon likel Rut 1 won'tdo this thing! No! Never'!' Why." andSam Shakss his head gently and smilesw ith the assurance of knowledge, "slavesdidn't talk thai w'ay to their marater,shoutin' defiance and proclaimin' whatthey wouldn't do. as if they were sayin'they were just as good or better than theirmarstcr "

Ami thru he shows you I'rrlr Trim ashe should be played, and you subscribe

yOll , l.n snot I.. Itiipripl Reedier Slou-e'-

verdict"Yes." he muses, "it does seem Wonder-

ful when I look back now an' think how-jes- t

a few years made such a mighty finefeathered bird out of me. I'll never for-get the first tinie 1 went back to Washington Court House after I'd got to the topo' that wave I waetsllln' you about.Clothes! You never saw such clothes as I

had on! An' 1 guess everybody frommiles around was at the deppo to see w hat

was like White folks, too. My, yes!I guess there was more white folks thanblack there. An' they crowded round nieso I thought I 'd never get uptown withoutbavin' my fine clothes torn off me. They'dcall out ;

" Shin! Don't you 'member iiow I

baek fence? Don't you 'member, Ham?

she'd sit an' look at me an' say

m &

BSjBjBJBBJHajMCLJ"-

" 'Son, how come you fo' to do It

"And I'd tell her about the barber shopM' how the minstrels came and so on.An' then she'd say:

" An' you say you done wrote all demsongs No. I don' want ter heah dem.My Ian'! All dem songs! Well, you mightjus' sing me one of 'em. Jee' one of 'em.'

"But it wasn't always like that. Thecolored preachers used to call me dedebbll' and warn everybody not to comenear our show I always used to go tohuroh on Sunday an' many 's the time the

preacher has leaned over the pulpit and--aid: Ham puts the preacher beforeyour eyes as he gets up and bulwarks j

himself behind a chair instead of a pulpitMah hiedren, de dehbil is hyar in our

midst dis' mawnin' Not cawntent widnotice dat he was he

is hyar himself, in our midst.'" An' me." laughs Sam. bein' there with

the intention of givin' them not lees thantwo dollars'"

Oh. oh. oh! how Sam laughs! And how '

before you know it. you find yourselflaughing as if you were a whole year'smirth in arrears What are you laughing

iat? Oh well -- and then you look againat this long gentleman in waiting on theSpirit of Fun; and he laughs; and a personmight as well be asked why he gets thesmallpox or the grip as for you to beasked why you laugh when Sam Lucasdoes. Not that it's all hilarity with htm.He is full of kindliness, generous and affec-tionate recollections of people with whomhe has been associated. Bck the earlydays of his career, when he was with theCallender show the "three Frohman hoyswere with it, too.

"Daniel, the oldest." says Sam, "was ouradvance agent, this was-- well, he dida good many things: he used to hill thetown, take tickets and so on. And Charlie,he was a little boy then; jest a boy. youknow, that used to run errands an' do 'mostany little odd job. He was a sort of favor-ite with me an' many's the time I've takenhim to my room an' seen to it that helooked nice to go into the din in' room.I'd look him over an' I'd say: No, no!that collar ain't clean enough. We gottaput on a bran' clean one!' You know howhoys are about things like that. An'when his hair needed OUttuV I'd do It,because you see I was a barber. Timescertainly have changed, haven't they?"says Sam. with this time a little smile,not the big. contagious laugh.

When you ask him in what part of ihecountry he has found the warmest wel-- I

conic, he hardly knows what to say. Now,'there's the middle Woet. What fun he'shad out there! He wrote a song one timecalled "And We Ought to Be Thankfulfor That." When the show would reach atow n Sam would pick up some item of localinterest and before ntght he would havea new verse to that song. He struck oneIndiana town where the bank cashier,who had posed as particularly pious, hadrecently skipped to Canada w ith the bankfunds. That night Sam's local verse toldabout "our bank cashier" and ended:

He's skipped with the hoodieHut he's left us the hank

111l we ought to be thankful for that1Well, welll Everybody in town that

wasn't already at the show thought therewas a riot when the applause broke loose.That's the way the middle West took toSam. Hut he didn't have to go out thereto tlnd friends. He played in Bostonnineteen straight years without goingoutside the town! And he went to Englandami stayed seven years over there.

" And I never lost a day," says Ham.In modern slang, that's some recoid.

When it was made he was playing in"variety" companies which later wereknown as vaudeville. In the earlierdays.when he was with the (leorgia Minstrelsand the Hyers Sisters, there was just onepart of the country where they wore putto inconvenience. That was the South.There they couldn't stay at hotels but hadto be distributed among the colored folksliving in the town. In later years thisdifficulty was overcome by taking aspecial car and living in that. Southernaudiences were an rigm, jne wnitc

used to ban' you bread an' j.m over the glaS let tne coiorea people nave both

PIOUS,An' when I got home to my mother Tt other times," says Bam, "colored

folks had to be satisfied with the gallery."

New Tork Palate Dull to Tea

Lots of It Drunk Here, but the Finer Qtialities

Somewhat Neglected Points for the Tea Buyer

Tea drinking has become so much'more j from ping pong It "takes a better rollgeneral in this country within the last ten und has a leaner appearance." In otheryears that the new luw forbidding the tm- - words, it Iooko pretty, so they buyportation of colored varieties of tea has' It has been especially popular In theSouth,aused greater Interest than would have

been possible in the ons. It is still truethat most tea drinkers know next to

t nothing about what they are drinking.They will swallow almost any amberoolored liquid provided it Is poured outof a teapot.

Nine-tenth- s of them so disguise theflavor, if there is any. with rum or lemonor both that it would be almost a crimeto give them tine tea anyway. They

where teathe

States have taken anof good tea

certain certainVork. instance,

near toknow three or four and ir they milting preference for Formosa tea

j ask for anything In particular they men as they allow themselvee to express,t'on of these names. The one quoted above describes It sa

' Apparently they think that they ask In and eaaily the moatfor breakfast or Ceylon tea of teas." Fooohowthey are exhibiting the discrimination have delicate cup, but less body than the

a connoisseur. They do not seem to I'ormosas It evident that one personrealize "F.nglish breakfast" a tiade ,ni(tht prefer Foochows and ror-- ;namo for Congo teas and that these are lriOWUI It depends on the person's own

'of many gradee and can be at tastefrom 30 cents a pound up. thirty lp-stat- e New York buys more Japancent kind Is just as much an English break- - teas than any other Ro do the Westfast as the one that costs ten times as ftnd the Northwest, Most of thsmuch. England Statoa take the black tesa. The

will be only too glad if the States used almost gsAmerican people can be roused to correct clusively the green teas until recent yearsthis ignorance. The more farseeing of ow arp changing to

welcome the new law with its es- - black.' tabllshment of official standards because Ind)a tw wmch arB fa Eng- -they believe that it result in raising Und, are just, winning a foothold.the quality of tea used in the UnitedStates.

There are two ways of judging teaOne is what the experts call style.The other, in their phrase, is by the cup-- ;ping quality. The two do always gotogether and it is a fact that many Amer

quality

preferswhich

generalcome

"delicate

another

bought

experts

called

theirCeylon on other hand,

ican housewives buy their tea chiefly delicate seem to have some peculiarleoause has style. affinity for lemon rum They as well

Style means form. M India tw are divided gradeslee.ves.are and a pleasing as Broken Orange Pekoe, Orangetint. To Becure this alluring shade it has Pp)oe pekoe and Pekoe-Souchon-

been the of the exporters to add These Rre trade namee.it be under-colorin- g

or facing making a glossy tooi Orange Pekoe tea may come fromtinted leaf. For instance, there is one Ceylon or it may come from Assam ordistrict in Japan which produces, as one In The original Orangeexpert says, "the most teas coming pekoe, which waa a China tea. does notTrom that country; but they lack fine cup-- exjt jn country to-da-y.

ping the liquor very often being These grsdee sre claseilled according tograssy the tip and the fineness of the leaf, the

it is some or these stylish Broken Orange being the (meetvarieties that the are brewed an(j tne Souchongs the coarsest,which drive consumers to declare that An(j Tet here person whothey taste as made of hay. tea buys simply on may be mistaken,coloring longer allowed this matter por per U that It mielsed-o- f

style in appearance will not cut so much ins to judge either the Ceylon orfigure. And if in addition housewives in(1ia teas by the Pekoe tips, many ofcan be taught to the cupping quali- - thB coarM leaf teas flneet

of various teas they, will be surprised flavors. And there are the Paeklumsto And badly they have managed ,orie 0f the South China the

tea buying the past. lower grades of breakfast!, whichIt would be a revelation to tnem to sit ar described as "the most stylish In

down at the testing tahle of expert j of all China black tea, the leaftea buyer. Perhaps they been drink-- ; heing small and evenly made. The

something they tolerated, t),r Krart show many tine. TheyYet the tea taster, with nis array 01 steam-Itt- g

cups, may find one that holds realdelight for them. Which one wouldbe depends on the woman. Ask any expertwhat is the best tea and he will replywithout a moment heeitation that it isentirely a matter of taste.

Unless some enterprising installstea tasting table for the education of his

customers the best thing forlhe ,hp tea wmle it ig fired and after-t- o

do to buy a samples of teas ward ar separated hy sifting.and conduct a tasting experiment of herown She must brew a dozen cups simul-taneously, one from sample. Shemust a spoonful each In turn.

Then let her scoop out with her spoonthe leaves at the bottom of the cup andhold them to her nose'to thearoma. Why. there are teas that smellscarcely more alike than roses and vio-

lets do! And just as one prefersroses to violet, so there some one teathat will be the most pleasing to eachindividual.

This is the only really satisfactory wayof finding the one best brand for yourpersons! taste. It can t he done sowell, and certainly not half so quickly,by trying a pound of one kind andthen half pound of another and thenhalf a pound of another, and so on indefin-itely. By the time one reachee the fourthkind one wouldn't be aide to rememberhow the first tasted.

Of course one run through thewhole list of teas. There are scores ofbrands. can buy tea for 35 cents apound or one can IS a pound for it

The most popular brands at retailfor AO cents to II .1 pound.. Thereare certain main distinctions trfat everylea drinker should learn, ann in learningthese he.will probably arrive a. a decisionas to his own of brand.

There useo to be an impression allgreen teas were colored and all blackteas were uneolorod. That was not cor-

rect. There were unoolored green teasand there were "faced" black teas. Rut

there was some foundation for that im-

pression.Most of the colorert teas were grrm

teas. Many of them were the cheapergrades which were colored ana faced locover up their defects. There will In no

more of that under the new Thatis why the dealers nofsi 111111 pstipia arcgoing to learn at last t,. buy tea for its

not for its appearance in thepackage.

.lapan teas will be .most affected by thenew law. Japan's and some of the Chinateas. pan fired Japan teas Will nowlook what have been known to thetrade as sun dried, having nn greenshade. I'ingsuey gunpowder Will Is' dinlgray. It was a bright green.

These Pingaueya, by the way. are 11

good example of tin mistaken principleon which many Americans have boughttea. They one of the two gent ralVarieties of China gn'cn tea. the otherIsdng the Moyunee 'I bis is the way theyare described by an

"MoyUne and I'ingsuey leas are nividcainio gunpowder. Imperial, Youngand Hyson skin; the different names de-

noting the styie and make of the leaf.Refore the new law wen. into effect Ping-aueya were bright and Moyunes adull grav. In the future the Moyuneswill retain this color end the PlngSUeyswill be more like them

"The latter will still tak" 11 better rolland have a cleaner appearance, especially j

the lower grades but the Moyunes havemore character, n. ay and uav,.r in tie cupHowever, HooohOWS (similar but finervariety than first crop PlngBlleSl andfirst crop Pingsiieys are quite iuIhe cup and far outclass the later Ping-

siieys. which become quite metallic in thedrink."

These are the distinctions which com-

petent housewives oilgh; to be findingout for themselves, but probably notone in of them knows Pingsuey

wim for years a neglected beverage It is only reoently that South-ern appreciablequantity judged from ltacupping

It is rather interesting, by the way,that tastes prevail In aeo-tio-

New forblack teas, especially Formosas.renin under the head of Oolongs.1 he experts about as ad- -

names, a

oneif flavor

English tea fragrant Oolongsa

of Isthat is

Thekind

Nsw

The Southern have

lnpy graduallythem

popuiarwill

by

not

get

The better gradee are said to have bothbody and aroma are the"Burgundy of teas," because they arerich and heavy. Probably that is the rea-son the English almost Invariably takecream In tea.

teas, the areand

it orcolor and The Into

prettily rolled of known

custom mustmatter,

DarjeeUng India.stylish

j tnigquality,

in flavor."Possibly from Pekoe

beveragesagain the

if With styleno the ex declare le

theae

study poseees theties

how Congoua.their in English

ap- -

an prancehave bet-

ing have barely white

it

a

grocera

eachsip from

elose

person

half

halfa

needn't

Onepay

sellfrom

choicethat

law

Thelike

olive

form

expert:

Hyson

green

in

a

delicate

They

are handsome, but lack body and character " Apparently it Is true among teasas among human beings that "handsomeis ae handsome does."

The real tea lover has a rather tolerantcontempt for what are known ae scentedteas The fragrance is not natural butis imparted by flowers, seeds or roots.In eom districts these are placed with

housewife beingis dozen 1 Generally

is

quality,

t

hundred

the scenting material is spread over thetea when it is ready for racking, onepound of blossoms to a hundred poundsof tea, and allowed to remain for a davThen it is removed end the chest of teais fastened up.

Flowerv Pekoe is an example of thesescented teas. It is a white, velvety tippedleaf and is used for "styling" other teas.

"These varieties have little merit in thecup." says the ex pert, "being without bodyor character. They are used chiefly forblending in black teas, and even thenshould be used sparinglv, perhaps onepound of scented to twenty of the black "

Not onlv does each country snd eachdistrict of each country produce a teapeculiar to itself, but the different pick-

ings from the same bushes are unlike.Onlv the voting terminal leavee are taken.These are nipped off bv hand, three orfour at a time. They are not picked untila plant is about five vears old. Thenthey are collected, generally three timesa year, until the hush loses its vitality.

In China the first picking is in Aprilor May and as a rule produces the beet

a The second comes a month or twolater and is the largest crop The thirdis in August or September and is inferiorto the other two

In India and Ceylon, owing to the cli-mate, there are from twelve to sixteenpickings running through the wholevear The Oolongs, unlike the otherChit a teas, are best In Ihe second picking,the summer crop And the autumnpicking is heller man ine tnirn pickingsof other varieties

.lava teas, grown by the Dutch fromecls imported into .lava from India and

Ceylon, have not made much headwayIn this country They are graded Inthe same wav as India's and Ceylon's.England is ilie chief market for Javateas, used there for blending withlndias snd Ceylons The medium andlower grades ere considered ae com-paring favorably with the same class,,f lndias and Ceylons, but the highergrades are not equal to those of the parentStocks

The evperi who has been quotedthroughout this article gives the follow-ing rule for telling to which of the threegeneral classes tea belongs"S"If von find, after sleeping your teafor shout live minutes, that the leavesate of a brownish shade it is a black tea.If they are wholly greenish it Is a greentea Hut if hey are greenish only iuthe middle and brown around ihe marginsil is an Oolong.

" The quality should be judged entirelyon ttie cup. Al a given price a bettercupping Ira can be ittlained withoutstylo, aa Style adds to the market valuewithout adding lo the cup merit Therean' between 300 and 800 cups of lea to thepound; so that at l a (xuind a cup oftea coal s less i han half a ent

In New Vork, according to thedealers,public taste is slowly being educated toappreciate and to demand a better qualityof tea 'The quantity used has increasedimmensely within the past decade

'Ten years ago a tea room venture wasforegone failure. Now apretty nearly a

certain section arouno Fifth avenue isfairly spattered with tea rooms anil mostol them manage to keep going. Hair adnr.en hotels have elaborate glMfflUtlU

lei arrango'iio"'' and clubs and evfnoffices have sel una samovar.

Afternoon ',,' became ImevltsuHe whenthe dinner hour passed the 7 o'clockmark When 'hat function of dinnercrept up 1 s "'clock, afternoon tea

the life saving institution which itU in England. So New Yorkers haveiumpo.1 the quantity of tea they drinkto a pretty high figure, while they haveremained almost Indifferent, at any ratehumbly uncomplaining, as to itaquahty.

That' tea tasting table at the grocerswould hilp R lot. Failing that, it wouldhe a fine thing if a programme with themotto, "Every housewife her own teataster!" could "be inaugurated.