The Orangeburg news. (Orangeburg, S.C.) 1867-1875, July 27, 1872, Image 2
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.,4
AUGUSTUS B. K.N0WLT0N
(Formerly oi iae ri.ew tork Bur.)
ATTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR
AT LAW,
OHAA'ClKRITRtji, 8. C.
jidy ? tf
HrnidcHcc isi JFo^k of Kdiato,
ALL BUSINESS ENTRUSTED v ill be
prompty^jnd carefully attended to.
DR. T. BERWICK LE?rARB,
: ' SUBGEON DENTIST,
feradtuttc Rnltlniofe College
Dental Surucry.
OFFICE MARKET-BT. OVER STORE OF
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and
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COM M1SSION M EUCH A NTS.
NORTH AsVtAXTJC WI/AJiF,
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Liberal Advances made on" Consign moot.
Kr.tKK TO. Andrew Simonds,- Kso,., Pres t '
1st Naj'ional Rank, Charleston, ?. 0.
may 21 weo tf
W ASHINGTON HOUSE
am
BY
JItb. If, W. Strattori,
~ conKmi ?tmr i
'GERVAIS t% ASSEMBLY RTKEETS
IDM'MBIA'. N. C.
Rail
In
s?es r
harl
maest piniipn of
feranaient
dived at
nek .?
tf
1 i
>W-BOY.
BY MKS. 8. C. HALL.
Many who rend this will remomber
I the heavy enow that gave the New
Year ef^I^^lo'^a^ftffce^r^
QW7^aM*>iM(ltwf mniMflopW
woke up to see tho whofe?ltPlliWI,tw^||lS
were it town or country, shrouded in
spotless white. Farmer Boyd's sheep,
seemed to know what was on the wing,
for they crowded together under"the
tiecs on tho close of that New Year's
day, as a sort of preparation for the
night. Tho uexfc moruiug, long before
day, the farmer und his sons were in the
meadow, heedless of the (hick blinding
snow, resolved to presorvo the flook ;
and if they had not been up and active,
the greater number of F? ?er Boyd's
valuable Southdowns wot. x have been
ouricd in the snuw.drilt, so sudden and
violent was tiie fall, s<) deep and dan -
gerous were the drifts.
The farmer said ho'should not have
Saved half but for the perseverance of
his little d. g?Lot a shei p dog, but a
email pet ol bis daughter's,' a little
sagacious creature 'that was often snub
bod b< cjiust it was uot "ihurouab bred,"
and so they forgot that it was thortnujli
hcurttd queer thing, who, with a
species 6f animal economy, alwayB rau
im three legs, giving one of the four
root, and another a rcBt in its turn.
Very early ou that particular morniug,
between scratching and barking nnd
"whining, she had manag'ed'to waken her
master bcforh daybreak on the 21 of
January. But that did not content her;
when the door was opened she ran to
the window, and the firmer, seeing it
wag nearly blocked up by sun w, roused
Iii.? suns and set off to s?K- after his sheep.
The dog at first wished t accompany
Ae party, but immediately on leaving
the porch she became bufied'in the j
^fuj^^ud quickly floundered hack again. 1
and alter being called "g'jo-l dog" t.nd
lwisc Peg" . by- her jnnng mistress, she.
sat quietly down <uj the warm kitchen
hearth, tu t t-lccping, however, but cock
ing firet one ear, and then the other
and quietly ,piQyiug. her stumpy tai
wh n the master's voice was heard iu
the distance. The farmer knew there
would be a still heavier fall, for the
clouds were weighted with snow.
"Alary," he said to his daughter, wheu
he returned, "see that there is a good
lot of pea soup made ; the cottagers
beyond the croft will be gJa&efit, for
their masters are frozcu out; uf work
I already." * > ... . .
Alary, like a good girl, said "Yes5,
father ;" but w hile she shook the snow
flukes off his cent she added. "Father,
what can poor dor Aunt Ltddy and
her one urmed boy do this weather'!"
"Wba,t is that to thee ?" fie answered
sharply. Mary said no more; but she
raised her beautiful large eyes to her
father's and he saw they were full of
tears. ?KWnilBB $ $
The trees all round the farm looked
lovely, coated with tho glittering auow,
and one of the farmer's sons cleared a
plaoe for the wild birds to food on; ' hey
Cleared it again and again, for tho snow
continued to fall.
"O deur I" said Mary to her brother
Tom, "I wish father would forgive his
sister, and let her and little Joe coirio
here tb uS j'he is so kind, in his rough
way, to every one. it sno did umrry
biiuuiy, only did hor duty us a wife
by refusing to leave her hu>sbaud ; and
now that ho is dead?"Mary paused.
Tom rubbed his curly red head with
his very red baud. Tdfti was called
"practical."
"1 don't Seo what little Joe could do
here, with only one arm. Which ol
them is gone ?" ho said at lust. "
"The left."
"(.In ! well, he could 'lend day school
and Sunday school; they might make a
scholar tofth'm 1 molse' than over they
'could make of ma 1
'?Dear Tom." said Mary, "wo must i
get at father's heart somehow, and oll J
will be Woll.' 1 cannot bear to think of
their situvitig, perhaps, in that horrid
London.".'
"Ijonid trfhdotj 1" repeated Tout. "1
like that! Oranges down here a pcuoy
apiece, ? and there Frank Fowlef got
tiirte for a penny?such beauties '."
On New Year's bay' the,, ' Aunt |
"Ijidd" who hud' such a strong hold on :
Mary Boyd's sympathy was literally
e ilhont tiro, aud almost without? fbdd j j
t tb I ? ??'?finmv ? #h**fe; a arsrveu
?od shivered let 5n thvr bitter wind, and
that day ?ttio Joe had douc everything
it steal ,o,
food. Ouo gentleman who had tossed j
him, three-jjaacc for holding his horse
said he was a hue little follow, nod if he
had two arms instead of oue, he would
get him into the shoeblack brigade. Joe
colored, but quickly recovering himself,
answered : "Please, sir^k
is equal to another ar
The gentleman "pfllit dtofahMfoH ft
and trotted off. Poor Joe put up his
hand to the remains of his arm it bad
been, amputated just.aboye the ?Ibqw in
coosequeuoe of an accident; "I only
wish 1 had to do all 1 could do with one
arm," he murmured. He wandered up
and down the streets;.the air.was grow
ing oolder and colder ; ha was very
hungry, but he passed tho temptations
of bakers' and cooks' shops, tightening
his finders more closely on the little
"I may get something for mother ; I
have another penny," ..murmured the
boy. lie entered a baker's shop and
usked for a penny loaf, laying down his
three-pence.?Suoh a fat, jolly .baker,
rolling and Lughiug behind a counter
pi lud with cakes and dainties, looked in
tlis pale, pinched luce, bluish from cold.
"Only a penny loaf New Year's night,
my littlo mun ? Well, there it is."
Joe took it up ; us the buker took up
the coin he fixed his eyes on the b?<y,
and said, sternly, "You are young to
follow so bad a trade; this is bad
money."
'?Bad money," repeated Joe. "O, sir,
I hud it from a kind-ueotleu.an.for bold
? ;. ? ".',,?'7 ? ? t= ?.. jVT <
tug hts horse."
"Have you no other money ?"
. "Another penny."
"And why did you not pay for the
loaf with that 5"'
"Please, sir, I wanted change ; I
wanted to buy Komething more for my
mother," and his large blue eyes filled
wiCh tears.
a 8Mn^c]ffp" gentleman, tocfo such a
thing as to give bud money to a child
like that '."
TMeasc, sir, I know he didju't intend
it; ho fipoko kind to ine ; lie didn't
know it was bad." *.
The jolly baket looked attentively At
the Ijttle boy....
"Sec here, my lad, if you. kijcw the I
coin, was bad, the sin will bo heavy^ou
.you; but I believe, you did not; you
wanted food for your mother, and you
would not let blame fall on the absent
.?l*b r^'ght "things: God" help you
child !" he added, pityingly ; "you look
half starved! Give me back that loaf,
and here is a bigger one ; aud, missis 1
'hand over one op those-ouuees of tea and,)
half pounds of sugar we made-up for our
p >or customers ; and there's three penny
pieces for you, little one ; only always
look u/yoiir silver before you pass it in
future!"
Joe could upt speak .for quite a miu
ute; ho walked to the shop door, aud
then turned back. ?'***?
"If you please, you do not think 1
kuew that -voncy was bad !"
"No." .' ,
"Thank you, sir, I'll?never forget it
?never, sir!" arid'"giving vent to oue
large sob, he left the shop.
There was feasting in the widow's at
tic that night; to be sure, Joe was
obliged to make a eandlo screen with
his hat, or the poor thin little candle
would hav? been biown out by inu wauu
that whistled through tho chattering
wiudow ; but ?hero was a bluish cup of
hot water with an infusion of tea and
in tfk, and a tiny little lire; and tin re
was much thankfulness for what would
have 6ceuied to many fnry small mercy ;
?ud there wa* earnest prayer, and, hud*
diud under thoir scanty dlotliiug, the
mother aud ohild slept soundly, and
twoko in the morning to tho conscious
ness that as the snow, having found its
wuy through the panes of the at ti ? win
dow, was heaped ou the floor, aud the
neighboring roofs and chimneys were
liksr m?un?niu8 ief 4,da?ft!ing -white,"
thore must have been a_"beavy full"
During the night.'
"NVe're snowed up, Joe1" said the poor
widow; "aud the end will soon come;
this cold will kill mo."
"Not f. bit of it, mother," said little^
Jdo, oheerily, white moulding a snow
ball out of tho snow ou tho floor.
? I shall go out as* sijow-boy. while
you remain there, just as I wrap you up,
uaid. see what lota of cash 1 sbail traru.
God has scut the snow tc be Our tViend-;
the ?nTfid Bhtill make, us fire,"
"lfy poor Harmed child V* whispered
the widow to Uorsetf, pat Qod baa grj.
Tho snow bad fsfr^ tif**W?atfly an*
^o^itaniPrHtjll^t ^8^^ door (be
streets were riearl^^looked up, the
omnibuses . did not J*n, tho low cabs
that appeared cauid-lS^t *?th a'l the
dignity of. horses ;'l?f^^?if^ r^?ff'
able thing of ull was^*-?*teoao silence
of the idmonse city, ^though Kensing
ton is generally oci^*dere*4 a quiet,
dignified suburb, yc" it has, in our
opinion, a more th?ojjHf ?hare of noise
and bustle; but ouJtS^ of January it
was as though we we^ ^riojteu ^'th a
plague. The only ?*nd in o?r v 111 ??
was toado by the rouajjtapw** of specula1 -
ting uavyjes, who k^tj^putfoually sug
gestiug that we niuife hitve the snow
cleared. "Clear you?*now ! clear your
snow 1"?torrifylng ?? Wnts by in
formation conveyed d^**0 tue area* that
if we did not "clear ?*ir saaw, we*d.be
had uj> aud pu!tis1liMfw'fr "ft t'hsn not
sweeping chimneys ra^yar it was."
Boys crept aboui^PKtrTsTio>el? t?d
brooms, but were ^VW;,*a aW? hy the
navvies, who i^'nopol^^'the trade:
Littlo Joe was sJ^WrwMt perplexed,
after bis dctormiu^f? ?9 go out as a
"snow-boy/* the fscuSfct he had noithcr
shovel nor broom.
After a 'little cooperation, heedless
of auow tfrifl or Bt^'^hower, he took
his way to the bake$'s> and entered the
shop-hopeful. ^Sfi
"Drai 'those' t^Hfij^1^0 baker's
witq, "they neither-."'???.? uor take rest '.
What do you want
"Please, ma'uj,.JrJ.ihad a broom and
a bhovel I could earrfceomcthiug for my
mother by clearing
"Well "'
"I thought th??'f$t3B gentleman here,
who was so ktud to u>? yesterday, might
Icud them .to (tie. pother and 1 had a
beautiful ton hut ifght?thank you
ma'am; v<ut we ha^. very little of any
tjiimi fi-rto dav^J
The baker eutered'She'shop befufrhia
wife had time to answer. '
"A shovel aud a bftwm, is it ?" said
the jolly baker. "Aud because I was"]
kind to you yesterday, you expect me to
be kind to you to-dtiy ?"
, "Hope, sir, not quite expect."
"Oh! oh!", said tho baker, "chops
words, decs it 7 And if I did leud them,
how do I know you tCTjuld rcturu them?"
"I would pruaiisd pou, sir; mother
knows I ucver told a lie in my life; you
might go to motherland'ask her."
The baker lent the child what ho re
quested; at fiveo'clnck he had uot re
turned.
"I told yon so," said "tho baker's wife.
"Yes, my dear; but as you did not
believe what you said yourself, how
could you expeot rue to believe you ?
The child has an honest face ; has, I am
sure, been well brought up, and, more
over, is very like poor Liddy Boyd."
"She. was a fool," said the bakdr's
wife.
"Becauso sho married the man Ehe
loved ? Did not y^it do the same t"
"I did uotr marry a seump," answered
tho baker's wife; .and though she was
dusting the counter with her apron, she
looked proudly at her husband at the
samo time.
? "Here comes our littlo snow-boy,'1
said tho baker, as Joe, weary and foot
sore, but smiling, went past the window.
"Here's your slrOjM^Pcjfofe?ni," said
the little felIow,<tfMWny ttuvuks. sir;
aud, please, 1 Want a two-penny loaf, ]
and hero are tho coppers?.JL made
.teupence .halfpenny ; aud at ouo house
tho lady, besides the moucy, gave me
this tract, and a groat bun."
"Wbioh you ate f" sBiqVthq'bakef's
wife.
4'0 no che. exclaimed; "L kept it for
mothor."
"What is your mother's unroc ? 'in
quired the baker.
"Mrs Loyd sir."
"Mrs. Lloyd?" he repeated. UEiddy
Lloyd V
"1 dou't know, sir, as to the Liddy ;
I nover heard, her called anything but
Mrs. Lloyd. I oall hqr mother."
" Was her name Boyd before ahe mar
ried ?"
I ^iLvmipht be, sir; she has a brother, I
know?Cncle Boyed."
"Docs he not take oaro of her?"'
' No, sir ; he's very hard, sir, I kqow,
(o mother; ami {.he prays so much for
him ; double to what she does for me.
Good night, sir, ana mistress!" He
paused,, 'sod then asked, "If it was to
snow again to night, sir, Would you
please load me them things again ?"
"I'll toll you aa wo p ajcug,"
o baker. "I shall go with
you to see your mother." J
Joe was Very glad when the bakcr.in
cToBed h s solitary cold hand iu his targe
Warm dhe y and when the child said he
must stop and inquire at the coal-shed
about coach, his friend only laughed and
astonished him by the rapidity and the
magnitude of. hia purchaoes?hot soup
and meat from a cookshop, tea, sugar,
three large caudles, and a hundred of j
coal, and all for Joe's mother ! At last
the child burst into tears.
"What is the matter nowt little, snow
boy ?" inquired the baker.
"Nothing, sir ; only mother will have
ail-she wants without my help !'r
"^o, my child ; it is all through you
that she will receive this little help from
an old friend. If you had not practiced <
self-help, and loved your mother, you
would not have enlisted my sympathy
aud"nad my help 1" <
"Mother was afraid of Ina snow,"
said little Joe, "but ! told her it came
forgot'"
"Did you ever hear this, little snow
boy," inquired the baker?" 'That all
things work together for good to those
who love the Lord r "
."Yes, sir ; mother has said it, though
she's so dull at times. This is the house,
but I think you nre too broad across the
shoulders to get up the top stairs." For
an instant the baker doubted aud looked
iuquiriogly at the child; could it be
that he had made up a story about his
mother.' But Joe added,"You can get
up sideways, sir, us tho landlady doe?
wbcu s>hc comes for rent ."
I think we all know b$ this time what
a kind heart the baker had, and.can be
lieve that he felt very sad when he saw
the once pretty and bright village girl a
faded wornout wotuau !
"Joe should not have brought you
here, Mr. Glaecote," she said, drawing a
threadbare blanket around her. "I do
not want to iutrude my poverty on any
-'?rot 'ti'Jwly^ *v ?rM? $
one.
?? Moth er/ i d ter r up ted Joe, i'the gen
tleman's very kind, but we have money
of our own, mother. I earned tet.peuce
half penny as a snow-boy ; did 1 not tell
you the snow came for cood ?"
"Godsends poverty as well as riches,'
observed her visitor, "and if-we knew
all, one is ofteu as great -i blessing as
the other: your life fell among hard
lines, but that will mako you. the nap
pier, perhaps, by and by. At all events,
among all your trials"'(the 'baker laid
his hand on Joe's head as he spoke) "he
gave an angel to your bosom."
"That's tjuoj." paid the widow ; "but
see how greatly even my poor.child has
been maimed and afHictcdJ" f
"Losing my an?1'' exclaimed little
Joe. "Why, mother, that's a blessing !
?I'll have the one-armed boy lor my
duct,' said one lady, and* 'the gave me two
ponce, aud when the other lads said they
would dd it quicker, she repeated, 'Slow
and sure.' A great' big navy, who at
first pushed me off the pavement, when
he saw I had but oue arm, patted me on
the back till I shook Again, arid said I
was a brave little man, nud he would let
me sweep where I liked ; he spoko as if
tho street belonged to him. Mother,
my half arm gets mo smiles and kind
words and friends ; I was right about
the snow, mother; I was right about
the enow !"
It is wonderful what good may be
done by a little thought, and a little
time well mid out.
'I be kind baker found his way to Mr.
Boyd's farm, and Lu a very few days at ,
terwavd the farmer's widowed su-tot aud
her little Joe were beneath the ?-heiter
of his roof MnryV mother had been
ih \r] two yenr?, aud Mr. Boyd's sister is
considered even by Tom to bo a comfort
in the house; and Joe?eveo now Joe
can do with his ono arm what Tom with
his too, 1 am B&frf to Sa/j is never like
ly to accomplish?ho can write hjs un
cle'6 letters, and car,*, up his uncle's bills;
and what is better, ho is bright and
cheerful and grateful. His uncle says
tho littlo "snow-boy" could find etraw
berrics in a bed of nettles 1
The conjunctive mood?thought of
matrimony.
What giows bigger tbn moro you
contract it ? ?>ebt
The best authorit'ifs on ?be horse
condemn the use of the check rein as
cruel and injurious.
A man in Middlebury, Vr. attempt?d
to commit suioide the other day by
touohiug off a can oi powder in his
baud
j - Atter Gteeley-^iiat? '
TBK CONQUEST Of AMERICA?TQE CON
SEQUENCES OOF HORACE OBEELBYB
ELECTION-PttOA'UKTIC TALE.
... ? ???
The following is supposed to nsve,
been written in IS?? by Max Adoler
who was a witness to the terrible Bcenes
which occurred at the time of which
the story tells : .r
. "You ask rue to tell you, my children,
of the events which immediately pro
ceeded tho destruction of the once great
American Union, and the capture of the
country by its' present European rulers ;
snd to say something olso of the causes
which led to these deplorable results. 1
undertake the. task with a heavy heart,
for whenever I revert to that, terrible
tim? I caiinotheip contrasting our proud
condition "up to that fata! year j with"the
humiliating position occupied now by
tho American people. Th^story is^*
short ofle. To tHttllMPW'j 2 HorsW
Greeley, the editor of a newspaper Jn>:
New York, was elected President of the *
Uuitod States. The people voted for.
bim because they believed him to be so
honest man. But he was rain and weak,
and he entertained certain fanatical and
preposterous notions?about agricultu
ral matters, for instancy ho was deter
mined to force upon the people at all
hazards and despite [all opposition. He
believed, among other thipgs, that every
man ought to go to the West to caru
his bread, and long before he was chosen
President he used to advise everybody j
to move to that region as a cure for all
the disasters J which could befall the!
human .family.
"As soon as he reached tho executive
mansion, which wo used to call tho
White House, President Greeley organ-1
ized an army of two hundred thooJsjjdJ
moo, and proceeded to force the Seaboard
Stetes westward at the pe nt of tjhe
bayonet. The utmost violence Was used.
Those who resisted were shot down, and
their dead bodies were carted off to a
national factory which the President had
established for making domestic fertilis?
era All tho large cities of the East
were depopulated, and towns Were empty.
The*'army swept before it millions of |
men, wofmen and children, uutil the vast i
^plains west ,ot Kansas were reached, j
when tho pursuit ceased, add tho army
was drawn up iu a continuous liuo with
orders to shoot any who attempted to
viait the East. Of course hundreds of
thousands of these poor creatures per
ished from starvation. This seemed to
frighten President Greeley, and he sent
a message to Congress recommending
that 700,000 volumes of a comic book! of
his," entitled 'What I Know About
Farming/ should bo voted for the relief
of tho starving sufferers. This was done,
aud farming implements and seeds were
supplied; and then tho millions of
wretched outcasts made on effort to till
the ground. Of the results of this I
will speak further on.
"Iu the meantime the President was
doing infinite harm to tho country in
another way. Iiis hand-writing was so
fearfully aud wonderfully bad that no
liviug man could read it. Aud so, when
he sent his Crst annual message to Con
gress?the document was devoted whol*
lv to the tariff ftnrJ t/i 1 r*.ire?
sentence appeared which subsequently
was ascertained to he 'Largo cultivation
of rutabagas aud beans is tho only hope
of the American nation, I am sure.'
The priutors not being ablo to inter
pret this, put it in tho following form,,
in which it went forth to the world :
'TI.o Czar of Russia could ?uot keep
clean it he washed himself.in the, whole
Atlautic Ocean once a day.' This
perversion of tho message was immedia
tely telegraphed to Itussia by the Rusj
iau Miuister, and the Czar was so in
dignant that he instantly declared war.
"Just at this time President Greeley
undertook to write some letters to
Prince Bismarck upon the subject of
potato rot, and alter giving his singular
views at great-length, he concluded with
the statement that if the Emperor Wil
liam said that t-ub-soil ploughing-was
not good in light soilr or that guano,
was better thau boneduwt he was 'a liar,
a villian and a slave.' Of course the
Emperor alf-o immediately declared war,
aqd beosme an ally of Russia and of
England, against which Utter country
Mr. ??A?I?y bmt\ ?ctu?!!y hj?5&^??ii?
tise already, bedsus* tfie Queen in her
I speech from the throne, had declared
^bc TVt'Hnc'e advocacy cf a tariff en
with hi* autograph
The Bttjerc* Hartroki
a caricature of the Austrian
he readily joined in war aj
United State?; wfcllr^"
yoked to the
vt'jcd tbe Freoch
on Mr.qreelajrj
the Preaideot, ^?jjJI
toriai *i tie tiaea, not
the French language, miatookthe Am
baasador for a baggaT, aru wMott* I**'
iog. up banded kiss ? qcstt?t3aeSSS (?
order for a clean ahirt and a
hoo, and aaid to kiaa, ???
man?go Westf:
"So all the*'
war vrofc the
swooped down upon <
io*t op^it5
irtiona of our
iiutely deserted,
afraid to call away the army
sas at first, rbt-fca*fBW?lMi
would come East in apiie c* him. 2ut
at last he drd awtMaa?ii?*lwa^??
aid, and it moved to
It was too lateBefore
reached Cincinnati the
seized Washington, and all
east of the Ohl?, Hd?
President (whose losawaaiect;
the Cabinet and every
greaa. Tho army'
and the invaders
West ; where they fa
dying of starratio? AlWMla^BaM^
f ollowed the advice of Greakj^s Ml to
'Try for your first crop to faiae Hraoa,
and don't pla't^^jlMlHMbliHflf
quick lime in a
wretched people, were at 1
the enemy who?to bir,
?treated ther
erick WilHat
|.AmerdepP
tions that on?i
(. blow top j^MB^fl
which it will nover
us, who were freemen, a nation
It was all the result of ot
fidence in a mis;
thought himself a philonc
Heaven preserve you, my or
tho remorso I feel when I
[has I voted for that bucolic editor/
Cincinnati Times.
Young alligators, foe beta, are
cd in the NcwdB?rkmua atreftt.
An organ grjOH
has a bank nccouut o
The new
tho question,
rash dishes for
A paper, in puffing a certain
says it is the "best ever made for 4
man's face. We have tried it, a&4
therefore ought to know." x
A policeman asked a drunken sdthiop
whom he could scarcely soe in tho dim
light of a coll, "Are yoa
"Colored, no ; dis ycr^chile h?r* i
Researches In Chinese archive* aft
that the architect why designed sad
engineer who built^tha^pj^|pg^gp
women. . .^JBtfMMMifeVMB
.Chicago is ?ov**?ajmjfijM
ment of some Holy Tree eoffeo
for the laboring classes; *nd witn
prospocta of success.
A salute "Was fired Zou
Irland shore in hi
io nomination. A kind
woman, hearing tha^me
they go again; trying to bring up
dead body.
"George," asked the teacher of a>
Sunday school class, to whom aJl other
shall you wish first to
to heaven. With a fa
with anticpatioh the
,'GerJUICfi
Tbe last
Wbal I Know about
cipe, which is attributed to hia^gswj**
cultivation of fcb belle. It ia ??
follows: "Never put over
io a bill with a codiah if
sure a crop.
cided
MNP
leva. Allot
jfaU^e slatrps will