The sunny South. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1875-1907, February 24, 1877, Image 8

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I LORKNCK HARTLANJ. i MY NOTE-BOOK. To my mind, tbe most despicable specimen of humanity extant is tbe serpentine man. I mean one of tbose fellows that always gets into \ your presence without sound or shadow. You r gee him or hear him until he is at your you do see him, you are always seized . by a»- .nstinctive disgust and an undefined tear. If you shake bands with him, yon imagine his j hands are cold and slimy, and a sensation ol : chilliness creeps over you. He always greets yon with what he intends f for a smile, but which reminds yon most of the j expression on the countenance of a hyena. When he asks you a question, you are at once impressed with the idea that he is seeking infor mation about some other subjeet than the one named. He answers questions with all the am biguity of the Delphic Oracle. You find it dilfi- cult to remember exactly what he said, and im possible to decide positively what he meant. He never goes anywhere by the most direct route, nor does anything in a straightforward manner. He could no more be frank and candid than an eccentric wheel could give a rotary motion to machinery. He is more double-barreled than Toodles’ candle, and has less knowledge about manly honesty than Blind Tom has about the colors of the rainbow. Know him as long and as intimately as you may, you can never be certain ot but one thing in regard to him, aud that is, he is essentially uncertain. XIV. Eill i ord was very much annoyed, and, in fact, very much frightened, by the conduct ot Major Sherman’s dog. Every time Bill passed tlmold man’s house, the dog—which was a dan gerous looking fellow—would run along the fence barking and growling furiously, and on one or two occasions he jumped over the fence, and Bill was compelled to take to his heels, and to sacrifice no little of his manly dignity on the altar of safety. But Bill got even with the dog at last, and put an end to all future annoy ance. We will let him explain in his own words: “I wouldn't have cared so much for tlm durn dog’s barking, if he hadn't come out in the street after me. I never did him no harm, and I wasn’t willing that he should do me any. I spoke to old man Sherman about it, but Le al lowed the dog wouldn’t bite anybody in the street nohow, and that the boys worried him and made him bark that way when anybody’ was passing. Well, you see, I didn t know who had worried him, but I knew I hadn’t (if the dog and soon had what they called a roaring rebel camp-fire. Sallie made coffee and spread the tablecloth on the grass, and we ate our evening meal with cheerful and contented, if not happy hearts; and tho only drawback to our enjoyment was the great war-cloud. We were encamped . . , . . ., i n« in on the pike near the narrow passage, and the j Ah . how majesties T , Y „ their scenery spread out before us grandly beautiful I the fair ight of memoiy. ' P- y .. in the purpling light of the clear sunset of the 1 glittering pinnacles pierce the serene sky . July evening. To the left, the flickering shad- j shines the mellow sunlight on their mar > ® ’ ows fell on the undulating fields, and peaceful- their stately towers, their frowning bannere at looking farm-houses, shrubs and ti’ees stretch- tlements ! The wide, massive portal stands ever ing away to tbe gray’ old Massanutten, rugged open, and through it throng such swarms of gaily and hoary with its huge liehened aud moss- ! hedight lords and ladies, in rustling silks and wav- grown rocks; to the right, like the remains of ' ing'plumes, ami gleam of glittering jewels. There some old castellated wall, towering high in tire ; s niusic the rich, delicious music of the realm of air, stood the abutments of tbe railroad bridge— tbe same bridge from which occurred the late terrible disaster. It had been burned by Ashby, i and huge pieces of charred timbers still hung ' their blackened length above, and swayed and creaked in the evening breeze; beyond this, the same stretch of peaceful-looking farm-houses, green fields, verdant woods, and beyond, all in the distance, the blue North Mountain, rearing 1 its bead in the evening mist, the one looking ! so blue in the distance; the other so gray in its nearness, we might almost imagine them the hostile armies confronting each other. (CONCI.UDEI) NEXT WEEK.) ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. A Courtship—She is looking for her beau. week we will see how they met. Preserve the sene [For Ttc Sunny Sontli.] | “Indeedit did; for, after being assured by The Days wlicn wc went Ilefu-i the two servants that y° n were reall y not at geeing. nr Mits. n. c. locke. AVe had been living, or rather existing, be tween the two armies for two years ; for we were in that portion of the lower valley of the Shen andoah sometimes held by the Confederates, sometimes by the Federals, and at all times overrun by T both. AVe still had meat and bread, and sometimes a limited supply of groceries. AVe had about exchanged our last spare chicken to some Federal for coffee when that great tidal- wave of war rushed down and over us, which culminated at.i^t ysburg and then ebbed back in ambulances of wounded, in troops of cavalry, home, they’ quietly rode away without searching the house. I was sorrv afterwards I did not find out the name of the officer, lor it was an act of courtesy I shall not soon forget.” “ AVell, it was better than I expected; but Mrs. Gerard, my kind hostess, cried over your letter about the children, and wished so much for you to have some of the things she has in abundance. They raise cane, and have a large sorghum mill, with kettles and furnace for boiling, and it is really splendid the way they make it. They have plenty of maple sugar, and a substitute for almost everything. They raise flax and keep sheep, have a loom and a woman to weave and make all their summer and winter clothing, but I cannot tell yon all; you can see when you get there. I made up my mind to come for you as dreams ; ami it swells through the vast, vaulted saloons, and steals in faint, echoing, ravishing whispers down thedim, arched corridors, until the very charmed air seems to pulse and throb and grow sentient with passionate enjoyment. There are pictures on the marble walls ; glowing dreams of the rapt artist, of such exquisite beauty that the most inspired canvas in the every day prosaic world seems cold and languid and dead. And the ! statues ! not the mute, pallid marble creations that the world has seen fit to enshrine lovingly in the j vast temple of art; but it is life—glowing, beaut : ful life suddenly frozen into the eternal glory of the ! stone, to be a joy and an inspiration forever. And | all this marvellous perfection of beauty is our own —our very own. We have reared the colosasl | columns of our splendid home; we have filled it ; with masterpieces of art. But dearest, sweetest, j most priceless of all, we have gathered there the j cherished forms of our nearest. They walk with ; us through the sumptuous halls; their arms are j interclasped with our own as we stand in rapt de light before the breathing marble of a divine j statue, ordriuk in with passionate enjoyment the j soft, mellow flow of the music. They are all—all | there, in that wonderful castle in cloudlaml. In j clout!landah, beautiful, beautiful home of our dreams! your foundations rested upon the airy outlines of a beautiful cloud; your marble walls and massive battlements were fashioned out of the swift-fading light of a radiant sunset; the music that filled your vast saloons was but the far away echo of the mystic melodies of your own brain ; and the friends who were the joy and light of our cloudbuilt home ; ah, we summoned them—many of them— _ t , in detachments of artillery, and in poor, strag- j soon as the way was open. There are several had any sense at all, he ought to know me from a j gling, foot-sore infantry—some wounded, weary j vacant houses near where I have been staying, bov, anyhow,), and I didn't feel so powerful J and depressed; others hopeful and gay, but all j and provisions in abundance to be bad. It is much confidence in the old man’s judgment i distressingly hungry—the more distressing, as j all settled ; we wii^ pack up to-morrow ; but abort the dog’s’biting anybody in the street, j we bad so little to give to appease their hunger, either. J didn’t look at hint-vet v !ong>vken he | AVe had stood on the r*-r‘ .co all day, doling out i ' - * • • ••• ' ■ fb--u,';J A you, V’iA bad die sect- y ind t<-]' .me oifick 1 ’ said ^•Exhausted tlhtu uf to jxiiaiisted titiu'Ui ag»i ' to walk to reach txci* * “'EY ; ’d. , V » spiral; mightily like a dog that -wowW/t.ite ■, Speak om, the street, and ay is ready lo do U r'uj/d'l!: u.'Q , made up my mind that I would be ra< 0 b tor mister dog next time he came out, and_.’’ i p re , K are< ? J or him. There was an old pi'f'f k'ing /.ing-water over wfcat the poor yebels c...ied a about the house—I don t know when -aihe/ ere scratch, until, we were t > - wearied out to from, but shouldnt wonder if it wad’ d:e G j/10 anything inor‘$ The sun Lad set, and twi- them that Joe Brown got up in the li m '/Part ot light was closing around, and stilt they came; the war, when there was more soidierlVWl but these last had laid by during the heat of the guns -and it struck me that that wa , the t erra day, or received aid elsewhere, and were making puppy s foot; it wouldn t make ar y noise, and i the most of the cool evening hours to reach . -usry, placing un* their destination. Ko now for a little quiet talk another to beleftV irie: and a family council. AVhat are we to do ? That now and then by era ' was the question, and Captain Newton, bis wife ‘ ' Jenny, and myself, Cora md it wouldn't miss lire, either. I ro md her up till it was as sharp as a razor, and tho next ume I wanted to go to the spring, I. took it along. Sure enough, the durn dog jumped the fence as soon as I passed the gate, and come at me with his mouth wide open and growling powerful. I tell you, he looked like a biting dog, and it ap peared to ine he was twice as big as I ever saw him before. I stood my ground, though, and being sorter mad, and right smartly scarfed too, I struck him a powerful lick, and the pike went plnmb through 1 im, kee.ed him over,'and tbe end stuck iDto the ground. I’ll bet high he don’t never bark at anybody again.” “AVhat did Mr. Sherman say?” “ Well, he was as mad as a wet hen about it, and we bad a right smart argument. Says he': ‘Why didn’t yon get after him with the other end of the pike and drive him off with that?’ Says I: ‘Mr. Sherman, why didn’t yqur durn dog come at-nr. icith the other end?’ And that floored him—sure as you’re a foot high, it did.’> - XV. The man wno has arrived at the point where he can calmly submit to the inevitable, nnd, to use a familiar expression, never feel any dispo sition to,-.“ cry over spilt milk.” has soored at least fifty in the great game of how to win hap piness. », ( Such a man was an old farmer wiJp paid much attention to, and took much pride in, raising cattle. One morning he was informed by his “hired man ” that one of a pair of brindle oxen bed suddenly died of murrain.* “Has he?”8aid the old man .placidly. “Well he always was a breaeby cuss. Take off bis hide and take it to the tanner, and he will give ycu the money for it.” AVher the “hired man” came to dinner, he told his employer that his yoke of red oxen had both died of the same disease. “ Well,” replied the old man, pleasantly, “I got them for a bad debt, and have, had the use of them over two years, and their hides will bring the-taoney at the tanners, which will be that much more. Just skin them, Jdhn, apd take tbe bides where you did old brindle’^’T, About three in tbe afternoon, the “hived again made his appearance,with the inlelligenc* that the mate of the brindle ox was dead also." 5 ” “I thought it quite likely;” said the old man, “ that he would follow his mate. I alwavs no- ticed that when old Brindle broke down a fence ^^Md Buck was always ready tc follow him into |e corn-field or other mischief, afffi it is ‘ to break n, LjWts, especially after a body ild, and h. ^fjhnd Brindle were no year- I tell you. ' JVell, well, let bis hide follow les, too.” ' ' farmer’s wife had not leaftted the lesson fission so well, and was no little pro- A the seeming indifference of her hus- |his accumulation of misfortunes. In a Ig much me -e of anger than of sor- ■*Tessed the cowman: / wa.think tbalj^nu murrain is sent on a judgn.erit r from tbe Lord on yr }f he vt wickedness ? ” eSs /e*\*aid the old man, “I think it au are right, my dear; hut then, AVilmer, Jenny’s cousin, resolve ourselves into a committee of three to decide, and seated ourselves on the cool porch, while the children chased the fireflies over the grassy yard, or made garlands of the fragrant fonr-o clocks, little heeding the grave matters under discussion. Captain Newton h»d been wounded some five months before, and 1 id been fefugeeing “np the valley,” and though still walking with two crutches, had mounted his wur-Lorxe, laid his crutches in from of him, and ridden down in the wake of tin army to see his dear ones once more. I had left my home west of the moun tains, in answer to an appeal from Jenny, u> j from some one else who was “ wearing of the 8 ra y> and was making a visit of indefinite I horse, cracked his.- ie wholesale length. The Captain spoke in enthusiastic’ 1 do this service Wl ' T terms ot his reception up the valley, of the 1 had ever done befc kindness and large-hearted hospitality which he wale d ,.ff to freedoniwntea 1 met with on every side, and how his friends all j last ears. Jenr-.* *irted, as proud to advocated his bringing the lamily back with buggy, took tui/¥ i >^ r ' ulii ster as aoy don't, I implore you, think we can take every thing in one wagon; you must pack nothing but the indispensable* \ the rest we will leave with mv dar Kate. ,1/mean, so lonely and "’iiho \ a hoolf. to read, to break the alt the 1W( 1here. I trust, when I made up the rivet into Ma% 1 tL- p.-«- calico, a’d suen, auorer, w_,o wiF.. sn not procure in fury love and ,avger than Souih went vigorously 11 life, hencefpaoe. 1 Y b ,le2. to stop and look A yon who decided so qnlirting, . , ^ onsly, placing th^ 1 ™d he isl-»a tisfied \.L ,.>* v%v v ;, A 1 a *•> , Henry P. II., of Sparta, wants to kffow when i cards were first used ? . . . From the best au- | thority we have, they were invented in lffilO, to ; divert Charles IV., then King of France, who was an imbecile, or of a melancholy disposition, i The cards had a meaning, and all French, in : fancy. By the “hearts,” are meant choice men j or ecclesiastics. The “spades” represent the nobility, or military part of the kingdom; but by j some ignorance the points of the lances or pikes : were called “spades,” because they looked a little like a spade. The “ diamonds ” represent the merchants and tradesmen, from the square stone tiles, or the like. The treefoil, or clover- grass, corruptly called “clubs,” represents farm ers or peasants. The four kings is that of Da vid, Alexander, Ciesar and Charlemagne, to rep resent the four celebrated monarchies of the Jews, Greeks, llomans and Franks, under Char lemagne. The queens are intended to rep resent llegina, queen by descent, Esther, Ju dith and Minerva; typical of birth, piety, forti tude and wisdom. The knaves are servants to the kings, or armor-bearers. T. D. Y., of Baltimore, says: “In talking one evening about the age of the world, and the number of dead, one of the company remarked that the dead were enough to cover America, if not the world. AVhat is your opinion about it ?” . . . Have never figured out such a ques tion, but will answer by giving you a calcula tion that has been made on it by a writer in Illinois to the New York Sun. Allowing 0,000 years and 200 generations from Adam till now,and the present population of the globe 1,200,000,- 000, the whole number ot deaths must have been about 120,000,000,000, allowing each generation to be half as numerous as the present—120,000,- 000,000. Fourteen square feet are sufficient to bury an adult, three square feet to bury an in fant, seventeen feet on an average for two per sons, 32 on a square rod, 3,270,800 on a square fV'lv '0^1 °l eighteen, pain- , their roof. To this unaiterau u.lv conscious of her wealth and consequent acquiesces, and gymte -gW ’ 7. ” :• jit tie Dee * "i ytto-i recently iies aud 03 | chessmen ^ his visu .0 Carolina by about-) •‘Hack from the silence so long and so deep. Hack from the rest of the late dreamless sleep.” As we gaze at the proud magnificence of our castle, the walls suddenly crumble before our gaze; the towers melt into Use thinnest air ; the gay stream ! of light fades from the hundred windows ; the I music dies away like a sigh ; and the forms we S held in our arms but a moment ago have fled into j the realm of shadows. The sha’tered dreams ofa | life-time ! how baseless and yet how sweet, they j were! So baseless, and yet we gaze at the wrecks ! through a mist of tears. But a radiant angel stoops ever to our side as J we bend sorrowfully over the ruins, and whispers j smilingly, “to-morrow I - ’ And the name of this I bright visitant is Hope ! A Game with Living Chessmen. ! Most persons who have any acquaintance with the i.jitfi?/.ture of ehes§ have heard of the games savl to ilk:; Utijo-i this revived Alooltan 1 1 reply calculation of amusement in Ifm, Wngtt nd rep y- mile*” - - u* boVS OUT Caicuu..*-- longev,ff'd- \ N Goon, of Atlanta, •' -' astonished him, * “• r«“i , w &g»» »e of chess \ en crutchiiig up, satff h; “ Now’, tny dear solutelv necessary\rnf not hold everythin?^n , By noon the nex:£ thi the large, brightly/! escaj fine horses, stood ’ ' but so acenrateiyoiy ex[ pensables that not ng pre a Jy to start aside. A snug litt-.l*'ent gon, with six portions ami softnes** buost capacity, tre of the wagon fc. f?°fred the indis- front of it a plaV^yrinje bad Vo be set the.day had not .ringf ea ther-bed P r0 ‘ breaking-up of therrin,';’,/A in the cen- as eager for the 1, r, ’ ! i i/J/'iand just ^n ing to an add.ess no vel game ngaged, we are tc b . gs _ SoarJi if sucli a twin fith Col. Millet• The eJ aui i white cali.o he allowed to a carpet 0 v _^. nfT been spread Ire^s- ppropiate H Se to till the world since Us ( ^ of(he httl ,_. chessmen, me^ ftpprt having beei AVell, Tom, « ^Suined creatioQ, or beginn 0 . . n generation 000,000 inhabitants and 0,070,000,000 for 33J J—V l'hat the world will stand .M 0611 rs 1 or & 11100 centuries, “^'“^mipose there > lively game ensuet An emperor of Morocco who once said to have all ogress to 1 So^ob^ee^Tom’^yon^need^ne^e^^^e^^t^of Lucifer’T headquarters, or ongh to ac- city middle-aged negr-i cook, for lmron ovoaIzo/I Li. *1 ter s • \ ar ae enou^u v- ajsrsras 1 *"• V,") uSXdoD-t remember « eforf i Ives. lsaa0 ’ 1 that looked alike. N°* S his saddle- that ^ , q twenty Bmb go there. kaleidoscope,and B .A." l .?2!!mber e«r J , A k nVRRTISEMENTS. COLLEGE TEMPLE, si; it .v.i -V, GA. him on his return. “But the getting there,” said Jennv. “Oh, that win be easy enough of accomplish ment. Mr. Pierson was here to-day to know if I would take his new wagon and two of his horses out with me, and Mr. Brown wants to send two horses. I can readily make up a six- horse team.” \ “But t’uo.houae— the property—we will have Dotbing to come back to,” demurred Jenny, i “AVe'are talking about going, Teeny, not corn ing back,” said the Captain sadly. “That may be a long way in the future. Do yon remember a certain letter you sent out to me in March, when the children all bad whooping-cough and you could get no medicine, no sugar, and not even syrup or molasses fbr them ?” "" “Don’t ask me if I remember. I shall never forget that. I thought they would all die, and IVtctnAlly prayed for some sugar. But I must hell you something in connection with that time thRi, you hayc hever heard. I think it was tbe ceit night after I wrote the letter. AVe Jiad a snow, and then'a. sleet, and every bush and shrnb and tree was covered with ice, glittering and resplendent in its lovely attire. 1 think it was the grandest-night I ever beheld, for the moon was full.'Nknd shining from a cloudless ,sky. Sad, very sad at heart, for we had just buried my little niece, and her father far away in prison, and onr own.little ones so sick. I -had been working with them for hours, and succeeded in getting them all quiet and to sleep, when,' thinking of retiring ’myself, my ear caught the tramp, tramjp of cavalry, with the ,jnsi I Ft.ill.Uk..91y»»“« lagge J le d this m»y»P- SrW-BTS;--. the pe ’ « of New Orleans, asks wn^ fiDhra8e Kate 1 ^*, of New of the phrase or L^ ° f t he U le”Wi?? « eC f 7 C /’ w a he d n p'ansa; !T is his pay in cattle, that is the is pay it, you know. ” rve how free the present an the next. “Future fik of this; they shall be V whereas their thoughts _present things as ours h h .that the glaffi yon - w,—. . NSt d«y may have “e.go'A frEF-tUSE&q&alon gar e « driving the old he could have and sometimes-d; ‘ t j me within the two suasion” and«.“• mvself, seated in a ceeded in keepin- *j n£ , the baby and sionally getting*^ jfioh sometimes went three of the “ otht, ^ut by some “moral asling, one with 4 ’ persuasion, we suc- a typhoid fever ske J well, and occa- with the cattle. ; Captain, with two or The first day’s j '■ jne with his arm m much, we were so P.* ’sleeve, and another desolation, ^rholfei bringing up the rear trampled down, *he 4 now nnd then' a deso ,^<1 not impresses ney, standing like m, uec \ to the sight oi what Lad been there,, ", all gone, the g ral “ the land. Every mii*-. dry and bare, wit or mule bad been d, l !p se , or only a cbl 7,i road, and a feeble att<^‘ one sentinel to teu earth. The soldiers wl , re war swept °'^ ,— ■ he couia uu * 7 • left to m® twos or threes, or in two fte | ther laid the first stone. no86-tf B M. AA t ooi,ti.y’« FaiuH-sB American Cure or an tee The babff o^nBmK MorpW^; Bum OP" 1 ®’red paioleBsly aud '.uia. at red 01 ?** V „,, ae6 (inar- ed >u hundred* ^ ^d. Valuable^ ET Atiauta . Address 15. SI Antidote:*^ *?*?£%£*■itiXeixa' S«S", , building ^tt^ wa ° g a garden forming » bower ring the fleets of “““ the commander of Uxe^ ^ sn bjuga- ntrij ireet attt there was one <* oe ^ - was conducting themto the si. .... ^ ,,-_ n the army. hf. X to cot er it with j starvation. The first night v j i.n. v \ o . oming singly. i Q room for onr own bedp, , e ^ Sier jmoflicer wno floor, and the use of u ’<v,finaHyttiain body oi partook of a sumptuous bread, butter and supplied ourselves , _.| SU ^ ... an eim*— would be impossible to p.r^'. Jom, w b ^. r , cam e proverbial ^ to puy journey. * /'of bam. chicken. wheu a man lelusea * -•— - V'i wii,h w’e had 1 c ^ stomarv t 0 say to tn would like to know It is 170S that i $55 b 111 a v» i -% T Q\V F P^avUle. Lake Oo.. OUa _ — 7 $77 p r y Goods .(JKOSI ’ Atlanta, aud *5 outfit eOuTuENT.-The W ^^ftOSS. *i... wiunh. xiiMiita. journey. The next morning s. «/l ! ’h which w r e road, through Sirasb*rf„ lartirg. knoWin ^ ur farther on in full view of tinre a meal upon o which has been so often debts 1 Y/by don t I $5 * $20 &=£.*<» “STS, _ worth k i5 f ree - per day at ^° o m0 p ortla nd .Maine. sounds of clanking sabres and jingling spurs. subjecUs "hackney^, ^1 early upon the I pushed to the window, and peeping from be- applied!, anything so Fisher’s Hill. Mary, of Eatonton, ^ e ’s cap,’ | August..^ _ dd , h , d was surrounded with cavalry, drawn up two) were it till standing, corn v.- 8 ascribed tba ‘ ‘V® script tell [ n Hungary that; , d kiUed ■ lhc were sinning A’.3 l. term could be 1 ^ ancieut cusm , . . t but bewho naa , hind the folds of t'ie curtain, saw that the house every item of the blue uniforms. “Were you frightened?” I asked, for it was before I came.” “No, not frightened, but startled. My first thought was for the children. If they were frightened ont of their sleep a^ter such paro ysms of coughing as they had just gone thro J I knew some of them would die.” _ “ What did you do ?” * “I threw a shawl around me and qnietly slipped out to the kitchen, where Lwas sum of finding Isaac, in the deepest of slumbers before the fire. Calling Sallie to my assistance, we succeeded at last in getting hinf aroused to a sense of the situation. ■*' “ ‘Yankees out dar, you say ?’ * \* “ • Yes; go out and see what tbey.wketi. Dll „ the commanding officer Low sick the children .man a glass »«, and they must not enter the house.’” jvehess, and “ Much good it did, I expect,” .answered the inch tempters. Captain. The best practice - ’ - jr ioun abreast sitting motionless in the cold, glittering, were sloping fields’ of rich* «* ■' a term could be an andeut hat but be wno - - - . T L’S ICT ““ d Sh«id.fha^ uotjet Sr „a. TM-gg H ** «»£ Vajtey and earned ont hMome of tb e 1 ft ^ ’ elu ies be bad kiliex uv | rdEBS for this P0P ular .^ r ga; <. s bought aud sold ? e Tye^ g ani foSnTtbmr stimulating gg vvas 5 perfectly w° nde , r blu9 ira meR in hi* oon- doriHt; Buist, ba «^ e d d t bem eminently success- w d;jog pl“” d iSJ .. bid ‘ E ,»cb.gta» -JKSXiit «• j” sSftt X The Capt^D „d V—WV^ol» ^ Gee. | with the annonneentapt ,‘L , lf .„ ve to camp out for tne nfcht, r ®. onr empty* 81 ' dren received with delight, l«A i.} day declmet. , desire of childhood for chuthe ., and cam 0 ba ing all along we might ha.' s we must Pi F Isaac drew his team up on GV b;ch news tne c under some tall shad e-tile- they, ^*tb * u . l “ of pebbles, leaves and flowers .ear, •» d .* d fia ' with blue glass, possess . . | & • V lilts and blank- the bine rane. iiue nry b I to execute ^^'^tSemoet approvedm.nuer. ets. Tb “boys” gathered graved in < ;. ORR& CO., 52 John Street, ; Sew York. J •A