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Judge, 1883-06-02 · page 5 of 16

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Did she speak of girding sword Ouly to his bosom erept, Uid her face and sorely wey But, while he was lingering still, Love lent power to ber will, Lent a suile that flickered wan For a moment, and was As she took from her br One blue ribbon mene Ga we it him, * Wear this token fr I So the youth her favor be Like Sir Launcelot, to the war. Watching, w iting, poor Elaine Hopes for we months in vain; ‘Then the tidings slipped along, Like some half-forgotten soi Broke upon her ear; it seemed Some old story she had dreamed; She had heard it all before How her lover inined the war; She had heard, but he How that picket who wa On his post in Maryland Meld a ribbon inv his hand A blue ribbon, stained with blo Onee, per ft She had he: Then she shyt When a grateful nati« Places wreaths Of the gallant dead who fo For her life—so dearly bong And, forgiving to the end, Laurels foe as well as fric Every ye: Hidden wh Midst the A fresh kn The trophy | eh brow n leaves shin of ribbon bl had loved so well his best immortelle ny throw gh, SUNDAY-SCHOOL STORIES. WITH PATENT SELP-SCGGESTING MorALS vi who attends Sunday- ct partial to bout Sam NO Or course everyone chool at all, or is in ubbath literature. iow he was very s\ west man that eve Tions, and carried how he finally pull thereby put an end to himself erable number of his enemi time. Even better known th: the great American giant, whose de whose misdeeds make the achiever Si little indeed. strot nts of of Amer- ag actually nothing could not do, ed rivers, built und unloaded He leveled im » bric railroads, loaded. steamship: mines—there was positively no end to his achievement © was only one trouble his appetite was tremen- dous—almost necess, enormous bulk and su and it was sometim with enou dowment a y so, conside: human str sd 1 to listen readily to flatterers and counselors who too often had anything but his good at heart. But, after all, the great problem was to find sustenance enough to stay his enormous ap- petite. Of ¢ » he received pay for his ervices—such services as they were. public work could be undertaken without j dle himself w WOUNDED HONOR. brated duel between an Undertaker and a Beewe tira, Happily the coffins, unlike the duellists, ann their fellow-men aject contd so much as reference to him. Were there was ne reat Aine int to hew the them in places and in fact de So vou will see thot it was for That he was ho engineeri sted with a new buil one but the comtemplat stones al s all the work everyone's interest to t fed care of providing for the fell on one chormously rich man who in the wi wrhood. Le did not sad- ost of maintain sure, for he jetilating aman, and always yood return from every dell he paid “But the deal of work about the by his toil enhanced th Ir sions, so that, as a rule, ied cheerfully enough ne a time wl n id when the s falling off, more prodigious than eve rich man did not tind sor usual for the result of his big dywork. It was at this moment th: ant, aflicted with his pei provisions nes, concluded to insist on havin sa day instead of thre Now to the rich man th ay just_ made the ant’s labor and incurring g him. He at said he would work no without it. So things were at a deadlock, with the most disastrous results for both. So. lon giant refused to save on his own terms the great works which the capitalist started remained on his hands idle and un- productive, for there was no one except. the giant who could carry them on, On the other hand, the rich man having cut off the s the hungry, or beg wi broken victuals he could, while every day were not filled, and they both his enforced idleness made him thinner and the capitalist poorer was impaired. ‘The x inet work as he could the st havea aday here the exjoli his mighty st italist. Te cod in down: he will severely brnise the capitalist if he does: but he will infallibly crush himself. And if the capitalist vields to terrorism, gives him four meals ‘a day, will that m up for the loss of m ks during whieh he has not had a meal at all? amson pulled down th ny, knowir wut willing tog his foes. Our An nt isp the pillars of ea yetting t fall will bury himself, and forgetting also that in seeking to de on hisown inte political economy would teach him is the complement of his own existence. end is not yet. ven three m n his 1 Samec advis ngth at the pil bringing them troy what . . . . The moral of the above will be found in ev- ery strike in which the manifest j hisd nds does not ensure the workin, an immediate victory + LAKE escapes, count of the flight of which appeared) in the Evening. Before read th n guided only by the head-lig t of the headin H ito peat Lake Superior or Michigan, it-#0 met mon Broadway, and turn them over to the proper authorities. We 1 heard ng a flood; why no p, too, if the heading of an a bold, bad eri Wilmi we and we y nece “We an is now g ” says a poem rounds, Wel t away with the boodle. you know, Polk comicbooks.com