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A Family Companion, Devoted to Literature, Miscellany, News, Agriculture, Markets, &c. Vol XIII. WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 7, 1877. No. 45. T HE HtaERFIA LD IS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY MOR~NING, A# febery C. BY THOS. F. GIORRKRR, Editor and P ropietor. Terms34 * OO per. .ianflt, Invariably in Advance. Th p..aPf is it d-t the :e ati=3 01 n-Y The >4 mark deno'tes expiration of sub a cription. Watches, Clocks, Jewelry. Watchmaking and Jewelry. EDWARD SCHOLTZ (.AT A. M. WICKER'S OLD 9T-4-D.) Retasp UXJ QMl he Dablic. Of 1;4w= berry and v gi It ttkat-. he,. has purchased Mr. ohn0. ~6~ls' stock of JQwery, -to which he wilr dD AD& NEW STOCK OF wATci ;: cKs W.DKJ EW Ry, AND A specialty made in REPAIRING ALL ARTICLES IN THIS Thankful for the patronage conferred on him in the -past, he respectfully solicits a continuance, with the a.surance that every -effort vuDi be miade tw ai satisfactioo. Sep. 26, 39-tf. M ardware. ise,r Es nw "9R.~, i Dry Goods, Groceries, re. COME INTO COURT, THE PLACE WHRE YOU CAN GET JUS TICE IS AT J. M. CRAWFORD'S Little Store on Main Street, Where can be found DRY GOODS, NOTIONS, SHOES HATS, QRGCERIES, and ot -arssls ept in a miscel laneous stock. My goods are fresh, I sell cheap, and it will be to the advantage of the public to give me a call. I return grateful acknowledgments to my friends.and the public for past- patronage, andl indulge the hope of a continuance of the same. J. M. CRAWFORD. Oct. 10, 41-1m. Wna. I-. ICIITC[ Respectfully,Call attention to their full PALL ANI1VINTER STOU, IN THE FOLLWIJ& LINS: Domestic and Dress+ Giods= Notions---Shaw1 s-- irls .. -and .Gent's Un derwear Shoes a i 1 ' . ? thing--Saddlery, Harness and Leather -Woodenwar- Cutlery -GROCERIES, & c., AT REDUCED PRICES FOR CASH,. A ful line*9DOMESTG6sQOODS, consist i ag of Jean nq r3Vn and Bleach ed Shirtings, Sheetings, Osnaburgs, D-ill ing.Checked and Striped Homespun, Bed Ticking. Linsey, Flannel, Alpaca, Prints, & LAME' WoRSTED GOODS AT AND BE Low COST. A..full and well. selected ,ine- of Notions, Hosiery, Stationery, Ladies' Sbawls, Boule vard Skirts, White and Colored Blankets, Ladies' and Gent's Underwear, Laundried d Unlaundried Shirts, Umbrellas, Trunks, othing and Hats. A e e a seelalty of Cable Screw Shoes, which .is the test Shoe for the money made in America. A li ~ ~ f d Harness at Fac'rpr es: W e Wve 'agency for a large Manufactory and, therefore, can fur nish anything in this line that our custom eis may desire. Sole, Harness and Whang Leather. Woodenware, Hollow-ware, H~iiware, Nails, Table andl Pocket Cutlery, Table and Tea Spoons. GROCERIES, consisting of Flour, Bacon, Lard, Hams, Sugar, Coffee, Rice, Soda, Starch, Gin'r Pepper, Tea, Molasses, Sy rup, Soap, %aco, Bagging and Ties. P. W. & R. S. CHICK. Sep. 26, 39-tf. I. B.240NAB & C., Corner of Pratt & Nance Streets, NEWBERRY, S. C. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Iobacte, S6[ars iS p3s &cO, Together with Of best brands and warranted. French and AInerican CONEFEC TIONEIRIES, IN~ LARGE VARIETY. Together with SHELF GOODS for FAMILY USE. Mar. 28, 13-1y. Confectioneries, Fruits, &c. COFECTIONERIES, F RUIT S, N U''S CRACKERS, CANNED GOODS, PICKLES WORCESTERSHIRE AND OTHIER SAUCES. FRENCH AND PLAIN CANDY. DESICCATED COCOANUT, GELATINE SEA FOAM, HORSFORD'S BREAD PREPAEATION. SODA, STARCH, PARCHED COFFEE, TEA LAUNDRY SOAP, TOILET SOAP. FINE CId~ARS, SMOKING AND CHEWING TOBACCO, PIPES, &c. At H. A. BURNS'. Sep. 26, 39-3m. TO THE FARIMERS, We would respectfully call your atten tion to our facilities for furnishing LIME FOR AGRICULTURAL PURPOSES. While we furnish Lime of superior qualit for i.,&ilding, etc., we make a specialty of AGRICULTURAL LIME, knowing full well the needs of the farmera of this section of country. We are prepared to furnish Lime in an; quantity at $7.50 Per Ton, On cars at Gaffney's, S. C. For further in formation or orders for Lime, address J.19~ MARTIN & GO., Newberry, S. C. Or STYRON & LYNN, 'c.~ Limestone Springs, S. 0. .]riscellaneous. $1. W. F. PRATT' DRUG.STORE. Now open with a full and co,mplete stock OODS. ALL NEW. Wholesa|8 ad Detail DR. PRATT begs to thank his custom ers and fr'erds-for their kind patronage during the past, and trusts he may merit a continuance o ~their favors. He guarantee: his Medicines and Drugs to be perfectly reli.able and of theebesauality. PRESCRIPTIUNS ACCURATELY COMPOUNDED At all hours of the day and night. FRIEDRICHSHALL BITTER WATER. WILBOR'S COD LIVER OIL and PHOS PHATE OF LIME, for Consumption, Asth. ma and Debility. BAKER'S COD LIVER OIL and LIME. DIALYSED IRON, enriches the blood does not affect the teeth. BAILEY'S SALINE or SELTZER APE. RIENT, 50c. a bottle. Full line of Patent Medicines. Fine assortment of TOILET SOAPS AND DRUGGISTS' SUN DRIES, GENUINE GERMAN COLOGNE, HOYT'S COLOGNE, BAY RUM, AND OTHER PERFUMES. LUBIN'S, ATKINSON'S and L'OT1S HAND KERCHIEF EXTRACTS. PURE FRENCH BRANDY, G-IN, RYE and CORN WHISKEYS, CHAMPACNE, CLARET, PORT, SHERRY, And other Wines for Medicinal use. BASS' PALE ALE and HIB .BERT'S LONDON STOUT. TOBACCO AND CIGARS. Paints and Oils. PRIC ES LOW. W. F. PRATT, Sep.19, S-4t. DRUGGIST. BUGGIES, CARRIAGES AND HARNESS. Will keep a full supply of Single and Double Seat BUJGGIES, DOG CARTS, &c., on hand, And will PUT. UPf5O4D,R any in the lateet-xd b t-material AT LOWEST CASH PRICES. & Will also heep a suply' _of tood and cheap H ARNFASU.' M "'s OLD BUGG4ESand CAlRIZOTNS REN OVATED and.made to appear equal to new. Repairinjg d,one with. .neatness and de spatch. Fropting%Jl at Webb',i-od stand. J. TAYLOR & 00. Oct. 10, 41-3m. No. 7 Cooking Stoves for $15. To make room for the Wade Hamnpto Cooking Stove. W. T. WRIGHT. Oct. 1'7, 42- tf. W. H. WALLACE,, Attorney -at-Law, NEWBERRY, S. C. Oct. 25, 43-tf. JUST THINK OF IT, A sixty dollar stove for thirty dollars Sold at a sacrifice by W. T. WRIGH T, t< make room for the "Wade Hampton Cooking Stove. Oct. 17?, 42--tf. ARNES' FOOT POWEl BMACHINERY. wifh which Builders *Cabinet Makers,Wagor -^L Makers and Jobbers ii miscellaneous work cai -compete as to QUALIrl - AND PRICE with stean power manufacturing ;als< Amateur's supplies, say Sa blades, fancy woods an< designs. Sywl'ere you read this and sent for cataloge and prices. W. F. & JoH2 BARNEs, Rocford, Winnebago Co., Ill. June 13, 2-1-6m. BARNARD'S PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY 263 KING STREET, CHARLESTON, S. C, This is one of the largest and finest galle ries in the South. New and costly instru mnents have been obtained; also, fine phc tographic furniture and scenic backgrounds The work turned out of this Gallery canno be surpassed either in finish or faithfu'nes Mr pBarnard has had thirty-four years ex perience in the art, and is now prepared tV do all styles of work. He attends personally to all sittings, an< is determined none shall go away dissatis PRICES HAVE BEEN REDUCED 25 PExt CENI A large assortment of frames and fi'L1ing for photographs on hand. Bep. 19, 38-6m. HAMPTON HOUSE MAIN STREET, SPARTANBURG, So. Ca. 8. B. CALCUT T, PROPRIETOR (Formerly of Palmetto House.) House well ventilated-rooms newly fm~ he best in the market-attntive servan -omnibus to all trains. Terms $2.00 per da3 FOR THE HERALD. MUSINGS. I'm thinking as I watch the stars gleam out, Like jewels on the bosom of night, Am thinking, and thinking, am lost in doubt, Will our record be dark or bright? Who of us I wonder has gathered a gem, That will one day shine in a crown; Or shall we like the virgins ten Not all be gathered 'round? To our earthly idols how fondly we cling, Yet we know they are :,ut clay, To earthly shrines our offerings bring, Though we must fade and they. The brightest hope, the fairest flower Blooms brightly but to die, Ambiion, fame, wealth and power Pass away like a zephyr's sigh. Then strive to brighten the hearts and homes Which God in his goodness has given, Hallow with love the sacred hearthstone, Dearer than all, save heaven. Wreathe with the beautiful roses of love, I Every cross which darkens life's way. Be tender and true, as the angels above, Who dwell in endless day. Then in the Lamb's great book of life, Bright shall our record be, When done with earthly toil and strife, We cross the jasper sea. Williamstoi), S. C. MAGGIE. Iiseuaneons. FOR TEE HERALD. BROA6BRIM'S NEW YORK LETTER. No. 42. High and Low Life in New York-Riches and Poverty--Starvation and Plenty-The Oreat Russian Bath-cvelations. of a Pauper's Life--Young Dfunkards The Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, &c. Nowhere can the share con trasts of life -be seen as'you see them in a large city ; here wealth and poverty jostle- each other on the highways, and misery and opu lence stand face to face with a full realization of the terrible gulf that divides them. No wonder that the advocatls zof : the: Commune find ragged hosts of eager listen er, wben purple and fine linen, and wretchedness and rags, have such a narrow barricade between them. On Wednesday last the daughter of a Fifth avenue miu lionaiiro was led to the altar by one of the richest and most fash ionable young men in the metro polis. Jenkins exhausted himself in describing the beauty of the toilettes and the lavish expendi ture of the menu. The church was crammed to suffocation ; all day long, and late into the even ing, carriages crowded about the splendid mansion of the happy pair, and the display of costly presents was something marvel ous even for these extravagant days. The interior of the house from hall to roof was one vast b6wer of fiowers,al most iesembling the fabled fairy-land. Wedding marches and marriage bells made harmony with the clink of glasses brimming with the rare wines of Moselle, Burgundy and Chami pagne. No thotught of wretched ness and poverty there, and yet, while the feast wvent on, whose waste would have been untold wealth to thousands, five children were perishing of starvation in a miserable cellar in Baxter street. For three whole days they had sat there in the dark, the oldest a girl only about eight years of age. Once she had left her little bro thers and sisters to try and get a morsel to eat ; but driven back nnsuccessful by her supreme and remorseless misery, she sat down by their side to die. Look your yellow-covered novel through,seek where you will for sickening sen sation stories,but nowhere willyou find a more pitiful or terrible reve .lation. When discovered by the agents of'the Society for the Pre vention. of Cruelty to Children, the rats that were swarming around them scampered off to their hiding places while the foul and fetid atmosphere of the miserable den compelled the humane agents to seek the air as quickly as possible. God bless that society for the good it has done, and is still doing. -Will not the friends of humanity throughout this land aid them with their contributions to extend their noble work. I am happy to' be able to state that the little waifs are now well eared for, look ed after by angels of mercy; they had been abandoned by a drunken mother, who had been committed to Blackwell's-Island. On Tuesday, two boys, aged only seven years, were arrested for drunkenness near the Five Points; both were utterly deprav ed ; when the policeman took them, one of them fought and bit and kicked, in his struggles nearly tearing the clothes from the po licman's back. One had no home ; his mother long before had a common drunkard-perhaps she rests in Potter's field with the host of unnamed dead-her little boy was a lost waif in our great city ; under a stoop or in a barrel was the only lodging he had ever known ; if he was a thief, who was to blame? Not he. If he became a ruffian and a murderer, it is just what society may ex pect, so long as it delegates its du ties to mercenaries. The other little boy had no home except when he could find his brother, and he was seldom out of jail. Again the Society for the Preven tion of Cruelty to Children steps in, and if not btterly depraved they may save them. The death of George Fox Humpty Dumpty reminds me that his partner, James Lingard, in the Old and New Bowery, com mitted suicide by jumping into the North River some years ago. The firm of Fox and Lingard was one of the most successful ever seen in the city, prosperity ruined both of them, and both died in poverty. At Snake Hill, just across the river in the neighboring State of Now Jersey, there has just been a terrible discovery among the paupcrs,-the board of trus tees made a sudden descent on the Poor-house on Thursday, and found the inmates, seven hundred and fifty in number, in a state of starvation and filth too shocking to be described. The whole State is in a fever of indignation at the. terrible exposure of crime and suffering, which we hope ' r the sake of common huma-. can not long exist without a remedy. - At last New York is happy, for we have a Russian bath, not the fraudulent.imitations with which certain imposters have amused our cousins in the neighboring country towns, but the real, gen uine Simon-pure Russian bath, such as Peter the Great might have sweltered in,".or the Grand Emperor Nicholas...have honored by his afternoon siesta. I am not aware that history gives us any positive and reliable information as to who was the first individual who enjoyed a Russian bath. The first bathing on an extended scale that I can call to mind at the present time was a gentleman named Noah something-his oth, er name I forget-who got caught in a heavy shower orce, and was so disgusted with water ever after that he took the earliest opportu nity of testifying his contempt of it by getting tight as bricks as soon as he got on shore. The next individual that tried a Rush ing bath was one Pharaoh, who lived somewhere in the vicinity of the Pyramids. He went hunting for Jews with some of his friends, and only succeeded in getting a duck in the Red Sea, while Moses stood on the banks with his friends and made game of him as he went down. All decent na tions have had their baths, we have our~s. We may not yet be able to rival the baths of Adrian or Carracall.a ; perhaps we have nothing that will equal the Tepi darium of biuried Pompeii. But this we have, beyond all question, the finest bath-house in the United States. if not on the continent of America. The opening of the es tablishment was one of the events of the week. For months past the busy note of preparation has been sounding, and our fashiona ble elite, to whom the Russian bath has become an absolute ne cessity, have been on the tip-toe of expectation. The opening took place on Tuesday the 23d, and no event of the season has created a reater sensation. All sorts of mavelous stories had got afloat of the luxurious appointments of the. new establishment, and of the thousands who flocked to the open ing on Tuesday, all were surprised and delighted. The press was largely represented, ministers and lawyers, belles of our fasbionable society who resort to it to pre serve their beauty, artists, au thors, and men of leisure, and doctors innumerable, graced the new baths with their presence. The building, No. 18 Lafayette Place, is large, handsome and commodious, but once inside and the interior arrangements eclipse everything of the kind that has been seen on the continent be fore. All the rooms are mag nificently furnished, and there are accommodations for sixty bathers at a time. Passing from the splendid and richly fur nished parlors you are ushered into the dressing department; having disrobed you are conveyed to a beautiful room of the purest white marble having several tiers of shelves or couches with white marble pillows, on which the Rus sian bather may repose ; for the first grand motto of the establish ment is "Take timo," and the sec ond is like unto it, "Don't be in a hurry." Around this apartment floats a light film of steam and in the center is a marble basin 12 feet long and 8 feet wide, filled with pure cold water. You stop her o. nlye a few minuntes, and pass ing through another small apart ment you are ushered into the grand marble ball known as the main bath. Here the steam is up to 120, and when you first enter some poor sinners have been heard to say that it felt like a foretaste of the future. For a moment the heat is overpowering ; the dense steam envelops you in a cloud so that it is impossible to recognize a person a few feet away ; here you stretch yourself.out on a lux urious marble couch and gradually sink into a state of beatitude only known to the blest. After dozing away about half an hour, you take a shower if you please, any thing from a young Niagara to a gentle spray, and then you pass into the small apartment which lies between low and high tem perature bathing rooms, here you are laid out on a marble slab and an attendant rapidly soaps you from your head to your heels, and taking a brush in his hand, some thing like a horse brush, he rubs you down till you begin to sym pathize with the horse, to think ihat he has to undergo this pun ishment every morning. When that fellow gets through with you, you don't feel as if you would need scrubbingagain for about ten years. You are showered and douched, and after taking a re freshing plunge in the marble ba sin, you pass out to the finishing department where a corps of Sy barites await you ; you are ]pid upon a couch and this merciless savage commences the finishing process by rubbing you from the crown of your head to the sole of your foot. Your body and limbs are polished till they resemble so much ivory, and when the attend ant signifies that he has done, you feel-you feel-well, I don't know that I can exactly describe the sensation, but it must be very like the happy darkey that felt like a morning star. The rush has been tremendous ever since the open ing day, and it would seem that, having struck a great popular need, the proprietors, Mad A. Capes and Dr. C. T. Ryan, are now on the ~high road to fortune. When taking in the lions of the city don't forget the Russian Bath. All stocks got a black eye on Wednesday. The market has been feverish during the week, and has not yet recovered. There has been a sharp decline in many sta ple articles, our keenest specula tors seeming to. be all afloat. Thbe Union Dime Savings Bank has been the center of excitement ever since Tuesday ; but, like an estab lished problem in Euclid, it cannot be shaken. A woman sueing for divorce and maintenance was con fronted by the fact that no parson had presided at the ceremony ; and on the trial it appeared that she had occupied the conjugal re lation before to at least a quarter of a dozen without the slightest civil or religious formality, and several substantial pledges of af fection bore testimony to the free love proclivities of the mother. I scarcely think that she will re cover alimony, or if she does, she ought then to go for the rest of her quondam husbands, and if she should happen to recover from each, she would realize a com fortable income. Long Island is in a whirl of excitement about the whipping of a school boy. It ap pears that he tried to bully the teacher, but the teacher did not bully worth a str-aw. Result: lick~ed boy-great excitement school investigation ; and it looks now as though there might be a general verdict of "Sarved him rightt" I am, Truly yours, BIROADBRIM. A SENSIBLE ARTICLE ON TH E WHIPPING POST. From the country press of this State comes an almost universal cry for the re-establishment of the whip ping post. Larceny, highway robbe ry and burglary have become such common crimes that, in many parts of the country, no man's property is safe, and, in fact, there is hardly any part of the State where it is safe. The chickens in the coop, the crops in the field, the very clothes that a man pulls off at night in the expectation of put ting them on again in the morning, become alike the prey of the midnight prowler. Even in Charleston and Columbia, where an expensive police force is sustained, the thief very often escapes; still oftener in the small towns, where is only a marshal or two to guard the whole place, and in the open country, where is not even a patrol, his chances of escape are nine out of ten. But suppose he is caught, what has he to fear ? For minor of fences a few days in jail, for more heinous crimes a longer imprisonment, or, at the most, some years in the Penitentiary. Experience shows that this kind of punishment does not de ter the criminal classes of this State from theft, and experience also proves that it adds greatly to the burden of taxation. What, then, is to be done to rid this State of this epidemic of kleptomania ? "Re-establish the whip png pos-that is the panacea for all these evils"-is the cry that comes from all quarters. Delaware and Vir ginia are pointed to as illustrious ex ainples of the virtues of the lash, and South Carolina is called upon to join those States in braving the sentiment' of the civilized world, and restore that mode of punisi' rent which is most de grading to hu,n i na.are, and which, justly or not, has come to be regarded as a relic of barbarism. We are not prepared to advocate so extreme a measure. Not that we fail to appreciate the extent of the malady which is preying on the vitals of the State, nor that we doubt the effective ness of the proposed remedy, if pro. perly administered, but because we believe that the same ends can be better accomplished by other means, means which will not be liable to the same objections. That means is the chain-gang. Labor is more distaste ful to the criminal even than the lash, at least to the criminal in this lati tude, for they have been often known to take a whipping of their own choice rather than be compelled to work. Again, whipping, although not so expensive as simple imprison ment, costs something. The thief cannot be caught, tried and convicted for nothing. The pain he suffers will not pay for this expense. Put him in the chain-gang, and let him stay there until he has not only served out the sentence due for his offence, but until he has paid all the costs the State has incurred on his account. He would not only be removed from the opportunity and temptation of crime, w'hile serving his time, but he would be doing good to the State. From the adoption of this policy one of two things would necessarily re sult : either the amount of crime or the amount of taxes would be greatly reduced. We are therefore opposed to the whipping-post, at least until the chain gang has had a fair trial. Vews & Courier. FIFTY QUESTIONS ALND AN. S WERS. An ingenious correspondent gives the following fifty questions, each to be answered by the name of a well know author. The guessing of these questions will form a pleas ant evening entertainment : 1. What a rough man said to his son when he wished him to eat properly. 2. Is a lion's house dug in the side of a hill where there is no wa ter. 3. Pilgrims and flatterers have knelt low to kiss him. 4. Makes and mends for first class customers. 5. Represents the dwellings of civilized men. 6. Is a kind of a linen. 7. Is worn on the head. 8. A name that means such fiery things I can't describe their,. pains and stings. 9. Belongs to a monastery. 10. Not one of the four points of the compass, but inclining to ward one of them. 11. Is what an oyster heap is likel'y to be. 12. Is a chain of hills conining a dark treasore. 13. Always youthful, as you see ; but between you and me he never was much of a chicken. 14. An American manufacturing town. 15. Humpbacked, but not deform ed. 16. An internal pain. 17. Value of a word. 18. A ten footer whose name be gins with fifty. 19. A brighter and smarter than: the other one. 20. A worker in the precious me-: tals. 21. A very vital part of the body.1 22. A lady's garment. 23. A small talk and a heavy weight. 24. A prefix of a disease. 25. Comes from a pig. 26. A disagreeable fellow to have on one's foot. 27. A sick place of worship. 28. A mean dog 'tis. 29. An official dre,aded by the students of English universities. 30. His middle name is suggest ive of an Indian or Hottentot. 31. A manufacturing metal. 32. A game, and a male of the homan species. 33. An answer to "which is the greater poet, William Shakespeare or Martin F: Tupper ?" 34. What are you doing. 35. Is very fast indeed. 36. A barrier bt'lt by an edible. 37. To agitate a weapon. 38. Red as an apple, black as nigit, a Heavenly sign or a perfect fright. 39. A domestic worker. 40. A slang expression. 41. Pack away closely, never scatter, and in doing so you will get at her. 42. A young domestic animal. 43. One that is more than a san dy shor:e. 44. A fraction in currency and the prevailing fashion. 45. Mamma is in perfect health, my child ; and thus he named the poet mild. 46. A girl's name and a male re ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements inserted at the rate of 51.00 per square (one inch) for first insertion, and 75 cents for each subseq~uAct insertion. Donble column advertisements ti~n per cent. on above. Notices of meetings, obituaries and tributes of respect, same rates per square as ordinary advertisements. Special Notices in Local column 15 cents per line. Advertisements rot marked with the nlum" ber of insertions will be kept in till forbid, and charged accordingly. Special corntracts made with large edver tisers, with liberal deductions on above rates. -:0: JOBi PRIXTIAW DUNE WITHI NEATNESS AND DISPATC119 TERMS CASH. 47. Take a heavy field piece, no thing loth. 48. Put an edible grain 'twixt a bee and an ant, and a much loved poet you will see. 49. Common domestic animal and what it can never do. 50. Each living head in time, 'tis said, will turn to him though he be dead. ANSWER&. 1. Chaucer. 27. Churchill. 2. Dryden. 28. Curtis. 3. Pope. 29. Proctor. 4. Taylor. 30. W. Savage 5. Holmes. Landor. 6. Ho 'and. 31. Steele. 7. Hood. 32. Tennyson. 8. Burns. 33. Willis. 9. Abbott. 34. Browning. 10. Southey. 35. Swift. 11. Shelley. 36. Cornwall. 12. Coleridge. 37. Shakespeare. 13. Young. 38. Crabbe. 14. Lowell. 89. Cooke. 15. Caiabell. 40. Dickens. 16. A kenside. 41. Stowe. 17. Wordsworth. 42. Lamb. 18. Longfellow. 43. Beecber. 19. Whittier. 44. Milton. 20. Goldsmith. 45. Motherwell. 21. Harte. 46. Addison. 22. Spencer. 47. Howitzer. There were just seven lines of it,