The
Smit
ERALD.
HFIELD
VOL V.
FRANK THORN TO
. , 0 ib greeting lkegd people Jolm-tn mmm&f, sul otagrahitaftcs them upon
1k ' : Railroad facilities. With pardonable pri le we aniuune thai wo have the lar-
wrf ' .t... krs! stock and the most perfectly
jll.lUvt" at t
se ef :'!ir NtawnuMh
-it He show perfect lines in elesrant Black Gras1 Grain, Striped ami Colored
I -Vl'X'S (Kir ssortaet is unsurpassed In beautiful black, colored, striped and mar
1 fvj V 1 ' VETS a an "aallj htaimM exhihil is wade of Si k Velvets, strip
r . 1 i ' Vc'.vf-; sMl Brocaded Velvet-. I S3 3.84 IL.l'SIIIBS arc seen al
WNf v,- :v IN FINK DRESS tltiOOS. All the novelties are secured ami ex
5
: ' sr. Striped Hondo. Assabet,
1 inches "ante; Lasamere inajEona --. . asaawere uwitf uong, aH wool lrie
Casn atn eiqne, travcrs, Faai ia Serge.-. Colore! Faille Colored RVada
m
. . , lii v:iv f Pelt Ball Kd nines. Mohair Marbo t Trilaminar-, Feathers Mar- enAalE? noaV ..f Uah. nv I
r? iarv Beaded Gimps, all calOrs, entirely new; ficot Braids, Lacinjts Oortls," Be- fTT . , . , . ,. . a short time AVOUld hardly learn I
Irieie. ,nd all the new designs in But,ons in matcc design- IN BLACK GOOl , th . And XU what proportion ? &nd nQ interprVter 4a j
m u eifect. A large and fell une ot Mouraiaf goods, taclaaing sitk Wrap lien I AS trie OOUOI mail and NlVlOUl of I ,
Tor H Vf:, ntvehe. Blk etc. In Wraps wo take pleasure ta the worM lo wasabove the Umi- ! niutJonoa-
ry i--ertiou o the ni.i eomptete array ever saowu n tins pjirt ot the country, a- ' l$Ut We CailllOt agree With tnOS6
KSwrar- V,h and Brocade sHk Kewmarketa in yiothand lUwade silk nil JatlOllS of VjUV, nationality and j holarswllo maintain that Christ j
ES-Jf - It. t-te -lewest designs: se-i. Blus;k sac-pics. 4 menes Ion . satin haed a language. He was absollltelv t -i i i
uHv wmp
LO A
, ,c-v heavy and haadsoute stock i shown embracing every available Novelty in
n&MaTcaraetiag ia flai l an I stripes. Ingraina 3 plays, Tapestry, Tapestry Brussels, Body
- J" f Velvet.. Axauaser,taojr Caraet ia Ingrain and Brusel. Ilerap. sc. In
..j. -tprinicfu is 'i i j,-v--.
Bros tine shoes, and
aake of shoes.
J?Urj fEmgr Brns-" EvTJ pair is '-rr.nded.
jjgamz kn6a-n to tho aristie trade.
There are no e.iiv. .-...-..
We use Our Best Endeavors
1 rtf.iitf s;,v to
Kv. i-w , .
L ... .hm.T iM i ' Kit' l .1. 1 1 i.nuc"4a.i'i..-.
Me,
- .
". A. . " - . ti...i-..iolv ftrnishe.l Parlor
C v ' i .it. ..-.. -.
... . .... .
. , .1. II ...... ;
a - i. ... , - i
... fct..
HTi ORl'r.l.Jt. ai. l oruers ic-r sami'i. -.it. in. i"'i" - - -
FRANKTHORNiDN-
FAY KTTEVILLE, X. Q
WHERE TO BUY
:o:
tV. M rev.iin i :uv frionds that his ami Ml
D
RE fiR 1 GS. PATENT M
T. R.
1 1
IOILKT ARTICLES. BOOKS. CIGARS AND TOBACCO,
ICBCOLDSODA AND VARIOUS MINERAL WATERS.
:o:
1 HAVE THK AGKNCY FOR THE ELEBRATED
SEELEY RUBBER TRUSSES!
I.
B.
I Gl
RAMEK A PEKFK'Jl
:o:
IF YOU ARE THINKING OF PAtNTING SOON, CALL AT MY STORE
ANPOKT A COLOR SHEET AND EXAMINE MY LARGE STOCK OF
WHITE LEAD, OILS AND COLOBP,
To the People of Joimston and
ADJOINING COUNTIES:
I have
in -rock at botn stores on Hav
selected Stock ot
HI
ROCEBIES. FERTILIZFRS. PLOWS, CASTINGS
IE
irn-
n aad General Fannin-
attcatkm. I am A-ont for celebrated TENNESSEE WAGONS, ART
WHEELS, ad Axle, an! hav,- ju received .1 ear load. Ttkere b no
r WTagea made than the TENNESS3S- t'd jwtlv merits its reputation.
COTTON AND NAVAL STORES.
n
itshest market nriecs paid !r Cotton
;.n this hnc are eoKeked. I guarantee
1 a
etoek when m town. Quotations Dialled n application.
Fayette vile.
A-XjXj STOCK I
We beg leave to inform the I'nbitc tnai we are reeeivinj uur
Fall stock of Goods,
GmsMtttg Dry Goods. Notions. Clothing, Hals. Boots and .Shoes,
Hardware, Croekery. Gasa ware. Tin ware. Bagsng, lies
and a full line of Groceries which we will sell low lor
C iL S Ha
AL : Our Baw and Saw Mill.
Rowing our brick store
Call ana see
arranged establishment in the entire State.
Store will convince uwtte tln-t we csrrv
all
all wool snitinxs. 4 ine ios wide; Oueko,
-- "- -" - ---t-- c - ;
uo one esse can nay or sou it em in ims em-
I : to cat the tonaiae eae .ire and looB for
W aVwr these ffftmda & every
-!vl. a:;
savo the Uur.e-m
1,V ..f iH.li r fr.-.m one store
an! we flatter ourselves that we can. wit ti
. . i , .... u..; , ,.
the parehasw
ith
. - - -
ni i cilet Koem.a teat arc uatae frj uwni
1 ? . tt..v. t.
Ml'
YOUR DRUGS
HOOD,
IN
le I an
S KITH FIELD !
is iv
etect st. ek i
ED1CI ES. STATI ONERY
KIT l InKoB
aud Gill
ume ccreet a
la rev and well
ftm lmentj, to arhieli 1 iavrte your
and Naval Stores, and consignments
satisfaction. liosuroand call and cxam-
N- C-
Wagon, and line Ycmt i.ut
us.
BeweetfnUji ,
PEACOCL BEO,
SMITHFIELD. N. C.
SMITHFIELD, N. C,
XEW YEAR'S EYE.
Jesus, tender shepherd, hear me, W
Let me Se thy little lamb ;
Thro lgh all danger be thow near me.
so very weak I am.
Oh. I thank thee, blessed Jesus.
Thou dosi all my wants supply:
That thy mercy iu-er ceases.
Even unto such as I .'
Thui hasi clothed me, warmed me, fed n;e
Green me toe air to breathe :
All the way thy hand hath led me,
To this happy New Year's Eve.
In the year that conies to-morrow.
May I never from thee stray !
Keep me safe from sin and sorrow.
Heavenly Shepherd, the.- 1 pray !
THE r,lXi:E OF C HRIST.
UII.i I BCHAFF, 1. 1.
What language did our Saviour
penecr, me model lor universal
nil -i -
imitation. Nevertheless he was
a historical person, and, as such,
had a well-defined individuality.
He was a son of David and Abra
ham, born and raised in Pales
tine, and could nor have been
bora anywhere else, either in
China, or in Italy, or Greece, or
among the savages in Germany
or England, where no prepara
tion ia as made for his reception
and appreciation, and where the
seed of the divine word would
have fallen on ice. lie
was a i
stood by them if he had not ad
dressed them in their own tongue ?
What then was this tongue?
He wrote nothing. lie is him
self the Book of Life to be read
by all men. He stamped his
image upon the world's history
and upon every human heart and
life that yields itself to his trans
forming and sanctifying- in-
flnertce. lint some of his disci
ples wrote books the New Tes
tament. And they all wrote
Greek. Only one of them, Mat
thew, is said to have written his
gospel first in Hebrew, and after
wards in Greek. Even James,
the brother of the Lord, who
spent all his public life in Jeru
salem, as far a-we know, address
ed his epistle to the twelve tribes
j of Israel, in the Greek language.
Did. then, our saviour likewise
, speak Greek ? There is something
pleasing in the idea. There
, never was a nobler, richer, more
flexible language spoken or writ
ten, than the language of Homer,
'' of Plato, of Sophocles, of Aristo
tle, aud all those immortal poets,
philosophers, and historians,
whose works are to this day
studied as models of style all over
I the civilized world. And the
! noblest of all uses to which it
was put is this that it became
the organ for the everlasting truth
of our religion, the silver picture
for the golden apqle of the gos
pel. The Greek was the language
of civilization, and of inter-
' national intercourse. Since the
conquests of Alexander the Great,
who carried the Greek into
: Orient, and still more since the
conquests of Rome, which united
all the nations from the banks
of the Euphrates
the banks of the
and the Nile to
Rhine and the
shores of the Atlantic, the Greek
had become the cosmopolitan
language, as the French was on
the Continent in the last century,
and as the English is now in the
"British colonies and in North
America. This was one of the
providential preparations for the
introduction and spead of Chris
tianty. The Greek penetrated into Pal
estine two or three hundred
years before Christ. This is evi-
dent from the numerous Greek
names of Jews, and of places of
Palestine, from coins and in-
scriptions, from the Greek ver-
sion of the Old Testament which
was used by the apostles and
evangelists, from the large num
ber of Greek-sjieaki ng Jews, call
ed "Hellenists," from the writ
ings of Philo and Josephus, who
wrote in Greek, and from the
New Testament itself. For it
need not be supposed that the
sacred writers learned the Greek
language miraculouslv on the
day of Pentecost. They had I
abundant opportunity to learn it
naturally in their youth, on the
street and in common intercourse '
with their felhnv men, especially j
in Galilee, their native province,
which was full of Greek-speaking
Gentiles.
. ii-i a cognate dialect which supplant -
phywfenomy, dressed, ate, spake ,,5 Tr , , -TTV
1 . 1 ed the Hebrew after the Baby-
land lived like ms countrymen.-,, . .
TT . , . J , Ionian exile. In this their 11a-
I-1 Mi- r-t-lrf Itn hofit noon midow.
JOHNSTON COD
From all these facts we may
safely infer tliat our Ixrd, too,
knew tlie Greek language, not in
deed from books, nor from school,
but from ordinary intercourse.
Why should he have been igno
rant of a language "which was
known to his disciples, -the un
lettered fishermen of Galilee ?
We have no doubt that he
used the Greek language when
speaking with strangers, and
with heathens, with such persons j
as the Syrophcenician woman, 1
the heathen centurion, the
"Greeks" who called on him j
shortly before the passion, King j
Herod and Pontius Pilate. For a I
Roman governor appointed for j
j sively or eAren chiefly. We must
! distinguish between the common
everyday language of the people,
j and the occasional language of
i the higher classes, and of busi-
-w -v -a i . a
ness men. raiestme was at tne
time of Christ a bilingual couit-
1 try, like the frontier countries on
i the continent (Alsa.ce, Lorraine.
1'osen, some cantons of Switzer,
land), or like Wale in England,
; or Eastern Canada, or the Ger
j man counties of Pennsylvania.
The popular language was the
Hebrew, or rather the Aramaic
Live tongue, our aaviour would
address the people.
We have the positive proof of
that in several words which have
been preserved to us in the Gos
pel of Mark, which is the faith
ful echo of the original impres
sions of St. Peter. When our
Saviour was to call the daughter
of Jairus back to life, he address
ed her in the Aramaic words,
Tctfith a cmi; thai is, "Damsel,
arise." When he opened the ear
of the deaf and dumb man in Dc
eapolis. he said to him Epliphd
tha; that is, Be opened." And
when he reached .lie height of
hi:- vicarious suffering on the
cross, he exclaimed, again ill
Aramaic. JJloI, Elm (the Hebrew '
would be Emiy Eli), lama sabacM
thatti f that is, f'My God, my Got?,
! why hast thou forsaken me?"
It is very significant that the
inscription on the cross was in
three languages in Hebrew, tin
language of religion ; in Greek,
, the language of culture ; and in
; Latin, the language of the em
pirethus proclaiming that Jesus
! of Nazareth died for all nations
and all classes of men. S. s'.
i TSmes.
Only two or three days ago a'l
overseer in an America millfoun'l
a pin which cost the company
three hundred dollars.
"Was it stolen?" asked Susie.
"I suppose it must have been
very handsome. What was it, 1
diamond pin ?"
"t ill Tin iiiv ilfflv' nOf. lixr ;m v
V ' . , . -, J . . . ' ' J " .7
means. It was just such a pin
as people buy every day, and ure
without stint. Here is one upon
my dress.''
Such a pin as thai cost thiVe
hundred dollars!" exclaimed
John. "I don't believe it."
But mama says it is a true story"
interposed Susie.
"Yes, L know it to be true.
And this is how the pin happened
to cost so much. You know that
calicoes after they are printed
and washed, are dried and
smoothed by being passed over
heated rollers. "Well,, by some
mischance, a pin dropped so as to
j lie upon the principle roller, and
f indeed became wedged into it,
j the head standing out a little
' from the surface. '
"(Her and over went the roller,
jand round and round went the
j cloth, winding at length upon
still another roller, until the
pieee was measured off. Then
another piece began, to be dried
and wound; aod so on till a hun
dred pieces had been counted oiF.
These were not examined imme
diately, but removed from the
machinery and laid aside. When
at length they came to be in
spected, it was found that there
were holes in every piece throng h-
out the web, and only three
quarters of a yard apart. Sow,
in each piece there were from
thirty-five to forty-five yards,and
at twelve cents a yard that would
count tip to about five hundred
dollars.
NT Y, JANUARY
"Of course, the goods csuld not
be classed as perfect goods, so
they were sold as remnants, at
less than half the price they
would have brought had it not
been for that hiddeo pin."
Now, it seems to me that when
a boy takes for his companion a
profane swearer, a Sabbath
breaker, or a lad who is untruth
ful, and a little girl for her play
mate one who is unkind or diso-
bedient, or in any way a wicked
cliild, they are like the roller
which took to its bosom the pin.
Without there being able to help
it, often the influence clings to
them, and leaves its mark upon
everybody with whom they come
in contact.
That -pin damaged irreparably
forfyliiiTidred yrds of new print,
but bad company has ruined
thousands of souls for whom
Christ died. Remember, "one
sinner destroyeth much good."
therefore avoid evil companions.
Selected.
A Boy's lecisiou.
Many years ago, Mr. Hall, an
English gentleman, visited Ire
land for the purpose of taking
sketches of its most beautiful
scenery, to be used in an illus
trated work on Ireland, which has
since been published.
On one occasion, when about
to spend a day in the neighbor
hood of Eake Kilarney, he met a
bright young Irish lad who of
fered hl-j service as guide through
the district.
A bargain was made with him
and the party went otf . The lad
proved himself well acquainted
with all the places of interest in
that neighborhood, and had plen
ty of stories to tell about them.
He did his work well, and to the
entire satisfaction of the visitors.
On their return to the starting
point, Mr. Hall took a flask of
whisky from his pocket and drank
some. Then he handed it to the
boy and asked him to help him
self. To his great surprise the
offer was firmly but politely de
dined. Mr. Hall thought this was verv
strange. To find an Irish boy
Tho would not touch or taste
wmsKsey was stranger than any-
u l.: 1. ii j t r
uuiii ne Usui seen uiai uay. lie
:ould not understand it; and he
esolved to try the strength of
he boy's temperance principles.
He offered first a slulliinr, then
ialf
a crown, and then five shil-
ings, if he would taste that whis- j
iy. But the boy was firm. A j
eal manly heart was beating on- I
ler his ragged jacket. Mr. Hall j
leter mined to try him f urther,so j
le offered the boy a golden half j
sovereign if he would take a drink
)f whiskey. That was a coin sel
lom seen by lads of this class in
:hose parts. Straightening him-
11 ui), with a look of indigna
tion 111 his face, the boy pulled
mat a temperance medal from the
..1 J. . J? ; . t ,1 j jn
,iuiier iHK'jt.et 01 ms jacKei, ana
holding it bravely up he said:
''This Wcis my father's medal.
For years he was intemperate.
All his wages were spent in drink,
it almost broke my mother's
heart; and what a hard time she
had to keep the poos children
from starving! At last my fa
ther took a stand. He signed the
dedge and wore this medal as
oiyr as he lived.
STARTIXCi IX THK U'OllLD-
Many an unwise parent labors
iard and lives sparingly all his
life for the purpose of leaving
nough to give his children a
tart in the world, as it is called.
Betting a young man float with
honey left him by his relatives
s like tying bladders under the
irms 01 one wiio cannot swim;
en chances to one he will lose
is bladder and go to the bottom.
'each Mm to swim, and he will
never need the bladders. Give
rour child a sound education, and
rou have done enough for him.
ee to it that his morals are pure,
jiis miuQ cultivated, ana ms
Ivhoie nature made subservient to
me laws which govern man, and
rou have given what will be of
more value than the wealth of
he Indies. JY. C. Farmer,
HOW THEY LOOKED.
A lady noticing the queer look
ing legs of young man, that they
"looked very much like a dis
carded tin water spout that had
been knocked about and been
driven over by the city drays."
And now the young man is sorry
that he ever wore thin pantaloons.
8, 1887.
Extra Feetl for Cows.
As cold weather approaches, it
will require the best efforts 'of
fanners to prevent serious shrink
age of milk. So'me loss is una
voidable, but if the yield falls off
greatly it shows that the cow gets
insufficient food, and tliis will
make her poor and decrease her
value for another year. If the
cow is with calf it is not best to
give her food for stimulating
milk flow for three or four months
before her time for calving. Try
ing to get all the profit there is
ii a cow in one season spoils
her usefulness for one or two years
after.
How is The Farmer Doing.
Amid the enormous industrial
inprovement of the south, what
is the farmer doing? We are
building cities at a great rate. Fac
tories, mills, railroads come into
existence as if by magic. Mil
lions of money and thousands of
men are hurrying south to assist
in developing its resources. The
next few pears Avill witness such
an industrial growth in the south
as has seldom been seen.
But what is the southern far
mer doing ? " Is he growing with
the general growth and strength
ening his lines as we all grow
stronger ? After all, the farmer
is the test of prosperity. If he
waxes fat and happy, the land
will be abundantly blessed and
all men may smile. If he falters
and fails, the crash will come to
all other interests. Agriculture
is at once the basis and measure
of all 'progress and prosperity.
How then, pending this sharp ad
vance in industrial matters, is the
farmer getting along ?
In Georgia he is doing well.
He is gradually paying out of
debt. He is becoming more in
dependent. As every year passes
he comes nearer making his sup
plies at home, and making cotton
at once his surplus and his mon
ey crop. The compost heap is
appearing on more farms every
year, and less commercial fertili
zers are being used. The drift
towards intensive farming is de
cided, and "fewer acres better
tilled" is becoming the motto of
the Georgia farmer. We hope
that farmers in all other south
ern states are as prosperous as
those who live in Georgia. We
have every reason to belive they
are, and shall have positive in
formation to offer on this subject
very soon.
The industrial improvement
will help the farmer very much.
It brings his market home to him,
and it is the farmer who has a
home market that prospers. In
the country about Birmingham
a C7
chickens sold before the town
was built at 10 cents, and now
bring 2o cents; eggs at 6 cents,
and now at 18; butter at 8 cents
a pound, and now at 30, and oth
er produce in proportion. Wher
ever a factory is planted, or a
city built, a home market is crea
ted for the farmer's truck and his
land advanced in value. A farm
worth $2 an acre without a rail
road is worth 10 an acre when
the railroad comes near at. Every
man who comes into our section
and does not earn his living by
farming, becomes a buyer from
the farmer, and helps just that
much. The richest agricultural
sections are those nearest the
manufacturing districts, though
the land is there notoriously the
poorest. When the south gets a
home market for its farm fruits
and produce, and .has its monop
oly of the cotton crop besides, it
will become the richest agricul
tural country in the world. The
South will become a great mai.u
facturing section; and this, more
than all things else combined,
will bring prosperity to the south
ern farmer and high value to his
lands. Atlanta Constitution.
the profits out of a newspaper
can be aptly termed the editors
ink-come.
Be not unmindful of the feel
ings and rights of others. Idly
spoken words often cause the
deepest wounds and many times
are the source of the direst trou
ble. In the depth of the sea the wa
ter is still; the heaviest grief is
borne in silence; the deepest love
flows through the eye and touch;
the purest joy is unspeakable; the
most impressive preacher at the
funeral is the silent one whose
lips are cold.
NO. 30.
FLASHES OF AMI WISDOM.
From the Sunny Heart of W. H.
Blount, or the Wllaon Mirror.
So closers the sympathy between night
and day that after one falls the other
breaks.
The more nature ia sad. tho dearer is
home, and sweeter still is the thought of
Heaven,
The heart of a beautiful woman like
that of a beautiful flower may be tlie abode
of a reptile.
Some genius proposes to introduce
paper shirts. But a shirt out of a story
paper would have too many tales.
The firmest friendships have been
formed in mutual adversity, as iron ia more
strongh united by the fiercest flame.
Hard iqards are l.ke hailstones in sara
mer beating down and destroying what
they nourish were they melted into drops.
A slight from those from whom we
have a right to expect some considerations
of courtesy coes through the heart like a
dagger of ice.
Politeness is but the outside coveriag
of a good heart the natural, graceful foli
age and drapery of inward refinement and
j elegant delicacy.
Every duty well done, doubtless adds
to the moral and spiritual stature. Each
opportunity eagerly grasped and used is the
key to larger privileged.
Storm and cloud are kind hands that
cool the sunshine out ot its withering touch
into a kiss tender enough tomakthe earth
laugh the joy of liarrcsts.
Love i the most terrible, also the
most generous of the passions; it is the
only one that includes in its dreams the
happiness of some one else.
The man who worries himself half to
death because he is unable to liquidate the
little bill held against him by the proprie
tor of the gin mill on the corner bar-owes
trouble.
Sensitive people spread out their feel
ings to far that they frequently imagine
some one is treading upon them, when they
have not even been touched. Hence, so
many unnecessary growls.
A lady who assumes to know how
boys ought to be trained, writes as follows;
!'Oh, mother ! hunt out the soft, tender,
genial side of your bo3r's nature." Moth
ers often do with and old shoe.
It may be accepted as a maxiam that
fco a man of an aesthetic nature no woman
ever looks lovely while in the act of flatten
ning her nose against the window in order
to catch a glance of a dog fight.
Life is a book ol which we hare bnfc
one edition. Let each day's action, as
they add their pages to the indestructible
volume, be such as we shall be willing to
have an assembled world to read.
Good temper is the philosophy of the
heart a gem in the treasury within, whose
raps are reflected on ail outward objects
a perpetual sunshine, imparting warmth,
light, and life, to all within the sphere of
its influence.
A geutle word a kindly act is a sweet
and precious flower Pom the beauteous and
oder-laden garden of goodness while a
harsh and uncivil one is the detestable
thorn of ill temper and poor breedingwhich
grows near it.
Woman, in her deepest shame, in her
lowest degredation, holds some little "keep
sake" of that higher existence, and like the
star t shines out in her darkest, night with
quenchless brilliancy, and reveals the heaven
from which ic was lost.
Candor is a virtue, but when indulg
ed to excess it becomes the worst species of
impoliteness, and may induce the belief
that the heart which prompts it, is gnn
"Teened all through with the loath some cor
ruption of malice and venom.
When you convince narrow minded
people that they have done wrong they
try to drown the conviction in a storm of
anger, and retaliate upon their own lash
ings of conscience by abusing and denounc
ing those who have shown them their er
ror. A real Christian seldom sees a defect
in his neighbor. A pure lake reflects tha
beautiful sky, the clouds, and the whole
overhanging trees; but when it is ruffled it
reflects nothing that is pure. A bad man
seldom see.4 a good trait in his neighbor.
The earth is every day overspread
with the evil of night, for the reason that
the cages of birds are darkened, so that
we may the more readily see and appre
hend the higher' and purer and sweeter
harmonies of thought and reflection amid
the hush and stillness of darkness.
( )f all the agonies (if life, that which
is most poignant and harrowing that
which for the time annihilates reason and
leaves the heart in one torn lacerated mass
of ruin is the conviction that we have been
disappointed and deceived in the devotioa
of the woman to whom we have paid heart
worship.
Do at least, one good, kind, and gen
tle act every day, and when night comes
aud you seek the couch of repose, Memory
will shake from that flower of goodness so
much delightful fragrance that sleep will
come on the sweetest perfumed pinions,
and sprinkle the thoughts with precious
dews of Heaven.
Entwine in thy garland the rare and
precious flowers of charity and kindness,
tor their bloom wiil ever keep fresh and
beauteous, while the perfume they shed is
both sweet and -fadeless. Po this and
though thy life Work should be humble
and lowly such trophies a thec will make
it both noble and holy.