Democratic Sentinel, Volume 6, Number 52, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 January 1883 — All Ashamed to Pick It Up. [ARTICLE]

All Ashamed to Pick It Up.

Every seat in the cabin of a Fulton Ferry boat was occupied, and many .persons stood in the narrow passageway. Fifty persons must have seen the bright new nickel that lay invitingly in the middle of the floor, but nobody picked it up. A young woman would have done so, but her companion whispered to her, blushed and pretended not to baTO seen it. It could hardly haVe escaped the eye of a small boy* who whistled all the way across the river, but he was bashful, or else he feared that it was nailed to the floor. When the boat entered the New York slip the passengers walked over the nickel as they went out. Some had a yearning expression of countenanoe, out did not yeld. Two men remained in the cabin.* One stooped, picked hp the nickel and deposited it in his pocket. “I*told yen how it would be,” he said to the other. “I knew no onfe would touch it. Drinks are on you.”—Neto York Sun. . -. . „Mr, F. I* Canet, of Madison, IntL, writes: *1 was completely broken up with rheumatism, and was also suffering from lndlfeation and piles My anfit, Mrs Whalen, ving In Louisville, wrote, advising me to try Dr. Guysott’s Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. I did so. I also bathed my joints with vinegar and salt This treatment relieved me of all suffering. ”