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MAKE IT TWO DOLLARS.

{Wild Oats.) Col. 0. Dodds, late member of Congress from the first district in Ohio, tells a good story about a call he recently received at his office from a man who claimed to be an editor from Arkansas. He was a very seedy looking chap, and appeared as though he had but recently come off from about six week's spree. Bowing profoundly, then striking an attitude, with one hand on his heart, and the other extending a badly-used plug hat, he exclaimed with a dramatic air : ' Have I the honor of addressing the Hon Orza J. Dodds ?' ' My name is Dodds, but I am no longer an honorable,' said the colonel. ' Not an honorable ? Dodds not an honorable? Now, by St. Paul, when I scan that honest face, on which all the gods at once do seem to their seal' (green. seal's murmur ed Dodds to himself), 'I read nothing dishonorable.' ' That's right,' said Dodds ; ' never read anything dishonorable. But to business.' ' Yes, as you say, to business. I am a printer—l might say, with no unbecoming blush, an editor. lam from the noble State of Arkansaw, the only state, by the way, able to and willing to support two governors at the same time. But I have been unfortunate. Much have I been tossed through the ire of cruel Juno, and ' ' Juno how it is yourself,' broke in the colonel. ' Buffeted by the world's rude stoms, you see me here a stranded wreck. Scarce three moons past I left my office in charge of my worthy foreman, and sought the peaceful vales and calm retreats of the Muskingum Valley, where my childhood sported. Returning, I stopped in Cincinnati. I fell into evil company, and—but why dwell on details ? Enough that I am that I am—disheartened ruined, broke. A mark for scorn to point her slow, unerring finger at. As I was about to give up in despair, having given up everything else I had. I thought of you. Sir, I am here. You ha\ e not sent for me, but I have come. Your name, sir, is known and honored f 10m one end of this great republic to the other. It " Glows in the stars, Refreshes in the breeze, Warms in the sun, And blossoms on the fees." When the national treasury was threatened by a horde of greedy Congressmen, you stood like a' wall of adamant between the people and those infamous salary grabbers. Lend me a dollar.' ' My dear sir,' the colonel hastened to explain, ' you mistake the case entirely. I was one of the grabbers.' ' You were ? ' (grasping the colonel's hand warmly) 'so much the better ! Let me congratulate you that a parsimonious public could not frighten you out of what was a fair remuneration for your invaluable services. I am glad that your pecuniary circumstances are so much better than I supposed. Make it two dollars !' And the colonel did. It was the only clean thing left for him to do.

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/GLOBE18750501.2.15

Bibliographic details

Globe, Volume III, Issue 277, 1 May 1875, Page 3

Word Count
502

MAKE IT TWO DOLLARS. Globe, Volume III, Issue 277, 1 May 1875, Page 3

MAKE IT TWO DOLLARS. Globe, Volume III, Issue 277, 1 May 1875, Page 3

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