The Telegraph Boy. Jr. Horatio Alger. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Jr. Horatio Alger
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
Год издания: 0
isbn: 4057664626806
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A TRAP, AND WHO FELL INTO IT.

       CHAPTER XXVII.

       FRANK BECOMES A GOOD SAMARITAN.

       CHAPTER XXVIII.

       A COUNTRY COUSIN.

       CHAPTER XXIX.

       CONCLUSION.

       FAMOUS ALGER BOOKS.

       RAGGED DICK SERIES.

       TATTERED TOM SERIES.

       TATTERED TOM SERIES. Second Series.

       CAMPAIGN SERIES.

       LUCK AND PLUCK SERIES. First Series.

       LUCK AND PLUCK SERIES. Second Series.

       BRAVE AND BOLD SERIES.

       PACIFIC SERIES.

       ATLANTIC SERIES.

       WAY TO SUCCESS SERIES.

       NEW WORLD SERIES.

       VICTORY SERIES.

       FRANK AND FEARLESS SERIES.

       GOOD FORTUNE LIBRARY.

       HOW TO RISE LIBRARY.

       THE JOHN C WINSTON COS POPULAR JUVENILES

       HARRY CASTLEMON BOOKS

       GUNBOAT SERIES.

       ROCKY MOUNTAIN SERIES.

       SPORTSMAN'S CLUB SERIES.

       FRANK NELSON SERIES.

       ROUGHING IT SERIES.

       ROD AND GUN SERIES.

       GO-AHEAD SERIES.

       WAR SERIES.

       HOUSEBOAT SERIES.

       AFLOAT AND ASHORE SERIES.

       J. T. TROWBRIDGE.

       JACK HAZARD SERIES.

       CHARLES ASBURY STEPHENS.

       CAMPING OUT SERIES.

       FAMOUS STANDARD JUVENILES FOR GIRLS

       WAYS AND MEANS LIBRARY. By Margaret Vandegrift.

       STORIES FOR GIRLS.

       HONEST ENDEAVOR LIBRARY. By Lucy C. Lillie.

       MILBROOK LIBRARY. By Lucy C. Lillie.

       RECENT SUCCESSES

       HURLBUT'S STORY OF THE BIBLE told for YOUNG AND OLD

       by Rev. Jesse Lyman Hurlbut, D.D.

       Table of Contents

      The "Telegraph Boy" completes the series of sketches of street-life in New York inaugurated eleven years since by the publication of "Ragged Dick." The author has reason to feel gratified by the warm reception accorded by the public to these pictures of humble life in the great metropolis. He is even more gratified by the assurance that his labors have awakened a philanthropic interest in the children whose struggles and privations he has endeavored faithfully to describe. He feels it his duty to state that there is no way in which these waifs can more effectually be assisted than by contributing to the funds of "The Children's Aid Society," whose wise and comprehensive plans for the benefit of their young wards have already been crowned with abundant success.

      The class of boys described in the present volume was called into existence only a few years since, but they are already so numerous that one can scarcely ride down town by any conveyance without having one for a fellow-passenger. Most of them reside with their parents and have comfortable homes, but a few, like the hero of this story, are wholly dependent on their own exertions for a livelihood. The variety of errands on which they are employed, and their curious experiences, are by no means exaggerated in the present story. In its preparation the author has been assisted by an excellent sketch published perhaps a year since in the "New York Tribune."

      Horatio Alger, Jr.

      New York,