[From Canal Boy to President by Horatio Alger, Jr.]@TWC D-Link book
From Canal Boy to President

CHAPTER XX
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CHAPTER XX.
GARFIELD BECOMES A STATE SENATOR.
Probably Garfield considered now that he was settled in life.

He had married the woman of his choice, set up a pleasant home, and was fully occupied with a class of duties that suited him.

Living frugally, he was able to lay by a portion of his salary annually, and saw the way open, if life and health continued, to a moderate prosperity.

He seemed to be a born teacher, and his life seemed likely to be passed in that pleasant and tranquil office.
Many years before, while still unmarried, his mother had been a teacher, and one of her experiences when so occupied was so remarkable that I can not forbear quoting it: "About the year 1820 she and her sister were left alone in the world, without provision, so far as the inheritance or possession of property was concerned.

Preferring to live among relatives, one went to reside with an uncle in Northern Ohio, and the other, Eliza, afterward Mrs.
Garfield, came to another uncle, the father of Samuel Arnold, who then lived on a farm near Norwich, Muskingum County, Ohio.


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