Decatur Eagle, Volume 6, Number 41, Decatur, Adams County, 13 November 1862 — Page 1
THE. DLUATIR ®A GI. IL
VOL. 6.
TT »BljaTO DECATUR EAGLE.: ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY MORNING, BY. Spencer & S hirmeyer. PUBLISHERS AND PROPRIETORS. OFFI E— Ou Second Street, in Patterson’s ‘budding, over rhe Drugstore. Terms of Subscription: one year, in advance, $1 00 If paid within the year, 1 50 j If not paid until the year has expired, 2Ou EFNo paper will be discon’hued until all i •rreragps are paid except it the option of the , Publisher. , ( Terms of Advertising: (>nr square, (ten lines) three insertions, fl 00 Kach subsequent insertion, 25; XT’No advertiseniMUt will be considered less: than one square; over one square will be counted and charged as two; over two, as three, <te, O' k liberal discount, from the above rates, made on .ill adv rrisenicnts inserted for a period j linger three months. LFThe nh »ve r it.es will be strictly adhered ! to under al) circumstances. JOB PRINTING: We are prepared to do all kinds of job-work in a neat and workmanlike nWhner.on the root ; reasonable terms. Our material for the completion of Job-Work, being new and of the bit , est styles, we feel confidant that satisfaction ean be given. H BI’SIXESS CAnnS? ” ’jbuut house. Decatur, Indiana. Proprietor. Will give good attention, and makes reasonable charges. n37-vG-ly. D. wTWampek' PHYSIC AIN $ SURGEON DECATUR, INDIANA, | tZOFFICE—On the east side of Second St. I ;n the room formerly occupied by J. D. Nutt-' man as a banking office. vl-n Ilf. Attorney* and Counsellors nt Law, DECATUR, IND. •VVII-L PRACTICE TN TUI? COURTS Os V V the tenth Judicial Circuit, attend tothe •ollec* ion of claims, the payment of taxes, re dump!ion of lands, <tc. OFFICE—On Maiu street, one door south o : the Public Square. v4-n!4. HARNESS SHOP. I. J. M cissc, Respectfully in forms hiscustomers and the pub lie in genen l, I hat he-till continues to carry on the Harners Business at his hl .z £> .D Sasnnr .-w On a larger scale than ever, where he invites al! to call and examine his work; for he flatters himself that he-can do a BETTER JOB for LESS money than any other establishment in North Enste' h Indiana. LTRf'pairing done on short notice and charges reasonable.—n37-v6 PIC TI H E GALL ER Y! P. V. SMITH. Ambrotyfe & Photograph JHE3. ” K ” JT TT $ Having permanently located in Decatur and supplied himself with everything that may be found in a First Class Picture Gallery, Would call the attention of all who desire good Picture at low prices, to call at his rooms in Houston’s immediately over the Drug Store. n37-ly ?: W JEFFERSON QUICK. DEALER IN CLOCKS, WATCHES, MUSICAL 15STRVMETITS, JEoELBY, <C., DECATUR, INDIANA. Clocks, Watches, Jewelry, Musical Instru menu, &c. repaired on short notice. SHOP-—On Second Street, in Frazee’s Jaw of ficcr v 5-u 41 iToafs Tsii oes At lower prices than ever before offered in’his market, end cheap, r th-.n the same til tides can be bought in Fort Wayne. 1 willset Mans’ Fine Calf Shoes, ■ good article, forf 1,2 I to $1.50; wnmer ’s hig> keeled Gaiters, fl.lo ',051,3 '. and ail kinds' • CHILDREN'S SHOES, althe same rates. I have, also, the best lot of Women’s Calf Shoes, paer fold in IWatur. from SI,CO to $1,25. pe lair,beside* any quantity of my own make ar J bv iiaual will make to order. Leather,Findings, stock fo* country shoemakers of all kiKds, and shoemskers tools, of the beat quality, cheap for cash. Give mi a fall. Qeoatur, March2R. JESSE NI»J l f, K. "MJ OOD wanted at this office on subscription * r tafora ’-he thg roads become oad.
The 11th Indiana Zuaves. ——■ BY MBS. it KING. " i [We have been requested to publish the fol j lowing poetry, written by a lady of this p’ace,| in honor of the brave boys who were the first to ; ! leave our place and lake up arms in defence of their country. —Ed ] Th-* EleventhTndiana bovs, | Their praise can ne’er be told— I They went to fiuht for liberty, They do not fight for gold! Tho’ they were treated shamefully By the would be “upper ten,” They have proved they were no cowards; ■ But brave true-hearted men. We have noble sons among them; A« brave as ever trod Upon the sacred soil of freedom, '1 he blessed;soil of God. Those true, noble and brave boys Have won themselves a name, I Upon the ft. Id of Donaldson, : And Shi Id’s bloody plain . They were among the first to g»o, At their country’s urgent call, ToOiushout this rebellion , I Or, in the struggle fall. There country was in peril;—• Enough for them to know; Their hippy hom»‘s w.-re menace! By a cruel and rebellious foe. Three times and mor? they’ve been in battle, I hey are no idle toys, They’ve gain’d great victories, 1 Lose brave, true hearted Zuave boys. They are no cowardly hirelings, No idle trash you see; They are fightinq for their country, 'They arc fighting to be fn e. Thry have suffered oil and hunger, They have braved the wintry blast; i They ve endured the heat of summer. Through seas of blood they ‘ve passed. They have laid on beds of sickness, No downy couch have they Tongue cannot tell their suffering s, Nor pen of mine portray It would take a m aster Ji and , A pt n more s illed than mine, To paint the suffering they’ve endured, ■ In a sickly Southern clime. Those brave boys love their co mtry. And live for her alone; Though they strive to hide their sadness, By careless word and tone. We did not know when parting, How they struggled to contr d; Each word, each look bet.i tying, The anguish of the soul. But they knew their country called them, And they were proud to go; To fight lor truth and liberty, Io exterminate the foe. Good Ground f>b Exempyivn —The Ohio S'atesinini i-;ls this story ul thevximping physician in that citv: ‘Doctor, i( the foot won’t answer, I have another i.ll sufficient reason, one that you can’t refuse an exemption for. I ‘What is it?’ I ‘Thu fact is doctor, I have not got good roEsr—l am an idiot, solemnly re- : plied the applicant. AL! said the doctor, what proof have you of that? What evidence can you bring?’ ‘Proof conclusive said the applicant.— i‘Why sir I voted for Abe Lincoln, nod : if that isn't proof of a man heieg a d——d idiot I don’t know how idiocy could be . . proven.’ — ... am ... ‘Silting with the girls., said little Charlie. ‘lt I am naughty to day, will you punish tnc and make me sit with the girls? ‘Whom would you like to sit with? was toe reply; ‘you needn’t be naughty for the sake of silling with the girls ’ Charlie turned his face nway, with a very conscious look, for, though he wanted to sit with the girls, be-disliked to hsve such » reputation, and twisting about uneasily, said, 1 don.t want to sit with the girls now, but if 1 should Bap. pen to be naughty, won’t you make me sit with Fanny Maria? . ~, Are you thinking of what I’m savin?, said a music master to a voung Miss D. nfti r explaining to her at some length the ditfereooe belweeb the major mid minor key. ’Why, sir, replied Miss D. I’ve been thinking al] this time whether these keys are ivorv or bone.’ Freiyy Good—The New Hampshire Spectator says that Gen. Jim Lane, in a recent speech al New York, boasted that , in his infancy he was rocked in the same craole with a nigger baby. The nigger keenly alive to the d sgraca has never . said a won! abut it. ’Do you like the game of drafts, madam?’ •N.>, I don’t like any game where 1 can’t take a man without having first to jump over him. Miss Faantmihng savs the first t’me she locked arms with a young man, she | felt like Hope leaning on her anchor.— i Poetic young lady that.
‘Our Country's Good shall over be our Alm— Willing to Praise and not afraid to Blame.”
DECA run, ADAMS COUNTY, INDIANA, NOV. 13, 1862.
A PRECIOUS FIX. or Darks ess palpa bi.e. By Glacoma 8. Campana. XT 1 Dio longer ago thon last summer I did whnt people call, ‘ride in a stage. ’ I don t mean a city omnibus so called but a regular built old fashioned stage coach such ns used to carry passengers from river so river mid from steamhoal to steam post across the State of Delaware a.id New Jersey. , Ii ad been detained on business in a little Western town, which I was glad to leave, though I was to start at midnight :an I travel all night. And an uncommon i dark night it was From the hotel window where I stood I could not tell whether tho object standing in the street was la stags or an elephant. ‘Ah ready sir?' shouted the driver, as 'he c .me tip the steps and passed on to the oilier end of the porch. Ho soon rej appeared holding a lantern ip one Ji and ! and wiping his lips with the other, from I which pantomimic demonstration I philo- . sophieally deduced that lie had been what |is vulgarly denominated ‘wetting his whirile ’ •Have you any passengers’ asked I as he again approaohed me. •No >ir,’ replied he, ‘only one beside ; yonrself ’ •Is lie going all lhe wav through.’ ‘I believe so, but he aint a he — the oth I cr passeng-r is a lady.’ ! ‘A lady! What sort- of a lady? The I word as used in this country is a most in- ! definite < ne. There have never yet be p n lint two I. dies here said p.-iientiarv warden in Tennessee, and they were b .th in for stealing. I trust my fellow traveller j is not that sort of a 1 >dv.’ I I enteral the carriage and groped mv .Way to a seat. The lady was doubtless I on the back seat, but I did not dare logo Iso far as that, for there would have been I imminent danger of depositing mvs-lf up lon my fair companion’s lap. I proceeded : in tli it direction as far as prudence war- > ranted and settled next to the aforesaid : I back seat. I It had b 'en raining and it was still very I damp and rather cool. The coach was ■ I apparently shut up all round; at till events i ■ it was as dark as it was possible for it to be. The silence within too was as perj feet as the darkness. Nor was there i much noise without. The road was soft ] and heavy, and the darktH-ss made it nec •‘ssary to travel slowly. For aught, that I could see or hear, I might have supposled myself to be the sole tenant of the ve- j ' hide. AH this time my imagination was busy as t be>e w rking away at the question what sort of a lady my fellow traveler might be. She might be as old as Majthuseleh and as ugly ns agorgon, and still by courtesy a lady; or she might be sweet seventeen and as lovely as an houri and still a lady, all the sarne. Confound it al!, I wish I knew how to settle that point. Reader—pantaloons-wearing reader— I did you ever try to put a la ly out of your : head, <r to take a nap with an unknown : lady who might be voung and beau'iful ; within three feet of yi.u? Well if you j have never actually been in such a predi : I enment, you have imagination enough to I (fancy the feelings of a fellow sinner so- ! situated. I twisted and I fidgeted. I shut my ! (eyes with what was intended to he a grin ; jof indomitable resolution. I counted hun ■ dreds innumerable and repeated the' whole multiplication table except eight or ( ten lines—and all to no purpose. Some- ! thing or other would prevent me from doing what I wanted to do ami force mo Ito do what I did not (or thought I did : nol ) want to do. Wearied out with what was between the willingness of the spirit and the weak ness of lhe flesh, I gave up the contest, ■ Ceased my efforts to sleep and not think, |and determined to wake myself just as wide awake ns ever I could and to think about the lady and nothing else, «s in | tensely as possible. And sol did. II ! could only find out what the lady is like thought *; if I could only get the , least inkling of her statue quo, mental, physical nnd chronological, I could then lorin some idea of the proper course to pursue. At that moment a thought struck me (an unusual occurrence, tile reader will be apt to think) which I at once resolved to put in practice. I pretended to be sound asleep and my reprehensible nice soon began to bear fruit. My very first snore was echoed ,py a titter—nol a horse laugh nipped in < the bud, nor yet that half involuntary, I semi snort, which is usually the first premonitory symptom of a giggle—but a litter — a dear delicious, de.licalely-feminine j lady like titter, wl.ich belongs only to. happily constituted young female voices. : Asif we had been playing a game of ; blindman’s buts ibis titter gave tne an op- ( portnnily to easternise myself, a« tbe| French say, and find out how ths laud
lay and where the points of the coinpass were situated. It came fiom the c.ruer (diagonally opposite, and towari) that cor- | Her I immediately began to work my way (gradually and ns if in the involuntary i fidgetings of sleep. i Finally, I succeeded in gaining a position opposite lhe titter; that is |o say, opi posite the place from which it came. Oi tile fact that the titteier was still there the titteree had a very paipiple demon•trillion. He felt i;; not with his bands , but with the caps of his knees. He also thought that that was far enough to go at that time. I now began to sleep more noisily, and i eventually tossed my arms out into the dark on a sort of voyage of discovery — You have heard a scrap of cr mmoti-place Litinity, which might be written, ‘knee qui’d nigh miss.’ I thought of it the 1 next inom-nt, when I began to sl-ep still more uneasily, and whin mv hands, sent lorili on the excursion afor-said, c one in contact with tin- nicest, roundest, smootu «’-l, plumpest, little knee ever seen in a| dark stage between K-n ne-bunk and Ne ’ brnska. Hands known fobs fast asleep are not io be held responsible, of course for lhe : blunders wh'di thev may commit. The ladv evidently thought so; otherwise she w uld not I'ave repeated •bat. dear little titter in such a good humored manner, after such an unequivocally ne-larious | transaction. More trips of discovery made by those hypocritical hands, resulted in still further additions to my stock of useful inform ntion. They brought b-ck information of an arm as soft and elastic as a p- n cushion, ns smooth as saiin and ns plump aS a patridge, and of a shoulder wh< re I could feel the dimples and it actually seemed. to me the whiteness also. In the midst of this system of expori mentation, at the very moment when I had stretched out both arms toward my lellow traveler, there came a sudden heavy and unexpected jolt, which taking advantage ol my unfixed position, g ive me at. energetic forward impulse which gave I me an iinprointu introduction to lhe lady by landing mo in her I <p, with m arms tn the position they had accidental'.)’ as- - sumed. A little scream followed, not by a titter I this time but by a hearty peal of genuine laughter, greeted lhe consumption oi this i involuntary exploit. In order to keep tip appearances I remained for a short time in the lady’s lap with mv arms in the position which they : had accidentally assumed. I Just as scon however as I could consistently dost,, I sprang up nnd said: 'Mercy on me! Ido believe there is some one in the stage.’ ‘Ha, ha, ha.’ ‘Madam (for that voice is certainly feminmr), I beg ten thousand pardons; but when one is asleep you know one is not ' ‘Awake. Certainly not.’ ‘And acidents will happen you know.’ ‘Certainly. You were not to blame, | sir.’ ‘You are very kind Madam; or perhaps 1 ought to say Miss?’ ‘I am only a school girl. That is I was : but 1 nrn going home from tlie seminary now for good. 1 will be eighteen ye.rs l old next winter.’ •Sweet seventeen bv all that's lovelv - What a voice she has! Bverv word is music. If her lips were playing Yankee 1 Doodle with variations, every time she ( opened ihem the effect could not be more delicious! And what nice, plump, rosy, sugar-sweet lips she must have, •Do you go all the wav through to C—•O yes, sir, my pa lives there. He’s in business in ’ Mae 1 ask what business? Possibly I ' may know him ‘My pa is General Smith. He used to be an ariist; but he deals in horses and ; cattle now. lie buys a hundred horses or more every month; besides mules and oxen and suchlike. He buys more horses than any one in the State. I The mischief he does! He must have I a good, big, comfortable purse of his own then! Sweet seventeen —a voice like an •ingel — lips like twin cherries—round, ripe' rosy, plump and pretty — and an ex artistic pa who buys horses by the hundred! I’m in luck, most decidedly. It ain’t every dark night, that one meets with all that, tele a tete, in a stage coach. ‘So your pa was an artist, was he? I'm glad to hear it, for I'm a bit of an artist mvsell, in a small wav; an anr>ateii r inly. Was yonr pa a votary oi lhe brush or of the chisel?’ ‘Of the brush.’ 1 ‘indeed! then we are brother chips, 'of the brush was my weapon.too; but 1 seldom make ush of it now, and only on a small scale.’ ‘Pa used it on a verv large scale.’ ‘Ah, indeed! In the historical or patriotic line, no doubt. the Government of this State patronize such work?’ I 'Oh, ves. sir— pa was • nepeyed al the State-house once, for a long time.’
Aba! thought I; then pa must have . been an artist of some celebrity, end pa’s daughter must be somebody. Why did stiel. ii man leave off the practice-of his art, I wonder, end embark in the horse trad.-: He wanted to g.-t rich, I suppose j And he has probably succeeded and Ins daughter is probably an heiress. This last supposition set ine to cog itating. and ilier.- ensued n silence of some mirmtes duration, which I event ually interrupted by an allusion to the intensity of the dai koess in which we were enveloped’. ,Yes, indeed.’ remarked the young lady; ‘I never saw it darker She seemed disposed l<> change the su’ j ct and asked me it I resided in the We I. j ‘No, miss,’ I re; lied; ‘I am a Virgin ian,’ i ‘ls it possiblr?' cried lhe musical lips; why, my grandfather, by mv mother’s side, was a Viaginian also. He bib.io'ed I ti 2 . ,IO Ine ivmnl ll• ipri iHftiiiv * I One of the F F. V.’s. by «H that,a ( arisiocratic! Os the royal blood of Pocahontas, most likely? I don’t profess to be ong to one of the .first Inmilie-s’ myself, numerous as I find them io be; but then good blood and uncien. lineage does have weight, you know.evi-n among D.-mocrats, 1 expressed jir great pleasure at wh it I had heard, aud claimed .the young lady’s sympathies on the i ground of the common origin from the grseious ‘Mother of States and Statemen ’ I he liile ice left between us now the wed most rapidly and ourconversjvmn became animated, interesting and even confident ial IL-r voice dissolutely fascinated toe. Its dulcet tones thrilled to mv verv heart and created such a flulten'ng there as J had not felt for many a day. As we became more intimate, and ; as the distance between us in a figurative (Sense, grew less and less, the actual muti eria] space between us began to diminish also. At last, in some way or oilier, I really cannot tell how, I found mysell by h<-r side, on the same seat, anti in such juxtapositirn that to get. any closer together would have been, physically speaking, an impossibility. Li some eq’nil! y strange end unaccotin j tube wav 1 found i.er lii'tle hand —well now to tell the honest truth, it was not a very little hand, but then she was not a liule person, by -ny means she was in tact a great bouncing, box *m lassie of considerably more than medium magnitude. With a fluttering heart 1 closed my fingers on the dear little dumpling and gave it im unequivocal squeeze. Great , Cupid and Ids mighty mother! Fancy mv ; feelings when the pressure was faintly re turned. The die was cast. No team of double jointed London brewer’s dray horses could have held me back. 1 clasped her I in my arms am! pressed her yielding form j to my loudly palpitating heart with a vi- . olence that would most assuredly would ( have been a caution to week ribs and fee- ! oly constituted breast bones' But. there was no weakness about Angelina Seraphina Smith. She bore it like ! a heroine, and I am not sure that she ( did not squeeze even harder than I did , while softly muimered vows and protests 1 ’ tions and ejaculations, mingled with the : mingling of our lips and exhaled heaven - ' ward in deep-drawn sighs born of lhe artlor of our mutual passion as summer va- ' porg arise from the full orbed fervor of ( (he summ r sun. For a period of time of indefinite tiyrn ■lion — I am wholly unable to sav whetli ' 'er it was five tniuutes or five hours — I was in ». state of im-ffible and paradisical : beaii'nde from which I was unexpectedly aroused by lhe lough voice of th.- driver ' proclaiming our arrival nt the vill-c’e of! S , where it would be necessary to stop for some time, in order to l-.ave some ir tlispemible repairs made to to the run- i ning gears of the stage. Lookingout I found that we had halt- I ed before the door of a hotel and lhe ! gray dawn of a rainy day was just malt- ' ing itself visible. 1 sprang out and then offered to assist iny fair companion to leave the coach; but she said she would prefer to remain where she was until we were ready to resume our journey. ‘That’s out and out impossible miss,’ cried (he driver; ‘lhe stage wil have to go round to the shop and lhe wheels have to lie tuck off. so that you would be spilt I out vou see.’ Having heard this, Miss Angelina Serephint Smith came forward, descended I from the coach and took my arm to be escorted into the hotel. Bhe seemed to ;be very timid orbashful and kept her face closely covered with a thick veil, so that 1 could see nolhino of her features, j though lhe morning twilight was now con siderably advanced. By the time we reached the hotel par- : lor where there were two lamps burning, ; my curiosity bad become wholy irrepressible; but I covered it up with a tbin
■ layer of gallantry, by saying, as I turned : aside the gauzv obstruction: ‘Lively Angelina S rnpLina, vou really i must allow me to least my eves upon ■ that beautiful 'ace, which, i am sure, 11* — blacker than a chimney-sweep’s, as I'm i a sinner! Yes. it was, literally nnd truly, and without < x iggeraiion one of the fery I blackest human laces I ever beheld with lips, nose, <fcc , to match — and l’v« seen ' a good many darkies in my time. And why — double distil yd, filth proof jackass ’l’Ct I was—why did I not profit by the olifactorv experience thus acquired? Parfum de femme! Gooby gracious! 1 dip notice a peculiar odor about the coach, but I'll be hanged i> ( didn’t think Ihtrt - there had been a polecat in the stable or about the horses in Home wav I 1 didn’t mom than half believe her when st>e said she wash't blue; but that she would turn out to be black was a catastrophe 1 had never once dreamed 1 of. H'w could I. with al! that talk about the seminary, nnd IL-breW studies, and her father the general, and all the rest of it? What could the girl mean? ‘Hillo, here, driver who is that lady, as you call her’ who came in the stage with us?’ ■Who is she? Why, she’s Angy Smith, i 01-l Gen Smi'h’e da'ter ’ Her falli«r a general?’ ‘Lors bless you, no! he ain’t no genj era]--it is only a nickname like.’ •W as he ever a painter?' | ‘Painter? No; !>nt he was a wl.itewasher—and a first rate one, too ’ ‘Yes, yes. 1 understand. Used the blush on an <X’>-nsive scale — whitewashed the capitol! What an ass! what an ass!’ 'No. t’aiht, sir; that’s a mule.’ 'Well, well, no matter —a ittle of both 1 llimk, —is the general rich enough to I buy horses by the hundred, think you? ’Hosses bv the i. .n [red? Hi, ha, ha — ho, ho, bo!—that,s a good one! Yes. sir, he has bought hundredsand : thousands oi them?’ ‘Why, you see they wag all dead ones! He buys al! lhe carion—all the dead ,dogs, and cals, mil bosses, and cattle, I nnd everything; and lie sells the hide*, jan 1 horn’, an d bones, and sich like! lie gets hold pretty much of all the carrion in C .* Just so The lady’s lather is a negro scavenger, nnd her grandfather a runaway 'belong ng tothe Randolph family’ I —one of the F. F. V.'t> j Three sodden cabbage-head that I am! why could't I see through ail thia? I did feel her wool 'every time I k-faughl! Idid feel it; but if 1 I didn’t think it was some sort of an arjtificial ornament inside her botitiet! And (those enormous blubber lips—how coulp I ever —mercy! 1 think I am not a bad-hearted man, and I c-plainly have the kindest feelinga towards the negr ■ race in general; and 1 certainly am not considered a profane mail; and, if 1 did say some verv naughty words just then, and expiess some very unamtnble feeling towaids 'mm and brethren’of African descent, I trust the i provocation will be considered along with i the offence. I While 1 was letting off the steam in I this way, another singe, drove up to he | door of the hotel. The noise brought to the window iny specimen of ‘darkness palpable,’—‘darkness that might be felt,’ and was felt, though to very little puri pose. The sight of her made my blond ■ run cold. The stage at the door was a- ( bout to start—whith-r 1 neither knew : nor cared. Though 1 had paid my fare (all the way to C—— -. J Imme lately had ray baggage transferred to tliis vehic kle, and away ! went, back again, over the same mivhly road over which I had been travelling n'l night, my only care bring to escape as rapidly ns possible from the vie vicinity of that eboney orniment of Oberlin Seminary, ibe lovelv, accompli shed j nnd rather ulueish-black Angelina Scraphina Smith. A minister’s wile anys: The firs* time I look my eldest boy to church, when he was two years and a half old. 1 managed, with caresses and frowns an 1 cvndy, to keep him very still till the sermon esa halt done. By idis time l.is patience was exhausted, and lie climbed to his feet and stood on the seat, looking at the preacher (bis (siher) quite intently. Then, as if lie had hit upon a certain relief for his troubles, he pulled n.e l,y lhe chin to alJract iny attention, and exclaimed, in a distinct voice, ‘Mamma, make papa say • Amen!’ i —1 ri • — Pa,’ said a little seven year old fellow I guess our old man, Ralph, is a good Christian. 'I ‘How so, my boy? enquired the par- , ent. •Why pa, 1 read in the Bible that the wicked shall nol lire out halt his days—i and Ralph says he has lived out ever II since he little boy '
NO 4,1
