Jasper County Democrat, Volume 1, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 September 1898 — Page 7
WOMAN HOME
IMPROVIDENT MARRIAGES. THE beginning of debts and difficulties lies in “Improvident marriages.” Happily they~are less popular than they were, says an exchange. Still one hears apparently sane middle-aged men and women carping at the Increased prudence and forethought of the young men and women of to-day. We were romantic! says some worn-worried lady, who has hardly known an hour’s freedom from care since the days of that honeymoon which was also quickly metamorphosed into a vinegar moon of a never-endi»s» description. She still, however, congratulates herself on having been romantic, thtiugh It is paten* to her friends and acquaintances that her romance has not been a success. There are very few peopte possessed of the temper, nerves, disposition or ability which would enable them to marry happily, and manage successfully. on a small income. There are acertain set of young men and young women who are able to make themselves happy on very little. Low living and high thinlflng contents many superior beings; but among the upper classes this tone of mind is distinctly rare. It requires a peculiarly exwUent, cheerful, strong, clever person, who is willing to forego all the luxury to which he or she has been accustomed, aud yet be honestly happy and content to have only the necessaries of life and do without its amusements. It is true a great many men and women are obliged to forego all pleasure and luxury; but they betray such discontent and annoyance at their fate that they are far from being pleasant companions! Moreover, their Ignorance of the domestic arts and sciences renders their homes remarkably uncomfortable. Fancy Work. The melon seed bag is one of the latest fancies. It is prertrty work and makes a pretty bag for handkerchiefs, opera glasses or anything one wishes. The bag illustrated is made of muskmelon seeds and steel beads, and a glance at the small illustration will give an idea as to the manner of stringing the beads and so as to form the network. They are strung on strong silk, and a string of twenty seeds separated from each other by alternating
THE MELON SEED BAG.
steel beads forms the foundation of the not, which widens about ten rows as shown In itihe two lower rows of No, 2, them continues in dusters of three 'melon seeds as shown in upper part of No. 2. The bag proper is made of satin or velvet, any shade, twelve inches long and fourteen inches wide, gathered Irmly together at the bottom, has a leading two inches deep at the top, there the draw-string may be of pretty ibbon or silk cord. To Get Rid of a Doable Chin. Sat as little -flesh forming food as I,visible and plenty of fruit and vegetables. Bread and pastry should be left almost entirely out of the diet; also iny food of an oily nature. Take plenty <»f long walks, avoid easy chairs and soft cushions and be as active and energetic as possible. Pat the chin with the backs of the fingers for about five or ten minutes each time after washing it, and you will find your weight gradually being reduced and your double chin disappearing. The process of reducing superfluous flesh should always be gradual; otherwise unsightly wrinkles will take the place of plumpness. Girl* Bay Boy** * hoes. The latest idea of the girl of the period is the wearing of boys’ shoes and boys’ gloves. Heavy projecting sole, broad-toed footgear Is all the rage. So, too, are thick gloves, whose fingers never taper. The athletic, energetic, outdoor game-plurlmg girl is the fashion. The boots md gloves built for her have a cut of their own that Is anything but feminine along the old lines. Some clever person discovered that these boots and gloves were Identically the same as those sold for boys, material, cut and oil. . . s L, Incompetency. Long and load Is the outcry among women of the better classes for profitable occupation, and many are the complaints from all quarters at the lack of lucrative employment, To the superficial observer the complaints appear to be just, and the outcry laudable; It Is only when yocscratchbelow the surface of the trouble that you become acquainted with its real nature. From those who have Interested themselves
sufficiently to make careful inquiry into the subject, we learn that in the majority of cases where female industry has been tried it has been “found wanting.” The “lady in reduced circumstances” who has expressed the commendable desire to do anything that may come to hand, has often been proved ignorant of the commonest duties of everyday life, and though professedly anxious and ready to acquire these, she has brought so little system to bear on her efforts that they have invariably been fraught with either loss to her employer or injury to her own health. An Antumn Model.
Fome Queer Finaer-rinss. Rings have been made for almost all purposes. Thus we find cramp-rings, said not only to cure cramp, but to prevent Its return; amulet-rings, infallible protectors against the “evil-eye;” astronomical, dial and zodiacal rings; gar-ter-rings and puzzle-rings; rings for novitiates taking the veil; rings for dip- ’ lomats signalizing the official standing ! of the wearer; rings for poets, pilgrims, 1 lawyers and clerics; squirt and poison ; rings, made so that they could contain I vegetable poisons of the most deadly : kind, which could be injected by slightly scratching the skin of the person whose hand the wearer grasped; whistle and key rings, both ttheful; mottoriugs, by means of which lovers gave vent to their passions; and love-knot rings and gemel-rings, the last made of two or three links intertwined, which could be joined together in such a manner as to form one ring.—Woman’s Home Companion. Women Upholsterers. The frequent advertisements seen in the public prints of the visiting upholstress, if the word may be permitted, indicate that this class of workers 'is being considerably recruited. It seems to offer an excellent field for the industry of women not yet classified in other pursuits. A number of the technical institutes have classes where the work is regularly taught, and as the field Is still comparatively unoccupied, the prospect of fair success is good. The work of making over a mattress is not in the least bard for a woman, and knowledge of the opefttion is easily obtained. Other legitimate work of the ' upholsterer is also quite within her strength and skill after very slight experience. A Housekeeper** Record. The average housekeeper finds that her memory is shortest when it comes to the dally planning of meals. Her frequent cry that she cannot think of anything to order never seems to be suggestive to her of its own remedy. She orders every day the round of family living, and if when the process is over she would arrange in a little book the cibef dishes that have appeared on the table during the twenty-four hours, she will find that sfhe quickly accumulates a valuable memorabilia. Classify them breakfast, luncheon, dinner; substantials and deserts. A housekeeper who practices’this plan will be amazed to discover how the useful simple dishes escape her memory without it. Ther Secret of Beauty. The secret of beauty is health, and thdfee who desire to be beautiful should do all that is possible to restore their health if they have lost it, or to retain it if they have it still. To possess a fresh complexion and bright eyes, even to have white hands and a graceful figure, you must be well, and to be well you must take plenty of exercise, eat proper food, and not too much of it, and do your best to be cheerful and look on the bright side of everything. Health, and the happiness which comes with it, are the true secrets of beauty. The Lock Bracelet. One sees a good many bracelets of the chain and lock variety on fhir wrists nowadays. The war Is responsible for this. Many a soldier boy has marched away carrying a tiny key hid den away In his pocket. The handsomest of the bracelets are heavy gold chains with a sparkling diamond Mt in the locks. A Daintjr Sachet. An excellent perfume, which will retain .its properties for a long time, can be made in the following way: Potted to a powder one ounce each of dores, caraway seed, nutmeg, mace, cinnamon and Tonquin beans; also, as much ofrij root as will equal the weight of all the foregoing ingredients.
THE FARM AND HOME
MATTERS OF INTEREST TO FARMER AND HOUSEWIFE. Chanarea in Agricultural Conditions During Recent Times Value of Wood A*he*-Pe*nut* aa a CropGreen Food for Stock - Farm Notes. Progress on the Farm. Every farm differs in some respects from all others, and rules governing the methods in certain localities may be inapplicable elsewhere. Climatic Influences and diversities of soilsinake It imperative that the farmer study the characteristics and surroundings of his farm and improve according to his opportunities. The farmer must contend with changes of seasons, drouth, rains, heat, cold and enemies which destroy his crops. He can not adapt the soil of his farm to the crop, but must select the crops for the soil. Plants thrive best when the conditions are most favorable; but the conditions suitable for one crop may not be favorable to another. There is more to learn on a single farm than any farmer can master if he keeps pace with progress. Systems of farming are changing. The reduction of the cost of labor by the use of improved implements has done much to revolutionize farming, and the co-operative system is gradually working its way into farm methods, as with the creamery system of butter-making the use of traction engines and the shipping of milk, fruit and other produce by associations; yet the individual fanner is not suppressed, but is attached more securely to his farm. Wood Aahes on the Farm. As a fertilizer wood ashes stand high, and may be used as medicine for farm animals. For many years I have fed them to stock, and believe they have done much toward preserving the im variably good health of the swine, horses and cattle. Of course, there may be a difference of opinion on the subject, and I have never yet found a veterinary surgeon who would recommend wood ashes as a medicine. Nevertheless, experience is sometimes worth as much as theoretical advice. My plan Is to keep wood ashes, charcoal and salt mixed together constantly In the pen for the swine. Three parts of wood ashes to one part of salt will not hurt the swine, and if the mixture is kept before them all the time, and fresh water is given to them freely, they will not eat too much to injure their health. I believe such a mixture is a good preventive of swine cholera and similar diseases. Certainly the beneficial effects are quite apparent. Clean wood ashes is better than all the condition powders for the farm horses. The ashes can be given to the hortes twice a week in their oats at the rate of an even teaspoonful each time. If given carefully and regularly I believe that no medicine will have to be given to horses that are fairly treated and cared for. Every one familiar at all with farm matters must have observed a certain habit in many horses and rows to gnaw wooden posts, trees and similar objects. This craving for something which they do not get from their daily food is satisfied when wood ashea are administered regularly to them. It is just as natural for the animals to desire this as for us to have a craving for acids, salt and even pepper. —Wisconsin Agriculturist. Peanuts. Prepare the ground just as you do for potatoes, making it tine and mellow as possible, and throw it up into low ridges, somewhat as sweet potatoes are planted. Carefully shell the peanuts in order not to break the broxyn skin that covers the kernel. Plant the last of May or early in June, about two feet apart, three or four kernels in a place in the ridge; cover about two Inches deep. They will soon come up. Cultivate shallow and keep the weeds down and the soil mellow until they bloom, then hoe every two or three weeks, or oftener if they need it, drawing the fine soil well up to the plants each time. It is a curious fact that the blooms on the plant produce the tubers under the ground, and some persons think it necessary to cover the blossoms, but it, Is not. If the soil is kept mellow and loose, each fertile blossom sends down a long root-like stem that pushes its way into the ground, and the tuber, or nut, is produced on the tip end of this atom. As soon as ripe, or when the vines frost, pull and throw into piles to cure. Most of the nuts will cling to the roots, but sometimes they will have to When cured pick off and rub and shake together to free from earth. Green Food for C tock. In summer the pasture is severely, taxed, not only to provide for a large herd, but also make growth when the land has not been supplied with plant food in the form of manure or fertilizer. Some farmers relieve the pasture from dose and cropping by growing some kind of green crop, such as sweet corn, oats or cow peas, the cattle being turned on the crops when the plants are young in order to take them off the pasture long enough to give the grass a start. But little labor is rethe land being stirred with a disc cultivator and the seed broadcasted and the land then rolled. If there is danger from trampling of the green food it may be cut and fed to cows. A mixture of oats and peas, broadcasted together, has long been used by some farmers, but any kind of green crop will answer, as the object Is to take the cows off the pasture and at the same time provide a substitute for grass in a manner not to diminish the yield of milk by the cows. The Farm n Laboratory. On every farm the manure heap is a receptacle for raw material that under-
goes chemical changes, and mor| changes occur therein than in any labl oratory under the control of chetnists. The food for plants is therein prepared, and is the same as that purchased in the form of artificial fertilizers. Even In the soil constant changes occur. We now know that minute bacteria work as agents in preparing food for plants, and in some cases are capable of utilizing the free nitrogen of the atmosphere. Every plant after its kind performs a certain duty, assisting in its way to benefit some plant that follows, and everay process of growth, every effort put forth by the farmer, and every beast that exists on the farm, are all aids in farm laboratory work, thousands of combinations being created and hundreds of compounds resulting. To succeed on the farm every farmer should study these things in order that he may more intelligently assist in deriving the most from his farm. There is room for hundreds of experiments, as agriculture is yet in its Infancy compared with what is possible in the future, as every year demonstrates that there is more to learn.—Philadelphia Record. r dviax Lettuce Feed. Probably most people U’ho have grown and saved lettuce seed for years have noticed that after a time the lettuce began to run up to liead earlier and earlier each year, until the period of leaf production was materially reductal. This comes from collecting seed from plants that all through their growth have been kept stripped of their leaves. The seedsman never or seldom picks any leaves from his seed lettuce. He only does It when he finds that the lettuce mildew has attacked it, which is the lettuce-seed growers most formidable difficulty. Usually when the leaf mildew gets in lettuce, it goes through the field within a day or two. Very little seed these headed lettuce, much less than from heads stripped of leaves. This is why the best lettuce seed must always be dear. Competition. The farmer who does not believe that farming pays can always find other farmers who make a profit. The real drawback to farming is competition, which the farmer niust'meet as well as the tradesman. The competitor of the farmer is some other farmer who is more progressive than he. Time on the farm cannot be wasted, hence a farmer cannot afford to wait two or three years watching 15 is neighbor make experiments, but must himself go ahead and get to the front as soon as possible. There is strong competition among farmers. Some can produce at a lower cost than others and can consequently sell at lower prices. To meet this competition each farmer must resort to the best stock to be Hhd and keep his farm up to the standard of fertility. Feeding Oats in the Straw. Though it saves labor, it is doubtful whether there is any advantage in feeding oats in the straw to ordinary stock. Unless the grain can be ground much of it will pass - through the stock whole and will be voided in the excrement. But there is an exception to this in the case of sheep, especially if fed oats in the straw in winter. The sheep masticate the grain so thoroughly that after it has come up and is rechewed in the cud there is scarcely any loss of nutriment. It is best to feed the oats in the straw before any hay is given, and require it to all be eaten. This will prevent waste.
Late Fall Pigs. The only pig that will attaia size enough to safely pass the winter Is one that is born six or seven month? before cold weather is expected. We have raised pigs in the fall, and that too when we had the advantage of a basement barn to provide warm quarters for them. Yet the growth during the winter, notwithstanding good feed, was never satisfactory. There is too little sunlight during the winter months, and if the pig is kept warm without sunlight it is usually at the expense of poor ventilation. Without good air no animal can maintain good digestion or remain healthy. Butter Color. The use of butter color, while not at all necessary during summer, frequently gives good satisfaction in winter months aind is by no means harmful, but often beneficial in the way of securing a better separation and texture, as its presence has a tendency to Ann butter. Answer* to Oft-Asked Questions. It takes about three months to grow a broiler. The goose lays a score or two of eggs in a year. No brooding pen should contain over fifty chicks. Broilers shrink about a half-pound each when dressed. Forty dressed ducklings are packed in a barrel for shipment. The shell of an egg contains about fifty grains of salt and lime. The duck averages ten dozen eggs in about seven months’ laying. Build the house ten by ten feet for ten fowls, and the yard ten tithes larger. Ducklings are marketed at five pounds weight, which they attain iq ten weeks. Ten dozen eggs a year is the average estimate given as the production of the hen. About four dozen eggs are given as an average for the annual output of the turkey. Duck feathers sell at 40 cents per pound; gobse feathers bring double the amount Thirteen eggs are considered a sitting, though many breeders are now giving fifteen; ■ Between forty and fifty degrees is the proper temperature to keep eggs for hatching during winter. Eggs intended for hatching should not be kept over four weeks. They must be turned every day or two.
INDIANA INCIDENTS.
RECORD OF EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK. A Terre Haate Young Man Released from a Mexican Prison-Woman Charged with Trying to Murder Her Daughter-in-Law-Found Dead. Freed from a Mexican Jail. Mrs. R. N. Hudson of Terre Haute has received a telegram informing her of the release of her son, Morton, who had been held in a Mexican jail on a charge of murder. Several weeks ago Hudson and a companion, when riding into Mexico from their ranch in Texas, met two highwaymen and shot them. Fearing they would not get justice in a Mexican trial, they hid for a day or two, and this fact caused some feeling against them. Ex-Secretary of the Navy Thompson, W. R. McKeon, Congressman Faris and Senator Fairbanks enlisted the State Department at Washington in Hudson’s liehalf, and Minister Powell Clayton asked the Mexican Government to expedite the case. Hudson and his companion were well treated while in jail. Woman Charged with Murder. Mrs. Sarah Shankenberger was arrested nt Frankfort, charged with the murder of her daughter-in-law, Mrs. Ed. Shankenberger. Mrs. Shankenberger died a few days ngo. She made an ante-mortem Statement expressing the belief that she had been systematically poisoned by her mother-in-law. The contents of her stomach were taken to Dr. Hurty of Indianapolis for analysis, and his report was that he had found arsenic in deadly quantities. Mrs. Shankenberger accepted her arrest coolly and denies guilt. The dead woman's husband is a member of the United States navy, on board the cruiser Minneapolis. He has arrived home. The accused was committed to jail without bail. Widow in Fear of I'eath. When Mrs. Norton of Terre Haute returned to her home from the funeral of her husband she found her 17-months-old child dead. When she left the house there was no indication of approaching death. At the time Norton was dying the dial on the side of the court house clock, which could be seen from the house, darkened until the time could not be read. Immediately upon his death the shadow passed away. The widow now believes there is the same fate in store for herself and is prostrated. Found Dead Near His Home. Thomas Stall, 53 years old, a veteran of the civil war, was found dead within fifty feet of his home in Indianapolis. He had been struck on the left temple, the blowcausing concussion of the brain. The fact that his clothes and hands were free from dirt, that the ground was undisturbed and that there were no signs of a struggle suggests the theory that he was murdered elsewhere and that his body was placed near his home by the murderers.
Within Our Borders. Frank Gallaway was run over and killed by a Big Four engine at Milford. The Elwood fair grounds will be temporarily converted into an all-year-round pleasure rcsor.r. Rev. Ralph J. Smith, for two years pastor of the First Congregational Church of Kokomo, has resigned. A mysterious disease lias appeared among the cattie of Oregon township; and is spreading. It is, apparently, not fatal. Levi Jakeway was instantly killed by a passenger train on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad at Ligonier. He was 45 years old. While bathing with several companions in Trout creek, near Jacksonville, Fla., Private Ernest Pullman of Company A, 161st Indiana regiment, dived from a high place into shallow water. He was taken to the hospital, where it was ascertained that his back had been broken. He died from his injuries. This is the first death in the regiment. The Populists of Floyd County held a mass convention in New Albany to nominate a county ticket, but before they finished they launched a boom of Lieut. Richmond Pearson Hobson, the hero of the Merrimac, for President in 1900. Resolutions were adopted describing Hobson’s heroism and Americanism, and indorsing him as a candidate for the chief executive of the nation. The Y. M. C. A. of Anderson and Marion leaded aud operated the entire system of the Gas Belt Electric Railway the other day. This gave them the thirtytwo miles of main line between the two cities. Excursion rates were announced, and picnics and excursion parties to the Soldiers' Home and other resorts were organized. The traffic was big, and they will clear S2OO or $250 on the day. The farm house of Tom Wantz, two miles east of North Manchester, was struck by lightning and wrecked in a peculiar manner. The bolt came inside at the comb of the roof and spread to every room in the building, knocking off plastering, door casings and playing havoc generally. It came out at the south side, where it made a large opening. The family of six were in the house and were severely shocked. The house was not set on fire, although it is almost a total wreck. At Hagerstown, Rev. F. M. Moore, a minister of the United Brethren Church, has brought suit against the Central Union Telephone Company for $2,500 damages. The ground of his complaint is the failure of the telephone company to properly convey a message in which Rev. Mr. Mqore was solicited to come to Falinoutih to preach a funeral sermon. After receiving the message the complainant went to Falmouth, but upon arrival there found that the information conveyed in the message was erroneous and that there was no funeral in that part of the county. On account of the levity indulged in at his expense by persons who learned of the peculiar mistake the minister was subjected to great annoyance. Daniel Sandborn, a deaf mute, 50 years old, while in a weakened condition from sickness, fell from a third-story window at the Morgan County infirmary and was killed. All that is mortal of ex-Gov. Claude Matthews now lie* in the Clinton cemetery. The last sad rites were attended by distinguished men from the capital and every section of the State. , ■ Sam Coburn, colored, employed at the Torey mine, near Clinton, was perhaps fatally burned by a premature explosion of a shot In the mine. The negro was lamping the cartridge when it exploded.
HENRY ENDS HIS LIFE.
Confesses Forgery of the Letter Whitl Accused Dreyfus of S Lieut. Col. Henry of the French arms who was one of the principal accuaMMß Captain Dreyfus, killed himself in Pgjjß .twenty-four hours after his arrest for fijß| gery and perjury. He cut his throat Wteß a razor which he had concealed in his Use when taken to prison. I He had confessed that he forged one'iß the letters upon which Dreyfus was CmH victed. The letter purported to revtfl secrets of the French Government, smß Dreyfus was accused of being in the psil of Germany. Henry admitted to th 2 minister of war that his testimony in thM Zola-Dreyfus trials was false. His cool session was so complete that it virtualW upsets the entire case against Dreyfusj and the Government has virtually promiiM ed a new trial. Henry’s only attempt tM justify his conduct was the statement! that he thought the honor of the French! army required the conviction of Drejrnjß Col. Henry was to be tried-by court-i»*aM tial. - I Col. Henry was attached to the Department when he helped by his for*] gery and perjury to convict Dreyfus, and! he was one of the prominent witnesses who testified unfavorably to M. Zola dur*| Ing the latter’s sensational trial on thal charge of libeling military officials. Thai victory for Zola is an unqualified one. Thai French public is already convinced that! Dreyfus will soon be free. The Government, although refusing to reopen the Dreyfus case, has kept up * persistent Inquiry in secret, and finally 1 obtained evidence connecting Henry with the forged letter. When the proof was sufficient he was brought face to fac* with the minister of war, and soon mads a clean breast of his guilty with the Dreyfus case. The Government is trying to secure more complete evU deuce against other army officers who aro suspected of complicity with Henry,. Major Esterhazy will be retired from th* army on account of his connection with the scandal. During the recent Zola trial Henry accused Col. Picquart of falsifying telegrams. A duel followed, in which Henry was wounded. The next scene occurred in the Chamber of Deputies, where Col. Picquart proclaimed the letter which con-: victed Dreyfus a forgery, and as a result; was arrested, while Henry’s villainy was rewarded by his being appointed Col. Picquart's successor in the intelligence de-, part meat. It is now evident that Henry forged th* letter with the express object of paralyzing Col. Piequart’s efforts to expose Maj. Esterhazy and to get a revision of the Dreyfus cqse. The letter was written lai bad French, a fact which first led to it* being regarded as spurious.
RIOTERS SHOT DOWN.
Galveston Policemen Quell a Mob of' Negro Dock Strikers. The negro ’longshoremen employed by the Mallory line at Galveston, Texas* •truck for an increase of 10 cents per hour, and when a special train from Houston arrived with a lot of imported laborers, a mob of 2,000 men, mostly no.groes, gathered about the Mallory wharf and tried to get at the newcomers. Mayo* Fly called on the mob to halt No attention was paid to him. He fired five shots and two men dropped. The mob then fell back, an ambulance was summoned, and when it arrived the mob agptd advanced. They were armed with clubs and rocks, and a few had pistols. The poUse fffed to force them back by clubbing those sh front, but It did not avail. The officers were being overpowered when the Mayor ortfervd them to fire. They obey- j ed and five men ftp. Then the mob fled. Gov. Culberson asked President McKinley to order the Galveston regiment ror riot duty.
K. OF P. OFFICERS CLEARED.
Next Encampment to Be Held in De- 1 troit in September* 1900. The special committee of the supreme lodge, Knights of Pythias, at Indianapo- < lis submitted a report exonerating the supreme officers of the charge of extravagance and mismanagement made against them. The committee finds that the offi- j sers have “In all things conducted the business of the supreme lodge honestly and for the interest of the order univer* j sally, and that all insinuations to the contrary are without foundation.” Detroit has been selected as the meeting place for 1900.
ODDS & ENDS SPORT
Bob Armstrong and Joe Goddard are to try conclusions shortly in the arena at Philadelphia, and they ought to make a lively bout. One of the many telegrams of condo* - lence received by James J. Corbett after the tragic death of his parents was from John L. Sullivan. It was addressed to George F. Considine, and read as follows I “Give Corbett my sympathy. His friend now and forever." A Toronto writer says that the Cana* dian ball teams are foolish to continue their alliance with American teams and go running off to small Massachusetts and Pennsylvania towns to play before poor, eyowds, urging the formation of a circuit that is exclusively Canadian. The ameteurs of the national wheel* men’s meet at Indianapolis did not like the ruling which made Kramer of Newark the champion, although he had won only one of the championships, while Collett of New Haven had captured three of them, and had a chance to win four when he was thrown from the track by the foul riding of a Detroit entry. The riders say that they do not consider anybody the champion but Collett. There are only 500 professionals of the 3,000 known bicycle riders for cash in th United States registered, and Chairman.. Mott says that the number of amatento of whom he has record number well up toward 10,000. Jim Corbett was passionately fond of his mother. When he beat Sullivan ho expressed >IO,OOO of the money he won to hie mother the next day, to lift a mortgage on her San Francisco property. Like many another loving son he dM not always do Just what hie mother wished, but tot all that his affection for her was deep* seated and eiacera.
