Hammond Times, Volume 2, Number 51, Hammond, Lake County, 18 January 1913 — Page 4

THE TIMES.

January, 18, 19 3.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

Sy Ta Lake Centy Prlatlaa: aad FaV.

lUklmc CBMr.

The Lake Conrtty Times, daily except

Bnnday, "enTered . a second-class mat

ter June as. 10"; The Lake County Timee. dally except Saturday and Sun. day, entered Feb. 1. The Oar; Evening Times, dally except Sunday, entered Oct. i, 1109; The Lake County

Times. Saturday and weekly edition, entered Jan. 80, 1911; The Times, dally!

I I

'THE

kMp-lDAY

TO SLEEP.

A flock of sheep that lelmirely pans hy.

One after one the sound of rain, and

been

MnrmnrinK) the fall of rivers, irlnda

and aeaa.

Smooth flelilM, nklle ahrrts of water.

and pure sky.

except Sunday, entered Jan. 15. 1911, at I rTe houht of all hy tarns, and yet do

the postofflce at Hammond. Indiana,

all tinder the aot of March I, 1179.

Bntered at -tha Postofflce. .Hammond.

lad., as secoad-okMS matter.

FOBEION ADVERTISIlVe OFFICES,

II Reotor Building - - Chicago

PimUCJkTlO'1 OFFICES,

Hammond Build In. Hammond. lad.

TKLEPSOSES, Hammond (private exchange) , Cbl for detMLrtment wasted.)

Ill

lie

Sleeplena, and aoon the mall bird'

melodies

Hut hear first ntterd from my orchard

t rerm

And the first euekoo'a melancholy ery. Even thus last night, and two nlghta

more, I lay.

And could not win thee, Sleep! hy any

tealth;

So do not let me wear tonight aVayi

Without Thee what in ail the morning's

wealth?

Come, neaaed barrier between day and

day.

Dear mother of fresh thoughts and

joyous health! William Wordsworth.

IS GUS REPINING?

Senator Frank Gavit was not both-

Cary Office Tel. 137

East Chicago Office ...Tel. 140-3 Indiana Harbor Tel. H9-M; ISO

vir"htif Tai an.vr

Crown Point .TaL 3 ered tnJs sess!m betting places for

Hegewlsch ............ .......Tel. it I his constituents on the clerical force.

! The democrats took that job off hi3

hands. Gavit enjoys the distinction

of being he lone bull moose of the In

diana legislature. And A. R. Gustaf

son was chairman of the convention

that nominated him. Funny!

Chesterton Tribune.

Aaverttetaa; oMctters will he sent, or

tatee a-tven on application.

U yea mure any trouble getttna; The Tfcne meCMTy the nearest office' and

bare tt promptly remedied.

bia; laymen speak of it as 'fear of consumption," says Karl de Schweinitz, executive secretary of the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Tuberculosis. "A person having this disease shuns consumptives as he would lepers. He will not talk to them; he will not even employ a man who has been cured of tuberculosis. He will

have nothing to do with sanatoria.

This is cruel and foolish. A careful

consumptive is harmless, as' is also

the man who has recovered from this

diesase. Careless consumptives should be sent to tuberculosis hospitals where they will be prevented

from spreading consumption.

"Remember also, that it is not easy

to contract tuberculosis. Consumption is a house disease. An hour or spent with a patient is not enough

to give you the disease. For this

close association with the sufferer is

required. If you live in a clean,

healthy, open-window life and see

that the consumptive does the same.

you need not fear contagion. In ajl the time that consumptives have been treated in the Saranac region not one nurse is known to have ' contracted

tuberculosis.

"Think over this and if you have

phthisiophobia, cure yourself right

now by changing your attltude'toward consumption and consumptives."

PAID UP CTRCULATIOIV

A ITT OTHER TWO HEWS.

PAPERS IN THE CALUMET REGION.

DR. Eliot, of Harvard, says there is

no hell. Evidently he has never en

AHOimiOua coramwaicatlona win I countered a clothesline in the back

not ha noticed, hut others will halyard, on a dark night

printed at cteeretlon. and should he ndyiroaeefl to The Editor. Times, Ham"

itifcttti is yet nope or cnicago.

4j5 J one of its inventors nas perfected a

pie knife that can't be put In the

mouth.

Garfield Lodge, No. 469, F. & A. M.

State meeting: every Friday evening:.

Hammond Chapter No. 117, R. A. M.

Regular stated meeting second and

fourth Wednesday of each month. '

MAY SOME DAY MAIL YOURSELF,

If the uses to which the parcel

post is being devoted, continue to in-

Hammond Council. No. 90, R. S. M. I crease, the ardent loved need no

Stated meetings first Tuesday of eaeh I longer quote in verse to his

enamorata, "were I a little postal card

Hammond Commandery. No. 41. K. A ma myseu to you. He is now

T. Regular stated meeting first and able encompass that achievement

third Monday of .each month. without having to turn himself into

a little postal card. True he may be

CHANGES WHEN MOON CHANGES, obliged to commit suicide to accom

Indianapolis Sun has, changed modate the ,ady' but tnere are hopes

nands again. Hereafter, the paper I " "

will be conducted as an independent very, distant future, mall himself to

into trouble. LAW fakes! How prices do soar up these days. Even the water down in the old Ohio river Is higher.

Up and Down in INDIANA

HELEN GOULD AND HUSBAND-TO-BE HAVE HAD REAL LOVE AFFAIR; THEY'RE TO BE WED SOON IN HER BEAUTIFUL HOME ON HUDSON

POOR BILLY! At the cement show which is now

holding forth at the Coliseum in Chi

cago they are exhibiting a concrete

model of the memorial designed by

eminent sculptors to commemorate

the heroic act of Billy Rugh, Gary's dead newsboy.

Gary and Chicago made a great fuss over Billy to the tune of $86.60

after he had died. Words were

plentiful in praising him but shelling

out for a memorial was a different

thing.

Heroes are never apreclated until they are dead about 200 years. It will be the best to cast the memorial model into the lake.

WELL the legislative hopper is just as big, though it is hard to size up what may be the grist.

GERTRUDE Hoffman has been robbed of all her jewels. Mercy! What will she wear now when she dances "Salome."

publication. This is no particular de

parture from its political attitude In

the past although during the late

campagn it went bull moose Columbus Republican. . . .'

WILL Mr. Taft take a chair at

Yale, or will there be a new one,

made to order?

any part of the country in the flesh

The mailing of the remains of a

Denver clubman lo England has demonstrated the mortuary uses to

which the parcel post may be devoted.

The remains in this case did not make

a bulky package to be sure, having

IT has remained for Turkey to find been cremated first. But still, they

a sure means of stopping warfare. I were "the remains"

That is to quit ngnting. - - it would have been difficult In

deed to have made some of our grandmothers and grandfathers who lived in the time when there was no such thing as postal service, outside of the intermittant and unreliable service providd by stage coach, to have fancied in this ne.riod that their Errand

A PRAISEWORTHY BILL. children would live to see the day

Representative Carter's bill for a when they could have themselves

nine hour working day for the street mailed to their relatives, dead or railway and interurban employe In-1 alive. Such however has come to

troduced by him into the house a day pass.

or two ago, should receive the support of all fair-minded men. While there

la not the neP,l for it in rrmntv A ork man says he can sing

I n ji I i j t.. i

that there was when trailers were . prooauiy no

used, often making it necessary for P0 13 goIng to muster up enough

men to double up on their time, the courage lo aSK n,rajto Prove K

working hours are still too long, fre

quently running up to eleven and a

half hours for one shift

'HEARD BY R U B E

KINtJ MACHINES IX ACCURATE. An examination made during the last few weeks Into election records shows that Allen County's voting machines in at least thirteen precincts failed to register all the votes cast. Only thirteen precincts have so far been investigated, but it is thought that the ma

chines in other precincts will also prove to have been Inaccurate. In the thirteen precincts the poll books show that from nine to sixty-three more votes were cast than were registered and counted by the machines and theso

discrepancies are shown in the official vote. It is intended to urge the county

commissioners to throw out the ma

chines on the ground of inaccuracy. It is alleged that more thanM.OOO votes

cast at the last election In this count were not counted. . DIES OP EXHAl STIOJi. Mrs. Etta Gilford. 6S years old wife

of Benjamin J. Gifford, died at her apartments In the Makever Hotel at 8

o'clock last evening at Rennselaer after an illness of only twenty minutes. Her husband, who suffered a stroke of apoplexy last Saturday morning, was' in an adjoining room. She had been in her usual health, but was exhausted by her constant watchfulness at the side of her huband. PITS BAN ON SOITH BEND. The ban of the Indiana Motion Picture Association has been placed on the proprietors of motion picture houses of South Bend because they have refused to assist in the state-wide campaign to legalize the Sunday opening of theaters. The theater owners in South Bend refused to get into the fight because the South Bend municipal authorities permit the places of amusement to operate on the Sabbath, and for that reason they decided to let well enough alone and keep on neutral ground. HYDROPHOBIA CAUSES DEATH. Maude Carson, 18 years old, daughter of Policeman Andrew Carson, of New Albany, is dead at her father's homo

from the effects of a dog bite. About ten days ago the family pet, a French poodle, bit her on the hand, but the wound was not thought serious, though the dog was killed. Wednesday Uie girl became delirious, growing violent

at the sight of water, and yesterday morning she died. Her father and a

brother were also bitten by the pup, but no symptoms of illness' have mani

fested themselves in their cases.

DEFENDS SELF WITH KSIFB. During a quarrel about a game of

marbles Meredith Wollam, 12 years old.

was badly cut by Glenn Markle, 12 years old. son of Mr. and Mrs. O. C.

Markle of Jasonvllle. Young Markle,

who asserts self-defense, used a pocket , ! M . 1 l 1 - 1

Knue, niuKiiig i luur-iucn eiasn in nisi victim's abdomen. The wounded boy J

ms, recover. ,..- i

I&- W?' t Yj s. y

A PROPHECY.

It is probable the street car com-

We are much interested in learn-

panles will benefit as largely as do ing that this Is to be a great year

the men. If the bill becomes a law, in

more cheerful service and possibly in

a reduced number of accidents. Con

ductors who are employed too long in

a somewhat nerve-racking business are liable to become Irritable, and motormen who stick to the controller for too many hours on a stretch, are . prone to absent mindedness. Grouchy conductors are liable to

put a street car company "in bad" with the public, and while doubtless tome conductors are so constituted naturally, it is also likely that irritability in some is due to. being obliged to push through crowded cars, and being otherwise on a nervous strain for many hours each day. A moment's forgetfulness on the part of a motorman Is liable to lead

to serious consequences, and these

moments increase geometrically when the men are obliged to work to long.

for red-headed women

After our own Congressman J. H. Peterson down at the Hub gets through announcing his postoffice appointment for Hammond there will be a lot of red-headed men around here.

UbKMAMs are; bragging about a

machine one of them has invented which can do everything but talk.

Well not mentioning any names, wo have thing over here that can do

nothing but talk.

MISS Virginia Brooks will probably get quite a little more material now ' for her lecture tour.

THE days have begun to lengthen but the nights are still long enough to give the footpads and the burglars plenty of time to ply their trade. And Home of them don't even need dark-

S3.

JOIN THE NEW CLUB.

Sir George Birdwood, a tough old Englishman, who has seen eighty winters says that the best rule for living long is to have no rules at all.

These principles govern his life: Do not think about your health.. Enjoy yourself as much as possibl Ignore dietary tables. Eat whenever you feel inclined.

Learn by experience what suits

you.

In modern slang we should refer to

old George as one of the happy mem bers of the "I Should Worry Club."

PHTHISIOPHOBIA. "A new disease has been discover' ed. Physicians call it Phthisiopho

GREAT- CAESAR! Southern man wants to ship a baby by parcel post. If this thing gets contagious the stork will be using the same method of delivery. NEW comet reported discovered in Australia. Can it be that the lights of

the Gary steel mills are tickling the

skies of the antipodes?

SEEMS kind of lonesome not to see

T. R.'s name in the poipers any more.

AS far as we can make it out that

eminent Whiting statesman, the Hon.

Frank Gavit, stands prominently in the

foreground of the Indiana senate as a sort of Moll Pitcher standing by the deserted bull moose cannons.

"AIR LINE TO GIVE NEW MILK

SERVICE." Times' headline. A sort of

aerated milk,, we presume.

BETTER STICK TO THE OLD HORSE

SHAY, DOC.

(Mulberry correspondence to the Laf

ayette Morning Journal.)

Monday evening while Dr. Kent was making a professional call at the home of John Sheetz, nine

miles in the country, he met with a painful accident. While cranking his

automobile the engine backfired, breaking his right arm at the wrist.

Dr. Kent drove home, guiding the

machine with his left hand.

DOC MACKEY of Hobart, who also broke his arm in a similar manner

after lie had passed up his faithful old

Dobbin for a Buick 40, should wire

sympathy to the Lafayette doc.

OH. yes! TTie vice president has some patronage. Mr. Marshall can appoint a private secretary and maybe he can recommend the postmaster at Indianapolis. , GOTHAM chauffeurs who fall off the water wagon will have to get into the patrol wagon and then pay a $500 fine. NOTE that the Hon. John B. Peterson has gone down to Washington again. No doubt John B. has gone down to gram off a good seat before his fellow congressmen get on the job. YES. IT IS SOMEWHAT DISCOXCERTIXti EVER BEEN THERE f (Laury Jeen Libbey in the Chicago Tribune.) . One thing which a man would find it had to forgive aften marriage is to find that the wild bloom on her cheeks which he so greatly admired was not nature's own; or he might -. be quite stunned to discover that the raven hued tresses of the girl whom lie had fallen in love with turned out to be just plain red. He had not imagined himself as falling in love with an auburn haired maiden, yet he wished that she had told him the truth about it. He liked her far better without artifices of any kind, and she was far prettier in his eyes. LIKE railroad men, aviators who take a drop too much are liable to get

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Helea Gould, Fialer Shepard. and Mlas Gould'a country place Hadsea. -' According to all the reports, Helen Gould and Finley G. Shepard, who are to be married next Wednesday, have fallen In love just like ordinary people. They are a very devoted couple, an-3 since the announcement of the engagement Misa Gould has had Mr. Shepard transferred from St. Louis to New York In order that they may be together. Shepard Is employed by the Gould lines, and Miss Gould met him first in a business way. The picture shows Miss Gould's beautiful country place at Tarry to wn-on-Hurison. It Is her that the rlwpi wedding ceremony will take place.

trations of Presidents of both parties. Congratulations to Congressman E. S. Candler of Mississippi, SI years old today. Olga Nethersole, the famous emotional actress, 43 years old today. Seth Low, former president of Columbia University, 63 years old today.

William T. Foster, president of Reed 1

College, Portland, Ore., 34 years old today.

fight valiantly my husband and sons, j this statement by way of a parenthesis. Succumb, die but don't retreat. Setran unostentatiously and uneenshly. for put (farewell) " there were thousands of such mothers Such are the actions and encourage- that memorlable day of departure at ments not only of the plain, but also of , Chicago. I pit ed the poor mall man.

the Intelligent Balkan women

V-"

The Day in HISTORY

"THIS DATE IX HISTORY" January 19. 1807 General Robert E. Lee, commander of the Confederate armies, born. Died Oct. 12, 1870. 1813 Sir Henry Bessemer, inventor of the process for converting cast Iron into cast steel, born. Died March 15, 1898. 1814Henry Clay resigned as Speaker of the House of Representatives.

1818 First territorial legislature of

Alabama met at St. Stephens. 1839 City of Aden taken by the British.

1861 Juaree entered the City of Mexico, und was re-elected Presl- " dent. . .

I""" "TH IS is MY S6TtffWPn!AY

Baroa Bagot. Baron Bagot, who is the head of an old Staffordshire family mentioned in Domesday Book, was born at Bllthfield, January 19, 1857, and was educated at Eton. He succeeded to the title and estates on the death of his father in 1887. At his estate at Bllthfield there is a famous art gallery, and one of the

"THIS DATE IX HISTORY" Jinan lS.

1797 Weekly mall service established most valuable collections of historical

the United States

..naalnirlnal QrhlvAfl In t Vl O wArlil

ana e-"-'e-" - - .Lord Bagot was a lord-ln-waltlng to

betwen Cartnd a.

1S04 Charles Nesblt, first president of -ueen Victoria and aide-de-camp to

Dickinson College, died in Carlisle. ln UKe OI rgyii. men me .arqu,s Pa. Born In Scotland, Jan. 21. 1736. of orne' wnen he was Governor Gen1 . M . J T- 1 (AO Tin nrn

1S13 Americans took Frenchtown "l v-d"it,,a" J" li,vo

(Monroe. Mich.) from the British. j marrlea 3,183 May. aaugnxer or 1814 Jonathan Russell of Rhode Is- the late Henry May of Baltimore Lady land appointed first United States Bagot secured a divorce in 1907.

minister to Norway and Sweden. I 1816 Congress imposed duties on

household furniture- and gold and silver watches. 1871 King William of Prussia proclaimed German Emperor.

"THIS IS MY 57TH BIRTHDAY" Wlllia L. Meere. Willis L. Moore. Chief of the United

States Weather Bureau,

VOICE OF p"e O F JL E

BALKAN WOMEN AXD WAR. Editor Times: Daily we read In our

whom many journals how heroicly the Balkan

believe will be the next Secretary of mothers dispatched their sons, wives Agriculture, was. born in Scranton, Pa., their husbands, sisters their brothers Jan. 18, 1866. His education was re- and fathers to fight the Turk in the ceived principally In the public schools present their holy war. All this reof Blnghampton, N. Y. Many years ago minds us of the ancient songs of

he entered the Signal Corps (now the Homer. Shoud her son happen to be

Weather Bureau), and rose through successive grades to local forecast official In Chicago, in 1891. He has been at the head of the Bureau since 1895, when President Cleveland appointed him to that position. His efficiency in

"refused" to serve, the mother laments woefully: "What did I bear you for?" If the husband is refused, his wife turns away with disgust; but on the

contrary, he being "passed" in company families,

with her sons, her face illuminates

there arise com

uals as well as a

prevent being who constantly

hy the worMan

not a doifansXi

orgU

the office is best Indicated to the pub- beaming with pride and consequent lie by the fact that he has remained pleasure. She does not shed tears nor there ever since, through the adminls- complains, but urges, "On to 'he Turk

This Week's News Forecast

Washington. D. C, Jan. 18. Hearings on tariff revision will be continued before the House Ways and Means Committee. The principal schedules to

be taken up during the week are those relating to agricultural products and provisions, cotton manufactures, flax, hemp and 'jute, and manufactures. In close connection with the tariff hearings will be the annual convention of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, which will meet in Washington Tuesday for a three days' session. The meeting will discuss important matters affecting the relation of business to legislation. The convention will be featured by a banquet at which President Taft, Speaker Champ Clark and Dr. Charles W. Eliot of Harvard University will make addresses. Tuesday will be the one hundredth anniversarw of the birth of John C. Fremont, soldier, explorer, governor of California and Arizona ant! first candidate of the Republican party for President of the United States. The twenty-second annual Negro Fatmers' Conference will meet at Tuskegee Institute Wednesday for a session of two days. "Agricultural credit" and "Finances of the negro public school" will be the principal topics of discussion. Delegates appointed by numerous States, both North and South, will meet in Philadelphia Thursday to take up the final plans for the coming celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the battle of Gettysburg.

A conference of Progressive of Wisconsin. Michigan. Minnesota and the Dakotas is to be held in St. Paul Friday, with former Senator Albert J. Beveridge of Indiana as the chief speaker. The Union of American Hebrew Congregations will hold its twenty-third convention in Cincinnati, beginning Monday. A feature of the convention will be the dedication of the new buildings of the Hebrew Union College. Other matters that will figure more or less prominently in the news of the week will be the senatorial contests in several of the States, the eighth National Western Stock Show in Denver, the convening of the Nevada legislature, the inauguration of Governor Colquitt of Texas for a second term, the opening of the American Chess Masters' tournament in New York City, and the fifth International Corn Exposition and annual meeting of the American Breeders' Asociation in Charleston, S. C

The intelligent woman the world over reads such reports wth. a mixture of amazement and respect. She

imagines her inability of like hatred

towards the usurper, if not murderer of her nation, a bitter enemy though he be. She was taught to view a war as something horrid, of which modern men do not approve, but condemn. Because of like feeling, the Intelligent woman is a propagator of peace. Most modern men Join her, so does the writer. They as a unit -discard he murder in war as black deeds unbecoming a cultured being in theory.

But the "practical today" is just the same as it was in the remote and

primitive ancient times. In , practice

amongst Individ

ongst nations, which

ttled amicably. He

ves" Is considered

rge as a coward, if

r nation meets

lrfci"esuits." A nation should neTt per

mit nay. It dare not to be robbed; It is compatable with her national honor, to

regain at all hazards If she must that of

which she ever was deprived. A nation that does not revenge her usurper would be classed amongst cowards and tenderfoots. But that nation that rises in her might to offset and revenge wrongs inflicted, receives a halo, be

cause of her heroism.

Countless ages may come and pass

before the morals of peace amongst In

dividuals In theory, shall be adopted In practice amongst nations if ever that

millenium materialises.

Under present conditions it is as true today as it was yesterday (will tomor

row ever change it?) and so accepted That might la right. The "empire'

turns victory' over to him. who has the

most powerful fist, that is not just,

because wrong. The conquerer in war, is the victor. He claims and gets all the right. The fate of a nation is not de

cided according to ber Inalienable

rights, but by her military might and chance that is as just as a duel. But in

practice.

In practice a woman cannot refrai

from evincing her admiration and re

spect for those, who shed their blood, sacrificing lives in the defense of their country. In practice she hartors In her heart an innocent love for like heroes. Like her sitsers in ancient times and nations, the woman of today despise a coward and a weakling, but loves men of valor, intrepidity and pride, who will not suffer, but fight off humiliation and wrong doings to their loved, ones bravely defending their wives and

when need presents Itself.

The admiration that the pre-historic woman manifested towards her manwarrior, her defender against wild

beasts and hostile clans, is ever as firmly and deeply planted in her soul, i though the emn of the present ceased to be mere warriors and defenders of human society, their vocations having changed accordingly. The present Balkan struggle renewed the womanls ferver in adoration of newly born heroes.

Behold a woman educated at some of the Parisian institutions considered as a very cultured being; that very worn- j an in a moment of a national war, will forget all the grand and ennobling j theories of peace, but will view her ( husband or sweetheart with enthusi- : asm, as he marches oft to fight the enemy, to right and revenge the bloody ! wrongs bo long endured by her motheicounty. She Is proud and feeling; happy of having been loved by him. j discarding, if not belittling those left ! behind, because of their needs to per-I form such home duties, without which : the nation would suffer famishing per- j chance, of hunger. That mother whose I son was detained from joining the war. I

is filled with shame because of him and

herself to have born such a weakling. That is the predominating feeling of all mothers, be they Servian, Montenegrin or Bulgarian, and placed In like predicament no doubt American mothers' would harbor like feelings, for no woman, no matter of what clan, supersedes In valor, self-denial and love that of a true American mother. I know so of experience, when the writer's wife

accompanied her first born son, bidding

Mothers Impatiently waiting threa times a day for his arrival, questioning: "Any word from my son?" Some there are who ridicule that admiration of the Balkan, women of to

day, they manifest towards their brave

sons and warriors, who so desperately

and valiantly are fighting off that

spiky yoke," with which that Infernal,

brutal miscreant Turk has Invested

them, and burdened their kin. That task, after S00 years of suspense and

hellish suffering, was received for the present generation, hence the Joy of those mothers, wives and sisters, of

their ability to furnish warriors, who can and who are doing that godly work

so nobly and valorously. The world, all women and men joining do and must bless - suchmothers and wives, who tearlessly, but their hearts overfilled with adoration, sent forth such caravan of heroes. They are the godesses, encircled at the eoft-satlned purple shrine

of justice, unfurling the long wished

Nor" are the Balkan women void of love towards their warriors that love which Is the first dress of Immortality, bringing; heaven to earth, full of purest joy, though severest of pain to those -bereft. It Is only out of tnat solemn sorrow, planted on the eorpse-bedecked battlefields, so copiously sprayed with the crimson, that eventually will bud and grow up the long coveted, because deserved, independence to their posterity, who shall everlastingly enjoy the balmy breezes, saturated with immaculate freedom, of which their tortured fathers only dared to dream "The United States of Balkan." Who dares to wlthold this their sacred hope? Not Turkey, nor the decelt of the treacherous powers. The world moves. MAX KIRCHMAN, Gary.

Popular Actress j

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him farewell such as only s mother can1 X'TjjjJQSJl'Zjboft 31) and will, to fight Spaniards. I makc.Tj0fe7r,Kocic7"gf fh Cnlnryt

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