Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 27, Number 37, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 March 1897 — Page 1

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VOL. 27—NO. 37.

Jos Gilbert

ON THE QUI YIVE.

II Governor Moant had to appoint a board of education to supervise audi matters in Terre Haute, he would probably appoint a polyglot one. At least that is borne out by the rumor of his decision as police commissioners under the new metropolitan law here. The latest rumor suggests Sidney B. Davis, Dr. W. O. Jenkins and George C. Buntin as the trio who will audit the pay roll of the blue coats and supervise the reporting of number of lights out, as well as grant special permits for operation of hieronimous and green table layouts. It is said that the governor did not get his inspiration for these appointments from any one fountain. He selected Judge Davis because both the governor and the judge were elders in the Presbyterian church and somewhat related by marriage. The fact tbat the governor and the judge stood on one foot together in the little Sunday-school room tip in the country and recited the shorter catechism for the edification of their elders is sufficient to account for the first appointment, and it is popularly presumed that this member of the board at least will sustain the dignity and moral force of the police administration, notwithstanding the fact that the other two fellows are supposed to be royal good fellows and notable to tell the shorter catechism from a tandem bicycle. Dr. Jenkins gets his appointment by reason of the fact that Senator Early insisted that the governor grant this one request. The doctor has been a member of the old police board for some time and if there will be any change in the methods of the department it certainly is not expected. Mr. Buntin is the letter in the algebraic problem as to the disposition of the new police board. If is equal to '2 then Mr. Buntin is "de whole t'ing." It is supposed that on the question of charities and corrections Mr. Buntin will stand with Mr. Davis, but on questions which it would not do to discuss in the Sunday-school room Mr. Buntin will probably side with I)r. Jenkins. No element in the city need feel that it has been overlooked. The liberal element have certainly been well taken care of and the church people cannot complain. If a crisis in moral and civic affairs should come the attitude of the police board would certainly be worth noticing.

When the Opera House rolled up into smoke and fiame hist July the great multitude of spectators would have refused to believe that another July would see that corner a tunas of lire eaten rubbish. And while all kuew that the fire was a great reaching it would become as the months passed by. The deserted ruins at Fourth and Main have injured business in the neighborhood. The corner has become an eye sore and property has depreciated on its account. The public is surprised at the attitude of the owners of the comer but as it is none of the public's business, the public should conceal its surprise and mind its own affairs. The situation will be generally understood when it is known that the Opera House owners hold an insurance for their rental and the insurance companies are compelled to pay the monthly rentals to the owners until the expiratiou of the lease upon the premises. If the lease was for a long term of years yet, it would pay the insurance companies to re construct the building but as the lease is but for a short time the indenmiflers must, grin and pay their monthly rental. You do not blame the Opera House owners, do you. for letting that pile of blackened brick rest safely on the ground when they are receiving several hundred dollars a mouth for it and saving insurance and free from fear of earthquake?

But the lack of au Opera House is a farreaching loss. Terre Haute is about to lose that prince of landlords, Chas. Baur, of the Terre Haute House, simply because he is dis gust til with a {withy shown in the town toward a feature which help* to build up a town as much as a dozen factories. He has received flattering offers from other cities and will accept one which will take him to manage the finest hotel property in Indiana.' Indianapolis is a good hotel town but Indianapolis is a good theater town. It, has two first class theaters, one popular theater and oue second class variety theater. They run day and night. They bring troupes from all quarters of the globe and make grfcat use of the talent of local musicians. They attract strangers to the city. They add names to hotel registers and put dollars in boardinghouse keeper's pocket#. They demaud more meat in the butcher's stalls and more eggs in the grocer's wagons. They make trade in the silk stores finer and they boom the business of kid gloves and fancy goods. In fact there are very few trades or occupations which do not directly or indirectly feel the benefit of a first class Opera House.

It is enough to make our old friend Ginger the mule, turn over In his bone yard grave to think of his master who used to go forth in haste with bills and paste now being compelled to walk leisure urvly around putting up patent medicine signs and disfiguring nature generally. Ami there Is our old friend, "Dick" Moore, who kept his presses hot day and night with theatrical posters and date figure*, he is actually compelled to subsist upon the gratuities offered him by broken down corporations Uke the Vandal is Railroad. Them frivolous thrust* are only meant to cover up the merioasness of the situation If Terre Haute lose* a few more men like landlord Baur we will wish that the

Board of Trade would drop all ideas of securing factories here—which we are always being promised in profusion, but alway alow in securing—for the next five years and bend its energies in the direction of a modern Opera Honse.

Charley Baur hasn't got the Denison honse at Indianapolis at this writing, but the chances are such that it is almost sure that at this time next week he will have it, and the Denison will have a man at its head "who knows how to run a hotel. In the past few years, since Vigo county came into prominence as a factor in state politics, hundreds of Terre Haute people have visited Indianapolis on account of politics, and the majority of them have stopped at the Denison hotel, because tbat is the head center of political affairs in Indianapolis, Democratic as jrell-as Kepublican. The thousands of df^li^Bft. that have been spent at the Denisori%tjpl for political reasons alone, ta'saft nothing of the regular business that belongs to it from such a city as Terre Haute, would make a bank roll that at this time would seem very attractive. It is safe to say tfefit there was never one of these patrons who paid a bill at the Denison without swearing to himself, perhaps in the hearing of others, that he would never patronize it again. He did not go back because he felt that he was going to get satisfaction, but because urgent rea sons put him there to be in the "push." That kind of a feeling makes no business for a hotel. When Charley Baur takes the hotel things will be different. He will run it like he runs the Terre Haute house, and people will go out of their way to spend money with him, as hundreds of persons in the course of a year go out of their way to spend Sunday at the Terre Haute house, because they know they will get the proper treatment there. WThen he took the Terre Haute house, Q. V., along with a whole lot of other people, wondered what he was going to do with it. He knew at that time, according to popular opinion, about as much about running a hotel as Q. V. would know about refereeing the Corbett-Fitzsimmons prize fight. But he soon developed the fact that he knew what he wasabout. There isno better hotel in the country than the Terre Haute. It has #0-pjitation far and wide, and that reputatJ will be a help to him when he takes hold of the Denison. This simply proves what Q. V. has always maintained, that when you want anything first-class done in a business, political, artistic or financial way, the place to get the talent to do it right is to call on the state of Terre Hante.

One of the dailies, in a wedding notice this week, after describing the bride's costume at some length said the groom "wore tti /rose bqutonflfllxe." nothing more."

"Only this and

People often wonder how the newspapers get the items frequently printed about the great amounts of life insurance carried by certain prominent and substantial citizens. The items come from the life insurance journals, which are supposed to be familiar with the large life insurers, and are meant to advertise the companies. The items are not always correct, however. For instance in The Mail last week an item was printed, copied from the Spectator, in which a list of well known names was printed, together with the amount of life insurance carried by each. In one case it was said a very prominent citizen carried life insurance to the amount of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, but it is stated on excellent authority, to be totally wrong. As a matter of fact the gentlemen referred to does not carry oue hundred and fifty thousand dollars' worth, nor the fourth of it.

"Wanted—A solution for the Terr® Haute Metropolitan Police puzzle that I am now trying to work out. All communications will be treated with confidence, and a handsome reward will be paid the man, woman or child that will furnish a solution that will please everybody. Address, J. A. M., State House, Indianapolis, Ind.

The revenue and postoffice situations do not seem to be clearing up any. Mr. Fil beck filed his petition and recommenda tions in Washington yesterday, and they are said to have been the most formidable presentation ever made by a candidate for a similar office. It includes county and city officials all over that state, prominent men in business circles, G. A. R. officials, etc. It is assorted that the man with the best chances for the place is A. S. Peacock, of Attica, who has behind him the personal friendship of both Senator Fairbanks and Congressman Charley Landis, of his district. Judge D. W. Henry is not a candidate for the place in the ordinary acceptation of that term, but he hasn't the Sparkts^svtitude to refuse it if it should be offered him, of which there is said to be strong probabilities, Alex, I* Crawford, of this city, who is understood to be an active candidate for the position, leaves next week for Washington to see what his chances are. He has already made two pilgrimages to Canton In his own interests.

"All is quiet on the Potomac" in tlje pmtoffice fight, and there's the trouble. Congressman Frtris was reported to be on his way home to investigate the claims of the local applicants, but a later dispatch announced that he had given up his trip, and as he is staying on the banks of the Potomac and saying not a word the people here feel that they can complain of the peculiar quietness alongside that more or less classic stream.

The annual meeting of those interested in the Social Settlement was held at Judge Taylor's office Tuesday night. A most favorable showing was made of the good work that is being done by this worthy institution.

mmmam

TEBBE HAUTE, END., SATURDAY EVEIpNG, MARCH 13, 1897.

ABOUT WOMEN.

Wearing rubbers over hew shoes, thereby making the leather dry and hard and easily cracked.

Preserves opened, forgotten and left to sour. Soap left in dish pans to dissolve and waste.

Orange peel throw away (save them for kindling). Bits of meat thrown away.

Carpet brooms used to scrub with. Throwing away tea leaves (save them for sweeping dark carpets coarse table salt should be used for light carpets).

An interested maiden aunt asked recently, say a writer in Harper's Bazar, "My dear, why, do you suppose, are children always better behaved when their mothers are not around? I've noticed it often, and heard people comment upon it numberless times. There are my own little nieces and nephews, for example, as sweet little cherubs as ever lived when they come to make a visit to me and I have them to myself. But when their mother is of the household, then see the difference. Arthur becomes a whiner and Clara is disobedient: Fred misbehaves at the table in spite of his mother's cautionary looks and ejaculations, and Mildred is saucy. The altera tion is absurd as well as pitiful. I feel sorry for mother and children alike, and glad to see the last of them. "I asked Arthur one day," went on the maiden aunt, confidentially, "why he was such a good boy when he was alone with me. I put the question as diplomatically as I could. •"He looked at me thoughtfully a moment, and then he said: 'Yon see, Aunt Sadie, I'm afraid of you but I love you, too,' he said, quickly, for he was afraid, the darling, that he'd hurt my feelings. "Perhaps it's true," concluded the maiden aunt, "that children do not stand in the same healthy awe of their mothers as they do of other people. Perhaps mothers are so fearful their children won't behave well that their very anxiety puts restless, rebellions thoughts into the child's mind. I have often thought that a child in his mother's presence becomes too conscious of himself, his manners, and his conduct. The constantly watchful eye of his mother Is felt too keenly by the child. "Sometimes I think that mothers don't let their children alone enough to give them a chance to forget themselves and be good without thinking about it. "But, bless me, if I say any more, you'll come down upon me with your 'old maids' children,' so I'll stop."

Some women, especially those who are popular with the lords of creation, declare unhesitatingly that one man friend is worth a dosen fetnlninea, and that a man at least is not spiteful or

The old adage that "a woman canthrow brighter burner often drive completely out of the window with a teaspoon more

Buying articles because they are cheap, and will come in some time. n. Allowing whalebones to wear through the waist, thereby ruining an elegant gown.

Wearing the same clothing each week as it comes from the wash. Leaving a silk umbrella in a case, thereby causing it to split in the folds.

Turning skirts wrong side out when hanging them tip. Placing brushes with the bristles side up.

Failing to sew glove buttons on before wearing, or mending them before cleaning. Sweeping the house' in the usual morning dress with head uncovered.

Pieces of cake and bread allowed to dry and mold, then thrown away. Failing to dry a box of soap for several days before using it.

Dried fruits left uncovered and consequently allowed to become wormy. Dish towels used for holders.

Sheets used for ironing tables. Napkins used for dish towels. Towels used for wash rags. The face of flat irons used to crack nuts on.

Cold potatoes allowed to sour. Sour milk thrown away. The kerosene can left open to evaporate. Cold fish thrown away. Cheese permitted to mold. Lemons left to dry. Fat put in earthen dishes. The mustard cruse remaining open to dry.

Canned goods left exposed in cans. Bread pan left with dough sticking to it. Left-over vegetables thrown away. v)s Rice and sugar wasted in the handling. Too much starch made and thrown out. Pails and washtubs 16it dry to fall to pieCQg. a,j,

Silver spoons and kitchen. Tin dishes improperly dried when washed.

away

than a man can bring in on a shovel" con-! But this, ethers will answer, relates only tains more truth than poetry. A large income can be wasted with surprising celerity by the continuance of little leaks that seem too insignificant to be noticed individually. Many a woman is ignorantly a participant in rearing and protecting these little foxes that spoil the household vine. A partial list of some of these little wastes is:

Pieces of lace and ribbons thrown away. Making the sewing woman wait in the house idle or doing fancy work because you have neglected to get materials before her arrival.

forks used in the

Mops and brooms not hung up. Tea and coffee pots neglected. Corks left out of vinegar and molasses j«gs.

•f

I

Then, agidfc, other women, with equal force, remptd one of the proverbial fickleness of nati, and how a new face and a

and time-honored friendship,

to a loVe Affair, and naturally when the little gdfl arrives on the scene, all such cold affairs ts friendship must find lodgings elsewhere.

Probably, like all assertions either way, the truth* lies between the two extremes. Some il$enare particularly calculated for friends. Infect, in that capacity are loyalty anjfl honor themselves. They never talk of or discuss their friends they are only too Willing and too ready so serve a woman t&ey really care for, and are always on*hand in trouble and in sorrow with ready sympathy and help. But friendil^p of this kind naturally demands much, and no one will waste such Platonic devotiOEj without expecting an equal amount* of friendship and loyalty in return.

THE"MO»EL" BABY.

A Philadelphia Doctor Tells what ,.V?-'$C^nstitutes a "Model" Baby. Tliere were 726 babies born in the city of Terre Haute last year, an 1 it can be established by the testimony of at least 145*2 parents that but one of these was a model baby.flt will interest to them, however, to knOW what the doctors call a model. A lecturer before the Jefferson Medical College of Philadelphia, thus describes what fie calls a mcdel: model baby is never flabby or never soft, but whether boy or girl {^certain elastic firmness which is portant indication of natural ment and good health. The color ild's body may vary with its combut the quality of firmness in its $ indispensable to proper nutrition. For tffe first few days of life sleep is by far the nflost important of all the conditions whicn have to do with the child's growth and pfcbsperity. Second to this is food, and third comes exercise. "Sufficient warmth, the absence of bright light br of any disturbing factor, the absencesf hunger or of pain, are all necessary. Foodfmust most nearly resemble the natural food of the infant, its mother's milk. The model baby of the model mother requires nothing else for nourishment. Thq temperature sense of the model baby is a^ itn portant faculty too little considered. The healthy infant before birth lives in a temperature of 100 degrees or over and is often rudely ushered into a world, which, by comparison, is cold, indeed. The importance of heat in promoting the comfort ofmfauts is best appreciated when we tftjjgjfftfrliTrfM* yr?^nf children by' 'feftifrcial' heat. We observe when children are within the incubator that a temperature of 90 at least is requisite for the child's comfort during the first week after birth. Heat must not be confounded with impure air, and the temperature of 90 is only comfortable to the child when air is constantly circulating through the incubator. The model baby needs no incubator, but its temperature must be maintained by the judicious use of woolen clothing. ____________

of the

tissti

THE OLD, OLD STORY.

Youth and Love fell out one day. Said Youth to Love: "I'll go my way And leave you broken hearted, I'll go through life without your aid I'll neither gaze on man or maid"—

And foolishly they parted. Off went haughty Youth alone He hummed a tune In morry tone

And never looked behind him While Love, at home, was sad and sore, And longed for merry Youth once more—

Alas! she could not find him! But Youth had not been walking long Before he hushed his merry song—

His heart was full of sorrow. He found it hard to stay away From Love, If only for a day-

He came back on the morrow. For Love and Youth apart would die Like flowers without dew or sky—

They'd fade if they would sever! As long as there is tide andjjtlme In every land, in every clime Youth and Love will be together. —Jos. P. Galton. In Philadelphia Times.

AMUSEMENTS.

OLIVER AND KA.TK BYBON.

Oliver Hyron supported by Kate Byron and their company of comedians will appear at the Avenue theatre next Tuesday and Wednesday evenings, with Wednesday matinee in the new romantic comedy drama, "The Turn of the Tide," written by David Higgins, author of "The Plunger." The piece is full of startling situations with plenty of comedy creating roars of laughter during the four acts of the play.

The sentimental position of the piece tells a beautiful story of love and revenge. Oliver Byron as Vandeleur is apart well suited for him. Kate Byron as Peggy, an Irish character, in which she has won much fame. The company is an excellent one. There is plenty of singing and dancing, and the piece is well mounted with new and beautiful scenery.

H. Hulman, Sr., has made a proposition to the Wabash Cycling club to build it a modern club honse on Ohio street, between Ninth and Tenth, to rent for $1,300 a year. The proposed building is three stories in beighth and will have a fourteen lap mile track in the hasement. The designs are by Vrydagh & Son.

The trial of Elmer Rumbley for killing flrmin Brill at Lock port last year, will

PEOPLE AND THINGS.

The greatest dandy in the world is Prince Albert of Thurn. This fastidious young man attires himself in anew suit every day, enough yearly to keep twenty experienced workmen going, and to run up a bill of $15,000. Each suit of wearing apparel is highly perfumed with attar of roses at $25 an ounce. He wears no less than 1,000 neckties during a year, being an average of three a day. A laundry employing twelve people is kept specially for washing his soiled linen, which he never wears more than twice, and his cast-off boots number 200 pairs a year. The cigarette bill of this highly-scented young gentleman reaches the respectable total of $1,000 per annum, and the different sports he engages in, including hunting, shooting, fishing, golfing and bicycling, cost him more than $75,000.

Col. John S. Mosby was in Washington, Thursday, to see McKinley inaugurated and incidentally to call on Gov. Grout, of Vermont. Mosby says that but for him Grout would never have won the the gov ernorsbip. He explains: "At Miskell's near Dranesville, on the 1st of April, I was surprised, with 65 men, by 150 "Vermont cavalry. We mounted under fire, charged, and soon killed a number and captured nearly all the rest. Among those left streched on the field for dead was J^ieut. Grout, of Vermont, and he was reported in the list of killed. He was, in fact, very badly wounded, but lived to see his wounds awaken enthusiasm in the late Vermont gubernatorial'conventiou, which nominated him by acclamation and elected him by many times the usual majority. So his election was the work of Mosby's men."

The New Orleans Times-Democrat says: "Young Creelman, of the crew of the battleship Maine, whose heroism in leaping into the ocean in a storm to save a shipmate has been printed and reprinted all over the country, is having a fine time in this port. In special recognition of his splendid courage his officers allow him more than the usual halves, and he spends a good deal of time ashore. He finds himself not less of a hero in the estimation of the general public than iD the esteem of his shipmates, and it is little less than remarkable that his head is not turned by the warmth with which he is greeted by every new acquaintance. It i9 not, however, and he gives always the simple explanation that 'there wasn't anything else to do, when he saw 'Mits' in the water. His deportment ashore, despite the many offers of customary hospitality, is such as to commend him to all, and reflects credit upon that branch of the government of which he is an, humble but at the same time very conspicuous member at present. One Of his shipmates was overheard say* ing on Canal-st: 'I've been at sea over 25 years now and I've never seen the like of what that boy did."'

DONT'S TO SLENDER WOMEN.

What They Must Do to Look Picturesque Yet Not Too Thin.

Don't walk to excess a short walk will be beneficial, but long walks are flesh reducing.

Don't wear black black has a tendency to make anyone look slender. Light clothes are the most becoming.

Don't have your lingerie too close fitting: have your underskirts gathered around the hips and a full front in your underwaist is good.

Don't strive for long-waisted effects or use girdles the longer you make yourself look the thinner you will appear.

Don't stay up too late at night get at least nine hours' good sleep. A woman needs more sleep than a man,, and nothing keeps her in good condition like lots of sleep.

Don't wear stripes: checks, plaids and horizontal effects are better for thin women. They should strive for becoming, deceiving effects if they study art in dressing at all.

Don't forget that a well-rounded figure makes you look younger and is considered a mark of beauty. The starchy foods, massage, moderate exercise, rest and sleep will produce this.

Don't wear a large, broad-rimmed hat— it looks out of proportion, especially as the face of a slender girl is usually small. A moderate sized or small hat will be found much better.

Don't fail to have your gowns made with an eye to hiding the fact that you are too slender. Full waists, fancy fronts and bouffant effects are best, while draped skirts or very full ones will detract from your slender appearance.

THE PENNY HABIT.

It Is Considered One of the Worst Indulged In by Parents

In a paper on "The Ethics of Money Spending," read recently before a woman's clnb, the penny habit was noted and condemned. It referred to the stream of pennies which flows almost perennially in some famiies from parents and guardians' pockets to the fingers of the children. Most American children have too much spending money. Even the boys and girls of very poor homes have, while the weekly wage is being earned, an unwarrantable proportion of pennies to waste. Money got thus without effort and in unlimited flow gives a child a false or rather no appreciation of its value, and a sharp lesson later in life, a necessity. It was conceded in the discussion which followed the paper that the task of teaching a child the true value of money without making him a little miser or a too shrewd penny-getter was a difficult one. Perplexed mothers were urged to work out the problem according to the

TWENTY-SEVENTH YEi.R.

individual needs and characteristics of.

their children and certainly not turn their backs upon it beeause of its intricacies.1"^*S The method in most English homes is to be recommended. An English child hns LtA« allowance, threepence, or six cents, a wwk being considered ample in very well-to-do families. In addition he has certain perquisites, a market penny on market day always in the country home, and other regular tips throughout the year. To these however, he is closely held. Allowances to the children in American families are also very common. Too often, though, the child learns, if the allowance is promptly spent, the pleading of poverty before another instalment is due will convert the too fond mother or father into a special providence for its alleviation.

A BIG "BIKE."

The French will Display If at Their AVorld's Fair In I})()(). A bid was made in New York, a few days ago, for a piece of work which will make the eyes of most bicycle tire manufacturers bulge with astonishment. It was the estimate made on the mammoth rubber tires for the big "bike" to be erected by the French government for the Paris exposition in 1900.

This monster wheel is not to be one built for two, but oue "built for two thousand." Its handle-bars will overtop any other building on the grounds with the single exception of the Eiffel tower. If it were stood up on Lower Broadway, Weather Prophet Dunn could just about step from the window of his sky eyrie onto its saddle, and a man sitting on the sprocket could get off and promennde on the roof gutters of the postoffice building.

Even the Colossus of Rhodes would look like a 3-year old baby on the handle-bar of an antiquated "ordinary" if he tried it.

As nobody can ride it the French government is going to play queer tricks with it. There will be a great entrance in each of its wheels, winding stairways up through the tires and elevators in its upright bars. The saddle will be a gigantic dancing floor and roof garden and the backbone will be a grand saloon and banquet hall.

But the work of the greatest magnitude will be the construction of the tires. The rubber used would make more than half a million ordinary tires and it will weigh in a lump something like 800 tons.

A small steam engine goes with the repair kit.

FRIENDSHIP'S DEATH.

I have stood In a churchyard when tears were fast falling. As the clods of onrth dropped on the form of a friend, Though we loved him, wo left him, beyond allrecjtftogT

We remained, all boreft, for his life was at end. But the death of a friendship is sadder, far sadder,

Stabbed straight to the heart by the keon shaft of scorn. Here Is never a chance that the soul may grow gladder,

For one lives but to mock and the other to mourn.

TERSE TRUTHS POINTEDLY PUT.

Garret A. Hobart is near the top, too. the manner of garrets. It is funny how the average man will lean toward a fat job.

It's a good deal pleasanter to eat a ripe cucumber than to kiss a baby. When a man carrying a baby sees a woman carry a poodle be always looks mad.

When you talk to some men you feel as if you wanted to spray their brains with a disinfectant.

Some men get married so as to have someone to rub their backs when they have the rheumatism.

Very few women were so good when they were girls that they think their daughters don't need watching.

When a woman is sorry about a thing she wishes she hadn't done it when a man is sorry he wishes he hadn't been found out.

A woman can get along without money only when she's got brains a man can get along without brains only when he's got money.

When a woman forgives, she really does it a man says he does, but will drag up the subject again at the very first opportunity.

When you are calling on a girl and take the cigars out of your vest pocket and lay them on the mantel she pretends not to notice it.

A woman always urges her husband to go into politics so she may have a chance to get pictures of herself and all the children in the newspapers.

After he has been married a couple of years a man has just about as many buttons off as his wife has pins in her clothes.

MY LOVE.

I kissed him—my life's life Is there, On his forehead, his lips and his cheek To others be may not seem fair—

But to me—oh. I never can speak The half of the heaven I know When I bold him and kiss him—so! Let the day be curtained by cloud.

Tls the same as though cheered by the sun, If only at noon-time allowed In play with my darling to ran— To run, and at the end of the race To bold him and Idse his dear face. Do you think when a man be is grown

I shall love him aa atom the less? No off In a world of his own My own be will still be to bless The world Is too narrow to part My boy from his true mother's heart.

1 V.

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