The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26

Tlie Cedarville Herald. W, B. IlLAIR, PUMhlur. CBDARVTLLE. OHIO, / STRANGE INDIAN RELICS. Indlostlooi o f th« ForpiK Kxkteaee o f Educated Aborf*ln*» In th e South. There Is ample proof th a t the Mlssls- sippt valley and V g re a t portion of tha southern states was formerly the abode of a vast population of Indians, not such savages as we know now, bu t people of .considerable eduoAtkm and mechanical knowledge; Xucooehe county, in Georgia, was car* tninly the favored resort of a very ad­ vanced tribe of Indians, as Is evinced by the many curious and well-carved relics found there* Capt. Nicholls, a well-known Geor­ gian, has been very enthusiastic lntex- ploring the graves and mounds, and his discoveries have been many and valu­ able, .* In each,grave were found bones mixed with arrow-heads, beads, battle-axes, pipes and other indestructible articles of sport, domestic use and war. But the most interesting relics taken from the’sc graves were conch-sheila, evident­ ly brought from the ■ sea-shore, and a tosnuhawk beaten from pure copper in its natural state, though.the nearest point on the continent where such cop­ per Is found is Lake Sapcrior. Attyong the r&lics found in this valley THE BATTLE FIELD* CALIFORNIA JOE, 'The DMdIjrWork of ■UnionMuurpshootsr At tho Battle of Torhtown, • »• Probably there la no Soldier,' who ever served in the army of the Potomac, that has not heard of ' ‘California Joe," thb most celebrated marksman of Berdan’s sharpshooters, all of whom were phenomenal marksmen, I t must be re­ membered that this picked regiment was composed only of the ,raoet expert riflemen in this country, and the sub­ ject' of this article, Truman Head, of Co. B, was the best in the yegiment. Truman Head was a little,'thin mar., of 54 years of age, in 1841, with long, black, silken hair, cnrlingin -rich- pro­ fusion about a pair of shoulders whose stoop showed the decline of life. His face beamed with intelligence and hu­ manity, and his voice was soft and gen­ tle nil a woman’s while detailing to the writer how he found it necessary while in the performance of his duty to "pick off” some rebel officer or gunner. For some days previous to the final contest a t Yorktowp, in 1863, Gen. Mc- Clell&n bad watched with much anxie­ ty, an enormous rifled eannon being placed in such a position by the enemy, as to sweep away any force.that might be brought against it. Satisfying him­ self that he could bring no piece to bear upon it which would be sufficiently heavy to ’ silence' it, he sent orders to Col. Berdan to detail a squad of his was a bullet made of load, although no like mineral has been discovered within most expert riflemen to pick off any of many miles OnDuke’s creek was found ] the enemy who should attempt to work a small “death’s head" formed of a hard 1 this monstrous ; instrument of death, stone, with one eye, made of an opal; ] The colonel immediately sent for "Cali- bequtifuUy worked, and the little trinket! forma Joe," and three others to whom shows considerable artistic, skill. This! he made known the task before them, relic, together with others of a similar and gave them the privilege of de- character, mast have been imported by \ {-‘lining if they were afraid, for a some one from Mexico, {sharpshooter, becomes utterly usc- Oapt. Nicholls has explained the use ’ Jess if not entirely devoid of fear. Of numerous relics ' Round and saucer- All four, however, true and tried men shaped stones of various sizes were v*» they .were, were only too glad of the used to play a game similar to quoits, honor, thus conferred upon them and Instead of pitching the stones they ■! signified their readiness to move to the rolled them at pegs. The wedge-shaped i front a t any moment. That night, near stones were employed to dress hides,- 13 o’clock, the devoted four," led by Joe, while the small ones wore used to work and well supplied with provisions and sinews with. ; ammunition,, took their departure from Their tomahawks wore of various, camp and marched over towards the shapes, and their axes, instead of hav-j enemy’s bristling batteries. At about ing the handle pass through them, were ( the distance of nine hundred yards from inclosed in a split stick, securely fast- • the latter they halted, and, with the ut- ened with thongs. I must caution and silence, dug four riflo- There was a separate make of toma - ; pits, each one some forty or fifty yards hawk, used by the chiefs and worn a t i from the others. In these they lay the belt for display, that was sharpened I quiet until after daylight, when, a t an n t both sides and a hole partially drilled early hour, the dull booming of a gun in the center. This was a valuable dis­ covery, as it showed how the Indians . worked this hard stone with only tha rudest implements. '".'here are several very fine speci­ mens of pipes. One excavated on Duke’s creek is a very valuable relic, and the United States government had a cast made of it, aa Capt Nicholls would not part with his treasure. I t la carved out of rock, and the bowl is made to represent the mouth of a whip- poor-will, the beak of an eagle project­ ing over i t The ears of a fox and other figures are also chiseled on i t It is as fine a carving as one would wish to see. In White's "Historical Collections of Georgia'* is mentioned the unearthing, in 1833, by a party of gold miners, of a buried village of log cabins on Duke’s creek, near Mount Yonah. These cab­ ins were about thirty in number, made of hewn logs, and in one was found a willow basket and in others earthen vessels. These houses were ten feet or more, beneath the surfaoe of the ground, and the oaks growing Upon them, and other evidences, showed that several centuries had elapsed since they had been erected. The theory of the* history of this Imried town'la vary plausible. The story is th a t DeSoto and his soldiers, in their march to the Mississippi, after Teaching the headwaters of the Savan­ nah river, struck across into this valley. This region was then occupied by two very flercAand warlike tribes of Indi­ ans, in conflict with each other, but when they heard of the white strangers marching into the country, they united their armies to resist the invasion. They succeeded in checking DeSoto, who was finally driven upon the Ybnsb, where h e fortified himself, and i t was hia sol­ diers who built these cabins as a protec­ tion against the winter. Capt. Nicholls says he has himself seen, near the cabins on this side of tfie mountain, a barricade-formed of loose atones, and this Is said to have been tho Work of the adventurous Spaniard and his men, To strengthen this theory, th e Opal cved death-head was found near here, and It is too fine a trinket to h a re been the handiwork of Indians. Another curiosity of the Valley Isa great inound, the summit of which the Indians leveled off perfectly flat and smooth lo r a space of nearly two acres fioirie authorities believe the leveling to have been the work of a race antedat­ ing the Indians, bu t it is certain that these latter people1used the spaoe as a ball ground.—Thomas Long, in Golden . Days. ________", « —Usually the Case.—Mrs.Dintviddie— ” l)o you remember Miss Trotter, who married a titled European?" Dlntvid* die—“Yes," Mr*. Dinwiddle-*‘It U said that she is very unhappy; th a t sh s was sndiy disappointed in her husband." Dinwiddle—"She. found him a Batun ideality, did she?"—Inter Ocean. —Ht, Agedore—"Poor Wings! He can’t live long." Ds Mason*—“Why not?* “He’s only four feet six."—« l Joseph News, ‘‘UNCft-E BU-CY." ••014 Atm’s" Ojilulea <tf Him m Given a M a la r W ho W an t * 4 to Go H om e. Few men in the- country are better known personally than Gen, Sherman and a multitude of anecdotes are toldof him. He was noted for his approach- ableness. No man ever made his rank less felt, and he had intimate friends in every walk of life. "Uncle Billy," as be was called by his soldiers, was the favorite subject of camp-fire anecdotes, and: a number of stories are told illus­ trating hia rough and ready manner of conducting business and his quickness of repartee. Shprtly after the outbreak of the rebellion, Sherman was sent to Washington, where he was placed in charge of a number of the new levies, all three months men. Their ideas in regard to discipline were as misty aa they were liberal, and it .was very hard to convince the officers and. men that they could not do exactly as they pleas­ ed. It happened that the term of en­ listment of severul regiments ran out, bu t they were not discharged. This the men regarded, as a great hardship and many walked off without asking per­ mission of anyone and betook them­ selves to their homes. One morning, as Col. Sherman was crossing Long bridge, he met a major under his com­ mand in full uniform making toward the city. He asked him why he was absent from his post, and the-major re­ plied that the time for which he had en­ listed had expired and. he m ean t,to. go home. Sherman saw that strong meas-1 urea were necessary an;l said: “If yon don’t a t once go back to your regiment I will shoot you," The major Btoodnoton the order of his going, but retired with speed. ■On the ‘following day there was a divisional review, and Sherman was sitting on his horse, near President Lincoln’s carriage, when the officer with whom he ha^kthe encounter approached and desired to make u complaint to the president. "I wish to complain of Col. Sherman," he said. "Yesterday I started to go to the city, and ha told me he would shoot me it I did not return to the camp.” Leaning over the carriage and speaking in a whisper that was perfectly audible to all in the vicinity, Mr. Lincoln said: 1 "My friend, if 1 were In your place, and if Sherman said that to ine, I would not try to leave camp, for he looks just, like a man who would keep his word.” The major retired in confusion amidst shouts of laughter from the bystanders, and there were no more attempts at irregular departures made in*Sherinan’s command.—Detroit Free Press. some distance to the left told them the strife was about to commence. Our hero was instantly on the alert, and rais­ ing his powerful telescope to his eye. he narrowly scanned the vicinity in which was the gun, over which he and his companions were to keep watch. As he did so, be caught sight of a rebel cannonier, cautiously advancing with a swab rammer to clean out the piece preparatory to its being loaded. Fearful of our sharpshooters the rebel haddlvest- ed himself of everything that might serve as a mark with the exception of | the brass ornament on the front of cap. This was a fatal want of fore­ sight, for the next instant Joe had his deadly rifle leveled directly a t the orna­ ment and was about to pull the trigger when a second thought struck him. Still keeping a "bead" drawn on the doomed man, lie allowed him to creep forward, raise the rammer, push it into the gun,- and ' then, an he was about to withdraw it, Joe touched the trigger, and the first victim of York- - G en. S herm an S quelched T h in . , Mr. Jacob "Zook says the death of Gen,. Sherman vividly recalls to his mind ah incident th a t happened a t Laporte in the fall of 1807. Gen. Sherman passed through there, and before the train arrived the. news spread ail through the city that he was coming. The consequence was that a. large crowd gathered a t the depot. When the train pulled in, it was seen tha t in tho Sherman coach the blinds on the f jside next the depot were all closed. The j , js 1crowd surged arpund to the, other Bide, and catching sight of a man with his back toward the window began yelling a t him.. Presently the window was opened, and Gen, Sherman sticking his head out, asked what they wanted! Mr. Zook was well in front, and cried out as loud as he could, "A speech, a speech!" The general looKed a t the crowd a moment and then said: "Where-were all you fellows when the _ _ last draft was made?" ' Gen, Sherman town fell, pierced directly "through the j h** he«n told th a t when the last draft brain. Of course the rammer remained i was made not an able-bodied man in the gun, and rendered i t useless until .it could be withdrawn. With a deter­ mination ahd valor worthy a much bet­ ter cause, mail after man stepped for­ ward to make the attempt, but without avail, for a ball from Joe’a rifle or one of his companions sealed the rash act with death. "Oh, sir," said Joe, while narrating the circumstance, "my heart grew sick with such work. Toward the latter part of the battle, my three compan­ ions were killed by rebel sharpshooters, and I alone was left to continue the work of death. I had kept , by me a pine stick, on which 1 cut a notch each time I fired. This stick X filled and cast away, after counting fifty-nine notches." "But, perhaps,” we suggested, "your ball did not strike its object each time.” "I never miss, sir," was the reply, ut­ tered in tones of pity and sorrow, rather than pride or exultation. "Since morning," continued Joe, after a pause, "1 had tnkeit no refreshments, and be­ ginning to feel the want of it, I wal obliged to cease firing. While eating, I cast occasional glances over a t the big gun, which the rebels had managed, little by little, to load since the death of my companions. Suddenly I saw a soldier grasp the lanyard, and in an In­ stant, dropping my cracker and morsel of meat, I instantly leveled my rifle at him and pulled, lie fell, but, as he went down, he jerked the lanyard. The ne/ct Instant a terrific explosion took place, and the enormous cannon, tom into fragments by the concussion, Went fly­ ing high til the air. My task was over, and aa the shades of night began to fall, I made my way back to our lines, thankful that my life had been spared me.”—Cooper’s Coffee Cooler. Mxs. G raxt ’ s eorrespondenoe is so huge that she finds It Impossible to at* ‘ to It all. She gives preference to from old soldiers and endeavors to ifeawar them tvlth her own pen., f -* could be found in Laporte. Mr, Zook says the crowd was completely squelch­ ed, and the sarcastic old warrior was permitted to go on his way' in peace.— Elkhart, (lnd.) Review. SCATTERING SHOT. M r . E dmurds is qnoted as wondering why Sherman and Grant always liked Joe Johnston so much and y e t were in­ different to Lee. “Of course Gen. Johnston is a most charming man so­ cially,” he added, “and so, I under- i stand, was Lee. Perhaps their par­ tiality for Johnston is due in a measure IN WOMAN'S BEHALF. FOR UNTHINKING HUSBANDS. At b u t Treat Year Wll* as Well as To* Would a Servant and Giro Her Zlor dust Duns. I was asked to speak a t a farmers’ in­ stitute the other evening on the subject of the wife’s share. This is a "talk" of which I never tire. In it I took occa­ sion to speak of the grumbling way in which some farmers dole out money to their wives; how the wife often has to ask and almost beg for what Is simply her owa ln justice. The next day I was talking with a well known manufac­ turer and merchant, in the town, on the aubjcct. He thought I did not overstate, the matteV. He said that a fanner and his wife were in his store trading. No, 1 mead) th a t the man was trading, and the wife, or servant,* or slave, was standing by. While doing this, she picked out three or four little articles on tli.e flve-cent counter (only costing five cents each) and asked her. husband, to let her have them. She pleaded that she would like them so much. He an­ swered, with an oath, "No, by---- you eau’t have any money to spend on-such tom-foolery." Webster defines slavery as having one’s will under the control of another. Isn’t that woman a slave? Are there not a great many farmers* wives, and town men’s wives too, who are slaves to a greater or less extent? And still I suspect that even the man spoken of above was not really as -bad as his words might indicate. Let us in charity, while condemning the deed in- strong language, think as well of the loan as possible. Doubtless money came slowly and hardly to him. Per­ haps he was brought up by a lord and master father; or little by little he had come to lord it over his mate, until thoughtlessly, let us hope, not inten­ tionally. he had become a veritable ty ran t ■ ■•■■■■. ‘ In regard to town wives, I have it di­ rectly from a lady in the city that she is, unknown to her husband,, scrimping tbclr living expenses and laying up small sums from time to time in the Bavings bank to her credit. ' This Is saved from money grudgingly given her, oftentimes, for- household expenses. And she says she knows, a neighbor’s wife whohas quite a little money in the savings bank, which she has from time’ to time taken out of the money drawer a t her husband’s store when she cojuld do it unseen. At another time when her husband was called downstairs at" night she took some money from hia pocket-book. The remark was' made that site had got through begging for what was her own; she had found out a better way. These cases I Can vouch-for,. A lady says on this point, in a recent number of tho N. Y. World: "Husbands seldom pay their wives the compliment of thinking they can manage a hank accqnnt. What is the result? The wfte grows cunning and underhanded, and condones the ways and means she em­ ploys to get money from her husband as legitimate self-defense. She enters into unholy ulliances with h e r dressmaker and milUncr to send in bills for larger amounts1 than she really owes,' and through their connivance receives the difference. She resorts to coaxing and all the pretty juggling a woman pos- Bosses—nay, she even picks her hus­ band's pockets a t night." I think it was Beecher who said that If you wanted a man born right you must begin with his grandmother. 1 would like to inquire what sort of men we are likely to have in the future from such grandmothers as the above-men­ tioned women? I hop* every man who reads this will do what he can to put an end to this terrible state of affairs. If he Isn't yet prepared to take his wife in as a full and trusted partner, let him at least surprise her, beginning the first of next month, by handing over to her a reasonable amount of cash, according to their circumstances, once a month to do as she pleases with. Let this be not less, if possible, than she could earn by doing housework for, some one else. If it doesn't bring team of joy to her eyes and gladness to her heart, in many cases, enough to well pay you, I miss my guess. But do it because it is simple justice; because it is rig h t Do it for to the fact tha t Lee was exceedingly | qhe good of future generations, if you reserved in his demeanor -toward all haven’t any love left for your patient, persons who came in contact with hard-working, faithful wife. Give her a little taste of the freedom you enjoy. B u t for Heaven’s sake! if you must cOUtintie to lord Sttd master and the head a t home In private, when you go to the store to trade, and Other people ir e around, do hot make your wife’s lo t doubly hard by showing up your true character, 1 Was standing in a store in a large town once, when a well-to-do farmer and his Wife canto in to trade,' lie was profuse ia hia loud ta lk to Jier tog e t everything she wanted; hu t he kept close to her side, and, as it scChied to me, really decided aboutevery purchase made, 1 watched her face closely and thought it told a sad story. After they had gone ou t ! quietly asked the mew chant, about them, lie boiled over im­ mediately, I would not like to repeat all the harsh things he said. The sub­ stance wt* th a t If the poor woman had dared to buy a thing on her own ac­ count—simply taking him a t hia word-— th a t ate would have 'got such a. blow* tog-up When they* got away th a t .only such a man can give. God forgive him! But this is certainly better than public to su it Let us 'kata a ll the charity pos-. Stole, lie ia our brother man and none o f us is perfect, Ha patient, dear sis­ ters, and do right, On* wrong ia uoex* euss tor another. Justice and right- sra him." Con. C lemexts , pension agent a t Chi­ cago, 111., recently paid out the largest individual pension ever granted t e a pen­ sioner In that division. Mrs. Lanra B. Whitney, widow of Samuel B. Whitney, of the Seventh Illinois,was thfi lucky per­ son, and the sum received was $0,834.40. She Is entitled to $30 per month here­ after from the United State* treasury. With one exception it was the largest amount ever paid one individual from the Chicago office. The exception was President Lincoln's widow, who re­ ceived $15,000, but this, however, was by special act of Congress, and not un­ der toe pension laws, A BEAUTiFUi, ceremony observed by the ladies of the Grand Army is the placing upon the bodies of deceased comrades a small Union flag upon the day of burial. This ceremony was ren­ dered by Custer Circle, No. 1, of to il city, fifteen times during the past year. Mrs, Phil Gnnloek, a member of toil circle, and its representative, attendee the funeral services of seven comrades o i George H. Thomas Post, No. 4, and pidd this highly appropriate tribute. The soldier dead, as well as the soldier living, la tone honored V toe mothers, wives and daughter* -#f ,to* Union an* •ran*. eousness will prevail in God’s on* time.—T. B. Terry, in Rural New Yorker. ■ A BURNING QUESTION. M l Women l'nd«rfi*ituM Wear ti» Cmp and CJown?—t'h»rle* Dadloy War. W t Views. One of the burning questions now ia the colleges for the higher education of women 1ia whether the 'undergrad­ uates shaU wear the cap and gown. The subject is a delicate one, and should not be confused with the .broader one. What is the purpose of the higher edu­ cation? Some bold tliafc the purpose is to enable a woman to dispense with marriage, while others maintain that it is to fit a woman for the higher duties of toe married life. The latter opinion will probably prevail, for it has nature on its, side, and toe course of history, and the imagination. But meantime the point of education is conceded, and whether a girl is to educate herself into single or double blessedness need not interfere-with the consideration of the -habit she is to wear during her college life,, That is to he determined by weigh­ ing a'variety of reasons. Not the least of these is the consider-, ation whether the- cap and gown habit is becoming. If it ^is .not becoming, it will not go, not even by an amendment to. the constitution of the United States; for woman’s dress obeys al­ ways the higher law. Masculine opinion is of no value on th is' point, and the Drawer is aware of the fact that if i t thinks the cap and gown becoming, it may imperil the cap-and- gown cause to say so; but the cold truth is that the habit gives a plain girl distinc­ tion, and a handsome girl gives the1 habit distinction. So that, aside from the mysterious working of feminine motive, which makes woman a law un­ to liureelf; there should be practical unanimity in regard to this habit There is in the cap and gown a subtle suggestion of the union of learning with womanly charm that is very cap­ tivating to the imagination. On the other hand, all this may go fo r nothing with the -girl herself, who' is conscious of the possession of quite other powers and attractions in a varied and con-, stantly changing toilet, which can re­ flect her moods from hour to hour. So that if it is admitted that this habit is almost universally becoming to-day, it might, in the inscratable depths of the feminine nature—the something that education never can and never should change—be irksome to-morrow, aud we can hardly imagine what a blight to a1. young spirit there, might be in three hundred and sixty-five days of uniform­ ity. 1The devotees of the higher education will perhaps need to approach the sub­ ject from another point of view, name­ ly, what they are willing to surrender in order to come into a distinctly schol­ astic influence. The cap and gown are scholastic emblems. Primarily they, marked the studeqt, and not alliance with any creed or vows to any religious order. They belong to the universities of learning, and to-day they have no more ecclesiastic meaning than do the gorgeous robes of the Oxford chancel­ lor and vice-chancellor and the scarlet liOod. From the scholarly side, then, if not from the dress side, there is much to be sahl for the cap and gown. They are badges of devotion, for the time be­ ing, to an intellectual life. They help the nilud in its efforts to set itself apart to unworldly pursuits; they arc indications of separateness from the prevailing fashions and frivoli­ ties. The girl who puts on the cap and gown devotes herself to the society which avowedly In pursuit of a larger intellectual sympathy and a wider in­ tellectual life. The enduring of this habit will have a confirming influence on her purposes, and hel. to keep her up to them. I t is like the uniform to the soldier or the veil to the nun—a sign of separation and devotion. I t is difficult jn this age to keep any historic consciousness, any proper relation to the past. In the cap abd gown the girl will a t least feel that she ia in the .line of the traditions of pure learning. And there is also something of order and discipline in the uniforming of a com­ munity set apart for an unworldly pur­ pose. Is it believed that three or four years of this kind of separateness marked by this habit in the life of a girl will rob her of any desirable womanly quality?—Charles Dudley Warner* ip Harper’s Magazine, IN WOMAN’S WORLD. Two tri-weekly papers a t Columbus, are managed and edited by women. II esoak Vhas 17 schools for the high­ er education of girls, with an atten­ dance of 3,134, and a cost of 387,737 florins per year. M rs . C jiaurcry M. H epxw , is one of the most elegantly attired women in New York. She dresses faultlessly, and is,moreover, magnificent in style. She is literary, and has been known to get her name “in print” on her *own ac­ count, Her illustrious husband’s repu­ tation is, however, so overshadowing that she can hope a t heat to shine only by a reflected light. M ho . A rthur S taxxajto (John Strange Winter), the novelist, is about to publish a new penny weekly paper, the leading feature of which will be bright, wholesome fiction by the best obtainable authors. Each number will be complete in itself and will contain, in addition to the fiction and her own editorial contribution*, abort articles upon topics of generat internet by skill* ad writers of repute, "J^UREH PyO , | „W*ter in wMch I ^ p ^ a k e d freshens] [ lag, grease th e tin s f 1 i.^°_Hot j i fort,'and um o a trev l fatigued by over-cxej ! J a German predial i ing cold-sores , 1pbead is to paint the Jlaily with equal P<H •nd water. _ ■ —Steamed Brownl I-Mnr milk; one and f I j d t n. one-half onp l l l u r t h cup molas |W e ra tu s.-H ou seha l —Lay a piece of under your tablecl napery.will look a | •yritli a sub-cover-tha pver the bare table I —Mock Lemon FI tp-o tablespoons c<| sugar, one-fourth te season with.extract! double boiler, coo l crusts baked brown! —German Apple! gether one-lialf p i dried before the fir! Balt, half a cup o | one-fourth pound oi • mixture about ha-$ ness, place it in a m must be turned tip «■ -apples, core a n d ' then' place them quarter straight u lemon-juice, powdl over the apples ahl —N. Y. World. I —Orange Puddil five oranges, and I heat one pint of ml Take one tables^- wet with a little the yolks of four j add to the hot * away to cool. Tt , eggs and one Cupl to a stiff froth, a the cold cream, th l and set in a pan ol ; oven to brown, orange gets heafe —Boiled Eggs.- pour boiling ho t I where they will f boiling point, anq for soft and twj boiled eggs. 3 .1 when it has boi|l the whites beiif boiling water, e for soft, five m it to thirty minutes 4. An ornament'1 thinly*, remove lightly into me sauce and seaspl on lettuce o r pi ■ laced rings bf t t keeping. __ THE H| It Should Alw»» The important house dressing* «C?ho matron fgaeinbers o f tti soiled wrapper I if indeed she t a | one a t all, tha comfortable,"! Bible conScquc Could she b n t| is ah evil exa and productlv^ will reach far life; th a t herd fail to draw dress and tha1| in other home irons cannot spectfor her, | give more atfe pcarance. Not even stant employe ckn t excuse fl its, for few t | to the well-t an old saying tidy mother and, while he may realise' yet there i s , and an tndiffl a mother wh| sonal appear And it iSi whose shpnll responsibiiit| order in dr to look after fail to insist of the fa with weli-k<J ly brushed least a t ere* sembles.- *rhf The roadll heart to geij ayoung in* it opens hi* l^rcat hope Never aval! which falhl dusty atm | the mote* through t t backs of carts rum! he s lts a k over a ve gates of gaze withij to him ' the whole! to step Harper’* :

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=