if-a i ' I r : Iff' M I
FLOWERS COLLECT
ESTABLISHED 1832.
- i m m m v t .
i i r - i i i j
.uutur.
earoSina jBL Watchman.
" OUR COUNTRY, MAY SHE EVER BE RIGHT, BUT EIGHT bit WRONG, OUR COUNTRY." "
SIXTY FOURTH YEAR. NO. 36. SALISBURY,-. C., THURSDAY, JANUARY 28, 1897-
I- - u p 1 '
1 uur ii II -
1
ii- r-n
The Wealth of Lore.
I was as poor as the poorest, dear,
And the world it passed me by;
Bat not that; day '
:
When yon Walked LoiVi way I
For heaven itself drew nigh
cweeinean :
For heaven itself drew nigh.
I was as lone as the loneliest, love,
With never a dream of bliss :
v
lut not that day
Wn vnn WitlVd Lava's vnv
And leaned to his thankful kiss
Sweetheart ! ri
And leaned to his thankful kiss.
And dear td my life is your love your love,
And ray soul has ceased to sigh ;
For sorrow seems
But an echo of dreams,
And the stars are in life's sky
Bweejtheart!
And the stars are in life's sky !
F. L. Stanton, in Atlanta Constitution.
FROM JIM."
Dal! Jfjving tripped down the gar-
deu path,; with its fringes of feathery.
ferns and pale, sweet-faced violets.
She was looking as cool as if the day
were tilled with delicious sea breezes.
Scissors in hand,' she stood and con
templated the 8weetly-bloomiug flower-beds
before her, tilled with their
Id-fasjbibned favorites ; as well as
newer, rrer flowers !
Another figure flitted np the garden
path thjatnof a young man, tall, dark,
IT y
stalwart and handsome. The "dark,
dark eyefc" lit np when he saw Dell,
and be waved his band gaily to her.
Isn't it warm today?"
t' Bick said this with a profoundly
look, as if afraid Dell might
not yet have discovered the fact. Then
he fanned himself vigorously with his
straw hat.
J Doou really think so?" with
sarcasm, "Why, I was laboring un
der the mistaken impression that it is
rather cool. I'm glad you came to
,nndeceiye me," gratefully.
I "Don't be ridiculous!" said Rick
dertOD, severely. Then: "Won't"
jou give me a flower, Dell?" with an
insinuating smile.
"Here is the'last rose of summer,' "
said Dei!, cutting the "last rose" off
its stemj with n vicious snip of the scis
sors. 1'It's rather faded and old, but
of course you don't mind," in a tone
impossible to translate.
"No, indeed," said Rick, provok
ingly, while Belkpinned it to the la
pel of his coat . "Of course I don't
mind if it is a trifle faded."
He was looking straight into her
-eyes as be said if, and as he was her
lover, Dell took a very unfair inter
pretation of bis remark.
"Dell, where did you get that
ring?" , i
- Rick Anderton took Dell's snow
flake Tttl a hand on bis own great,
strong one, and gazed at it; a frown,
naif playful, half real, in his eyes.
"Oh, somewhere !" said Dell, in a
manner as exasperating as it was
vague. "But which one do you mean,
Rick?! This one? Why, you gave it
to me. Don't you remember?'
I don't mean that one," said Rick,
the frown in his eyes growing ra.ore
ominously dark, the ilayful expres
sion entirely gone.
"Tais oue, then? Aunt Belle gave
h to hie on my last birthday. You've
seen it ever so many times before, I'm
qitesure."
"I don't meau that one!"
And Rick's voice was so harsh and
stern and jealous that Dell almost
skipped out Of her dainty slippers.
She heaved a reluctant sigh ; there
Was Only one ring left a dclicately
ehf!S"d gold oneso she supposed she
would have to tell him all about it.
She meant to teach him a lesson,
though, for being so jealous.
fyhi8,"she began, with a charming,
as well as exasperating air of reluct
ance "erJim sent me yesterday.
Isn't ii lovely?"gazing up at him with
bewitching blue eyes.
Rjck made.no reply, but held her
hand tightly crushed in bis own, dis
pleasure and pain in his eyes.
"You hurt me. Rick," said Dell,
plaintively, gently essaying-to with
draw her hand.
She was rather enjoying the scene,
but she had n o intention of permitting
her hand to be broken to bits.
With an impatient gesture, Rick
dropped it. ,
"Who is Jim?" he said, abruptly.
'A dear old friend of mine, Rick."
with enthusiasm. "I only wish you
knew J ins. You would bo perfectly
.'1
1 beg leave to differ with yon,"
said Rick, freezingly. "I would not
be delighted with him, for I'm 'sure
he's a prig and a fool !"
Dell looked snubbed.
"But isn't the ring pretty?" she said,
at last, holding it up tantalizingly.
"And see what's' engraved on it."
"To Darling Dell, from Jim."
As Rick read, the passionate, jealous
pain at his heart became almost unen
durable. He dared not trust himself
to speak, so he turned abruptly and
strode rapidly down the garden-path.
"Dell laughed, though just a little
uneasily.
"He will come back tonight,' she
thought, "to ask to be forgiven for
doubting me, and than how he will
laugh when he knows all about it!"
But the lovely blneeyes were a trifle
clouded for all that when she returned
to the house laden with flowers.
Aunt Belle noticed the cloud and
said : f
"What is the matter with Rick
Andertou, Dell? He walked away as if
racing for a vager?"
"Oh, he gotmad I'lsaid Dell, de
lightfully vague, as was her wont
"The mountain and the squirrel
had a quarrel V " laughedAunt Belie,
resuming her borne without giving
further' thought to the, matter.
She was quite accustomed to Rick'u
and Dell's little squabbles, and did
not imagine that this was anything
more serious than usual.
But Rick did not come back that
evening, nor the next ; and Deli be
came distrait and uneasy, and then in
dignant. What a fuss Rick made about noth
ing, on accouut of jealousy and ill
temper! Why couldn't he have
waited for an explanation, instead of
starting off in such a huff?"
Well, she was glad to get rid of
him, and hoped it was for good and
all. i kl
But for all tbati Dell xMfrmttt fee
quite happy. If Jonly Rick were not
so inclined to misjudge her!
Glad newsl Jim Harper was com
ing on a visit, that very afternoon
and Dell was to be at the railroad sta
tion at two o'clock, with her pony
phaeton. She made herself look very bewitch
ing in a light summer dress, with
great, golden-hearted pansies at her
throat and in her belt.
She wasradiautly happy. How nice
it would be to see dear old Jini again!
After all, this world was a very glad
world to live in, in spite of the jealous
Ricks who tried to make it so un
happy. Rick Anderton was at the station,
lounging about with a dissatisfied and
not altogether happy look on his
face.
As the train swept up, shrieking iahd
puffing, Dell flitted past him without
even a nod of recognition, and gazed
delightedly at one of the car wiu
dows. There were not many passengers
bound for this sleepy village, but
among them was oue dainty little
brunette, who threw herself raptur
ously into Deli's arms.
Rick stared in astonishment. He
had heard, as naughty Dell well knew,
that a certain Jim Harper was about
to pay a visit to Mrs. Belle Irving, and
he had haunted the station in order to
find out what sort of a looking fellow
this Jim was. He found out at last.
"Jemima Harper dear old Jim
how delighted I am to see you again!"
gushed Dell, rapturously, taking good
care to speak loud enough for Rick to
hear every word.
And then she and her old school
friend drove away, whilo Rick Ander
ton stood and stared after them like
one dazed. .
But when he came to her that even-
ing, so repentant aud humble, what
could she do but "forgive and for
get. "
Kick promised never to be jeal
ous again, and bids fair to keep his
word.
Dell was a little sorry, however, that
she surrendered so soon, for, as het
old schoolmate herself declared, "Eiek
would never have found so ready a
pardon from Jim !" Saturday Night.
. A Theory.
Marie He seemed somewhat . dis
satisfied, although I assure i him that
he held the first placj in my henrt.
Edith Perhaps he fears that some
odo cite may be a dose second.
iPuok.
Cost of Wild Animals.
Tbe most costly of wild animals held
in captivity is the elephant A fine
African elephant costs from $6,000 to
$7,000. A fine Indian elephant would
cost about $5,000.
i
Giraffes cost about the same as the
best elephants, about $6,000 or $7, 000,
but that quotation is really only nomi
nal ; it would bo difficult to get a
giraffe at any price. This is due part
ly to their . increasing scarcity and
partly o the difficulty of obtaining
them,' due to the internal wars of the
natives in the giraffe country. Giraffes
very rarely breed in captivity.
A fine hippopotamus would prob
ably cost about $3,000.
A good African lion, with a full and
perfect mane, would cost from $1,000
to $1,500 ; a fine lioness $300 or $900.
Good Bengal tigers cost about the
same.
Camels usually cost from $400 to
$500 apiece.
Many wild animals breed in captiv
ity, and the supply of wild animals is
now made up tb some extent from that
source. In New York's menagerie in
Central Park,' for example, a largo
number of wild animals have been
born, some of them of rare kinds and
great value. The same is true, in a
greater or less degree, of menageries
aud of zoological gardens in various
parts of the world. It is customary
to sell or exchange the surplus ani
mals so born.
-Wild animals in captivity may final
ly cease to breed. Wild auimals born
in enptivily are not so likely to be as
fine specimens as those born in a wild
slate, and in succeeding generations
they degenerate and become weaker
and more susceptible to disease. This
stock is improved by adding to it
from time to time, wild animals from
their native homes. New York Sun.
AU J.Il&eUlUUS t9JIUla
Few pedestrians who have passed
along Walnut street between 7th and
8th have ever noticed the little black
shingle extending from the third-story
window of No. 715, and still fewer
know that it has any significance?. Dr.
Henry W. Leffmann, the well-kuown
analytical chemist, occupies the third
sWy front office of the building, and
the shingle is a primitive means of
announcing to his regular callers that
he is in or out. The end of the board
nearest to the window is hinged, and
to the other is attached a, cord which
passes over a pulley and dangles from
the wall inside of the room. When
the doctor is in he hangs his hat on
a hook ou the end of the string, and
the weight pulls the shingle up into a
vertical position. When he puts his
hat on before going out the sustaining
weight is released and the sign board
droi)s to horizontal. It can readily
be seen from the street, and Dr. Leff
mann says that automatic annunciators
are crude when compared with bis
scheme. Philadelphia Record.
Structure of Coral Reefs.
In order to prove, or disprove, the
accuracy of tbe generally uccepted
subsidence.or "Darwinian," theory of
coral formations.it has been considered
necessary to know more thoroughly
one element in the construction of
three peculiar formations uamcly,the
thickness of the coral-made rock. With
a grant of $4,500 made by the Royal
Society of Loudon, Professor Liollas
was commissioned to execute borings
in the coral reefa of the Funi-Futi
atoll of tbe South Pacific News has
recently been received that the bor
ings have proved unsuccessful, a quick -
sand, by clogging the borehole, pre-
venting more than a superficial pene-
tration into the rock. It is now urged i the water in the trough was more pala
that a secoud effort be made in the tablo to the cows than the branch
- Bermuda islands, where greater facil-
ities are afforded for such operations, if we are successful in the diary busi
and where the general conditions for J ness we, mufst consnlt so smill r. thing
success appear much more favorable. as the taste of the cows, and if they
So Room for Argument.
SheWhat were the happiest mo
ments of your youth?
He When I'd hear father calling
my brother Jack to get up -in the
morning, and knew that he'd make
Jack get up before he got after me.
Truth.
General Booth has announced that
the Salvation Army is to extend its
operations over the whole Malay ar
chipelago. The movement will be
directed from the army's head quartert
in Australia,
FOR FARM AND GARDEN.
PBOLEPIC APPLE TREES.
There has .been a great crop of ap
ples throughout the country this year,
and probably more trees bore crops
that will exhaust them for at least a
year to come than ever before. When
we visited apple orchards in Lincoln
and Concord last September, we saw
trees loaded more heavily than ever
before. They were not the largest
trees we have grown apples on, but
some of them undoubtedly bore ten,
twelve or more barrels of fruit.oount
iug defective and poor with the good.
At a low price per barrel these trees
pay in a single crop many times more
than the land they occupy is worth.
We have, known this often to be done
with plums, peaches and the smaller
fruits. But what other farm crop can
do this? The gardeners often do it,
but with the addition of much expense
for manure aud labor. American Cul
tivator, '.
don't waste plant food.
If you feed in a stable don't throw
manure out daily uuder the eaves of
the barn and the water from the roof.
Perhaps some of you would hardly
believe it, but I have seen many barns
where this wasteful practice is ..fol
lowed yet. Don't throw the horse
manure oat of windows or doors into
a careless pile. This is an almost
universal custom. The valuable
plaut-fooi, half the value or more?
is washed out of the cattle manure
under the eaves, and most of the nitro
gen ko8 into the air from the
loose, beating pile of horse manure.
Oftentimes one could make money
faster, than he did in summer, by
simply getting a wheelbarrow and
wheeling out the cattle manure, and
making a pile away from the barn and
surface wash. Make the pile, broad
and flat, and. if you ac wheel the
horse manure to the same place and
spread it in thin layers ou the same
pile, along with the other manure.you
save it in the best manner. It can be
saved by itself, however, by sprinkling
snd tramping. I used to put rubbiug
posts on our manure pile out in the
yard, so the cattle would go up on it
and tramp it for me. And tbeuE al
ways shovelled-it np around the edges
before a rain, to prevent loss. Twenty-seven
years ago I bought a wheel
barrow, and begau doing just what I
have advised above. Had I waited
until we could build a large manure
shed and cement floors as we have
now, before trying to save the manure,
we probably never would have had
these improvements. T. B. Terry in
Praotical Farmer.
WA7.'EBIXO MILS.
I do not tueun to advocate the prac
tice of bringing the milk can into
contact with the pump spout, but xlo
wish to present for serious considera
tion a point too often ignored in car
ing for the cow. Ordinary milk has
about 87 per cent water in its make-up,
and in spite of all that may be said as
to the value of proper feeding, it is a
self-evident fact that without a proper
supply of water it is impossible for
the cow to give the usual amount of
milk. Nevertheless, it is not sufficient
ly understood that the cow should
have water of the right kind, and at
the right times.
We hHve often soen cows come up
from the pasture wnere mere was a
A
running stream tba: they1 had to pass
on their way up, aud the first thing
I they did after getting into the yard
l was to make straight for the pump
i trough. The reason for this was that
j water, Whether we want to or not,
' prefer pump water to branch Water,
j mu8t give it to them. It is absolutely
j essential to the .highest production of
milk that the cow have- all the water
she want, and this she wip not have
if the water does not suit- her taste.
It is also important that the cow
have access to water frequently. A
camel may drink once in a week and
thrive, but a cow ia not a camel by any
means. She is uiug water all the
i time iu miking niiik, and her reser
voir is not constructed to hold enough
water for any length of time.
Ii a cow is turned . out oX a winter'a
morning to drink water from which the
ice has been broken first, she will not
drink all she wants unless she has been
parched by thirst, aud then she will
stand drawn up with cold chills run
ning up .nd down her. spine, and at
the same time taking the feed that she
Would otherwise have turned into but
ter, and using it to warm the water
that she has just filled herself with.
Unless a cow has all she wants of
water that suits her taste, she will not
produce all the milk she is capable of,
and we don't want to keep a cow un
less she is doing that P. B, 0. in
National Stockman.
KEEPING FOWIiS IX CONFINEMENT.
The idea that poultry cannot be
kept in good health and in good lay-
I ing condition unless they are allowed
free range of the premises of their
owner as well as the gardens of the
neighbors is erroneous. If u house is
well built and well taken care of, as
well as the fair-sized yard connected
with it and tho fowls are fed properly
there will be nb chaneo for disease,
and a good profit from the jegg prod
uct will be assured. Two small rooms
10x12 ?r 10x14 for ten or twelve
fowls is much better thau one large
room for a flock of double that num
ber and too it is much better that eisch
small flock have its oue cock than that
there be two or three with a large
fldek as one cock is sure to rule aud
there should never be more than ten
or twelve hens with a good cock to
ensure a satisfactory hatching of the
eggs.
A thorough cleaning of the roost
boards and a stirring of the soil of
the ground floor of each room daily as
well as a forking over of a part of the
ground of each yard in summer time,
and a change of water in clean dishes,
should not be neglected. It is an easy
matter to overfeed when fowls are con
fined to 6mall quarters, but it is very
easy to watch, as one will if he has an
interest in his Tvork, bo that jut the
right quantity will be given so that
all will be cleaned up at each feeding,
and the fowls left with their appetites
just sharp enough, so that they will
not mope" but will keep themselves
busy scratching for the few grains of
!,,, . ,.t,,.i
MUt.lt WUV IUH T III! ' ASVU DVIU151CM
-
when the soil was loosened with the
fork or spade earlier in the morning,
for ihe cleaning should be done first
of all.
Some kind of ground meat should
be mixed in the dough in tho morn
ing; a constaut supply of oyster shell
and a little green food each diiy are
necessary for thrift aud profit. Cab
bage?, rutabages and apples are all
goou. A buu ueiier winter supply
i i t it i
can be secured by cutting a sufficient
quantity of young clover while it is in
the leaf, but wish not much stem or
blossom, and curing it sufficiently so
that it cau be pressed in barrels and
kept without molding. A large quan
tity can thus be kept in small space,
and if a little is cut flue and put in
the hot water that is used for mixing
the dough each morning, and mixed
uj thoroughly with the dough, it will
be found to bo a nice thing. Lawn
clippings can be saved and used in the
same way. Although this may appear
like a good dcul to be looked after, it
is not more thau there is in any other
undertaking where there is auy hope or
expectation of success; but all can in
a short time be reduced to such a sys
tem that the labor wilL be compara
tively light. When considering the
profits to be gained from the keeping
of poultry the loss that mav result
from allowing them to run at largo
should of course be considered.
What is there more tempting to the
hevs than the sight of a newly plant-
ed flower or vegetable garden? And
if they can get a chanco what havoc
trey can make scratching over the
s'aoothlv made hed-j and in eating the
,
seeds so carefully planted, to say noth-
i.g of tbe unsightly holes msde iu the
lawns and burrowing in the paths in
, . i i j t iLomeoiroB
which they hke to dust themselves.
And toohvoa waut to keep in the good
... . -,
graces of vonr netgubors which Jou
cannot do
if you allow voar fowls free
3
their property as we. I as
range over
yonr own. There is n$. valid reason
why fqwla shonld not be kept in their
places 'as much as horses and cows.
American Agriculturist.
A house was sold on tho Comstock,
Mexico, recently for $21, which cost
$5,000 to build.
BILL ARP'S LETTER.
A HIGHLY INTERESTING RETRO
f SPECTIYE COMMUNICATION.
Suggests That All Pat riot ic Young- Ameri
can Should Read of the Battle
of New Orleans.
-
This is the 8th of January a day memor
able in the annate of American history. The
young people ought to read about the battle
of New Orleans Jackson's great battle,
where his troops in less than an hour
killed and wounded 2,600 of the ilower of
" -e British army and lost only eight killed
and thirteen wounded. Never in the history
of the world has a battle been fought in
f hich there was so great dtsj arity of loss.
Pakenham, who was in command of 12,000
troops, was the brother-in-law of Welling
ton and had only a short time before ob
tained a great victory over Napoleon at
Salamanca. Jackson had only 6,000 untrain
ed riflemen, and Pakenham was killed and
his army routed and put to fligt t. This bat
tle established the prowess of the snuthern
yeomanry and made Jackson president. He
was certainly a very wonderful man. He
had but a little schooling in an old field
school, and n?ver learned in the course of
his life to use the English language correctly.
When only thirteen years old an English
officer cut him with his sword because he
refused to blak his boots. His father died
nar,ly, his brothers were killed in the revolu
tionary war and his mother died from hard
ship and suffering and scrhe grew up with
an intense hatred of tbe BritishT The fam
ily were Scotch-Irish, and my friend, George
A.dair, would say that accounts for all his
wonderful deeds. Ho had but little knoC
edge of law, but was made public prosecu
tor and was a terror to evil-doers. He gave
the new state its name of Tennessee, and
waged a war of years against the Indians,
whom he subdued, not only in his own state,
but even in Alabama, Mississippi and Flori
da. He had to cut out roads werever he went
with his troops and almost every great high
way in the south from north Georgia to the
Mississippi is still known to the old mn as
Jackson's road. When on the warpath he
paid no respect to orders from Washington,
but pursued his own plans in defiance of the
government. He was several limes wounded
in battle and in duels with his political ene--mics,
but seems to have lived a charmed
life. Ho followed no precedents and made
no alliances with political cliques. He was
always original, self-wilied and defiant. John
Forsythe was his secretary of state and Ber
rien his attorney general, both from Georgia.
He hated Adams and Clay and all the follow
ers of Jay and Hamilton. He challenged
Wlnfield Scott for a remark he made about
ni:n. He turned Calhoun out of his cabinet
because Mrs. Calhoun wouldn't assoJate
with Mrs. Eaton, tho wif;.of the secretary of
war. The whig papers had maligned Jack
son's wife and Jackson never forgave the
party for it and turned 2,000 of them out of
office the first year of his administration.
Ifis chivalrous respect for the female sex was
the most winsome feature about his character.-
Sam Houston and Davy Crockett had
touKi.t www him. and were pis trusted po
litical friends and advisers. ! UucerpriT
Taylor, they had fought their way up in
hard, dangerous warfare, and had but little
respect for the limitations of law or the
provoking delays of red tape. Almost all
West Pointers have a similar contempt for
the slow methods of the civil law, and es
pecially for the writ of habeas corpurand
appeal from court to court. I remember
wnen Croneral Joe Jonnston ordered a court-
, . , . . , . . . ,
mnftin or lnitnpri llu V n Tn trc tirn unlfllPrvl
for striking their captain. Tho crime was
committed at 10 o'clock in the morning.
They were tried on the afternoon of the
same day and .shot tpe next morning at sun
rise. That is tho kind of swift !usjice that
military men admire.
There re some curious things about these
old-time presidents. Three of them died on.
the Fourth of July. Th first fourteen wore
no beard; sixteen no moustache; twelve had
no middle name;. five were named Jamo?;
seven had thirteen letters in their uamoa,
and every nam had the letU-r A in it, some
where, except John Tyler's, and he was a
vice president. So it is no use in nominat
ing a man who has not that little vowel to
give him luck, nor is thirteen an unlucky
number amonc presidents. It is my mis
fortune that I never saw a president. I
looked toward Franklin Tierce once in New
York, but he was so tangled up in a carriage
with other gentlemen that I could not dis
tinguish him. But I have seen quite a num
ber of great .men some of them, indeed,
who were greater than presidents. I saw
Daniel Webster and ( Jay and Choato and
heard them speak. Mr. Calhoun put his
hand on my head when I was a lad and spoke
kind words to me. I still reverence his
memory, for he was a great and acood man.
I saw and heard Jefferson Davis on the bat
tlefield and on the platform after the war. I
saw and heard all the great m; ii of Georgia
who figured in polities in the '40's and '0's .
The greatest speech I ever heard from any
of them, it seems to me. was made by Waiter
Colquitt, but I was a young democrat then
and very susceptible. During the war I saw
the great generals quite often. Lee and
Johnston, Longstreet, ueauregara, fcany.
Hardee and others. I never saw btonewaU
Jackson but once, and then he was asleep,
lying upon some straw in General Lee's
tent. I Wish I had a photograph of that
scene. It was about noonday. Lee, with
his staff wero -dining at their camp tables,
but Jackson was tired out with
the seven days' fighting, and
General Lee said, "Let -"Mm iwp; he needs
rest more than food." All the great men I
have ever seen are dead, save General Long
street and General Gordon, whom our peo-
nle have delighted to honor. Age is telling
; .JJ p'ioa fr0m the national tre-asury.
. . - m a. 1 .1
i and so should all our other lieroes. Yes, and
I their widows, too. t
1 Well the crlad crreetinjrs of Christmas
! times are over at our house, and bo are tho
! gad farewells, ine Danquei nan ia m.tw".
i The long table has been shortenfd
I uT to its accustomed length. The
I holly and tho mistletoe have withered
I and lost the glossy green that gave welcome
to the hohthwrar and to the ehildreh who
i a .T!. A cfl.l wfl(vtiTA cileneA
i came iruui 'i "
j broods around the family hearth, for we are
j
j a happy time, old and young. Old J-anta
I Claus heailed th procession, andi thd little
; flka havl not BubBidcd yet. Lastprught w6
; bad to get off our dignity and play with
them. Everything wo eould think of , from
j "C'lubflst'' to "Milybright." And we mad
an -'Aunt Betty; for them and iniroauceu
them to the king and queen, and we had
mUgc, too sweet, delicious music that sof-
tens us down and makes us think of heaven.
Home and sweet contentment and loving
children bring us as near to heaven as we
can get in this sublunary world. The time
was when I had ambition and wanted to ne
a great man, but all that is nothing now.
Domestic love is worth tverything else.
"Sad is the home where love doautU 1
JJo longer nestles.
But stricken by tome cruel doom,
Its corpse live on the trestle''
-1
m .
I
i