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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (July 31, 1910)
TMK OMAHA SUNDAY HKK: .ft'fA' .11. 1010. Historic Memories Cluster Around Harvard Campus and Cambridge c CAMBRIDGE, Wfts., July 11-To tho Boy and Girls of Train School: Tlia fo'ty-elghth animal convention of the National Jldu oation association has closed, and I am at Cambridge attend ing the Hummer, chcnl of Harvard, the oldest university ot our country. You may be surprised to loam that t upend but one hour a day with my teaoUer, arriving In the class-room p.t 11 o'clock and remaining until n on. My class asso ciate are mostly superintendents cf fcliools, college profesjora and ' schuo! p-! .duals, iiome of thoni from foreign Oouuli i!". Out of th clans-room I am expected to ;;p'".id about five hours reading- and xvritmr.. My teacher, Dr. Paul Hanus. a. greet educator and writer, suggests books for us to rend, an4 assigns subjects upon which are to write. I hav Just finished a paper of ll.OOU words on the subject "What Docs Edccatlon Mean?" which will be handed to Mm today for criticisms. I am iuite -mtro X have the same fooling reaardinir .thH that you have when you hand in an essay or examination paper to your teacher. Much of my reading Is done hi the college yard, where the great elm, ash, horso chestnut and oak treos form a canopy of meeting boughs, und where comfortable beats are placed for our use. Every morning I enter the yard through tha beautiful Johnston gateway, which boars this Inscription: precious relics. Its well-foundecr tradition have been suns by Lowell and Holmes and the hallowed memories of "the dimple great ones." who have stood .within Its shude, make It a sacred us well as historic slirlne. Guarded and cherished by the loving care of tho people of Cambridge It stands In a little court of Its own. Though shorn of Its former wealth of over-hanging brandies. its xven'tness supported by bunds und braces. lids "bravo old tree" Is visited every rem by thousands of pilgrims. On a grahlte block at Its fee' simple legend: Will lilt fPSwfil ftiVv1 f -rv: it rt&?frK fewfLS m ltfo' Twin, iliiitlitlfss. 1 !. i- brave vmintr colli- II V -... .. Ia. .. 11 '" - 1 ' III X X W J RL little court of Its own. Though shorn of nmndcr. I I 4iJ -Jar."?' ' - - , 3 UM ,'!'m'J , gVfraMHMliim .151 kl Ij i School: The furty-elithth annual Its former wealth of over-hanging brandies. Whom muny liad no'er. scon before, II . , , .' ,' r--iVni m,.. i , -- nnmiwr ,. i, , . ! i f s jf I fK I oc5V On marching away on the morrow. 111 it " ' ' V" JjVYyQKVfl Vfl So well was wurk planncil and begun. Ill 11 ' T -.., I K II AVfvW(VC5yIl c3 fh is recorded the That they felt In him fullest reHanee-. II f 1 1 . It .- -. . ,' I ! 'XVfWfXW lYfl Tliat the fight U be waged was ,0!f rtoil. ,t.wMiiii'Mttiiii.iiiiMalMiMM . ' VOrtXltVV V 74 Krnrt ths ftoiy f nil thrv paHHtil throuKh ww . ' JL iff MX iu bodj- of men ever ianded T, 'get her, in weakness and miglit. youglit harder for what they regarded As theli'3 by an inherent right. 'i'o throw off the yoke of oppression. Kend the story of all they passed through, In t!e yenrs of tho great Kevol ution. And .r:::u t'oat the statement is true. Let us recall the story of the simple How tl.jr battled and strust'd ami 4uf- ic: cu "Under this troe. W'asHngtu:: First tixik cuminaiiil of the Ammlcan Army July 81. ITT.".'- ceremony. Washington ' had reached thu .And they won an undying renown, camp on the previous day, Sunday. He had iroin their marcii from tho elm at old limde the Journey from Philadelphia' on Cambridge) horseback In eleven davs. On the morn- Till Cornwallis' defeat at Yorktown We who know we who profit remember, The new fins 'of tho free;, they unfurled- Ins of the third, a' multitude ' of men, women and children had assemUed. many oer a nation on liberty founded . coming; loiig distances to see tho com-. Tho grandest and best in tho ,world. manner, and traveling: In all sorts cr.d con-'. ttlttons of vehicles. At i o'clock, mounting ' Oh. Washington ' Klrti, his name' bearing. Stand firm while the long years. roll by!- his fine, horse ut the headquarters, ho be-aue of your history glorious, rode slowly to this spot, ' while the army The nation will ne'er let you die. was drawn' up in line across tho Common, And when your great roots and your Reaching the tree, lie "wheeled his horse. uroncueH j No longer draw life from the ground; In the hearts and the lives of the people its fountain of life will be found. . -THOMAS K. PORTER." It was near the old tree tliat Colonel "After God had carried va snfe to Now liingla.id and wee had bvilded ovr hovsp provided necessaries for ovr livelihood leard convonlent places for Gods worship and setled the clvlll government one of the next things we longed for nd looked after was to advance learning and wee had bvilded ovr hovses dreading to leave en illiterate ministery to the chvrohes when ovr present min lhtaii shall die in the dvst" drew his- aword us oomntander-ln-chief" of tho forcps of the united colonics, and tha ceremony was. over. Then, with his officers, he immediately made a tour of the various pots occupied by the troops. Jiis p.,,,,,. a,, ,,,s .. n band were lraw dress was a blue coat w'th buff-colored fac- .,., . i ,.,.I.i,i .,.,!,. ir, IVIVH "J llllblLllllin Vllllio III Ul.ll of ITT.". rauslng' at the house of the president of Harvard college he came, out ::nd from the 'doorsteps 'of the old suiti- lnsrs, rich tpauleis, buff unde'rdross and a black cockade In his bet. "In old Cambridge an elm tree is standing, Where the great tido af travel goes bv: That beeaut-e ot the story twined round brel-roofed liousn, coinnieiidcd them and ni,,',l'.'it. , ,,, , . their enterprlso to the care of God. Then Iho peoplo. will never let die; , And when Its huge roots and Its branches thev hurried on to. Hunker Hill and to ino longer uraw tire trom the ground, tliat conflict of blood and fire, wiilch What is called College Ymi In Cambridge vers eighty-two and one-third acres, land enough, as President 12llot has said, "to make It certain that the setting of the uni versity buildings will b an open one for many generations. They will continue to be surrounded by grnss and trees even though the number of students should be multiplied by five in the generations to on." I have attended two church service hi Cambridge, both held In historic church.-, standing near together, with the oM bury ing ground called -"God's acre," lying p!c tursaquely between. Christ church dates lack to 1759. IU diver communion service was the gift of King William ;vnd Queen II try and is still used at Christmas ami Kaster services. When the Revolutionary army assembled in Cambridge in the spring of lTTS, C'.irt.st Church was occupied as barracks by a Connecticut company. Reing Tory property tha building was roughly used and the or gan pipes were melted down Into bullets; the scar of a wantonly fired musket ball is still seen on one of tiie walls, on New Tear'a Eve, 1713. General Washington or dered service held and lie and Mrs. Wash ington attended. Th First rarisii Meeting-house is the successor of tho first church of the town. It was here that the first Provincial con gress which organised the minute-men und ths Committee of .Safety, assembled. Oliver Wendell Holmes, who was born within eight of these two modest and un assuming churcliiM, wrote the following beautiful poem about them und tor- old cemetery: "Our ancient Church! iU lowly tower Beneath the loftier spire . la shadowed when th sunset hour Clothes the tall shaft In fire. It sinks beyond the distant eye I .one ere the glittering van H'gh wheeling In the wes'ern sky Has fxd-.l o'er tho plain. Llk KcntlnW and Nun. the." wop Their vlfcil on the green; One seems lu guard and one to T ri p. The deud that lie between: And both roll out to full and nuar Their music's mingling vavw; Tiic i-bake the grasu. who. e petitioned sp,.i Ieaus o'er the t.airow titvts." Of the "Old lSuryh.g Ground" lie wrc.e: "Go mher the ancient pathway f uiJe.i He where our sires laid down Their smiling bal.es, their chei-imed Jl '.d s. The patriarchs of toe town: Ilant thou a teur for burled love? A sigh for transient power? ' All that a century left above. Go, read it In an hour!" At noon hi compeny w!ta my friend 3U!s L., I go to Agansiu house, Kad'.l'.ffo collegs, where a lunch room Is maintained and in reaching it T pass what do you think? Ah! the history classes and the classes studying the elm tree have guessed! Tea, every day about noon I pass the Wash ington elm. Among ths treasures of his toric Interest this tree Is one of the meet In tiie hearts and the . lives of the people Its fountain of life will bo found. It was under this elm, far outspreading, That our bravo and beloved Washington Took command of the American armies, Tliat for liberty battled and won. There he, they hud chosen as leader, Irew his sword for a nation to be. That hereafter became a world power. lis flag honored o'er land and o'er sea. "made the liberties of the people safe." Feeling quite sure that you would like me to visit the "V'illago Smithy" immor talized by Longfellow in his early poem, beginning: "I'nder tiie spreading chestnut tree The village smithy stands," 1 walked over the Story street and found To those thousands of patriots there gath- tablet tho . atdewalk marking the cred. tspot where the horse-chestnut tree stood. What a grand and a glorious time! Hloth troo and smitliv have .been , swept Even now our hearts thrill with emotion, Hwav i,v tha march of iintiiov.nwuK Looking back on their victories sublime. a, a5 U 8 n,artn ur ""M o ements. A How righteous and grand was their mis- t'1"' was made from the wood of the tree s'on, and giVen to Longfellow on his seventieth Tho land from a tyrant to free! birthday by the children of Cambridge And from that sacred spot twas they L ... started ' and was the occasion of another, poem. From that now revered Washington tree. You remember it, 1 am sure, for 1 hoard What courage tneir action demanded! some of you read it not manv weeks ago. By a power from wulnn they were stirred, t . . . ,. , .. , Or they i.e'er could have dared meet hi But 1 have y1 to teU Juu ol ray yMt to latt'.c, the homes of Longfellow and Lowell which as you ,l:now are Tiere. Although I have thought of you many times slneo 1 left home und wished that yon could visit with me this historic and literary ground, I wished most for you that lovely July day when I' walked through the rooms and grounds of CiaU.lc house und Klmwood. When I saw "Tho Old Clock on the Stair" and heard it say, "Forever m ver, never forever"! saw the chair oxer which the "blue-eyed banditti'' clamored; saw that other chair made from the. tree, that shaded tho village blacksmith: . whllo he xxorked; saw everything; in those beautiful old colonial homes filled with the belong ings of those two poets, of whom you have studied and whoso writings you enjoy. In x'isiting Cralgie hotite one has nlso to remember that Washington once occupied it. That was the winter of J 7;.'. and from his letters v.e learn that he was far from happy there. Jealousies 'and difficulties with the untrained i roups and lack of good assistance from his mlHtarv family and secretaries gave him much itiinuytini c. ' Of this Longfellow wrote: "once, ah, once, within these walls, One xvhom memory oft recalls, The Father of his Country dwelt. And yonder meadows broad and danip The fires of the besieging camp Knelroled wither burning bell. I'D and down .those echoing stairs. Heavy with the weight of cares. Sounded his majestic tread. TVs, xvithln this very room, Sat he in those hours of gloom. Weary both in heart and head." The Longfellow house has a broad hall through the center from front to back and two square rooms on each side of this. The hall and rooms have a high panelled xvalns coat und in every room one side is entirely panelled in xxood- - All the xvoodwork is painted white. There are two staircases xvhich meet on a landing, where there is an arched window between the front and back halls, and the stairs again divide to the front and back. The rooms on the second flood correspond xvitli those below. The large front roum ut the right of the hall xvas the poet's study and behind It his li brary, the same rooms which Washington usfd for the business of- lietidquarleiB. Across the hall- on the left side is the long, bfly drawing room where Madam Wash ington held her receptions. The .southeast chamber of the second floor xvas Washing ton's sleeping room and this xvas Long felh'.w's room when ho first came as a lodger when the Widoxv Craigie occupied it. '. Miss Alice Longfellow occupied tho old homo and it xvas through her courtesy that I' xyis privileged to visit tho. house, and grounds. ' i . It Is but a short xxulk from the "Cialgle House" t Kltnxvr oil. the life- lomi home of James Russell Lowell. It is nol open to visitors . usu ally ami we who are ut tending the Har vard hummer school felt grateful, indeed, to President Lowell xvhch we learned that upon his request Or. P.a.vsett, the grandson of James Russell Lowell. x on Id receive uh n:trc. The rav" old house, well back from ihe remlway. xvitii its t.pprn.ich under ureli fi.fe eln'is which gave, it its. name, and Its ba kurmuid of pines dimmed us as much as the stutelin- Longfellow' house. , its history.- too, is interesting. It. was the heme of Thomas Oliver, hint of the royal lienictuiiit govcrno.M, whom 'he men of .Middlesex, drawn to Cambridge. Common by the "Powder Ahum." forced to resign his commission. Summoned to the door and presented xvlth the form of resignation to which his signature, was demanded, he wrote upon It. "My house at Cambridge be ing surrounded by 4.00(1 people, in compli ance xvlth their commatld I sign my nuuie, Thomas ollvtr." Soon after he took flight to Boston. After Hunker Hill tho mansion was used as a hot-pit al and tho Provincials who died there were buried in the field "Opposite. In 17113, Elbridge Gerry, the early patriot leader, purchased It and it was his homo till his death, when Rev. Charles Lrxvell, father of the poet, bought it. Through Lowell's letters happy glimp-es are gained of almost every room in this h-'.iFn xvh'ch xvas Yr. lifelong home. ' Tn those words ho described his first study: "Here 1 am in my garrcti I slept here xvhen I xvas a curly-headed boy, and In it I used to tio shut up without a lamp, my mother saying that none of her children should bo afrnid of the dark. 'It Is a pleasant room, facing almost equally toward tho morning end the afternoon sun. In winter I can sec it only as It lights up tho tall trunks of the English elms in front of the house, making them sometimes, when the sky be hind them is lead-colored, seem of the most brilliant yellow. In winter my view Is a wldo iino, taking in a part of Boston. As the spring advances and one after the other of our treos put forth the landscape Is cut off from mo, piece by piece, tlil, by the end of May, lam closeted in a cool and rustic privacy of leaves. Then I begin to bud with the season, when I can sit at my open window and my friendly leaves hold their hands before my eyes to prexcut their v' tndering to the landscape, 1 can sit down arid writ' ." in lio he wrote from Paris to Thomus Bailey Aldricli, who xvas occupying Klin wood during his absence. "It Is a pleasant old house, Isn't it? Doesn't elboxv one, us it were. It will make a frightful conservative of you before you know it. It xvas born a tory and will dlo so. Don't get too used to It. I often wisli I had not grown into It so. 1 am not happy anywhere else." In 1875. ho wrote. "1 am Kitting now with Fanny sexving besidu me, on our new veranda, which we built last fall on tho north side of the house. The catalpa Is just coming Into bloom and the chestnut hard by is hoary xvlth blossoms. A quail Is calling Bob While,' over in tho field, butterflies are shimmering over Fanny's flowers, robins aro singing xvlth all their might, and there xvlll come a hummingbird before long. 1 see the masts In tho river and the spires In the toxvn." The catalpa xvas In full bloom tho. day we xcere there; the butterflies were flitting from flower to flower in the old-fathioned GALLANTRY DEFTLY TOUCHED American t.lolie trotter !' for the Smiles of a Urass . Widow. Throughout my stax' in St. Petersbmg there lias been ut the hotel an Kngllsli wo man ..it', iitr l.iuid. She 1 tall, slender, qu't" hands. Hi. e. of vivai ious manner, and she h is been too recipient .of no end of at tention. Half a doueu Russian officers swarmed around her in the tea room, at dinner, and have been lavish with car riages. While obtaining my passport, which. I suspect, has been hi the hotel all tile time lnsica-l of ut police head quarters, a'il paving icy bill, this popular lady hit.rmi.t:- '.l:a j-.!reao:iy to ask th clerk u, lot of cue. :io:.s. As I take a drosbky sin Is u.-au rd by a general, or two or three, i;; o j c irrl.ge that Is laden with flowers. At the station the party is re enforced by r. 'group of three or four dis tinguished looking iNt'i. wiio have come to bid her uuleu. 'Coat evening when I go into the dlnlr.g car there i. but one x-aca:it seat, and that at a small table opposite the rug'.ng be'.is. As the dining car onduotor leads me to tills beat iihe smiles, and when I have pulled the ilii .r to (he table re marks tl t i look as thoug'.i I speak Kug hi'i. The conversation la brlsU and I learn be.- story, that , the story x;.ioh sa tcl'w. Her Uu.--bdl.il Is nil under oflicer of the ltv!;lU m:.nls,i.- ai.d has been assigned u mission ths'. rriiaircs Ms presence tor i:x morr.hs la Su'.;to .rtica. wiif-'e s'ae coulj not B0Cjn;pi.x- Uiio. !o shu bundled' up her nulii i-nd herself and has g me fcromni the x.-or.d. stopping c.t t'l. Peters burg, whM s s!: !.ai many t; ,c!:;. As the ColldUulo: i:u:r!lnitci ti.e cheek.; I have a gallant Inclii.atlo:!, but hesitate, recollectlt-g that both Mrs. Shot-wood and Ruth Ashraore agree tliat it lj not e'.lquet for a gentleman to pay a lady's traveling expenses. The hesitation lasts not longer than a second and a half, for she hands tns the bill for herself and her maid, and says with persuasive sweetness, "Will j-ou lay this?" New Yoik t5un. Old Dorchester Girls Have Baby Show I f - 4- l ' " ' ?l . f - , -. . -, ' ' V - frv I j' III .v I vrv j ' CI .. rl t.'l ' - I I i k n l ' M THRIFTY GROWER OF POPCORN M nil on Ihe Job it is llnsier T!imi tllflee "iirk, "Last j ear J raised my champion pop corn crop, wnich netted mo 7 to the acre, und a:; I hud thirty-eight acres you can easily calculate the amount cleared on the .Hire crop." The xpeak'-r xvns an loixa woui.iii who uv.us und manages a farm near Odeholdt, tho popcorn center of the country, if not of the world, as thu inhabitants describe it. She continued: "There are several men who have M,r pnssed me. but in lime I intend to beat them. You see, 1 have only been fariiiiim on my own ho"k for the last eight xears, and for the (list i.vo 1 didn't go hi for more than a few ceres of popcorn. Tuun finding tliat there xvas more money in it than in any other farm truck. I determined to make the blggeKt clops In tho country. "1 am by no means a largo popcorn farmer. There are more than 100 men hav ing farms many times as lurge as mine, but I believe I hav - as large an acreage as any woman farming for herself lu the country. "I in I tidiik women make good, farmers? Well, thul depends on the woman. My opinion Is that the right woman can make a success of farming and will loie the life jusi as the right man does. "I know that I have made more money rahing popeorn than I could have made hail I gone in for office work or fctudltd a profession." E.V rorcheter "girls" emhle1 TT I ut their forme" home In Dor JL I cheater. Neb., some we ks ago anil held a baby show at the home of Mrs. F. IS. Ireland. Tiie "girls" xveie all school mates and finished thu Lorchester public school together and t.oxx, after several years of so ;m i .it ion, tl.ry were glad lo gsl lu- tl-er arfl ta'fc ef t'u r!nsr,nt times thry sptmt wliile cliilditu. Rut thin time they brought th'-lr tables Instead of the dolls thi y used to piay with. Those In the pic ture are: Top roxv. Mrs. I'runk Mooberry and daughter. Leon, of Winchester, Neb.; Mrs. Harry Iloopir and duiigliler, Ji-un, of Omaha; Mrs. George Rubins and daugh ter, Kluabtth. of Omaha: Mis. William Crist and sol-, ilowaid, of Omaha, a an Mrs. I?. A. IToikman and son, Kai-nr.lt, of l-'alrfleld, Neb. Bottom how, Mrs. Karl llyeis and daughtir, Norma, of i lore), enter; Mis. 1 'r. R. C. Punter and son, Hyron, of lion liester; Mrs. William Stanley and daughter. Aleiie Agues, of iJenver; Mrs. 1'. li. In land and daughter, Phyllis, of I 'orchi-Mler. and Mrs. Willbtiu Goodmiiu and daugbler, Mildred. t,f Heaver t'roskiijg, Nb. Taken at Ilia Word. James A. Keller, traffic manager for Raker & Hamilton, has little patience with railroad men who try to do business with him over the telephone. The other day Iim was hi conversation with a representa tive of an eastern road. "You go hang yourself," ho said over the phone. Then, afier a pause, "I'o you hear me?" "Your party has hung up," broke lu cen tral -m r'i'itiiclsco Call. garden; tho dtatc?r elms, oaks anfl ptnM cast their grateful hiid over the !nortTl porch, but tho master Was not -there "ami missing li lua wo turned our eyes ' toward beautiful Mount Auburn, whore he slnepsj near his friends Longfellow, Motley and Holmes. Tn 1875, he' wrote, "My vloxv Is very' dear to me, for it Is what, my eyes flrat looked upon, and I trust will look on. last. ,A group of tall pines planted by my father, and my life-long friends, murmurs to ma aa I write: A horse chestnut, of which I planted the seed, more than fifty years ago, lifts it huge, stack of shodo before me and loxes me with Us leaves." Tn IRK! on his seventy-first year he -thtu describes the house: " 'Tlx a pleasant bid house just about twice as old as I am, four miles from Roston, in what was one the country and is now a populous suburb. Rut R mill bus sonio ten ucres of opii about It and some fine old trees. It is a square houie with four rooimi on a floor, like some houses of the Georgian era I hax-e seen in Krigiand, only they art? nt brick and this is of xvood. . Rut It Is solid with its heavy oaken beams, the spaces between which In tho four wails are filled xylth brick, though you must not fancy a brick and timber hoiisi-, ior iutwardly It ! sheathed xxltli wood. Inside there is mucTi wainscot tof Ueul) painted xvlilte In tha fashion of the time it was built. It la very sunny. There Is a pretty staircase with ths -quaint twisted banisters. My library oo cupies txvo rooms, opening Into each other by arches at the sides of the ample chlm r.iys. The trees 1 look out on arc tha earliest tilings I remember. The' txvo Kng llsh elms In front of tho house haven changed, the -sturdy islanders, a trifle" thicker in the waist, perhaps, as is the xvont of prosperous ciders, but looking just a. I first saw them seventy years ago, and It Is u balm to my eyes! Thero you have me in my old quarters. Rut you must not fancy a large house, j mis sixteen feet square, and on the ground floor, nine high. It Was laigu as tilings xv.-nt here when it was built .find has n certain air of amplHi'ida about it as from some inward Kenan nf dignity." Lowell's libra. y comprised some V.UJu vol umes, among them many valu'.ble editions adri-1 during his diplomatic uervlce at Madrid and London. One who visited him in lSf,3 thuii describes the hours spent la the Klnnvooil study: " -. i-nie'inber. xvith -i curion.-i vlvlilnee, the , hUir: in which xvo sal by th fir -place. I .; ,,i tiie det.l t 'I'mle:- the VI!lnwf' .and f.-el ih.'U 1 too have lie.ird lib; 'liliiiwood iLin: my's ileep-tin-oaied ina,-.' All round us were the iTov.ed hook .-hclv, . xvI.ohc upjiearnnce ahortcd them to be Uh- , ompaiiloiis f the tru- Iiteiaiy workman, stialems' to,, is, n,,t lie re ornamental plaything .-. He would sit among his books, pijn ia moiiin, a book in hand, hour after hoi,:-. nr ,,. -,vuii!.l look fioin ids studx window and uwq lovingly upon the beaiaiis of the American elm or the gambols of the gray sqr.lrrcl on 1:1s lawn. To r l.oweil in his home and tho homo of his father wan to realize mors distinctly what Is Indeed plain enough In all his book.5 hoxv deeply lie ),d struck his roots into his native earth. Cosmopoli tan ; s he was in knowledge, xvlth the lit erature not only of L'iighiiid, but of Franco and Italy at his fingers' ( nds, th,j genuine Yankee, the Ho.seu Rlgluw, was never far bi-low the surfai-e." lu l7ii LoXM-ll wrote, "1 have changed my quarto- and moved out of the library Into (he front room where a lora; window gives me more breeze and when I shall have the morning sun In winter, which 1 crave moro as I grow older." ills easy chair still stands beside this window. His desk is near ut hand, while above the fireplace U Iho lifelike and exquisitely lovely portrait of Murla White Lowell. Some day soon 1 shall go to Lexlng.ou and Concord over the route of the British troops and Paul Revere and am hoping to visit tho homes of Kmerson, Hawthorne, and the Alcotts while there! Will try to write you regarding that excursion, as It will emphasize your history and literary wurk. Lovingly, CLARA R. MASON, Principal Trulu i-'ebos.