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diff --git a/old/14111.txt b/old/14111.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..a91b8fb --- /dev/null +++ b/old/14111.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1174 @@ +The Project Gutenberg eBook, Dew Drops, Vol. 37, No. 15, April 12, 1914, +by Various, Edited by George E. Cook + + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + + + + +Title: Dew Drops, Vol. 37, No. 15, April 12, 1914 + +Author: Various + +Release Date: November 22, 2004 [eBook #14111] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII) + + +***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DEW DROPS, VOL. 37, NO. 15, APRIL +12, 1914*** + + +E-text prepared by Juliet Sutherland, Ronald Holder, and the Project +Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team + + + +Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this + file which includes the original illustrations. + See 14111-h.htm or 14111-h.zip: + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/1/1/14111/14111-h/14111-h.htm) + or + (https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/1/1/14111/14111-h.zip) + + + + + +DEW DROPS + +VOL. 37. No. 15. Weekly + +David C. Cook Publishing Co., Elgin, Illinois. George E. Cook, Editor + +April 12, 1914 + + + + + + + +[Illustration] + + + +TWO EASTER LOVE-GIFTS + +BY JULIA H. JOHNSON + +[Illustration] + + +"Why, Myra, what is the matter?" + +Mabel had found Myra crying in a little sheltered place where the +little neighbors sometimes played together. Mabel lived in a big house +and Myra in a little one, but they were neighbors, and loved each +other just the same. + +"I don't mean to cry long," Myra said, "but I couldn't help having a +small cry before I began to look pleasant. It's because mother could +not make my white dress for Easter. She had to sew for other people +till it was too late, and now I have to wear my blue dress when all +the rest in our class wear white." + +"That is too bad." said Mabel, putting her arm around her small +neighbor, "but we'll all love you just the same." + +"Yes," Myra said, drying her tears, "and mother said that if I would +take it pleasantly, and be happy just the same, because it was right, +that it would be like an Easter love-gift. I can't take many pennies, +but I do mean to take the love-gift, and I'll begin now, so that's the +last tear." Her smile came out like a bright little rainbow. Mabel +kissed her, because she could not help it, and the two little girls +went together to look for as many little spring things as they could +find. This was the best possible thing to do. + +"Mother," said Mabel that night, in the little go-to-bed talk. "Myra +has to wear a blue dress on Easter Day, when the rest of us will all +wear white. I am so sorry for her." + +"Is Myra very sorry, too?" asked mother. + +"Of course she is, mother: I found her crying over it this afternoon. +But she stopped pretty soon, and said she would not cry any more." +Then Mabel told about the "love-gift." + +"I wish I could take some kind of a love-gift, too," said Mabel, +seeing that her mother thought this a beautiful thing. + +"I am sure you could, if you would." said mother. + +"Please, tell me how." + +"No. it must be your own _love-thought_ first. You will have to-morrow +to think it out. Good-night, now." + +Mabel thought and thought a long time, next day. At last she whispered +something to mother that made her look very happy, and say "Yes, +dear." + +On Easter morning Mabel waited for Myra, that they might go to +Sunday-school together. + +"Oh, oh!" cried Myra, as she saw Mabel, "you have on your pink dress +in-stead of your new white one. Now I don't mind my blue one." + +"We sit in the same row, you know," said Mabel, "and we'll be near +together." She looked very happy. The two little girls with shining +faces went together to God's house, and One above looked down and +smiled upon them. + + * * * * * + +THE MYSTERY IN BILLY'S YARD. + + +"Something's going on over to our place." + +Billy Wells walked into the school yard at noon with a face which +showed that the "something" was very important indeed. The other boys +gathered in a little crowd about him. + +"What is it, Billy?" + +[Illustration: "We sit in the same row," said Mabel.] + +"Tell us, Billy." + +"It's--somebody that's come there--" + +"What for?" + +"To stay, I guess. Acts that way." + +"Friends of the folks?" + +"No, we've never seen 'em before." + +"Do you mean some kind of a tramp?" + +"What's he doing?" + +"Seems to be building a house." + +"A house? Well, that sounds queer." + +"Whereabouts?" + +"In my father's back yard." + +"Billy, you're joking." + +"It's as true as I stand here." + +"Well, go on and tell more about it. Did he skulk 'round as if he was +afraid?" + +"Not a bit of it." + +"Did he see you?" + +"Well," Billy hesitated a little. "I didn't go so very near him." + +"That's best for you," one of the boys shook his head wisely. "You +never can tell what these tramp fellows may be up to." + +"How do you mean--building?" + +"Just what I say. He was picking up things in the yard to build with. +Stuff to begin with." + +"Your father's stuff?" + +"Yes." + +"What does your father think of it?" + +"I don't believe he's seen him. Father goes to work early." + +"Of course he'll drive him off." + +"Another one came and helped him," said Billy. "They were both working +hard when I came to school." + +"Billy, you're fooling us." + +"You can come and see for yourselves," said Billy. "You can see if it +isn't exactly as I've said." + +"Let's do it." + +It was agreed, and after school a number of small boys took with him +the road leading to Billy's home. As they went in by the shady back +yard, Billy held up his hand, saying: + +"S-h-h-h-h--don't scare 'em! Now--come this way--look up there!" + +Billy led the way into a corner and pointed up into an oak tree. + +"There--right above that branch--see? They've got their sticks for the +foundation, and now they're finishing up. Quick--see that flash of +blue just where the sun shines! Look! look! they're pulling at that +bit of red yarn--I put it up there. My mother always hangs bits of +string about for 'em. My mother likes blue-birds."--_Written for Dew +Drops by Sydney Dare._ + + * * * * * + +When anyone speaks to us in anger, we should remember that it takes +two to make a quarrel, and determine not to become one of the two. + + * * * * * + +ENID'S FLOWERS + +[Illustration] + +BY MARY E. Q. BRUSH + + +The first robin had come, so had the first bluebird and the first +hand-organ man; caterpillars were beginning to crawl along the sunny +side of the fence rails and everybody was housecleaning, so it was +quite certain that spring was here. + +With it there came to the three little Ashley sisters three packets of +seeds. + +A lady friend of their mother had sent them. Every one of them had +printed on it, "A Surprise Collection." + +When the little, light-brown envelopes were opened, they were found to +contain several varieties of seeds. Some were like little, round, +brown pills--those were "sweet-peas," mamma said. Others were very +small indeed, like grains of powder, and some were like tiny, +grayish-green sticks--somebody said those were verbena seeds; and, +well, dear me, there were all kinds and shapes and sizes and grays and +browns. + +Three neat, round beds were spaded up on the lawn, and Amy, Enid and +Ruth raked them over, smoothed and patted the rich soil, and then +planted their seeds. + +Of course, you know what happened next. There had to be waiting, +watching, weeding and watering. Most of the seeds sprouted and grew, +and soon the dark brown earth was covered by green shoots and trailing +sprays. + +By and by, buds began to appear and tiny bits of color to show, and +then how happy the little girls were! + +All but Enid. She was pleased, but also a little disappointed. + +Now, it so happened, that Ruth's "Surprise Collection" turned out to +be pansies, asters, phlox and ragged sailors--all posies of bright +pink, purple and crimson in various shades. Amy's garden plot was gay +with marigolds, four-o'clocks, larkspurs, and bachelor's-buttons--all +orange and yellow, blue and purple. + +[Illustration: Enid was pleased.] + +But Enid's flowers were nearly all white, and it was truly a surprise, +though not a very agreeable one. She had white verbenas, sweet +alyssum, candytuft, daisies and gillyflowers. + +Consequently, her flower bed did not attract as much attention from +the passers-by as did the gay ones of her sisters. + +"Anyhow, almost all my posies are sweet-smelling," the little girl +said, trying her best to be contented. For, after all, to own flowers, +every one of which was fragrant, was a comfort. + +Then, there came another comfort--a real "surprise" comfort. Late one +evening, after the family had been away all day, attending the +Sunday-school picnic, and drove home in the moonlight, what do you +suppose they saw as they turned in at the gateway? Why, there on the +lawn, was a great circle of white, gleaming like frosted silver. + +"Wonder if a sheet has blown off the clothesline," said grandma. + +"Oh, it isn't a sheet--it's my flower bed! It's my dear, darling white +posies!" + +And, sure enough, the white flowers could be seen in the dark, when +all the gay reds and yellows and blues and purples were dim and dull. + +Enid felt very happy. + +"I like 'surprise collections' you can see at night," she said. + + * * * * * + +TRUE LOVE. + + "How much I love, you, mother dear," + A little prattler said; + "I love you in the morning bright, + And when I go to bed. + + "I love you when I'm near to you, + And when I'm far away; + I love you when I am at work, + And when I am at play." + + And then she shyly, sweetly raised + Her loving eyes of blue-- + "I love you when you love me best, + And when you scold me, too." + + The mother kissed her darling child, + And stooped a tear to hide: + "My precious one, I love you most + When I am forced to chide. + + "I could not let my darling child + In sin and folly go; + And this is why I sometimes chide-- + Because I love you so." + --_Sel_. + + + * * * * * + +A RUNAWAY UMBRELLA. + +There was a big umbrella with a pretty twisted handle, that belonged +to father, and he carried it down town on rainy days. There was a +little brown-eyed girl, who was four years old her last birthday; that +was Marjorie. + +There was a mischievous south wind that would be quiet for a long time +and then come with a quick gust and blow, oh, ever so hard and play +all sorts of pranks on people. + +Then, there was a lady who sat on a porch not very far from Marjorie's +house. These four together made a story, and that's what I am going to +tell you about. + +It was a beautiful sunny day and Marjorie was going out in the front +yard to play. As she went through the hall there, by the hall tree, +stood the big umbrella. + +"Wouldn't it be fun to take the umbrella and play rainy day?" she +thought. So she reached and picked it up. + +Through the door, across the porch and down onto the sidewalk she ran. +She worked a long while before she could get the umbrella to stay up. + +"Now, I am a big lady with a long dress and I am going over to the +store," she said to herself as she gathered her little short skirt up +with one hand, and held the umbrella up straight and fine with the +other. Walking carefully, "because it is so muddy," she said, as down +the street she started. Pretty soon a gust of the mischievous south +wind came along and lifted the umbrella right out of Marjorie's little +fat hand and took it out into the middle of the street and set it +down. + +Forgetting the rainy day, the long skirt, and the mud, off the curbing +she jumped, and ran for the umbrella. She had almost grasped it +again, when along came another gust of wind, and down the street +bumity-bump went the big, open umbrella. Marjorie started to run after +it, but over and over it went so much faster than a little girl could +run, that it was soon far out of her reach. + +[Illustration: She walked carefully because it was muddy.] + +Then she began to cry. + +"Catch it, oh, catch it!" she screamed, as she ran. + +The lady I told you about heard the cry, and looking up from her +reading, saw the big umbrella go rolling past, followed by the +frightened, crying little girl. Down the steps she ran and out into +the street after the umbrella. "Bump," it went up against a telephone +pole and the wind left it there. In a moment the lady had it in her +hand. + +"I want it down, oh, please, I want it down." sobbed Marjorie all out +of breath. + +"Now, it's all right. Don't cry any more," said the lady as she put it +down and handed it to Marjorie, kissing her little tear-stained face. + +Marjorie clung to it with both hands and started for home. She wanted +to put the umbrella back by the hall tree, and tell mother all about +the runaway.--_Written for Dew Drops by Flora Louise Whitmore._ + + * * * * * + +THE ADOPTED BROOD. + +"Oh, look, Bobby!" said Betty, as she jumped out of the swing, and +went running down toward the hayfield. "Here comes Joe, and he has +something to show us. I know it's a surprise." + +Bobby looked, and then he and Betty went running to meet Joe, who was +coming along the path by the orchard. He was carrying his straw hat +carefully in one hand, and beckoning with his other hand for the +children to hurry and see the surprise. + +"What have you got?" shouted both the children, excitedly, as they +came near. + +"Eggs." said Joe. + +"Oh, eggs," said Bobby and Betty. "Eggs--why eggs are nothing to see. +We find them every day." + +"Yes," said Joe, "but these are not hen's eggs--they are pheasant's +eggs!" + +Bobby and Betty looked, and sure enough, in Joe's hat were seven +eggs--olive-brown in color. + +"We were mowing in the meadow," said Joe, "and we almost ran over a +mother pheasant on her nest. She flew up right under the horse's feet, +and old Nell almost stepped into the nest. I took all the eggs, +because a pheasant will not come back to the nest after she has been +frightened away. She finds another place and makes a new nest. She +won't go back to the old one." + +"Well," said Bobby, "what are you going to do with the eggs?" + +"Oh," said Joe, "I'm going to put them under that little brown bantam +hen that wants to set, and let her hatch them." + +So Bobby and Betty went with Joe, and watched him while he made a +comfortable nest in an old box in the shop loft. Then he put the seven +eggs in the nest carefully, and got the little bantam hen and put her +in, too. She clucked and scolded, and when Joe put her in the box she +stood up and moved the eggs round with her feet, to arrange them as +she wished before she would settle down; but when Bobby and Betty +peeped in, a little later, she was all comfortable for her long wait +of three weeks. Joe put grain and water near by, and Bobby and Betty +peeped in almost every day. + +One day when the children went near the nest, they heard little +peeping sounds, and ran to tell Joe. He came and lifted up the little +bantam hen, although she scolded and pecked at him; and in the nest +Bobby and Betty saw six little pheasant chicks and one egg that did +not hatch. The pheasant chicks were little brown downy things, and Joe +took hen, chicks, nest and all, and made a little coop for them under +the orchard trees. The little chicks were very lively and very +shy--not like hen chicks; they loved to run away and hide in the +grass, and the children could hardly find them at all when they looked +for them. Mother Bantam would cluck and run back and forth in the coop +and call to them, she was so afraid something would happen. At last, +one day, Joe decided to let the little bantam run with her brood, and +show them how to scratch and find worms. So he took away the slats +from the foot of the coop, and Mrs. Bantam stepped out. + +The children saw the hen and chicks in the orchard grass. The little +pheasants ran through the orchard and the little bantam hen followed +them. What became of them nobody knew, and they have never been seen +since. Joe thinks they are still out in the woods, and that the little +pheasants are teaching their mother how to get her own food +there.--_Selected_. + + * * * * * + + "Not mighty deeds make up the sum + Of happiness below: + But little acts of kindliness, + Which any child may show." + + * * * * * + +[Illustration] + +WHERE THE JASMINE BELLS WERE RINGING + +BY ALICE MILLER WEEKS + + +The pine woodland was dark and sweet and cool, and grandmother and +little Emily were walking through it, hand in hand, enjoying its peace +and fragrance. The trees grew so closely on either side of the narrow +path that hardly a glimpse of blue sky could be seen overhead, and not +a shaft of golden sunlight was bold enough to shine down through the +glossy pine needles, as both were thinking. + +"Why, yes there is!" little Emily called suddenly, as if answering her +own thoughts aloud. "There's a sunbeam over there--right where the +trees are thickest!" + +Grandmother and she hurried to the spot; it seemed a little strange +that the sunlight should have filtered down through such dense shade. +And when they reached it, it was not sunshine at all. It was a +delicate spray of clustered yellow bells, swaying from a slender +thread of vine, and filling the spring air with delicious perfume. + +"Oh, it's jasmine!" grandmother and little Emily exclaimed, at the +same moment. And a mocking-bird, flying by, stopped a moment to trill +a sweet strain, as if he, too, was glad to welcome back this lovely +blossom of early spring. + +Little Emily gathered the spray of golden bells very carefully, to +carry it home to mother, who was not well enough to walk in the +woodland and see it where it grew; and all that day and the next, the +sweetness of the delicate flowers filled the room and seemed to speak +of love and hope and cheer. + +"They bring the sunshine and springtime right here to me," the little +girl's mother said, looking lovingly at Emily. "They are like a small +lassie I know, who helps to brighten all the dark places in my life." + +Emily looked questioningly at her mother. "What does that mean, +mamma?" she asked. And grandmother, who was standing by, said, with a +smile: + +"You thought the jasmine bells, shining in the dark wood, were a gleam +of sunshine, dear, brightening up the gloom. There are sometimes dark +places in our lives, you know; mother is having one just now, while +she is not well enough to go out herself into the sunshine. And her +little daughter, by being sweet and cheery, is just such a gleam of +sunshine to her as the jasmine bells were to the dark pine woods." + +Little Emily leaned over her mother for a kiss, then turned to touch +caressingly the golden bells of the jasmine. + +"Dear little sunshine flowers," she said, lovingly. "I'll try to +remember you every day, and be a sunshine maker, too." + +[Illustration: "You thought the jasmine bells were sunshine."] + + * * * * * + +The more one controls his temper, the less will it control him. + + * * * * * + +Knowledge Box + +Berry. + + +Berry is not something to eat, as you might think, but a big dog that +has a very important place. He is the night watchdog of the Electra +Company's factory in Cleveland, Ohio. Before Berry was given the job +they had a watchman, but he had to be discharged because he was +unfaithful, which Berry never is. He is well fitted for the place, as +he is a big, powerful animal, part Newfoundland and part St. Bernard, +and weighs 170 pounds. Not only does he do his duty well, but Berry +works cheap, for he is counted an employee of the company, and is on +the pay roll at seventy cents a week, which is the cost of the food he +eats. + +Berry is not only faithful, but one night he even proved himself a +hero, in a battle with two desperate safe robbers, who had gained +entrance to the office by sawing the lock, thinking, no doubt, that +they could easily overcome the watchdog. But when the door was burst +open, Berry instantly sprang at the burglars, and a terrible fight he +had, for the men who had come armed with pieces of lead pipe, struck +him most cruel blows. + +But they struck in vain, for with howls of mingled pain and +determination to guard his trust, Berry fought the robbers till they +were glad to escape into the darkness. It had been a desperate +struggle, and though Berry was terribly hurt, he had proved that he +was both fearless and faithful. In the morning he was found lying +beside the safe whose valuable contents he had kept from being +touched, but with only enough of life left to give a feeble wag of +welcome to his master, as though he would say, "You trusted me. and I +have kept the trust." + +So badly was Berry injured that he was taken to a dog hospital where +for two weeks it was uncertain whether he would live or die. But at +last he grew well so he was able to go back to work again, more loved +and trusted than ever. + +Though only a dog, was not Berry a hero?--_Written for Dew Drops by +Adele E. Thompson._ + + * * * * * + +EASTER DAY. + + + Awake, pretty flowers + Asleep in the snows, + For this is the morning + When Jesus arose. + Each lily he loved + In the meadows of old, + Will welcome the Master + With blossoms of gold. + + Ye violets, sweet with + The breath of the South; + Anemone blushing, + With rosy-lipped mouth; + Arbutus, half-hiding + Your delicate grace-- + The Savior has risen, + Behold ye his face! + + The types of his death + And rising are ye. + Fair gems of the meadow, + Bright buds of the lea. + "Messiah is living!" + The cherubim say; + Shine forth in your beauty + To greet him to-day! + --_Sel_. + +OUR LESSON.--For April 12. + + * * * * * + +PREPARED BY MARGUERITE COOK. + + * * * * * + +Title.--The Journey to Emmaus (Easter Lesson).--Luke 24: 13-35. + +Golden Text.--It is Christ ... that was raised from the dead.--Rom. +8:34. + +_Golden Text for Beginners_.--Be ye _kind one to another_.--Eph. 4:32. + +Truth.--Jesus is alive for evermore. + +1. The day that Jesus arose from the dead two of his friends walked to +a village called Emmaus, near Jerusalem. + +[Illustration] + +2. Jesus passing by noticed that as they walked they talked together +and seemed very sad. + +3. He went up to them and walked with them and asked them why they +were so sorrowful. + +4. They did not believe that Jesus had risen from the dead, and when +they saw him they did not know him. + +5. They told him about the sad things that had happened--how Jesus had +been put to death and placed in the grave. + +[Illustration] + +6. They said that some women who had visited the tomb of Jesus had +told them that Jesus was risen. + +7. Jesus then told the two men that if they were not so slow to +believe the Word of God and the promise Jesus had given them they +would know that it must be true. + +8. When they came to their home the men urged Jesus to stop with them +for it was now evening. + +9. While they were eating supper Jesus took bread and blessed it and +gave it to them. + +[Illustration] + +10. As they saw Jesus blessing the bread they knew him, but he at once +vanished out of their sight. + +[Illustration] + +11. They said one to another, "Did not our hearts burn within us while +we talked by the way?" + +[Illustration] + +12. They at once went back to Jerusalem to tell the other disciples +the good news that Jesus had truly risen from the dead and they had +seen him. + + * * * * * + +QUESTIONS. + +What is the Golden Text? What is the Truth? + +1. On what day did two of Jesus' friends walk to a village called +Emmaus? + +2. As Jesus passed by, what did he notice? + +3. What did he do? + +4. What did they not believe? + +5. About what did they tell him? + +6. What had some women told them, who had visited Jesus' tomb? + +7. What did Jesus tell the two men? + +8. When they came to their home what did they urge Jesus to do? + +9. While they were eating supper what did Jesus do? + +10. When they knew him what became of Jesus? + +11. What did they say one to another? + +12. What did they at once go back to Jerusalem to tell the other +disciples? + + * * * * * + +LESSON HYMN. + +_Tune_--"Jesus loves me, this I know," omitting chorus (E flat). + +Close beside us every day +Christ is walking all the way; +And his voice is very near; +If we listen we may hear. + +Title of Lesson for April 19. + +The Cost of Discipleship.--Luke 14:25-35. + + * * * * * + +Golden Text for April 19. + +Whosoever shall lose his life for my sake shall find it.--Matt. 16:25. + + * * * * * + +Beginners Golden Text for April 19. + +_Be ye kind one to another_.--Eph. 4:32. + + * * * * * + +Advice to Boys and Girls + +The Extra Step Society. + + +The "Extra Step Society" was formed in the Martin household when the +mother was forced to be on the lounge for some time with a sprained +ankle. It was Tom who cheerfully took an extra step on his way to +school each day to call at his grandmother's and report the progress +of the invalid. It was Bessie who left her play and stepped softly +into the parlor every morning to lower the blind so that the sun's +rays might not beam too warmly on her mother's face. And it was wee +Alice who took many an extra step during the day, sometimes to carry a +glass of fresh water to her mother, and sometimes to bring a magazine +or paper. + +"We're trying to pay you back a little, mamma," Bessie said lovingly +one night when all the children were gathered around their mother. "We +don't mind a bit taking extra steps if only we can make you +comfortable, so you must not think we get tired of doing things for +you." + +"Bless my faithful, unselfish little nurses!" Mrs. Martin rejoined +earnestly. "Love lightens your labors."--_Sel._ + + * * * * * + +Thoughts for Mothers + +The Care of the Home. + + +The busy mother will find the care of the home too much for one pair +of hands unless she enlists the children as helpers. Let her begin to +practice systematics at once. Assign some corner or box of play-things +to one child to be cared for. A small boy might have the work of +putting away yesterday's newspapers regularly, as his part in keeping +the house tidy. The small daughter could pick up and dust in one +special room, taking care that a second dusting by a more careful hand +is not necessary. + +The motive for doing these little tasks well should be made prominent, +showing that the child is big enough to "help" mother. Praise should +be bestowed, not as if it were anything astonishing and out of the way +for the child to do the work well, but as a token of appreciation of +the motive and manner in doing it. Encourage as much as possible, but +do not develop vanity by praising to excess. + +Let their love be the mainspring of their every act of +service.--_Written for Dew Drops by Julia H. Johnston_. + + * * * * * + +[Entered at the Post Office at Elgin, Ill., as Second Class Mail +Matter.] + +Price of Dew Drops.--In lots of five or more, to one address, 20 +cents per copy per year, or 5-1/2 cents per copy per quarter. Address, + +David C. Cook Publishing Co., Elgin, Ill. + + + +***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DEW DROPS, VOL. 37, NO. 15, APRIL +12, 1914*** + + +******* This file should be named 14111.txt or 14111.zip ******* + + +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: +https://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/1/4/1/1/14111 + + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. 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