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Show I. 0F THE 00 PY B0Y' o-double bliss and EJxwlpit dallte ( took her tew the thtotar lMt nite one thing it) certain And the rest is that Way for me lies purrydise. strange is it not that from One so so Great and bntiful a hive has sprung So ardent is my heart! true ilamo I bought two jmrket seats at 30 Per nor is e'en that the full extent of . is Proof of my affexion piping hot i also dtig from my too Slender purse Be. for peanuts Which is not so wurse ah But the grattitood in her soft eyes had moved much older heads than ine Tow sighs it Beats all how a girl cold tew her will warm up when he Takes her tew no doubt But woman dearly hives and that the road tew her hart runs That wey Whtch same makes bliss a luxury tew seek when ,ono's income is But 3 bucks a but that for which man, Has laid down his life 111 not bgrudge But when she is my if haply Fate shall thence my frale craft steer we'll see n show about twice Times a but what Fond thoughts are in my and what sweet nothings did she sweetly say Alas Tew poetry's eturnal loss here cums that foe tew literchure The boss. r-St. Louis Post-Dlsnntch. ont in their studies, while only 12 per cent of those living in the low-priced dormitores fell under the same reproach. re-proach. Moreover, the dean tells us that the trouble is becoming worse, and that the scholarship of all rich students is going lower and lower all the time. The dean- proposes that the palatial dormitories bo abolished' or reduced in number, but this seems to strike at the- effect rather than at the cause. The rich students are not poor scholars becausq they live in palatial dormitories, but because they have never experienced the self-discipline that usually accompanies the small or middle class income. |