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Land For Father:

Land For Father Returning to Missouri, Grant settled his fam¬ily on 80 acres of land for father given him by his father-in-law and tried to farm. With grim humor he called the place "Hard Scrabble," for he had to bear all the work of clearing the land for father, hauling wood, plowing, and cultivating his crop. After four years he abandoned fanning and set up an unsuccessful real-estate business in St. Louis. In 1860 he moved to Galena, 111., where he worked in his father's leather shop.

RIDERS TO THE SEA, by John Milling- j ton Synge, is the most nearly perfect trapf!- * in one act in modern literature. The very sir pie plot is based not on the traditional confi:: of human wills but on the hopeless struggle.: man against the impersonal but relentless cruei; of the sea. It has taken from Maurya fouroi her six sons, their father, and their father's father.

See Also Protesting Father And:

Italy, espe-in the Papal States, was in chaos caused i warring Visconti brigands. Constant de-i were made on papal diplomacy by dis-r between the houses of Aragon and Anjou FRA 'arious territories, and by the war between id and France. Finally, although disorders t ued in Italy, the Pope literally stepped over stigat in so ;beg >rnop> gnize :hurc to p five 1234 )dy of his protesting father and, on Sept. 176, started for Rome.

Carol did not say anything else. She rang her doorbell, took the five-year-old's hand and, when her mother pushed the buzzer, went inside. The other little girl rode away on her bicycle. Read the following incident, trying to understand what the child's be¬havior meant to him: Father and nine-year-old David were out in the backyard; father was working on the rosebushes. David, close by, picked up some of his father's tools.


On The Other Hand See The Father Of Maharaja:

RANJIT SINGH or RUNJIT SINGH,run'jit siN'ha, Indian maharaja, founder of the Sikh kingdom in the Punjab: b. Gujranwala, Punjab, Nov. 13, 1780; d. Lahore, June 27, 1839. His father, Maha Singh, was chief of the Suker-chakia clan, whose headquarters was at Gujran¬wala, and his mother was a princess of Jind. An attack of smallpox deprived him of his left eye. His father died when he was 12, and he then came under the tutelage of a widow, named Sada Kaur, who was the head of the Kanhaya clan, and to whose daughter he was affianced.

Gujranwala is of relatively recent origin, hav¬ing come into prominence with the rise of Sikh power in the Punjab in the 18th and 19th cen¬turies. The only site of historical significance is the mausoleum of Mahan Singh, the father of Maharaja Ranjit Singh (1780-1839), both of whom were bom in the city. Gujranwala played a prominent role in the politics of the British Punjab. Population: (1961) 196,154.

 

 

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