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of strong brown tea. Once in a while my father had some piece of business to do which had [ineligible writing above] had to be done by water. The Sunbeam was kept tied up at one of the docks and when the steam was up he would have the mate blow his whistle to call my mother who collected us and hurried down the tan back road past the machine ships and the shingle mill to the last slip where the Sunbeam was waiting for us, her white paint clean and her brass shining. Then the lines were case and the water began to boil over the propeller as we glided away from the docks, out into open water. My father up in the wheel house behind us, turning the great wheel which kept us on our course. Although nobody thought much about such things in those years before the First World War when there was first Theodore Roosevelt and then William Taft holding the reins of American government, life in the North Woods offered a detailed model of paternalistic management. The Company