The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52

The Gedarville Herald. THE WRECKING TRAIN. W a. rlair , Vubllsber. CEDARVILLE. OHIO, GOOD FISH STORIES. .The Herring’* E»«fulu*«—Origin of the IleVil-Flshand the Hole. The strangest flab in the world la said •to be the 'humble herring. He la aa common as mud, and aa cheap as dirt, but bo can not bo beaten lor flavor; and it la claimed for him that ho supports more persons than any creature in the world—in the catching, tho preserving, the selling or the eating. Another curious1thing is that , he assumes so Catch him In ft L qo I u Homely, ButWhen It's Needed It b NeededBadly.. Accidents will happen occasionally on the heat-managed railroads, and some* times bad wrecks happen, the cause ot which frequently is a mystery, and the tracks are blocked for hours. For every minute the track remains blocked mon­ ey and time are lost, and passenger and freight traffic are. Interrupted. So the railroads are always prepared, andwith­ in thirty minutes aftera wreck has hap­ pened a wrecking train is on the way with a trained crow of men, and If the telegram announcing the wreck says thatpassengers or employes are injured, the wrecking train comes along with Its physicians, bandages and cots. A wrecking outfit is about'the homeliest thing owned by a railroad company, /faiany shapes and names, ono place and bo is a bloater; in anotb- j but when it is needed it isneeded badly, or a sodger; in a-third, a sprat, and, 1 The wrecking cars are kept at the end when young, he is taken from the \of a division, and are directly, under the Thames and called whitebait, while across theChannelin'Brittany,before be is more than a couple of inches long, ho can be found tinned and laboied in pure olive oil as a sardine. He is a wonderful fish and from the out-and-out genuine ancient and fish-like smell during the herring harvest that obtains in the neighborhood about Amsterdam, it is not so very hard to beiieve that that ancient.am! highly respectable.town is really built, as they say, on herrlhg bones. * Once upon a'time tho herring used to control o f tho snporlntehdentof that di­ vision. The wrecking train is composed of three ears and apoworful locomotive, and alj the cars aro fitted with air brakea The first oar is what is known as the truck car. The body of the car is very low. and upon It are carried two extra pairs of truoks, rails, cross-ties, and spikes, for sometimes the track is torn up in a wreck. The socond car Is the wrecking car. It is built of the heaviest tlrnbor,. and is mounted on two pairs of small, heavy trucks. Half of tho car is covored over and the 'other he worshipped in Holland, a custom that half is-a more platform, but arising from obtains to-day in: Scotland in a, very practical manner. They have a cheer­ ful method at some of tho fishing ports in. that country ot Insuring luck beforo starting out witlTtheir boats on a fish­ ing, trip. Each man thrashes his wife, and the ono who first draws .blood is sure to have the biggest haul. For self- proteotion the women invented a pecu­ liar method of lacing tho corsets, which thus became known as herring boning, a torm now in every-day use among sea­ faring men. Tho men will not go out, however, if awoman wishes them "good tho contor is a powerful dorrick with a 28-foot beam. With this powerful.con­ trivance, truoks, cars and locomotives are swung about* The covered portion of the car resembles the inside of a storeroom of a ship, as there aro so many cables hanging around. In ono end of the cararo twqolosets,one containing tho food for tho^creiy The locker is always well fUiod, tor-'thore is no tolling when tho wrecking train may be called into service. Tho other olosot' or locker con tains medicines, bandagos, and a portable telegraph outfit, with luck," or it a rabbit or a pig orosses j sovoral coils ot wire. - If the wreck is a their path, being perfectly sure that they will have nothing hut their labor for their pains. It is appalling to thlnk of tho number of perjured souls whio ought to be, like Tam o’ Shantor, "roastin’ liko a herrin’’’ for baiting their hooks with lies. It is always somebody else, however, who does the fibbing, so that the following story as to tho origin of the devil fish may go unchallenged: A French brig was 'at one time on- gaged in the Mediterranean fruit trade, an occupation by no moans calculated to mako saints of those who are en­ gaged in it Still, thoro aro limits even to a Frenchman’s aacre bltu*, and the captain of the brig overstepped thorn with much disastrous results to himself. Ho.swore so much and so terrible over a boatload of currants that old Satan appeared over tho taffrail and claimed him with smiles. Tho Frenchman said that ho would ho wbat-you-may-call- onit-d in all of the languages of Europe before ho would go, so old Nick stlrrcdTiim tip with his fork; whereupon the skipper took a header into the briny beforo the old villaitf could catch him, hut in revenge his Satanic Majesty turned him .into a devil fish, and as such ho has roamed tho soas evory since, playing sad havoo with the fishormon’a nets. •: Tho origin of the sole Is rather a queer It was not always tho fiat fish that one. it at present appears, hut onoe upon timo It was os round as a cod. the Queen of Finland was cru.se in her yacht, and being hungry about lunch time thought she would like a bit of frlod fish. The lines woro bad onS the instrument is brought into use An oporator is plowed up at the first station along tho road, and when tho scone of tho accident Is reached the wires are set and a telegraph office is establish. The car carries rope of every slze apd kind up to three Inchos In di­ ameter, hydraulic jacks for raising en­ gines and cars, levers, pulleys and der­ rick tackle of all kinds.- "On the Louis- vlllo & Nashville first division wrecking card there aro carried 800 feet of manila three-inch rope for pulling engines on the track, 800 foot of two-inch, full line tor pulling purposes, 275 feet ljf-lnch rope for the derrick, two 80-foot sections of threo-inoh switch rope for pulling on cars,- 840 feet 2K-lrioh rope for tho same purpose, and 220 feet of three-inch rope for puilingon trucks, and 500 feet for guy lines. The next car is the "block car,’’ containing short blocks .o f wood of every size for blocking qp cars and locomotives At ovory wreck cars aro generally tumbled about in confusion, and the wrecking crow,begin on those. The shattered ones aro pushed off the track, and those left in a little better condition are put on the track and drawn away, After this is done there is one or more disabled onginos. The heavy cables on tho wrecking ear are attached to the disabled locomotive, and a live one at the othor end of tho ropo generally, by hard work, pulls tho disabled locomo­ t i v e back on tho track, Whon the track One day ; is clear, tho wrecking train picks up all having a |the iron-and truoks and comes back to town.—-Boston Herald. AMERICAN LAWYERS. thrown over and a groat fat solo was, I<ord Co,erWgo T«7ir^h«™^The, DUftr caught. Somehow they could only ( . From the English, manage to fry ono sido of him in time j There is one possibly impending for lunch, and the Queon in rage at schange. - I mean tho Introduction of their delay, throw tho other half ovor*. ( tko American practice as to our profes- hoard. This sot tho fashion for flatgess; 9j0u; the allowing the functions of tho which has ovor since been adistinguish- { attorney and tho functions of tho bar* PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL, —There are seven millfonaire editors in New York. Hogarth’s bouse at Chiswick, En­ gland, Is rapidly going to decay, and no one seems ready to rescue it from utter demolition. —The house in which Columbus died at Valladolid is falling into decay, and the Spanish Government is much re­ proached for allowing it-to go to ruin. The Italians talk of purchasing it by a national subscription —Martha Ann Bogart, who died re­ cently in Elizabeth, N« J., was noted for her ponuriousnega She used to split lucifer matches so as to make onomatch do for .two pr throo , timoa It is need­ less to say that she left a fortune. —Mrs. Ambrose Haley,.of. Houlton, Me., has in her possession aWeasurod hoirloom, a slipper that was worn by her father's grandmother on the occa­ sion of her marriage in England, which must havo occurred fully 175 years ago: It is made of brocaded satin. —In Borne niales wore black for mourning, while the women indicated their grief by wearing white garments. In Turkey, at the present day, the mourning hue is violet; in China, white; in Egypt, yellow; in Ethiopia, brown; in London and America, black. The mourning color in Spain was white un­ til changed by the laws o f 1800, —A Frenchman fond of literature^ who died at Dolo in the Jura recently, was buried according to the terms of his will, ,with a French edition of Horace beneath his hend, a copy of Milton at his feet, a Greok Testament in hisright band, and an Elzevirian edition of Hor­ ace in his l e f t ' Under his back lay* ah English edition of the same poet —Mrs. Marble, of Dlxfiold, Me., broke a hen of setting. She did it in this way; Sho shut the hen' up in a close room—and forgot her. It was twonty- Oigbt days later that somebody hap-, pened to find Mrs. Hen, hungry and thirsty, to be sure, hut alive 'hud bright and with more taste for scratching for worms in the garden than for sitting on eggs, even in a stolen nest —Mrs. General Grant says she first met the General in 184*1and they were married in 1848. She has many of the letters written by him during the days of their oourtsbip, and while she re­ gards these in their entirety too saored for the public eye, she will make ex­ tracts from them for her book of rem­ iniscences of her famous husband. She is working very slowly on tho book and does not expect to have it roady for pub­ lication before next spring. —Sir Edwin Chadwick, who diod ro- cofitly, was asked to what lio attributed his longlife and good health. “ Well,” ho replied, "I have always taken groat care of (Myself; I have my daily tub, in which 1 strongly believe. But my groat age is undoubtedly hereditary, for my, father died at tho age. of oighty-four, my grandfather at ninety-five, and my two groat-great-grandfathers were cent­ enarians.” Sir Edwin, it should be added, nevor smoked, and lived largely on vegetables. . TEMPERANCE NOTES. FIGURES THAT TALK* ••A LITTLE NONSENSE.1* ing characteristic ot crimes. tho sole.—N. Y. BRAIDING MACHINES. Beantlfol rlstcr to ho exercised by tho same per­ son, writes Lord Coleridgo in tho Con­ temporary Review. *It Is true that in the great cities of America, where there Ornaments Made Without a ; are firms of lawyers, the principles of Finger Touch. It is very curious to an outsider 1natural selection send seine of the firms tos into court and keep others in chambers, watch tho operations of a braiding ma-1go that the pract ce a good deal modifies chine. In one factory there are some' the principle. But tho principle re­ tort different kinds of machines kept in i mains, and I believe tho extension ot it operation. Tho most curious of all Is a to England is not so very far off. machine whose special domain is the Whether it will ho a benefit or not I do so-called "applique” work. Itperfortns j not feel sure three tasks at one and the same time, I once asked Mr. Benjamin, who had When properly adjusted a tiny kn ife! experience of both systems, which, cuts out, according to tho pretty design i upon tho whole, he thought the best intended, the fibres from the upper j He replied that the question could not layer of cloth, while simultaneously the i be answered In* word. ‘ ‘If," he said, machine sews those figures on to the layer of cloth underneath—tho Upper layer boing generally of medium thick4 ness, while the lower one is cloth of the thickest, warmest and most expensive kind, such as is suitable for a lady's cloak. The effect thus obtained—art­ istic arabesques, beautifully curving lines, forming an intricate yet pleasing pattern, lying on tho cloth underneath |vast majority of clients, —is very pretty indeed. { once the American.” . The beading* machine, by means o f , This was very weighty and very itn* which those most elegant ornaments on partial evidence, and 1 think, if Mr. a woman’s dress, those glistening arab- ] Benjamin was right, that what is clear- esques of beading, are put on, is another ; ly for the benefit of the vast majority of triumph of mechanical genius. The clients is certain to be established in "you ask me which is bc3t fitted for producing from time to time a dozen or a score of very eminent and highly- cultivated men, men fit to play a groat part in public affairs and stand up for the oppressed and persecuted in times of trouble and danger, I should say at once the English. If you ask me which Is the best in ordinary times for the I answer at same may be said of the leather-edge machine, which does the so-called “ sun­ beam" *nd "rainbow" work, embroider­ ing tho Shades, which arc gradually toned down; or the eornolly machine, Which does the cording, and still‘ mpre so of the soutache machine, whifh does the simplest and yet one of tho most ef­ fective styles of embroidery.-Pitta- burgh Dispatch. tho end. Without expressing any opin­ ion whatever upon recently-controvert­ ed facts, which I can not do and which would be quite improper for me if t could, I may say so much as this, that I think they have appreciably hastened the advent of the change. —•Theaverage distance ofth*'cloud* from the earth, is about one mile* —"That was a bad scare Mrs. Parting­ ton had the other day.” "? ? ?” “ She wont to a pantomime, and thought qho had suddenly lost hor hearing."—N. Y. Sun. - “ Times aro gottlng so hard,” re-, marked an unsuccessful business man, "that it’s getting to bo all I can do to collect ,my thoughts.”—Washington Post.' —'“ Charlie—“ Yos, Mabol, t llko you, but there was something about you last night that I didn't like." Mabol— "Why, Charlie, what was it?" Charlie —"Fred Somers’ arm.” . * —"•I)ayou guarantee this not to break down?” sho asked. "Our Instructions, miss,” said the salesman, blandly, “ aro never to guarantee hammocks whon wo sell ’em to handsome yonng ladles.” She bought it. —First Mosquito—“ You aro looking plump and well fed. Where do you,go to find such gtfod faro?” Second Mos­ quito—“ I hang around the baberdasb- ors and follow tho young meirwho buy negligojihicts.’ —America. —Logic—"Shall I take more beer? My stomach says ‘Yos.’ My reason says *Na* My reason is wiser than my stomach, of course, and it is always the wiser ono that yields in a quarrel, they say—waltor, another bottle!" — File- gende Blatter. —“ I wish to see Miss Elder," said Mrs F*nglc, handing a card to the door- maid. "She’s ongaged, ma’am,” replied the girl. "Well, now, I’ve been ex­ pecting that for somo time. I must go in right'away and congratulate her.”— Harper’s Bazar. —Old Friend (unexpected arrival)— "And so this is your daughter’s coming- out party?" Practical Mother—"Yes; and it I hadn’ t put’ my veto on those dressmakers, she would have been out a good deal further than she ia.*’~-Dom- orest’s Monthly, —Burly Party—“ Are you aware, sir, that you deliberately placed, your unit brella in my ear last evening?" Little Bliffcrton—“Very careless of mo, I’m sure, I wondered what became of it, and—-Would it be too much trouble to ask you to return it?”—Dry Goods Chronicle, , —I'mher husband, she’s iny wife; tkeep her busy, you bet your life; We’ve got a littlecottsge, several children, too, Ibe nukes the firs, and i get up when She Gets Through, —Washington Post, Oar National' Drink Bill and th* Faopl* Who Fay It. "You can not have your cako and eat it, too." So reads the immutable-law which we alt some time mournfully learned in childhood. A nation can not drink its income and havd it, top. What people spend for drink they can not spend for food, clothing or dwell­ ings, hooka, schools or churches, If a man spends 8100 a year for drink be can not spend that 8100 for clothes for himself or family, for food or fuel, or any of the comforts of life. This is not * mere abstract argument, but a truth which has awful, practical demonstra­ tion in every community. We all know families utterly wretched because the husband and father .drinks up the earn­ ings which might support them in com­ fort The Nation is only a collection of families. According to the latest esti­ mates,which have passed unchallenged, the criticism of those staunch liquor papers, the Chicago Champion and the Brewers’ Journal, the. whole Nation is spending more than 81*100,000,0U0 an­ nually for intoxicating liquors, and in­ creasing tho amount at the rate of 550,- 000,000a year. By a fair deduction of all ‘ receipts from State and National taxation of the. traffic, it would easily amount to a clear 81,000,000,000, for which the Nation receives no return. If our population is 00,000,000, .that amounts to $16.00. for every man; woman and ' child; at the mili­ tary' rate of one able-bodied man for every five persons, ' that would give 880 cash loss every year for every able-bodied man in the Nation. If one-halt of these do not-drink^ that will carry the amount which tho aver­ age.drinker wastes up to$100 annually, It easily amounts to 8100. Few are the drinking men who are content with less than five glasses of beer a day, making 25 cents a day and 800 a year; for men who drink every othor day, got it some­ how on Sunday. From. their point of viow they "must” have it. Add. in oc­ casional "treats" and "sprees" and "whiskies'’ at, tea to fifteen cents a glass, and you see how easy it is to Overrun 8100. Now, for the man who is earning 8300,. or even ,8000 a year, think what a terrible draft that 8100 for liquor is upon the subsistence of his family. So is the expenditure of 81.000,- 000,000 a terrible draft'upon the fami­ lies of the Nation. Let no man flatter- himself that he does notfhave to pay part of that'thou­ sand millions because he does nbt drink, the liquor. If ono-half of the men in tho Nation were to fire off their wages in gunpowder as fast as received, would not tbo other half have to pay for tho fire-works? Certainly they would, for they .would have to support the men and" the families-ot tho men whoso wages had gone up in smoke. It is just the same whon wages go down in drink. This is the greatest cause of hardship to the working-mon. Far bo it.from us to say that all their poverty is caused by drink. There are thousands sober, faithful and industrious, toiling with a devotion that is sublime to support themselves and thoir dear ones amid ill- adjusted social conditions. The drink­ ing man is a worso rival than the China­ man. When he is sober ho can do nearly as good work as another man, hut being always under the harrow he Is glad to work for baud to mouth wages. Bo he brings down the wages of every man who works with'him. The Intemperate man dooS not support his Wifo and children. Hence his wife must go into tho wage-market, to work for what she can get, and bring prices down still lower. The sober working-men* must pay for the support of the wives and children of drunkards, for the ar-‘ rest, trial and conviction of drink-crim­ inals, and for the support of their fam­ ilies while they are imprisoned. They must pay, too, for all the idle timo and spoiled goods caused by drink in (the. factory, for all thoso things increase the employers' expenses, and are sure to cut down the workman's wages. The tradesmen, pay their part, too. We will suppose that at tho first four- corners beyond |hq drinking-man's home there aro four business places. No. I is a saloon. No. 2 is a grocery. No. 8 d dry-goods store, No. 4 a boot and shoe store. Just beyond lives his land­ lord. Tho working-man recoives 812 in wages Saturday night, and starts out to spend it as follows: For Groceries..,..... ,,.»«■«,,,,,.«.««,,,,, *900 Dr,T-xoods................ 3-00 “ Children's s h o e s . . . . . s o o “ Rent due....... ............. ......... 600 But he comes.to the saloon first, and stops in there. He owes a little “ score,” which ho pays. All the dead-boats who hang around pass the word that he has money about him. They drop in, crowd around, and on one pretext or another get him to “ treat the crowd.” But tlie time he comes out, 85 of his money is gone. He has lost that 85. But Is he the only one who has lost It? Let us see. When he leaves the saloon, he takes out his memorandum of expenses amounting to 812. In his purso there are now only 87, (Somehow that list muat be cut down by the amount of ts. He must'let the children’s shoes go and tho groceries or the dry-goods, or leave his rent un­ paid. The grocer, the dry-goods mer­ chant, the boot and shoe dealer and the real-estate owner, among them, must get $5 less than they would have re­ ceived if the saloon had been out of the way. This, which Is true for one man's ex­ penditures, is true proportionately for the Nation, Yon see it in the bare feet, the fireless rooms, the pinched facet and tattered clothing of the families ot drinking wen and the wretched w meats where they live. All that that these people havo not bought tU1 food and fuel, the shoes and ’ they would have bought, nor paftTSi rent they would havo paid .if tlio - had not boon spent for liquor, in 0*hi' words, tho grocer and the butcher, ib dry-goods dealer and tho shoo deal*, the coal merchant and the owner otreil estate havo lost what the saloon hu got. What is called “ ovcr-produotloa* is simply the Withdrawal by tho liquA dealers of 81,01)0,009,00a from, the indn* tries of the Nation. FARglffl A POOP I _ ,ii« Mads a®** l * * j S S * » * * » '■ l» £ to : The farmers have the privilege of paying their part to the sunport ande* richment of tho saloon-keeper, Ths» help in the .great enterprise, oven m they do not drink, llow is that? We]L ] every one knows that the sale of far* 1 products is painfully slow. Whili women and children in the city art starving, the farmers of Illinois, Ran. sos and Dakota are lamenting over com crops that shake like Lebanon and wheat-fields fair as the garden ot Qod, It you could bring the surplus harvest to the deficient stomach, there would be rejoicing at. both ends of the line. Itis not a mere question of -transportation, for you might pile that grain in sky. touching elevators in the cities, and the starvation, of the poor go on all the same. They have not the money to buy with, and they never wlllhavo while $1,000,000,000 is wasted for intoxicant*, “ But, now, see here.” says some farming friend, “ isn’t all the beer and whisky made out of grain? and doesn't that grain have to be bought of the farmers? What difference does it make whether the ppoplobuy-it in the form ^ of food or in the form of drink?’’ It ig the difference between 25 cents and850 per bushel. According to the report of the Bureau o f Statistics of the United States for 1880, there were used in the manufacture of intoxicating liquors 15,310,802 bushels of corn. The total of all grains so used was 20,990,* 024 jmshels. If we consider it all ae corn, and divide the total expenditure for liquor in that year—51,100,000,000— by the number of bushels, we have a little more than 850.a bushel which the drinkers paid for their grain in the form o f ' liquor. . Sold as corn, the bushel of corn brought the Westorn farmer something like 25 cents. Sold as liquor it brought the liquor dealer a solid.850. - But observe, the farmer only received his 25 cents just the. same. Now, the people who have paid 850 for corn in the form of liquor will have so,much less money to spend for corn in the shape of Corn. If wo suppose tho retail prico of corn to thorn would avorago. 50 cents, then tho 850 they, havo spent for corn in tho Shape of liquor would'have bought 100 bushels of corn in tho shape of corn. But he- . cause they have paid $50for one bushel, they can not buy the other ninety-nine. The farmer has all those left on his hands, and is poor for lack of sale for - his splendid crops. Is it not evident that the farmer can not work.alongside of the distiller, the{ brower and the saloon-keopor and livo?’ . He can not soil corn for 25 cents and ’^ have the saloon-keeper sell It for 830 to the very people who would otherwise buy of- him. •But would they buy the grain if they did not buy tho.llquor? Take a wagon load of meal in twelve-pound saoks down among the poor tenements, and offer to glvo a Back to every needy fam­ ily, and see how far you would drive before you would have an empty wagon! These people woofully need your grain, but you cani not sell ft to them because the saloon has exhausted' their buying power. The same would be found true of all other products. Let It be announced that on a certain day a suit of clothes, a pair ot shoes, a dress-pattern, a suit of underclothing, etc., would he given freely to every needy applicant You might use military strictness to guard against imposition, and nevertheless It would ho a question whother tho whole retail stock of-any city would not be exhausted within twenty-four hours. The only thing that keeps them in the stores now is that the people who need them most have not* tho money to buy them. * The money which is spent for liquor can not ho spent for any thing else, Tho saloon is sucking the,blood of every honest industry. It is keeping us poor as a Nation in spite of our splendid re­ sources, just as the Individual drinker is kept poor though earning ample wages, Tho sober people of the Nation suffer with the intemperate, just as the drinking man's family suffer with him. —■Rev, J. C. Fernald, in Chicago Ad­ vance, . Dn, N arsem , the Norwegian explorer, crossed Greenland on foot. With five companions ha spent several weeks on floating ice. For forty days they tramped over frozen snow, with eighty degrees of frost Didhe use anyalcoholic drinks? That he did mako use of alco­ holic spirits you can see from tho fol­ lowing statement, but never as a bov erage. He says: “ The only spirits w» took were as fuel for oii'r stove to molt the snow that wo might have water to drink. I think the use of Btlmulanta is a mistake," It is against the law to sell whisky on Sunday in Christiana, Norway, and now amovement is on foot to have the sale of beer and wine on that day prohibited also. The official organ of tho Norweg­ ian Total Abstinence Society says that the Lutheran bishop, all tho ministers ot Christiana, and five professors o! theology hate signed a petitlorf infavo# o f this action. pin, % oy \ in center, and ie n d o f* ° « er^ t f i y e r t t ^ t o s e f «i to spring tra l ushes RMffi* w * ^ja»°to pa«fh fiy°r tl | down to the h- inches bigl thenbore alia ^ 1 ' •’ * — L- PAM FIO. 1.—1 (he back board wl thepan. DriJ e a hole, then tie a hole of the pan ..half-inch holes ai tight enough to 1 bottom when tno ■ take a piece of sc r inside tho trap, c ^ square, 27 incl it with sand, d: f-otn each end ir the trap, »nd to tho short tie a twine to th ' just long enouj inches When set - between tho-en< L & FIG. wire nails dr Make a hole t let the rats ru Take old di Of White lural i9d squirrels,. Jhtch chioker Without bait, throo monthf traps like mi 1 timed three where you cs to the long l when they b thing every - Tho folio1 tlonal Stoc I t is tho s , the groates D on ' t to or hay who old, A DAtny- weeks' in paying on T xik eov constlpati dry feed. I f you at that, ’ nine-tent Nnvr.r. cow's hai < is one W e ca they dor kind of ’ T he ct pasture ? start tot . M iek const: p; bowels T he f ly divit Bumrne weaklj Tttic- with «. calves quantl I v y cream lass is raisin I t that 1 lowin will some Tii gin« clarl' dcnd Idem A good any hors »a y all.

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