The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
The CedarviUe Herald, i B. BtAIHifFeMlahw. * l&[-' "< V ' •*. 4 W ^AEV IT J-'E . , -'a r " 9 0 HDUt?T 0 »ra THE BATTLE FIELD. ou t? A, 4?O tlt) P 5 8TORY, n «> *U «U ow H i | h h #w B * Byrop*ta*iu iHUrtpi-ir n ir»»<r y - ”1 know,” said theponduotor, mi he fin. #b©dcountlngi,p andlighted a.olgar, "thatffib#t p e o j^ : oonifldnr ua a hard hearted lot, but w*’ve get to be, or at least mult 1 appe#^ to be. A railroad company has little to ’do with sentlm#rit and a groat deal to do with builuesa, I can’t affordtolat people ride a t my wx- penso, aOWhatapi Xtado?” * ■ away lpf s |I m m ! ^ ? J wo or three Min utes, and. then continued: ’i “I didn’t use’ tp ;hiave ao mwoh heart about it, always excusing rayself on the plea ot duty; but One night about three, Whisk ^deMtol^wwftr f i A ’Ddm^lfto: » Co». who “Tbew little episodes would happen and were Nte life ot the campa on both aides. Twaatf-six « # • **▼• pataed' «btoe ti>At1v%h^JhT4N«r>omiiyr> but Mm event* e l wftgsrttA side ray tp4nty«flr#kMrthd#yfc*#«w©ninmind ’'T i^ ty - s ix - y A r i ago-oh the,Wd of •inly,? h a **tejp,-"th**oam##a»4 to Which I belonged—the' Fourth Virginian of General f-JE i j Stbert’s old, ^g#**-— was te*tlng af|*r ;the;*ffidrAt*Beam’* Station,* In theoohnty of Dinwiddle, and o t all thWthlterable camping grounds of DISASTROUS FIRE. Qte way,that he^dry, du a tt -earn# -was tne-worst il e rw sawi Twf baa keptmyTSsflnprartiyMftgyor’raWkteYdi^ weeks we had had noYalit aftd (hOplne lehvoa of the, foroat in ,wbbb out blankets were spread—for tents, we hadnone—wore curled: into .spirals and thaflndr pieces were ;rdsf>lvifcg. Into” dust Fdod wee scarce, more ao than usual, corn meal being the staple, and it waa rausty at t h a t., $o when,on the evening of July aJ Sorgeant Stringfollow, a noted scout, ig r- i--i i' ~— *—H'— ■ 'TaftaTwiT if — 1:W * A Ootit.derat.US* Comaf*taly‘ Drok.abjr i a l ln |l t Shot, . .Mnonj^tberaany geotf Shots mjsfteby the artillery on both aides, I think one made by.tbs$ebtWnd,(*tw* rank away along up among the bist. ’ T a p a n i * M tte ry^^* ihd iM r ode* mand of €#» ta£ Coaf wift sSaobed t a Wagner’# » r l|id e « * G * e r § Wood# Sixth division. At tml:hatt)Ki>f Stode River, December 3, 1862, It waa posted on the loft of the railroad In the field just south of the roun£ forest anjl from fifty to one, hundred fromf where- now stands the Hazen monument. Af terdoing splendid «'Wk thrpugh^he best of the battth It w*A-sjMiqgwflK IN WOMAN'S BEHALF. AN C iS iiA M kA D tw iM . 11wason the run out ofBuffalo, and whbn I came to take up the fares Icame aoroM a woman and child. She was pale-faced and poorly clad and she bad a world of trouble in her 'face. F saw that in a general way,-butit was nobtny business to pity hen The child with her, a boy of'seven preight, was lying on the seat, with her old Shawl for a pillow. She of fered m* one full fare ticket to a: point about' forty miles below, but I dhayuided one for the boy. i “ 'Please sir,’ she said, ‘wo .ore very poor and he’s only a little chap and I’m taking him home to die.’ “That was no excuse/ a n d l plainly told her th a t the must pay for him or he’d have to get off. I thought she was trying to beat hia way, bu t In th a t I was mistaken. I t was a da rk 'and rainy night and she’d never have got ready to lemro the train at the next stop if she’d had'money be pay for the boy. J felt a b it ashamed when I saw.her making ready, and it- hurt mo to see her lean over him and both cry together, but one of our men had, .been discharged only the week before for overlooking a one- legged soldier who; pnly wanted a lift for ton miles.*' "And no one offered to pay the boy's., fare?" ■ “For a wonder, no, There waa a full crowd In the oar, but all seemed to look upon th e pair with suspicion. I hated to put them off, and I was hoping the woman „would thake on* more appeal and glyo me a show to back water, when the train ran into -— and she made ready to got off. The least 1 could do was to help her with the boy. I picked him up and started to follow her out, but I bad scarcely taken notion of his whito face and tear-wot cheeks when he uttered a shriek o* fear, straightened out in my arms, and nex t instant 1 knew I hold a corpse. Yes, air, the lifo wont out ot him in that cry, and the mother turned on me with a look f can never forget and cried: " 'lie ’s dead! Bo’s dead. And you huvo killed him!’ ' “I don’t like to think of it," whispered t'ut conductor, after a long silence. "X iind my month’s wages in my pookok and I gave her every dollat of it and the passengers raised as much more, and when H e f t her with her dead at the noxt station I had done every thing 1 possibly could, but that didn’t dear mo. I had been too harsh and aold. Sho had. told we the truth and I had doubted her. Bhe had asked for mercy, and I had ordered her out into the night and the storm with ‘a dying boy in her care. Sba haa never forgiven me, and never will, and try a* hard as I may I xan never forgive myself."—N. Y. Sun. "little Jrlde,V «aa h e called it, into the enemy’#.ltnos,jX.W#s only top glad to fly the evils that wero’to dangers WO know notifc.' The then Sergeant Strlngfellow was. regarded as one of the most daring an(l roliable scouts of General Loo’s arftiy—ho is hoW and eriiinCnt dlvine of" ’the protostant'FpiscCpaltlhtufcht "When the,moon was just sinking be hind the western horizon and Its linger ing beams woro disappearing for tho night from among(tbe silent, and scrag gy pines, about one o’clock -a party of tvjrelve.raggsd cavalrymen ,armed only with pistols and isbors quietly departed from the camp,'following in single file the lead of. the sergeant, whoignorod all questions os' to the route and purpose of the expedition until the journey’s end Should have, been reached. I t was dark and hot, as we silen tly . traveled over smooth fields and through long stretches of !>lhe woods, stopping only now and then to listen to the calls of the owls, which several times startled thtl whole party by their nearness. I t was not un til daybreak, and after many miles had beenplaoed botween ourselves and our aleaping comrades, that we drew rein, and in ohedienco to a- low-spoken com mand from tho sergeank wo dismounted from our weary—and previously fagged out—ateoda apd drew around in a circle to hear his plans. The place whore ho had halted was beside a sandy road, bor dered by thick plno forests, and for a miloor moro in either direction thoro was an unobstructed view—a long, nar row lano nearly as ievei as a floor.■ Hav ing divided tho squad into two parts, Sorgeant Stringfellow at lasUarelteacd our increasing curiosity as to bis inton-, tions. "Some days ago whitoscouting in that neighborhood ho had noticed that every splondtdslidteverseift. , ■- * Every thing 6 n th#;righl o t ^ M k road being defeated and driven hack, a now line waa. formed along^ the .track of the railroad- from Waghor’SBrigade to the roar, thus leaving tho Tenth In-i The F*s»l J u t l K of Mtfrta- 4 e»te* to W n g p t ISoralU ght ««• The following able address tuw given by Rev. II. A, Cleveland, a t the South Dakota Lawn Fete recently held In In- dianapolia: The admission of the American woman to the prerogatives of the ballot, and a* a consequence her occasional elevation to hlBce, nertalnlywould -notTottdsr the wagsffyhan Ikn^NK f h V i*ouH |pdly itfwi>g|d n t t|e ^ u % ^ t » ] f l i f P linoh ly to improve our politicians and also their methods and manners. The com ing of women practically Into the arena oft ourv-poit^losj wjopld bring,t n .lt tho healthy influence of a higher Idealism, and make a purer morality, operative th ll^ : _Tha^at^mmcp |flf5*^^fii6rlcap n ttpsn at thfi causnt, *i|» *% t|o Voting tmticbs p# the oeqntry SMl«|Hon dej% Morkghe regenemiojiHi# the-no* tton,ifr,heart1and the reccflntrnctlOn of all our political procedures. .1 Want that.oujc-women fchoijld'ntand; • side by side with pur mop, andhb their diana battery and its infantry, support *n Atery jriVUogo aPd'honor, ec- a t the point of tho angle mado by this P^ltical. They are en- M LADY TO BUILD IT. #tta*j.m«k*r is to*DMixacror um .. , Isab ella m a ilIon. ™ Thsunsfy woman architect pr«a«U»' inFh%tdelpbia hoi achieved t b i t f , : tinotiimjof being selected as dwitl er<A| A w w ijn ------"• • w oun E' Seth ship and i yt|tlod .t<^ this by^^htf chartOf ofc ^nature, by^tpo nohiiil^of th e ir powers; and by tne sphsiPdor of their »aohitve;- p ik o ^ th e cedar forest ,t|iit. h |d ^ fought .over so fiercely that tPorning.bp. ,®J}ed Fa$*8®,r^ 5* the r . , __ _ ____ . . r , . . . . r.. ... nltv. There are good reasons.for be- now formation. After thonow .formation the floldjfrom tho railroad west, across th» BPshyilie THE SPOTTED NEGRO. One ef the Btroagest loreahs Kwt FreSa—4 ■yXatara. In the early part of the present cen tury, some authorities say 1006, George Alexander Gratton, the famous spotted negro, waa bom on the island of Bt. Yiuoent, both of his parent* being ooal- hlack naflvee of Africa. Even among the bnlf-olvilked inhabitant# of 8 L Vla- oent Gratton waa such a ourleeity that they readily paid t l each, for the privi lege of seeing whet was then tanned "the'eighth wonder of the world.” The superstitious prejudices of the mongrel negro population plaoed the frank in each danger of being sacrificed th a t i t was deemed kdvisable to ship him te England. The child was about fifteen months old when he landed with his perents in BristoL In color his skin was everywhere parti-colored, transpar ent white and brownish black On the crown of his head there were several perfect white triangles with black ones of equally perfect contour within them, which were formed by the odd altera tions In the color of the heir, or wool. On his back, almost directly between the shoulders, there was an almost per fect circle with*square ot black upon the inside, which in turn^had a white triangle in Its center. On one leg there Was s circle, similar to tha t on the hack, all tho other Spots, except the numerous triangles on the head, neck and face, having no uniformity whatever, being great blotches of white on the black surface with no seeming regard for plat* or situation, When nearly five year* Old this re markable specimen of the geftus homo died of a swelling of the jaw, which, curious to say, eliminated nearly every spot from the head, Heck and face.— 8 t, Louis Republic. ■-•'Old.Coquette -'Tenyeara of my Ufa would t willingly give it 1 could only make myself twenty yeai* younger."— Fliegendo Blatter. morning about sunrise a squadron of colored cavalry passed from, its camp to that of anothor command Some flvo miles away—tor drilling'purposes, per haps—and it occurred to him th a t boro was a lino opportunity to pay off an old score or two with a quid pro quo, as well ss to exchange soma vary indifferent horse-flesh for first-class goods and to glvo tho sable troopers an object lesson in the mysterios of.war. "Five of us wero posted up tbo road a distance and tho other seven wore stationed in the woods about where the consultation was held, and the plan of procedure was for tho seven to remain quiet until the head of the expected column reached the fsrthor squad, when simultanaoualy both pxrtios were to break into the road and fire and yell for all they were worth. ' Some fiftoon or twenty minutes of anxious expeotanoy elapsed, when from between the trees we oould see the enemy coming nlong in n dog trot, soma sitting sideways in their saddles; other* with the bridle reins loose upon (heir horses' necks and their hands and arms glviag expression to a camp-meeting song they were ting ing, which filled the air with tho true and charming negro melody. "At length the front reached the •mailer squad, when the aergeantcried: 'Charge boys, charger* sad in an instant we dashed into their midst, firing our pistols sad yelling like demons. As tounded and oonfused those who did not tumble off in trying to rightthemselves, turned, only to be confronted with their rear guard rushing up, with our fellows in their midst, whooping and shooting right and left, and then followed a scene tha t beggars description in any lan guage. Some of the troopers felt flat on the roadside and lay there until they oould recover their sarprise.aad flee for their life. Others dashed their horses Into the woods, got stuck, dismounted and fled in dismay—canteens, caps and other accoutrements were scattered in ©vary direction. The majority, however, cut out down the roads, sending the sand np in cloisds behind their horse’s tail*. For five miles along that narrow, sandy lane we went together,helter-skelter.pis. tola cracking, horses falling and our men yelling like madmen. The woods on either aide of the road were fast fill ing with the terrified, fleeing troop er*. 'T h e race was Brought to a close by onr discovering upon a turn in tho road. o f an abatis, through Which the-foremost pitched headlong, whereupon wo turned back and gathered up the trophies, We reached camp ISte lit the afternoon without the loss of a mas, and richer by some eighteen, or twenty horses more than we wanted for our own use and a whlteMrgeantwe picked upfor good luck. Five day* later the surplus captured steeds were put up ut auction: and brought from' 96,66# to 96,606 apiece lit «t» money. camo the neutral ground onwhicheither army must fight to pass. Thq. last attempt th© rCqnf©derate# made on the front g#ve £apta(h 6 ox ah opportunity to put in a flank shot ip f u l l ' battery on a lino of Infantry not fifty yards away that he took advantage of and executed with aresult most horrible, to witness. t; A charging column was formed by the Confederates on tbo high ground to tho Southwest of the burned Craven house, and in splendid order camo across, that field until their right flahk was Apposite and some fifty yards from tho battery, Cox in the me^fime, saw tho direction thoy wore .taking and thinking they might offer thblr flank to him, 'Wheeled his six guns to the right, placing thorn to boar on a given point, then awaited tho moment to fire. ' Every hattorymah •was at his post- Six lanyards wore hold by six powder- besmeared men who knew that >lmt a momonfc more they would send a bolt of death and destruction into tho ranks of a.bravo, hut unsuspecting ffw. “SU-nNrf-e^ ‘fiTon;"HoTdTfor Tho word,” said Cox, as ho sat in his saddla watching for tho su preme moment. On thoy camp! What a splendid lino! .Thoir guns .glittered in -the-dosconding-woatern—sum—Ohrhow hi y wl - lioving that they would make a bettor use of the ballot than men have made of it, and there is noreason for believing: that they would mpke # worse uaehf It. The victories they are achieving, and the prizes they are winning in litera ture and muthenpitics *$, B s r v ^ j^ o t Cambridge, England and Parii, furnish new probf, if this were heeded, 6 f their ability to master the most difficult of ,political problem#, and to pass intelli gent judgment u$ 6 n all -questions tha f may come in to political debate. >'■ Thoro can ho no rational objection to the enfranchisement of-~our American women tha t does not apply with equal force against the enfranchiaementof our men. If it ho said tha t "not a ll .women': should vote, and not all should'hold of fice,” the same Is to-be .said of men. Men themselves have so recently come to the art of voting that, like boys with a now toy, they aro jealous of sharing its privilege and power 1 with persons who aro as skillful as themselves, and who livo with them in the same houses. We lot-Roland, and Germany/ and Ire land, and Africa.vote, and wo tax the property of women os wo do that of men; why is it that wo withhold tho ballot from our own sisters,whoso rights boautiful tho sight this momont, and oh. how horrible tho next! "Ready, fire,” rang out cloar and distinct above the din of battle to tho right of us. Tho smoko rose, and there, in ono long winrow of doath lay haTT^oTthat splendid line, while tho'Othors wero Booking safety in flight. “Wo knocked tho bull’s- oyo," said Cox. "A cheer and a tiger." said his infantry support, and then rang out a prolonged hurrah for tho Tenth Indi ana Voluntoor battery.—American Tri bune. THE VETERAN'S CORNER. C aptaiit S. E. TnoHAgsBN, of Wash ington, D. C., aged fifty, was tho oldest Son of a Veteran present at the Nation al Encampment at St. Joseph. The Captain has also a fine war record of h it own. Si J ohhsox , a negro, who died lately In Albany, G*.. went through three wars—that of 1811 a> the body servant of Colonel John Gilmore, and through the Mexican war he was in the same ca pacity with Colossi John Gilmore, jr.« in tha civil war he belonged to Mack Johnson. "Old81” was ninety-six years old. J amkr Mossxr, a veteran of the war, died a few days ago a t Nebraska City: A few years sgo he applied for a pension on account of a wound he received a t Fort Donelson. His application was re jected, as no mark or wound could be found on his head, where he claimed to have been shot After his death a post mortem was held and n large buckshot was found Imbedded in his brain. A sox of a veteran applied for a posi tion to the head of one of the Govern ment offices in this city, and when told the place would probably be given to a soldier, promptly replied:' "That’s a ll right, I was in arms the same time my father was." The official Commended the young fellow for his wit, but he hasn’t yet given him the coveted posi tion.—Columbus ( 0 .y State Journal. G kxerai , N oyes , of Ohio, who drop ped dead in Cincinnati the other day, lost hi*; leg while lekding a brilliant and successful charge during tho late war. On his way to the hospital in an ambu lance he met General McPherson, hfe commander, and said to him: "General, I got their toorks, and (pointing to his shattered leg) tho? got part of mine, hut it’s Fourth of July, and l don’t caro a continental.” . ,% s a 8 . S. CAttn, ot Almond, N. Y., claims to have been the last Union prisoner to leave the Andersonville pen. lie se cured the rebel flag which had floated so long over that prison and tho wretch edness and .misery it* wall* inclosed, and he atlll has it In his possession. . I t is probably one of the most interesting relies ot the eivll war, and should hav* a plae* in some National oollactlon, as It Is rarely ever seen la the little villa*# of Almond. and abilities wo acknowledge aro as great ag our own? It is only hecauso tho tribal vanltios and prejudices ot our pa gan and savago state still survive in ub . I do not object to woman’s voting, hut earnestly advocate it. For thirty years I have advocated it. Tho most efficient teacher of my early days was a woman. For thirty yoars I havo boon ruled with diligonco by ono woman, and always to my groat advuntago. The' barbarian sentiment, by whatovor chlvalrlo lan guage expressed, that regards woman only as tho play thing and slave of man, I scorn and with indignation resent. And the cooking argument is a not much hotter argument. - Doubtloss a woman does a good thing who learns how to becomo a good cook. Porhaps Abraham Lincoln might havo become a good cook and earned large wages. But what a loss that would have been to the nation and to the wqrld. This talk which wo sometimes hear, that woman's sphero is in the kltohsn. and her prime relation is to the cook-stove, is not the talk of reason, but of men whose con trolling logic prrSteeds from their ap petites and passions. When women themselves Indulge in such talk, It is usually in their weary moments when a culinary life seema to them easier than an Intellectual one. When the tribal chieftain comet back victoriously to his tent door, tired, hungry and animally •elfish, and loudly proclaims that wom an’* sphere is entirely domestic, and that only in that Is she queenly, his ut terance ie wholly unenlightened, stom achic and barbarian.' The test of anatioh’s culture, aa of Its Christian virtue, Is the place it accords to women. The logical outcome of our girl’s schools and of woman’s literary clnhs i t just Such meetings as the one you have called in the interest of wqman'a suffrage in the new State of Dakota. Dnr ttenek are marked by "the new attitude of woman,” Everywhere increasing onlightment Is extending the ballot. Lot us do what we can to make the ballot ip our own country the expueteiefl of. mind, or the American mind, of man’s and of woman’s. .The time will Como when our girls will be ’less attracted by foreign titles than In* fluertoed t y American patriotism. Our women do not enough interest them selves In politics, \Vhon they have the ballot thoy will become more thought fully and earnestly patriotic, Their cn- franCMseSmnt is inevitable. I t is the dictate of justice and of polities! pru dence, The event is transpiring. When itHUcebmplisket, as it surely wilt l*, I donot wish in hi seen crawlln:: out of •ome fsare comer, and trying to make my neighbor*believe that f have ' been in fanmef ib M m M, % G a um W T uhoteirapher • f ChieafA, i t MNUmToiv# an Interne of •16.666 » W Z 'o fien lt of her talent •wft * m m W c t eh#### lint #f work. Isabella pavilion I sms , ' nectlon^ith thoWorld’s Fair at Chic*-. 1 Mis* Minerva Parker is the fortgay, young artist. She is about 83jMr* 4 ag©and was horn In Chicago. Shtweu to Philadelphia in , 1870., She nttf* apodal study of industrial artmodality and aho has been in active practice t« ecialist comes fromgoof; ,nd stock. Bfr gint&j oanq, was a w»u rlg|gr nqd architect i* ; 83#n® wont, West u f purchased property on the shore ofhah* Michigan where Chicago now stand*. Her father was a.lawyer and wag' vniff a t tb3 head of Bis regiment while fight. ing bravely in the civil war. brother# aEWuladolpbia, and although, younginj4«N)rofeS8lon she has attain. ; edc^wdflertBSte success. Home and dp.: mestim«APM|U6esture is hor specialty, Tho designs for Chicago which Min Parker,has been commissioned to draft arte5for aid’ International clUb-houto, with congress hall, in connection with: the proposed sooial. headquarters for woman in the fair grounds. Mrs. Job* A. Logan is pne of the managers It i*. to bo called the Queen Isabella pavilion: in honor'of the consort of King Ferdi nand of Sjjpain. History states that this Queen pawned her jewels to raise fundi for Columbus’ journey to discover Amir- ica .; ^.Mtes Parker .has only oho lady rivalin b&r Iprpfoseioh, #hd she Is, Mrs. Loulu BethunO, of .Epchester, N. Y., .who wu highly commended for a set of school plans exhibited at the Paris Exposition i A SHAME TO CIVILIZATION. that this .is an indofonsihle injus tice, and one so gross os to shamo civil ization. Why do legislators sit passive ly under such discrimination of sex in the matter of work and wages? Simply bocatiso thoy know that the women car ry no votes, and that more sentiment, however just, can neither scat nor un seat a politician. . But it will not al ways he thus.—Boston Globo. BUSINESS WOMEN OF ABILITY. fBEI ##fOTl less wages for (he samo work at th a^ I Wo havo no hesitation in saying 1 sge of 1 another D lsgracefat Irjm tlo a Done to th a Worklit* Woman o f MaMKchaietts—It Will Mat i ^ Iv iiy i.R e Tima. About one-fifth of all males [In Mu- sachusetts] average less than 81pecday. The females working at this low seals of wages, comprise 72.04 per oent of *U tho'workers. No intelligent reader will! fall toyrealize what this fact mean*. As the scalo of wages rises the numbot of females enjoying them grows steadily le ss., Of a total o f7,257 workprs receiv- J ing 820 a week atfd over, only 268are 1 female#. - The! figures simplyhhow that | in tho ompioymonts in whloli tho very lowest wages' atrt paid, woinoh consti tute ‘ovor *70 per cent, of tho worker*, ; while in employmonta where as high *• $20 a week are _paid they constitute hardly over 3 por cent. In addition to all this is the humiliating fact that in the same occupation, standing side by slde-wRh-men^-thtrfowniius nro pald4ea wages for the same work; or, wh#t amounts to the same thing, a woman of 20 years or upwards is mado to work side by side with a boy of 10 at tho same wages. Women aro compelled, then, to fill most of tho oheap places, and paid The i shout fo side one isntfitt thepota «*arral •than eit i t woul< er, beca from thf ings ooi- vantage Sorter ’ morece from th poseth; potatoe ■mall o lower si In the • Scribe, where! be rais less si: . potato. !firlind ^ 4 Tot cl throug Under Yorlto I t U u Miss A my B eix , a Newnham student, 1 b the only wbman stock broker in Lon don. She has been in business tift years, is fairly auocessfuL does ho spec ulative business, has women client! chiefly, snd has encountered neithir prejudice nor opposition. M« 3 SM attik H kstkk is United States mail-carrier over the route from Condar, Laurens County, to Lothalr, Montgom ery County, Georgia, a distance of forty miles through a sparsely settled regie*, which aho traverses throe times a week. She drives her own mail-cart, -carries a revolver hnd Is punctual as the sun at all seasons and in all weathers. Besictei transporting, th* mails, she manages# farm, gets out lumber, splits fence rails, and contrive# to support a widowed mother, two younger sisters and a broth er, white she is not yet twenty year* of *ge- Miss D oha B eam , of Springfield, 0., eighteen years old, is making an envi able reputation for hnslitea# ability. A few months ago she h it upon a new pro cess ot making Saratoga chips which is said to excel all others. For a few months hot business was confined to supplying private families and the Woman’s Exchange. She sent samples of hor products to wholesale dealers. Those firm* aro no# tegular customers and she furnishes them with six hun dred pounds per week. Bhe buys pota toes liy the hundreds of bushels and di rects the entire business herself. MtsSEfXAS. LroXAKl) and Miss Csro* line L. Llngle, the Vassar girls who bought the Atlantic Highlands (New Jefsey) Independent, and began running it before, they were fairly graduated from college; have sold the paper at a good profit, after making it a p*yteg property. They wSote their own copy, ijhop". ,th*m#olves, and rah their own engine and presses. In * few months they had erected a substantial brick bunding, mole the P*P*f P**™" able, and established * ft**1, patronage. They leave their veatera i now because Miss Liagl*’* given eat- ' I an gist ( Garde pecul’ tho hi not e; of a 1 worm Sor to ato leave small upon skiii strut numl Week less 1 -tho 1 In a feed tho grufc host pup com the; hav Ing the whi the h t ti ’ ' T Jatb®1' , n|trr*lrtr ! mow tha ! ismond 1 I gi«, hut I Itwvld go ■ ' dyou . j i i a n ^ able have tw« within ’ Should h t *®*‘D5 ’ [ yould.pOI 1 cl such 1 1 m lolal n d j . U Iffi 834 rtye 0 C) a.la 10 cl lives ffess SUCCl .fcure •r C 1 co lerfli all, ooial dr g of tl Quec icon Hist or je urno asm and ihpst led f at tt ro tlo e l .u a c t ,hof sgel rkin; so 72 o W what vagift ring [of.7 r am ftguv uont r qp i ,)or c rmen co p; « cei umii) latioi tho f. sun same .varde h a h t are ohoa the -host in 1 gros. lo log disci ork 1 loWti id th m no) tn. Boatt fOMf t.i^ a tan at been suoce Ss, h as ei ?poslt B est ir the r, to >rgia, t span irtcs t own 1 pnn in all he m. .umhe to si unger ■no ty EAK, aid, is forbt >she t ffttesi all a □sines ate f nuge, ts ta 1 no# tea th, r week idreds 1 hfisln L f . oxj 0 , the tlantic ndont, r W«r save s er ma y wroi rmseln md pi tad er, male blishe4 :ey te its Lit i - . MI
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