The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
mm , i VWVW m t »HOOUQH, I* « r lendla* t « ' * SUMPTION, O T T O 6 COD L I V E t t O I L m r a o s p B r n t jatm a x d movjL n o t r x u n a r o s * xvt, Mlon contains tha sttraula- ill th» world,over. UU *« vtlifc. ThroetlmMu tfflco- » cod Liver Oil. a perfect .torthanallothersmade. For catina XH mokh , F k im MN iu s u m p t i o n ; udasaFlesh Producer DK like ICOTT'I EMULSION, ill Druggist*. tot noonehr nationor Impudent entreaty t acceptasubstitute. j GOLDMEDAt.gAMg, 187& V. BAKER & CO/S | 6 l JTb Chem icals am om 4 la hrprtpuallea. It hi* ■Mr*On One Mno <1* MrmttM of C om *mindwithStarch,Arrowroot orSugar,ssd 1 * thcnlbrsfir bmm ooonoailMlioMlnsU*»OsaoMowe i■ews» It'lrdritclou* notatahlu; . latnotllnBlab EMtur Disarm, [ud•dmlwbJyadapted Ibr istslU*. Iu well u Ibrperaon*la health. ■ ildbyGroceraeverywhere. ftCOuOorcliester. 3 “ ipursuitofpleeumrwthebody Muon’s despotic m r i |fa* forrepoeeoredevotedtoaw. 71thestomachis rutklvetlv wftsdlebw jb ignored,wad bstltuted until, ere we ore roseJessfired Its 1 mm m m rrulookfor the "remedy." ■ oftheeefollies,wecommend ■pills. They stimulate the a*the nerves,restoretheam* lap the debilitated iLiver Pills .VIGOROUS BODY. les,S »* 4 ! FaritHato.jl.tii MD HOME V 9 IO C K FARM. V H. C.Fsrsssi, Inserter h L A s i t Breeder er Perch. M a i m asdFrexh Ceech ^ B H e n u . 1tA r i very Urge atsd i f *enea teselectfrooi. I p w m ' " n s n satessty iMkasIe leoaaele i prices rett ashH sell oa_ essy terms. Tutors slnsys rrsl. esns. tsrgsCstsleguo free. iddrtte. H. C. n m a , ensw u*,xfea. lowerhe*inerts. MAHON■ K A N S A S * ^ ^ i^ J S S S S J S S S iSSEX. Lud CftmitoiftMr* OCK. • • AKKAMS il. Smmeias * PER DAY AIL WINTER a s s iieusefceewwc _ . deishis,,fl*. ■ one or more coehtiee gtvea Write tedsy enclosing. etamp 1 uwill never regret It. Addrem K. TeUrth rhllsdolphle, re. wWpSeiiwwrie i YSIPLAYS!PLAYS! rfdfAB4ttWl i w s f e . . .takfiM r*ltlu.rsllc liAgex, mwtI JONES OF (BIMGHAMTI Ns Ye Mwrngnj “ I * - UPtarffllt. i s s p s le U* ms. A. ewe IlMr KvMSMlkWrtMMIsed ihamtecMWaHet'»r*v» r m t f sm isisiweg IChMheedSwWNjiMg z“ ‘,r&iEcH 2 ? • AgTftKATIO, 'k atTAKUN ________- j S S l c r OATAIiOOPlI'.^Mt. twedlsb dtthrrta 'OtfAB :cifircifc^»aS i« <».♦«, f* | f A f t fiu/Naifwfrrtfo JTJI7MOTMMK» iSiwMl S 0 MMI y iTnimlrtf, THE BATTLE FIELD. ON THE PICKET LINE. With iron handandomen et steel The wurriorsmites hit foes, And mgr* the landwith pruthlngbssl, With ullittonding w6b»{ * But Inin* lonely watching houst, . . Wimt dreams aroundhim shine R Of hoipe «nd leva’s sweet rosy bowers, ft • Whsnon theplqhetllnt, , E « Sternly,meets the vaunting foe,' > And scorns ell craven fear. Nor will hlsflashlng eyes then show The weakness of a tear; But in the.dim and silent grove, ■ The bravest heart willpine- To taste theJoys of homo and love, . When on *be picket line. Bis ward t* kept with watchful eyes,, ' While yet In spirit drsams To other scenes be fondly Wes . . Till glint of morningbeams, He treiids the pathhe used to roam, Fond arms around him twine* , Recalling oil the bliss of home When on the picket line. . . 'When surging o’e f the battle plains No horrors e’er appall; His hands may reek with bloody stains; As fusttlio foemon fail; But .when the knightly watch is set, . Fond memories ail combine To cheer the war-worn lone vldette, When On the pleketilne, Oh, cduld wo gatherfrom the air. The echo oi their algbi, ^ . The'iender thoughts theirbosoms share, ■Andtrlbuto of their eyes; . The truly brave are first to yield To every melting sign The sternness of the.battle-field. When on the picket line. r . Itonmeatlast—ausplaiousdayl That bade the carnage cease, AnAgsve agnin to blue and gray! 3be blessed reign of peace I .Oho flag again floats o'er the’frebi ..fts stars more brightly shine Since those great leaders Grant and Lee; Hot on the pioket line. —Rev.«6idney Dyer, In N, Y. Ledger. GRINDSTONE SOUP. An Adventure of Two Ofitcers After the Surrender o f Tleksburg. Tho day after tbe aurrendor of VicVfc . burg Colonel Eldridge and mysolf w«ro assigned quarters for the night in ah isolated house on the road between Vicksburg and Haines’ ^lnfl. We had been skirmishing all dajf over thorough MiBSIssipfii roads and were hungry and' ’ tired,' ' Wo at onco laid alege to the en emy’s kitchen, whore we weTe confront ed by thq indignant family. The per sonnel consistedof a corpulent old lady, two pretty daughters, and a wrinkled -cotoftod aunty. When they realized that we had come for supper and lodging they retired excitedly to a comer of the kitchen, where they held a council of ' war. ‘ •' ‘ , “Lhok hero!” said the Colonel, some what sharply, "Wo are hungry. 9U^ yoiir whispering, andget ha something - to eat !’ ' ; The mother stepped "boldly from the . ranks and, confronting the Colonel, an nounced the melancholy fact that there were no edibles about the premises. / “Give us any thing," replied tbe fam- 5 iahed Colonel. “ We’re Hot fastidioua" “Well, youaeel aah,,' repUed the lady . Impressively, “ first there were onr own l^oldiers, then came the Yankoea yester day.*and between the two they-ate us out of house and home.*' "This is serious," said the Colonel to me in an undertone, and then aloud: "Go out into the shed and bring me in an armful of Wood.** Wondering what hia scheme could be, I wentoht iit'o iho yard and returned: with ,a d<, 7 ,'-ii large faggots. Tho Col- •onel heaped them upon tho expiring em bers on the hearth in one comer of the kitchen, whom they soon blazed up brightly. Then talcing Akettle to the ptiMp, ho filled it with water and sat it •ontho fire to boiL 'Wiiat arc you going to do?" asked tbe old lady. "Make soup!" was the Colonel's lacon ic rSply. Thoro was a small grindstone •onthe dresser., This tbe Colonel laid in tbs kettle. Tbe enemy Was bsglnnlag 4omanifest tome interest in our oullnsry operations, "What kind erb scrap am dat gwine to "bo7" asked the colored servant, with a Fin* "Grindstone soupf snapped the Col- •onel. Be seized a ladle and, lifting the lid of the kettle, dipped out some of the water and tasted it with great gravity, “Il’mi" he cried, addressing me, “ not J*t strong enoughI Will you pleas* get ■another armful of wood?*’ 1 did as requested, to the oon*tema- ■ttonof the enemy, which saw itsmeager •ttoekof fuel bunt away. After a pause tbeColonel again raised the lid to test* tbemess. "Ah!" he said, smacking his lips with satisfaction; “ that's something llkel Nay I trouble you for a little aalt and >*P«7" Amid great tittering oh tbe pert of tbe ladies the condiments werebronght, 'That’s s queerway of making aoupr* wried one of the girls with n smothsrod tffltle, "Yea: it's economical. Have you a little flour handy?" After a moment’s hesitation the flour j **»* brought, "And now acouple of onions, please,1* "There are noOnions, eah!” cried tbe [ledy of the house, "Then bring lit some move wood; vttrge: the stone is not soft yet." I was juat *tatting to the door* when Wecommander stopped me, "Coming le think, I believe there are [mu* onions left," eke **M, meekly, "hWred, gwand sot,** Mtidred, the elder deujfhMiv dieap* Imeted and returned a fter* while trill fine onions, The Celenel cut them lew# bita, and. with befitBhf eelemtUty* stirred them into the soup, I could scarcely restrain from laughing. "And now, madanva s U cq of good fat bacon, i f you please,Hsaid the Colonel. Thja was too much for tbe enemy. The old lady advanced. Thoro was flro in her eye, “ You can’t get.,another thing from tos!" she shouted, “ You Yankeos think' you are smart; There ain’t any bacon in the house, ajnd, if there were you wouldn’t get it!" “ Very well,” replied the Colonel, calmly. • Be gave me a look and I brought In the rest of the wood, “ Hire’s your ^ork," said?the youngest daughter, angrily. The day was won. Ten minutes after ward there stood on the table as good and thick a soup as any of us ever tast ed, Tho flavor of the grindstone could not bo detected,---Philadelphia Times. WAR'S AWFUL CARNAGE. HowCarlton’* BatiarjrBTowvdDown Han.' drada or Drove Hen. General Fitzhugh Loo, of Virginia, when in Washington a abort,while ago, tend quite an interesting story about the greatest fatality of the war iq propor tion to the number-of troops engaged. He was talking about Congressman Carlton as an artillerist in. the war. “ VVhen General Sodgwick’s corps,” he said, “ surprised our-troops by crossing tho Rappahannock at Fredericksburg, and capturing a regiment and a halt of General Barksdale's Mississippi brigade and a portion of the Washington artil lery stationed on Marie’ s Heights, that cut off from our main lino that small portion of our troops stationed between Fredericksburg and Hamilton’scrossing, on the Richmond and Fredericksburg railroad. Among these troops so cut off was a battery of artillery in positionjust opposite Deep Bottom Run, on the Kap- .pahannook river, and far in advance of that portion of our line. “ A brigado of Sedgwick’scorps, which had crossed the river at Deep Bottom Run, discovering the position of this battery and seeing that it was unsup ported by and cut oft from the main line of our troops, marched upon it prepara tory to charging and capturing it. “ The Captain commanding this bat tery, who is now Congressman Carlton,-- of Georgia, discovering the movement of the enemy, at onco roalized the situ ation, and knowing full woll that to at tempt to retreat in face of the enemy would result in the capture and loss' of his battery, promptly, although entire ly unsupported, moved his guns forward, meeting tho advancing brigade, and whop in easy cannister range poured a volley into the enemy’s ranks, which Btaggored And drove them back. “ Reforming, tboy advanced again, whon Carlton repeated the dose with tho samo success. “Attempting a third time to charge tho battery, and seeing the resolute do- termination, of Carlton and hia men not to yield tho Sold, they rushed pell moll into an adjoining ravino, when the ar tillerist turned his guns upon them in their hiding placo; and scarcely a man Was left to toll tho talo. “ Tho official report made a few day* afterward by the Federal officer in com mand of the brigade, as to the loss in this engagement, was about 1,000 killod and wounded. The loss sustained by Carlton’s battery was remarkably slight^'-t-Atlanta Constitution. ON THE SKIRMISH LINE. A camp of Sons of Veterans has boon organized at Montreal, ■Can. It la at tached to the Division of Vermont; T he horse that General Grant last used is leading a comfortable' life on a farm near St Louis, where itla tenderly oared for. A ccohdiko to their official records the Woman's Relief Corps show an expendi ture during the past year for charity of 9S17.ftS0.6S, A KOVEL feature of the national En campment at Detroit next year.will be a raft ride. The excursion is tbe con ception of tbe popular ex-Commander- in-Chief, General R. A. Alger. The raft will contain 100,000 logs, one for each visiting veteran. Ax old army officer, according to Mra. Custer, bad a four-year-old boy who naver tired of war atories. “The story la » little roughen me," said the officer to Mrs. Custer, "hot if you know a child, you know that he wants a plenti ful sprinkling of I's, and nothing told in the third person. So I kept on as ho demanded, till one day he looked up in my face and said: 'Father, couldn't you gat eny one to help you put down the rebellion ¥ * F ew people know that Janies Gordon Bennett, the proprietor of the New York Herald, is a naval veteran,, but he was a Lieutenant and Commended hia own yacht, which was firmed and com missioned a* a vessel of the United States havy, and he took an active part personally in suppressing the rebellion. He i* eligible to membership In tbe Grfiad Army of the Repttblio, having been regularly commissioned and hon orably discharged as, an officer of the navy. T he Commissionerof Peaslone' rsport shows that thsrs ware at the end of the last fiscal year 6*7,944 then upon thfi rolls, elfiselfled as follow*: Army Invalid psaskmsw.. ArmywidowA etiaereMidrsfifiaddtpend- ■sat rsUtlvM................. . m e t Waw invalid e sMl o f l s f f i M. . . . 6 i 6 ? 4 Navy wtfiew*.eunerefindrsafied depMd- snirelfitives....»..-.n—* m .^.............«4»4Se KUifivsrsvt mewoeof itli.«»....*.*■•».••»• sift WtdewftefsstMemMtMweirMMe.,,.,. 'MM flanlists of the ttsftitsfiwar............ it,US WM#wSe<»0»di*<*e<*hSl4»iies«W*f.. 9,144- Tetal. IN WOMAN’S BEHALF. FUTURE OF AMERICAN WOMEN. Tba Grand PosalbllltlM That Are Opanlnc lip TorWoman at tUa l’r«a«nt Uajr. Whatever demand for prophecy as to woman's future tho past may have held, to-day has small need of it, amd to-mor- 1 row will have lest. Far all women, the world over, life holds a.proraise unknown to any generation, and the twentieth century, whoso dimly rounded sphere even now moves on toward ^bo fullness of light, carries with it the hope and fulfillment of all dreams of the past. Here is a certainty, yet the student of human Ufo, to whom at moments a thousand years seem but a day, in any backward look finds a day as a thousand years, and marvels, not so much at the dragging pace as at any pace at alL ' For if roal aearch begins, and thispast is weighed and measured; if the true story of human struggle is told, with the slow unfolding and evolution of the human sou], there la always tho' sense of a miracle, and tho acceptance of all the ages as the necessity for a growth, in which the century counts hardly more than, the moment of to-day. With this evolution we have naught to do, savo as thought must for an in stant rotnrn to it before any present es timate becomes possible. It is tho American woman’sbackground that con cerns us. It is her past that is fqunda- tion.for tho futuro on tb'a way. The English woman of that seven teenth century in which tho story of the- Republic begins was a composite pro duction. Anglo-Saxon and Norman traits still battled togother for suprem acy, though Puritanism had taken both in charge, and hidden naturo behind a mask of its own. The transfer to Amer ican soil simply shifted tbe scenes, but for 'long, mado no alteration in facts. From the beginning of Amorican life, two distinct typos wore always hers. Tho Puritan led—the Puritan in whom every impulse had been repressed and schooled; whoso sense of .beauty in art and literature hfid been stifled or rooted out as, the work of the enemy of souls himself, and whose life was bounded by duty, with small margin for human love , 0 ^ human desire. Painful, minute ob servance; rigid obedience to law; un swerving fidelity to a principle, was tbe life of our New England fore-mothers, who spun and wove, and oared for their households with a .zeal which know no flagging, and had few ambitions bo- yond. One, was' common to man and woman alike. Tho colony which before tho tree-stumps were brown in its Holds had founded a college regardedlearning as a prize second only to godliness, and the New England mother, as she rocked the cradle, saw already tho gown and bands, which moant the highest attainment mortal could know. The volco of ono mother has come down to us in an old chronicle of those early days; “ Child, if God mako thee a good,Christian and a good scholar, thou hast all that thy mother ever asked for thoo.” . This was tho Puritsn woman, narrow ing year by year, and year by year more Incapable of comprehending that on tho same continent, undor tho same sky, breathing tho samo alt, the. cavalier on Virginia soil bad sought and found equal rights. For thorn faith in beauty and joy, and the delight of living had never boon quenched, and their women •hivered as they thought of the North, and tho lives afi barren as the New Eng land hill-sides, and counted thefr own ers'an alien people. Farther south, the 8 psniard and the Frenchman had already sot their seal, and dark-eyed, soft-voiced creoles added anotbor typo to tbe sharply-deflnad ones already in possession. So tho years went on, and as the Bax- on love of dominion and possession drove its owners always before it, ad vance guards from South and North met in the West, the angles of the last soft ened by the curve* of the first, till a new people, bearing tbe traits of both, had sprung up and lived a life freer than had been possible to either. Invention, fertility of resource, adaptiveness to conditions, and always tbe outresch for something better, had added themselves to the sturdy English qualities. Climate and condition worked together. That \ subtle “ added drop of nervous fluid” { stirred in American blood and sharpen- ' ed American perception; tinged in tbe child, and urged the mother to ever more strenuous effort to give it the “ chance" often denied herself. These Were the forces slowly prepar ing, for the work to come, but uncon scious of Us nature or need. Old tradi tions ware strong and still held the eyes from seeing. Women were counted the natural enemies of women. It was de nied that they ooald ever work to gether; certainly never in wider sphere than that offered’by the sewing-circle or the missionary society. Womon them selves repeated the old formula, and eyed suspiciously the few who affirmed that such faith was part of the old bond age, end that larger life was on .the way- Fight aa they might, It was al- teady here. A thousand forces unknown to the Old World work in the New, In the sharp straggle with hard conditions grosser forms fell away* and the new Ideal showed its true ehape, Dominated tM it might be by psrtissnship and all lower passions of polltlosl life, the thought that had made the Republic lived end strengthened, and women breathed it, first insensibly, then with yearning to tank* i t consciously end. natively their ewe* Forany straggle toward something higher1*always ths full proportion of error, blunder* stupidityand temporary failure which makes up human life. It is within a compass of hardlymore than fifty ydarft that all tho new forms and necessities for woman's work have de fined tbomaelvug. it is not ageneration since trades of all orders became open to women, and far less than this before this could bo ssid to bo true for all who sought Tho higher education is of to day, Tho flood of new life has poured in silontiy; so sllonily that manyaPhil istine mill boliovns it can bo forced backward, and clamors for a roturn to old motiiods and tbo good old timos. Its surfaco bolds froth and foam and drift wood, and navigation is oftonuncertain; but underneath all commotion is tho doop sea whoso depths we have but be gan to sound, and whoso treasures are for all the nations. ■ Admit that this is a transition time; admit that a thousand crudities are still with us, and that thoro may even he nood of retreat from some of tho posi tions taken to-day, it is still certain that the American ' wemau points the way that all women must tread. - Already she represents a type higher than the world, savo hero and thoro an instance, has ever known. She has learned to work with other women in generous rivalry. She has measured her own powers; knows whore she lacks, and is seeking honestly and earnestly to de velop each one to its highest: Tho senSe of boauty, denied by the Puritan,, has been born, and she is learning ail soorota of form and color, and laying tho foundation of art, wliich is the hor- itago from,' tho past, 'and which, with liberty for its soul, has before it a futuro of which as yot wo may hut dream. Through every shock of prejudice, every changing creed, every falling awfiy of old shackles of law and custom, the larger life shows its face divinely fair, and, by - that divinity, compelling tho worship womon give. Under all tbo mar torlalism of the age strange spiritual forces are at work, and even tho most sluggish fool thoir_ power. It is no longer question of than against woman, or woman against man. Side by side, eternally unlike yot eternally equal, tho two walk together, tho Bamo hope and the same goal for each.: To no woman on earth la thoro the samo opportunity or the.samo hopo. .It is tho spirit of liberty that moves in hor, and that opens tho door for every captive woman. Tho hopo of tho wide world is boro and in tho hands of wom on. This light of tbo world is boro, and tho tproh is hold by a woman, whoso voice, full and sweet, speaks tho word of present and futuro: -‘Justice is mine, and It grows by loving; changing the world like tho Hireling sun; Evil recedes from, tbe spirit's proving, as mist from the hollows when n'ght is dono. I am the test, O silent .toilers, holding the scales of error and truth; Proving the heriltgo held by spoilers from bard linnds empty and wasted youth. Hither, ye blind, from your futile bonding; know the rights and the rights are won; Wrong shall die with the understanding; one truth olear. and the work la done.r ____ _ Hither, ye weary ones and breathless, search ing the seas for a kindly shore, I am Liberty! patient, deaihloss, sot by Love at tho nation's door. —Helen Campbell, In Leslie's HI. News paper. ______ _ j __________ Woman’s Medical College o f Georgia, Tho Woman’s' Medical Collogo of Goorgla was organizod-.last year at At lanta. It is tho only tMdical collogo exclusively for womon, sputh of Haiti- more, and it has mot with strong sup port and good patronago, many of the studentB coming from States qulto dis tant, At tho opening of the second term recently, about twonty-flve students wore enrolled, who ' came from every part of Goorgla and tho South. The wlvos find daughters of olergymon and old soldiers are admitted on payment of half tho regular tuition. A training- school for nurses is connected with the college, and furnishes additional oppor tunities to womon. The list of the faculty contains tbe name of only one woman, Mra A. O. Pickering, M. D., ad- junct-locturor on nervous diseatea SUFFRAGE SLIPS. BIDDLE Photographer XENIA. OHIO. Enlarging ohl pieltires a specialty. Artistic Crayons* tho new Opals and Transparencies. First class work guaranteed. s C. C. HENEJE, . — CONTRACTOR TOR— Tin.Iron andSlate R O O F I N G t SPOUTING, AND GENERAL JOB WORK Castings furnished promptly for all kinds o f Stoves. Office over Hook’s Dry Goods Store, Xenia, O. / Agent for Eureka Furnace. . O.L. PAINE, D.D.S. EBURREYNOLDS,DJ>.'a PAINE & REYNOLDS, ’ — . D E N T I S T S ! Xeniia National Bank building, cor. Main and Detroit Sts., Xenia, O. Vitalized Air and Nitrous Oxide Can used for the PAINLESS extrac tion of teeth. CHARLES E. SMITH, T H E B O S S B A R B E R Guarantees the b^st work in his line o f any barber in town. Give him a call. Basement o f Orr’s building; TANK HEATER. A GR EA T S A V IN G TO ALL OATTLE FEEDERS. Stockmen who liavn naed till* Uenter aay they would not do without thorn at any price. Sectional viewbolotr aliowatunv tho flame and eiuoke Is worried around under the bottom,giving great heatingeurfaee. Moeparko leavetheheater.' One tiringwill hutdrain8to7days. Any boyeon operate. No 'progressive fanner e*aaffordtobe without one. Investigate and yon will sorely bay-one. --------- C 0 ftTSF*fl« 2 CT£» 6 oPEflDtt. 4 -SUES. ■ntn von cmcetan aee rwicro. O. P. B EN J AM IN A BRQ| U r t T K T r t , m n . * I am in favor of woman suffrage.— Phillips Brooks. I k N ow Zealand tho House of Repre sentatives baa voted in favor of woman suffrage, ft? to ll. You ask my roasons for hollovlng in women’s suffrage, It scorns to mo al most solf-ovidonL an axiom, that every houso-holdcr and tax-payor ought to’ have a voice In the oxpondlturo of the money wo pay, including, as this does,. Interests the most vital to a human be ing.—Florence Nightingale, I k England, Scotland and Wales, women, unless married, vote for all of ficers oxcept members of Parliament, and some of them now hold offices as school directors, aldermen and city councilman, and a bill has been intro duced to give them, whether msrricd or single, tho absolute right of suffrage. Ik Germany, it is aaid, not one of the leading German newspapers, nor one German politician, or scientific man of note, has ever been bn tho side of equal rights for women, and the advocates of woman suffrage in that country find themselves obliged to quote foreign wri ters Whon they want the support of au thorities among men, B e l f a s t is the only municipal bor ough in Ireland in which women have full municipal suffrage, The samoqual ifications are requited as for men, and the actdefining thesequalificationssays: “For all purposes connected with and having reference to ifce right to vote In municipal elections, the word person In this not includes women.” Four thou sand seven hundrodandsixty-six women were found qualified to vote for city councillors, w a r RtUqStotsSnbgM k H n I nsMCuntMMnanenoinsvnun------- Until* mwM eantla- tttttlytaoMdlfaalua. FRIOTIOK NKAKLV A oo ush so . Dm* .fMttr with turn muam »f THE “ S t l lM lD * AM tfaM lvM l** a a M - e t a y a a turn AblM FINESTOFTHERM S V t in A IM b M k S ri>na,p«nilf»gyita* Itla ttiwan luiMl UMpriMwtnSwrtS* RuntOas-RaHEaster. »«*”.*■* jft?*—- Baythe Boctt notaryMvMoaiMh*OnlyTravKtShvSVtMrimra ltvh|XuUM.B*tMMM fh«TM«b»Mtanva MV•ftMM*Xnua!Mthv -H iXWM ;* atwii totMlftfrimUn, vte. Msndard Sewing ffiacMa* Cs-»Clmhri,01
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