The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
*PH T" cm The CedarvilleHerald, W. H. DLA1R. PuUUher. CEDARVILLE, OHIO# FISH CULTURE IN FRANCE. The method of Frop»(itloa at the Baris r *. Aqvarlum. ..■■■■ In Paris an aquarium is maintained for the purpose of breeding: Rah lo r re* ..plenishing the rivers of Prance* A quantity of California salmon are kept in a tank apeciaUy constructed for the purpose o | artifleal breeding, which a t a certain time of the year is carried out in the following manner: The water is reduced to a low level and a number of operators enter the tank, and, forcing before them a wire screen, drive the fish to, one end of the taplc. This iH generally a very troublesome operation, as the salmon resist most vigorously, frequently jumping over the *<iet and necessitating an active chase of longer duration, as the case may he. When the fish are a ll inclosed in one p a rt of 'the tank q certain number are taken out and carefully examined. Each fe male salmon is made by pressure to re lease the. unfertilized eggs which it con tains, which are received in an iron bucket. After this is done the salmon is released and allowed to swim away into the free part of the tank. When a sufficient quantity of spawn has thus been collected in the bucket a male fish -is caught and squeezed carefully by the hand of the operator. The eggs are impregnated with the generating fluid thus obtained, and after having been left for some time in the bucket for fecundation are trans ferred to the water in a separate tank, where in due time they Ore hatched. The method employed in the aquarium is called the dry method, as the eggs are received in a receptacle which eon- tainsno water, and the generating fluid is poured, directly upon them. I t ap pears'that this mode involves less loss than the wet method, which consists in receiving the eggs in water. - The oper ation described takes place three or foiir times h week from the beginning of October to the middle of November. The task of catching and transferring the flBh is said to be a very arduous one for the men engaged, who have to be from two to three hours in the cold water engaged in continuous struggles with the powerful fish. I t is not un common' to see-oiic of the men knocked clean over by a blow from . the tail of a twenty-pound sttlippn. One*of the re- . suits of this mode of artificial breeding . is that more than 300,000 healthy fish are transferred to-the river Seine evory year.—Chicago News. TEMPERANCE NOTES. A GOOD CUSTOMER. of TRICKY . RATS. Out What a KnftWo Family Has Found About the Rodents. Rats have always been credited with great intelligence. Their tricks some-' times rise entirely above the level of mere animal cunning and reach the domain of humor. A family living on the West side, says the Buffalo Express, has been both amused and annoyed by the doings of .a rat in the cellar; To give an outline of the creature’s career would fill a book, and only a few.of his feats can he referred to here. He ap* peared to delight most in carrying things about the cellar, and his favorite freight was eggs. The eggs were kept in a box with a cover shutting close down over it, not a mere lid. bu t n real shutter w ith a rim on it. . This ra t cared 'nothing fo r that, but not only carried off the eggS aft fast Os he pleased, hot he always sho t'the cover just as he found it. I t is said'that rats carry eggs between their fore paws and walk on their hind ones like a kangaroo, blit nobody appears to have found out ju st h6w this one carried on his buBin^w.. The eggs would be everywhere -* found about ^ the cellar and the most unaccountable ffU10 places, sometimes stowed away in a corner w ith something thrown over them to cover them up, sometimes tucked into holes in the wall, but none of them were ever e&toH by Sir Rodent. He did every thing just lo r the fun of the thing and never for plunder. Bat somehow the family didn’t take kindly to the r a t hnd his ways and unfeelingly set a trap and caught him, when he was *vo4oe low and sweet with sympathy’s An Illustration of tlie Evil Effects Down-Town Associates. When Rodney came into the d u b the other evening, one of the boys re marked* ”Ah, Rod, you’re looking pretty slick!” "'Yes, and I am feeling pretty slick, as you terra it. My eye teeth have come through since the last time I was around here. One evening, not long ago, I dropped in a t Brack’s toget a few bowls*, and while I was sitting a t a table drinking, Brack, after slinking bands withseVcr&l convivial friends and bid ding them good-bye, chanced to come near my table. The old fellow that was waiting on me—the one wo call Bis marck-thought to pay me a high com pliment by giving me an introduction to his muster, and, turning to Bruch, said: ' “ 'This is Mir. Roflncy, a good custom- ei of oprs.’ V ■■■'■ “Brack sat down and ordered the .drinks, lie was exceedingly jestfnl, and laughed immoderately a t some lit tle pleasantry uttered by himself, and I attempted to be of good cheer, but if I smiled a t all it must have been in a' constrained way, for certain words lay with shudder-inspiring clamminess on my mind: ‘Mr. Rodney is a good customer of ours.’ •<* “Many a time had I sat a t that table, studying' the faces of the clamorous crowd about me, and many an ill-spent dollar hod I left there, bu t never be fore had it struck me that I. had been picked out as a ‘good customer of ours.’ I went out with the words still ringing in my ears, and meditatively strolled along Michigan avenue, Hundreds of resplendent equipages whirled past, A man gayly waved his hand, a t me. He was driving a handsome span of horses. I recognized Brack. ‘A good customer of onrs.’ Good customers of ours had provided him with that striking turn out. But where was my team? “I went home.' My wife was cooking supper . We could not afford to keep a g irl.' My wife had said so ,.and X had agreed ,with her. She hail often de clared that I was*working too hard, and that i t was no' more than right that she should attempt to cut down expenses. I had agreed to all this, for I knew that I did work hard, and I prided _mysfelf th a t I hodnUvdin beCn intoxicated, and yet-^I was ‘a good customer of ours.’ We sat down to supper. My wife—and how weary she did look—sat with her arms resting on the table. ‘Aren’t you going to eat any thing?’ I asked. • “ ‘Not now,’ slic answered; ‘I ’m so tired that I haven't any appetite.’ “ 'Mr. Rodney is a good customer of onrs,’ the tea-kettle hummed; and a cat, purring nt the leg of my chair, seemed to.repeat .the words. A chill crept over me. “ ‘Whathave yon learned nt school' to-dayV’ 1 asked my little daughter. “ ‘1 didn’t go to school to-day,’ she answered. “ ‘Why?’ “My wife looked up wearily and said:- ‘Her shoes are worn out. , She’ll have to wait until we can get her a new pair.’ “Great God! ‘A good customer of ours.’ . “1 went into the sitting-room and lay on the sofa. A troop of reproachful thoughts skurried through iny brain. And then, old, villainous human nature tried to sooth me: ’You were never drunk,’ it said, “you have' always (been kind to your family. You drink o f pn evening,when your Work is done, bnb you need some sort of recreation. You spend money, it is true, but why does a man care to live If he can not enjoy himself occasionally.’ Ah, how easy it would' have been to yield, but truth, l a a sad tone of reproval, waved aside tempting scoundrel and said: *Tlio money you spend for beer Would mala* your home a rCAt-inspiring and liAppy place. You say that you must have recreation, IVliat recreation has yodr wife? Whose good customer fcakwr- “My wife came into the room and sat down,near me. “ 'Are yon very tired?’ she asked, In NOTES IN GENERAL. T he sheriff pf Glasgow says thirty thousand people get drunk in that city every Saturday night, and that crime is increasing six times faster than the population. T he Russian Duchy of Finland1 h a s a Temperance League, a Blue Ribbon movement, a form of Good Templars molded by Government orders, and a Coffee-house movement.—Christian In quirer. 1 st one county in Alabama the num ber of saloons was reduced from six to one b y , aw. Inside of thirty days the general retail trade had increased thir ty per cent;, and inside of six months people who had lived for years on charity were earning-their own sup- tporh—Detroit Free Press. M ajor K nox , Governor of Gloucester prison, in a late speech at Cheltenham, Eng., statcd.thatin his opinion nearly aU enme was traceable to drink. When men entered a jail they -were obliged to abstain from liquor, and mainly owing to this abstinence the death-rate i of English prisoners was only about one- third of that outside. T he King of Samoa seems de termined that his subjects shall, be sober if not free. The foUowing order is his own proclamation, any breach Of which is to bo visited by heavy penal ties; “No spirituous, vinous or ferment ed liquors or intoxicating drinks what ever shall be sold, given or offered to bo bought, or bartered by any native ■ Samoan or Pacific Islander resident in Samoa.”—Union Signal, A nother fond delusion lias been shattered by the relentless data of sci ence. Whisky has long been regarded as of value In the treatment of pneu- lAonin, but a comparison of the results attained in different hospitals by its use in this capacity shows that its employ ment is not desirable. I t is found that in the New York hospitals sixty-fivo per cent of'tlie pneumonia patients d ie under alcoholic treatment, while in London, a t the Object Lesson Temper ance Hospital, only five per cen t die.— N. Y# Commercial Advertiser. T here are, it is stated, in round hum hers, fourteen thousand drink-shops in London, and every year twenty thousand persons are arrested for drunkenness. In the United Kingdom there are one hundred and ninety thou sand' public houses, and every, year there are two hundred-thousand arrests for drunkenness. I t i s . estimated th a t there is a huge standing army of half a million men who are more or less al ways besotted, men whose intemper ance impairs their working power, con sumes tliefr earnings and renders their homes wretched.—National Temper ance Advocate. ***■. ■ dispatched just as though he wasn’t * b it of a genius. But still the. eggs turn up in unexpected parts of the cellar, ju st to remind people of the sharp quadruped tha t once had the run of things down there. The last discovery is of two or three eggs on top of the bricked wall of the furnace, which no t only rises perpendicularly from the floor nearly to the next floor, bu t has appar ently rio approach, on which an ani mat cOUld walk. How did the. creature get them there? —Two Scottish clergymen were very firm friends, yet as different In charac te r as possible. The one was prim and precise, specially careful of his linen, quiet in speech and manner; the other, careless ns to dress, and a very John Hull in ways and Words. The la tte r had formed the hab it of taking snttff, very much to the disgust of his friend, who abhorred a ll Such practices, One day.' a t a ministers’ meeting, Mr; B. pulled Out bis snuff-box, tapped it in the orthodox fashion, and took a hearty phteb, doubtless making a ll the. noises usually made by snuff-takers. Mr. A., thinking to relrake him, said, in hii m ildest tones: “Mr# B., how much does I t cost yoti a y ear for straff?” “Don’! know,” was the reply; “perhaps about aaqttuch a* it dosh you to r irtttfw * paste. “ ‘No!’ I could no t help exclaim, T *m not tired, bu t a good customer pf— 1 mean that I am a brute.’ ■ ‘Why, what do you mean?* she asked in surprise. “ T mean exactly what I say—tha t I am simply a brute. I have wasted many a dollar th a t I should have, brought home; my selfishness has kept you hard n t work when you should have been reading some entertaining book. In truth, I am a good customer a t a beer hall and you are a slave!’ “ ‘Oli, don’t say that, dear,' she im plored# gently smoothing hack my hair. 'I am sure that your position demands the spending of some money. You must not be made to appear selfish,’ “ ‘Oh, no,’ Lrcplied bitterly, ‘I must throw looney away—1 must be a thoughtless brute a t home so tha t I may not appear thoughtfully selfish among my down-town associates. We’ll not discuss it, bu t we shall sec.’ ** “We have seen,” Rodney continued after a short pause, “We havc*6cen * girl in the kitchen; we have seen my daughter, bright and Well clothed, go ing to school—have Seenmy wife rested and cheerful, and especially have we seen that I am no longer ‘a good custom er of ours,’” ~Opie P. Read, In Arkan- laur Traveler. NAVAL BALLOONS IN FRANCE. flow T hey A re t n d to F ollow tb o Xvvo- a w t i o f Sobm ariue Boots# Some experiments have been lately conducted by the French navy, which will have an important influence on the future use of the balloon in time of war. A balloon was constructed, says the ChicagoGlobe, with a capacity of 11,300 feet, especially for experimental purposes. I t was inflated with hydro gen, which was carried in reservoirs under a pressure of 100 atmospheres. A tail rope 130 feet long served to con nect the balloon with a ship of the fleet when the balloon was required to bo kept captive for rcconnoitering pur poses. It was found, that on aclear day oH important objects within a radius of eighteen*’ to twenty-four miles were clearly distinguished. ■v . Another very important point was tha t the waters of the spa, when ob served from a considerable altitude, The Hon# J. W . Fennitnore is th* Sheriff of Kent Co., Del., and Hv» a t D over, the County Seat and Cap. ital of the State. The Sheriff js » gentleman fifty-nine years of a*t and this is what he says: “I “ used your August Flower for sey, “ eral years iu my family and formy “ own use, and found it does me were found to be singularly clear, and the details of the bottom wore in one of the ascents perfectly distinguishable, even at a depth of eighty feet. This pe culiarity allowed an observer in the balloon to foHow the movements of the submarine boat; Gymnote, during its re cent trials, without losing sight of it for a single moment, whatever its depth of immersion. The balloon used on this occasion was very Stoutly constructed, having been a short time before towed a t a speed of ten and one-half knots nn hour, for a distance of twenty-one knots, by a tor pedo boat, without being any the worse. Germany has now adopted baUoons for naval purposes, and during the recent maneuvers a t AVilholmshaven one of these was used from a war-ship of the fleet for rcconnoitcring. Roys W anted. Have you a boy to spare?. The saloon must have boys or it must shut up shop; Can’t you find one? I t is a great facto ry, and unless it can have two million from each generation for raw material some of these factories must close up and the operatives be thrown out upon a cold world and the public reve nue dwindle. Wanted—two million boys!"One family out of fix must Contribute a boy in order to keep up the supply. Will you help? Which of your boys sha ll.it lie? Arq, you a father? Have you given your share to keep up the supply for this great public institution that is helping to pay your taxes and kindly electing public officers for yo”? Have you con tributed a hoy? If not, some other family lias had to give more tlmn its share. Are you selfish—voting to keep the saloon open to grind up boys and then doing nothing to keep up the sup ply? Ponder these questions, ye voters, and answer them to God, to whom you will one day give an accbnnt for votes as well as for prayers.—Temperance Leaflet#. . Religions In tbc United States. The census announcement th a t there are a hundred and forty religious bodies in the United States, exclusive of many ^independent congregations, will be re ceived, says the Providence (R. I#) Journal, with some surprise by most people whose knowledge of different sects does not embrace more than a dozen or twenty a t the most, In the list as disclosed by the preliminary bul letin issued by the Census Bureau from Washington are the Geheral-.Six-Princi- plc Baptists, the Schwerkfoldians, the Theosophieal Society, the Life and Ad vent Union, and others which to a mar' jority of people will* be, entirely new. With. a hundred and forty creeds form ally adopted and ‘‘many independent* organizations’’ with their own notion# besides, the task of those who favor church unions -is difficult indeed. If only the more numerous denominations existed the labor of effecting a unity of churches with regard to polity and the more * essential doctrines might he cosier, but what shall bo said when a hundred little denominations, sturdy in their belief# and customs, are in tin field, loth to rive them up?, Cold Wet Weather A R m n k x rd ’a CtonteijJnn. Five years ago I waa prosperous*, but a little too much given to strong drink, or what Temperance apostles are pleased to denominate double distilled damnation. I drunk in secret a t the time# and# whoneverlgotdnmk,locked mySplf lit my room and lmd a personal inserted in the papers to the effect that I was sick. About three years ago I fell in love for the first time. Other girls lmd interested me, hut nothing more. 1 celebrated the discovery by a rip-roaring drunk. My nnib did not prosper a# I would have liked and ray means were dwindling away, so I de termined to know my fate# I was re fused, and, In the presence of the wom an 1 loved and ijeforo ray God, I swore never to breathe a sober breath. Sev eral times I have come near breaking my oath, owing to financial reasons, but have Managed somehow always to make ends meet. I go on my way, and when my corpse is rattled over thu stones# as the poets have it, it will be nothing but a mixture of beer and bad whisky.”—St, Louis Globe-Democrat Marrlaicwwith Inebriates# The efforts to raise the poor and de generate inebriate and his family arc practically of no value so long us mar riage with inebriates is permitted. Re cently the Legislature of the State of Victoria in Australia has passed a law whteh gives the wife the right of di vorce if the husband is found to lie nn habitual drunkard. If, after marriage, she discovers that lie. is an inebriate, she can also get a divorce. Tlio hus band can do the same with the wife, if she la proved to be an inebriate. This is a clear anticipation of the higher sentiment which demands relief from the barbarous laws which would hold marriage with an inebriate as fixed add permanent—Journal of Inebriety# Drite* the blood from the in th e e of tbo body, at,d canee* congestion of tlio liror end ktrtnoyn, which ere thus tumble to fully perform their duly of eliminating Impurities. Uonco lectio odd !• •ccnmuUted lit the blood end deposited iu the Joints snd tissues, resulting In the pains ain't aches wo colt rheumatism. Hood’s SorsopstriUo lias hod great success In curing this disease, both chronic and inflomumtory. I t pnrldos the blood, neutral- I ms tbo lactic odd. mod restores tbo Ilrar and kidneys to natural ootion. , H o o d ’ s Sarsaparilla •old by all druggists, lit six forts. Prepared only by C.I.UOOO A CO, Apothecaries, Lowell, Mask IOO Doses One Dollar _— - -7—r-rj ».«# MWt.g ‘‘more good than any other remedy. “ I have been troubled with what j “ call Sick .Headache, A pain comes “ in the back part of my head first, “ and then soon a general headache “ until I become sick and vomit “ At times, too, I have a fullness “ after eating, a pressure aftereating' “ at the p jt of the stomach, and 4 ‘sournessJwfien food^sedmed to rise “ up in myjfifoat and mouth. When “ I feel this coming on if I take a little August Flower it relieves “ me, and is the best remedy I have “ ever taken for it. For this mason “ I take i t and recommend it to “ others as a great remedy for Dys- ‘pepsia, & c .” 6 . G. GREEN, Sole Manufacturer, Woodbury, New Jersey, 0. S. A CURE CONSTIPATION. T « * a j* y h e a lth o n e s h o u ld h av e reg u l a r e v a c u a tio n s e v e ry t n e s y ro w • m m ; T b e e t l l i , b o th m e n ta l and p h y s ic a l, re am liln c f r o m HABITUAL CONSTIPATION a r e m a n y a n il s e rio u s . F o r th e core o r t h i s c om m o n tr o u b le : T u tt’s I.tver F ills h a v e r a i n e d a p o p u la r ity uupag* m llcled . E le g a n tly s u g a r co ated ; SOLDEVERYWHERE. MOTHERS'FRIEHn ISECHILi S IAM IF USED BEFORE CONFINEMENT, BOOKTO “ Sloinxits'’ H ai & eo F a st. BRAOFIELD KeOCLATpR CO., ATLANTAU , S old iiy a l i . D K u a o ire t.'’ BOILING WATER OR MILK. E P P S ’S GRATEFUL—COMFORTING. C O C O A LABELLED1-2 LB. TINS ONLY. IlluiiratedPublications,wift MAPSailoflcribing'MfncecoU,, northDakota,MofttanMiifibiV Washington and.Greirotj.tfc^ FKEKiU>V£ltrt£IK>T / AKI» CHEAP NORTHERN PACIFIC R. R. C ut AtrrlcnUuralGras.. and Timber. Land *1 _____ open to (Cttlery. Mailed FUSS. AilIRfm (H.Ef. B. UBBOKX, L ud CM*. K. V. 17 . K., 8 b r#Dl, K m . tt-BAX*TUI»MtVHmo\M«yHWpU. BOREWELLS! OarWfiU mte th«r«oflt RBTJAIItS.DVfcANM^ftttCCXfigntt.t TbcytioMOUEWOKKfind »»k»OltKATi£R HKWflT* TheyFININHWell*where VAILf Atir Fit®, t .................. Lli Incbes to u inchofitiIfijn«t«r, LOOMIS& NYMAN, T IFF IN , - OHIO. oriMKC TKI »*fWtw l ? i l G |AHiouNW,noBBH, H lW Sfl BV I I WiralilllKlon, It. 0. •uoOMBfUlly FROSCOUTES CLAIM*. f attFrimtiyglXxKBlier U, (. Fwoba Bureta#, yr»Intut n»r, 1 5Adjudicatingclaliui,attyilaM# arxatuTiaranamrOMTMnsa PAINLESS. P I L L S effectual ' M r W O R T H A G U I N E A A B O X . 'M i Fur BILIOUS & NERVOUSDISORDERS S^H Sick Headache, Weak Stomach, Impaired Digestion, Constipation, Disordered Liver, etc., ACTING! LIKEMACH,on the vital organ*,etrengthenin# the muscular system,and arousingwith thetosebud of health The whole Phyiic.l Energy of the llttnian Frame. B»*chamr$ Pills, taken as directed, wHl quickly RESTORE FEMALES to complete health. SOLO BYALLORUCClSTS# Price, 25 cents pel* J3ox. Pnrnttdwlyty THOfi. BEE0HAM, It. Hth.i, LtaMahin, Btehri, J9L X A t it E t i CO., Sal* At/tM/i f t Pnllett gfafr*, .T«A#t 3*7 Cnnal HI.. Xew York, teho ({ft/onr dramilitt flat* not http them) «M!I malt ririton t iHv^rajftnl. ___ ________ 1 h i * ) itm O i l HE Biliousness, ThJiiPtotora,raacl site,mtllri r«f 4 oteta. J . r . SM IT H A C O ., Ntkera o f “ Bile Bauw,” 255 ft. 257 CriMwIeh 3L, N. Y*Ctty# Sick Headache^ Malaria. BILE BEANS. i i THE BATTl A COWARDLY A JiMwra of Iiijt Wldol £n th e little village yea coun ty , O,, a fe ■fifP widow of Zaclt gras o ld an a poor an jumdh'ad been a sol. jp ^ h tr y and died in pennison, 0 ., on tke gff th a t insidious ^iarrkw a. The w i f , fo ld in g h is hand and Beat and knew th e : upon which she lean . $ be . retu rn ed to from w h ich th e soldi' fore, strong and brav fron t. I n due time th e pension which th allow ed soldiers’ wit’ a month. On th is p i eke p u t existence 1884, w hen th e re oce oil h e r sorrow ful Reeder h a d lived hii Henpeek and knew “but a designing worn g e t h is nam e in soi recotnm s th a t of Ins company ^ rem ed y filed a claim for a pe • y, she w as h b w id o w -. ^jhe facts usually sta lOle Manufa for a pension. New Jersei The usual call on i eral’s office for 'th . histoty developed th Jate fall of- 1863 Za Been conrtmartialed sentenced to a forfei uUowances and to m in the military pi O l U r A I Tcnn., and that he 1 Hhoa1(| u t Camp Dennison every twe * A me - July, 1864, three mo »* J o A i piratibn of his sen i n Bad been overlooked lUHu I IPi vvidow. had obtaincglans.. Fo r a fte r the soldier’s £®M“ £ |* r'J then rulings of the. y augarcai a record would hq JJJ.Y' dier of a pension i -jr~ any one claiming t P J ■poor old_blind wid stricken from the pe aUowancc suspendec ^ Fennid to., Del#, amty Seat The i |niue year, he say s ; *n»t Flow; ly family a found if; ,a n y o th $ publed wi| iche, A p Irt of my a general .e, sick a I have iressure af the. stoxjj food,see andinouj ing on ij rFlower i best remei it. Fortl; SOMFORi LB. TINS liustraiBd Pubil |lAPS,<tescr>bli lortitJ)u!tot«^M wnHliIngtou iui ■KEBGOVJKK r t!* M a I ltd V Hi. N. l\ IT, R,t ’tiaAirtnifnl*, - IS! j—wMfc JIOUNW# Her miserable co ' vnqised about the. |g confine ; <storm of protest w eos * h ' x i £ e d ington against this.! sion Office. --;------- *—q The papers in thegTER OR . Special examiner o ■then located a t ,W: instructions to inve the true condition ’two women had widows of the saine| lowing curious his -the fall of 1863, whe ■the North was in co vosion of Bragg’s a ened -capture of Ohio Infantry wa . from a camp in the ■State, a t which it 1 located. Zacliariah| ■tog sick to march tfil^ght, so near dc ■no Turther use as given a pass, told t* his discharge woul •due time. This w a s an assumptioi <-ers had no riglv ignorant soldier k went home. He w, health for months, ^discharge never cai who hud sent hln him discharged o w a s also worrying warded from the headquarters for misplaced and nev while the compapj ■uphis owndcllnqi t©f authority, carri Uriah Reeder on had lain reporte witii hii. company knew he was th a t he had sc officer’s conduct fluenccd more b: than by his duty Summer of 1863 farmer in the n he had disclosed as to his coming reported himself itics a t Camp might be arrest •this did not sav he reported him enmstances of regiment, than r deputy provost his living by th fleeced the Gov seized him as n to has regiment. Rack with li went on as ustia one day ho was a court-martial, sof his regiment. W a sh ing re* Jto saouT -. K mt V. I, Fw TjUdldAtiD*Clfti ERSS2 kpaired iver, etc, theninflt .fid of hfcfil | Frank*, RESTS! [E*fkrir T Canal SI., 3 ham'* tnn*\ w FflP Ota tion and the off<j Ihghomeon a with a promise 1 be sent him. was tooignora ened to explain! there to speak f] lmd Lceii the c» ftot jKissesstrue give to steR f*j his-own error a matt# Hence* that was the >l<*e*e*!. Print*) ros’e r. made tr* iHiing sent i r i
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