The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52
i 1 . I i r - PlWIJVpjPfPP....V l ' I I ' l ' f t J i 4. ■ ./ .V>w ...v * ■* ’ A MIDNIGHT CAPTURE. A JRomantlo Incident in th« Tonth Waalthjr Coloradoan, “Da Iremembsr the first $ 1 , 0001 ever earned?" eohood Henry Weitftll, ft wealthy resident ot Colorado, in answer to a question of « fellow-lodger a t the Grand Pacific HoteL “Well, rather. I was ft young lad at tbetiine, and the only child of the poor* ta t fam ily.In a coal-mining town in Pennsylvania. One day, while picking slate, I heard a big commotion a tth e top of the mine. The men were very $»oh excited, and the owner, who was . the richest and most devout churchman- ip the town, waswringing his hands and imploring the men to do something. “Running up I learned that the men had fired* a fuse attached to an extra largo cartridge and had just come from the mine, when th ey discovered that they had left the pretty little daughter of the owner behind. She had gone - down with her father, and while the lat te r came up for an errand hadwandered aWay. The cartridge had not yot exr. { loded, as the fuse -had purposely been lade, long to enable the men to get. up. . “The father, you may imagine, was agonised. He offered $ 1,000 to any one who would go down after the little one. Hut no. one would stir. All of them had families of their own—except, of course, S iyself—and would n^t run the risk of eath. The sum was ’a fortune to mo, especially as my father was, from slck- fness, unable to work. “Jumping on the oar Xcalled to he lot J own, and, amid the cheers of tho men, descended. Each moment had doath |n i t for me, unless the fuse was longer Vian was thought. But I tried not to think of it and when I reached the bot tom the child was playing at tho mouth Of the shaft I grabbed her, put her in the car, and gave the signal to be hoist ed up. But the car did not move.' I re peated tho signal, but still without ftVftlL In agony of tear 1 jerked it gain and the car still remaining .at tho attorn I bade the little girl to stay where.. she was and then I ran into the now drift, where the ex plosion was to .take place. A little spark revealed the whereabouts of the fuse. The fuse was still an tnoh long; and Xtook hold of it and pulled it ou t I tried to oheer, but had fainted -in stead. “When I came to I was on top of tho ground, taken there by the men who, -when in answer to my last signal—thoy had not received the other two-had raised the little girl and had then come down after me. ''Well, ..the, next day the fathor .thanked me, but said nothing about the $1,00D l The men advised me to ask for it. I refused. Then Some of them asked for me and the owner told them th a t they were mistaken; ho had offered nothing. So madwero they th a t they jbreatened to ttyrow him down tho idine, but desisted a t my request A tew weeks lator.I was discharged, probably because I was an eyesore to the owner. My father having in tho meantime re covered, I went aw ay and obtained work in Npw York, and after awhile se cured a fair position. “One day, about fifteen years after this even t a charming younglady drove up In -her cariTago.'Hrad, coming* in, oallod for me. She did not a t first glvo her name, but asked mo if I would do her a favor. Of course I said ‘yes. She then told me th a t i t was she whom I had saved; th a t her father had died a short time before, and th a t in looking over bis papers she had found a latter, from someof the~men fcThim ,Tipbrilfl ing him for not paying me the $ 1 , 000 . This was th e first she had heard of the obligation, and she bad immediately set ou t to find me. As she said this she handed me a check for $1,500, the extya ‘fOOObslng, she explained tho in terest J v ia. to refuse to accept the - •* - - —* - ....... ‘ n « Long lloll Was Sounded and the Poor Porker Died. ■“Twenty-six years ago last night,” laid a veteran the other evening, “was my time to go, on guard. You know how thoy stand; three men and * corporal go cu t and it was customary for, them to divide the night Into four parts, the of ficer takes the flrot quarter; but ho isn’t obliged to stand a t all. ’ s ■ “We went out th a t night with no idea of foraging, as our orders were very Strict against it, old Forrest being pret ty close to us, and the eamp-was ready ,to turn out a t a moment’s notice. The corporal of tho guard was Mack Hollis— be afterwards beoame a Lieutenant—and the relief consisted of Henry Williams, Tom Irwimand myself. AhoutthSO o'clock, as wo were .sitting around the iflrp -a-cussing the rebels and wishing tho war waf over, we hoard a short, sharp grunt and "snuffing of the air. Turning around,, we saw o n e ,of i reminded mo t h ^ I h a d p jfflis c i -to xkEher a favor, -*vy- feat card, and she left. Whatbecame of her? Well, six months later-she be came my wife.”—Chicago Evening Post iManltjr Cured Dr Inflaenxa. Iu a recent number of the Nenrolo* gisches Ccntralblatt Dr. Meta records the case of a man, aged thirty, who had suffered with metit&l disease since the summer of 1S8S. In February, 1839, ho became affected with delirium dt perse cution, and was so violent th a t he had io be placed In confinement At the be ginning of tho present year .there was an outbreak of influenza In the asylum. The patient in question was attacked on the 18th of January; on tho 17th he wrote a rational letter to his wife, giving a clear and Coherent account of all th a t had occurred since he had become in sane. He dated the recovery of his mental lucidity from the day on which Aie Was attacked Vritl influenza.—S t James Gazette. When He V m weak. -Palette ' is such an original a rtist Ho never repeats him- Ted- young «df. Ned—Nonsense! You should just hear him say good-night to h it girl.— L ight —“For a life by your side, my darling, t would give up every thing 1 possess— parsnte, position, wealth -all.” “Bui la tha t case what would thare be left fee m*f*-Fll*f«tfde Waiter. those razor-backed, rail-splitting hogs, liko'you spoke of, Andy. I t didn't look like it had been ted in six months, but We wore awful hungry for .fresh hog m eat and Tom Irwin and I snatched up our guns,, and would have' fired,- b«tMa,ck told us to hold on, we'd :alarm the whole camp.'''''-'The hog turned around all of a sudden and ran into, the bushes like a train of cars; you know th a t sort;.of pigs can outrun a race horse, anyhow.' Wo heard it. tearing along a little ways, and then i t stopped, to listen, I suppose. “ ’There,’ said I, ‘you’ve lot it get away.’. “ ‘No, I haven’t ’ replied Mack. ‘Put your bayonet o n 'th e end of your gun, Bill, and go otit to the right*about fifty, steps and stand still." Toin, you fix your bayonet and go. to tho left about the same distance. Hen and I will go around the hog and drive it towards the fire; it will go on one sido or the other! then make a sure stab.* “Wo got into our positions, and Mack and Henry wont out to drive in' tho porker. .Of coarse thoy had their guns-, ready, so If they got closo enough they would stick, the brute: Protty soon I heard a grunting, and. a crashing of'the bushes, and in a’-few seconds the porker ran out into tho light of tho fire anil- stooil stock still, head down and evident ly listening; hearing Mack and Henry coming from behind, .it gave a quick ■harp grunt and dashed straight toward me. *• “ I got a good grip on my gun, and pre pared todrivomy bayonot right through the hog when it got near-enough, hut it must have seen mefor when it got with* in about fifteen foot of mb it sheered and started between myself and the flro. I t was too far away to stick,, and, of courso. I ’was resolved not to lot it escapo if 1 could help It, so I raised my gun and threw it at the animal with ali my strength. But it was running fastor than I thought, or else I did not throw tho gun quick enough; ter Instead of striking right behind the foro legs as I intended, the bayonet went through tho back part of’ the hams, sunk deop into tho earth and pinned it to the ground. “Tho bog set up such a squealing as I never heard before, louder than a steam boat whistle, and fairlymade my oars ache with its terrible din, A fow jumps brought tiio boys on the spot, and wo all tried to talk at once, but nono of us could ha heard. ' “ 1 caught hold of the butt end of my gun, which was shaking like a leaf, to steady it, for, if tho hog kept up his struggles, it would pull the bayonet out of tho ground and run off. Hen and Tom grabbed it by the legs and cars to hold It still, and Mack, in his excitement quite forgottlng to use liis bayonptjorked out a little twenty-two revolver he had been carrying to practice with, placed its muzzle in the hog’s ear .and stopped its squealing forever. “The pistol, being soeloso to its head, made a pretty loud report, and a fool in th e 'n ex t picket to the right heard the sound, and concluding., that the, rehs w e re jiflit onto us, fired off his gun.and te r ittheri, so "we covered up tho dead hog with bushes and got back to the fire. “The long roll sounded, tho whole army turned out and got ready lo t An* slant battle. I t must have been two hours before the mistake was discovered and tho men got back into their quar ters. Nothing was done about i t th a t night, .and we brought our meat Into camp with us next morning. About twelve o’clock wo wero summoned be fore the Colonel to answer ter our breach of orders; of course we all de nied our guilt, but tbe Colonel broke us off with: “ ‘I know th a t one of you is guilty, and if that one doesn't report to me by five o’clock this 'afternoon 1 will be obliged to punish you all.’ “As we passed oq£ of the tent we saw another body of men, which wo surmised was the other picket, coming slowly to ward headquarters. We four talked the matter over and decided that, as wo were equally guilty and one man could suffor for tho whole party, wo would draw lots to soo who would repot* o the Colonel. 1 dr.ew tho unlucky straw, and at five o'clock presented myself a t headquar ters, announcing th a t I was tho guilty wretch. The .Colonel sot me to work carrying a log of wood—a pretty heavy chunk, by the way- up and down before his tent. In a couple of honra he eon- eluded 1 was punished enough' and let m « go,, and my ex tra work only nude the pork taste a ll the better, bu t my ahoulder was terribly sore ter a time. “As for the other picket, the Colonel failed to see th a t th ey .were- little to blame, and as thoy refused to pick out a man to suffer for the balance, the whole squad was sent on fatigue duty ter a week.*’—Pennsylvania Grit,w WANTED A WOUND. Vain E ffort o f "a Kontokr Hoy Confederate; Scar. Wounded? / No. N o rhavo I ever Seen the time when .lu s h e d to be. ' Rl^/any one? Yes, indeed. I have known .volunteers who never gave a thought to rank or promotion; who served well and fought well with, Bcemingly, no other ambition than to carry home with them some ugly sea? In a conspicuous place. I recall a remark able oose of th is kind. ! Johnnie was a.young and rosy recruit in a Kentucky regiment, .brave in action and a favorite in °camp. He often ex pressed a wish th a t the war might not end until he had received his, scar. One day in~ i 868 , while the' array of General Rosecranz,was resting a t M‘ur- freosboro, Tenn., recruiting from the effects of Stone River, the company to which Johnnie belonged was ordored out as guard to a wagon train th a t was pull ing out on a foraging expedition. Our line of march was along the Shelbyville turnpike, whore we found some well- filled corn cribs, .While the wagons wore being loaded, Johnnie’s company took up a'position across the turnpike, about a milo in advance, while other companies guarded the othor approaches. The enemy'wore not long in discover ing our object and attacking our posi tion, which wo had -strengthened by a rail anddog barricade. During those at -1 tacks Johnnio persisted in nocdlcssly exposing hiniBolf, in the hope that ho might be wounded.. At tho momen’trof, one of tho fiercest efforts to dislodge us, Johnnie mounted the barricado and yelled derisively at tho enemy, but in shorter time than it requires to writo it .he leaped to tho ground, with one hand clasping the side of his neck, qnd danced with gioe. ’ ' . Wounded! When the enemy withdrew, and the wound was examined, it was found.to be so slight that no hopes of a scar could be entortalnod. Tears and profanity followed, and Johnnie linishod tho war unscarred.—J Joston Globe. IN WOMAN’S BEHALF, 'OUR MYRA.” GAME TO THE LAST. Cant>i>n Dalis Wore Not Included In Frl- > rate Williams’ Statement. Wo had- with .us in the —th Now 1 York a private named Williams, and from our very first battle ho usod to de clare: • “Boys, the robs will never mould- a bullet to k ill mo.” * I t seemed as if there was something in it, for while almost every othor man in his company got a scratch now' and then, and every fight reduced tho roll call, ho was novor hit. At Fredericks- burg he. stood for fivo minutes alone, with tho men on the right and left shot down, and yot ho wasn’t hurt. Wc/ got around to Spottsylvania at last, and only the day boforo that fight ho cracked h 1 s hods together, uttered a crow, and said: “Boys, wb shall have a fight to-mor row, and 1 ’U bet ton to one I don’t got hit.” Noxt-day about ton o’clock wo wore' advanced in support of some Ohio troops which wore hard pressed, and just ns wo swung juto position the Confederates opened on us with solid shot, Tho very first ball I saw como our way bounded along tho ground and h it Williams on the left thigh with an" awful thud. His hip was smashed to a pulp and ho hadn’t five minutes to live. Two of us moved him a tew foot, propped his head up, and them "as TputTaIs cantcori"nTAiiSbands, I said: "Poor old boy! Wo thought you had a charmed life, but they’ve h it you a t last.” “Yes, I am done for,” ho replied, as he drank off half the contents of tho canteen; “but, you seo, I was figuring on bullet*, and tho eusicd robs have i 1 -'--j w .i-w f’™ N. Y.-Kun. ALLEN’S WAR STORIES, Two Good Storles/Tola bjr tho M litlxtpp i , Congressman. Representative John Allen has an in exhaustible supply of stories, says a Washington letter to the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette: Here are two re lating to tho war. With the first Mr. Allen illustrates the deep-seated preju dice and contempt felt ter the Yankees. A Confederate soldier In a certain regi m en t had become noted for tunning away from ovory figh t. On ono occasion his Captain found him In lino as an Un expected attack opened, Standing be hind him the Captain drew his pistol and said: “Now, John, up to this tlmo you have run from overy fight, You have disgraced yourself on all occasloris. Now, if you stir from tho lino this time I intend to shoot you dead. I shall stand here, righ t behind you, and if you sta rt to run I will certainly k ill you.” John heard the Captain through, and drawing himself up "1 to an unusual hoight, ropllad: “Wall, Captain, you may shoot me If you like; but I ’ll never give any low-lived, low-down Yankee the privilege Of doing it,” v. At Murfreesboro a Confederate soldier waaruehlitg to tbe reatfwith all the speed ho m id command. ' An officer hailed him and nneerlngiy inquired why be was funning so fast awajrfrom the Yan kees. Tbe soldier, without stopping, yelled bask: “Heeauee 1 can’t fly.” * The 8 bccb «» Which B h Crowned the Ef fort* ofOne itriicht, Persevering Woman. I t is interesting to note in the prog ress of events th a t the suqceas of women in walks of life outside of the fami ly circle has not Intorioted a t all with th a t sweet domesticity of nature, about which men of overy age have h ad .so much to say. A woman can s it all day in s rocking-chair a t home, -reading a novel and holding a pet poodle, and no one will censure her. But let her elect to sit in an office chair, and fulfill the duties of a profession, and she will „be immediately a target for criticism. However, i t is pretty well understood now th a t a woman who espouses a pro fession need be no less womanly in voice, style, manner or dress than-if she sat a t home-in'a rocker. . The tailor- made suit was not the out-come of a pro fesstonal need, but was instituted by the gi?i who frivols, and adopted by her business sister. The a rt of expression has .taught a woman that she need not uso a squeaky voice as an emblem of fem ininity, and a modest, unassuming man ner is a dower in any profession. These last were the attributes pertaining to the first woman who ever applied for ad mission to the bar of* the United States and was refused. “James,” said Mrs. Bradwell pto her husband, who was a t that time.a Chi cago; justice,,"w hat do you suppose they mean by refusing to receive me at the bar on account of w legal disa bility?’' “My dear/’ said the good-natured man, “you are a woman and are disqual ified or I might say disbarred—eh?” ■ “I don’t believe it, James, This is mot one of tho dark-ages. 1 know just as much about law as that little whip per-snapper S - , who was 'given the -right to practice his profession. I have done a great deal more legislati ve work than he, and all those prominent jurists and legislators listen te^tno with the greatest respect and adopt my measures, but thoy won’t give mo the only right that I demand and which they claim l am fitted for, tho right to practice be fore any court in th e United States.” , . “I will look into it," said her hus band, gallantly-; and he did. Ho went to Springfield to tho Illinois Legisla tu re , to Washington to the Supreme Court, and when-he'returned he said to his wife: “Well, Myra, I ’ve found out what the disability is.” “Have you?”asked tho little woman ea gerly, “tell me what it is. Hurry,. James, I’ve waited’years for-this. What is the disability that prevents me,from succeeding in my profession?” “I am,” said Judge Bradwoll, meekly. “You are a married woman instead of a femme sole, and/ so you can •not be a lawyor. I .novel’ thought ot that, did you?" ' ' • ; “No, and 1 shall call you my disabil ity now out of rovonge, until I repeal that stupid old lavV, if there is one,"and* Mrs. B-----was as good as her word, but' it did not disturb in tho least the hat- mony of their united lives or of their beautiful household. As Chicago!s first lady lawyer, Mrs. Bradwoll was soon woll-known, and sho bad a rich fund' of anCcdoto to tell con cerning thoBO days when sho wore her hair in a shower of abundant black curls and drossed sweetly In lady -1 iko silk costumes and edited tho Legal Nows, her own law paper. All (ythe lawyers know “Our Myra,” as shcrvivas always called, and tbejf admired /non pluck and go-ahoadativeness and her-slngleness of purposo. Mrs Bradwoll filed a printed argument in which her right to a license to prac tice before the bar of tho United States was earnestly and ablymaintained. Mr. ■Justice Laurence delivered the opinion POOR ARGUMENTS. t o of tbe Court and denied tho application. Then i t became apparent th a t tb ore was really no established law forbidding a woman to practice in th e Courts, whether sho was married -or single. There were certain technicalities easily romoved by the Legislature if that judi cial body cboose to exercise its author ity, which i t would not- thendo, sS?-:*, -•„*,'? rr»-- • .Ll«A-V*UtAvi4JUi>- ter women to leave their domestic sphere for legislative hails. Mrs. Bradwoll, like the clever woman she is, finding she could not become queen of tbe ermined throne, was satis fied with being the powor behind ttad throne. Busy with her legal newspaper, which was taken and read by tbe most astute of the lawyers and judges, Sho found ker-lfcste^filled with an actual practice which brought her both money and fame, and a t last, when sho bad ceased to labor ter it, tbe coveted honor was granted. Bbe was permitted to practice before the bar of tbe United States law courts as an honorary mem- bor, and there the m atter rests.—Mrs. If, L. Raync, in Detroit Free Press. Senator Ve*t’» Foolish Objections Woman’s Satifrage. In his recent spee'efi against the aft. mission of Wyoming into the Union. Senator Vest frankly declared that ha - would never consent to admit into the Union any State with a constitution that adopts woman suffrage. First, because woman’s voting is antagonistic to the U. S. Constitution; second, because woman's impulsive, emotional, sentk mental nature unfits her ter taking part in, government; third, because the evili of negro male suffrage in the .South would.be greatly intensified by allowing ignorant negro women to vote. Let us consider, these three object tions: L Senator. Vest can- not find a sen tence, a line, a word in the U. S. Const!, tution which excludes women from vot ing. The principles of tho preamble imply tbe equal right of all citizens irrespective of racoor s e x .. Not only eo , but the- constitution was adopted by ;one State, New Jersey, which had already . extended suffrage to its women upon tbs same terms a s men, and whose election laws contained at th a t very time tbs words “ho or she” and “his or.herbal, lot." The U. S. Constitution was framed in part by New Jersey delegates- representing a constituency composed in -p a rt of women "voters. On the seeond day of. July, 1770, on motion.of Rev. Mr. Cooper, a Quaker minister, the ; New 1 Jersey State Constitutional Con* vention in session a t Burlington,amend-, ed the suffrage clause of the provincial . charter by changing.the words "male , freeholders worth forty pounds,” to "all inhabitants' worth forty pounds." Women and free colored men of proper* ty voted in Now Jersey from 1776 until 1807, and John Adams received the elec toral vote of tho-State over Thomas Jof-,* i ferson in 180b because mostqf tho woin- . eh voters were Federalists, and this fact led,to their exclusion in 1807 by-an un* . constitutional act of a Demdcratfc-Legis lature. So far, therefore, from tho al leged, inconsistency of woman suffrage with tho U. S. Constitution, that consti tution waa framed in part by delegates representing women voters, and was* ratified by a State Legislature elected in part by women voters. In the elec tions of Presidents Washington, Adams and Jefferson -women participated, and it- remained ter Senator Vest, of Mis souri, nearly a century later, to raise , the bugbear of the unconstitutionSlity against the suffrage of .one-half of his fellow citizens. . 2 . Some women and some men are un duly impulsive, emotional and senti- mnntaL But many womejn are far less impulsive and emotional than many men. Indeed, women as a sex are ex pected-qot only to suppress their im pulses and emotion's, but to curb and regulate those of men. They are the recognized conservators of private mor als; how, then, can they bo dangerous, as voters, to public morals? But the charge, of impulsiveness and sentimen talism sounds strangely*- in tho mouth ' of Senator Vost. For ho, of all our Sent ators, is perhaps most liable to criticism in these respects. If women are to be disfranchised on such a ground, might wo not logically question tho right of Senator Vest to pass Upon their qualifi cations? 3. Senator Vest argues that if educate . ed women vote in Wyoming, then illit erate colored' women must vote in Mis-, souri. He overlooks the fact that the Stato Constitution of Wyoming estab-. lishcB an educational/"qualification for suffrage similar to Ahat of Massachu setts. Unless we groatly mistake the signs of tho times, tho Southern States will eventually find their only relief from tho admitted calamity of their present malo illiteracy, by enlisting in future elections their millions of- edu cated women, elovon out of twelve of whom aro white, and who will outnum ber all the illiterate men,, black and. white, Combined. What an amusing commentary it will be upon Senator Vest’s sentimental ob jections, of order and civilization and peace and contentment should prevail throughout the South within tho next under J-dccade as a result of an extension of . . . i _ - V - y - s - i E - U . upon a reading and writing qualifica tion. Stranger things have happened.— Woman’s Journal. T he corner stone of the Prophylseum, a building designated to accommodate tbo various social and literary clubs of Indianapolis, where i t is to be located, was recently laid with appropriate ceremonies. This enterprise, tbe idea of which was conceived about a year ago by Mrs. May Wright Sewall, is in tho hands of a woman’s stock company, of which there are more than two hundred members,-. Tho capital stock is $ 10 , 000 , and all ol the shares have been sold for $35 each, Says one of the Indianapolis papers! “A history of the Prophylmum from its organization until to-day has been an uninterrupted story of success," I t is expected that tbe building will be completed and dedicated by n e st Octo ber. TO ENCOURAGE THE WOMEN. T he fctaslo scholarship of the F.oyat Geographical Socioty has been won .by Miss K. 1J, Clagne, of Southlands, Eng.' T he University of Brussels has just conferred its M. 1). degree upon three English women students, who have all passed with honors, I n tbe list of physicians licensed to practice by tho Minnesota state Medical Board, a t its last meeting, wero Eliza beth E. Molllson, of S t Peter, and Mary Knanf, of Duluth. Annv M. A dams , M. D.l is connected With the Indiana Insane Hospital in In dianapolis, as assistant physician, and ranks on an equality with the men who occupy similar positions. M esdamks F osi . ei : and S tiuaht , members of the Cotton Exchange and Board ot Trade, 145 Main street, Hous ton, Texas, Aggregate sales ‘for the pastsix months, $500,000. Owners rep resented, Soo, Value of listed property, o $ 1 , 000 , 000 . M bs . I ka L. L ikes , of Hayes City. Nob,, has tho reputation ot being one pf the smartest lawyers in the State. She is only twenty-nlno years old, but she has been an enthusiastic law student ever since she' WftSseventeen, and like* th* business. OF kouM —The »re kiUin, corset* si the mis* —An o pounds of -consumes sary tokilj • —The c the excha ' has markc| seven ye* i t had bee timepiece —At'Spr] a farmer nlng whil- wliiob kill .like a gra in to which| him was b —The -opened -tb inMontrea >• by alms a money.' I ' ' they go t penance a olpal occu and ponan open to t monks sha ’selves, —Allian refugee R past eight ous village inhabitant: thousand a _ Salem Cou . to th'o refu‘ dety, the about S 12 over $100 prosperous —ALon to the Timl people evei! bands desirl They every] necessarily though the means old: has long not know 1 that any .should occ rather star —The loose again ly against They asser making ma : tifioial” no «re a h o u tr . be .distingu ice?” The to m eet ti loo" woul dueed by prooess. I Beaton fip ark News. —Up to t' check for posed to b! T h is has hi th e Indian pany for .JE County Rai through th Ponnsylva favor of Mi for over $ Pfailadelph . stock. Th: up in, the Railroad Nows. —An In place in .sohool for which hav -question o and disou the flame, settle the test,' cons: leap, a tu_ were six whom girdles an Tho non-c tors, their als with a —The who go t lr tlon b?-?"” not be use ft- Afassac liked fan commltte fans of all t‘.on and r riotyonly ftto compl ’ tions fan,] ponderou place of waved th which glv and satisf —A ten thirty to four rac nets to when the A tennis * good g And a m_ whltowa; months *ud at consider teason, Scnoral gAtno; h mand to. good! love to nick to U ten o *ftthusl migh ma bolUh, f* Suffi Speech ling, ii pkly di ont to |i t h a c tago. Is ant; on; a |ro, or iits. hei bird, h ■uffrag Intonsi Imen t< I r , the It can Jusd in ludes v pies o: right po or b ' i on tva: ly, wh I to its on, am ivt tha I ” and Co ' New onstiti iien, July, -l; (a Qua! |to Cor la tB u lause o ring th ft forty Irth ! Icolovec persoy lams r IStftto c bauso i lidoral psion i ;of a I there! my oi fenstitu Id i n ; bmon late L( Ion vof ltd Wt lomen Sena Icentui th em rage o n and emoj lany v emoti roman to f Jions, of m srvato: :an th Ihlic l Isivond [trange For most -. If- such quest pass u -t argi n Wy< iinon n looks ion o tional to [w j gr >3, the find ]ttod ( ilitorac thoi: dovon and v iterat ing c Vest ir ant tmon South illlfc 0 -ated things .1. [AGE :holai doty e, of ty of D. A stud* lors. pky linn; it me i, of S ;h„ Ma, M la Inss issista [ality ■ iSitiC ’osr.Ei: Cotti 145 N liffffeg. it *50( lvalue Eitvi iputft -yers line , ithus 86 jaB*INite*
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