The Cedarville Herald, Volume 11, Numbers 22-52

¥ The Cedaryille Herald. W. H. BLAIH, Publish^. CEDARVILLE. : . i OHIO. THE ENGINEER’ S DOG. It Wa» BUda’t Cftnlno Instinct That Tjm* rant.d » B»llnml Wrwlt. ‘ ‘Yet, air," remarked the gray-balrcd gentleman with a slight tremor in bis voice, “ I have given up railroading now, having become a little bit too tar advanced upon the road of life to ait in a cab and make a locomotive move, OhI you want to know about that dog of mine, All right J uaed to run into Chicago,on the Lake Shore on old 482. That dog Uevermlssed a trip over the road wjth i3§? ahdLowe my life to him on more than iWMKfcasion. His name’s ‘Slide,’ not of 'SudnKelly, slide’ fame, however. X’AgoAlton tothe round-house and see my eld girl run out and then monkey abopt hir to see that nothing was out of. whack until it was time to start jdghtatthe hour Slide could be seen coming down the street with my dlnner-baskat in hls old mouth. When -> It became time to Btart X’d give the wblstle a chance, and Slide would:bo on board in-the cab beside me. .That dog never would walk. He Was too blooded for that It became no trick at all for him to climb out on the foot- -hoard, run along'and jump down on the pilot got up again on the other side and walk' into the. other window. Whenever we got to New York Slide would go down and ride into town, big as life on thecowcatcher. 1even taught him to pull the whistle cord whenever I commanded. Every body along the line knew him. When I got down to oil my wheels he would always follow andwatch to see that no kidB jumped on the locomotive. “ I remember distinctly one stormy night as I was approaching Chicago. There was a tremendous tempest on the lake, for I could hear the dull roar of ■ the waves beat upon the shore. Thad to lay upon a siding and wait for orders to pull in overany one of thefifty tracks that spread out near the olty. There was a little telegraph station a few rods away from where I lay. Orders were confidently expected in a few minutes, hut they did not come. My firemanand I got lonely Bitting out there in the driving rain, and hot even' distinguish­ ing each other's volees In the din. 1 re­ member Tom yelling ‘It’ll be a hard time out on the lake to-night,’ and then the light camefrom the station, bobbing up and down, and some onecame hurry­ ing up and gave mo the written orders to proceed over the last track to one of the stations on the outskirts of the efty and lay there until aspecial had passed. “ Well, the brakeman got' down t<rK throw the switch, when Slide madea^* bee line out of the cab and. flew at the followas though he had gone crazy, and back. Why he simply tore sounds into 'shreds. He jumped at the fellow every time h„e made a movement fob tho switch; lie would crouch down and bog and whine terribly. “ ‘Say, Charley, I won’t touch that switch,* the brakey said as he walked towards mo with a white faoe. There’s something gone wrong, and I know it,’ be wont on. At first ! laughed, but gradually something strange came over me suddenly. I could feel ,the warm perspiration trickling down my back, hone. Tho conductor got impatientand yelled to us to pull out Tho brake- man started back to throw the swltoh again, hut sic, the dog displayed the same tactics, and even hit the brake- man’s hands. Just then there was a sudden lull in the storm. The most mournful'howl I ever heard came from that animsL “ ‘My God, look?criedthe brakeman, pointing up the track. Both of ua sprung to our posts and peered towards Chicago. A great red light came like a flash out of thelnkyblackness snd the -special rushedpast us like a whirlwind and was gone. ••four white faces looked Into one an­ other’s cdnntedanoes a moment later, and just then the Operator dame run­ ning out with orders to stop us, but we had been stopped by a keener instinct thanhuman intelligence and telegraph wires. Yes, he .was our mascot” con­ cluded the old engineer, bruahlffg a strange moisture la his eyes and walk­ ing further along life's rugged road, The dog had gone before him.—Denver (Col.) Nows, aoeeacM S r iA w Faya. A man stood in a doorway on Jeffer­ son avenue at ten o’clock at night puff­ ing at a cigar. Along came a second men with an unlighted cigar .in his Angers, and he halted and asked! “Give me a light please?” “ Certainly,” was the reply. The smoker then then took from big vest pocket a mstch, and from his oost tail pocket a osndle wrapped iapaper, HOstruck the match, lighted the can­ dle, and then taking a paper from an­ other pocket he lighted It at the flame of the caudle an* heldlt oat with the reMirk: “Certainly, slr—always wllljng to oblige.” Hie etherlookedat thewatch, the candle and the paper in unfeigned astonishment for a moment and then drew back, pocketed his cigar, and passed on with the remark! “ Jtpeh obliged, hut you am too all- fired civil.”—-Detroit Free Pxese, —A Chicago furniture manufacturer lays m i umlaut Wilt soon be left behind for chamber suits. Metal will supersede them, he s m ' . THE BATTLE FIELD. - - 0OWNEO the general . Hew theGuard Got tiiaiHast of a Division Commander,- During the, spring of 1808 our army was, encamped at Franklin, Tonn.v Gor­ don Granger in command. A regiment crossed the river from the camp, and picketed around tho town daily. One day the One Hundred and Twenty-first Ohio went aver, and it fell to the writer to. take a squad back to the pontoon bridge. The sergeant I relieved told mo bis was a special detail made tho night be­ fo r e ‘from a regiment near by; that Captain Stacy had fooled tho regular guards out'Of their guns, and then bad them all put under arrest This Captain Staoywas always atsuch tricks. Ho was Chief of Staff to Gen­ eral Gilbort, In command of our divis­ ion, and the soldiers generally bnted thorn because they seomed to lmto the soldiers, and wore continually trying to play just'.such. tricks upon thorn S®tho above. I asked the sergeant what his orders were. ' , . “Pass no man without a pass counter­ signed by General Granger.” “Yod don’t moan just that; "what else have you got?” 1 replied. “Nothing; that’s all the orders I’ve got to give you,” ho said very emphati­ cally. “ All right,” 1 said, turning to« my guards; "boys, there'll be fun here to­ day.” We looked-for the grand rounds dur­ ing the first relief, and I put our best man on duty, with tho aforesaid “ or­ ders”. I regret that I can not recall his name. It was a cold, windy day, and the guards (except tho.ono on duty) took shelter behind some boards, and I sat down on a log to leeward of them about ten yards from the guard to note events.. At 10:30 General Gilbert, Captain Stacy and at least a dozen’Orderlies came over the hill and down toward our post on tho gallop.' If we had known that he was tho offi­ cer of the day that day, wo should have turned out to salute him, according' to regulations; but wa-didn't, so the guards kept their abettor, I sat on my log, and down thimdoring came Gilbert •and Stacy. Supposing tbeyWiad another good chance to dab it to some more soldiers, they began toroln up, but just before they stopped tho guard brought his bayo­ net down till it barely touched/ the horse's shoulder and demand—- “Got a pass, Ginoral?” The General's face darkened. . “ Do you know who I am? X.command these guard!” “Can’t see It, Ginoral,” said the sol­ dier, looking him In the face. “1’tn officer of the day! I command those guards! I command you to lay down your arms!” ho fairly yelled, his face now white with rage. The guard said nothing, hut still kept his bayonet down, whilo I still sat on tho log. with as indifferent a look, as I was capable of. “Where's your sorgoant?” ho exclaim­ ed, looking round as viciously as if he could bite Iron. I came forward leisurely, and told him-— “The guard Is riglit, sir; wo are to re­ quire it pass, countersigned by General Granger, of .every man. 1 presume there is some mistake, and told tho ser­ geant so that I relieved.” “ But I am generat officer of the day,” sir.” he said; and Stacy looked as if I would turn palo at the thought of being reduced to tho ranks and the whole guard arrested In disgrace. “I have no^reason to doubt your word, sir,” I replied, “but wo havo no such in­ formation, and I don’t soo your sash. I suppose you should wear a red sash.” “ Eh! that’s all you know about it. A general officer wears a yellow sash. What regiment do you belong to?” 1 tald&jm. “Xh! that accounts for it; that ac­ counts for it Now, whon you go back to capap you study tho regulations. You’ll find a general officer wears a yel­ low sash,” But ho looked round for a momentand then turnertall and rode slowly toward Granger's tont with his head down, and all bis cavalcade, followed, ' After a long while here camo an or­ derly, riding on the gallop, with a big envelope in his hahd. “ Now you’ll catch it’’—said the guard. “ I don’t care; we’ve got in good on Gilbort for what Stacy did last night" Great Scott! Wouldn’t the whole di­ vision hold a jubilee over it if they dar­ ed?” Thq,orderly dismounted and saluted as if I were the General in command. “ From General Granger,” handing me the envelope. Xopened it and read: . Tothe S<kjrcantof theGuardat thebridge: YonWiltpatsatl divisionoommandera. Byorderof Gonbott GHA hokr , General Commanding. Gilbert was officer of the day; but About four o’clock he came over the hill on a walk, with one little Orderly be­ hind him. Wc turned out: “Have you any different orders?” he asked,'in a sneering tone, “ Yes, sir; written orders fromGeneral Granger to pass division commanders.” He passed over, and on bis rounds made them believe over there that the deuce would be to pay for It, butthatWas the end of H. The scene in Granger’s tent must hats bssn Hcb. for Granger was popular, and delighted in a soldier who was up to his dnty.-G, Irwin, Foncha Springs, Cola, InNational Tribune, SOLDIER OF FORTUNE. Vicissitudes of a paring and Slue* th* Civil War. “ In 1870,” safdMajor George A. Van* dergrift, “ I met Of typical a soldier of fortune as over Lever Imagined. I had- gone. from-St.!Louis t6 Grafton, sixty miles above, on an excursion, to witness an eclipse of the sun. On the boat re* turning to tho city thero was dancing in the cabin, and as I stood watching the dancers I observed a man staring at me. lie was a typical Southerner in appear­ ance, tall, handsome and.striking-look­ ing. His gaze annoyed me so that Xleft the cabin. ,, .. r. “Returning again, \he; renewed tho stare, and I flnaRyfound him standing by my aide,. •Herald;, ‘Xbegpardon, but you don’ t know me:.' I see,' ‘No,’ I said, ‘Xdon’t!’ ’I know you,’ he replied. Tn 1861 you were a Lieutenant in tho Sec­ ond Ohio Regiment in froqt of Wash­ ington, weren’t you?’ ‘Yes.’ I assented., Tn ’03 you were Adjutant of the Second in front of Murfreesboro, Tonn?:, ‘Yes.’ 'In the latter part pf ’ 04 you wore on the Little MiamL railway?1 '‘Yes,* I said, getting interested,‘but you’ve the ad­ vantage of me, for I can’t recall ever seeing you.’ , “ ‘I know you, you see,' th'o stranger said,,, ‘and I’ll tell you a story. In ’611 was a boy of twenty; I was in your camp iii front of Washington soiling fruit and trinkets to tho men., I was a- Confeder­ ate spy then. I ’63 Xwas still a spy,,aiid struck your camp at Murfreesboro,It, was odd that I should get into the same: camp again,' but I did. There were so many officers there, you among them, whom I ’ knew, that I feared detection and fled. The latter part of ’64 I was captured—not as a spy, fortunately, but as a rebel soldier—and sent as &prisoner to Camp Chase, O .O n e night nine of us succeeded in escaping from prison and, making our way as far as Alton, on tho Little Miami, we boarded the midnight express. Wo were sitting together con­ cealed as much as possible, when the oar door opened, and Who should walk in hut yourself. •Xtold the boys the jig was up, and we jumped- from the train and took to the woods. We thought you were on officer in pursuit of the fu­ gitives. You were not? God, I wish we had known it then. “ ‘After the war,’ he continued, ‘I drifted down into Mexico, and joined Maximilian’s forces, where I1was cap­ tured andcamo within an aco of being shot with Maximilian. From Mexico I went to South America, and fought in two or three of their revolutions. I grow tlrod of that, and came back to the States. I’m tired of it here, and I’moff next weok to enlist in tho I’apat Zou­ aves, as I soo Victor Emmanuel and tho Tope are having trouble, and his Holi­ ness has advertised for recruits. Good­ bye!’ andho was off. It was curious that he and Xshould have met bo frequently, and I’vo boon rather sorry that Host track of the follow afterward. He was a true soldier of fortune, and thero wero lots like him in tho war.”—Cincinnati Commercial. G. A. R. STATISTICS. New York...................................April8,1667 Connecticut............................... April 11,1807 New Jersey.,,.......................... ....Deo. 10, UG7 Maine......'....... Jsn. io,18GS California.. m ~ m ' Feb. SO. 1868 Rhode Island........ ......................MarchSI, 1868 New Hampshire......... ...... ............May, 1808 •Vermont ..Oct. 2^ isos Potomac................ ..,Feb. 11, 18C9 Dates of the Permanent Organisation of ?1 the Various Departments. In general orders No. 16, National Headquarters, G. A. IL, tho dates of the permanent organization of the various departments of tho' Grand Army are given as follows: Dateof Permanent DePAnTHRKT., Oranniiiiiott. Illinois........... ............................July 12, 1866 Wisconsin.,.,,................. ......September, i860 Pennsylvania....................... Jan. IS, 1667 Ohlo„...„..................................Jan. 00,1867 Virginia..... Maryland.. Nebraska., Michigan-.. Iowa...,,..,.,. ••***»•«*•••« •<<«.«*• 4 •s•«»*•*•* •#**♦♦**#*«»* 4 * 1871 Jan. 9, 1876 .--..June 11,1877 ..Jan. ft, 1870 .. . .................... ........ ...Jan. « , 1870 Indiana..,,.-,.,-..........,............Oct.2, 1679 •Colorado a n d v Wy o m l n g . D e e . II, 1870 K a n s a s . , , , . S t a r c h 16.1880 Delaware «•*•*••*s*»«■«*•«•« Jan.lt, 1681 Minnesota.,.,. ............................ Aug. 17,1881 Missouri,,.—....- — — —.April 2*. 18*2 Oregon Sept 28,1882 Kentucky«*«.*•*•*■«M>siDHiwG li| 18S.H Wflt •wnrtsststS*••MMWtFcbr90*1S88 I 8011 O 1 Oikoi* *•.««»<•••uj.MaiHrttiiFob. S 7 ; j 6 H Wathfn^ton k&dAlA«kAn.*Mt.....sJune 90, 188S ArlcAnt as .«•»*• •{***#•«••.*•<s«**n*t>*niJttly 1909 Nev M e x i c o . J u l y 24 ,1189 Utah....... .................. ....... Feb. *6,1884 ILoBlsIaaa andMississippi MayIS, 1881 Florida—— June 12,1884 Texas....,.,.,,,,-,— ... .........M a r ch lA e Montana.—........ *»!«••*«t»»tHNtw*t*l»*«r*l*i»» m 269($ Idaho<H4*4*4*4.t444*4*4*44*4»*444«H «»* dept 1 1 ter ArltOflft* w sMHMWllDUrttn***«*« *44*» Sept. M, 1887 Georgia— ,.., — « « « . . . *«Jan* 28 . J882 Alabama.............. ................ ...March 12.1882 North Dakota.—— *—,,., ,,——April 22 , i860 Indian Territory and Oklahoma.,, .May 7, isto Massachusetts....... ................Aug, 7,1867 •As Department of the Mountains; name changed to Colorado July 8j, ]$ *: Him* changed to Colorado and Wyoming Ahgdst 22, 1882, lAs Departmentof Dakota; name changed to South Dakota April 11. 1886. tAs Department of theGulf; changed to Lou- tsanaand MississippiJuneM, 1888 . RANDOM SHOTS. T hk Gran* Army of the Republic was born at Springfield, III., In the Winter of 1885-6. The first post was lormed at Decatur, 111:, April «, 1886. WmtirGeneral Mahbna was wounded at Second Manaasan, some one, to com­ fort Mri, Mahone, Said: *‘Oh, don’t be RMS#* It’s only a fleth wound.” Mrs. Mahone, through her tears* cried out; “Ob, I know that ISImpossible; there is not flesh enough oh him for that.” IN WOMAN’S BEHALF* WOMAN’S Hpt j e (PEA. What ghn .Hopes ~«mS S trlrii for and Sojpitlmai^tiriRir A woman, hovers ground the idea of home like amoth ground * candle. It fixes her with its gaze, as a'Serpent fixes a bird. She has to be poor indeed—poor in spirit as well as in pocket—if tho in­ tention to establish a homo for herself does not flit before her, shining now with steady light, paling ht intervals as the prospect grows remote and dim, but never entirely dying out until death re­ moves her to: that other home, her bo- iiof in which has pqssibly sustained hpr (in her ^earthly expectations. It Is. the ehaVactetisth; of such women *£ can form no eonceptlbn of happiness which, does not have home as its center, that they hope. againBt hope. As soon nstone expectation is killed another rises in Its place, Or, to vary the simile, hope, with them, is Argus eyed and Briarean; you can not render it blind andhelpless, at a stroke ’ , What are tho attractionsof thlsbbme, which is the center of a woman’s heart? .It would be foolish to claim that ,a hus­ band . always enters it, forthe does not,, although it is true that many's husband ip oftener at home in imagination than in reality,: Home and husband may be. exchangeable terms in the fancies of a young glrlrbut wq are not talking of the day-dreams which visit the heart of the* average .girl, but of the desire and the' determinationso frequently metwith in women of tho middle and lower classes —women who very often,havo to strug­ gle for a living—to create a home for th’emselvos and tholr children, for their children more than themselves, where every comfort and delight sliall exist that can bo compassed by 'their en­ deavor. What, I say, is at the root of this home Idea? In many cases tho woman who cherishes it is compollCd by the 6lendorness of her resources—or of her husband’s 'if she have one—to contem­ plate herself as the chief worker. I f she is notactually the bread-winner, she is forced, when her home-idea is even partially carried out; to work just as hard as though she were, if not harder. If she is obliged to live in aflat, without a servant, her work is never done, though she rise at sixTn the morning and retiro at ton at night. The good housewife will tell you that there is “always something to do,” and without that over-zealous pertinacity which makes some housewives the scourge of the domain over which thoy preside. If .she have a servant—one of these Incap­ able beings who. by a mysterious par­ adox of language, denominated ’.‘help” —she is at onco plunged into an Inferno in which the question, “ Is life worth living” might be instantly answered in the negative. And, as a rule, the more servants she. has the worse the inferno becomes,, unless slip is exceptionally lucky. To this dictum nine out of ten of those women who aro brought person­ ally into contact with .their servants will subscribe. As for those whose wealth enables them to interpose a housewife between them and their do­ mestics, they know nothing about it; and the housewife, if questioned, would answer that the idea of a home is of a plnce where tho work can bo done by machinery and tho word servant is un­ known, , Are wo forced then to concludo that the reason why a. woman clings so ob­ stinately to tho home-idea is because it represents to her imagination a realm where sl^cart rulo and reign? Does She like to think that her word is law there? Her slightest reflection will show her that she mistakes, Unless Bite Is a very wonderful woman, or a woman of very unusual experiences, her word is not law, either when her hus­ band is there or whon he isn’t. IVben bo is at homo he is not apt to forget that his house is his castle—you may say if you choose that his flat is his for­ tress—and when he is not at home he is apt to leave the impression of his au­ thority lingering in the air. You can perceive it, just as you can tell he has been smoking in the parlor. The bou­ quet of masculinity Is in the atmos­ phere, just as the flavor of tobacco is in. the air. If a woman, docs -not have her way with her husband still less does she hare it with her servants and her chil­ dren. The **splrit of our Institutions” is on the side of hired help in this coun­ try, and It is the “help” who have their own way and not those Who pay good wages in the despairing hope of getting good work. A* for Children, when you comparo the number of well-mannered and fairly-obedient children with those Whose behavior shows not the slightest ifcste of good breeding, and towhomany thing like a decent response for their elders would be a totally hew idea, it is readily seen that the woman who basks in the heavenly idea of home surrounds herself with a golden dream which generally has no exact counterpart in reality. . v- . * But delusive as this dreammay be, if we dissect it further we shall perhaps ebo that qhaliiy of unselfishness which beautifies so many of the Actaof Agood woman’s iife. The inferences we have been makingtnnst not be taken In toe peMlmlstioAnduhlvAMMlaM^sfl. There are manyhomes—many,.when taken in the lump by themselves, few when con­ trastedWith the whole numberof homes ****** *»»y ttlHy be describedas happy, and that are made so mainly by the ministrations of the Women who are their comfort. The reason of this bap pine*#, when it exists, is to be found in the ussfsinsMwith which this woman lays herself out to provide for the w pineaa of the others. ^ dp that Enterprise nowork is too bul that $be is able to. perform. When fti is mending tho clothes that havo js* been; laundried—useful work, wski, Jnakes one to say so much in so her brain is designing.nowdisheswher* witn to surprise the household. can not give a woman of this kind to« many cook-books; for she. applies h« invention to the receipts found in cma and no menu can bo shown her u rn sho cannot imagine bettered.. You cm not confineher to good old dishes in the gpod old way. She may give yos the' old ones for a change, but sho Issol happy unless she is; bewildering yosi palatoWitb pew ones, and setting before yog cq^gootiona. which you jbavo never dreamed of;1bvenduring thowildcstpol* Buttons of the gustatory nerve. The Scotch have a proverb: “Tho evening brings a’ hame.” Perhaps itis this sense*of having all who are dearejt to her under this- same roof-tree each nighLthat so often commends to awom­ an hoc favdrito home-idea.. But this sdfise must bo greatly interfered via when she lives in a boarding-house,an hotel, or flat; for the same roof which covers her and hers, covers also amulti, tudo tbwhom she is indifferent Itla necessary to her peace of mind as well as her peace of body'that she shall have a cottage in the suburbs if she can not- have a brown-stone mansion, or evenV little brick house, in the metropolit If she can own, actually own, without*, mortgage, a cottage in thesuburbs, with a wee bit of garden attached, andif she have bought and paid for.that cottage by her own unaided efforts, she is a. proud as well ,as a happy woman—and sho deserves to be! Thero she will bring her children up, unless, indeed, they are already mar­ riageable, as, alas! they are apt tobeby«, the time her ambition has achieved it­ self. Perhaps, howover, she can have her girl married from this house, and through, a long stretch of years to com* her children and their children will re­ turn to eat their Thanksgiving and Christmas dinners there, and she will have something of that feeling.which belongs to manorial rights, Tho real idea of homo is that it is a permanent abiding place, where every kind of hon­ orable love finds nurture andexpansion; where the noblest and sweetest and' most sacred feelings are expressed; where traditions of the heart are begot­ ten, and generation after generation brings its incense and its worship. True, this idea is hampered, if not crushed, in its growth in the majority of cases; but the germ is there, and itls a germ that lies at the foundation o f all that is de­ lightful in family andsocial intercourse. —N. Y. Home Journal. Appeal to Ohio Voter*. Sara IVinthrap Smith, as secretary for,: Ohioof National Platform CommitteeN. A. W. S. A., .has addressed an open let­ ter to the voters of Ohio. Itis a thought-: ful plea for equal rights, and doses ** follows: ■■■■■• ‘Women long to bo free, to speakand to act their convictions as women, a* men act theirs as men. Mon deny to women, this.freodom when they saythat wo shall have no voice whatever inahap- ing or controlling the conditions of soci­ ety in Which wo live. In tho hands of wombn lid the destinies of men. The two sexes rise ' or fall together. We claim tho ballot as a 'privilege and im­ munity of oitizensof the United States,' and We ask you to protect tho women citizens of Ohio in tho exorcise of their right to vote.” ’ WOMEN AND THEIR RIGHTS, t 5 je tax-payers of Shclbyville, Ky., aro to vote upon issuingbonds forwater­ works; that is, the Men tax-payors. The ShelbyvHlo News remarks of this caw of taxation without representation; “It does hot look just or right to debar women property owners from voting os the water-works proposition simply be­ cause they are not men. When a prop­ erty qualification is required to settle any question, every one irrespective of sex, should be granted the privilege of a voice in the matter.” T he law of Georgia permits marrirt women to have the same propertyright* as their husbands. -There has been a married woman's property clause in the constitution since just after the war, but it* meaning has never been exactly settled. - Thero was no doubt that aay property which bad belonged to awom­ an before marriage, or which came W her by gift or inheritance afterward, Was hers, to control or dispose of assbt pleased; but whether after marriage women could buy property, mako con­ tracts, and do business in their ew* right,waa the question. Tho Saprem* Court of the 8tate says they can; that putting women on a level with menbe­ fore the law in this respect.—Spring- field Republican. t)H. M ary F. T homas say*.* “Thou­ sands of women gave their heart’*rich­ est treasures. In tho persons of thclf husbands, sons and brothers, to *ki struggle for freedom; number*of wow en to the hospitals in the building proper, those on the river andontb4 tented field, wherever suffering i=M Were found. Other thousands remain* at home, managing the farms andbusi­ ness houses, making and shipping »*I* -tary stores to the army at everyptl** While we 4o not a*k recognition« political equality for women a*a ****' pense for service performed, tint « ■trong evidencethatwomen, in*11ttsw* of emergency, *rd considered apowers* the government, even though deprive*’ of the active duties of citizcMbip« the government.” t e m p e r a P * WQ Ei __ AetWi of Ab ” tarter an vpiv aclence it -ktnntttresayf «bplis?e»Wy*I r j|er h « ***■ ^prejudiced, an What does nature J&loobol to the Food is req»l« •ants of the bod, the body is mi the aecond is fue perature- The s perform, even a 1 themind, occasi ef *ome tissue o ie being const must be constan cess can go on kept at its natu 28 degrees- N: wants by provic The one kind is •supplies all the . holy is compos called non-niti foods, which al­ to maintain its is a type of all white, or albut building;- the warmth. Tin . want. It roqu the food can b every part of ppse nature su that is water. Kow, natun two kinds o wants how ca for the bpdj ‘ They must blood;” No tody, either tore or mai: until it. hash •Bearing this -prepared to can be of ut< body.Carbonate : sodium (corn: parts of the the eubstanc therefore, fo eiltuent of t come part of not food, as arsenic. i can never 1 become part « ■ this the h may bo quot Dr. Ed wan •‘Alcohol i neither wa by the ele posed.” Liebig; “ nlsb no el •into the cos onlarfiber* of vital pri- Dr. T. that Wo mt- in^my sens 1:6 goos out us ■ * far as we •tance beh Many scientific prove that ly foreign never hec Therefore buildin g | pure del body roq iron, but To dream ■1 alcohol is build a ' further n i of most c Cl ment, is a alcohol it 1 that o f a ! • There does no- 9| membra’ deadens * chemlca &j other fii precipit juice, a< the bio u up, alco i and de3 ei It come- fa With th V functlo e>l the bod W sltatin; u its exp - t tem a: fll throug id action and tb aj poison aj strong m i N ho! al« •w blood 1 food. 6* waste thus x p the h« ft tn s 1# - tnent! in leal : i quote t trast ua fool j i For ■i to bu ♦ Food ’ g body finlaf fo easrl w wat« m * fort kt but it tion

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