The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
The CeclarvilleHerald. W. B. BLAlK,'PU*UlW». CEDARVJLLE. i I OHIO. OLIVE# AND THEIR OIL. Where Thwjr Grow H<l How the OilUOb tained fo r TaW# V mn Tho olive la an evergram troa With ' leaves resembling those o f the willow, lanceolate, entire, of a dull* dark green color above and scaly and whitish gray underneath. The flower*, which ap pear in June, July and August,.■** small and white, growing shorty dense racemes, with four cleft corolla, four toothed calyx, two stamens and a two cleft stigma. Tho fruit is a drupe, or Ktoni’ fruit, of a gTcenishf w^iitish^ Tip* let or even block color, never larger than a pigeon's egg, generally oval, sometimes globular, obovato or acumi nate. " , , hi southern France, where the famed virgin oil of Aix is made, tho harvest of the berries for dll takes place in No vember add December, when the ber ries are about two-thirds ripe. They arc spread out for a short time to dry off any moisture from the surface, and arc then crushed in an edge wheel mill of stone, driven by animal power gen eral ly, care, being taken' not to crush the stones, which contain a hitter principle and a poor oil. The vir gin oil is dipped out o f tho mill after the fruit is reduced to a pulp, and is seldom sold in commerce separately, bearing the highest price, but is used cither by the proprietors of estates or lor enriching the poorer sorts. After removing the vigin oil the pulp is put into straw baskets, which are then put into a screw press and squeezed, and the oil trickling down is collected by a circular gutter and runB into a tank. This gives the. best market oil, and it is called premiere quality. The pomace is subjected to repeated pressure, some times aided at last by pouring warm Water on the mass, a poorer quality of oil being obtained by each repetition of the process. Even thepurest virgin oil is turbid when first expressed. It clears itself by simply standing in the tanks, which on large estates are masonry cisterns underground, where the oil is kept at an even temperature for a long time, all air being excluded. The color of the oil of Aix and Tuscany, which is said to he the best, Is greenish. The kind known as. oil -of Lucca is also of superior quality. The mean produce of . a tree in France is about ten pounds of oilf. and in Italy fifteen pounds, hut single trees have boon known, in fruit ful seasons, to produce 300 pounds of oil. . , Oliye. oil is adulterated chiefly by tho addition of cotton seed oil, rape seed oil, colza seed oil, sesame seed o i l - known as oil of bonne or gingillne oil, and which' is, in seme respects, better than .olive oil—and above all, tho oil of the groundnut .(American peanut), which is grown extensively on the African coast expressly for 'ts olL Much of the "hullo d’ollve” that we get put up in long-necked bottles with for eign labels is put up in thi* country, and consists of nothing bnt cotton seed oil. oil of benne or groundnut oil. While these oils are bland and whole- some, thoy do not possess the peenliar hutttf flavor of the "sweet oil" of olives, which is not to he mistaken, Tim French Imitate olive oil by a chemical preparation o f American lard, which is exported to the United States under the name o f "oil of Lucca," or ‘ TrovSncc.” Foi*the table the berries aro gathered when- fully grown but still quite green. They are steeped for twenty-four hours in n weak lye of wood ashes or lime water; then in cold water, renewed daily, until they have lost their bitter flavor and the water runs off clear and tasteless. ’ They ,are now salted or pickled in brine, in which they are kept for use in close vessels. For luxury the stones are sometimes removed and the fruit stuffed with capers, truffles, minced sardines and closed, air-tight, in bottles of the finest oi{. Olives are a well-known restorative of the palate, and arc said to promote digestion.— Popular Science, THE BATTLE FIELD. PRI9CILLA FAIRFAX. "8or« deforrtd tnalwUi tM best! *l#lc; hut wh«uteedntre ooaetfe lt b i t m at ilto.” — Trov.xiU: is. But few of the Ihrisf srslsft te know - Howfriicllls Fairfax's faith wtu tried, Whan lore IntheMaysof longsgo The ravage sad wrsekaga of wardefied. As.outof thomeadowthe larktookwing, Her soul hr » strssgc unrestwas stirred, To keepher tryst at theollg-kldspring, Though bar heart was sick with Its heps de ferred. Agalast the bole of a gnarly beach Shepressed her lips withahlushlag fees, To th» rough-out words of a lover's speech Her trembling fingers scarce could frees.. The letters wars blurred amt scarred with ago. By winters of saowand sun>trr ' of rain, But never was written aboiler paga, By wlntaraof sorrowand autninur* of pain. Andtherewaathedata—wasit " W Applesand cherries were all In bloom, Bho sawhimshoulderhis heavygun Andmarohaway in tho solemn gloom. Thrice ilnoe then badtilecherry bloomed And the hills been crowned with a vivid red, While over the valleys the cannon boomed . Till the waves opwar washed up the dead. The cloud passed over them, speeding south, Sweeping with besom of smolte and.flame— Never by letteror ward of mouth Unto her ever a whlspor came. But the afternoon grew hot and still; The path to the house was long and steep; 8b* dippedhor prill Into the bubbling rill— . 'Tis a woman's fate to work and weep. She stopped at theknotty benoh again - To rest and linger a little spell. Sighing toronly “What might have been," When over her pathway a shadow fell. - Shading her ayes with a tremblingpalm. She caught her breath in her glad dismay, Shs knew tn spite of that soldierly calm . That bronzed face and that suit of gray. Her eyas met his andwithcheeks aglow Their tears Into solemn joy were wed. Forthe kindly care of a northern foe Had robbed the yawning grave of its dead. With, his good right.arm ho hold hor close, •And she. for joy. eould scarcelygrieve Though—her hand on his shoulder folded thus— Hsr tears dropped down on his empty sleeve. —Edwin S. Hopkins, inDetroit Free Press. IN THE TRENCHES. Confederate Soldier’s Stories of the Atlanta Campaign. Notes on Children’s Dress. The favorite colors for dresses made up in Scotch zephyrs and ordinary checked ginghams, for girls of from two to ten years, a re’blue and pink. They arc all made with plain skirts, sortie-times hem-stitched, with embroid ery of white on tho goods above the hcm-stitching, and have either plain waists trimmed with V’s of Hamburg insertion, or box-plaited waists and short over-jackets edged with white embroidery; or they aro made with baby waists having yokes of white cm- broidery, over which fall pretty odd- fcluipcd jackets, pointed, Founded or square, according to fancy. The sleeves r.tv fall, and simply gathered at tho with hands of embroidery. Tho bein'* are usually put in the skirts about i',\ »•in >ht*sdeep, and the skirts reach to the floor for two years; for three years to 1 10 ankle; for four years to the shbO- 1tr* ; for six years they aro a trifle Ahurtor yet; and so’ on to tenyears of ago. when skirts begin to lengthen csfui::. until at sixteen they are mad# the ngih o f a lady’s short walking -tkvSP.- -IK-Inorest. Mj.fl. Youngwlte (to pretty appli- <■ . 1*1 —"No, I don’t think you will do?* Ati:»i;e:int—'"Ihifcl am able to cook in' * !•'•<», style.” Mrs, Yonngwi.'b—4‘I » t— . la w my business; I advertised it-' t »• cook,"—Hamer’s Bazar. “ Yirg Mose” has some lively rem iniscences;of the days when the Yan kees were encamped round' and about Atlanta. His adventures in that local ity are very interesting. But let him tell lits story in his own way; Our rifle pits were about ten feet long, four foot wide and five feet deep. The .dirt was piled up on rails, and un-. der them was a smull hole to shoot through. Those pits were twenty feet npart, and in each of themwe had three men. 1Our main line was two hundred yards in the rear of the rifle jpits, and wo always had one-half of our men on picket The pickets were relieved every night at midnight On the night of August 5, a Yankee exclaimed: “ John ny, stop your shooting and let's be friendly." YVesaid: "All right” and in less than ten minutes we were all mix ed tip together and chatting pleasantly, We exchanged tobacco for coffee and other stimulants. I remember convers ing with two Yankees of Indiana, who' were of raiddlo age, on their rifle pit They said to me; “ You seem to be very young; were you conscripted and made to go to the' war?" "No,” said I, “ I volunteered.” “ Where do you live?" aid one of them. "About seventy-five miles north of here,” said 1. They then asked me what 1 was fighting for. My answer was that I was fighting for Georgia, to drive the invaders from her soil. Those Yankees looked upon each other and said: "This boy don’t know what he is fighting for. We don’t care a cent for the negroes, but we want the union, and we are going to vote for Gen. McClellan for president and stop this bloody war, and if the private sol diers would do it on both sides the war would end before daylight;” and they at last asked me to go with them to their headquarters and they would as sure me that 1 would be out of the war for aP time to come if I would take the oath and go north and hire out and make money, etc. 1 commenced to tell them what I would submit to before I would do a thing like that, when the Louisianians on our right took a notion to charge them. The firing was heavy and the ycUing was awful. I jumped tip to run to my hole and ran against a Yankee who had been on our side, and we both fell backward. As we rose wc could tell each other by ottr uniforms—' both apologized and went on. That was the hardest jolt-a Yankee ever gave me in the war. The midnight charge did not last more than half an hour, and wc were %ll together again next day and night— all friendly--not a gun fired, when on the- third day of our armistice the enemy brought a line of battle up at once and charged our picket line, and but five of ottr pickets got away in trar brigade. Hut we dug new pits that nigiit under a heavy fire, when several of onrracn got killed. From that time on there was no more friendship be tween us. I remember next day hav ing shot eighty rounds o f Cartridges, and awhile before night the tube of trty gun burst and I asked Lieut. Mc Gee, who was in command of the pick ets, what to do about it. He said it was dangerous to go to the rear for an other gun; and if they charged us f was in no fix to be there without a gun. It waa some distance to our line and through an old pine field; bnt I thought Xwould risk it and outrun the bullets- A*I got out pf the rifle pit it seemed as though • thousand want to shooting at me. I never could remember bow I got to the line o f breastworks, but think th# bullets were so thick that I got on top o f them and rode out, It was dark when I went hack and found Lieut. McGee very anxious about me. The . following day Lafayette Chambers, of our company, . was killed—a shot in the head. I went over to the 1st Georgia to tell bis brother John, who afterward took charge of his clothing, John wore his brother’s hat, and I waa informed by Frank Ar* rendale, who was in the same company with John, that he was killed soon af terward—shot in the head. 2 We cut down those old field pines and felled them all toward the enemy—cut off the limbs two or three feet from the main trunk and hewed them to a sharp point, One Yankee who belonged to the Twenty-first Missouri crawled near our line and was killed. He was taken away by neither Bide. Three weeks later when Sherman evacuated our front I and some others went to find the body o f ' John Chambers. His head had come off. I remember looking at him and thinking that perhaps at that moment he had a dear mother in the far west, who, like my own dear mother who was so far away, was in some se cret place upon her knees asking God to spare her hoy. Perhaps that mother now is still'looking for her boy; but alas! she will see him never on this eaith. When living I was his enemy, but when he was lying there in death I was his fri'end and admired his bravery, and now I sympathize with liis family wherever they may be.—Atlanta,Con stitution. /' A BRAVE DEED. How a ' Private Ex lngul«he<l • Burning Ammunition Wagon. "There goes the bravest man in the United States army, at least L saw him do as brave a deed as any that ever was done,” said Caph. Mack in Amsden’a bank as he looked out on the street at a man going by. , "There were a good many brave deeds done in the army. Who is your man, and what did he do?” "He Is Tom Gilbert and was a private in my company. Two men were pack ing ammunition in a wagon at Baton Rouge and some powder exploded in the wagon and killed one.of them. The wagon contained thirty-two twenty- pound shells loaded with powder. The shells were packed points down and the orifice in the rear end of each one was filled With oakum, which is to be pulled out and replaced by a fuse when. put in the gun. The explosion of pow der set fire to the oakum and it was burning toward the powder when Gil bert saw the situation. .. lie first drew the injured man away from the wagon, and then finding a pail of water con- viently near, picked the shells up and dipped the burning ends in the water. None o f them exploded, or he would not have been here to go by the win dow to-day."—Detroit Free Press. WAIFS FOR OLD WARRIORS. IN WOMAN’S BEHALF. A WOMAN OF THE WORLD. What Is Meant by This l l i u w l Term— tbs Commsndabls Traits Sbs Possessa*. A woman said to a man the other day, "Mrs, White is a woman of theworld to her finger tip*;” and the man said, "Thank goodness, she is. i wish we had a few more like her,” And then he added: "Do yon know anything of the virtues of a woman o f the world—that is, the true woman of the world? She is the woman who makes life perfectly smooth and de lightful She does not say disagree able things. She makes her likes felt and her dislikes are so well concealed that her enemies are ignorant, when they get a blow as to where it comes from. Don’t imagine by this that I mean that she is the woman who does the cat act, and is given to smiling and grinning at everybody. Oh, no, Bho has too much sense for that, She has tlio art of making people appear at their best, and: she knows how to be. agree able alike to old and young. Her hus band respects her; her children love her; her servants fear her, and conser quently they obey her orders. If she finds it necessary to mark either a man or a woman as detrimental, she can usual ly give a reason forut, as she does, not G en . L awkence P ike G raham , U. S. A., now residing in Washington, is the son of Dr. William Graham of the Revolutionary army. He and David Blalock, of Decatur, IU., are believed to be the only living sons o f Revolu tionary sires. “ B uiiy Me with My Grand Army Badge on My Breast,” “ My Father's Flag and Mine,” "Oh, Guard That Ban ner While Wc Sleep,” and the Veteran's Last Song” are very popular with the boys who wore the blue. Chaplain John Hogarth Lozier, o f Mount Ver non, la., is the author o f the last of those named. ■ C harges F, G ielet , o f Cleveland, has the honorable discharge o f a dog from the union army. The dog served for three years in battery H of the independent regiment of the Pennsylvania light artillery. The discharge recites that “ Jack Puppy" (brindle) is a "watchman” In CapL E II. Ncvin's company; .that he was enlisted Jan. 21, 1362, for three years, and was discharged June 10,1805, by reason of expiration of term. A dmirat . W orden , who commanded the original Monitor in Its historic fight with the Merrimac, still shows in his face the heavy peppering with gunpow der which he received in that engage ment by the explosion o f a shell at the peephole to which his eye was applied, He is living unostentatiously in Wash ington, and it is difficult to get him to , say anything about himself or about! the battle in which he won distinction. He eschews all articles o f dress which would indicate his profession, T he late Henry S. Sanford was American minister to Belgium during our civil war; but Mr. Seward once said of him that during the first year of the rebellion he Was virtually our minister for all Europe. He performed many important and delicate services for the government in that crisis, At the time o f the "Trent affair," for instance, when there jvas danger o f war with England, and when by the queen's or der British ports were closed to the ex porting o f military supplies, some two thousand, tons o f much-needed salt petre that had been purchased for the United States Was locked Up in Eng land. Immediately, on hi* own respon sibility, Mr. Sanford bought up and shipped to this country all the saltpetre i on sale on the continent—a responsible, j ityon which he risked hi* whole for tune, go out of her way to make enemies. “ She would not forgive bad manners in a genius, for she. very properly con cludes that a genius has no more right to be bad mannered than' a more ordi nary man. She regrets that genius and gentleman are not always synonymous, but until they are she doesn’t desire the acquaintance of the genius. She is an earnest believer ' in the bond o f mar riage, and thinks it quite as unnecessa ry to uphold it as it is to refuse to dis cuss scandals in regard to a failure in it She does not ask that she shall have love, hut she does insist that she shall’ have respect She is not one of the women who make their husbands un-' happy, for she is not inquisitive. She ignores many things because it is not good form for'her to see them, covering in this way with a'mantle of charity the half-concealed, offenses of her friends. "The man married to a woman of the ..world has a much happier life than does the one married to the ingenue; she is disappointed because he isn’t her ideal, and he is made wrbtched because o f the tears and moans that pervade the household. If I had a son I should pre fer lie would marry a woman of the world—remember, I am using the phrase in its best and truest sense, and had I to choose a husband for my daughter it should be a man who hud known other women, who had seen their faults and their virtues, and who knew how to take a young and innocent girl by the hand and lead iter carefully and considerately into the state o f mat rimony ■until she herself became' the monarch thereof.” And the woman to whom this little sermon was preached began to think that after all there were different kinds o f women o f the world. —N. V. Sun. A NOTABLE ACHIEVEMENT. UlM Mary II. Kraut’S Itrrnisrkable finncMi In the Newspaper 'World. Mrs. Antoinette Van Iloosen Wakc- mtuv of the Illinois Press association, said at the Woman’s council: "In no line is woman less trammeled than in newspaper work. A notable illustration of this occurred in connec tion with Miss Mary II. Krout,' of the Chicago Inter Ocean, during the cam paign that resulted In the election of President Harrison. At that time she was on the reportorial force of the pa per. However, tho managing editor had discovered that she was not only able and reliable, but was possessed of • better knowledge of Indiana politics and politicians than any member o f the ■taff. After consulting with her, it was decided that she should conduct the campaign for the Inter Ocean in Indi ana. Miss Krout is by no means a strong woman, but for one hundred and eight consecutive days she sent from one to two columns o f matter each day to her paper. Besides this, she sent numerous telegrams and private lettera from which the editorial policy of the paper was shaped. "The longest telegram sent by Miss Krout was a speech o f Gen, Lew Wal lace o f between two and three columns. It was delivered at Whitlock, Ind,, ten' miles from a railway station, Her judgment was that it was a great speech, and she hastened in a carriage to the nearest telegraph office and sent it to her paper. The result confirmed her judgment, for the edition of the Inter Ocean containing the speech was soon exhausted, and to meet the demand thirty thousand copies werfe printed and sent to Indianapolis by special train, The papers o f Indianapolis were obliged to copy it from the Inter Ocean, and it was used as a campaign document. "The day of the election Miss Krout sent ail the specials for the office bul letins, and worked without leaving her desk fromnineo’clock one morning until two o’clock the next, making seventeen hours of consecutive work. She says, in speaking of it, that she was the soli tary woman at tho Dress headquarters, but Was not reminded o f the fact, save by the special courtesy o f the state of ficials. When Miss Krout returned she was made one of the editors of the ’in ter Ocean, which position shs still holds. No more arduous abd brilliant piece o f newspaper work has been done by any woman in America than this.” "A REAL LADY.” QualifloatloM XeeeMary.te ifrod acs . Geaalne Article. We hear the phrase ao often, and how hard itis to define its exact meaning. We all know the lady when we meet her, and yet her ebarm is as indscrib. able as the scent of a rose or the tints o f the sunset sky. It might be said to He in her utter lack o f posUiveness and best painted in negative*. She id not obtrusive in appearance%or dress; she does hot claim' your attention by any effort to attract it, nor does she seem conscious of your admiration if yon evince it. She is never known to speak harshly, maliciously or loudly to su^a. rior, equal or inferior. She ■jjfajyvbt laugh at anything that could My any possibility wound another, nor seek to introduce into the conversation any topic she has reason to think may prove disagreeable or embarrassing, but rather closes her. eyes to whatever her keen trict tolls her you desire to remain unnoticed. In -her judgments she does not seek to impress you with iter to- fallibleness,. but is quick to add th? saving clause. She does not envy or scorn another’s possessions, and would not point out the crumbled rose leaf for the world. She makes no boast of any thing, but does not decry herself in any way, so that her sweet pride is humility, and her sweet humility the truest pride. • She is no gossip; though sne is' not above taking an interest in the lowliest that cross her path, and has a womanly sympathy for every sick arid suffering thing. She takes up no fad or hobby to the exclusion of other dutios, but is con sistent in all things, and, without being foolishly conventional, does not neglect to fulfill the least demand of her posi tion. She is not a. religious fanatic, and has no hell of excommunication for , those not of her way of thinking, but is in the truest' and best sense a noble- liearted, Christian woman, than,which, there is no better definition of a lady.— St Louis Globe-Democrat. Women aa Detectives. An old detective announces as the re sult of long experience that women possess qualifications that fit them specially for detective. work. "Men u a rule are not as dose observers, and do not give what I call detective de scriptions of people. I remember try ing to catch a woman counterfeiter once who had been described to me by several men. I found half a dozen women who would answer to her de scription. Finally a woman who had seen her gave me a description with* one strong detective point—the way she did up her hair—and on that descrip tion I very soon arrested the rightwom an. Women have peculiar observation in details, and are sure to notice and re member some small but definite point that men would overlook, It isn’tpleas ant work for a woman, but she lias de tective instincts." FRESH AND INTERESTING. T he Montreal general hospitel re fused to admit female stiidcnjgflfetha privileges of the institution, T he British Medical society ™|p,paid Dr. Julia. Hick the unexamplcd honor— unexampled to a woman—of voting her £20 to publish her pamphlet on “ The Nutrition of the Muscles,” I n the list of late patents are one for a propeller and brake cork-packed bicy cle, another for improvement in the construction of tlreB for bicycles, others for improveitaents in tho running gear of road vehicles, and all invented by women. T he house in which Moltbe was bora in Hardline had been devoted to an edu cational institution for girls for many years past, It has now been purchased by a society which is to start a museum therein, and to preserve relics of the battle-thinker. W omen ’ s clubs are among the-best educational institutions of the time. They train women in parliamentary usage, in the ability to think while on their feet, and they supplant frivolity and gossip with deep thinking and earnest purpose.—Wives and Daugh ters. H einrich S cuxiunsky , a wealthy and distinguished citizen of Hamburg, recently deceased, has bequeathed sev eral millions of marks In his will to found a Hamburgasylum for unmarried women teachers who have outlived their ability to cam a living at that calling. M rs . B randkr , who is inspectress of the girls’ schools in Madras, India, which 22,000 children attend, says in her tenth annual report to the national association "that tan improvement in female education is necessary before any of the great reforms, such as the abolition of infant marriage and child widowhood,,can be effected." Miss G eneva A rmstrong , a young lady who owns a farm in tWestern New York, has Invented a machine for feeding cattle on trains, She recently addressed A meeting of railroad men, before whom she had placed the Inven tion. It is patented, and she hopes to have it adopted for use during the transportation of live stock. Civil, engineering is the only profes sion in which women have not asyet figured Conspicuously, but it is known that for some years the sisters of J. Ed gar Thomson, tho railroad magnate, have worked with their brother in the father's office at civil engineering. Aud in the office o f the surveyor-general at Denver women aro employed, andhave, with the exception o f the heads of twc departments, filled aa high places si; any of the employes o f the office. THE FAR’ a- lad ; o » e f u l :,“ s ; ^ comMood uoo rase•« o ft ■ •* * »e it* exn Here is a desc e lady- wh floor arid table, charm is closet. I t nw.v gf a rose lumber, dressed . i t InjKj an ordinary ba -b o f posi? there should be legative*. side a t the top i -aranueon the inside neap ,0ur atten he p # together |t, nor do ■intwo aboutt« w ,admir*i never kwp COMBINEDDpi The lower par door, The u- serve both as out bread, etc top o f the low hinges prefer; opened back It rests on th, are fastened) top port wit) shut they bar o f thinl when o! best sent dy or 16u( ferior. 31 g that oo another, ie eonver in tothinh embarrai eyes to w,1 you desk r judgmet ess you i is quick I ie does w issessions, rumbled t akes no bi t decry hei veot pride1 lility tbet i, though; terestin 1 and has ■y sick ari up no fad her duties s, and, wil inal, does demand o a rcligiot excommut hut woman, ^ definition, -mocrat. . 1 COMBINED their vertici table, whet against the edges and c nailed to th- corner of th rest when o is secured b Cor, Farm a tDetcctlvej announcei eric nee ,ti ions that tive work,1 close dbsi I call de e. I rem< woman co I describe^ found ha), : answer a womai 5 a detori repoint—t ,nd on thi rested the I peculiar c suretonoi II but def| -crlook. It naan; but i INTERES GOOD Skim Milk t ai UUjr’raise l tell the n skim milk cows on pi- skim milk done so fo results. 8 muscle gn wihout tnt out danger the lambs milk skin . hours on general hi ■male studt stitution. , teal socictj unexnmph -oman-—o f r pamphle USClOH." t patents a ike cork-pa| mprovemei is for bicyd n the rum and all ite ich Moltke tn devoted ! any kind c BJor ^ r]s er, I warr now & E to#1? « is to start: Such feed resenro rej want m * lamb rais gence and ,, the busm n ,rt nmrU\ lamb . . it n in parlil ty to think, usually ewes can d« P thln and they *WlTCft *ni is wrong i great ow imnskt , a per cent- citizen of )j dropped bus bcquCI are in wi °arks in hi have the isylumfor u and huvi who have quirt'd u irn a llvitit arid whe I mother *who is inspi people a in Mad# demand i dren attend growing -‘port to th# .With pran improve prices, v. is nccessai lambs . :i reforms, sur skimmer marriage i eitherm i effected.” counters umstroxg , the mill farm in i Yorker, rented a rax Butl rains, She A cm ^ of rsilri carried placed th fewer,y* 1 *and she cheese fo* d* the prote* stock, simpler f fs Hie only that ol"c« have « made but it i while 'the sisters months► railroad ii agemon their broth market'll engineer!' orlce. surveyor-#* limited employed, a orfame the head as hfgh is o f theofib 1
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