The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
m The Cedarville Herald. W H. BLAIR, Publlshur. CEOARVILLE. i i t OHIO. M a tern a l in c o n s is t e n c y . Hvfcat Kill woulfUt tjaouf' oa Christina* Uda I a-sie-il iny yoUDiMl one, icy prulc, "A tihm tng te u " lie prompt replied, I tel myknillt&e ta,l: I I acem* but yesterday to me , B* roile to Bcston oa my fence, And darn ed mound a Cbrlsiir.ii- treov Tbis tf y x ir crown so tao And wr. .e 1se*e loleei. I onA, His bea-ned cUaeiSagainst n.lB- oil'll, And nce iiie deep and tnar/iy tone Ir, wbirh be speaks to all . Y n, oh..,t tiring* back precious year* To »ce h j .'.!' .utle tad la le a n E i*b re u i rr.fitf.c r with'bis fears And rro ber l»>S”m faiL • I t jr;y» yet pr'-f”. <s m e so lo see ■ •, 1 How !tuto» iH’cn be mis of, me, AHAatij ibowdear some Others be. Since bo has grown no tail. He boast? the smites of '‘beauty’s queen—^ My Jea'oax oar biswarmWordsglean (I ltbow whai bitter truth tbeymean)- As from lns lips they lalb Eebeaio is tearsUll np my eyes, Bil .(w must live by sacriGct. Some woman wants to steal myprlaw Sly Iwynowgrown so talL And ou, though Idly, oil I pray Old Time to give me back the day When *n my breast my baby lay, ■ So warm, so soft, s 'i small;- Though proud as parent o’er can be My well grown noble son to see, My beart criuH out beseechingly: MConift burls, my baby, sweet, to me— This buy t ii* gfown ho talL ’ 1 - Cordelia Keade, In Yankee Blade. UtAwatt r ir neck*—digging trench**, j 1 Airing eordarof roada and advancing’ At the rate of half a mile a day, with the ! one envied luxury of joining a foraging ! party now and then; for, though the iQ , m A Stofy of. the -Lato War. BY JBERfJftRD B IGSBY , Author of "naval at'E ast.” "My Lady Faat**- Uc.” "Elloti'a Great SecroV " Fall Among Thieves." Etc. Copyright. 1891 . by A N Kellogg Newspaper Co. CHAPTER X. ■-ONTI.M' ko At two o’clock, it seemed indeed-a ’Confederate victory. Hut ’raid the ringing shout of triumph came the wail *f grief -Johnston was shot through the leg by-a rifle ball, and none was near with sense enough to stop the flowing blood. • Still the blue flag waved vic toriously with Beauregard, biek him self nigh into death, in the van. - And now Grant was at bay-.--the con quering foe before him. the river roll ing ori his rear. But tbd stout heart never failed him, and with dogged determination he rallied, his men Before the enemy could reach them, they must cross -a - decp ravim-wtth sUpiM-ry sidesiuui_a_ bottom full of ‘water. Now was his ciiaiue. As with Southern dash and bravery thi.t ri«-hed to cross th s .treacherous defile.-Grant-sweptthem with the frag me lit*, of Ins batteries, poured on them tin; leaden, hail of musketry, while two gun-boats rained shells upon the wav ing tine, which literally melted away before the withering volleys. And now that ery—that wild hurrah! The Fighting Fourth came shouting to the field! ' Night closed on the ghastly scene. But what a night for Grant his camps gone, thirty flags and immense stores in the hands of the enemy, and three -thousand of hi* men- prisuners_of war. But during the night a change came •ver the scene. General Lewis Wallace command was well provisioned, orders were given to raid the country. In charge of an -expedition of this character, Frank Besant had be-en un usually lucky, and was returning to camp one -evening when they came to a comfortable farm-house, whose neat curtains and orderly out-houses prom ised richer plunder than their nsual fortune had brought them. “There's 'something strange about that house I can’t make out,” said Will Bidley, Frank’s sergeant,, and an es pecial favorite of the, young officer. “Nary a child, nor dog,’ nor Beast, nor fowl about tlje place to give a-sign that folkn is living there.” “PVaps some of the boys have been i here before us,” suggested one of the men. ‘■Or the folks have lef’ their country residence ;and gone to the .city for change of-air,” grinned another. • , “Over the fence, boys, and we’ll Soon f find out,” Frank ordered. A thundering knock upon the front > door brought no response. “Bring that stick of cord-wood here an”we’ll knock the old thing Into kind ling-wood,” Ridley cried. ’ It was a favorite means of-letting peo ple know they were itonoring them with a call: for the soldier-boys did not carry visiting-cards, and were as impervious > to “not-nt-homes” as a duck is to damp , feet. . i Already two men stood swinging the formidable battering-ram, - which, in : another instant, would have crashed -, into the massive door,- when it opened, and they saw standing before them a- pleasant-loolring lady of middle, age with a baby i , her arms—such a picture of domestic innocence, that the rough lads sheepishly dropped the cord-wood, and looked like school boys caught in some piece of misplilef. “Come right in, gentlemen,.’’ »lu> said, free from, all embarrassment; "we’ve sickness in the house or I would have come to the door at your first summons." Tlie men piled into the front room with little ceremony. Frank was as bashful as a school boy. “I’m sorry to intrude, ma’am,” be said, . blushing scarlet; “ but we roust search 1 your house for arms and supplies—a disagreeable duty, which 'we’ll make as easy as we can for vou.” “ I wish, the mu. 'cr had been at home," the lady mutt red, pensively, in a kind of “aside," that -was intended to be heard by everybody. parson’s house, Jack," said one of the men to number.- “1 feel kind of mean and wish I tvas out of it.’’ But others were of a rougher natiire, .and hud already begun to explore the contents of an adjoining room, when the ■ mother drew aside a handkerchief from the babv's face and revealed a great scarlet blot covering' tite little one's r.m.head and cheek. Holding the in- •ant up to Frat ;’s gaze while the rest stood staring in astonishment she said, with tearful eyes. ‘ . Vou Hee niv darling has raught it now. I)u you know any thing of. sur gery’.* f an you tell me what'to do, for I am indeed distracted, and know not which way to turn for help? The four ■ 'thers arc much Worse, and my poor husband looked awfully sick when lie left home tills morning to try and get medical aid. It’s enough to craze one. “thera’ath—*nraMf—« i* lk t hottbV wine we looted from Mwt Mg white house, I feel kind o’ sorry fur that poor woman, so don’t yer think w« might leave ’em fur her?” “You are a good fellow, Black, to think of it, and I’ll be hanged if we don’t dp it," was the quick response; so, carefully iaying these luxuries at the garden-gate, they hastened with all speed back to camp. , Dr. Saunders Was much discomposed, when he heard- Frank’s story, which he did as soon as they had reached their quarters; for the young officer well ap preciated the danger pf the fell disease in the vicinity of the army. , “ I will go :at once,” this energetic son of Galen said, “and satisfy myself about H. Why, sir, it will be ruin, if ■- v.r ”— MV m - t b a b y wW t C h a rlla F u lto n aak ari, a t re a c h , h ow e v a r, b ra w n y g ra sp . im U m I e o a r a t e ’a PER sj ’- osmu AND IMPCRSQN ai * An gives it CHAPTER XL I OT.EAS0JT! ■ Eoughirig it in-the busli, would have been a good description of Frank Be* sant’s mode of life during the .hot Kuglish county court judg* as liia experience that “mor* i uiij^ruthful evidence is given by women ! ten times over than by men." f —A comedy man's trousers cost, more time and a-, much money as several ir reproachable suits. The, cut must 1^ so grotesquely horrible, and the patches months of summer, v hen the Fighting so artistically variegated that the con- Fourth was marching hither and thither, ! struction of Mich a garment is a serious according to Buell’s erratic movements, I matter, and only a tailor, with skih and or as some evolution of the enemy -s patience is equal to' the task, called for their attention. Take it for [ —The crucifi* which t hris’.opher all in all, the dog-days went by without , Columbus wore .when he discovered making any very vast strain on the ca- j America is reported to be in the keep- ergies of young men who wens unused : ing of the Sisters of Borefto at Duran- to fatigue and loss of sleep by nearly a 1 go, Col. An inquiry will be set on foot year’s practice i n .the field; and even . jn regard to the authenticity of the relic, and if its genuineness is estab lished it will be exhibited a t world’s James Lawson 'would have , welcomed ‘ the excitement of something bigger than a brusli with the. enemy. It was picket and skirmish, skirmish and pick etw ith them, till the lads grew weary of the monotonous life they led. One day, 'however, there came a change in this eteri/al sameness of things for Frank Bcs'antat least, for his and Charlie Fulton's companies were fair a t Chicago. '—It is claimed that John Rockefeller could give every man, woman and child in the United States two dollars each and still have left the modest sum of $1,000,000 with which to start a peanut stand. William Waldorf Astor could do the same thing, while our own dear ordered out on a reconnoitering expedi-;Jay Oould could ^ S1.60 each and A BOAR OF r.ArO LITER ORERTED THE COX- CIXSION-OF THE NARRATIVE. . isn’t it’.”’ . Frank stood helplessly'gazing a t the babe. , "Here, Black, you’re a family mart; p'r’ups you can tell the lady what to do,” Ridley said, pushing forward the veriest rough of all the party. “Oh. sir. if you could!” the mother pleaded, offering, him the child. ‘‘Lord, mum! I don’t know nothin' about babies. What do yer think be the matter with ’im?” lie poked his 1big finger caressingly >>n t^e child’s i cheek as he spoke, for the sight of a ■baby always touches a tender spot in a - soldier's heart, no matter how rough he r fee. “Why,” the woman said, “it’s ‘-mali- and got Hoc and /A W- A r i m m , OK womehth : innoc e n c e . with five t'uousand men and three divisions of Buell’s army had crossed the stream ■<>the aid of the beleaguered Federal} And Monday morning dawned with drizzling mil). No longer erouching fi om a foe he could not grapple, Grant gave the eommund to advanee. and with a wild hurrah the whole line moved forward, and si*» Wallace says. “Step by step, from tree to tree, position to position, the Confederates went hack, never stopping agniti." I*t vain the brave Beauregard mde Vo. and fro be fore his troops inrilmg them to action; the tide off.n tune had turned against them Yet, lighting to the last, they fell back on Corinth, whose, frowning guns held Grant’s advance in check. it was iFoary work that followed for pox’ One of them died a w ^ k ago; there’s four of them down ;v§ i it up stairs, aud-boh, good, kind gentlemen, don’t go; don’t leave a poor loo- wom an lik e - ’’ But the rest of her sentence was never heard. Had ri regiment of Con federates charged upon them it couldn’t have cleared the house in quicker time than that poor woman's words. Helter- skelter over h e d g e and diteli. they never stopped till panting and breath less they'reaehed the country lata*. "We've been an’ gome an' done it." gasped Blaek, as soon as lie could find breath to speak. ".Shouldn't wonder if we’re took before night, Who km v., wliat the syin'toins he?” “ Intense thirst dryness of tongue- " Frank began, for he hud partly got over his scare, and was indulging i.i a little fun a t the big fellow’s expense. “That’s me all over,” Black groaned. "My throat's dry as a dodgasted lime kiln.’’ "Besides Blaek touched the baby; I seed hi;', do it. He’s sure to he took first." tried another Job's comforter. “An1 you stripped .the covers from them pillers in the bedroom.” Black r* - tnlJalod. “An' you've got ’em in you. pocket now blame me, if yer ain’t,'' This pointed remark led to half a dozen pockets being emptied on the rpadaide, where lay quite a little pile of meinentoHof theit visit the men had been able to stow away In the brief time allotted them. "Bay', Cap,” said Black to Frank, •wecan not check it—worse than a dozen armies in our rear. Say nothing about it till I return, and caution your fellows to silence; for talking about these things creates an alarm which predis poses the men to infection.” Frank 'promised discretion, and the doctor rode away on his sanitary er rand. Grouped in bivouac around the fire that night, a dozen officers lay smokingi chatting and whiling the hours away with song and story. Suddenly Charlie Fulton burst into the throng. ••■Oh, boys,” he cried, " I’ve the grand est joke you ever heard. ■Where’s Be sant? htand up, Frank, and' reveal to the- gaze of an admiring multitude the best sold' man in Christendom. What .will you give me, old fellow, to spare your blushes—but, by Jove, 1 couldn't keep it in. if you offered tne a ‘gold mine." , ■ ' “What is it? Out with it!” cried a dozen voices. “Why. four rebel officers were having a quietTittle game of ante this after noon at a (arm-house About five miles east of this, when up comes Captain Frank and his merry men on a forage, seeking whom and what they may de vour, There was no chance of escape. The men were all round the house, and the poor beggars gave themselves up for lost, when the Jiady of the house— whose health, by the by we’ll drink -presently,.If Robinson doesn't guzzle the. whole contents of that deathjohfi— snatches her baby from the cradle,' up sets a bottle of red ink over its innocent countenance and tells Frank’s lambs her darling’s got the small-pox. That was euougli; they stood not on the order of their going, but went, never stopped running till they back to camp. Then Frank tells Maunders, who reports to thy dad yalses the old man’s hair with such a holy horror that he won’t be able to get his hat on till he's been shingled." “Oh! Charlie, surely you’re making it all up,” Frank gasped. "Not a bit, my boy. It's all as true as Gospel. The doctor wonned the whole story out of a colored girl, who was the only occupant of tW house When he got there.” A roar of laughter greeted the con clusion of the narrative and completed Frank's discomfiture. X nv, aft soon as Halleek in St. Louis heard of the battle of Shiloh and its results, lie was filled with indigna tion at what he persisted in considering . mismanagement on the part of the Union leaders, and af once set out him self to take command of the troops be fore Pittsburgh »lauding, once more humiliating Grant, tvho was retained in the anomalous position of second in comm.Old Haileck made haste slow Iv. He had been reinforced by l ’ope, with twenty- five thousand men from tin* Mississippi, and u as now* at the head of an army numbering at least one hundred thou sand. <hi the aist of May, he hud crept to v. itbiu three miles of the dreaded fortification*.of Corinth, whose terrible guns threatened his advanee. and eoni- - pelted him to move with a caution that was depressing alike to officers and men. And meanwhile Beauregard saw the . mighty' host approaching, and though he too had been re-injoreed, knew that • when the tussle came he would l»e un* ^able to withstand them, so he coolly de stroyed every thing of value in the city and witlidvew his forces southward.* On the :;oth of May, Ilullcek marched into tlie descried fortress; and what nnist have been ids feelings, whefi be f.mnd that all this vast array of brist ling guns. tvhi'di had awed" him into such deliberate action, tit v but harm less logs of wornl painted and mounted ' to represent cannon! I "Well," cried Frank, ns be gazed nt ; the. mod. artillery, “if that doesn’t heat any tiling in the tvny of snaipc, ! I'm a Duti-hm;,»!'« , tion under Major Hopkins, wbich prom ised to be full of adventure.' j The enemy was supposed to be lying j some forty miles to the westtvard^-sup- t posed, I say, for beyond the unreliable I reports of farmers, Buell's officers, who j at this period' seemed doomed to be chasing shadow k, had -no idea of their real whereabouts, and with the object of ferreting them out, had" dispatched this little expedition. , • Two days they had marched and dis covered nothing more formidable than the scowling faces of women, who met their Inquiries with assertions that were so' palpably false that it was- a customary thing to read their answers backwards. "I can almost brutal order at Hopkins said, after an encounter with a cottager's wife, in,which he had de- then have left $8,009,000 with which to sink a well for more'water. .—Mine. Chaussenot, claiming to be a daughter of the Empress Eugenic,-is- creating something of a sensation in Paris by telling a highly dramatic, even if imaginative tale She pretends to have been adopted by a poor plumber, but asserts that, her education was pro- 1vided by some one of the court of the 1 Tuileries. She is upwards of thirty , years of age and handsome. | —The princess of IVales adds to her *various accomplishments, which in- -elude practical dressmaking, a technical knowledge of carpentering, brass ham mering, eta,. and she spends some time r, ., , . ! teaching in the school she has estab- torgivc Butler for lus , , , ” , , . , , ,, .. . ashed on the estate. The hospital, also, New Orleans,-- Major-' 1 ' engages much of. her attention, and hen kindly visits among her people there and in their cottages-wins for this gra cious, gentle lady their most devoted cidcdly come-off .second best. “But that i can not," Fran!; declared, i ^ *' with all the chivalry of youth. Aj «... . ___ woman, you know. Major, is beyond the reach of man’s personal chastise ment—something too sacred for- ’’ "Oh. yes, boy. . 1 know w h a t yda would sav,1 and I do not think the worse of yon for your appreciation of the gentler sex; but if this goddess of yours chooses to cut up most nnfemininc ca pers what are you going to do about it? I think that to a degree Butler was justi fied in—” "Do not say it, Major!" Charlie Fnl- ton interrupted, in; a white heat of in dignation. "Do.not try to make us b e -. , . . . , , . ., , lieve you would god-father such an or- j ^ “ppomted ° f the consular dt-r under any circumstances. I say I The inheritance of great, wealth has not destroyed young Adam Forepaugh’a love forithe glitter and spangles of the circus. • Though his income is now greater than the president’s salary, the son of the great showthan dons the pink tights a t every performance and rides in the hurdle race with util the interest of a ten-dollar-a-week supc. Young Forepaugh Is SOyears old and built like an athlete. He has had something to do j about a circus ring .since he was a boy of 7. J WilliamE. S. Fales, who wasrecenfc- to you, and I would say to Butler himself, that his barbarity disgraced his uniform.” “Why. Charlie!" Frank ejaculated, aghast at his friend's passionate reply, whose tones more than the words rang a defiance of the Majors opinion., “ I mean just what I Aayr* Fulton continued. “ We all suffer. What do you think Southern Indies will think of Northern -chivalry after this? 1 tell you they will class us all—the Major, you, 1 nnd every one—with the man who bade his soldiers trea t thorn like outcasts.” Frank looked anxiously in the Major’s face, fearing that Charlie's hot out burst, which at that time seemed close akin to treason, would bring him Into trouble, but tlie superior officer Only smiled as he said, With a meaning glance at his subaltern: “ I know, my lad, that your heart is Stronger than your head, and I fear the reminiscence of some bright-eyed Southern belle you have known in happier duys may have made yon unfitted to criticise General Butler’s conduct impartially,*' “ And what if it lias?” The question was asked offensively, with flushed face and defiant gesture. “Only that lave is a god who blinds his devotees, and that if you hare lost your heart on the wrong side of the line, you are very much to be compas sionated, Captain Fulton,” and the Major, as though tired of the conversa tion, turned on his heel and left tlie twp young men to themselves. “The idea of Hopkins promulgating such rani; heresy against the purest,, noblest women the earth can chow! It makes me riled all over, to think that he could be so mean. Why, yon look as il you half-agreed with him* Frank, or tvhy those elevated eye-brotvs and that expressive snigger?” “ I think,” was the terse reply, “that you have made a fool of yourself. You had no business to check the Major the way you did, for there Is no Wore con siderate man iff the army than ho is.” “Then, what did he stick up for But ler for?” “Oh, hang Butlor!” . “With all my heart, my boy! That’s just what they ought to have done last May, But about my checking ifopkins, that is another question; sorest assured, I'll seel; an e,arly chance te beg his par don.” “Do!” Frank said, earnestly. “I think f hit World of Hopkins.” Next day they met with better suc cess in their Undertaking. On reaching court of the United States at Amoy, China, is a well known writer. He lived in Brooklyn some years ago and practiced law there. By repeated visits , to Mott street he learned much about the customs of the Chinese and acquired a knowledge of the Chinese language. He went to China last fall, and in let ters tob is friends he says he has a com plete wardrobe of Chinese .clothing, from which he occasionally selects a salt and goes out among the natives, ••A LITTLE NONSENSE.” . the crown of-a lull, which gave tliem a ™ ™vo not fine view of a broad stretch of lowland, the Umlon. y. ti had bri- they observed a solitary horsemtin emu-1 * *'#»&*>«& the Embankment and “ • lit man coin- j lug towards them in the far distance. The tuen were dung upon the ground enjoying their noon halt under tlie shadow of the’ trees, when the Major’s attention was called to trie unfroaching figure JfO *>r OlMtnjj trEtr ,) '^U S E H O LP b revt jqeccs of licorice laid arm, S T rn n Is r e c o m m e n t e d ; newspapers tern 1 0 6 :1 7 ^ “t in water softened by S lo f a little sqnmoma arc e S fc lamp chimney* Fried Cakes.— Two eggs, , r six tablespoonfuls f r d 1three teaspopufuls of h one and one-half cup D e tro it Free Pres* I Crisped C ra c k e ra -S p li S n butter crackers and , sp batter. P u t them, bu « into a pan and color q t S ! 5 l They should be ^ te golden-brown and j ?!rilv so look a t them oiU ^ meJournal AteasfWonfnl of pure it: tolgill of raw linseed oil 1 ful reviver for oil-finlshei flhske the vinegar and oil ° eUmixed. Use by just n Z tt woolen rag with the ml rinegar prevents the oil fro: N. y. World. —Salads may be made of narbniled in boUing salted , in a®®11 Pieces and ouickly browned in butte let should be well heated ting them in place in the of lettuce, which should white. Serve with mayo lng.-N. Y, World. \ —Sherbet—Crush a qu berries or other small fr gdd three pints of water of a lemon. Let the mixtt or three honrs, then stra cloth to clear of seeds fourths of a pound of s until dissolved; add ice, when quite cold. It is vei Boston Budget —Baked Shrimps.—Boi minutes, in wellrsalted wi of shrimps. Drain, peel, 1 fine. Add three,eggs, tat butter, saltspoonful ea pepper and ground ce! gether and pour into a Cover with bread crum fifteen minutes. This j GoiifdHousekeeping. —Potted Fowl and Han neat from a cold fowl ai hones and skin; cut it v< quarter pound lean ham spoonfuls butter; pepper and a pinch of cayenne; 1 and mix all thoroughly mass; set aside to becor cool; serve for tea or lu; with slices of lemon and —Old Homestead. —An able financial article-rq(f hun dred dollar bill.—Washington Star. —Theopinion now hold by physicians that “raw cow’s milk is better for chil dren than’boiled,” is very gratifying,- since a raw cow gives much more milk than a boiled one.—Cldverdale Reveille. —Dashaway—“I hear that you upset some soup on Miss Palisade’s dress at the dinner last night.” Stuffer—“Yps, and I was fearfully put out about it You know it isn’t polite to ask for soup twice.”—Cloak Review. —Taking an Unfair Advantage.— Rambo—“That’s a curious kind of a sign across the way.” Baldwin (read ing it)—“ *Step inside fo r the best mint julep in the city.’” Rambo (with alac rity)—“Thanhs, Baldwin. I go you!”— Chicago Tribune. —The agent for a patent hair restorer received this testimonial: “Dear hir: A few days ago I accidentally spilled some of your *hair hatcher’ on the corn husk bed at my boarding house and when I .returned home I found a hair mattress.” —Philadelphia Record. —When Atchison young people of sn economical turn of mind become en gaged, they stop sitting In the dollar seats a t the opera house, and take seats in the seventy-five cent row. After they are married the husband goes alone and takes a dollar seat,—Atchison Globe. —In a town bp north an ex-judge is cashier of a bank. One day recently he refused to cash a check offered by a stranger. “Tlie cheek is all right," be said, “but the evidence you offer in identifying yourself as the person to whose order It is drawn is scarcely suf ficient.” “ I’ve known you to hang a man on less evidence, judge,” was the stranger’s response. “Quite likely."re sponded the judge, “but when it comes to letting go of cold cash we have to lie careful."—St. Louis Globe-Democrat, j —A Long Way Roitnlt.—Ladv of the j House-(to new page-boy fresh from the [ country)—“ Now, Adolphus, I want vim I to take Endytnion out for bis afternoon walk; and, ns you have not seen many '"cripatra's Needle. You knovi it 1 - very o ld—so that Mosefc probnhiv *aw' it when he le i the Israelites <«*. >■! Egypt,” l’age-ltoy (with astonishment! —1“Lor’ now. mum, to think that he should have eotno all tils way round!" —Funny Folks —Bacon and Snap Bi piece of nice, bacon pounds. If the dinner i St twelve o’clock put tl right in the morning, iialf gallon of snap b< w all pieces, cover wit gently, so that at the I the beans will be quite ! Slice the bacon thin ar shallow .dish. Put the ered dish.—Uousekeepc —Fillets of Salmon pound and a half or tw mon into small fillets from thW>one with a move all the skin ca fillet into a well-bea Balt and a little lemon bread crumbs, and fry In hot bird; place on and pour over each on tershirc sauce; serve and new beets.—Bosb M o d e rn Ytit Effeminate young wrath of a late writ courses: At a little ago the majority of 1 and single, talked in[ using their inflectioj ciscly ns women do. I the moderii young-iq effeminate. Many yj keeping house by tli can tell you all aboti one should pay for width of a tabicelot| not the worst. I tvi afternoon and on 1 the reception room 1 of the house, a boy | by the, window bus] drawn .work'. He 1 frames and was n threads of an intrie tern in and out tvl tion. He spread 0 inspection- it was I and patted it, sm;>| up in various ligh| might have done. ' enjoyed taking hi and gently droppii pool of water, 1 1 disgust and admit (lelphin Press. : The Flnl _Women who arj little niceties of! gown, nnd o n ly ' feet, for one or find out their f amine frocks n tailors. In thus Uon is given 1< eve v thing; the | ten. ,t is alii ;iys| venient spot t )u| will permit, ani Ring down, the 1 little strap tU;j waist-hand, a ' suring perfect;! by a good moJ [should certain!) !extent. *Ladies -4 "
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