The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
r . / 7 P * P i-. ■ P P W i * ' . •! : i J I i i mm m m m em mm T h e C e c l a m l l e H e r a l d , JL BLAIR. FubUsbir. CF.DARVILLE. OHIO. s * 4? AN AWFUL HONEYMOON. Urlde Imiirlioued In »n Elevator Uroom SlrumlliiK With the Oreumejcil MnnHtor. . A 'bridal couple, well-known young people of tills city, returned a day or two ago from their honeymoon trip to San Francisco, where their new-found' happiness was nearly wrecked. The day after their arrival they started opt together, the bride wishing to do some shopping. They were, not too happy, for an old lover of the girl had, by merely coincidence, gone up on the same train, and, by another coinci dence, bad stopped at the same hoteL The bride, perhaps,feeling a, little so£ry, for him, hod foolishly exerted herself to be pleasant, pnd the result was that the husband, who is naturally very jeal ous, allowed unworthy suspicions. to enter bis mind. , As 'they walked along Market street the ex-rival passed thdm, and the hus band was irritated by the gracious salutation his wife gave. However, he endeavored to cheer up, and when they reached a large dry-goods store, where his wife of two days intended to pur chase some stuff to adorn herself with, he pulled out his pocketbook and handed it to her, and told her to go ahead and purchase whatever she wished. “I'll finish my cigar and come right in and see what you buy,’*he added, and she flushed with pleasure at his good ness, gave his hand a squeeze' as she took the purse, and walked into the store. He smoked for a short time, and then THE BATTLE FIELD. CkOSEO Uf THE COURT, An In cid en t o f f i n Civil W a r Overlooked "by History* t General Schuyler Hamilton, the ’Vet eran of three "Wars* is one of the mbst picturesque figures in the military his tory of the United States. His record as a soldier was Buch as to call tor the special commendation of President Lin coln when he resigned his, command in 1803 on account of ill-health and dis ability; ' ‘incurred,” to use Secretary Stanton’s words, “in the service of his country, wherein he was highly distin guished for ability and good conduct.” Although, during hie long military career General Hamilton had his lung pierced with a lance and his skull frac tured. by a blow, yet he finds.himself now' at nearly seventy year# of age in the possession of all hia mental and physical faculties. His bearing is as soldierly and bis eye as clear as when lie/ led his command to battle. •The General often recalls incidents in bis military service. Perhaps the. most remarkable event in his military career occurred In Wash ington in 1881, when the Supreme Court of the United States was tempor arily closed. This story, the General believes, has never before appeared in print. He recalled it the other day while in conversation with some friends, and subsequently related it substantial ly as follows: A “I t was in tho early days of the civil war in 1881, when a writ of'habeas cor puswas issued by Justice Wayne, of the United States Supreme Court, in the matter of a private in Colonel .Willis Gorman's regiment of Minnesota volun teers. The point involved in the ease was practically the right of the Presi dent to call out the volunteer militia to aid in the suppression of the rebellion sought his wife in the store. She was not to he found. Ho started to go up to ( The writ-wus finally served upon Geu- the upper floor on the elevator, but was ' *ral Winfield Scott, and the importance met by a boy stationed there, who ex* 1attaching to the subject may be imag- plained that something had just broken ! mod from the fact that a Cabinet meet- aboiitthe machinery, and the car was , fogwas called to onsider the matter, stuck fast up against the. roof, so be j The Attorney General' was appointed walked up stairs and hunted thoroughly i General Scott’s legal adviser, but fruitlessly. As he came down h i t ‘‘T was absent a t-th e moment, giving .thought he saw his former rival ahead.( liberty to a collateral descendant of of him, but the crowd was so great be; Washington without parole. When I could not be sure. It made him'‘feel returned General Scott asked: ‘Colonel, and he began inquiring of the uneasy. clerks. At last he found one who re membered selling a lot of goods to a lady Who answered his wife's descrip tion, and shehad ordered themdelivered at the hotel she was staying at, so there . was no mistake about her identity. The elerk knew nothing else about her. Another, search of the establishment resulted in nothing. Perhaps she had .missed him in the crowd and gone beak to the hotel. He jumped into scab and drove there post haste, to find th a t,she had not returned. By this time he be gan to get wild with worry and sus picion. The presence of that hated ex- lover a t the store, his wife’s sodden dis appearance, all siufgeatfed horrible ideas to him. Tw&nhoiirs had passed and no trace of her. He hurried to the police headquarters and told hia story. A big detective, to whom he talked, smiled pityingly at him and at onoo ac cepted the elopement theory. Officers were sent out to find the detestable wretch suspected of having wrecked the budding happiness of two souls. The husband Wandered frantically about the streets until he found th*L unwittingly, he had walked back to hit hotel. He was weary, and mechanically took the elevator up to his room. He opened the door, and there on the sofa lay his wife, who, as he entered, ex claimed: “Oh, my dear, I’ve been shut up in an elevator for hours in that hor rid store. Something broke and the car went to the roof and bumped so hard I fell down, and ohl it was dread ful. I fainted at first, and it was along time before any one knew I was in it. Then 1 came to, and had to. sit there hour after hour while the men were working. Oh, I’m so glad to get hack to my loveyl” and two round asmswere around his neck in a minute and a kiss ing match was in progress, when it was interrupted by a bell bqy, who ushered in a big policeman, accompanied by the hated ex-rival. This detestable man was smiling in a most exasperating manner. “This officer wants to arrest me,” he said to the husband, “for eloping with your wife-----” There warno neoessity to finish the sentence. The husband swore a little to himself, gave the of ficer a SlOgold piece, and made a mum bling apology to the young man, who was the only one of the trio whoseemed to enjoy the situation.—LOs Angeles Herald. _____________ Hank o f England R elics. The Bank of England is the custodian . of a large number of boxes deposited by customers for safetyduring the past two hundred years, and in not a few instances forgotten. Many of these consignments are not only of rare in trinsic and historical value, but of great romantic interest. For instance; some years ago the servants of the bank dis covered in its vaults a cheat, which on being moved literally fell to pieces. On examining the contents, a quantity of massive plate of the period of Charlefc . It, was discovered, along with a bundle of love letters indited during the period of the Restoration. The directors of the bank caused search to he made in their books, the representative of the original depositor of the box was dis covered, and the plate and love letters handed over,—Chambers4Journal. —When the somersault thrower dies their Is no other all-lure-sUvs for him. —Texas Siftings, is your horse.. saddled?’ My reply was: ‘My horse is always saddled; only drop the bit in his mouth.'. “He then told me about the writ, which was deemed defective. Ho thought the Sergeant knew ,the servitor of the writ and wc started out with or ders from General Scott; 'Get the par pers; use violence if necessary,'” Secre tary Stanton added: ‘Wo do notcalfe for the man; we want the papers.’ “We started on the search at once, hut the Sergeant could not recog nize the man. Ho pointed out half a dozen in the block in front of Willard’s Hotel. We ran our horses to the Capi tol, where I saw Mr. Carroll, clerk of the Supreme' Court, and advised him of the dilemma. He gave orders that no papers should go on file unless indorsed by him. I then invited him to be tem porarily ill, provided a coach, a lunch eon, and a guard of cavalry, with or ders to shoot anyone who attempted to approach the carriage. "We meandered through the llock Creek region until sundown. Upon re turning to General Scott’s headquar ters I found him in his chair and not in a very amiable mood.' He began to scold. I smiled and asked him to hear me. He said:' ‘Young man, I have sent yon on Very many important missions, to-day perhaps on-the most lmpi'.-;a.:i of them all, and here yon are philander ing away the whole day without any report.’ “I then simply told him that I had taken tho clerk of the Supreme Court off in the Ilock CrCck country, guarded by a cavalry escort, to prevent the fil ing of the return to the writ of habeas corpus which he deemed erroneous or defective. ‘Capital! Capital!’ lie cried. ’Shnt up the Supreme Court of the Ufilted States for the first time since its inauguration by law, without viola tion of law or order. Take this re turn to President Lincoln and toll him what you have done and what I have said.* “1 did so. The President approved the return, and added, jocosely: “1 should not have thought of that way of shutting up the Supreme Court of the United States by carrying away the Clerk; take this to Mr. Seward.’ I took the letter to Secretary of State Seward. ArchbishopHughes was with him. They 'conned it over. Mr. Seward then wrote a note to Justice Wayne. 1 was re quested* to bear it to him and to bring back an answer, which I did. “The decision was made by Justice Wayne in chambers. I t .was to the ef fect an 1 afterwards learned from Mr. Seward, that the President had the right, under the Constitution, had the right to select preferrable volun teers from Uiemilitia. “I took this to Secretary Seward, and, by his reqnest to President Lincoln, General Scott and Secretary Stanton. I afterward saw the papers locked in the safe of the Department of State, and took a tete-a-tete dinner with Sec retary Seward that evening." Search for the paper waa recently made among the archives of the State Department, hat it could not be found. What became of it nobody seems to know.-—H. Y. W o rld .____ T bkhk are no less than 10,600Union veterans residing in Colorado and Wyoming. Of these only about 8,000 ira members of the Grand Army of the Bspublla A SUNDAY IN THE ARMY. Two P ictu re* Illu stra tiv e o f th e V arying F o rtu n e* « ( W ar. While to a, certain extent the soldiers of the war of the rebellion had experi ence in common, the survivors find upon comparing, notes more than a quarter of a century after the warciosed max their lines frequently diverted in a ifargreater degree than they at that time even dreamed of. Hence the recollections of years agone, of the camp-fire, the march and bivouac, which have been securely hidden away in memory’s cloisters, are of profound interest to both soldier and civilian. . . In March .1883, while the writer had command of a fort on Grant’s line of defenses at City Point, he was awaken ed one day, -at all events, to a vivid realization of the horrors and vicissi tudes of war. One Sunday morning the boys had formed alignment in their respective company streets for the usual nine o’clock inspection. The weather was delightful. The sun shone brightly, and the temperature was that of a morning in May. Every boy in blue seemed to possess an intnition respect ing’an early closing of the dreadful four-years’ war, and every heart beat high with the anticipations born, of a return to the homes and friends in the North. How quickly the transforma tion came can scarcely yet be realized by the actors in one of .the closing scenes of the great war drama. Scarcely had the inspection begun, however, ere a mounted orderly dashed up to the head of each company street, handed dispatches to each company commander and was off again like a shot, Then came the ominous order: “Unsling knapsacks,'and run for tho fort!" There was apparently no time to be lost; knapsacks wore unslung and tossed into the tents of the owners and a grand scurrying for the various forts along the line ensued. By this time the artillery duel, which had been of a desultory, character all the morning, had develoyed,into what seemed a continuous roar, and thoughts of “the loved ones at home” had been changed in a moment, as it were, into those of apprehension for personal safe ty. Within'a half-hour subsequently a body of soldiers was descried approach ing from City Point. Nearer they came until the fez, scarlet trousers and white leggings of the Zouave uniform bespoke the One Hundred and Fourteenth Penn sylvania. On they came, with band playing lively airs and their .colors waving in the sunshine and light morn ing breeze, as if they were ,on parade rather than on their way, as subsequent events demonstrated, into the jaws of death in front of the formidable Con federate defenses of Petersburg. i To the strains of as inspiring music as was ever heard in Virginia, the bravo Pennsylvanians passed through tliegate- way of our line, near Fort McICcon, moved Over the plain toward Petersburg in columns of fours, and within an hour wore lost to sight because of a small piece of intervening woodland. This was one picture, und a bright one it must be conceded of army life. But the other! Alas! There was another, and one which causes an in voluntary shudder even to this day. On the following Tuesday, far away off toward Mead Station, the writer heard p locomotive whistle, indicating the approach of a train on Grant’s army railroad. At the place where the rail road cut through our line there was quite an embankment, and to this place I hurricd. As the train came nearer and nearer I observed it was made up of platform or fiat-cars, and when it passed my point of observation I saw that' car after car was covered with straw, and on that straw was all that was left of the 114th Pennsylvania, a very large percentage of the poor fel lows with fatal wounds, "What a change was this in forty-eight hours! And as 1 closed my eyes upon the dreadful scene I saw again the wav ing colors, heard once more the soul stirring music, and saw Pennsylvania's gallant sons on their march to death. But the names of those who thus sacri ficed themselves upon their country's altar are pr’r.ted In letters of living light on one of the most historic pages of which the world has knowledge.— National Tribune. HANDOM NOTES. T he G. A. B. intends to have a week set apart at the World's Fair at Chicago to be known as Grand Army week. It is proposed to have a grand reunion, to include the armies of the Cumberland, the Tennessee, the James, the Potomac, and all the other departments, with a grand parade, to eclipse anything since the grand review at the close of the ■war. ■/ T he movement to sccnre a monument to Philadelphia valor as exhibited dur ing the late war by the Philadelphia Monument Association, promises to be a greater success than was at first ex pected. When completed the monument will be tho finest erected to the memory of Union sailors and soldiers in tho Uniten States. Philadelphia sent more citizen soldiers to defend the Union than did any other city. A t the battle of Bull Bun, Governor Alger met a breathless soldier fleeing with the rest of the army toward Wash ington. The soldier had a wound on •his face, “That's a bad wound,, my man,” said the Governor as the soldier halt; “where did yon get it?” “Got It a t the Bull Bun fight yesterday. "But how could yon get hit in the face at Bull Run?” “Well, air,” said the man, half-i^K)logeticaHy, “I got carelsas, and IN WOMAN'S BEHALF. THE WOMAN PHYSICIAN. Why H er P resence flo P ositively N eces sary In th e Care o f W omen Suffarlng From D iseases, E ith er Physical. M ental or M oral. Hr. Busan Dimock was but .twenty-' eight years old when her body, rescued from the wreck of the SchlUer, was' borne to its last resting place by eight of the physicians of Boston, who had known her and been in practice with her for three years before her death. Among them was Dr. Henry I. Bow- ditch, who, speaking frbm an experi ence of more than forty years’ profes sional life, said of her, “I found her one of the most accomplished physicians I have met." Dr, Samuel Cabot, for years.one of the leading surgeons of Boston, was also one df the pall-hearers. “In her shortlife,” he said afterward, “she acquired, in the face of many ob stacles; an amountof medical knowledge and ,of surgical skill such as but few pos sess. Her skill and self-command in oper ating no one can appreciate who has not witnessed it. Her brief and highly honorable career points surely to the high position she would have attained had her life been spared.” In lecturing to her students she said,. ‘Hf I were obliged, in my practice, to do without sympathy or medicine, I should say do without medicine;” and to a class in the training-school for nurses, “I wish you, of all my instructions, especially to re member this: when you. go to nurse a patient, imagine that it is your own tit ter before you iu that bed, and treat her in every respect as you would wish your own sister.to be treated.” It was her inherent womanliness which constituted Dr. Dimock the ideal woman physician, and it is upon the womanliness of educated women that is based the strongest argument in favor of placing under their care women who arc Suffering from disease, physical or mental, and women who have lost their womanliness. To the strong,to the well, to the good, to the happy, sympathy is not an essen tial—they can live without it; but to the weak, the suffering, the crushed, and the wickcdi sympathy is the first neces sity; they must have it or they can not be lifted and cured. Now the sympathy which one woman can give to another is impossible that a, man should give to a woman. Even the superficial sympathy with physical suf fering which arises from like experi ence isj rendered impossible by their different organizations; a man docs not know what a woman is feeling, be cause lie never has felt and never can feel the same. This, where women are simply ill, is sufficient to make the attendance of a woman physician of value; but toiwomeU who arc suffering from disease, mental or moral, women who arc torn from their natural rela tions and places in life and shut away in the insane asylum, prisons, or re formatories, for their own cure and the safety of others, the ministration of educated, high-minded, womanly women are almost a necessity. To have men- os physicians in a prison for women, or iu air insane asylum in charge of women, is simply to throw away the strongest influence for good which can possible be availably for the reformation and euro of either prison ers or patients. To an insane patient, peace and quiet of mind, a sense of safety and repose, arc essential, and to many sttch rest and freedom from anxiety are not possible if under the charge of a man. There is a .sensitive shrinking and dread of men, often amounting to positive fear, in nervous women which may become so intensified in insane patients as to make it impossible for a man to ap proach them without injuty to them. Apart from such extreme cases, how ever, the daily and hourly oversight of a woman physician is of a far more- searching and intimate character than that of a man can possibly be, and it is sad that the unhappy patients should lose the comfort and advantage which the care of educated women would af ford them. A woman can know a worn an as a man can not. Bat to the vicious woman or girl the blessing of the presence of a woman physician seems tp be almost greater than to any other. To such a one, ac customed to regard men and women from a point of view incomprehensible to other women,the entrance into her life of ah absolutely pure-minded woman, who is alto strong, intelligent and kind is a revelation. She stands self-con demned in her presence, her life for the first time presents itself to her as re volting; for the first time she sees her self as she is, defiled, degraded and cast out; and when such a woman stoops to perform for her the most revolting offices, shows that she loves her, that she is full of tender pity for her, the elevating influence is wonderful. To a depraved woman no man dares to show tenderness or pity; he must feel and •how to her only the moral repulsion which her degradation arouses in him. Should he long to help her,*to lift and succor her, he is powerless, and he pan not show her even the common pity of .one human being for another who is Buffering; she will not understand it, and she will pervert it in her mind, and it can do her no good, bnt only-harm. The contact of pure men with such women can only be hardening and in jurious to both, but the pure woman may give free vent to all the overpow ering p it/o f her heart, and it serves only to soften and chasten the heart of th« miserable outcast. To one more els** of the unfortunate the woman phyrican may come as a sa vior. The young ekjl beginning life, wayward, ignorantTnobalanced, need ing help and guidance, will often con ceive for a high-minded, steady-minded Woman such devotion aa will serve to keep her from wrong through life; and where is such a girl, beating her angry heart out against the walls of a reform- atoiy, so likely to find her ideal as in the calm and noble woman who comes as physician and friend to cure andhelp her? Here, again, no man can take such a place, no man can stand in such a relation to the girL It muBt be a woman who saves her, or she is lost I t is to be remembered that it is .then- very degradation which renders it nec essary that vicious women should have the protection of good women. They can not be left to the care of brutal men, to be a t once tempters and vic tims; they can not be left to the care of men of better feelings, forcing these to repress all that is best in them: they must be placed in the hauds of women to whom impurity is horrible and re volting; of women who will protect them from themselves, and lead them with strong and gentle guidance out from darkness into light.—Josephine Lowell, in Century. . W om en a* Inventor*. American women figure conspicuous ly in the list of modem inventors, and the patents token out by them are con tinually increasing in number and im portance. Among the more novel and surprising of the inventions is a barrel- hooping machine, which yields a gener al revenue of 820,000 a year to the clever Philadelphia woman who de signed .and patented the rnodeL The Eureka street-sweeper is the invention of a woman, antra horseshoe machine, which turns oat 1,200 finished horse shoes in an hour,' is the products of another woman’s skill, in mechanics. English women stand next in the list of women inventors, but their inspira tions seem to partake of a more femi nine nature, such as an improved feed ing bottle for babies, a new furniture polish, or kitchen utensil of improved style. . -_________ _• Home Economic*. There is nothing which goes so far toward placing young people beyond the reach of poverty as economy in the management of th'eir domestic affairs. It matters not whether a man furnish little or much for his family, if there is a continual leakage in the kitchen Orin the parlor. It is. the husband's duty to bring into the house,and it isthedutyof the wife to see that nothing goes wrong fully out of it—not the least article, however unimportant in itself, for it establishes a precedent—nor under any pretense, for it opens the door for ruin to stalk in, and he seldom leaves an op portunity unimproved. Tho husband's interest should be the wife's ourc, and her greatest ambition should cany her no farther than his welfare and happi ness, together with that of her children. N. Y. Ledger. NOTES OF INTEREST. Miss A nnie ,R. O sgood , of Augusta, Me., has been appointed registrar,of? deeds', to succeed her dead father, whose assistant she was for a number of years. A new industry for females has lately come into public notico. They go from house to house among the wealthy classes, supplied with spirits of am monia, and other detergents, and soHdt employment to remove stains from cost!y garments. T ub Progressive Woman's Club is the , name to be given a.new organization soon to be started in London. There is to be hut a small entrance fee, women of every class wiU be admitted and dis cussions will be entered into on all pro gressive movements. A n interesting foreign appointment is that of Miss Xavier, formerly instructor of Spanish in Wellesley College, to the secretaryship of the French and Span!-: consulate. Miss Xavier is mistress of the French, Spanish, Italian, German and English languages, and is the first of her sex to receive an official positk* of this sort. A n education union for working girls has recently been organized at Vienna Literature, physiology, French, voal music and other branches are taugft and one evening of each week is devoid to social pleasures. The new more meat is attracting considerable attri tion, and there are already three few* dred members. L ondon has; many apartment boost* .built for women alone. They consbt of two rooms for 82.50 or asuitof room* for $20, with intermediate prices, ac cording to accommodations. Eachwom an has her latch key and there are so rules. Such a mode of living has never been successfully planned in this coun try, although the want has long bee* felt Tnx Waco, Texas, School Board h ;j composed of progressive men, Th#J believe in women as educators. Thk is clearly evinced by the fact than thej j elected Mrs. W. D. House as city super- j intendont of their pnbllo schools | Thereupon some of the gentlemen pro-] feasors resigned. It is said, however, t*| the honor of Mrs. House, that she ffihj the position in a highly satisfactof/I manner, and reflects credit upon ttl | action of the Board whose judgnv*** i placed her in this official position. Al; who have taught under her regimei* : gard her as an efficient superintend*** : kind and helpfnl to the teachers, If whom she isgreatly bslored,—Woffl***j Chronicle, tbroi beat! walk id to i no n i can N r -m*y| HOUSEHOl *1 , . aoba, J —To Truss Wil w ny clean, twi efit „j knuckle, rest the p-gyi the breast, secui skewer through 1 —Eggs a Ja Fin jfor dropped egg ^ h« pour over them « romai .and serve. It is this name, and th is certain to be re * —Bars of Tons "irl, has recovered suf ;eri such things, little cd th be relished. Ben ch ri ordinary slice of omeu to strips half an )>odw the oven to get he c« brown. Serve wi tern] soup,—Ladies’ He ;jeft —Oranges Puddi s, foi six orqnges, piact K>st ii dish;make and po s ban of one quart of hoi two tablespoons --d who yelks of four egg4»s, a: whites and one-th)ntjc spread over top I, Ugh Serve cold.—Christ —If nuts are eat____ they will rarely tnv«n On the contrary, 1Q wholesome urtick| j pie and can be . nuts are best blan * . as almonds, should? ■_ by putting them hot oven for a shov. , Work. hlch- C , a. T, 000 a —opanish Buns sugar, onC-half cu . . cupful sour milL . melted butter, one^iorge woi the '.,200 (save the whites c one teaspoon sod. cups of flour, one tJJ,,, the same of cloi KHm brown sugar for ‘ncJ ® until ((uite white.-*' VT —Fofc. oyster p if j with rich puff pasLs a fill oysters season'.;,*' and plenty of bulltens| boiled eggs. Cove---—< ling of cracker crisonomd the liquor from thf whii with puff paste, sei.unfr j and prickingwith a8 { minutes in'a hot oiyjj- —A nice way to <ther.i to soak over night iis fan . boil in the morning in th white bag kept forhe hui place in a pot w;e.and meat cabbage, bee[ nothii boil three hours, wt the with butter and s mt in thus they resemble dent in taste and appedns the snce* jseidoj —Gold tinsel niched, assistance to those the i on their own fingei ion sli tion of bonbonnie, welfl friends. It is brig! kthat i used in. ornament flower tubes cove —— — plush, etc. The r INI themum petal rucli---- for they save all tl Osaoo ■gon each petal sepaippoint —Impermeable ( erdea impermeable glue a for in water until it so before it has lost for fe After this dissolve otice. a slow fire until i t : smonj sistence of a jell; with used for joining m:i leterg In addition to stroi ctnov has the advantage < of water.—Christia Worn a s a In Lo Coniforlul, There is nothing ive 'than the greu pers that nowadi - . every lady’s wardi dofee used for these gar: wools, in a variety like colorings, : clinging fronts of ing in material or These gowns may style, with square ish, trically draped fi iag« after the Grecian i ve an they must .alway* fortable and not There is one feat: which is soinetii?! iologj they are made iri br&m their freedom fro if eaei ment, Their grarMres. all Japanese or (gig co their drapery and &er in which they -extraneous ornatiu is unknown in the antbemnm. The < trimming, but not modern luxury th the Renaissance, entra; be a< ter n 't*- oreign iii sr, fori lleslej leFrtl Xavir 1 m es, nion fi t orgal re alr< irl Hew HptrS The first import [ ji Poods am rough*!, ens of light weigh •large plaids in nas stripes. These ro . “ ffht colors, and threads of wool* white threads, Hi, weaving so papal considered Very s', threads or stripe uiixturoii of with yellow, «r "j Pother, striped or low. Other!;, whe Ti*!1*' have pale \ heliotrope Si: way, or in dots o *?™-thnl stripe<. Waid< though t "*** faith in pla Ported them latgi nlond | $2.50(; ermet uodat Ihey • ;le of f planf i' want (sxas, j !SSi| sa I by tl keir I (of tlk I tis i Houl ahid Ifleets .rd i let undid ciefij kl to 1 b*
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