The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 1-26
i s T •*** ■ THE AS l.NDUl’EWllEHT WKBKtY NKWSPAFEn, SATURDAY, A PR IL 4, 1891. IF. I f . B L A IR , E d ito r a n d P rop > i PRICE * 1 .2 0 PER ANNUM. 3 - l i e h t d . a m l l C I I D I R K O T O l tY . "'’^Covenantor" C h tirJh .—flev T . .0. $jmin 1, Pastor, ’ttngitlar serv ic e s a t 11:00 a ni; Salibatliscltool a t ItfiOQ'u m It. P. U lturoh.—lt<?v. .1. J<\ Morion, iiasior., Sarvinas a t 11:00 a in'; Sabbath sohoolat 10:00 ft in. M. K. Churwh.—Row G. h. Tufts, jihh - tor. Preaching lit 10:15 a h i ; Habbath et-liool a t O’.'IOa. in,; clu.su. p. m ,; ■young Penjilti’s meetfn-' a t 7:00 p m ; nravor mooting Wetlnonday evu inng .a t *:W) ’ U. 1*. Church. —Kov, .T, C. Wiirnook, pastor, Sorvlutw* lit 11 :lli) a in an d 7 p ny Sabbath school a t 10:00 a in A JV*« 15. C hurch.—t t e v . . ,T. I). Jack- ton. pastor, .Services a t 11:00a m nml 7:00 ]>m each S abb a th ; Sabbath school 3:00 p nt; class, 7:00 p in ouch F riday. llaptidt Chu rch , — Rev. J>, MT um o r, ' pastor. J’rm tching ev e ry S abbath pi lla in, an d 7:00 p h i; Sabbath School a t 8:00 o’clock o in ; P ra y e r m eeting Wed nesday night: THE CARDIFF GIANT, {History o f tho H e lix b y th e Man 'W ho X£ad© It. ‘iPObllc Swindle T liat Broncht to Perpetrator Considerable money . ’ -.U o s It lb icclteil lt t ’ ■ v <' '■ Narno. * • 5 Its By the announcement of the recent ideath of George Qnli, stylcdin the press .dispatches .“th e originator of tho Car diff giant hook,", it was recalled to the .memory of a reporter .that ho had once 'heard him tell in detail tho whole story of that celebrated and marvelous fraud. , ‘The reporter, aaya the Chicago Tribune, twas at, the time at Binghamton, N. Y., Ircpojtipg the trial pf Edward R-ujtaff, 'vrho waa finally hanged in that elty for jmhrder. - At tha t time the exposure of jthe. Cardiff giant was a matter of the {recent past, and the story thatiluU told .one January night to, a party gathered .around the huge open hearth fire in the ■sitting-room of the hotel had not only (the merit, of being news, but was llke- ,wise eptitled to the credit of boingRigh tly interesting. . | As he gave the story bo had the idea lof .the Cardiff giant in llis-mind as a {good speculation long before he tools ;nny practical stops in the matter. Fi- 1 mally he decided to undertnho the job,of {making u petrified g ian t th a t' would* . «mazo th e multitude, puzzle the Jr HeaWpd, and fill his own pockets with (dollars.’ Hull had noknatvledpfc of the iiu&of sculpture and was totally Ignor- {ant of the Science of anatomy. First of ali ke sethimself.rcsolutela'to work ItOremedy these defects- lie nod con- |siderablo natural aptitude^ with the ichisel, and he soon acquired sufficient (skill to how opt a flgura tbafcwas to be ■ -put before the public as a relie of an :ago so prehistoric th a t nobody would be 'likely to closely criticise its proportions. 'But Hull said he knew tha t no matter iliow ancient was the era in which his .giant lived he hod to have pore* in his skin to pass the scrutiny of cvcnthe „unlearned; and it was the making of <!these pores, fao claimed, which required ■more time and labor than all the other , work ho did in the manufacture;, of the igiant. His .work occupied ufkny weeks, land was all done in an outhouse a t tached to his home near Binghamton. When it was n t last finished he next ■mode preparations for its burial, in order th a t when brought to public view . it mlghtahow the proper evidence of an tiquity. To effect that he buried it is , tbs side of a hill on bis farm and only ;a few yards from th e “studio*'' where it 'had bees chiseled ou t of a huge block of stone tha t had been dug ou t of that same hill. In all this work, hug* and .heavy as the uncut stone and the ghmt hews out of it were, he had only the assistasoe of one mas; a sted and a yoke of os«n is moving theta; the man who helped him move the stone was a * newly-arrivedGerman immigrant whom he had employed a* * farmhand, and hod no cariosity about the matter, and ,the one who helped him bury the “statue” Was another than of the s*m* 'kind. t Hull allowed the statue to remain in th e ground two years, h« said, before he considered it to he in proper condition to he “aecfelentAlly” disoovsred by him-* '.self, dag out, and the hag* petrifaction ‘brought hrtx>public view to amass and perplex people ha gene ra !/bu t to de light the abtiquurlana who found ht It an argument to uphold Some Of their mosteberMied theoitea. The work of Hall got its name from the fact th a t n ea r,th e spot where it was buried and was afterwards res urrected was a amill hamlet called Abe tirngh^ tsoon a f te r lts appearance in public. Of course exposure in the end was sure to come and did come, but th a t would have made no difference to Barnum; as an item in the “great Show" it would always have had value, bu t with Hull tbe -oase waa. different} the truth becoming known the giant was forced into retirement. But he da* *"• fr*k MAKING CLAY PIPES / Raw sad Where They Are Manufactured. —An m tereeUns P ratw i. Charles W» Maxwell of Strawbridge, Mias., in conversation with a St. Louis BtAwSayings reporter said: - “ It id popularly believed that all clay pipes arc either mode in Europe or from elated to his auditors tha t night in the !clay brought from the other hemisphere, Binghamton hotel that the j but such is no t the case, os a very large giant, which- be averred was theft lying !:phare of tho cl°y P1**8 m A“ enca in the shed Where it was made, had brought him more money than he had ever dared hope it would and that be was entirely content with the result of the . venture so far aa its pecuniary returns were concerned. Berenaded the Editor. The editor of the Aroostook (Me.) North Star was serenaded by a cow a few .nights ago. He pays: “She sta tioned herself directly under our bed room window add began to ring the. changes and variations on the most un earthly and discordant' cow bell that ever was' turned..out of a foundry. •Ting-a-ling, elapety-clap, 'ding-dong, wharigibarig, tickle, tickle.’ Wo had been expecting" that the addition of a prominent North Aroostook granger to ’ tho editorial management pf the Star would elicit some agricultural response, but we had not expected tho response to .’take the shape of a sox-enUdaby an ■ old coiv a t two o’clock in the morning." After listening to the doleful and dis training sound for half an hour the editor arose in his wrath and his night gown and with a club'convinced tho cow .that she bad waked up the wrong journalist. Such is a newspaper man’s life in northern Maine. , . Foasar.t I-'rajirlctarshiti la Europe. Inquiries instituted by the ^British, foreign cfilco regarding peasant,nropi-ie-' tor-ship in Europe give, come interesting resu lt. A r-c.viotl of forty years ia covered, nrs'-tywhera tlsorc is ' on ih- oreasingdesiro to pv.rsharas laucL This In nkawis i-emarkihly in France, whoro, although the actual euttivatk-.g popula tion .flimtuichcd, (he piNVprictpra have grown in numbor.ta the ulaplaoc- meat o f tenants ..... * / ° BASHFUL BRIDEGROOMS^ v Brides Am More Self I’o iw a ed Thaiji Their Tertacrg In Fadiu* tlie MioiAer. Ministers dceldro that •In nine cases out of ten brides arc much more self possessed than are bridegrooms when the marriage ceremony is being per formed. 4 A shy. modest looking little creature, robed, in white will stand perfectly erect, looking the minister calmly hud squarely ip the eye without for an in stant losing her self poise, while tho big, blunt. s{."-fopter of a bridegroom by her side-'is pale and nervous and trembling.' Ilis lingers are likely t o 5 twitch nervously and h e ' may •oven hitch atTiis trouser legs or twist a cor ner of his coat skirt. or* from clay found a t and near Wood bridge; N. J. The clay comes by tbc carload and the first stop toward pre paring it for molding is to sufficiently dampen it with water to make it pliar. ble. This is done by* placing it in a tank, where it soaks, for about twenty- four hours. It is then hammered with iron bars, thus ridding it of any lumps or dry chunks. Then the ■molding be gins. The workman takeB a lump of clay in each hand and by squeezing, and rolling it molds tho pieces Into a rough stem about throe times as lurge as the finished pipe stem, having a rough ball u t its end. These rolls, us they are called, are piled on wooden trays, six teen to each tray, after which they are dried, either by thd sun or by artificial means, according to the weather. After having been dried, not to hardness but sufficiently to dispose of ull superfluous dampness, the roils arO ready to have the stem drilled and the bowl, formed. To.drill the stem the workman holds a small Iron rod t|ie size of the stem holes, and with his left hand pulls the clay roll over the rod instead of shoving the rod through the stem, To do this tho workman is guided solely by the. sense of touch in ’his finger tips, nud that souse is iso accurate that the hole is in variably made correctly. Tho ball aft the end of the roil is turned up, and then roll and rod are placed ia an iron matrix which presses tiro pliable clay into the .desired outside pattern. The matrix and its contents are placed In a ■hand press, and the workman, by pull ing a lever, forms the hole of the pipe bowl. The molded pipe, t till soft and pliable, then pas :«■; to the hands of the trimmer girls, who scrape off the super fluous clay, making the joints of the .matrix. Then the pipes are placed ia fire-proof clay sayger-und the loaded saggers are placed in a kirgo furnace. This furnace has eight fines a t the bot tom. and tho six shoots of flame at the .bottom uonceutrato a t the .top, thus making the lipat. even throughout. Until tho pities go into the furnace they are blue in color, but when they coma out they are pbro white.” i PrommW!on»ofCtatomen, diirtnv the ' woes th« wjllct Hut V IC K 'S SE1___ disappoint, why waste time, moneyand patience on ast years, never • „ . * ■ , l t , • a • a ■ U tM U p U liltl 1' l t l THMVVi M IK V IM H -M V ; "H U p«UVHVW U ll I-was once ' bp rt map to a stn lu art, others, whenyoucanbuy the BEST «t same pricet middle-aged bridegroom, noted fo r h is ;Mahenomljt»Vethlayear: tendiacentstor Vicfc’a “o'-'* »'• , , iJPiorof Guide, deduct the to cents fromfirstorder, COUVage and feats of uari'lg, Says a and it co*»nothing. It Ishetter thm ever: toohrje paves, colored plates, grand noreltioa worthyof ctiitlvallorr CashJwireajSioooand fi»o. ■ m ' JMCSBVZ0X. S&MKAXi BOObSMttt. N. ? . •' A W u m i v r W o r k i - r ; Mi*. F rliu k l lu ll,";ui, n ' (mug infill o f B iirH iigltui. status. Unit 1»* had burnt u n d e r i.tie <>!' tw o p ro ib i- uunt pltyairiaiii-, ftiul iisim I i h e ir tr e a t m en t u n til in’ was no t able Ut *pel a to n n d . T h ey p ronoun c ed bis earn lo 'b e cou«miij>Hbn and im -n rab |n . H e was peivtiadeii to tr y ill'. K liigVX uw D iscovery for. C‘ou « sm jd tp u , C'onglis ., -.V a*m. St V/ - SA. V f ; ,, .1 writer in the Fhiladtilphia. Call, dnd when thq time came for us to g? down stairs to meet the bride and licr attend ants he nearly hadra fit. and he looked like a walking cm^tso all through tho ceremony. I hod. to keep saying: “Uraco dp, old boy,’’ and “Come, come, you’ve got to gofdown.” to get him started a t all, and a t the door he was idiotic enough to clutch at.me cad say; * “Say, Fred, how wo'ulil it do to have . Maiy arid the .preacher slip la here and hav£ it all over with before we go down a t a)l? 1 can't go through it before all that crowd.” “ Idiot!” I said briefly had pointedly enough to leave no doubt as to my meaning, “Maty won’t come in licrc and you will go down this instant.” He got through a t last without d ung or saying anything ridiculous, la which respect I ks was luckier than another of my acquaint* FAWCETT. Has in stock a fine line of WATCFIEH, CLOCKS, J EW E L HIT/ a ir D IAM OND S ! The finest Jlne of Optical Goods in Orcoiid Cojinty, a Specialty made of Bruzilhip Pebble (SiK-ctHclcs in Gold, Silver unit £ (tH irHinca, 'l iit-v confer a brilljHiicy nod dIMiiietoe-s of yisioo,.wlHi,u« lUWOUOljif m w m,d. comfort, Hcldom enjoyed by speetiielo weurerH. WUCQUMHTEOWirHTHESIOWIWHIOfTHUOOUKTOyWUtMT** MUCHOLUUUIHlomilOHROWASIUOIOfTHISMATOfTHE [I*a«A*Y dip, RockIslaM&FacieR?„ rgli, Cin’fi&SI,LouisKy I'AN-JI A.N1H,E JlO liT Ii. Selfodiiic iiZ/c-Heet June. 1.1890. I’nilus depitrt from Cedarvillwna follow ’• * tiO ING WEST. I j 4.-H) i}, in. flag slop, 10.14 in in. . ■ II * o.Hl p. tn. flag stop, GOING EAST * 8 a. in, * 51.57 p. ffi. SUNDAY. / UAST, UT>T. ’ II10. 3 i a. tn. |j 4.1 f p. rn. -(id -57 p. m. 4,2(5 a, hi , T iim rgivenultovo ib I'vm ru t Time. I'F'ag' tl>ail.\i. *lfiii!i txe«|il. ritintlWy, : ie N' 12 me ?IS 5 ! The Dirvct Koute toanil fromChicago, Joliet, Ottawa, [ .. ,, • I’eorie, tn Salle, Moline, Knelt Tmintii. In ILUNOIS; I 1,r<! lOl.OIVlllg iritlUS Stop Oil Davenport, Muscatine, Ottumwa, Oshaloosa, De* , flap onlv, > . Moines, Wlntenwt, Audulmp, llurlau anil Council, { ' ’ BIu(ft. in IOWA: Ml.nm-apolJii nml St, Paul, In JlIN- i NKSOTA: WaU-rlawn andSiouxFalls. In DAKOTA; j Cttmeinn, SI. Joseph unit KansasCUy; In MISSODIU; j Ormtlm. Ltucolu.VnlrburymatKelson. InXKItRASKA; ■ Atchisun, Lvstvomvurlti, Il-irlon. Tii[(’ku, nutchlnson. ' wiclilt.i, BHlevIlle, Abilene, Ilwlge City, Caldwell, In ; KANSAS; Kingfisher, El Uu:uandMlnco, InIKDIAK ) TKRJU'I-OltV; Denver, CUInradoSprings and FueWo, ; In ('OlAUlAlK’;. Traverwi! newareas o( rich farmfrig . andgrimingluuds, nRurdtnptlic best faclhtlea nfinter- comuiinileatkn tn all towns and cities east and west, I -northwest andsouthwest of Cliicagoand to Paclfioand ttans.occaulosenporls. 1 MACtmriCENT ■ VESTIBULE EXPRESS TRAINS Beading all-competitor* (« iplendor of equipment, between UlICAOt) and DK» MOINHS, roi-NCII, BIA’l'-KSand OMAHA, and between I'lfK’A'it) and DISSVKH, COUiltADOSt-KIKOS amt I-CEItLO, via KANSASCITYnml TOPUCAnml via ST .HWKPIt'. loss DayCVwct.ra, FBEli JJKCI.ISIA'OCHAIIt 'CABS, and lMtaco'SU'opers, with Dining. <Str Service.'. Closecnmiecthmant Denver andCnlnnulnSpring, v,tth diverging railway lines, now forming the neiv ami plcturciftuo STANDARD GAUGE TRANS-ROCKY MOUNTAIN ROUTE Over which nupcrMyeriuvpped trains rtip dally Tintor(HI WITHOUT ( HASOE (« and from Salt LakeCity, Ogden and San Francisco. THE ltOCK ISL a NO la alco the Direct and Favorite Line tomid fromManltou Pike’s Peak and all (tl’tcr nsnlmry and scenicrcMrtanndcltlisandmlnlngdlsiricts<n,€ulor&do. ' DAILY PAST EXPRESS TRAINS FromSLJotcph andKanv.is City to and fromall 1m* ptirtapttowns,citiesandm Don-j,lttSmnhcrnKcbmeka, Kansas and the Indian Territory, Also viaALBHUT !I.I!A' IlOfiTEfromKmica-tCityand Chfcngn toWater* town, Stonx Falls, MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL, ' comiedloiii; fornil {mintsnorthand northwest b.twtca tilt*lakesanil the PacificCoast. For Tickets, Stmo, Folders, or desired Information applytounyCouponTicket.Office in the I'nlted State* orCanada,Oraddress j e m v AGENCYJor^ , Apttrophletof Information and*b */ “ \Martrs, Copyrlgata. tent Jrs*./ ^AddnwMUNN & CO.. s3(U_Bro»<l«uy, JERSEY OALVANIZ^U. STCCi, . F / i s n i s L a m E. 8 T . JOHN , tieh’lManffiCr, ' • ' JOHN SEBASTIAN* Gcn’tTkt. A Pas*.AgU CHIOAOO, ILL. FENCING K fc.- K l f i l t e f ; . Wh *■ font *T>*- Il Ar »;! ilf ( <f lljtMtllfitU • m am i Oohls *ntf «1 th a t lim e wts not ’abh* lo walk acrukv (iiualrrcf « ifinmi * f *, -ECgliitg. He Y ouik L btifoiT* lit* /mil i ntpti h a lfm fa tloiiar boiilt*, that lie t wnfc liliirli beflf’i'V he (*OHliiMli‘(l lo stalwart bridegroom „ , , .. , ancc. who was so dazed and overcome,; use it mill is (o*tl:iy enjoying goeti that he held out oimof Ms own flngera , health. If you have any Thival, 94 , ME6 i *1 v«* T v / A. I ~m£ for the ring wtwn the minister sqid: “ With this ring I thee wed.” Another bridegroom i know lost hls head to sttch a degree that when It came time for him to say: “ L Horace, take thee, Annie,to be my lawful wedded wife,” he said, in no unnaturally toud low : “ I, Annie* take thee, lioraee, to be my lawful wedded wife,” and wEen the time came for him to introduce his bride to some of Ms friends who had hot ye t seen her ho did i t by saying, awkwardly: “Ah. e r-M its Carter, this Is my wife,Mias Ikrton.” calling her by her maiden name. Few men day “ fay wife” easily end naturally the first time they use the words in public. A funny .case was tha t of a bsdly- tirttfed bridegroom who stored blankly At" the minister until asked if no took “ tide woman to be hist lawful, wedded wife,” whoa ho started Suddenly and hastily, and said, in the blandest man- ^ “Ah! beg pardon, wore you speaking tomoT” A village preochor says th a t be once m arrkdatium t Oftepte a t home of \ L iliig o r C’lmsf 'iVoiildtf fry if. \ l c | QiifrkerGiiiii H iir< iflm rlineniifliiio.U g u a ra n te e SKtiafacthui, T ria l ItoHIt-1 F l tilin iA . 'iltt. m ij (rue a t It. G , H idgu ’UyV D riig sto ro , ; 13JU&T ;T he T h !K 8 ; where a BTE&02WG, I.A S T IM G , OT* ■— l I ’E R IO K k ttw la tW r td . ' J» onSAJSSSXtMo doMJ» t ee«e«U ye* -1' H \ proteotacttclosni*,wjUioutlnJary to man at p v S ?.? ;- he»«L Befietwmtl.UmSfatkiieratsr. i AU i n t e n d i n g iP ttfsM u e ftf Shoahlget oar lltottMUd price Bet, lh iw lii| flie luixrtor twl*t eatl w**w , eeA etiw o fd tn ts a t m erit. Ayply* te y ear Soe l*r, e r directly to them eim foetarew , f - The Mnderaiyned h&« itecti duly njtfiolnicd exeettfer nf (he (ailwill Mul tcatnlbtiit nf Jean- setW 38. firr. late of (Irertfe eoultiy, Ohio, tie- All per,nn-i ififietitctl to the entxte ■ are M^SMted t* nuik : imirfedikte payment, and thou? Itsviny clatiaMagaintUha eafno will pre. *est U mis fisly asthestkatul. .to the under, signed..for f|il>**ni*cc. ,TAMKfi II. OUR. Kxeeahnrof Jeannette 1). Orf, deet-seetl. •idUr day 01‘Febrttary IHVt. O ffice of ilirroie & G at . mn , .D ok I pps ill litiu httpeCti, Oolufttluikf ().. . G i ’N tlk . uen —^Ksi ly I hfi spring t»n»» Of OlH- (lOVMfit WAS -Miriuilfil.V lit)Kted by (n-fitg kickfih ' Arstd.-ili -Oil iv»8 fVPbllllllOilflud lO US Hilt! ivn gitvft If H (rlAli Tin* rt’«nlt. wnS uof (»Hly K«ljn- factory, lint aitt*j>i-ising, Tho wound (if-slcd I'Ajrfdiy, fiiut t l i i ‘AnlniHi w jts roAily for «'*« In « few d»j k , fliiice th a t iimo tvo have by {/s nwi t-m-pil “ (httdiifgiiw r tiw lth* «wgMr*haw» liridigttwm * m * { % -Imago bon»n and onded f u pablte | young follow •arocy, which was s e t of km* oontiaw* ] ooaM ha t* ^ h s d ah oa with hls ik ti m m in waa, *af* j im H & b mr** •tg * . flriontiy Wagthy to un M o H«Ht» >aalta bo fh rtto f ** .f* cvXMldnwbhi axwtity out a# Ut* thing. J c U m fitM tA o m ti* adtNtdfaMt, tottui Aoomvttag to kisow* stoyy **jk* hM i t laaaihhw^awaoyaaoo m fafiewt. Ww that ho mlgh-t h*w4 wad* aioi»flaiAlaN»*k>«odl«i»h«^^ m m nRuk m * vM * i£ itm m * * * * * * * * * * * * * - ------->* . ; a iiiiui1>iTt>f mwt-H o f ft-isitdips ant) re- s & x s s k ' # t o r tw ’ s s r rt,;, »•-*-> « ■ * « « » a a ™ wmifl had cusps ofcnrir. idfin OH hi undoithiPtUy (litj henf gun BkH-.k LlufiuettL that' tyo tivcr used; ami,wo adyiao K»i*ini‘i-» amt Ijorsfnimi bi kwpai «Nqd\ of il in, tw if WrbtM #( ill that*. Vynrs ilo- njwpmrtTy, P i t t o a k ffAM.iN.' , Wo.oftbr f iOfifor a rasa ofHeralehrs Arahian Oil will not rum. For. solo ty H. G. Hhlgway. T&elei Jerscj line riiMtiiitf I'tilltmiii lii.iultiTr iitttl 1't.l- ;«w ,SleC|»t*nt iimhliiH t|»ii*k ti»ti»* tn Al- iHiUa.Auviietn: Uit«;tii(.N:iva»iiiiil),!.»t:!’M-'}- v|«*k, litiktt t ity, 'fht*uiflf.vi‘ii‘. t ,-(i!ti-| S5K^&tW^'fi^s;0HAS E. SMITHJS Hiid Alnltniiut. IMmhfiH itif Htorl-t-e to* w * '* * * ^ * JL#* K JJ k * * .^ .* * * w NEW ORLEANS SG.L.P. i l! ♦> 3 ; L* ( *1 Imp. 27 iintir*. Rttfld fraiun wifIv i'nlf- 'maw lIt»ndf<iiv#Jlei'|»iitg rut'-* innhm.s <li i t Dvt<-*ii(ii(‘(:ti>*ii a t Notv t>ih*iii>N u* 5 <ut ,* i m v *,-* t ttitinibua trNlisi(‘i-f*>r I cviik . iMt'SkunlitD ” *v‘ I '.>»»',. 4 CALIFORNIA The only lino •«».TanksMt Vti*!i*.l»:/l-sr, • uiahing Uir.'tt. <(iiit<ii-:tn-.^- ttmt.il,1th nt it, ' l,oulal(iiiti (<n; i»n)lits’ F< H Wtiiiit, *t-.iirs-1 ton, Ou!n Mow,’fox«ot„ Mt-xh-t* ut (t t ;< fot-nia. Tin* eiiort lint- v.illi tin- >.v; ibiliiiiPii ISowdolr Kl«p<iprw t*« h'u*> , mi .> t-oiint flin g w ith lltfotipli i - jii - iim-H :«• At-lteviHc. ifnltliilt im tlfh e t nit Only Ih.p froiiH’i«it‘liiUi*U.t“ < bniitti *< •* caTt-iin. KttH I’liyiit*. Ain., Iitsjtl.tu.5 Mias., Vk-kslittrgli, Xian., NJ im - vpj i . iv . La , 2« iiilh s iha bhorleafct lin ti,t(.,u la ’Sbmtmi, Ky.,.Mi<<uiHqiiifk<rt( ;i;v:u- ita h fo Kiitxvlilt*„.'f<-m»„ liii i:»H * i:.» aiitiripaM’iirciiinati to Af.oma nml ,\n . g n « t;, <lt»„ f (llhtldkthP ftltmlp.if t Ji,t*i> - DStili) A wii J h I ou A1 h , 5K$mi!*-** * w-t t'liicitiiiail to IliriMiUkhi ui. .Abie 1<> lilih'H pfioi-lPtf t'liii-bi.i.iJl 1.. Sltd.ilftWiti’,. ■ • I ratlin Ir-nv# Uurttat UtiiorU'hjFi oi. ’ iihirti; (Mwatshg fiw •FatimftyP(!tt!h' llridgpoAJKoiUtiOty awe) tiHUMii(>s lit*-; Ifoo* oflH'okoiit AioitMaln* F t # laica. 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