The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 27-52
The Cedarville Herald. , W. H . BLAIR, PublUhM . CEDABVTLLE, j i t OHIO. LAUNCHED. N»w. Rifts, bring his comforter; tin thread •nd noodle, too; BU worsted mitts n*ve sprung e leak; his lit tle thumb is through. B is rubbers, Georgia—quick, my boy. you’ll tlr.d ’em ’neath the sink; . B* can't be late to-day, you know; the olook Is fast, I think. Nowgettbo whisk-broom, Elsie, child; the *1- ster momma made Will keep the Coldout famously; the cloth’s » trifle frayed, But I did the best I could with mx old brown cloak, laid aside ' A year aco Thanksgiving day, when your, poor fatberdiod. Bow proud he’d be ot Tcddv now, If he oonld only bco BJs eldest son a-marohlng off a business man tobel * Perhaps he does—porhapa—(my eyes are get ting weak, I think; These things so filled my thoughts last night I couldn’t sleep a wink). And now he’s ready—goodness me, you’re not a going to cry! Just think of all the money you’ll be earning by and by 1 And only think how fine 'twill be to sit there In the store A signing checks at a great big desk six feet above the floor. But ere that time arrives, -mydear—and come H surely will— There's many a rugged' road to plod, and many a rocky hill; There’s many a flagging wayfarer In envy to misguide,. And lead your trusting footsteps down Suooess’ moumaln-sldo. Poor boy, my words are Greek to you; well, kiss me, then, good-bye; Another—and another 1 what, Is mamma going ■ to cry? . • 8he's thinking of tho path through life,she • fondly piianed for you;' Your collego years—the lovely dreams that never can come true. Launched I—God of winds and waves and tides and calms and acoan strifo, Oh. pilot; this, my. precious bark,'safe o’or tho sea ol life; And plant, In my rebellious heart this bloom from wisdom's btore— "Tie only when wo dare not hope thug wo arc truly poorl —Thomas Frost, In N. Y. Herald. A Story of the Late War. B Y B E R N A R D B IG S B Y , Anther of " Ecyal at Last," "H r Lady Fonts*- , tic,” "Ellen’s Oreat EOcrot," "Foil Among Thlovos,'' Etc. Copyright, < 891 , by A. N, Kellogg Newspaper Co.. CHAPTER XII.-CoNTiscKp. • „ Could Frank Besant have followed the current of the Major’# wandering' thoughts, ho would indeed liavo been i startled; for his meditations wero on j the possibility, of 'a man sincerely lov- i ing two women,’with himself ns .an il- | lustration of tho p’-oblcm, and one of I the women, the true wife tho sea. had- j robbed him of. the other—whom he t could only remember as a lovely school girl—-the mother of his young friend and subaltern. Ah, it was her face, not his boy’s, that the lad had reminded him of when ho first noticed him on board the ship going down to St. Louis. “ Pretty Mary Carter," the Major thought, “I wonder what she is like now —wonder if b I io was happy with that fel-' low Bet-ant, who always seemed to me 1 Abit of a prig,—wonder if—" But liis dreams were cut short by Ills noticing the figure of a man creeping stealthily across tho orchard. He first thought it was Charlie Fulton, hut aa the fellow emerged from the shadows into the. moonlit road, he quickly saw his mistake, and a moment after he ' recognized the tall, spare figure of his host. In an instant treachery flashed across his mind like an electric shook, barely Dixon had told him an hour ago that he was so weary ho eonld scarcely keep his eyes open and would his in bed in a few minutes: then what did this midnight ramble mean? Snatching his field-glass from its ease, lie fixed hla eyes on an open bit of road he knew the midnight prowler would shortly Teach. Yes, there he was. A long, shrill whistle like the call of a bird, and a mounted man in Confederate uniform rode np to him. They talked together earnestly and negligently—negligently because they thought themselves too fnr 11 way for observation, but they wero reckoning without the Major’s power ful binoculars. Then tins trooper turned hack up the hill and Dixon ac- •companied him. To snatch his cap nnd pistols and spring froth the win dow was hut tho work of a minute to one whoso active, wholesome life made his flvc-imd-forty-years ns light a bur- £cn as many a man’s of half his age. The drop to the ground shook him a bit, but lie was not hurt, and without stopping do give word of warning to any one, be aitcrted up. the hill, blow he could un derstand Why Dixon hod persuaded him to post dlls sentries on tho north, why this important road was without patrol Or picket, Tho best part of an hour elapsed. “Wake up, boys, quickly and quietly t§ Hake m mb* whatarar— •nr livse depend upoayour silence." It was the Major’s voice. In five minutes his officerswere in bis room. "You see that hill yonder, my lads,* he said, grimly pointing to the cluster ing pines. “Well, just beyond those pretty trees In a little valley lies half a regiment of Confederate cavalry, who ate about to do us the honor of an early morning call. What do you say to onr getting up a little surprise party and anticipating them in their polite atten tions? You think it best, of cou rse- then order your men under arms with out an Instant’s loss—get them out of the church if you can without a sound— and meet me a t the bend of the road yonder." Ah, little do Colonel Hawes and his merry, men, stretched a t their ease on the green sward, snatching a few hours of precious sleep before they shall cap the climax of Jack Lascelles* superb mimicry by peppering the lives ont of those poor devils of defenseless Yanks, know, that two. hundred gleaming muskets, held by the hands of resolute men were pointed on their prostrate forms from every tree around them. Little did they think that even now their careless pickets lay stunned, or gagged and bound a t their neglected posts. Did they sta rt in their sleep and think It was a dream, as the hoarse dbmmond rang out: ‘.’Make ready--Fire! Fix bayonets— Charge!” and two deadly volleys waked the woodland echoes. With wild hurrah the Fighting Fourth were on them. There is no time to even shout surprise; the only sounds, the senifiing of men and tramp of steeds, as a score or two of troopers, fighting like wild-cats, manage to cut their horses loose and flee to the valley below. It-was a grand, glorious little victory —fifty of the enemy killed .and1wounded, over forty prisoners taken,and nearly two hundred horses; with their equipments and ac coutrements, captured, to say nothing of several stands of small arms and two baggage wagons filled with ammunition and supplies. But there was one enemy the gallant Major missed, and him ho.sought for with eager,. vengeful haste—ah, there he goes stretching his long legs like a crane in awkward flight, and making with maddened haste for a neighboring copse. “After him, boys!" tho Major cried, pointing with his sword to .the luckless fugitive, “I ’ll give fifty dollars to the man that brings him back to me. a liv e - alive,'remember,1 for I want to hang him!" . Who would ever have thought the- gentle Major could have made os blood thirsty a declaration — not’ Frank Besant, who gazed in inquiring wonder on his' flushed cheeks and flashing eyes. But the Major’s soul was raging against the hapless wretch’s sustained duplici ty, and, when ho said he intended to hang the scoundrel, he surely meant it. Poor Squire Dixon was. indeed a pitiable sight as he was dragged by two rough soldiers into the irate Major’s presence. “Fling a rope over tho limb of tlm? Vco arid lie him up!" was the stern command. : At first tho poor wretch’s tongue re fused to utter ubjcctprnycrs for pardon, but when in an agony of terror he saw them ranking the fatal preparations a torrent of wild supplications burst from his lips. .But tlie'Major’s face never relaxed a muscle. “String him up, boys!” Already the tnen’s bands were forc ing his neck into the noose, when an other appeal from the doomed man was more effective. “I will give tho lives of.six Union sol diers for my own—six 'Btrong, young t o * yon offer!” U«|«r'HupkiW ' m UL tojiy- “Well, prove your words, a a i I will accept the terms, even though X cheat the devil in giving, you your life,** “And you will let no pne injure me?* “No one; bq t be quick about it or I may change my mind. Where are these men?" “In a cellar under my own house," “I might have thought of that,” the Major said, annoyed to think that the miserable wretch was to escape his righteous punishment. So Mr. Dixon was marched back to his own house, with the rope' still around his neck and his hands tied behind his hock, together with the horses and spoils of war, and the many wounded men, who, though most of them ene mies, were treated with a wonderful tenderness by the rongb soldiers. I t wua even as ' Dixon had said. The men—one officer and five privates of on Iowa regiment—were found, gagged and bound with cords drawn so tightly that their flesh was ent as with a knife. “We had to keep them quiet or you would have heard them," Dixon said, reading the stem inquiry of the Major’s looks. “Unloose his bonds and let him1go before I break my word and brain him where he stands!” Hopkips cried, una ble to control his indignation. Nor was the Major alone in. his wrath, for it was with the utmost difficulty that the officers’were able to restrain their men while the trembling wretch< slunk from their sight. When the rescued prisoners, whose tongues had been so cruelly tied by whip-cord, were able to speak, they were of course asked a hundred ques tions, and among them this: “ I)o you know where Bragg is?" “Yes,” was the prompt reply, “he is off northwards with all the speed he can to Louisville.” “And Buell knows it not!" Major Hop- kin# declared, aghast at the significant importance of the news. So, leaving tho enemy’s wounded to the tender mercies of the citizens of Winstanley, and despatching their own in a baggage wagon.with a small es cort, they mounted their nowly-ao- quired steeds and hurried usfust as they could back to BiielVs army. -feputfaf • I frd ia a a B M M f b t n on a s •arty November uvaalagtoa figure of a homeman might have bee* eeen riding a t a steady tro t along a road which led In a southeasterly direction from Nash ville. Ever and anon ■ the traveler looked back over his shoulder with an expression of anxiety at (ha fair city he was leaving, and then grasping hie bridle with more determination and spurring his, horse to greater effort, as though he were there instigating him self to the accomplishment of some thing he was undertaking in only a half-hearted manner, fixed his eyeBon lights which glimmered in the far dis tance and steadily pursued his journey without permitting any regret he might have entertained to distract him from his purpose. In the trim figure and handsome features of this solitary horseman it Is not difficult to recognize our young friend, Charlie Fulton—but not the gallant, gay, light-hearted lad who marched from Columbus with high hopes and spotless soul, for in the rider to-night we see one whose face is drawn SUE TREMBLED UNDER UIS ARDENT GAZE. m ^ ■ CHAPTER Xin. A LL iro n A. WOMAN, Human interest is always stirred to fever heat by a race, whdthertho com peting objects bo men in the arena, horses on the course or yachts or ocean steamers flying overthe foaming waves, • hut here wiis.a sight that made the dull est pulse heat fast—two armies rushing across a State, as big as a European couutry, in anxious haste to reach a spot that may be a key to pronounced victory. Btagg and Buell with their thousands were tho participators in this1 stupendous straggle, with all tho odds of an early start in favor of tho former, hut the Union General reached the goal first, and so foiled one of the finest ef forts of his astute antagonist, whoso [ record during his brilliant career was second only to Lee’s among the. South ern commanders ns an expert tactician. But though forestalled in his inte.n- tlons, the Confederate-leader-seized the opportunities loft to him, with consum mate skill, flooding tho State with ap peals to loyalty to his cause!, inspiring them by.the presence and boasted suc cesses of his troops to join hi^ standard, and raukiug almost superhuman ef forts to win tho Kentuckians to a declaration of secession. He went further than Lee had ventured to do in Maryland, during even to create a pro visional Governor arid carry into effect a. stringent conscription law “Come into the folds of your brotherhood," was his passionate appeal by jproclama tion. "Cheer us with the smiles of women, aud lend your willing secure the heritage of liberty]’ And even when all tills failed he won success from defeat by turning his de mand for men into one fog, supplies, r&VNglng the rich lands of the northern part of the State with its fertile val leys and greeu pastures, until he hod a wagon-train of supplies fcjrty miles boots, arms,j(two hun with care, one who would even now turn back from the fatal errand he is bent on if something stronger1 than his sense of honor did not drag him; for ward;.and this somethingwas the siren- figure of a woman, for whoso favors he felt a t that moment os if he would barter'his very soul. As themariner of ancient-days looked on Scylla.-and dreaded Cliaiybdis, he knew that he was risking two imminent dangers— being caught as a spy 'and hung, or arrested for treason and shot—but she had sent him word to come, and if a. hundred deaths stood between him and her, for her sweet sake he would dare them all. Hour by hour ho rode, each mile alternately as- ho neared his goal torturing him with remorse or thrilling him with expectation. Ah! there is the signal—two lights burning in a .gnrret window of the, house he is a t last approaching, Has I 10 been there before? It seems so, for ho dismounts and, leaving lffs horse tethered to a treo, advances up the very orchard path down which one meiuor- uble midnight Frank Bdsant fled so hurriedly. And she meets him*. Radiantly beautiful in a dress so per fect that it allows the rounded loveli ness of her exquisite figure to show its graceful lines and stir to the depths of Ids soul the impassioned youtjh as ho gazes a t the undulating form, Worship ing with the fervor of u first love. "You are come,” she says, in an ac cent tremulously musicnl-, “Yet I hard ly thought you would dare another visit.” Slio permitted him to draw her to his breust and imprint a kiss upon the up turned face. __ “Come!” he said. “When you say limnin'trr *ituUUi,rThy sweet one, there is no dan ger I would not dare to do your bid ding.” She trembled under his ardent gaze. Pity for a moment broke the spell that bound her better nature, and,disengag ing herself f romflus embrace Bhe cried, in earnest tones: “No, poor hoy, i t is not too late even now to save you from tho consequences of your rashness. your loug—clothing, ----- ------...----------- - , . . , . dred loads of bacon, six thoifcand bar- Hasten to your horse and aWay as fast . . . . - .,1 . y o n C a n -1 .1 - rp — - l , n - - > . -11 around you. H I® 1 V/fA*-' "FLING A HOPE.OVER THE I,IM» OF THAT tou e !" men in tho vigor of youth for this old, worn-out life of mine!" he cried, with despairing energy. “What do you mean? Speak quickly* scoundrel, or it will be too late!” “There are six Unionprisoners hidden where you can never find them if I die with tho secret on my lips, and where,. if yon slaughter me, they will perish with hunger and thirst, for I alone have fed them, and there will be no one to do it if you murder me.’! “If he fepcalta the triltli there is some sense in that," the Major said, reflect ively. “I t is God's own truth," tho man moaned “If you will give your word to let me go free and unharmed I will tnake a clean breast of it and fell you where they ere. Six young lives for one old one—think of it!" "Yes, and such a worthless one as rcls of pork, two thousand Worses and eight thousand beeves, and a$ this vast array of booty ho dispatched in safety southward. Then, when this valuable feat was accomplished, I 10 sullenly be gan a retrograde movement with Buell, whose delay had fretted the gallant troops he led almost beyond endur ance, In tardy pursuit. Day \>y day the Union forces followed the jretreating host, when on the 9th of October, as they reached* the village of ^’erryville, Bragg turned upon them wfth sudden fury, and fighting from noon till eve, so crippled his pursuers that when darkness came on was allowed un- s plunder s actions molested to escape with all li to Chattanooga. » lu judging General' Bud during this campaign* it is but fair to remember that many! of“ti|s failures were due to unavoidable misfortune and false information, aud t b i t he was pitted against a leader of exceptionable high qualities; hut popular {opinion did not stop to weigh these considerations, so on the last day of the satric month ho met the fate so oftejn accorded to tho unsuccessful General, deprivation of command. Thomas had refused to re place him, soKosecrans, wlipsc brilliant carder in West Virginia had'alrendy be come a matter of history, wqjs appointed to this important command; and under these now auspices tlio Fighting Fourth with the rest of the army found them selves once more a t Nashville. Tho dusky shades of night wero fast lengthening and the sun bad set in ? V- ride. Treachery Is all I, even I, have dug the pitfall for you. Fly, if you would save yourself from harm and me from mad ness; for your grand devotion has touched my heart aud I could almost lohre you,” ’.“Almost! I thought-" {“Hush!” But the warning came too late; a dozen stalwart forms, springing from the shadows of tlio trees, surronnd the yciung man, who, stunned by the girl’s revelation, yields without A blow for freedom. yAnothcrcaptive to your fascinations, Mips Lascelles,” the officer in charge of tho party says, with more mockery than sinjeerity. “Your beaux j/ewz are more ef fective than our rifle-bullets." < MAnd just as cruel!" alio muttered, biti crly, as she Watched them lead her vicl im to the house.- “Fool tha t I am, if n fter all, t’werehimandnotthe other one Hove." O ncomore Charlie is on the rood, with his Horse’s head turned not to Nashville but to Murfreesboro, and . not alone non , but with a gay company of jolly fellmws, who, though they guard lfim well, trea t himwith a consideration that woe Id rob Us capture of its sting, if he wer e not so dazed with the discovery that 1 he was delivered Into bondage by the Jgiri he loved; and, poor, infatuated lad,;he felt that oven now he could not shako himself free from the chains W her ]fatal fascinations. Vro b » oomutuxs.] PERSONAL AND IMPERSONAL —Minister Fred Douglass lias a ii«^, some home in Anacostia. a pretty «*, nrb of Washington, and he says i* would much rather live there than i* HaytL —During th a t three-months’ night up in Greenland Mrs. Peary does not pro. pose to sleep all the time. ISho will' mount specimens, read, ai d also lead the musicals, which will be a fumoui feature of the trip, for every member of the’ Peary party plays a different musical instrument. —Queen Natalie lately sent several very fine wreaths of laurel and ever- green, with bunches of white flowers, for the adornment of' the graves ot those who fell in the disorders result* ing from her enforced expulsion; hut the police refused permission to deposit them on the fresh tombs. —In admitting tho exceptwnal supe riority of certain long words in forcibly expressing an idea, Herbert Spencer suggests th a t one cause of their ad vantage may be tha t a long word al lows the hearer’s consciousness to dwell upon the quality predicated, a longer time than when a short word is used to: express.the same idea. —It is said tha t this season the men a t Bar Ifarbop carry dress to even more, extreme fashion than do the women They array themselves in tennis suits of bright and giddy color, and parade tho Tow Path in caps of every shade and shape, while the gorgeous ties and unique, canes they affect are more “conspic” than any toilets the women have exhibited. —Carl Schurzhas great^ gaunt hands, biit they are very artistic in perform ance and more delicate than the touch of a WOman when they wander over tho ivory keys of the piano. There is probably no amateur pianist in the country equally gifted with the German collego professor, who, after a few years in tins country, became a mem ber of a president’s cabinet: - —The most unhappy period of mar riage, according to French divorce sta tistics, is for the period extending from the fifth to the tenth year. After that tho figures drop rapidly. Only twenty- eight per cent, of couples seek divorce between their tenth and twentieth years of union. Only one pair in a hundred seeks to cut the knot after the period over thirty und under forty years. —A Rhode Island man is having a serious time keeping track of his meals. He maintains th a t his first meal was his breakfast, and that his subsequent dinners, suppers arid breakfasts should follow in order. Thus, when ho has missed a dipuer and supper on one day, the first meal of the following day was Ids dinner and the noonday ritcal his supper, llis reckoning seoms a little odd to his neighbors, but he is sure ho isright. ______ “ A LITTLE NONSENSE.0’ ■--“What is tho use? >. Wo can't mah^ the car go any faster.” '-“ Ifeel as though’ I had been in it a week.” “What’s that?” “Why,'I just heard the conductor tell that man he’d been on this car three years.’’—Philadelphia Times. —Plenty of Visitor# —Hyman. “Your noighors don’t seem to call on you very often, Crawford.” Crawford ‘Oh, yes, they do. collectors and a deputy sheriff JKnfjbecn here nlrcndy this morning. "-Aflitrtrday'Even- ing Herald. * jiftAn Eyo to-Economy.—“If you must know, tria’am," said tho doctor, “your husband won’t live twenty-four hours.” 'Goodness gracious!" ejaculated tho heart-broken woman, “and hcrcyou'ro gone and prescribed medicine enough for five days."—Philadelphia Times. —Ho Was a Specialist.—Miss .Mabel (to young M. D;)—“And what particular brunch of the profession do you prac tice chiefly, Dr. Shinyscam?” Dr. Bhinysoam (a little sadly)—“At pres ent, Miss Mabel, I am making a speci alty of vaccination eases.”—N. Y. Times. —A certain elderly lady in the audi ence a t the commencement exercises caused a ripple of aiuuscmcnt in her immediate vicinity. Beading the names of the graduating class, which, asusual, were in Latin, aho exclaimed in a stage whisper to her friend: “Why, I didri know they were all foreigners.’’—Lew iston •fournaL —A Name to Conjure With.—“Cotild you publish a volume of poems for me?” “Certainly, sir," answered tho publisher, "bu$ the terms will depend upon whether your name is well known 1 or not." “Oh, tny name bone of the best known in the country.’’ “Andyon so young? Pray honor me with it. sir.” “My name is Smith,’—Flicgeniie lilacf-l ter. —“How did your revival, over nt Apache Gulch pan ont?” “Wei!," answered tho Arizona evangelist. wasn’t-exactly a success. At the thirlj meeting I happeuod to say that I fcH lieved Apnche Gulch was the wickcdorll place of its’size on earth. After thstI my words fell fiat, It was the firalj time the town had over been -ratedasr first-class in anything, and they didnlj care to lose the distinction.”— Indiana?* olis .Tournab - - I t is related of the late Hr. Ilodfisi] of the Princeton Theological scmb.VI that ho once asked a ctai'cnt for tW dcilnition of 'eternity. The slndoiW after some hesitation, replied used to know tho definition, hut ' forgotten it. ‘tOh, my, my, my!"**' claimed Dr. Hodge, bringing his k down forcibly upon the tabic, ’ whst calamity! The only man in the uoivefi that over knew What otcrc'.*!'-?* forgotten."—Morning 8 *.v. ' HOUSEHOLD BREl a plot, dessert dish ofJ by creaming togetbel -Jb a tte r with two ounces three eggs and thij chocolate, adding 1 iL.tcn whites of the eggs wtered mold-—N. Y. Woj _To test the puritj reods, wet your finger ai maunder side of the hne»J «jd unmixed with cotton P through a t oncp; it mixed| looker to become damp, tains no linen a t all it vj through at all. -JTo take iron rust out o^ ppnr a teacupful of boiling 1 the goods tightly across then pour on a little <Sf tlm , oxalic acid dissolved ft with the eml.of a spoon 1 If ^ does,«uut come o,ut down into the hot water Homestead* —Spiced Cookies.—Twol caps sugar, ope cup seedcj currants, three-fourths cun teaspoon each of cinnamon! meg, mace and allspice, Spoons water, two tablesj powder. Use flour to malcel Boll it tbin and bake in a <J Housekeeper. • —Potpourri.—Fry sfighll veal, then mince it. very fin some egg plant; a few L | little corn finely cut, a U jgausbroom, tomato, potato| ' ^chopped fine. Mince all slump of butter, put it id fry i t All the vegetables ] viously cooked. .If you! chicken, lobster, crab, etc! add to the dish.—Detroit M —Indian Light Cake.—Oa ,dian meal,, one pint of mil one teaspoonful of butter, { one teaspoonful of dissolvj Mix-the butter and salt w| boil half the milk, add ' 1 saleratus and the eggs, afl been well beaten, to thl half of cold initlr. Pourf milk over the meal and! Then add the cold milk aif Bake it in a shallow Budget —In dwelling houses ligj a frequent renewing of great importance. A singl will consume far more oxy| duce more carbonic acid 1 the atmosphere; of a rooml eight candles. If, thereto* eral burners are used, no ] made for the escape of t air and for the introduction! from without the health habiting such an apartnncj essarily suffer. —Boiled Rice.—Wash ha rice,throw It into one quart ] ter containing, two teaspo idboil it fast ten minutej blander, saving the ivat ith next day; raeantim| 'pot with sweet drippings, back in it, cover it and set| on the top of the stove, oven and let it stand •swell; bo careful not to addition of a very little 1 molasses, nutmeg, lemon; and pepper, will give it dif and vary tin: taste.—Sprinl lican. W-, ttoO----------- COMBINATION Suggestions For Making N#J , Costumes. If possessed of a strl checked skirt th a t is in g l and tho bodice to it worn f it into a fan-plaited buckj box-plait.-with a plain frJ and a bias ruffle gatherel at tho top to form its which reaches to tho 1] each side. For the bod! basque of one of the darl the skirt* using either cloth, camel’s-h&ir or 1] an edging round the nd lower part of the basqtuJ of gilt and silk gimp, 'll ho made very drossy by square or V»shapcd' pi as! plaits, which may be wh the light shades of the L basque of black silk or ll light-cream brocade f ning dress for a ffln! ve several changes by] different skirts. < Coats and pointed h i Woolen goods are wor and skirts of figured mnl basques and a bias ski rtf Saline, faille or silk br! «pan old-fashioned HI its owner will scarcely respondents asking *og old silk gown# adding the brocade, a L set ^and silk cord anti white or light-colored taay ho strapped acrossl menteric, if the drea Judy, i t la a pretty idea l, low in the neck and fill] o ' China silk, surah the low neck and wif galloon. This is cqiuf dresfey woolen gown t nouse. Entire sk irt frl of figured material basques and plaitedl fabric. i ■ „ 1*- * weiingly On Are you aware nir,’. j r 1* fiercely, “th sl *• poking mo in the eyJ I " " k o ’fc my timbrel IJuan in front, with eqt! I* OO:rowed one, Rir,"*J ■M
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