The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 27-52

L . . . Stick to # may havu tQ w a ifW hat nftVQ‘ l)etn year* 3 6 always bo cleared I F o r all tbo disease* peculiar to woman- je’a Favorite Pr®.t |eurest and speediest m depend upon that ao is obstinate, give jorating, restorative ig ana strengthen' a positive _specific esses and ailments, disturbances, painful d derangements are rod by it. AHunnat* ' bearing-down eensa- V, accompanied with kindred symptoms; In every case for mended, “ Favorite guaranteed to give1 the money is re­ other medicine for n such terras.' That ihing else offered by , fbe “ just as good.” lacks of beauty Jmpness.” . frequent thought, / some one. |baby's beatify is l id nearly all ofa |we know it as limples. lpness has to do is told in a little | e f u l l i v in g ; sent ■ fou rather be * lutiful? “Both” fr answer.. . hsmuts, ija Southjth Avacut, •Scot*EoiiUw*,t,fcrf.Ur«r “ wbersdo. $i. |SfozaacUPishes-. tea se of Fullness rxojf, P adt . ra ENERGY, formal ClrcuUtkm, sad n o To* Tm. INC CO., tt. tosh, MS. ►AT lift* (itm Mfiaritit 1*twwnor «*rw1ietaM*«I wsmt U c M.*] ■rkttthMkmkVMyaice 1 r.»r*w- , w« w»(T«ft VErj Wsb ■ran*! Mu** »l **crf H M W t r tHrt, »us iMk* * m 4sayKJsfcsf ijS driP ' Ifr., Metteo, M * m > THE BATTLE FIELD* foo led ©X MOSBY, 1^ tlve Cunhitml* 0*1 tk* r»d«r*l I’dMWprA and **»<*#* 1UI4. , ♦‘Tbo man with the oqolest nerval MHrmeti’' Raid Col. A- B.8elfert, who in a reminiscent mood, recently, «WM Col- John 0. Mosbjylate a 8. A. 11 rs*a high private at Harper'* Ferry alien that place waa 1captured by <H^eewalV Jackson In 1809U After diking for some time loir our exchange ea were ordered down to Fairfax Court goue, Va., where we were on the look- #*1 for Mo»by. . «Dne cold, dear night in February, Igtf, I was on picket duty on the War- r«oton roadi I had peat twa I was Waking my post almost on the double qnfclr. trying to keep warm, when I jiMirda troop of cavalry coming down hn Warrenton road at a quick trot, *. They were stopped by the man on post ebe all right and then dune down on n y p o s t' ■ . ■ . ■* “When they cameelose enough to me I halted them. , ‘‘friends with the countersign," woe {he answer to my challenge. “ ‘One man dismount and advance : with the countersign,’ , was ray next . command. . .:‘ ; "A well dressed officer dismounted andadvanced to the point o f my bayo­ net arid gave the countersign ?Ja­ maica.' ■■ . . - " .... . :• " ‘Countersign correct,' I shouted. , *Pass on.’ \ , . ■■: ■ "There were about three hundred o f them; a motly crew in appearance, but .they were a jolly lot, singing, talking and laughing. They passed on, and in due time I was relieved and soon was ' sound asleep,'' ‘ "Early the nextmorning the sergeant of.the guard roused me up and told me . I was wanted at headquarters. In ■. charge of an orderly I went. "When I , got there, the man who was on post -one was ahead o f me. He was ushered into the presence o f Gen.. Alexander ‘‘Hayes, our commanding officer, and . when he came out I went in. ; “ ‘You had post two'at----- last night? demanded the generaL " T had, sir.’ “ Tell me about the troop of cavalry that passed your post. ’ " I told him what had happened. ." ‘Well,’ he said, grimly, ‘you played the deuce,Vtrad lie dismissed me. “ I discovered pretty soon that the men I had passed were Mosby’s com: maud with.Mosby at their head. They had iridden through the entire camp, takc-n the tent o f one o f the general officers, mounted him on a male and escaped with him to the confederate lines. "How did he get the password?, We found out that afterward. At one of the outposts was the rawest kind o f a . raw German, While he was on picket duty a man dressed in a captain’s uni­ form With the red sash of the officer o f the day across his breast ap­ proached liim, He challenged aud the officer responded. • “ ‘Officer o f the day with the counter. sign.’ ■■■. ■ ■ • ■ ■ “ ‘Advance and give the countersign.* "The officer advanced arid gave a, word which was not the correct One. “ That’s not right,’ .said the sentinel, ’‘and you can’t pass.* . “ After considerable wrangling, the irfQcer insisted that his word was right, exclaimed, angrily, ‘What word have you got?’ The man said, ‘The sergeant to f the guard gave me the word' ‘Jamai­ ca,’ and nobody can pass withoutit* f /'T h e officer whs no other than Moaby mselt He had all he wanted, and sitingfor night, get his men together 'and made the successful raid. . “ For cool nerve i t beat anything I ever hoard of."~N . Y « Herald. STORYO F t h e s a b e r . Reminiscence*Htlrred Up by the Vote* o f . a Bogle. “ Did yon hear that?" I listened, and after a moment it came again—some one on the street sounding the call o f "Boots and Saddles’* oil a bugle, I t wasn’t well done, hut it had something of the old familiar ring—something to make the blood leap faster. "I couldn’ t help bnt rattle about," said the saber, as the notes died away. "It’s a quarter o f a century since I've heard those notes, and yet it all comes hack to me in a Hash. I hear the com­ mands ‘Prepare. to .mount!’ ‘Mount!’ and once more 1 am jogging alongside of a trooper’ s leg." “ Doyon remember when I got yon?" £ asked. “Of course I d a I was hanging in the kitchen o f * farmer’s house at Brandy Station, V a , arid yon bought me for two silver dollars. That was so soon after the war that I hadn’t time to rust, You can’t find many “ C, S. A." belt-plates around thess days, I reckon?" "They are very searee; what’a your story?" ■ "That o f a thousand other aahVra You’ve heard o f Stuart,. the Chevel.ar, aaoiir boys used to oall him? Well/1 had the honor to make that famous ride around Mc’CIellsa’* army with him, That Whsmy first active service, 1belonged t o a eaptaht, aa yoririan see, end he knew h ow to handle me Well, Yon remember when Stuart was killed. Well, on that day my captain wee beset by three troopers St once, bnt we won a victory. The very first down-stroke he made cat oris o f those som eon ss- befe slick in halves, and at his first •point* it was driven throngh a troop*; er’a body, tfghl Makes me shiver to ♦htnk of it) Poor Binart! I saw strong men weep like children that day when they heard o f his fatal wounding. Ever «p the Shenandoah valley?1.* “ Yea." “Well, after a time, roy captain was transferred over there, and f waa car­ ried up and down until 1 knew every crook and turn o f the highways. My osptsln wa* killed over, there- in a skir­ mish, and a second lieutenant of1cav* aliy somehow got hold o f me. This was promotion backward*, bu tlaooa t o ®ut he li^| iM ng«k and skill. It wasn’t over three rijmnths, though, before he was ehso kUted^' and from thence on 1 had a aozen owners. ^ ^■•Idthe cavalry, infantry, and aw tUlery by times and I alwayavgot around in time for-ell the big fights. YouMreJraird of FlteHugh Lee?" , . -“ And!;Wide.Hampon?” , •. ‘ *0f .oOnrae*’’ ; ' ».• . ... ■ . “ WelL at diftefent times 1 served un­ der both. The night Gen. Jackson was killed at PhaucbllovsviUe, I wasn’t a quarter o f ajidile away. Wasn't thata terrible blow to ns? They kept the news from U* as long aa they could, hut when ithecameknowneomamen look* ,ed white and scared, j and Others hid their faces and wept. You were at Gettysburg, «.f course? Bather hot work there, eh?,When Custer drove at us, thinklngto get, hold of our wagon- train, I had ,the honor of giving one o f ‘you *uns’ a slash across.the face which wade him a homely man for the rest of his life. You men under Custer fol­ lowed ns oyer the mountains. Lands! but didn’t it rains as Lee began.to fall' back? We turned on yon two or three times and left the road full o f dead; but our orders were to fall back to the river. Did you make the Wilderness campaign?” • “ Yea” . “ What a place was that for two mighty armies to grapple! I.had got into the infantry again, and this time a major had me. He was among the first killed and before ndon the captain o f a battery had me buckled -around him. I changed ^owners three times before Lee finally stood at bay and prepared to dole oiit the. blood o f the confederacy until the last drop was gone. Ah! those were grim and grewsome days. In and around Petersburg were barefooted captains and ragged colonelB, and there were days when even a brigadier could not get- full rations. Outside of the army there were those who could see the beginning of the end, but we in it never gave up hoping. It was hope and fight, fight and hope, and even when the calamity came we couldn’t compre-. hend it Wo always believed ‘Uncle Robert’ would find.a way out of it, but the day finally came when he had done, all that human hands could do. Ap­ pomattox! Ah! it hurts, and yet why Bhottld it? We had done better than the veterans of Napoleon, and when we laid down onr -arms not a cheer was heard from yonr legions. You. felt how it was, and you had only kind words. It. was always ‘Yank* and ‘Johnny’ with us at the front and if the politicians had kept away we’d never felt the bitterness that came later on, O, well, that’s all in the past, and what’s gone is gone. I wouldn’t have said a word, you know, but that bugle woke mo up, and for just a minute I seemed to hear the old yi! yi! yi! again, and to feel the-exultation of a cavalry charge.’’-—M. Quad, in N. Y. World. . RETREATING COMMANDERS. Tile Only Time Gen. Grant Ever Showed the White Feather. On the evening before the battle at Fort Henry In 1803, Gens. Grant; McCler- n&nd and'Smith went on board tho Cincinnati about dusk to hold a confer­ ence with Admiral Footo. * While they were in the cabin thegun­ boat Conestogii, which had been recon- noltorlng up the river to ascertain whether the channel ws* clear, came alongside the flagship and unloaded on the sh. p’s “ fan-tail” a huge torpedo wbich ahe had pulled from the water above, says the Youth’s Companion The “ fan-tail*! of these ironclads was clear space at the stern ot the boat nekr the water’s edge; from its extrem­ ity rose the iron end of the gun-deck, to be reached by a ladder. When the conference was over the officers descended the ladder to this fan-fail, and as- they were about enter­ ing their rowboat the torpedo attract­ ed their attention. Gen. Grant expressed a wish to see its mechanism, and ao the.ship’s armorer waa summoned, and soon ap­ peared with monkey-wrench, hammer shd chisels. Its iron head waft remov­ ed, disclosing another, terminating in a cap with a screw-head. The examin­ ation was growing interesting and every Officer bent closely Over the dead­ ly contrivance. Ths esp was unscrewed and suddenly allowed vebt to a quantity of gas, probably generated from the wet pow­ der. It rushed out with a loud, hissing noise, arid on the Instant two officers threw themselves face downward on the declo , Admiral Foote sprang with the agil­ ity o f » Cat up the ship’s ladder, follow­ ed , with commendable enthusiasm by Gen. Grant.' Beaching the top and realising that the danger had passed, the admiral turned to Gen. Grant, who waa displaying more energy than grace in his first efforts on Aship’s ladder, and said, with his quiet smile: •‘General why this haste?” “ ThAt the navy may riot get ahead o f us,” as quietly responded the general, turning to go down. k _ k A fftr this little interruption the busi­ ness o f examining^ the torpedo con­ tinued.---Military i Xtsays and Recol­ lections. . HOUSEHOLD BREVITIES, ' —Perfumed oil sprinkled on library shelves, such as oil of olives, will pre­ vent mold oa. books. . —Peach Cookies.—Two sups of white anger, one «up pf batter, two eggs, fix tablespoonfuls o f water, oae teaspoon­ ful of soda, fir# enpa o f flour, flavor with extriset o f peaoh,—Detroit Free Press ' ■ —Creams*!Apple Pie.—Strain stewed apple*, sweeten and flavor! to taste. Vfjten opld, #dd three egge to a pint of apple,viand., a tesuupful o f whipped cream. Beat all together, and hake k> one crust—Demorest’s Magazine. ■ ' —Qatmeal Muffins.—Oae cupful o f oatmeal pudding, one cupful o f bolted wheat flour, on* cupful of milk, one egg. Bake in muffin rings or gem pans This is a delicious breakfast dfsh, especially when eaten with baked sweet apples and cream.—Good House­ keeping, . . —A long-box-seat fitted into the bay window in a bedroom furnishes an ad­ mirable place for dresses, oto. (If made at least twentv-eight inches wide!, and it would provide a comfortable lounge also; if the top were well stuffed, up­ holstered and supplied with a large square pillow.—N. Y. World. • —Cream Candy.-—Take one. pound of white sugar, one tablespoonful of vinegar, one teaspoonful of lemon ex­ tract and one teaspoonful of erfeatn-of- tartar. Add a little water to moisten the sugar, then boil until brittle. The, extract should b eyadded just before turning the mass quickly out 'on but­ tered plates. When cool; cut in squares. —Ladies’ Home Journal. • —Apple-tartlets With Cream.—Cnt out as many rounds from threefold puff- paste as will be required. Place them in tartlet pans and lay in each some chopped apple and a little sugar. Bake them in a moderate oven; when cooked, let them get cold. Whisk up a little cream very Btiff, add a lemon. Just be­ fore wanted, place a little cream ori the top of each tartlet and two little strips o f red currant jelly in the form o f a cross. Serve on lace papers—House­ keeper; - , —To make lip salve that has been sold .in larger quantities than any other1such pomade known, take two ounces of oil o f lemon, one ounce of white wax and one ounce of spermaceti. Melt those ingredients to­ gether and, while warm, add two ounces of rose water and one-half, ounce o f orange-flower water. This is a most excellent article. The lips are liable to excoriation and chaps which often extend to a seriously.uncomfort­ able depth, the trouble being usually oc­ casioned by cold. The above solve will be found efficacious in correcting these evils—Detroit Free Press . —A delicious pudding and one quite easily prepared/ may be made a la Charlotte Busse with a filling o f ice­ cream and quince or -wino- jelly. Line small charlotte russe forms with lady fingers Mask them all over the inside with a nice wine jelly or with quince jelly. Fill them with any suitably flavored ice-cream. This dessert may he prepared at a moment's notice by purchasing the ice-cream and charlotte russe forms of cake at * French baker’s In combination with wine jelly, It Is a much greater hovelty than charlotte russe and altogether a delicious dainty.—N. Y. Tribune. FASHIONS IN JEWELRY. New anil Unique Deulgns In Silver and Gold. Telegram blanks in block are pro­ vided with silver mounted holders Baby spirals and garnots set in squares and centered with’ gold are used as queen chains. A white polka-dotted enamel bow rimmed with gold is the most chic fast­ ening imaginable for a watch. . A very pretty stick pin is°a serpent with a jeweled eye, the ball of which is carried down and forms the pin. . Glove stretchers o f stained Ivory are confined at the points of intersection with ornamental bands of silver g ilt The most popular necklace has alter­ nate stones, ruby and diamond, or em­ erald and diamond, dropping from a narrow gold tape. ■ Rosewtood boxes mounted with brass are equipped for the card table with counters, cards, chips, stowed away in luxurious receptacles. Funny little pot-shaped match boxes are one half silver and one half glass. Through the glass a small landscape appears Half across the top is the acratcher. Small gold wish-bones used for stick pins are in great force as presents to bridesmaids. Occasionally a diamond is found hanging between tho bones, and sometimes they are combined with horse-shoes.—Jewelers' Circular. Glass Fi ling For the Teeth. Persona who object to the oohapicu- onsness of gold filling when it Is placed in the front teeth may now have their dentists use a substance which resem­ bles the teeth so closely in color that its presence can he detected only by a close and careful examination, This neift filling Is a kind o f glasa and la the invention of a German- It was put oh the market only • ahort time ago. hot It has been used enough to prove that the idea la is capital one. The glass oomes in the form of a sand, which is made o f nine different tint* These hues range from a brightwhite through varlbttsyoltowa to » kind of pale pink. Generally a set a teeth will have about the oolor o f one o f the ten klndaoi sand, hut to have the two exactly th* same It may ha necessary to mix twe shades,—H. Y. Tribune. IN WOMAN'S BEHALF. WOMEN IN ART. . Always m Good Openls? for Girls -Who Have the Ability and .Energy. > „ In the rush toward things artistic to­ day, too many "persons unfitted for the career adopt the profession of anartist, with a light heart; that, as year* roll on, too often grows to be a very heavy one, Before deciding whether one's taste for dabbling in paint or plaster is likely to putlagt the jjec***arjdru<]gery of the first years qf study, it is well to he quite sure that not only the will but the power it there- Usually the first efforts of 'a girl, who shows some knack o f handling brush or pencil, are greeted witUa chorus of praise; those who know better withhold the sharp criticism the prentipe’a attempt* de­ serve; while those who do not know in? siet that with such genius it would he a shame to remain content with mere common-place pursuits. Bothe victim to circumstances listens greedily to prophecies of future fame and fortune, and decides to become another Rosa Bonheur. In rare cases the decision is right, and both the .individual rad the world g ain thereby. But in the large majority o f failures one wishes that some kindly friend could have Btayed the waste of time and energy by telling the truth in time. To decide whether a clever girl has or has not tho talent—without which success-is impossible, or, at best, dis­ honorable—is not easy. If she tuibis to friends and acquaintances, their polite­ ness forbids plain speaking; if she ap­ proaches a local tericher, the chances are that the natural eagerness to secure another pupil makes himdiscern hidden talent where otherwise he worild fail to find it. Nor is it easier to obtain valuable advice from a ,stranger; it-is a serious responsibility to stay the career of one who may be great some day, and so, mindful of the romances o f un­ appreciated genius, wo all shrink from saying—’ ’You have no shadow of. a chance of eminence as an artist; aban­ don the attempt wholly.” ■ To begin, with, their is no royal road to art; genius alone can not paint a great picture. Knowledge of drawing and anatomy; skill in technique, in brush-work and the laying on of color are all gained only by hard arid seri­ ous study. To copy good paintings is a help; but nothing replaces the teacher, A serious objection to many artschools is-that the level of the class is lowered to avoid showing the. utter incompe­ tence of the worst The first steps are made too easy, and when a spurious fa­ cility is gained, the young miss (or master) sallies out to conquer the' world. Possibly a dealer buys a few sketches; personal friends offer small commissions, and the student's head is turned. Ignorant of her own want of knowledge—the. deepest of all ignor­ ance—she paints daubs that defy every law o f art, but attract a certain class of admirers; and so, content with her be­ ginning,. goes on to find a younger novice forestalling her, and tho ap­ preciation of those worth having, lost forever. What has been called a "divine dis­ content” is at once the artist's sorrow and crown. The ideal aimed at must always be far ahead of the result; satis­ faction, beyond a certain point, with one's finished work is the deadliest in­ dication of all. If before a great paint­ ing a young artist secretly fcelB she could paint as well, in one caso out of a million shemay lie right; but in the others it is a dead certainty -that both the humility of real genius and the genins itself aro lacking. But besides the lack of that supreme talent men call genius, there are other secondary qualities that must be hers who would succeed in art Of these, a power of steady application, a keen ob­ servance of natural facts, a love o f na­ ture, and real delight in color and the ’beauty of things seen as well as things painted, are among the most important; but energy, patlcnco and study can alono make them fruitful. . Difficult as it is to ascertain whether a beginner ha* solid reason to hope for success, there are a few rough and ready tests that, if unflirichingly ap­ plied, would weld out the most hopeless incapables. Note first whether the would-be artist is clever at copying, or tries to Invent her pictures. If her sketches are full of eveiy technical fault and yet ahow honest attempts to draw or paint rirhat she sees, there is room for hope. If, however, her pic­ tures are all mere copies of the work of other artiste, though done ever so well, they prove nothing; beyond the lower faculty of Imitation, that is only a small part of the equipment of ari artist " Such an one may go to nature and yet paint iter scenes after a previously learned formula. If all her sketches— gray days or sunny days, autumn or spring—have a similar chromo-like col­ oring, it is proof positive that the vision of the real artist has been denied her. The choice of subjects is another test A real artist makes everything paintable; the most unpromising soene has its rare moments of beauty, and, like the smile on a homely face, may be lovely at times. The amateur is al­ ways trying to make pictures; the real artist is satisfied with half a dozen rough lines, If she grasps the essentials o t the fact she wishes to note. The stndy needed Is not to be put away with the easel and palette at the art school, but continued always; jotting down stray memoranda in pencil or color, noting the effects of atmosphere and color under every condition. That a course o f tuition at a good school of art is essential to success, goes without saying. In default of working In the studio of a first-rate painter—almost iuHKNsihl* in this country—It la tit* only way. Iflatter this, some years o f study at P a r lo r Munich is not within roach, ft should be mad* *°i tof th* energy that overcomes the apparently impossible, is, in itself, not far off genius . Suppose after every effort to gauge her capability, the beginner feels justi* fled in accepting the riaka aud toils o f a professional career; then, if she be wise, she will at the same time prepare for non-snccess, although ahe strain every effort to deserve, it, for even granting absolute genius, commer­ cial -prosperity does not necessarily accompany it, Ths highest prices rarely ^11 to ths beat painters; wrimight say, during their lives, never, were It not that fortunately a few in- . stances to the contrary have existed and still exist. Therefore, it will be wise for her to study the marketable every-day branches of art, that an*ln- come may he always fn h*rpov£er,-even if her best pictures fall to selL The im* portanco of this can hardly be overesti­ mated. To become a teacher is the en -. forced alternative of almost every fail* ure as an artist. Yet to teach well re­ quires as much talent .as to paint ryelL . Not that every good instructor must be ' able to paint as well as she teaches; but she must have the appreciation of good work, and the unerring certainty o f critical insight that is at least half the ' qualification for a good artist Apart from the question whether it is honest to.be paid for imparting knowledge to others that the so-called teacher lacks herself; it is certain that an incapable instructor is not likely to turn out cap­ able pupils But if the art of design be studied thoroughly, and one of the many tech- . nical crofts that belong to the art mas­ tered at the same' time, then, with a permanent source of livelihood secured, the chances of the future may be faced. . Every day sees a wider market for in­ diAtrial art; girls who can paint flow­ ers or sketch a more or less common­ place landscape, are here in thousands. Nobody wants such work. The prices paid by wholesale dealers for "hand-painted” trifles are an insult to thos^ who are .compelled to accept them or starve. But the capable designers are few; the girls who can invent a work­ ing pattern for a c&rpet or wall paper, who can create a bold and striking de­ sign for a bill poster, who can master the technicalities of etching or lithog- rapliy, or make effective illustrations for a trade catalogue or an advertising circular, are not likely to become bur­ dens on their friends. ' High art is a noble aii but the true artist is less degraded by cepting pay­ ment for a pattern fora floor cloth or the hand bill for a patent medicine seller, than by receiving alms from friends who buy, otherwise unsaleable pictures, out of pure charity. It may be that the art student has no feeling for design and is incapable of produc­ ing the simplest original pattern. Then let her essay portraiture and try if she can catch a "speaking likeness;" here, even if commissions [fail, her skill will make her 'valuable to photogra­ phers to finish their enlargements in crayons or colors In short, the advice, sums itself up in one sen­ tence—b e ' practical! The world does not want more than a limited number of pictures, but for, patterns, illustra­ tions and such things, the demand is unlimited. The rapid growth of pho­ tographic processes may have injured fatally the art of wopd-culting, steel engraving and many of Qio finer arts; hut it 1ms increased tho need for pic­ tures. Every day see* more use o f il­ lustrations, more effort to produce new decorations and new -shapes in all man­ ufactured articles. ' The art student who aspires to paint masterpieces the ' world shall accept with acclamation, should determine at the same time that if her well-meant ambition fail, she will at least have a trade to fall back upon; art would not suffer thereby, and the artist would escape the degradation of failure that sours the aging years of so many who set out so gaily to con­ quer its supreme heights. Above all, let ber eschew the sc-called artwork of the amateur. More or less idle people may decorate tambourines, milking-stools and bric-a-brao general­ ly, with more or less well-painted stud­ ies of flowers; hut between such thing* and real art of the humblest sort, an impassable gulf 1s fixed; that once the true mission of the artist is undertaken, teay never be retraced withont peril.— Gleeson White, in Ladies’ Home Jour- uah - NOTES FOR THE WOMEN. Anoitt 8,500 women are employed in the British post office, or one to every eight men employed, M rs . E lizabeth T hompson , the phil­ anthropist is the only woman who haa received the freedom of the house of congress, a right presented to her in consideration o f her gift to congress o f Carpenter’s "Lincoln.” I n Germany 5,500,000 women earn their living by industrial pursuits, in England 4,000,000, in France 3,750,000, in Austria-Hungary about the saint, and in* Amerloa, including all occupa­ tions, something over 3,700,000. T ub Turkish girl o f the present gen­ eration is expected to know aa mnoU about mathematics, geography and the science* as any average American girl, while in needlework and general house, keeping ahe arirpasses her American sister*. * UHL * r n m m * m * A 1 4

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