The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 27-52

f % IN WOMAN’S BEHALF. g ir l s w h o w a n t w o r k . to ¥ ruing* Which Tnang Women Ought . Know H*rl>r»TU*y u**iu, MostCattjesfglrlsijowadays com. In to maturity with, a yeal longing for work. Tlisjr are reposefuDmiddle-aged people, to be sure, who firmly believe that this is a mischievous and misplaced activity and that it la going to work out all kinds til destruction i f the race of women take to other things titan domestic and polite accomplishments, lie that as It w ill,, it doesn’ t pay to argue about what we shall never ’live to prove. Harp you are,, hundreds of you, girls who honestly want to #avk and who are honestly averse' tohouxe- work, 11also happens to he true that women, like men, work for wages, and that the wages a g irl gets for house­ work, even in h .r father’s bouse, ore not such ns to encourage you t6'aefopt housowovk ns » profe^iotir vAnd.-»so. It happens that -you are thinking to-day about a wage-earning , business outside your home, more than yon are thinking about a husband. ’’ ,&f r* The .first thing you’ ve got to know is what you cand&l)U»t: 'To findtbafcout consult your^taeto.,, I f you -thbSli/lt would be beautiful to trim lints or make gowns, say. so-and stick-to it. Then go to the best milliner or dress­ maker in your town,and ask her to let you come into ]hof s^opmnd learm Siie won’t pay you a^fl^t(jbu^Vour, fathbr: has fed you for.*eyi5riHytfiSrs, apd cajtj you, go to the officetof 'yotir’ father's lawyer by physician,and borrow; ' his simplest’-book J!^d-Pit|i^y 1$./ any: case don't disdain the modest beginning that lies, nearest your 'hand; you are ‘ not ready for wider fields yet And when you’ ve settled upon a work,don’t play with: .it; learn to treat it just as seriously as your, big brother or your father treats his. his. And so as your diligence and knowl­ edge grow together, yeti. w ill perhaps come to a point wheife you must Wave ‘ your father's roof in order'to flnlsliyout preparation for your vfoirlt or*tb widen your competence aud?.sb fUcrtfte your wages. You must leave your small town fbracity *nr the Small city fora largehbtKJ. Before 'this can be consid- ercdfOr^moment; oho o f two things is imperative': either yOu touiSt have the ‘ecrtaintjfc-yibt tl^'mprb possibility—-of Something to Work,at that will giye you,” a modpst living, ^o^elne you must have roOne^enough reserve to pay ytiur way lo r a y ea r ahead. There is no compromising with this. Never leave your fjathor'^homc on any other condi­ tions. -The nfimber' of young women who leave their homos each yeah and come to NOW,-York* without definite provisioti for wbrk issSimply appalling, and out of this spring the awful trage­ dies of want and discouragemeht that drive women to death or Worse.' With this provision niade.go into your work with thnWhOledf you. Take care of your health, and, for thereat, give your mind and body to -your-dtt; ties You will get discouraged in evelry fiber of your tired body,,but it will on- lydaiyou good; THo id&nbr'wpmstiWho doesn^gct d|itcour*godoften and bfteni seeing his ultimate reach beyond Ilia daily grasp, doesn’t aee* fjsr enough ahead ever to Succeed. SO“btisjiititliit you will get .discouraged, and getting discouraged, encourage; yourself be­ cause of that very thing, - >’ You will probably be thrown much among men*Learn not to expect par loretiqbdtttiln business places. 5 You are not there to interpret the amenities ,. o f life to a lot o f busy men, but to do your work competently and go your Way sensibly- They may be as kindly Intentloncd as your own brothers, but they am too bufcy to assure you o f their distinguished consideration- I f they treat you brusquely, directly and frank ly, they’re paying you the compliment of treating you like a sensible woman. You will have to keep your tastes, opinions wad purposes thoroughly to yourself. * On# young woman in now* paper work In New York had what she called “conscientious scruples” against certain kind*of newspaper necessities, andsite wanted to argue them hut with every editor ahatalked to. She failed in her work, and It served her.right; not because she had “ conscientious scruples,** but because she aired them whem she had no business to Neither have your tastes any more ptaoe in your work. You will have to leant to do what you are told to do, and reflect that if you find the task insuperably objectionable, you have the largest lib­ erty to give some obe else the opportu­ nity of trying it. Above all, don't always be looking for things tohurt your feelings. They’ll come sometimes, and bruise you ip ev­ ery fiber till you’ll want to pat your head down in your mother's tap and cry like a little girL rNut you /must learn to distinguish between wounded feelings and wounded .vanity. A wom­ an nine time*out o f t*fl of wound­ ed vanity and onoe out of the wounded soul that eoUaidr divtoest soothing to heaL - Let your vanity smart all It will; it’s good for most of us, for vanity Is a kind of. “ proud fl*eti" o f the soul that has to be treated With caustic to keep it from becoming au excrescence that will dfsflguta Another thing you will have to learn is to keen your word; to go where you is y yW il go, and ebtte when you say you’ll come- and. let the heaven* drop if they AV-II.' Hut they WtinV-exeept, in hie;sings on your head, A young yon you woman reporter on a New York paper was told by her physician to coma to at ®*rtaln hour the next day. Will pome If I don’t have an assign- went, aha said “ There is no ‘i f about IV said the great surgeon, as he .mwnnd aad looked at her, “ Doctor, said the small autocrat defiantly, my own funeral was to be at 8 o’clock to-morrow, and if at S;»0 Ibadan as- ypMnt'iifc to doMO^iebody i I io ’ b lunorjit for the paper, the chief object of inUv* est at my funeral would, he missing, boolisli, perhaps,,to take her work s grimly, but it was .just that quality that made, that girl succeed, , . Last of all, you may be the daughter Of £lph parents/ and you may not I f ypu prd tl»a former, behav# yourzelfas if you ware tfee latter- Ikn ’t preface yoqr fimt'^mistjfor. work with the In formation that you are not going t< work because you want to and not be- Ifon harp-to; ft’s bad business policy and worse taste, and noneof your eaiP)?y^r’*;hUSlfaoss, oqy way. Th^se. are 4 few of the thing*: will lmve to learn, and any one of ___ _ huhdrpda of .girls looking, forward to thb time Vlien j^ou will' be’one .of the bravo, strong, bread-and-charact'er- the•laud- i.Tlws.way is lo.n'gnnd|vjftrysomejq|ten, bptifisai smooth for you to-day as it Is forme’n. And .it pays—-pays, in every way, and .the cliaracler-wihning pays best bf all, because knowledge is better than igno1 ranc%i ab|l. strength; Is -better than weakness, -'and! the sum of A rounded yi'omhuhood uji’r better than a rounded banVi;iccdttnt.*-^Nel0tt', AVdtterson, St. Loiiis Republic. st^i, ty (t« C p ^ ; l i t tEf f ATE- - lSernlOKs., of iTosien In a Pleasant and j Adaptable Line orWork.' ■' WoWieu Are there favored in literary work at present than are men. For ex­ ample, Mrs. Duim|tt has a larger iu come from royalties:than is recelved hy any man. Mra Humphrey Ward will make a small" fortune out of her “ David." Elizaboth .Stuart Thbipfe commands the highest prices from all the.magazines. Mrs. Margaret Delaud bets her own figures. Sarah Orne Jew- ett receives as much for a short story aa dods the most Spccesssful male au- thpr, ,Anna Katharine Green sustains a, comfortable home ‘ solely from the proceeds of her pen- Ella Wheeler Wxlcox sells .everything she writes. Amelia Rives writes little, but what she does write and sell brings her the best prices. Maria Parloa lives on the income of her pen. Mary J. Holmes reboives; a’larger yearly cheek from her publishers than does many a bank pres­ ident Amelia E. Dare is kept busy supplying stories and articles at flatter­ ing figures. VThe Duchess’’, makes several; thousands of dollars eachyear with her pen, while “Mrs. Alexander’’ does the same- “Octave Thanet” has bipre than ahe eauv.do at the most re­ munerative rate* of payment, and one might go throughan almost endless list of women, such as Julia Magruder, Elizabeth U. Custer, FrancesCourtenay ■Baylur. Harrlet Prescott Spofford, Miss McClelland, Mollie -Elliott Seawall, Louslb'Chandlec jMoulton, Ellen Olney Kirk. GraeaKing and a score or two of other* , I w B u i r t o lie Knoirn. . ’ .“ The :beat are too busy to be known." Tills remark,was made by a corre sponddnt, vvriting from Plymouth, who found a; Yankee schoolmistress on Clark’s island, in the bay, keeping house,,taking care ,of an aged.mother- Cultivating a garden (besides a corn and potato field), getting her supplies —groceries, etc.—from the main land in a rowboat or sailboat, teaching school daytimes In winter and spring, and a navigation class in the evenings (of b ig. boys), doing her own sewing and washing, and taking boarders In the summer!—The Watchman. OF INTEREST TO WOMEN. L ondon has a lady auctioneer. J a i ’ a NKSK women are the best land scape gardeners in their country, and they are to bp employed in laying out the grounds of the women's department of the World’s fair. Mas. II attik M. K iu b a ix , who has been elected president o f the Penns- boro & HaineSville railroad, is probably the only woman in the country who is at the head of a steam railway. to t G eorgs G rat , the ex-premier o f New Zealand, has made a proposition, which -will be submitted to the house of representatives, that a new upper chamber be formed In the government of New Zealand composed entirely of women, and that it replacp the present upper chamber. Tus'fnture of women in the art world wonld seem to be a bright one if the signs of the ttmesbe read aright. There is a noticeable and commendable Activ­ ity among women artists, and recent successeswill doubtless stimulate them to accomplish yet more praiseworthy result*—Home and Art Magazine. M r * S tkwart M knzirs has performed the feat of “killing” five salmon* weighing on an average of over twenty pounds each, in one day's fishing on the Spey river, in Scotland. The Spey is considered one o f the most difficult sal* mon streams in the world to fish, and the exploit of Mrs. Menziesis regarded asa wonderful performance. Mine J ohnson , o f tfie Washington Camera club, is Mid to make a very cokaforUble living out tit her camera- She has orders for magazines and press associations, holds herself and Msmall trap ih readiness for a trip at an hour's notice, and can he relied upon -for good and quick work. Her pictures are said to be first-claseforau amateur. PERSONAL. AND IMPERSONAL. —J, L. Macadam, whose name U well-known In connection with tbs road-paving which ha labored for years to perfect, was voted 930,000 hy tbs English parliament, in recognition of hi* ssrviee*,- it L said that his rnonu* ment is the roads of England. ~ A man at Dunlap* ia southern Arizona, the other day pnt a giant cap in his pipy along with some tobacco, and had one finger half torn oft with the explosion., it was some little time before he could he convinced that the, eatnp had not been attacked „ by Apaches- ~ . • """ ' ...... ' -1' ~- ■—Queen ..Christina, regent.of Spain uptfitho baby Alfonso attain* his,six* teeoth year, is very much; beloved by the Spanish people for her good sense and kindness of heart. She was an archduchess, of Austria, and it Is note­ worthy that a foreigner should have become ao popular ip a Conservative country j,ike Spain. —M. d# Wokerle,; the Hilhgarian minister of finance, refuse* to use the luxurious railroad carriage to whichh* Is entitled by his official position. was receatly asked why .he preferred a single seat in an ordinary car, to which hprcfilied: “ I paddle my OXnoe in such a manner as ur have nothing to regret in the way of luxuries if the changes of politlcsshoutd oblige me to quit ths ministerial hotel" —Several Russian grand dukes apd duchesses, with their children, have re­ cently been .staying at,San Sebastian, wherO •the infant monarch of Spain was also spending a few weeks. After Alfonso took his leave the juvenile Russians, Who had.been his playmates, took occasion to free their -minds. They pronounced him perfectly horrid. He never wanted to play any one else’s game, nnd’ipsisted on having’ his own way.- —Around the table' in the Cafe of the Chicago club are to be'found every day at lunch Marshall Field, with a fortune of $40,000,000; George M, Pullman, 823,- 000,000; P. D: Armour, 820,009,000; L. Z. Leiter, 820,000,000;‘Potter Palmer, 810,- 000,000, and N. Fairbanks, 85,000,000. Field, Leiter and PaimCr began life as clerks in dry good* stores, and Pullman as a railroad conductor. Armour and E’airbanks did not start at the bottom of the ladder. ■> —A young Bostonian, whose, mar­ riage to a western girl was broken off by her a day or two before-the time set for the wedding, thought’ there must he some, mistake, and so jour­ neyed to her home.' He found the story f true, but lie remained with herparents for a few dayB and hod a pleasant time. His bride that was to have been had several sisters, and one of these became smitten with the'young easterner, and before his visit ended they became en “ A LITTLE NONSENSE.” -—Repentance—“ I wish i hadn’t re­ jected him.” “Why?" “ Because he didn’t seem the least bit put out when I said no."—N. Y. Prcsa —The Result—-Leary-—"Still waiting for your ship to come in, eh?" Weary —"Ob, -they’ve eOmo- Whole fleet o f ’em. A ll hardshipa" — Indianapolis Journal 1 —“ She’s awful, isn’t she?" “ Dread­ fu l" "She flirts with everybody, ex­ cept Mr. Moke." “ Yes; why doesn't she flirt with him?" “ He's hee -fiance, you know."-—Colusa Sun. Altogether Too Versatile—“ No, I never play poker with Skinner. He is too versatile,'-’ “ Eh?" “He seems to be ablefto turn his hsnd to anything he choosea”—Indianapolis Journal. —MurderIn His Heart—Hackett(sav •ffely)—“ I want to get some ribbon for my wife's dog.” Clerk—“ Yea sir. How will this do?" Ilaeket—“ Do you think this will hear his weight?"—-Cloak Re­ view. —Great Cat In Pricea—Stranger— "What's the crowd goinginto that store for? Anybody hnrt?" Native—"No, bargain day. Silks have been reduced from fl.25 to 8124 a yard."—Yankee Blade. —She—“ I eaw your cousin Tom the other day. He looked shockingly ilL” He—“Wall you see, Tom has just moved into a suburban villa and is taking care of bis own furnace."—Bos­ ton Beacon. —The Difference—Wife'— "He’s a poet" Husband (contemptuously)-“A poet? Pooh!” Wife—“ Yes, a success­ ful one" Husband (with interest)— Ah, invite him! Why, by all mesne" —Yankee Blade Jimmy—"Pa, I wish I could be a pirate and sail the Spanish main and scuttle ships.” ' Mr. Scrimp—“ Well, you just take this scuttle and sail down cellar and pirate some coal from Smith’s bin,"—Birmingham Republican. Now He Got a Dinner.—Haymow Hal, the tramp—“Madam, do you keep French cook?" Housewife—“No; why do you ask, you dirty tramp?" Haymow—“ I meant nooffense, ma’am, but the odor of food that comes from the kitchen is so appetizing that I felt sure you must have a superior cook on your premises." “No, sir, I do say own cooking. Won't yon step in andsample some o f it?" —Eoonomy and Wisdom.—“By thun­ der," scolded a grocer to an erring clerk, “ I don't believe you know the first principle of this business." “ Ex­ cuse me, but 1 do," replied the clerk, with such confidence a* to surprise his employer. “ The deuce you do. What , i* it then?" “ To make a little >gO » greet weigh," and the grocer apoto gized and-raised the otodr's salary.«• Detroit free Preet, I THEBATTLEFIELD. A CURIOUS RELIC. fle w G «„. jM itiim ’i H «* 4 W as Stolen From tlio Frigate Constitution. In recognition of valuable aerrioes, and alsoas an honor offered the war­ like president, patriotic and; grateful Boston placed on tjte bow of the frigate Constitution’ a marvellously well-carv. ed> life-size figure o f Gen,, Jackson. The guost skiLlfni caryer of those wood­ en statues was employed, aud gave the figure a vigor of pose and likeness to thctarigtaal SeldomfoMttfinimohworlc. A long, full cloak fell front IheshouU dent pfife hand was thrust ipto the breast of the coht And'the othergflWpo4 ’ a scroll; while the head was held p'tfoud- ly and onofootsllghtly |Mjyancad gAvp the general an energetic and command- tog posture, when with befitting cero- nipnles thsy firmly fastohed thOflgnref headto the bow o f the brave ship.' , Tb®making and placingof this flgnfie- nead was entirely the doingo f the pres­ ident’s political supporters and friends, anfl those, opposed to th f presidential: ’policy' warmly resented" the* action;' Enemies of. Jackson insisted on the figure's removal, but the old frigate calmly bobbed up and down in the blue bay, the figure of “Old Hickory" gazing sjterniy seaward, and for a time nothing at all was done' by those who wished, the figure removed. t It was iq Boston hay that the myste­ rious unloading of the tea ship had tak­ en; place mahy years before; and early one, 'July iporning the old town, the Constitution's'crew aud her officers dis­ covered to their consternation that secondciiripii* and secret attack had been made over night ' <■}:■ •< Gen. Jackson's woodenheadhad. been sawed off just along the upper lip and was not to be found! No specter, but a very, human hand had wielded the saw that accomplished the, wicked work, and a'half-headless figure faced the sea from its place on the Constitu­ tion’s bow. ,f - The ship’B.company, as well as of­ ficers of the law'and reporters of insig­ nificant newspapers,- wept searching and advertising for the clever scamp, who, evading the ship’s guards, had, under the cover of darkness, committed the peculiar crime.. A long and care­ ful investigation; did pot bring the Criminal to, justice, though Commodore Elliott offered one thousand eight hun­ dred dollars reward for *&uy informa­ tion concerning the act - i A-year later the Constitution came down to New York bay and a second heed, made for the purpose, was quiet­ ly bolted on in place of the lost one. Gen. Jnokaon’s administration closed not long after, all excitement over po­ litical matter* abated, and nowadays the famous figurehead can bo seen at -the Annapolis Naval academy, where there are many others nearly as well known; So much for the figure; but now for ■ the lost head which had mo mysterious ly disappeared from its place. Three years after the unexplained decapitation in Boston harbor a ,man, Capt Dewey by name, and a native of Cape Cod, asked for an interview with Malden Dickerson, the seretary of the navy. To the secretary’s surprise, Capt Dewey produced the missing half of Gen. Jackson’s head. After receiv­ ing the secretary’s assurance that no punishment would be laid upon him, Capt. Dewey proudly told hts story: Near midnight he andn friend rowed out in a small boat to where the big vessel lay, and liy the aid of a rope and the hawsers contrived to sealo the tall bow* With sver-watcliful eyes and ears for the not too vigilant guards, Capt Dewey crept out over the water, and, hugging the general close, plied a small, sharp new. At the first attempt the saw struck a bolt that fastened the head to the body; but <fn the second trial he cut his prize entirely off. low­ ered it to the little boat, slid quietly down, and rowed away, chuckling over hia own cleverness and the surprise in store for the crew and town. Partisan- ism and a love of exciting and adven­ turous undertakings led him to risk his life in the adventure.—Margaret Dis­ land, in Sh Nicholas. MOSBY’S EXECUTIONS. Reminlsc-nees o f an Adventure W ith the Mated {In errllls'e Baud. They had stopped at several houses on the way, and taken bedoords off the old-fashioned corded bedsteads with which to hang us. My nsme was first on the death roll, and had attention been paid to that I would have >been the first man executed; bat la the search of a tree upon which to hang Us the line was placed in such a posi­ tion that I was the fartherest man on It from the tree. The first man was gotten up, his hands tied behind him, a bedcord doubled and tied around his neck. He was marched to a largo tree beside the road, from which allmb pro­ jected. He Was lifted in the air, the rope taken by one of themen on horse­ back and tied to the limb, and there he Was left dangling. Two more were treated in the.same manner. It took Some considerable time, and onr execu­ tioners were becoming Uneasy,- not knowing what minute a party of our troops would pass that Way; and they decided',' 0s they said, to-Shoot the balance o f Us, as “ This huiiglOg Is too slow work." So they immediately ordered Us to get tip, When to their dis­ may they fouftd there were but three of Us where there ahould have been four. I t afterwards turned out that one of the men had gotten looSe from the line, and as we passed over a ditch ia afield had dropped Into the ditch and escaped/ All,this occurred on a dark rainy night* in November. Our hands were tied behind ns with heavy bedcord, I was completely exhausted, not feeling that j t would have been possible for roe to have walked a hun­ dred yards father; but I succeeded in freeing my hands, not because I expect­ ed to escape, but having seen men on battle-fields who had svidentally used their hands in their dying mo­ ments, for their comfort or relief, I thoughtmine might do the same forme, Having reached the tree were the three m°n were hanging three confederates stepped out in front of uk , and sqid to those behind us (we were now standing side by side, the three of us); “ Get awayfrom behind there, boys.” When Xsaid: “ Is this all the show younaro going to give us?" he replied: “ Jt is all you need, you Yankee,*’ when the three revolvers wpr’e placed ip our face* The revolvcrion.my rjght >?«nt off,; the revolver on p y loft went off, and the revolver'th*t Wua^jjn intfyface failed to explode. Thecliok o f the hiirtimerbn to® tube went, throughme Iike an electric -shock; T-caughtiby breath, ralsed^OPi; v, to the -balls of my' fe§t, knocked the re- . volver to one side, hit him in the head, jumped over him as ho fell into the road, and they satfg out: “ There goes the big Yankee!” 1 ieeined to find new lifo, ,aBd want,-, at the speed o f a streak of lightning dowp' the; road about one hundred • yards, where I entered the same woods they Were in-and climbed a shellbark hickory tree. ; Climbing is a feat J had never been able to perform when I -was a boy; but I have done a great deal of hunting and I do not think I ever saw a squirrel go up a tree faster thah I went-up that one. Here I remained until I,-heard them ride away, when! came down and started for Winchester, which Tgathered'froth their conversa-' tion was directly west on the road alongside of which they had left my comrades huffing or shot I avoided the road until it began to get daylight when, feeling that I was us safe in the road as elsewhere, and the walking be­ ing much better. I came "out onto the road proper, two miles from the place of the execution, where I discovered the man who had been shot onmy le ft , with a shattered elbow: On-receiving the wound he had fallen down and they had gone off andle ft him for dead after kicking him in the ribs and rolling him over, This man’s name was Hoffnagle, of the One Hundred and Fifty-third. New York. .,IIe was very weak from the loss of blood. -I walked along slowly with him toward Win­ chester until it got quite light, whenha insisted that I should'go: hidemyself nntil night as a recapture meant death forme, and ho would make his way to some-house to. seek assistance. Ire- plied, “ I will stay with you until I find you assistance,", allowing . him to loan upon me. Wo approached a large, weather-beaten house, at the door of which I knocked and demanded admittance. , In answer to a query, evidently from/ an old wo­ man, as to who was thisre, 1 Stated that I had,a wounded man withtoe, » Yan- kcosoldicr, who needed.assistance. The reply came back, "Walt a moment and I will let you In.’’ It was scarcely more than a moment when a .'frerjr old und poorly clad woman, with'a Saucer in which was some grease and a rag in lieu of a better light1 opened a door and admitted uS. : I toIdhSi WhoW6 were. Shesaid: "Hare no fenr. I.had three, of Custer’s men in my house when Mosby’s men were looking all over it for them, and I had two of Mosby’s men concealed in my bouse when Cus­ ter’s men were looking for them. Any one who comes to me for assistance gets it if I can give it to them." I said ' from the bottom of my heart: “ Lord bless you,".—N. O. Times-Dcmocrat WHEN THE WAR ENDED. Six Months L ater Than Is Generally Sup­ posed. It is generally supposed that the civil war came to an end with the surrender of Gen. Lee, and that is true as far as the operations on land were concerned, but on thp sen hostilities did not cease nntil the 0th of November, 1805, or about six months after the fall of Rich­ mond. Capt. James 1. Waddell ot the confederate cruiser Shenandoah was the last man to give up the struggle. He took command of the privateer, which was originsllyan English mer­ chant steamer, in .October, 1804, and started from Maderlafor a voyage on the Pacific ocean. While on his way to Melbourne Capt. Waddell ran across some nine or ten vessels belonging to American merchants and captured them alL Most of them were sent to the bottom after being despoiled of all valuables on board. After a brief stay in Australia the Shenandoah left on the 8th o f ' February, 1805, for a cruise in the Okhotsk sea, Behring sea and the Arctic ocean. The privateer created great havoc among the defenseless whalers, whose owners supposed thpm safe so far away from the wye of war. I t is not known how inatyf ships Capt. Waddell sunk or burned? but the number was certainly Ukgi>. All through the summer he kodfi up hi* de­ structive Work, atld it w J j notuntil in August that ho ehancmq-to hear fromu the captain of a Brltit# ship that the war o f the rebellion K *d come to a close. Then, insteadJ&f proceeding ai- rectly to the Hnitedjmtates, he stowed away his gnnS ih tWC hold of the Shen­ andoah and iMtiWd M or Liverpool, where he Surrendered tw # »hip to the British government OnFths 9thof November the vessel was /Jbrmftlly turned over to the United StatCf ooniul at Livcrpoti. —Chicago New; 1

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