The Cedarville Herald, Volume 12, Numbers 27-52
*!'H iw I]IWIJIJIW V The CedarvilleHerald, CEElARVILLB, B. BLAIR, FuMUhsr. <■*& ' i J h io . ETIQUETTE PILOT; Sowo curious Kxperleece* That Lie In t|ie fa tli o f His Arduous Uutlits. Ocean trnvelors all know of the ex* citeraent.ihat is aroused and of the in terest that' prevails when a pilot .is taken aboard an incoming ship. The pilot himself is not oblivious to it, either, i And he j*»t. b«nk^ ;on it TIf lifts : liimself ^gfht; above the j^ jra r thrpng of passengers inc( soprns;itbem. When hekdoes cohdescend to-speik his Words are emphatic and not always nice. It is ^.natural for -hint tosUrear .as it is to chew tobacco, It. would be hard to say which he enjoys the most However.'thq, passengers all bow down to him, though what there is to inspire, so much adniiratioh in tho speotaole of an ordinary loolcing-man with a slouch hat and rubber boots none p f them could tell if they tried. Perhaps it is the roughness of his exterior and the ibreezy blaffness of his manner. ♦'Of course you have many experi ences, pleasant and otherwise, in board ing vessels. Did yon ever' lose your hold and fall in?" * J - “ What, ino! Go overboard! Into the .drink! Well, I should say hay. Think I’m a fool?” “ Did you over lose a ship?" “ Not often. Two or three times they have, outrun me, so that some other fellows got them. I seldom lose a ship.” Then I discovered that a. pilot’s idea o f losing a ship had no connection with shipwreck. To him the- ship was lost only when he did not get aboard of hor .and get the foe for bringing her into port. He knew nothing of shipwrecks; they were not in his line of business. He was paid to save ships, not t o . lose them. “ Dp you make many pleasant ac quaintances among the passengers?" “ Oh, I could if I tried, but I don’t -much care to bother with them. If I should let down any they would he taking liberties on the acquaintance all tlio time, ’ So whenever I go aboard and they get familiar I just give ’em some back talk that will slnifr them up quick. They are always a-betting on thd number of my boat and what 1 look like and a-climblng all over me •for the latest Now York papers." “ What is the first thingyou say when .you get alongside tho ship?" "The first thing? Well, it’s usually ‘ Lowpr down that ladder, you lunk- .head!’ All the while the passengers-- men. women, and all hands—are yell-' 'ing at me for my number. I don’t pay any attention to them till I get on deck, and then I just say: “Now, blow you, I’m No. S! Do you understand? “Then they don’t bother mo much after «that. They get right out o f my way and 1 can go along about my business. I.ain't paid to answer* fool questions for passengers. I find that if I give them a good blast at the start they will keep their distance." “ A little while ago a woman came rushing up to me as I was coming up the gangway, and I thought she was trying to throw her arms around my neck. 1 don’t like that kind of non sense right out on dock. I slnng her off. Thought maybe she" was crazy. Then she oomo at me again, and I saw she wasn’t trying to hug me, but was trying to turn my chin nronnd sovthut a ll could sec. 'Look, ’ she said, ‘he hasn't got nny board and I’ve won,* That mode mo kind of mad and I said: “ ‘Madam, lt‘s none of your business i f I haven't got any face,' and I guess I spoke very plain. Come to find out they had been betting on whethor I had a beard or n o t" “ Do smugglers ever try to got you to do work for them?" * “ Not as I know of, of course, I ain’ t an that business. One time, though, not long ago, I tlilnk a follow worked sic . Just before the ship was docked he come to me with a little box In his hand upt more than four inches long, and said that he had got to catch a train over In Jersey right off and -wouldn’ t have time to deliver that box, as lie had promised, to a firm on Maiden lane. If I would do it for him he said there would be a good box of cigars .coming for me. Well, I don’ t smoke, but everything goes, and a box of ci gars is worth a car faro any time, and .-so I took it, “ It came out just as ho said, and after I had found out that the cigars was really fine and I got away with them, it flashed across my mind that the firmwere diamond dealers and that maybe that little box had diamonds in it. Of course, I felt pretty well cut up about, it, but what could I do?’*—N. Y. llcrald. Not Very Consistent. A western editor was writing at 5'»-ne, when his children disturbed him, Athereupon he bowled to his Wife! “Make them cussed brats keep quiet, or III get tip and beat tho life and soul out of them.” “ Why, what’s the matter?” "I’m busy writing an editorial de nouncing the infliction o f corporal punishment in children in the publia st bools, and if those brats interrupt me once more I'll get up and wear my cane out on them”—TexaS Siftings. * —.Married men in the rural districts who do not subscribe to courses o f lec tures are twitted with haring leotursa enough at home.—Onee a Week, THE BATTLE FIELD. HOHKSTY 0F jTHE.801.DIEB. , inaxtSjsMtobbajP During trijM' FourHspSeLtUo War,'. e fir.Htjdjtry dPtbe volunb new i K o f tjappoldior, lt| <*d JPfhno«'''iKct either, oath -o f muster'Th or'some invisible cause made him a man pf honor, a man whoso word could be trusted. I am willing to admit thatfi^tho prepara tory camp ho may.hairo been, and was, somewhat wild, but when ho became somewhat accustomed to the routine of soldierly duties, saw' the necessity of drill and discipline, his word always soemed to me as good as gold. ,, This fact is more firmly 'established for the reason that with' the thousands of opportunities I have yet tohear of. a paymaster being robbed during the war by the sutler, the volunteer or regular soldier,land tins’ point stands 'out In high relief to their credit; for nothing could have been more easy during those days than for one soldier and one accomplice, making themselves inde pendently rich, hud they been so dis posed. During the last two years tho surviv ing soldier of the late war -will no doubt remember the small iron safe carried by paymasters when they came to "the front" to pay off the troops. They were small, as a matter of course, and two men could carry it easily, it having a .handle on each aide for that purpose. *When a paymaster would arrive; he would be given an extra tent in which to place the safe; a guard would bo de tailed who was supposed to keep the safe in sight, ami I well remember an incident that came under my own view of that kind. The safe in this instance contained, tho paymaster told mo, ,sev en hundred thousand dollurs, An ex tra tent was assigned him on his ar rival, and a detail of three men, all he asked for, wus made to guard tho extra tent. -The guard paced backward and forward "in front-of it, but as he cbukl not possibly sec the rear of it, and only occasionally its sides, any one can read ily sec that it would have beeu no ditH- cult matter for two dishonest soldiers to have cut open the tent from the rear, quietly enter it, and carry off tho safe with all its contents, the guard being none the wiser, liven the guard could easily have become an accomplice with soma others, and winked at tiic rob bery.' After securing the booty, it could easily have, been- hidden nway, .to await a future visit; when the for tune could have been secured and di vided. • This is only oiie illustration of • the- ease with which paymasters could have been robbed, but there were dozens of other plans that might, have been put, in force, whereby a fortune might have been secured. To the everlasting credit of tlio sol diers composing tho federal array dur ing this late war, not a single paymas ter was robbed by tile soldiers them selves. They did lose money in many ways; one L believe, lost in gambling nearly all the contents of his safe; an immense amount o f .greenbacks wore lost by the sinking of the Sultana on the Mississippi, below Memphis, if I re member correctly, rising into more Linn u million of dollars. They lost money in many other ways, but no sol dier that I ever heard of, was guilty, With all the opportunities at his dispos al, of taking u single greenback from them. There was something in the service that seemed to put men on good beha vior; it might have been the oaths re quired of them, or it may havo boon the knowledge that when they woro the uniform of their country they rep resented the everlasting principles of right, justice and humanity in general, and that it would l>e■inconsistent in them to do a single act that was mean or wrong. In any way U may bo looked at, the fact that no paymaster was robbed by the soldiers during the war, whose opportunities woro excel lent every day, speaks volumes in praiso of the inherent honesty of the pay corps of the federal ’army during the war.—-lleub. Williams, in American Tribune. ______________ FATE OF A UNION SCOUT. Taken From III* Cainrade* nttil Shot as a Traitor. It happened that when Col. Strelglit, of Indiana, made his famous raid into Georgia in the, spring of I8(H, in an abortive attempt to destroy the arsenal at Rome and draw away Bragg’s cav alry from the front of Roscerans, thon at Tullalioma, he hud in his command as guides and scouts some fifty East Tcnneseeaus, picked from regiments at Nashville, for this special duty. These mountaineers proved invaluable to the command in piloting it through tho pnsscs and defiles of the rugged coun try in which Sir-eight’s rough-riders op* orated. They knew all the short-cuts, the fords and good stands for battle when the column was pursued, and at-* tacked, as it was almost daily from the start of the expedition by the rebel car* airy. On May 4 Streight and Ills little band of raiders atackcd their gnns and sur rendered to the superior force of Gen. Forrest, the famous confederate caval ry leader. Among those surrendered were the hardy scouts and guides, Of their number was * Tennesseean from Waldron's Ridge, in the locality where these’ mining troubles now exist,named Albert Wintermuth. Wintarmtith was a daring fellow and had done excellent service on the r^d botyi ajfgolde ^ on the skirmish line In the dally bouts with Forrest's men before tho capture. He and tho writer,,who was a member Straight’*; coin* n thCcmwjdays .tlutt aadjbefora n li*4 become > h e .M e ^ r iil* tome and- corraled of an Ohio..regiment mnpijrihad fpaterni of the disastrous *: the day o f ; capit’ sworn friends. , After tmrron$K diers -were taken toT c on the hank of the Coosa river, near the little city, surrounded by a heavy guard. Wintermuth was noticeably nervous, lie seemed to lose all his reckless bearing after his carbine had left his hands. The reason for this sudden change came out later. Dtp, the first qjorningaffcer pur bivouac op the shore of the Coosa a file pf con federate soldiers marched by the guard Into thO. camp. • The prisoners, one thousand threa hundred in ' number, were ranged in single file on, tho four sides Of the inclosure. The officer, the captain of a regimental company, who headed the squad of newcomers, then ,passed uloug the line." With him were two women. They seemed to be of tho ordinary type of southern women one met in-those days in the little farm houses in the mountain regions, of Tennessee or the Caroliuas, Tho elder one was perhaps forty-five, while the younger, though sallow-faced, was rather comely .and scarcely twenty years of age. Wintermuth and I stood side by side in the line. There was much wonder ment among the men as.to the purpose of this inspection. ■A slight tremor of the aVm that touched my own on tho right caused me to look at Wintprmuth. His face was corpsclike, but not a word, escaped him. The officer and the-wom en in his company were approaching, closely scanning each man in tho lines ns they stood, with heads bared for the scrutiny.'" When the ' eyes of Winter muth and tho woman met, there-wns a flash of recognition, betraying hatred, too, on tho part of tho visitors. . , When the younger female had quick ly scanned the face of my comrade, she said, sharply: "That’s the man. Your name is Al Wintermuth." Not a word fell from the lips o f Win termuth, hut is his face took on a deep er pallor, I felt the tremor in ltis arm cease. His muscles seemed to be al most rigid. "Step out here,” said the officer, Wintermuth obeyed. A motion of the: hand to the file of confederate soldiers, who had hoen quietly standing at order arms, brought them to where tho cap tain stood. > % “ March this man to the guard-house and see he don't escape. At, the first move he makes put a bayonet or a bul let into him." These were their orders, and without a word my comrade in arms was gone. There was no time for leave-taking, and the suddenness and mystery of the thing had driven words away. Tho two wo.tnen passed without tlio linos as they hud come in tho company o f the officer. Within ten days after- Wintermuth left the lines he was dead. “ Court- martialed and shot for desertion and serving with the enemy," was the entry on the roster after his name. His story was learned after the wap. Business called me into that part of Tennessee from which Wintermuth- had come and from relatives the facts were gleaned His family were stanch unionists. The father and- three sons had enlisted in a Kentucky union regi ment. Albert being tlio youngest re mained at home, lit* was paying court to a young girl in the Sequutclie Val ley, whose fain ly were all ardent sup porters of tho confederacy. The en gagement was hrokeh off by tho ill- feeling engendered by war. Winter muth was conscripted into a Georgia regiment, deserted and joined a Ten nessee battalion in Rosccrun's army. The families became bitter enemies. The Egglers, driven out of their home by the change in the shifting tide of war, had gone to Georgia,-and mother and daughter were visiting a brother and son stationed with his regiment at Rome when Straight's men rode through the streets as prisoners. They saw and recognized Wintermuth. Their story was soon told to the provost-mar shal, and willingly or unwillingly the woman who had once prom^d to be the brave young mountaineer's Wife, pronounced tho words which caused hir, execution as a traitor.—St Louis Post* •Dispatch. (in i, Connor noil tlio Mormons, A good story is told of Gen, Patrick Connor, who commanded in Utah dur ing the war. In February, 180:1, his force encamped near Salt Lake City, after a long ami hard campaign against the Indians. Itrigham Young, tho gov ernor o f Utah as well as president of tho Mormon church, promptly sent a bishop to him to say that the govern ment had exempted a township (thirty* six square miles) from occupation by any federal troops,' that liis presence was not desired by the governor and that he must retire at once. Gen. Con nor heard the bishop to tho end and then made this answer, his native brogue coming to tho front as ho became ex cited. He began very gently; ’ “ .Bishop, will you tell Mr. Young that we’ve marched many a long mile, and that we’re tired.We find good campin’ ground here—well dhrained an* wathered. an* wo’re comfortable where we are, an* we don’t want to retire onless wo have to. An’ tell Mr. Young thet if we do retire ’ twill be to the front—"down into Halt Lake City, wid out guns in the main streets an’ ray headquarters in the president's house. That’s all, bishop," And Fort Douglas still stands where Gejj. Connor placed ^**~ . y, « « « IN WOMAN’S BEHALF. CLUBS FOR THE,-WORKERS,. The C U » ot WometjywS-' the Aid o f Muc'li aa.Org The history of labor id had included from til organization for raee^ "inev itable,' and contented and unreasonable, had come to represent something firm, self-reliant and l.oysl tOhis'cluss.: The conscious ness of liis manhood and his rights as a man were ingrained facts, but since the knights o f labor’ sent ont the“ Prenm- .able” wonaan-jhad no, share in the BchemC." Cnder the old regime, all workers had been part o f the family. The apprentice system included this, but the sudden broadening of all avenues to'wealth, brought about by the enormous growth o f the country, ,and the improvedmachinery which met the new demand for production, ended the old and brought in the new, In evitably in this new, thee individual dropped out of sight. Workers became simply “ liand^,'’ and remain so. That bodies owning souls andbrains are also to*be included, forms no paid of-the con sideration. Society has long concen trated its work principally on the criminal, and thus a mass o f hard working patient women and girls who also must earn, and who began the work untrained, undeveloped, and gain ing their knowledge of both life and work through sharp experience, walked in our midst unregarded and imeared for. In tho great cities a portion lived at home, but the the larger part were lodged in tenement-houses, or if a little higher, class of worker, in narrow halt bed-rooms of cheap hoarding houses, Or clubbed together in a larger one., The report .of the Massachusetts Bu reau of Labor for 188-4, on the working- women of Boston, their wages, lives and general conditions, was one of the first strong Impulses toward better ment As in all suddenly defined need of action, the movement began almost simultaneously at different points, Philadelphia taking the lead. Tho “ Working-Woman’s Guild" of that city, an offshoot of the New Century club, owes its life as does also that of the parent,atom, to the wisdom and energy of a woman who has always ignored recognition, and gone her quiet way, bent only upon accomplishing her pur pose,- Mrs. Eliza S. Turner, the first president of the New Century club. It was to her that New York workers turned when tho thought came also to them that the dreary lives of shop .girls and general workers might be tighten ed-and there are -points in the '"Phila delphia system still to be attempted in New York. There is small occasion for criticism of methods. All know the untiring energy ami devotedness of Miss Dodge, and her work, and tho con vention of working-girls’’clubs hold in New York in April, 1 S 110 , demonstrated tho extraordinary change that six years of work had brought about. For every city where the experiment, had been tried, hundreds had learned two things thatiinderlie the formation of anyliUeh Organization. First, that there are .means of happiness and of growth Within the reach of all workers, and Second, that out -of such organization grows a feeling of mutual trustfulness, solidarity, and “a confidence in the power o f concentrated action, which' will enable the worker to make effect ual claim to larger and. juster share of the product of her labor,” Sc.venty- five societies banded together to these ends met nt the New York convention, and gave three days to general discus sion of what lmd already been done, nrtd of methods of enlarging tho work. One of the most vital phases of effort connected with the movement is the White Cross society, and tho special talk to girls, hundreds of whom have received from this source their first les- • son in the laws of life. Classes of ev ery variety, from languages to cooking, have been formed, and the Philadel phia Guild, an absolutely unsectarian one, has included light carpentering and oilier features of industrial train ing. Further detail of tho practical side is unnecessary, since he who runs may read. That there is sometimes too evident aji attempt tq wipe out dividing lines, and reach the level of the lowest worker, is at least a venial fault. At best it is a task filled with difficulties. The sense of perfect equality—-the, "I'm as good as you arc" feeling, is strong in every one. How to guide this per sonal independence so that it may keep the soul of whdlesomcner.s within, yet learn that there is no cqnallty save as souls seek the same things and those the highest, is tho problem to be solved. A myriad questions arise which only experience can answer. But one thing is certain. Of all*the clubs forming on every hand, none are of sncli vital power, or essential to any growth for women, as a whole, as these for the worker. Her wage at best for the whole United States is, as given in the report of the United States Bureau o f Laboi\ for 1898, entitled, “ Working- Womeh in Large Cities," a trifle under five dollars a week. The actual figures are 84,84. These mean sharp limita tions; so sharp that when their possi bilities are summed up, one has hardly wbrds to praise, in just measure, the patience, the fidelity of the mass o f these workers. Every Influence from without tends to force them to a dead level and to keep them there. It la, then, a demand nnon more fortunate women, to lighten hard Conditions, and S iva to all the knowledge In which lies mlr only hope o f escape.—Helen Campbell, in Are**, 1 ' * MISS JANE M. WELCH. A * .» Student of American History she U <■** 5f/'l8iw4*;tUe'^Aad. >hn F % Jafle Meade Welch; who so thoroughly know of erstands ht have f. what lit: com: ican history." . ye with perfect truth ’rich knows she i* in such a way as cepted ns necessary undonevit ble, and ^ in sp ire otherswith the enthusiasm the workmen, even when the most d t s - A m e r i c a n ideals which led her to- make this especial province of knowj- ^ edge her own. In this last particular she is peculiarly gifted. Presented by her, historical facts glow with living interest, and ip investing them with po tent philosophical significance she be. comes qs truly an Interpreter as any poet ■'£ &*• • . A slendpr, dark-eyed, dark-haired woman with a genial smile, Miss Weleh possesses in A riarked degree a pleasing and whining presence. Being a lineal descendant of John Alden and Priscilla —as there is much jn the run of the blood—it is quite natural that she should have devoted her leisure to in vestigating the, history with which her distinguished ancestors were so inti* mately connected. Miss Welch wai connected with the editorial staff of the Buffalo Courier for ten years, and it was during that time that, as a matter of inclination,,she de voted her leisure to the study of Ameri can history. The'zealous interest which was developed by her Btudy led her to discuss the subject with her friends, who soon began to share her enthusiasm and to urge her to give regular infor mal talks in her mother’s parlor. Soon the fame of these talks reached-Chau tauqua, and Miss Welch wav ipvited to speak there. She was received with enthusiasm, and now- has charge of the department of American history in the Chautauqua extension course. Miss Welch holdBthat women will be especially benputted by the study of American history, and quoting James Bryce ns saying that np country owes so much to its women ns does America, o r ’owes them .so much in the beliefs that govern conduct,' slie adds that -America will owe a great deal more to its women when .they have mastered American history.—Chicago Post. SVonieti l ’-.lw Winner*. . The placet attained by women at the examinations of the University of Lon don is regarded with particular pride by those interested in woman’s educa tional advancement, for' not only are the tests more severe than those of any otlipr English examining body, bnt the men and women students meet on an equal footing, ■and prizes are offered for thoir competition without favor on either side. At the summer exnminu-. tions tho women students fairly held 'their own. althougli’the distinctions be tween the. subjects of study affected by men and women are sfrongly .marked, lu Latin hut-one-woman’s name ap pears, and that in ' the second class, while in English three out of four stu dents who take honors are women. In1 mathematics, too, one woman figures alone,' a' Gorton student, who lias ob tained first-class .honors. Altdgether the Homeric list is a creditable record' for women. Iteneiit Juvtmtlonn o f Women. It is a mistake to suppose that women lack inventive genius. Last week one of them obtained a patent for a port able electric illuminating advertise ment. Another woman has patented an improvement in umbrellns, a third lias an improved guide for the wrists of piano-forte players. Another lias im proved cornets. Still another lias pat ented a new way of sharpening pencils, or rather a now apparatus for sharpen* _ ing them. A woman who lias, no doubt, a fancy for finger rings, has got out an appliance for keeping them from slipping off, and the list winds up with a strong brained woman who has pat ented a n ew and improved means for inducing and increasing up-draft and preventing down-draft in fireplaces. WOMEN' IN THE FIELD. Aim ie J 0 HX 80 X, of West Virginia, is a skillful machinist. For three years, site had entire charge of a grist and planing mill. Miss H ei . ex S mith , who edited the Bar Harbor Record last summer, is said to be the only editor who succeeded in procuring an interview with Mr. Blaine. S ai . uk . M atthews , of C’loverport, Ky., has been for six years agent of » cooperage company, with two hundred men and several steamboats under her command. D r . A mv K imrai . t ,, of Jackson, Mich., has ortc of the largest practices in the city. She is consulted by all the lead* ing masculine physicians, and Is mueb beloved by her townspeople. . M rs , Br.ooMiNcrox, of Jackson, Midi., has been elioscn treasurer of the school hoard of which she is a member, and the wealthy women of the city went on her official bond for twenty thousand dollars, just as if she weren’t a Woman, A nnie It, CntTTBNDEN, ol Osceola, la, has patented a road cart which is de signed to support the weight of the oc* cupants on the axlel, relieving the ani* mal o f all strain, and obviating the dis agreeable jar frequently found in cart* as now constructed. M bs , G roroe Bowaox, of Chicago, has recently patented a car coupler of her own invention, whose simplicity and ingenuity hate won the praise of all practical railroad, men who have aeen i t Experts say that by its help I cars can be bandied much more expedi* tiously, and with pnfeot aijetyv . , THEFARM SHIPPING IFf.-“ ExperJcUffl o f 1 * Frut Th ru i In V My berries we point garden, abou market, and it was rangemerits shoul them to the store a possible. In cas $bie packages I eu jeets as illustrated, convenience of h etc,, seemed, to just - Into each one, an placed IS plates, 4 o on two wooden ha and caught into the splints, which also on top on the on ooultl be placed r, ph plates and at this jolded papers in ord reeking, as tbe^bott otherwise moving.' top, to secure them quito netting was around the edge of t peach baskets are c red color was used attractive and suitab as the fruit itself i, ing to enhance its a needed. However, make fruit appear! so it was not neglec as might have bee: some-other colored used. • The matter of slii me some trouble, as not do to consign ordinary by-"no-mea of the average expre ever, by going abou determined but plea: seeing the ofiicia arranged with the c on the train to give t baskets of fruit, and the express agent at authorized to sign n ceipt and to keep- tin man from the store c In this way, altl good deal to the ej never had any occas the fruit carried in g< at very little expense of 13plates cost 12 ormore Were sent at warded the expressm trouble by giving thi ;■berries (not of the ! they were, in conscq all that they could t< Tireful handling of i limed. fAllogethcr, my sh Iwas very satisfactor; Ithe same thing can h similarly situated, b; Itho right way. It is (pose that, with a 1 1some (improvement Ithemselves, as was I I second season as c Ifirst one.—Elmer E. Itry Gentleman. ’ THE FARMIN To uf . ndkh new n I diminish its strong I hour o r so and dr, tflkiDg care that it d |knot. T he stalks o f c put in the ground 1 covered, so as to 1 [ sprouts and supply < i spring. A few slieop wil I gers, and clear an { kind that is not |The mutton breeds |in small flocks. I I f yon cannot refuse bones plan 1 fruit trees and vii Ideep enough to » Iturned up by the pi W here the crab Iground completely f until it dies down : field over. Plowinf the seeds during tin I’ocr.cr.Y should j It is not usual for t 1a crop to sell durin I out the hens do not basket when I(o&rces lias Ceased. I '-'"SfrEMroiJAR'K I the best plans of up I before plowing uni IInaddition to the a Iwe lime will help t l^ w t h that is turn T he difference be I{*3 a dull one tna1 Iwportank but it m !* « « »n labor of tlit IJith two. When tl ["* proper order lest not wise to i l**kinfr » specialty < 15” or crop. Then ■■re and loss by gro |£°P* of different 1 l » subjected to Ku!5r8 J, n a y escape* Stands varied et ‘ be best utilize jto'jArietjr. ******** *** ‘ flni ■<Mf 1 1 i»*HwWwi tfi.it'I
Made with FlippingBook
RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MTM4ODY=