The Cedarville Herald, Volume 13, Numbers 1-21

T h e C e d a r v i l l e H e r a l d . T H E B A T T L E F I E L D , W, M. HLAIK, IMUUfcW. IN T H E LA ST DAYS. C15DABVILL®. o s r a i M LEW IS AT HOME . Uon i m » t'rimtiu* Heroins U m In 14slc K se k I 4 (ht< Buuntng from the mainland of the city of Newport, E. I., into the west side of its harbor, is a lag, staunchly built Wharf. Were ypu to find your way to its end, you would ere long see from the light-houa* beyond, a woman appear and glance in j o u r direction. Presently, with Agile step, she run* down the narrow ladder fastened to the stone wall, jumps nimbly into a boat, unties it from its mooring, takes the heavy oars, and with a beauty of Btroka all her own, pulls with a long and a strong pull tha t sends her flying toward the steps of the pier on which you wait. Tier back is as erect as th a t of a youttg girl, her powerful strength manifest in the great strides the row-boat makes, and yet, when sbe deftly turns it around and you got a good look a t her faceli ft can be seen th a t it belongs to a woman in middle life, bu t upon whom time, has left few tell-tale marks. She puts out a welcoming hand with a beautiful white wrist, lidding a cheery smile and word of greeting, as she makes ready to take you over to Limn Bock as her guest. You have cause for congratulation in being thus favored by the heroine—Ida Lewis. Life on a light-house, situated as Is Lime Bock light, is not the gruesome thing generally imagined. .With a six', ro tated house there are' cates tha t fill, the. day, and like any other “gude wife,1' Misfs Lewis has her pots, kettles and p«ms to attend to, rooms to sweep, beds to make, papers and magazines to read, lettra* to write, and all the various e t cetoras to manage which fill the time of a busy woman, A devoted church woman, she spends Sunday on shore iv*i.\ncver her brother is a t home. As the only woman light-house keep­ er in our country, and the last one th a t will be given a light—for such is the verdict of the powers tha t he—Miss, Lewis has other duties that are unique. Exactly a t sundown she must light her lamp and precisely a t midnight another luvxt be substituted. All through the n igh t it must be' watched, and Miss Lewis likens the constant care to th a t rtvmumled by an infant. The wick might, flare cr burn low, the chimney, smoke or crack, or any o fth e hundred- and one accidents happen th a t are ever taking piece' with the use of kerosene oil. She can b u t catokcat-napsrbence the nearness of her sleeping-room to the light. A t sunrise the law requites her lamp, like the foolish virgins** to have gone out and from this fact she is an early rise r,. The responsibility is no small one, for the slightest neglect of duty or accident to her ligh t or lenses would bring a report from the first sea­ man who suffered by it. Lives hang on Inn* vigilance, bu t to her credit no light on nil the coast is as regularly or >,per­ fectly attended to, nor does any other gain from the government inspector so high a report. Miss Lewis kebps a daily expense book, noting just the amount of wick and oil burnt, and the time to a sworn! of the lighting' and putting out of the lamp. In addition, a record of the weather must be entered dally. As Lime Bock light is a first-class light, no rations are allowed, the yearly salary bring #750 anil two tons of coni.—Ellen Li* tiavde, in Ladies* Home Journal. S H E WAS CAR EFU L . A nmly'ft Queer Irina* About Hand­ ling a Watoli, “That watch, ’i purchased of you d'liwn’t keep good time," said the pretty y. »ung woman to the jeweler. ‘•Indeedt- Will you permit me to ex- iimiiHi it?” “Oh. yes,” came sweetly from the lit­ tle creature's lips, and she began fum­ bling a t her <tress. Presently, with an air of determination, she buttoned her loose front sealskin and slipping her luindrj under it continued operations on a lu-iro extensive scale. In a minute there was a little rustle and a sharp click on the floor. She picked up the Watch, quite as a matter of course, and p aw d it to- the jeweler, who stood aghast. *Tt keeps all sorts of time,” slio said, uv,..ringly. The jeweler suppressed lii>, feelings, and only remarked mildly: “A wat.’h needs very careful hand­ ling." **()h, I*mvery careful of mine. I al­ ways carry It inside my dress, so it won't, get scratched. I ought to have brought it in before, it has been doing so badly, ba t Tleft it underlay pillow the other morning, nfid Mary changed the bedding, and i t got into the laun­ dry. I t wasn't boiled; just soaked a litf ft- while. Mary is very careful and she found i t / ’ *1 fear, miss, we shall be obliged t-i >-barge you for adjusting this watch. It w'oms to I k ) in rather a bad way.'* ••oh, I think tha t Is awful. It was vam in ted for a whole year, and here 1 .*:• had it- only about a week and I Inn,-hardly used it a t all.”—Jeweler's Weekly. ■, . ........... -•■/our proposal is so unexpected, 15•.. spoonautore," said the young Wdm- sia. WWillingly, “ that I hardly know trit u to say. You must give the time t-, think it over." “Certainly, Miss .la*. ;vr.s," said the young ntBii, aecom- dnUngly. “That's the way I've—er~ •rdivsiyu been in the ha'.lt of doing it *,i.'ti ■’*.like, tins.” PMrrimr IMW 1* tk« Soath Daria* fib* *f tb«war. There are not many of us left who ac­ companied Mr. Davis from Greensboro, N. C., to Washington, Ga. We reached the former place a t or about midnight April 17, with orders to escort and guard the president and his cabinet and the archives of the confederate govern­ ment. Solemn is no word to apply to that cortege. Still I don 't believe there was th a t agony tha t one beholds in Metssonler’Swonderful painting of 1818. But there was no hilarity, I can assure jrou, although Mr. Davis was always affable, kind, cheerful and resolute. We rode a t the head of the column all the way. Gen. Cooper and Judah P. Benja­ min rode in an ambplance, and so did Mr. Trelholm, and family. If I remem­ ber correctly Reagan and Lubbock, of Texas, and Preston Johnston, a nephew of Albert Sidney Johnston, rode to the right of the president, while upon his left wore George Davis and Gen. S t Johns. There were, also, Quartermas­ ter-General Lawton and Chief Engineer Gilmer and their staffs. I had fought all through ’the war as a high private of Dibrell's command and hud never been in so much exalted company before. I never had put my eyes on Mr. Davis until then—no rany one I have named, But you should have seen us when wc arrived a t Salisbury. Here were rem­ nants pf lost armies from Georgia, Vir­ ginia and various parts of the Caro­ tins, all being pushed to a common center by Graftt, Sherman, Stonemah, Wilson and other victorious federals. No pen can describe or pencil delineate that heartrending scene. Here were the president of the lost cause, many civil functionaries, gilt-edged-officers and half-starved soldiers, negroes and refugees. Hero was a debris such as will never be aggregated again.. Surely "the bottom of the confederacy had fall­ out—I . felt it in my soul. But on. we pressed, and a t every little town or crossroads we encountered refugees and furloughed confederates, who would thrill us with the tinwelcome intelli­ gence of Stoneman’s approach. .1 re­ member particularly, after We had crossed Yadain river, th a t Gen. Dibrell received word from Gen. Ferguson th a t Stoneman was nearing Charlotte, and to we Were marched all night, arriving: a t Charlotte about satirise. ' I must ad­ mit that we did not want to see Stone- man; still we felt somewhat disap- appointed when we discovered tha t he had deceived ns and burned all the bridges over the Catawba. The end Wasnear. We were soon again on our way. Gen. Ferguson moved out of Charlotte a few hours after \vearrived, and proceeded to Nation Ford, a t a point where the Co­ lumbia railroad crossed the Catawba. Shortly afterward Gen, Basil Duke,with about 480 veterans of John Morgan’s renowned cavalry, pu t in an appearance qp artillery, horses and wagon mules, bareback and all other ways, These an­ imals hhd been picked up here and there, as the Kentuckians had been dis­ mounted a t Chrlsiianburg. Soon Eeholo ahd Vaughan canto with about 400 men, and the same day Mr. Davis made that speech wldeh Was so falsely reported. How many in all? About 9,800,1,300 of whom wero under Col. Breckinridge. But there was not much fight left in us, I catf assure you, And a great many were disheartened and not a small num­ ber utterly demoralized. Two days af­ terward Geo, Breckinridge arrived from Greensboro and informed Us of his agreement with Sherman, and the ex­ istence a t a truce was officially promul­ gated, On the morning'of the 20tli wo started for Abbeyvillc. Our original in­ tention was to cross the CataWbn a t Na­ tion Forth hut high water, burnt bridges, and other obstacles necessi­ tated a change of route,and we went by way of Yorkville and Unionvillc to Cokcsbtny and arrived a t Abbeyvillo May 1. In the meantime nows had reached us of Jo Johnston's sur­ render and th a t Gen. Bragg had dis­ banded tiie Second and Third South Carolina cavalry. The fall of Spanish Fort and Blakely and the occupation of Mobile and the successes of Wilsonbame right along with the other shocks. Then came rumors of Forrest's defeat a t Seimu and Stoncman's capture of Athens and the occupation of Atlanta, Macon, Augusta, and the titte r demoralization of that part of Johnston's army tha t had not surrendered. Thinkl I thought nothing. I knew i t all. Anil 1 saw the utter hopelessness of reaching the Mis­ sissippi.—An Ex-Confederate In Chicago Tribune, -A TH E TH U N fc£R O F ART ILLERY . KartH, A ir and W ater Convulsed by th e Hour o t O re st Gun*. Mere are two field batteries—twelve, si*, and nine pounders in a ll-firing as rapidly fls they can be reloaded. The reports blend into a roar, and you must raise your voice as if a hurricane was howling almut you. You arc impressed, but rather aggravated and annoyed. There's a snap to each report likc^the cracking of a great whip—a spiteful sound which', reminds you of a dog fol­ lowing a t your heels with his yelpl yelpl yclpl Thefo is ho more trying situation for a soldier than to be lying down in sup­ port of a battery. He is only a few yards In front of the guns, find he not only feels the full shock of the concus­ sion as communicated to tho earth, from the “kick" of the gun, but the re­ port Itself seem, to strike the spinal column snd travel up totho back of the head. Then, top, there la tha fear of •holla exploding prematurely or of grope and canister “dribbling” to causa Wounds or death, and i t la a positive relief to aee a column of the enemy break oorar for a charge. The roar of the guns does no t linger for hours after, as is the case with mortars and siege guns, bn t yon find your nerves on edge and your temper spoiled for a day or two. The.men who lay in lines with a battery firing over them probably endured more m en ta l.suffering than the enemy a t whom the guns were pointed. The fire of great guns is terribly trying for the first few minutes, bu t this feeling gradually gives way to one of awe and sublimity. ' There is something so terrific and ap­ palling—you feel yourself so atomless in comparison—th a t you would speak in whispers if the; roar could suddenly case, Ypu are an onlooker; if assist­ ing to work a, gun,^physical activity would take away from the mental strain. When Admiral Porter got hi* twenty iportar boats, each armed with an 8££-ton mortar and thirty-pound rifle canhon, a t work against the fOrto below New Orleans, and the big guns, in both forts had opened in reply, there was something akin to the sound of heaven and earth coming together. The .mortar shells weighed over 'two hundred pounds apiece, and the rush of them through the air made one’? hair feel as if it crawled. The venom­ ous hiss of a. big skyrocket was magni-. fled thousands of times, to he followed by a crash which seemed to sp lit the sky open into cracks and crevices. When the firing had continued until all reports had been merged into one steady roar there was little short of an earthquake on land or sea for teii miles around. The earth shook as if a great steam hammer was pounding it a few. yards from your feet. I f standing near a tree, you could feel the roots letting go of the soil with a sound like bugs crawling over dry loaves. On the water great mud spots rose up here and there to show where the earth forty feet be­ low had been disturbed. In the Missis­ sippi river itself liuglt catfish leaped' above the surface in fright and pain or floated belly up and were carried along, with the current, gasping for breath. Outon bine water air bubbles as large as dining plates floated to the surface and thirsted with a snap, and fish of -all. kinds exhibited the greatest confusion and alarm. Thirty miles away the roar was like th a t of &gale sweeping over a pine for­ est. Horses and cattle sought to hide away, birds flew about uttering cries of distress, and dogs pointed their noses' toward the sky and hqwled dismally., Birds and fowls felt tiie air and earth waves long before human beings did, and their actions were so'queer as to become alarming. The coming, of the roar to those afar off was preceded by a jarring of the earth and a moaning in the air. Springs overflowed, and the water in yrells circled around as ip a whirlpool. The wildest species of birds left the woods snd thickets and came flying about the houses, and rabbits de­ serted their burrows and sought the companionship, of domestic animals. The thunder storms of a score of years combined could not have ren t the heav­ ens nor disturbed the solid earth as that cannonade did. , If the beginning was painful and ox-' asperating the ending was something to be remembered for its grandeur. One mortar after another, one great gun after another, was silenced by order. Thu reverberations had traveled through air amt earth and water a distance of fifty miles. They now seemed to re­ turn back to the guns. ‘ The rent and riven skies had kept up a constant moaning and complaining. These sounds gradually died away, as a man in paln.tinally drops off' to sleep. The earth resumed its solidity again, the sun slione forth in its old familiar way, and the hank of clouds piled up in tbo west and tinged with gold all along their lower edges seemed proof to the eye th a t the world still stood as we had lived in it the day before those monsters awoke and demanded human blood and wreck and destruction as the price of their silence.—N. Y, Sun. How to Take Away ills Conceit. If you Wish to take the conceit out oi a peacock pull out his tail feathers, and as soon as he finds the glory of his plumage gone he becomes the humblest, most subdued and ashamed-looking bird th a t ever walked the earth. A peacock in full feather is so vain and conceited as sometimes to bo really troublesome. Not satisfied with equal­ ing a t the top of his discordant voice, and with parading himself through the yard and tip and down the walks with expanded plumage, he will attack cats, dogs and even children, and has been known to seriously injure small boys or girls that were incautious chough to venture within his reach. Plucking his tail feathers, howeveir, causes all his courage to evaporate. He wilt sneak around the yard like, a whipped spaniel, will keep out of right aft much as pos­ sible, and yott will hear nothing of him AM tea very llttlenn til his plumage has ' again grown.—St. Louis Glohc-Dnmoe- rnt. —“Since our last interview, my dear air, i find th a t yeti have go t slightly gray," “A mere nothing—a litt'e. of the dust off the road of life," waft the philosophic reply.—Once AWeek. A Bad Outlook—Spacer—So poot Boundabotti 'hits gone to the dogs, Liner—Dear me, That means another epidemic of hydrophobia.—N. Y. Her aid IN WOMAN'S BEHALF. A W OM A N 'S WORK . Only this work of to-d»y; WhatorilB trlu«|Pui sad sorrows? Does It th e p * it overweigh. Give It a zeal for to-morrow? Where have I broken the’thread; What have t left still uftmendedr Truer word never was said, ‘‘Wtman's work neverJa emieO.** Only the woik of to-day; Soothing the heart that is broken, Speeding love’s message to say, Leaving the evil unspoken. And when the curtain's urn drawn . Over the Innocent sleeping, Some onemust Unger till dawn, •Watch for the prodigal keeping. Only the workof to-day;' No one bath guessedhalf its meaning: None knows the sower; but pray Many be blessedat the gleaning. No one hSth stayed for her fears, None hath u helping hand leaded: Only the sower hath tears Over her lonely toll bended. WOMEN A t ORATORS . Only the work or upday; lnubor but Unite and human; Only the task of decay, Only the work of a woman. Tell mo what hand will portray— Uponwlmt Infinite pages— Only the work of to-day At the Ingirth'ring.ot ages? —Frank W. Huu, In Union Signal. A FT E R S C H O O L—WHAT ? Dow Thousands o f Voting Women lluve • Tlieli' AUlltliloiis Chained. We have a recollection of having met this query in print before, but us it ex­ presses our own present anxiety, lmve no hesitation'in appropriating it. Our sympathies are called into fullest action by the struggles and discourage­ ments in the path of a certain young woman of our acquaintance. As' her case is th a t of thousands, wc will cite it as a text for a very short sermon. Sara Bartlettfscparents are active, en­ ergetic, hard-working, ambitious peo­ ple, whose aims to make money and achieve a certain prominence in their village have been-, more than usually successful. The mother had some na­ tive refinement, bu t the' narrowness of her life and the society of a coarse and vulgar husband have not developed her best qualities. The father, albeit as destitute of refinement as one well can be who has no vices and has a strong desire to receive the respect of his fel­ lows, is a man of great force of charac­ ter, and some rather unusual, though uncultivated powers of mind. Sura has inherited the best of both parents, and the education their efforts have enabledjher to> gain has developed mental faculties to a degree far beyond that, of the most at even bright or for­ tunate young women, Her ambition and tha t of her parents have led her to seek the society of people above their own social position, and her talents ^nd accomplishments have enabled her to do it successfully. She is welcome wher­ ever she chooses to go. ' This satisfies the ■parents, bu t not Sara. Ambition, the ruling passion of her parents; is hers also, bu t its ideals are higher. Her mental vision is as far­ sighted. as theirs is short. From the height she has already reached, she sees other and greater heights, and She longs to scale them. Her vigorous young na­ ture pants for the efforts it is so able t * make. Bnt the parents, who have hitherto aided, now repress. Now Sara is held back by all the force of their strong but ignoble natures. They re­ fuse Iter permission to leave home, dr money to prosecute her studiesat home, or to forward her aims in any way, and they claim from her warm filial affec­ tions a hard tribute of enforced grati­ tude. Their cry is; “After all we have done for you, will you desert ns? We have made you- a good home. No home in the village is finer or more prettily furnished. Stay here; receive your frictids; introduce us to the society you are in; marry to please us. I t is your duty.” What can poor Sara do? She is twenty-five years okl. The men whom she might marry if left to herself, avoid her, because they would not wish to be associated with her relatives. The men to whom this association would not be objectionable, and whom her parents would no t refuse, are not acceptable to the daughter. She is like a bird chained by the foot. The chain is long—fora, chain—and she is allowed to take short flights in any direction; bn t a t a certain limit the chain is felt, the flight is checked, and weary, chafed and dispirited, the poor bird returns to earth. * Wliat shall be done for the girls thus chained? Much has been said of the selfishness and-ingratltutc of children who abandon or neglect in their old age the parents who by dint of greatest sacrifices have enabled them to soar far above the parental nest. Sometimes, perhaps often, the blame iffMcserved; bu t are there not many otner cases where the selfishness is on the part of the parents, who have educated their children not that these might be wiser, better or happier than they, bu t tha t they should rise upon their children's wings to social heights which unaided they could not have hoped to reach?— Harper’s Bazar. Over a Y ear Old, The Woman's Legal Educational So­ ciety of Now York, having for Its ob­ ject the study of the general principles of law, and especially of those laws af­ fecting the Interests of women celebrat­ ed its first anniversary recently. Mrs, ex-Mayor HeWitt, Dr* Mary Putnam Jacobi and other women of distinction are among the directors of the society. Prof. Christopher Tiedman has been en­ gaged to deliver four Courses of lectures before the society, I t I* C k M / tfc* Look •# Volm T k st w - g - aap*Th*trSaae«M, I t is not everybody who has yet grown up the idea that the female orator is an essential p a rt of the social fabric, and yet we have her suddenly with us and taking the. prizes away from the sex that has hitherto enjoyed a practical monopoly of the oratorical arts and graces. I t is not wo^th while to ques­ tion the propriety of woman's appear­ ance on the platform. As a matter of fact she appeared there some time ago, hu t as a speaker, hardly as an orator, in the proper sense. I t has been several years now since the sight of a woman aa a public speaker created even a rip­ ple of emotjon. She has been presiding ’ over and addressing temperance meet­ ings and club gatherings; she hss lec­ tured to public assemblies; she has made political stump speeches; she has even ^preached sermons—all without arousing excitement or serious opposL tion. The fact is, women have “ar- , rived,” and the people who are slow to adjust themselves to the situation are a t a disadvantage. If, however, woman will address her fellow citizens from the stage or the stump, it is butter that she should do it acceptably. Even the most ardent friends of udvanced woman—those who have kept her in sight in her rapid progress toward “emancipation'.'—are obliged to confess Uf a frequent wish that she wouldn’t «;hen she essays to electrify the Kuiltitjlde. ' She may be earnest utad eloquent, she may be witty and wise, but, ns n rale, she can not spear- Ifor voice gets away from: her; she is alternately shrill, and husky; she shrieks when she would be'emphatic; she whispers hoarsely when she-would persuade. Sensitive and sympathetic members of the audience incline to crawl under the benches. ' She hod, in short, a voice that was trained by an­ cestry and early environments to -do­ mestic uses, and has not grown to the requirements of a .ball. Henceforth this will be different. Colleges recog­ nize this lack and are prepared to rem­ edy it. If any female students show , oratorical •talent or are ambitious to become spellbinders, opportunity shall be offered them. The woman o fthe future, and of the near future,.who speaks in public on the stage may, if she likes, be the Daniel Webster, the Henry Ward Beecher •or* the. Chauncey M. Depew of her sex. Whether the young'wotuau who so proudly boro the oratorical pennon from the male con­ testants of other Indiana colleges re- • eently .will choowj to follow up her victory 1 b not yet known, bu t if she does shd wiii undoubtedly win renown. The public will wish her to “come give us a taste of (her) quality.”—Indian­ apolis Journal. ______ .An l u t t m l l n z Woman. One of New York’s many interesting self-supporting women Is Cynthia M. Westover, now engaged a t the M useum of Natural History in collecting scien­ tific data and recording descriptions of new specimens, Miss Westoverwent to New York from the west, and was one the most efficient of the. corps of women inspectors a t the custom house. At that time she lefiimed .French, Ger­ man, Spanish and Italian by boarding a year with a family of each of those na­ tionalities, and, this knowledge became very valuable to her wheb she was afterward engaged in the street-clean­ ing- department. Fn addition to her present work in the museum, she edits a department in the Social Economist. IN WOMAN ’S DOMAIN* Tim French societies of women have formed a federation similar to our na­ tional council, and is to held its nation­ al congress yearly. T idier hundred and 'eighty women nve employed in twenty-four prominent libraries, receiving from $240 to 81,000, an average salary of *570. . C aroline E sciiakd pays more taxes titan any other woman in her county in Ohio, is a director of a hank, and is con­ nected with several other enterprises. T tie champion tarpon fisherwoman in Florida is Mrs. George Stagg, She caught a 'tarpon a t Fort Myers meas­ uring seven feet three inches and weigh­ ing 205 pounds. WoxtAS is gradually extending the field of her occupation in Sweden. A proposal now before the riksdag, that Women should have the same right as men to be elected clerks,of churches, has met with a favorable reception. A nother vocation for women recent­ ly developed is that of designing book- covers. A good cover is often quite as attractive as a good title, and many of the striking designs now seen arc the work of wotnen. I t requires a special g ift or art, Miss ,M art G olding L anman , who has lately been appointed to a responsi­ ble position on tlie staff of the Boston Evening Transcript, is a member of tho old Trnhtbuil family, of Connecticut. Miss Lanman is one of the youngest Of successful women in journalism.' A hew industry lias been invented by a clever girl. She calls herself an ac­ countant and auditor for large house- holds. She finds plenty of employment in looking after the business of a few families of large expenditure, whose heads have no t taste for tile work. T h * first case on record where a woman lias been appointed clerk of the d ren it court of the United States is that of Miss Adelaide titter. The district for which She is appointed is the west­ ern division of the Western district oi Missouri a t Kansas City. Miss'litter is twenty years old and has been a deputy clerk for a long while, ■ his wis indulg dlvom the j»« the p a •—A ’ Spring Indian; wheels was h horse, as a bo Qm prated Jlennei in the 1 he woj rescue i times r ' —Job the pot <Atchiso in char drejv t from In journey ated. —A B -station • a ticket gotten urged ti in blus, jomethi got a tit —The ' facturei teen ye; New Yo own foi in sever: United work fo skilled i —Alva maker, r of his de a t first a received pathy ' a ■. virtues t % the mist; attraetec circles. —Cong surprise' ing eque ing alon speed on Ms sadd ground a years oh. gore ride a cowboj classic T* —Sir A teebof hi point of 1 . of the ho in Londo nings th patients used to r: his own 1 medicine; ■inhandin should n: —Choll; —“Yessi: owandw Herald. —Sure portrait was he < after he s Journal. t —What did you it biggest 11 “I meant level-heat Herald. —“now pentcr)— expect a leigh say house th Transcrip —A M "I have kind of Prison M your dec about?" work is tion.”—Ti —In Sc tered a c strap stoi soon as 1 arose mul very kind, madam, 1 it‘s self-th —A sail: Dot find cl fees. The log to tie • touted fe« his hand fihillings.s us as far n —A ytn cailoc upo asked, to shall I rjm the frpnt stilted to t held up h< inquired, Epoch. —Norwa was gover 630 Qlaf 'i Yngliags Sweden, ff- land, the n W ihyhisd Black, a g whose ntci *n Mk ifU >0 t W roi t ml vll. tat a me ar be' >f d jet :ra sh< es; ih< al *ioi t P* iit; ai ita al ao; t— In pa eq iht .SVi la; sh *y A) 3e u 8J e S! ait act TO’ Ii lcj >ar. ide im rtu on fu ag* Vel te Vh idl: te col llO' . h wii >y- null ' r c: th tsci rivi am the ash Fr< y b of •edg (CO s tr ' itio m i r Mi \v< at* id gin tr ’240 1 IB ter W •ntc fish Sts Mj ■s a :ten iSv riki amt of eee: jme (ign ten tml seei fes Asi to a >f icml Cot yo alls: nit ersc *lar ‘em nest litu ;e W ord I clt S’tai Th is * ' Mi? ?ecn

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