The Cedarville Herald, Volume 13, Numbers 1-21
, . r V C n * m j r V ie Cedarville Herald. W. H. BLAIB, Pabllibsr. i o H i a JARVILLB, i BUSINESS PA||_URES. rtcvr'fco Younf Men Starting Out Far 'Client-elves. , largo number of men who “go Into iness for themselves" moot swith ore. Almost eviry business man is no t employed iu a salaried posi ts obliged to borrow monev in or- ilr to carry on his business^ His own >ital would In nearly every case be small for a reasonable profit If be is to deni in ’merchandise, for Stance, ho expects to buy bis goods' Hi borrowed money, and to soil-them a price so much higher as to pay back h a t be borrowed and leave enough to give himself an income. . • B u t should' he be disappointed in his tations of profit, or should ho fall find customers, he may not be able pay back the borrowed money. In It ease, he must “fail,*’ and cease to business until the bankruptcy law ts him; or until lie can make ivnte arrangements with his cred- J&-., ■ ’ . . Failure in business is the greatest d pf young men starting out for themselves. I t will be, interesting, therefore, to glance over some of the *(*ti;tics of- business failures recently qoLected by the great mercantile agen- K lc x a n d see-if they give any hint how ijl'nr?£ may be avoided. ■ -vJLvtlie year 1801, considerably more million men were in business fp* themselves throughout the United Bfeates, • • v • ' this number, more than twelve IttbuS&nd failed in business, and a com- (parison with other recent years shows 4he number to be not far from the an- jntiAl average. ;fb»ly about one percent., therefore, « t.tbe men now in business for them- M h o . are likely to become bankrupt ^hiefore the year is over. The propor-. ion of failures in the number who be- business in any one yeur, however, KMJich layger. '.liM to f tne million men already in ess have experience, and have ed some degree of success. The rtion of failures among them year is extremely small; it is tbe nger and untried men among whom ~ rnptcy is most extensive. No one • right to sta rt in business rashly own account, and assume that nhances of success aro a hundred.to in his favor. to n the other haqd, if a young Is sure of himself and understands in. which be is tp try his e, he heed not be discouraged by figutoa Careful estimates have made of the causes of business in this country, and the results i some useful lessons, a than one-balf of the business x in the year were due to insuf- preparation, or insufficient to accomplish what was tinder-' A g reat many of them Were by the investigators to have been absolute incompetence and un- to r the business chosen, ta&re .still of the unsuccessful b failed because tbey under- too tnuch; tried to do business on scale all a t once,-and rather do a safe business for small profit, -large risks where wealth would have come bad their plans sne- bttt where bankruptcy was I t they did not. Important to observe oxactly ‘t h l i means. Those are results from thousands of different and they all agree in one Personal unfitness for the bust- n, and ambition to make too rashly and too fast, ore the Of more business failures than p u le s , excessive competition, holiness relations, and all combined. of these plain statistics ftmmts man starting out in ■ r himself are: If he wishes a t euccesa, lo t him first he 1* fitted and properly See the- business which he is St and second, let him be met* slowly, and tru st that will come w ith time —•Youth's Companion, THE BATTLE FIELD. i W u M p l m Furniture. i Are two articles which one te r this room—a table and I t often happens th a t * ikeeptr, not realising the •fo r having these of generous Well made, chooses articles ;good, but which in a short Unstable, Oak is the •wood for the dining- Tth* tab le of good width, as never looks well. The be Strong, broad-seated high books. Having the l tfcble, Von can wait for the although a sideboard- able thing It one cab you oaanotbave exactly Went, be p atien t Side- 1-tables and eliina- *11 come in such aim- designs, th a t one may them *11 one’s life. I t > lo r such a piece of a hard wood o r a dost enough of the tabled to make * deep biigl* ra g be placed in fhe& om . Shades, with •hewer very well ^Homejonrnai, A SOLDIER'S PHOTOGRAPH. ’Twos takes thirty years ago— My photo o’erdho mantel yonder;. "1’wuSNuld the raeomblunce then .Was very lifelike—e'en a wonder; My hair was curly, dark and long, My face was round, unseamed and fair, My figure, of athletic mold, Showed health and vigor everywhere, -To-day my glass reflects to me . Gray hair and features thin and wan; The roundness from my supple form, And health and vigor all are gone; The soldier of those times Is dead, And in his place a shadow elands; The past is hut n memory, The preseut useless on his hands. Abovu my photo bangs the sword I carried through my array life, And over all the old cuntcon, That never tailed me In tho strife; They have’not changed with going yenrs, And hut for a shade browner grown, They look as fresh as when we loft . The Held a t close of duty doue. Ah,’well! ’twiis destined so to hi, - And to the edict all must bow. I've lived tho past, and- memory ^ is all that time has left mu now; 'But what a leguqy Is mine! My story of a martial fife! , • Wealth could got buy the knowledge grand, Of tented Held and mortal strife! ’Tls mine, and though I am to-day Naught but a wreck upon the shore, I’m rich in what the past hath wrought, A millionaire forever more! And dally I live o’er again A hundred recollections past Of cump, Hold, hospital aiul march, And hope to lire ihoin to the lust. * —13. B, Wicks, in Farm and Homo. A NEGLECTED HERO. ( ! • W orked th e Engine o f tlie Aahuelot After Ills Arm Wus Shot Off. John Drummond' saved the Ashuelot. Tho story appeared in tho newspapers at the time but has long since been for gotten. The Ashuelot 'was a side- wheel wooden steamer of one ’thousand tons burden, armed with twelve rifled guns in battery and two carronados. Her commander was Adam Barrett, a worthy but somewhat narrow-minded old seaman. The Ashuelot had been sent a few miles up the James to put a stop to some fortifications which the confederates had begun upon a long, narrow spit of land running well out into tlie stream and commanding the channel for a considerable distance. An hour's vigorous shelling had accom plished tbe work. The enemy were dislodged, the guns spiked, and, the lookout reporting the smoke of several other steamers around the betid of the river two miles above, the Ashuelot wo? headed down' stream:. At this point the James -Is full of dangerous, shoals and the channel is tortuous. Sailing vessols draw ing as much water as the Ashuelot.at full speed was a task of infinite difficulty bu t "Capt," Lee Jordan, who was in charge of tho ship on this expedition, hod been an old -James river pilot.- "Capt.” "Jordan know every sand-bar, spit, snag, rock, curve and turn in tho river and no one be(te.r, except, perhaps, John Drum mond, likewise a James river pilot in the old days before tlie war. Drummond, however, was also an ex perienced engineer and when the 'Ashuelot was put in commission he hod been git on charge of her engines With his two assistants he was now in the engine-room of the ship and -when the hell rang for “full speed” he took the starting-bar in his own stalwart hands. No sooner had the Ashuelot opened the point above than three ves sels came steaming around the curve in full view. They were the three most powerful, members of the confed erate fleet . od ths Jamos—tho York- town, tho Potomac a»d tlie iron-cl ad ram Virginia—the tatter destined, a few days later, totiwork such terrible bovoc among the federal vessels a t Hampton Roads. The Ashuelot «*as not a match for the smallest of her pur suers in men and tfistal Her only hope was in her heels. As the pursuers came sweeping around the bend two puffs of smoko arose from the bow-gunk of the Yorktotvn and the Potomac. A solid shot sang far over the mainmast of the Ashuelot: then a heavy shell crashed into tho port battery, and, ex ploding. killed asA wounded half the gnn's craw. Th&'ji^hu*lot replied with her stern guns and tho forward smoke stack of the Potomac disappeared. For the next fifteen minutes a rapid exchange o f iron salutation* took place between pursuers and pnrsned without noticeable effect By this time the slower moving but mufch more heavily -armed Virginia had rounded the point and now took a hand in the duel , by discharging both of h e r ten-inch bow- guns. .Both shots took effect Dne, a solid shot, struck ' the pilot-house, car ried i t pverboard and killed “Capt** Jordan; the other, a shell, exploded aft the mainmast, '* fragment severely wounding Commander Barnett; another one, entering the engine-room, took off John Drummond’s left arm and broke his left leg. The second officer, a young man, who happened to be in the cngine-roOm at the time, immediately gave orders to Strike th e color* With the pilot killed, the captain insensible and tho chief engineer apparently dying, no tone aboard to carry the ship through the intricacies of the channel, what, in deed, was le ft for him to do? But as the order to strike was about to b e . transmitted to the deck John Drum mond struggled feebly, to Ids feet, and while one of his assistants knotted a piece of waste about his bleedfngatump to check the blood lie said; “No, a n Don't-give her up, In;viten ant! I can pull hor through." And pull her through ho did by an exhibition of grit, skill, experience and fortitude probably never excelled in the history of our navy.’ Propped up on his seat by the valve rods,' ghastly, sick and racked with agony, he coursed the aliip from the engine room. • His fire men, stimulated by hi» superhuman courage, worked like demons. Cost, resin, hams, fat, grease, waste were poured upon the furnaces. The drafts were wide, agape and tho blowers working like cyclones. Clouds of smoke poured from the chimneys; every pound of steam which the boilers would gen erate was admitted to tho valvea And .the Ashuelatescnp.ed, albeit badly hurt in many places and with twenty-one of her crew dead or wounded, among the iormor her pilot, her commander badly injured and her chief engineer maimed for life.—N. Y. World. . OVERTAKEN BY THE STORM. W hat .Happened to Sheridan's Messenger' W hen Ills Horse Stumbled. A group of old cavalrymen were gathered in the smoking room a t their post headquarters one stormy day, en gaged in narrating marvelous tales of the speed and endurance of the horses they had owned or handled during the famous struggle, when Gilo, whose fame as a .good otory-telter is not strengthened by a reputation for verac ity, spoke up, saying: “You remember th a t big chestnut 1 rode when attached to Sheridan’s head quarters in '04?.” A smile passed round the circle, and tbe major, with, a wink, replied: "No, what was he, Gile?" "What was he?- Why, he was the fastest horse in Sheridan’s cavalry. He had but one fault—he wasn’t sure-foot ed—and that was what cost me these scars I carry to remind me of tlie hot test race I ever took part in." Ilis /hearers remembered the many ways in which Gile had told those scars were received, and know a good' Story wus coming. " I got him of a southern planter," Gile continued, “and the stories of his speed soon got to headquarters. Wheth er this helped to bring it about I can’t say, but-twas but.a short time before they had me engnged in carrying im portant despatches through the enemy’s line* 'The surrounding country was infested with guerrillas, and Mosby's men were especially active in .captur ing our detached pickets and scouts. Aa you may see my work was of an,ex ceedingly hazardous nature, .but, as I was familiar with the country, and al ways kept my eyes open, I had little fear of being drawn into an ambush, and when it camo to a cliaso I knew they hadn't the horse that could over take me. “But one morning as I was riding leisurely down the Brownsville turn pike I heard hoofbeats behind, and turning s*w- a squad of Johnnies coin ing down on me on the gallop. .1 touched tiie spurs to my horse and wait off like the wind, ant} soon I heard the pop, pop pop of their carbines behind me. They fired till there ammunition was exhausted and never touched me, and I should have got Off all right, but just then my horse stumbled and fell. Before I could rise and mount again I was struck by a storm ©I bullets.” Why, how •was that?" the major broke in, “you said their ammunition was exhausted." “Yes, .it was," Gilo replied, with a sly look, "but when I fell tho bullets had a chance to overtake me."—Boston Herald. . NOTES FOR OLD SOLDIERS. G en . B urnside ' s sword and othet military equipments have been pur chased for the Memorial hall a t Bris tol, R. I. Ills library was purchased by Col. S. P. Colt, who will donate it tc the Rhode Island soldiers' home. A few days since while visiting tbe battle-field of Chanccilorville, Vn., Comrade II. II. Martin, Commander of Lincoln Post, of Washington. D. (\. picked up a copper medal which, under the circumstances, is in a good state of preservation. On one side is the head of Gen. McClellan, and on the other Bide appears the name of W. M. John son, Cot C, Uth Pa. Reserves, Washing ton. County, Pa. If this comrade is living, and will correspond with Com rade Martin, a t llfi. F street northeast, he can get tils medaL—National Tri bune. E vert man. wbo went to the war achieved some personal distinction that has ever since been a source of pride to him to tell'about when he fights his bat tles o'er, P. H Willoughby.a white-hair edm sn of seventy, who recently appear ed before *n Indianapolis court,’di vulged the Information th a t be owned and carried and cared for the famous eagle known as "Old Ale," which wus borne a t the head of tho Seventy Wis consin in all its engagements-' "Old Abe" devoted his or rather her time af ter the return front tbe tyar to laying egg* and her owner's subsequent ca reer has beep hardly more ambitious. M a j .-G ey . O. O. H oward lost ids right arm a t the battle of Fair Oaks, and it was to him th a t Gen, l'lnl Ke:y- ney, who had lost his left arm at Chapultcpec, is said to Have made tho famous remark; “ IIoWiu"l, yon and I Will have to buy our gloves in partner ship." Gen. Howard is sixty-two years of age. His headquarters ns com mander of the department of tlie east, are on Governor’s Island, and he is hut, infrequently seen in New York. Tlie abundant leisure which his official position gives hint is devoted to Ids books, and particularly to r.ludieu in military science. Ju st a t present he is a t work on a life of Gen Zachary Tay lor, JITIWOMAN’S BEHALF. WOMEN IN FINLAND. Much lis a lieon D on e and I s Y et B ein g Done In T h at L lttl* Country. .The woman question is progressing In Finland. Woman’s position in Fin land has, in fact, always been good, and favored by the- laws. The na tional character also- permits advance ment, because,of its readiness to sub ject tbe physical to the spiritual. Again, our culture is comparatively modern, and tbe young people are not so deeply imbedded in an.clent cus toms. ■ In the thirteenth century Birger Jarl granted woman the, righ t of inherit ance. The laws of 1784. however, con firmed the custom th a t had become tlie prevailing one—th a t sons inherited two- thirds and daughters one-third, except ing children of clergyman, who were to divide evenly. In 1680 wo hear of a school .in Ny Ifarleby which admitted girls to the study of reading, writing and the catechism. The fact'-becomes interesting when wo remember that tho contemporary French lady, Fran- coise do Ssintongea, was persecuted ita Paris because she labored for the estab lishment of girls' schools in her native land. I n ‘spite of all this progress the wom en at large, of Finland, did. not, until 1884, supporter even encourage any or-, gauizccl work for woman's rights. Then in Helsingfors a "Finnish Woman’s union" was organised by Airs. Elizabeth Lqfgren, who became its first president The union had to suiter like all similar ones elsewhere, but it sur vived criticism .and opposition. I t ad mits no male members, because that would make it suspicious in tho eyes of the Russian police, who are bunting for Nihilists everywhere. Tho pro gramme of tlie union is as follows: Equal rights aiul advantages with- men in the securing of both universal sand special knowledge. Woman's right to puss academical and other examinations and to profit thereby- equally with man. The same wages for same labor with out regard to . the laborer’s sex—pro vided the same amount of knowledge anil efficiency is furnished- Married and unmarried women arc of age when twenty-one years old. . A married woman- shall have full possession and right .of administering her inherited or otherwise acquired property. ' " Woman's legal right to marry must be placed far beyond the present fixed .ago of fifteen. - The same lkw and custom for woman as for-iimn on all moral questions. . The law must acknowledge abuse and drunkenness as sufficient cause for di vorce and equal to martial in fidelity. Considering the progress of tlie last ten years, wo can sec an advance on the whole line. Women have now the right to vote' at municipal elections, and they are elective to school boards and as charity commissioners. The public interest in admitting' girls to boys’ schools has grown very much, and parent:!, as a ru le , arc now bent upon giving their girls an education for use, rather than for 'o rnam en t Wom en study now in the industrial and technical schools. Upon special application women are admitted to the university, and, upon paying the regu lar fee, they enjoy the advantages of mule students in tlie lecture-room and elsewhere. There is not much pros pect, at present for women getting equal wages with men. because of their neglect in acquiring equal proficiency. A law was passed in 1SS9, relating to property mid indebtedness of married people; according to this law the husband remains tbe guardian of tbe wife, but the wife lias sole right over her own earnings. The same law gave the married woman tbe right to do business without her husbaud's per mission. in case ’he is imprisoned, lias abandoned her, or when the married partners live ap a rt I’ublic opinion is. in a general way, aroused on the subject of the woman question, and some -of the daily papers have put it upon their pro gramme. But, though the voice is J a cob’s. the. hands are those „of Esau. They talk noblr about progress, but they practice according to the old cus tom of allowing man a tnpnil cede differing? from that of woman and giv ing him liberties denied her. Very much remains yet to be done in Finland. Our work and progress is only local and limited ss such.-—Ivvin- tlert ag Natnfundcl, A NOBLE WOMAN. One Who Spent s 1.1re In t’ntiring Effort for Her Sex. In her modest home in Buckland, Mass., the mother of Mary Lyotl had a beautiful flower-garden, which she kept with notable care a id skill. A peighbor one day h e .r' d, tlie privilege of sotting a choice, plant there, saying that if it grew in her garden lie knew it Would not die. M rs. Lyon's h ou se hold was a garden where everything th a t grew was tended as carefully as she kept her flowers. The plants there were trained ,to live, and, in a higher sense, to live forever. M ary devoted her life to teaching. Tlie story of the founding of tho school that made her fame is a record of her unresting efforts for her sex and race, continued through patient year* Tlie Mount Holyoke Female seminary was opened in 18J7. Twelve years af terward site was gathered to her rest, but she had l e f t » deathless m ark on the characters of >■th ree tliouBsad women. The' institution she crested was- not born, to die. Thirty-five years after its founding Andrew Murray, in Squth Af rica, read Mary Lyonfc biography, sad also, the life of one' of her pupils, Fi delia Fiske, "The Mary Lyon of Per sia." He determined.to found a school for tlie girls of Cape- Colony similar to the ooe at Mount Ilolyoke. Hia letter to th e parent seminary wwy sent to Abbie P. Ferguson and Annie E. Bliss, two ,of its graduates; awl in 1878 they sailed for the- "Dark Continent'*' to become teachers In the wevr schooL The- ©ext year’We&lngto© Female seminary was opened; sad al ready—in less than twenty years—it has become the parent of t*tk Qoutb African Christian school* Mary Lyon’s mother deserved her neighbor’s praise, A plant of her nursing would not die. A human life is not merely an Im mortal sotiL .I t lives on 'In whs* it leaves behind. Enough if St can be xsid • of the obscurest toiler that ■In the desert where he lies entombed He made u litti^Bnrden, and (eft there Some flowers. Unit but roi him had never bloomed. . —^Youth's Companion. . A WORD TO YOUNG LADIES, You Have a l'nrt Iu tho Moulding nf Your Brother's diameter. And this leads me to the thought: Let sisters not begrudge the time and care bestowed on a brother. It is hBrd to believe, that any boy you know so well as you do your brother can ever turn out anything very useful. Well, be may not be a Moses. There is Only one of th a t bind needed for six thou sand year* But I tell you what your brother will be—either a blessiqg or a curse to society, and a candidate for happiness or wretchedness.. He will, like Moses, have the choice between rubies and living coals, and yoiir influ ence will have much to do with his de cision. lie may not; like Moses, be the deliverer of a nation, but he may. after your father and mother are gone, be the deliver^*Of a household. Wltat thousands of homes tod ay Awi piloted by brothers! There are properties now, well invested and yieidingfneome for the support of sisters and younger brothers, because the older brother rose to the leadership from the day-the father laid down to die. Whatever you do for .your brother will come back to .you again. If you set him an ill- natured, censorious, unaccommodating example, it will recoil upon you from his own irritated and despoiled nature. If you, by patience w ith'all his infirm- ties and by nobility of Character, dwell ■with him in the few years of' your com panionship, you will have your own counsels reflected back upon you some day by his splendor of behavior in some crisis where he woul^ have failed but for you,—Ladies' llomfo Jou rn a l A Spanish Noveliipv Among the modern Spanish women who are making a natno in. literature1 is Senorctta Emilia Pardo-Bazan. Sen- oretta Bazan was born in 1652 (they don't conceal the ages of authors in Spain); her birthplace was Corunna and she is said to have descended "on both sides" from Galician nobility. As a girl she wus one of those omnivorous readers wbo worry their guardians. • She was educated a t a French board ing-school in Madrid. During the rev olution of 1868 she traveled a good deal with her father. It was in this year th a t she married Don Jose Quiroga. Iler first writings'were in history and philosophy, in which branches she studied extensively.' “ Pascual Lopez" was her first novel. While devoting herself very closely to novel writing she has found time during the last ten years to do a good deal of lecturing and has found tbe "woman question" aeon- genial subject of study and propagan da. Her lust novel, is "A Christian Woman,” in which social and domestic life are considered with great candor. IN WOMAN’S WORLO. Two thousand women became artists in the year 1891. C anada is to have a Primros# league, of which Baroness Macdonald fcf 10 be the patroness. , M hs . M inv ir K kei . ru G oad , a young woman lawyer of Appleton City, Ma, lins lately been admitted to the bar. II k . nkv J ames lias keen saying some very fluttering tilings about the success of women in the profession of litera ture. Till: G ris’ Friendly rociety of Eng land is a union of over 170,009 women and girls of all classes which holds re ligious and secular classes, provides homes of rest and training, lodges, li braries, etc. I n only five states has * mother abso lute legal right to tlie custody of her own children. These are lows, Ne braska. Kansas, Oregon and Washing ton. In all other states the right of fatherhood is paramount. llri.DA F kikoricks , a yoqng German woman, lias been’engaged by the Pall Mail Gazette to make a tour of the United States for tlie purpose of writ ing up the social institutions of tho country,especially their effect on.wom an's condition, Miss J ennie C arso N, of Minnesota, lias increased the number of available occupations for women by becoming a Stage-driver. She makes three trips a week, in all Weathers and through all seasons, between Osage and Par!; lispids, In winter tho mercury some times falls to ton degrees below fcera and in summer it frisks among the nineties, but Miss Carson never misses a trip . i?< m Moral Publ ■jueatic tbe d r| lot a r t princij degree ] weiwot tiie maj . urges liovi) free is temper weaklhl stronge ters. J| ,the sar ling w] and g«| loved it certain! oftener| the hat inventel designs! to t h e : one wJ can. tional quaiity,| cident < sort otlJ pravity I as the r l ty or i f the dan| ■ is becd more ei tion o f| m ak e; tlie prl falsity, | why nc th a t wc ' of mor sobrietj may us and so| becaus have tempts! gets dil known | .'cause be gcts| be n o t« be is hr someth! tion b{ others i couragij pose temper is bfa iifactuf the ins his attrac an eveii she?) says. li| "I w ill . ‘Tho The dJ gen ions her o f | ponent sinder John, much ' get a II treated! has dif darken I burden] wife, b | he shot invites! But ths be deni case, to hir Say to I can yt ffn ags flench* {flow | lad sii lope.- eranc krlls th re e tho u sa • created ivas i ire years (iftoe ray, in. South J n“s biography, [of her pupils, lacy Lyon of F t t o found a sell I Colony similai |tyokn. parent seisin P. Ferguson of its gradua .led for the- "D ae teachers in Ix t year Weilinf |a s opened; and twenty yean [ren t of ten iiools. Magy Ly | r neighbor’* pn |n g would not d 1 not merely an |e s on in wh< lugh if Hcan toe |ct- th a t j lies entombed". In, at.ul left there put fo- him had i mutV's Companh lOUNG LAD1E |th u Moulding o f |t'luxrnct.er, fme to tbe thoi •/radge the tiuu . brother. . I t Is |iy boy you lent lour brother cad ;very useful, loses. . There id i needed for six I: tell, you what fth e ru . blessing xnd a Candida lichedness. - Tie J the choice bet Icouls, and your tell to do with li lot,' like Moses, 1 |on, but lie may,! ■mother are go l a household, jes to-day'Atre i |re are propertiei l' yielding ihcot Isisters and yc le the o.lder b Iship from the d Ito die. WhateV liter will come t you set him i lus, unaccommo Vccoil upon yoi and despoiled i bee with all his fity of Character Jew years of yot will have yo Id back Upon yo |io r of behdvior i vould have fqib I* Hom’e Jou rnal sish NOVcU*G |iodern Spanish a natae in lit liiia Pardo-Bazai la s born in 165$ |he ages of auti rthplaco was C have descend >Galician nobili ic of those orat vorry their gu ed a t a French tidrid. During Ihe traveled a g‘ |r. It was in t ed Don Jose ( igs were in' higl which brand |vely. "Pascual Inovcl. While ( losely to novel time during tho Loti deal of lcclu [’woman questiot if study and pi lovet. is “A ( Ihich social and < |retl with great IAN'S WORLI Lil women bccan j have a Primro* Iness Macdouald K kei . fi : G oad , Jr of Appleton C admitted to tli I e S lias t een say ■ tilings about th Hie profession ^r. r.dly roctet} h of over 170,00 li classes which Lftettlar classes, and training, i Istates has a mo' lit to the eusti These are b Oregon and Liner states tin |p iramount. tbEtf'K ', a joqn ccn engaged by to mane a toi [for tin* jnirpos Ikiciat inniitutiol ;al!y their eftec kt; (' arson , o f h !th.-.number of 1women by b.’ Hiio makes thr heathers and tl |wcon Osage : riatet* the mere . ten degrees hi Jmcr it frisks a iMiss Carson nc L t.
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