The Cedarville Herald, Volume 13, Numbers 1-21
TO—I HP WI.U * 7 The Cedarvilie Herald. W. H . BLAIR, FaMUher. CEDARVILLK. ; : : THE BATTLE FIELD. A PARDONED DESERTER. OHIO. ABOU T WRINKLES, . Iienoli nail American Specialist. Hitler as to t rcutmeat lly Hot Steam. Wrinkles are the index of nervous coalition, Upright lines between the eyes indicate mental trouble, thought, earc, it temper more than physical ill ness, Pine netted lines about the eyes denote nervous exhaustion and the de pression which follows overstimUlns. Women are likely to get them from living and sleeping-in close, -hot rooms. The latest scientific writer on the -subject says the air in our rooitos should bo changed three times every hour. The skin owes its beauty to the nerves which control the fine invisible blood vessels of the surface, whose work, lend glow and transparency .to the face. The nerves-ln turn owe. their sensitiveness to the air, which, noxious or pure, is our chief nutriment, inhaled by , gallons hourly. When the nerves are deadened .by. close, air, the fine muscles lose their tone,' the tissue of the face shrinks, and these shrinkages , become wrinkles ‘At first they are fugitive; a week’s watching may write the face over with cross-hatching of fine lines, and another week of rest wi l restore loss tissue, fat and fluids to.HU the spaces and smooth the face again. " . 'Jo avert wrinkles the nervous and .. overtaxed must rest and eat nourishing food. The neuralgic should eat roast fat and make food tempting with con diments, adding to their fare the sound, coarse bread which contains phosphate . to feed their starjed nerves, and is the great re gulator of .nutritive function. Too often the trouble is not so much what people eat, what they don’t cat, and do not get provided for them at • table. Leanness and wrinkles go to gether. Wo seldom see a florid plethoric woman with them, as the supply of blood keeps the skin in repair. Steaming the face is the fashionable treatment to remove wrinkles, but it is an idea of -American adoption, if not original. French specialists deprecate steaming; They say that it makes wrinkles .worse when the practice is suspended, and asserts that it causes fulling of eyelashes and eyebrows. The intensely hot steaming may have thatefftfet in certain states of the blood, and it must cause deterioriation of blood to' tlio face, which is fa r from healthy. The remedy is. to use vapor a t milder host, keeping up the process longer at a time. Half an hoar over the vapor, however, is more time than most wom en can spend. The most convenient application is a firm waxen paste which takes timo for rubbingvout and gives jnst the right amount of massage for the face is the process. The soft, oily salves and -creams in request are not such good wrinkle erasers as a firm, protective co-metic which will not rub off so easily, bat allows the moisture of the skin to remain and freshen the tissues. It is easier to disperse wrinkles than t j eradicate any other defect of the face. Sleep, much more than people -suppose necessary, rathe r hearty food, mnd moistcr air in houses are indis pensable to keeping a smooth face, whatever cosmetic is used, and a toilot paste, or cream, has twlco the effect in le.<Mtime if the hygiene of the* com plexion'be observed. Massage of the face should be by a firm, leisurely stroke, just soft enough not to irritate. The best usage makes the movement in circular sweeps over the Wrinkles, not lifting the fingers much tilt one has finished on that par ticular line. Massage of the face should be soothing, not leaving' it flushed and burning.' To avert the wretched outwork of lines about the eves and baggy eyelids, observe the precaution never to'sleep after a dance o r late hours without bathing the face plentifully in very warm water and taking a few spoonfuls of something light, half a cup of chocolate, or hot boulllioti, cau sucre, rich and sirupy, o r a lemonade, with or Without a fresh beaten egg. Three spoonsful* of sncli refreshment will take off the horrible exbausti >n which presents Its account on waking. A cup of hot water with •one drop of oil of cinnamon is a famous restorative, especially in heart weak ness, after late hours.—N. Y. Sun. Indian T radition o f the Flood, There Was not, if early historians,- tn'&sionnries and theologians are to be believed, n single tribe of American In dians who had, a t the time of the white man’s advent into the Western Hembphcre, the least smattering of tradition concerning the life, ministry and sufferings of Jcsns. Hut this does not hold good in regard to the story of creation, the Tower of Iiabel and the flood, many of them having tradition ary history which almost exactly cor responds with the stories of these great events as related to the Bible, One day, Maj. Davenport, the government agent for the Musquakies, was telling pome chiefs about Noah, the flood and the ark when one of* them interrupted bi n with; “Humph! Wo know that long time. We was in canoes all tied together. We float on heap water. We send muskrat down one, two-many times. lie dive, come up. Last he go down and come up with mud in his daw. We know water going down.” This was all the information Mr Davenport could elicit from the dusky beer.—Detroit Free Press. 'The Noble A tonem ent o f a Confederate A rtillerym an , Gen. Cullen A. ltattle; of the con federate army, in relating his experience during the civil war, tolls the following story; During ,the winter of 1803-4 it was my fortune to be president of one of the court martinis *of the army of Northern Virginia. One bleak Decem ber morning, while the snow covered the g round ' and the winds howled around our camp, I left my bivouac fire to attend the session of the court. Winding for miles along uncertain paths, I at length arrived at the court- ground at Hound Oak church. Day after day it had boon our dn ty ’to try the gallant soldiers of that array, charged with violatioas of military law. But never hud'I, on any previous occasion, been greeted with such anxious spectators as on that morning, awaiting the opening of the court. Case after case was disposed ’of, and at length the case of “The Confederate States vs. Edward Cooper,” was called —the charge, desertion. A low murmur rose spontaneously from, the battle- s,earned spectators • as a young artilleryman rose from the prisoner’s bench, and In response to the /question, “Guilty, . or nqt guilty?” answered, “Not guilty.” . The judge-advocate was proceeding to open tho prosecution, when tire court, observing that the prisoner was unattended by counsel, interposed, and said to the accused: “Who is your counsel?” I ”1 have no counsel,” .he replied. -~ Supposing that it'was his intention to represent himself before the court, the judge-advocate was directed to proceed. Every charge and specification .against the prisoner was sustained. The' pris oner was then told to introduce his wit nesses, “I have no witnesses,” he replied. Astonished a t -the 'calmness with which he seemed to be submitting to what ho regarded as inevitable fate, I said, to him: / “Have-yon no defense? Is it possible you abandoned your comrades and do- serted your colors in the presence of an .enemy without reason?" “There was a reason,” he replied, “but.it will no* avail mo before a mili tary c o u rt” , “Perhaps you are mistaken." I re plied. . “ You arc-charged with the high est crime known to military law, and it is your , duty to make known'the cause that inlluenccd your actions.'.’ For tho first time his manly form trembled, and h is. blue eyes swam in tears. Approaching tiic president of tho court, he presented a letter, saying as he did so: “There, general, is what did it,” I opened the letter, and in a moment my eyes were filled with tears. I t was passed from onp to another of the court until all had seen it, and those stern Warriors, who had passedwith Stone wall Jackson through a hundred bat tles. wept like little children. As soon as I had recovered my self-possession, I road tiie letter as the defense of the prisoner. /It was in these words: “M y D ear E dward :—I have always been proud of you, and since your con nection with the confederate army 1 have been prouder of you \han over before. I would not have yon do any thing wrong for the world; but, before God dear Edward, unless yott come home we must die. Bast night I was aroused by. little Edgar’s crying. I called out and said, ‘What is the mat ter, Eddie?’ and he said: ‘Oh, mamma, I’m so hungry!' And Lucy, Edward, your darling Lucy, she never complains, but she's growing thinner and thinner every day. And, before God, my dear Edward, unless you come home, we must die of starvation. Yovr. M aby ,” After reading the letter, I turned to the prisoner and said: “What did you do when yon received this letter? Did you apply for a leave of absence to the proper officers?” 'I made application for a furlough, and it was rejected; again I made an application and it was rejected; a third timo I made application and they refused to grant i t That n igh t as I. wandered backward and forward in the camp, thinking of my home, with the mild eyes of Lucy looking toward me, and tho burning words of Mary sinking deep into my brain, I was no longer the confederate soldier, bnt 1 was the father of Lucy and the hus band of Mary, and I would have pass ed those lines if every gun in the bat tery had fired npon me, I went to my home. Mary ran out to meet me—her angel arms embraced me, and she whispered': “ ‘Oh! Edward, I am so happy! I am glad you got your furlough!” “She must have felt mo shudder, for she turned as pale as death, and then, catching her breath at every word, she said: “ ‘Have you come without your fur lough? Oh, Edward, Edward,’ go back! Go back! Let me and my children go down together to the grave, bu t oh, for Heaven’s sake, save tho honor of your name!’ “ I a t once returned, and here I am, gentlemen, not brought here by milita ry power, but in obedience to the com mand of.Mary, to at !e the sentence of your court.” Every soldier o f that court-martial felt tho forco of tho prisoner’s words. Before them stood, in beatific vision, tha eloquent pleader for a husband s and a father's wrongs; bnt they hud been trained by their great leader, Robert E. Lee, to tread the path of du ty, though tho lightning's flash scorch ed the ground beneath their feet, am* each in turn pronounced the verdict—- guilty. •But, fortunately for humanity, for tunately for tho confederacy, the pro ceedings of the court were reviewed by the commanding general, ’and- upon the record was written: ”HKA'Dtil 7 ABTi ;»8 A JIMY NOJITII- I "istix V irginia . f “The finding of the court is approv ed. The prisoner—Edward Cooper—'is pardoned, and will report to his com pany for duty. II. E, I.fiE, General," , During the- second battle .of Cold Harbor, while, shot and shell were fall ing “like torrents from the mountain cloud,” my attention, was directed to the fact that one of our batteries was being silenced by the concentrated fire of the union forces. When I reached tho battery every gun but one had been dismantled, and by it stood a solitnry confederate soldier, with tho blood streaming -from his side. As he recog nised me, lm elevated his voice above the roar of the battle,'and said. “General, I have one shell left. Tell me, have I saved the honor of Mary and Lucy?” . » I raised my liat. Once more a con federate shell went crashing through the federal ranks, and the hero sank by his gun to rise no more.—Drake's Mag azine. \ I Y \M \ V \ p i n i A T F ‘ paper work. She must ho able to en- l i t VVLM JU lit O . j dure the routine of regular work w;th- WOMEN AS MONEY-SAVERS. !out much interruption and, if emer gency arises, to make extra effort and They Cii-iierully Make Closer Kcouoinints ] work longer hours without thinking of Thar, the Men. j ill feelings -or fatigue. There is noth* The fact that women are economical \ ing in business life more inexorable and money-savers is difficult to impress | than the hour of "press time" and if an upon the minds of men as a class. ,The methods adopted by women are sensi ble and practical, sometimes ludicrous, and often pathetic, •according to tho position in which they are placed in re- gard to tho amounts which fall to their lots to dispose of. There are a few Hetty Greens, and it is more whole some for the race that her class is an overwhelming minority. Money-savers of her kind are a detriment and not a benefit employe, who is trusted to do a certain part of the work is unable to fill tin- requirement, some bqsy fellow-worker fliust do double duty and supply the • lack. A few such failures during a critical press of work would.stamp one with inefficiency or unfitness for the place. One must be so interested in her work that she can forget her own personal feelingsand interests and pref erences and think only of what she is doing and liow to do it best A newspaper woricer must not be too' One who denies herself even the common decencies, not to. mention j the necessaries of life, is not a good j sensitive, and must learn to bear crit icism with philosophy. If you do nine ty-nine things well yoti may receive no apparent credit ,for them, and if yoit example for others. Whenever a wom an is allowed a certain sum or earns a regular amount, with w h ich a ll'ex penses must be met, then slut is better fail on th.e one-hundredth you may fui- A LUCKY TRANSACTION . An t'n d iirta k tr'i F o rt nnntu f i n d on u IH-uil Soldier. • During the war I was at .Louisville,' There were twenty-eight, hospitals in the city alone, and funerals were by tho .wholesale, We buried 4,000 after the battle of Shiloh, and the lot the government bought proved altogether too small for the increasing wants of tho dead. One night I was ordered to take out the body- of a soldier, ajid for company as well its help I took along a colored man named Frank/ I never did know his other name. He was a slave and belonged to the Lightburnes. I noticed that the pockets of the corpse seemed much inflated, as if each con tained a hat, and pretty soon Frank, who never kept his eyes off the corpse, to see if it would wake up, I suppose,’ at last broke out; “Massa, wonder what dat dead man has got in detn pockets. •Speck it might be something worth something.” I said nothing and Frank went ahead and searched the pockets. He pulled out some immense rolls of confederate money and a silver half dollar. I took the silver half dollar and Frank looked over the money, then said: “Say, boss, dat ain’t no good. Now, it's a l.ong time since I seen a sil ver doyar, and I’d really liko to ’havc that piece for. luck. I’ll, give you all this money for that half dollar.’* I thought a moment,, and, more to humor the old fellow than anything else, l made the exchange. I regarded 'the confederate money as absolutely worthless; and really thought I had the worst of the bargain. .We drove bade to tho city and the next rlay the brotlicr-in-law ol the man 1 was employed by saw me with the roll of money and a t once be gan to banter me for a trade. He was a blockade runner or cotton smuggler or something of that sort, but I thought he was ortly quizzing me. At last he said: ‘I’m in earnest. What will you tak£ for the roll?’ “ ‘What’ll you give?' I said. “ ‘Sixty conts on the dollar,’ he promptly replied, “The hair fairly stood on my head. 1 didn't believe lie was in earnest, bui he said: ‘Count it out: I mean it.’ Well, of course 1 did, and counted out £3,000 worth,” “What did you got out of it?” “Only' SI,300 in good American money. I t was the biggest day's work I've done from that day to this. The money didn’t belong to anybody any how, and only for my having met the blockade runner could not have got & cent out of it,”—-Cincinnati Enquirer. able to appreciate, relative values, and | ly expect that the failure will he no she will soon accustom herself to the | ticeci and criticised; that is one of the -best methods for procuring the most ! inevitable conspquencesof work which ami best for her money. As a class, ! the whole public sees and npon which women are more' saving than men ever j H is at liberty to pass judgment. If think of being. [.vow. write an article which you fully The wife of one of tho most promi-1 believe to be a masterpiece, do not be’ nont politicians thi.s state lias ever pro- i disappointed if you fail to hear it com- duced was the financier of the family i mended or noticed a t all. Very possi- and but for her ambition and faith in i bl/? you may conclude after a while his abilities lie, would probably never ' tbat V,JU were mistaken, and that it was have been known beyond the confines , pot a masterpiece. But even if it. was of his own county. H e r farsightedness j unusual excellence, remember the in real estate purchases, which were ) newspaper world is full of ambitious exceedingly small at first, made for , young people who would rather bo com- therii a modest competency which gave plimented for th e ir. own masterpieces B ITS ABOU T OLD SOLDIERS, G en . N eeson A. M iles should, in the regular order of promotion, become the general commanding the United States army two years hence. In th a t case he will be the first, man since Gen, Win field Scott, not graduated from West I’oint, to hold that place, A i ’ juv ' ate soldier had knocked down his captain,' and a court-martial had sentenced him to the Dry Tonfugas. His friends bestirred themselves in his behalf, and prevailed upon Judge Scho field, a personal friend of President Lincoln, to intercede i n . his behalf, Lincoln paid dose attention to all that Schofield had to offer, and then said: “I tell you, judge, you go right down to the capitol, and get congress to pass an act authorizing a private soldier to knock down his captain. Then come back here and I will pardon your man.” The judge saw tho point, and with drew, with a broad smile on his face, O ne of the most distinguished caval ry leaders during the war, Maj.-Gcn. Alfred I’lcasonton, a native of Wash ington, is spending the last years of his life in a small room of a poor hotel in that city. He is not in want, being in receipt of a good Income, having been placed on tho retired list of the army with the rank of major by special act of congress, but ho suffers greatly from illness. It is said he is greatly emaci ated, and that men who knew him and were intimate with him when ho was the.gallant and dashing commander of the cavalry corps of the array of the Potomac would not recognize the fight er now* him opportunities in furthering his political career. All the household labor was performed by her own bunds and the sale of dairy products gave them their first, start. One plan was to buy: a lot ill a respectable quarter and place several 'houses upon •it. The houses wore not built there. The wife, passing through the streets, would find houses for sale cheap if they were moved from the place. These were bought and placed on the lot mentioned, the cost being much less than a like structure- when new. Fresh paper, within and a coat of paint made them desirable to rent, and little by little the fortune lias accumulated. Tho officers of the bnildin than to stop and admire'yours. Do not be discouraged, but keep straight on, doing every, piece of work as faithfully .and perfectly as you possibly can, and in time appreciation will come, very , likely- when you least expect it and' perhaps from a quarter whence you least looked for it. There Is one great reward ancl encouragement in news paper work: When .you h'ave once ob tained a good foothold you can always hold it, if you wilL A reputation gained for doing good,honest, capable work in this line is something tha t will always serve you, and when yon have once, proved your ability yon will never need .Jto go hunting for work. Work will and loan i come to you,as fast as you want it. associations have found thousands of I ^ the ■ first step that is difficult, women stockholders. Young women, [• 1he obtaining a chance to begin is the fired with an ambition to own property j step that counts. There is scarcely any and have a home of their own, are pay- j chance for an inexperienced person to ing weekly into the association linn- j obtain even the humblest situation on dreds of dollars. Many of them have J onfc of the great newspapers.- Busy to practice the most rigid economy in or- 1 editors and busy managers can not stop der to meet their obligations. The comparative newness of women in bus iness life and their/ natural sensitive consciences make .them prompt, and dealers in real estate have found them, as a rule, desirable purchasers. In an organization recently started'the plan is the same as that of a savings bank! Any sum may be deposited at any.time, and after the deposits amount to fifty dollars interest is paid to the depositor. Among the persons who have dealings with this association are women of our most fashionable, sets, who entertain handsomely and seemingly have every thing heart can wish. Their saving's arc sometimes as small as twenty-five and fifty cents, occasionally as many dollars.—Indianapolis Journal. ' JOURNAL IS T IC PROFESSION. Some SUKCf-stlon* for Younr Indies Who IVlsli to Kilter This Field.' I t .is a safe statement to say that there are a t least a hundred women employed in newspaper work to-day where there was one twenty years ago. In fact, many -of us can remember when the sight of a woman gathering news for a paper or reporting a lecture or a concert was unusual enough to at trac t considerable attention and re mark. and the women who held salar ied positions as regulur correspondents of the great newspapers were few in number, and were usually those who had attained fame as writers. Now there is hardly any newspaper of stand ing and prominence which does not em ploy some women either as writers on special topics, news reporters, or salar ied correspondents. Those who have proved their ability command higher salaries than women can earn in almost any other branch of work. This fact causes such positions to be much sought for, and many young women have a mistaken idea that journalism is an easy road to fame and a delightful pro fession through which to gratify their ambition and earn money without hard work. The truth is (leaving out of con sideration brilliant special gifts of ex ceptional genius) tha t there is no work that requires a longer or harder or more rigid apprenticeship before one can a t tain success. Young women frequently ask what are the chief requirements for a girl who wishes to enter upon newspaper work. As ' a ‘ preliminary, she should know how to spell correctly, punctuate properly and paragraph with 1 good taste. She should be familiar with the meanings and correct uses of English words, and tho more wide and general information, she possesses the better will be her chances for success. If she is lacking in these necessary points she is not fit. to take the first step in jour nalism. Learn to write and .spell and us© the English language tersely and correctly before thinking of anything else. , One of the first requisites for a woman who expects to do systematic work is good health, l ’ho girl who is subject to sick headaches or hysterics or who can not control her nerves and temper had better not undertake news- to be troubled with the blunders of'in experience and 'Will not take the risks of incompetence. Almost everyone must begin at first in some small office and gradually work -his or her way up ward After one or two promotions the way is clear and success depends only upon yourself. B u t, s long as you may live you will never live long chough to know it all. You will always be learning, and there is hardly any form of knowledge but will sometime-' come useful in news paper work: Cultivate attention and memory, two o f the best aids and friends to success. Yon will be sure to find a time when any scrap of accurate knowledge or reliable information will serve you a good turn.—-Fanny M. Johnson, in Farm and Home. oC“ adit Notwithstan ng the striking merit of her work, Lanoe Falconer had the common experience, of new aspirants in the literary field. Publisher after publisher rejected her nihilist heroine until, vvhen she finally reached the hands of appreciation, her dress was sadly soiled with overmuch handling. The origin of the story was curious. A lady in the neighborhood played the zither. Once she played an air which haunted Lanoe with its Us intense and hopeless sadness. She said it was a Russian peasant nir. Thereupon the impressionable authoress decided to write a novel with a nihilist heroine, and began to read Russian books— Stcpniak's helped her the most—and finally Fisher Unwin published i t Mrs. Drew reviewed it* and the fortune of •‘Madamoiselle Ixc” was made. The author is described as tall, with fair hair and rather prominent blue eyos. WOMEN IN TH E FIELD. Mr.i.K. K armisa B ii -E kcok , the first woman admitted to the bar in France, is said to have taken the highest rank in a class of .500 men at the Ecole du Droit, Paris. She will practice in Bu charest. wtiere her father is a banker. F orty thousand girls are studying in the various colleges of the land, and arc living witnesses to the falsity of the old tradition about the unloveliness of women who cultivate their mental powers. At Wellesley the. girl-students are. as healthy and rosy and genuinely feminine, in the best sense of the word, as if they were in utter ignorance of Greek verbs and co-tangents. Mental health and physical health are comple ments, as the college girl is constantly proving. Miss C atharine W eed B arnes , of Albany, X. Y., whose exquisite photo graphs are famous in a rt circles, advo cated photography as a profession for women at the recent woman’s congress a t Grand Rapids. The work docs not call forgreat strength, but for patience, accuracy, and an artistic eye. Miss Barnes thinks there is no reason why women should not do well in photog raphy, and in some branches of it, as in taking child pictures, they would be. likely to succeed even better than men. HOUSEHOLI —Orange Cakeil sugar; one-half c,u| .......... half cupful of mil one and op e-half eggs, one-half te powder, the rind frosted,—Good Ho , —An outstretch rich, green moss a: ■flowers laid out, » piece. Near the e border of roses an be fringed with d of the valley, and. flat on a.plate-glas ■—Silver Cake, of four eggs, buatci cup of sugar, one one.-half cup of ini! Spoonful of soda even cups of sift teaspoouful of era Flavor with yan| Press. • —To bleach gut in twenty times its benzole; ■add one/ and agitate from ti ' two days’ standing clear solution. A to twice its voluin alcohol, agitating gutta-percha is prel troit Free Press. —Potato Soup, potatoes, one Dint spoonful of choppl of celery, one tab! one even tnblesp half teaspoonful pepper. Boil- the Cook the celery a in .double boiler, are-done drain ant and strain all. A| pan, and when bu ■and stir in soup Serve hot; thin wi( ian Inquirer. ' —Kisses.—Beat eggs to a stiff frot! and n-hnlf pound sugar; flavor with tract. Continue t- lie in a heap. La. letter paper, in thi half an egg, and a’ Then place the pa wood and put into out closing the do when they turn out and le.t them e minutes. Then sli. under one and tranj then take another the sides, that 3a. \place the kiss .thus Boston Budget. ‘ .—Cream Fish.- a pint of milk, a loaf, a tablespoon ley, quarter of a and when all has t a tablespoon ful o •been well blended and cook three mli time. Add the yo have been well spoonfuls of col well, put in. pep take from the fi layer of this snn greased baking shells, then a lay with pepper and fish. The top sh •dotted with butte] brown and serv ~N. Y, Worid. Iim 1 ri |>ti In (wi Em le lire lit( | is Ibu lit: J Irk |ir 1 be c Jxl Ion lo j >ln 1 biy yi lir |d r Id; E?n Re- *> 1) lei 1st' In i Id Ich fal J tier I j \V( Kdr Idn Jut lof po' &lo ll I t 1 Inn L-n fho >ne tir 'ht iy/s for it i ite :hc Ti !XP mu it m th •ill it ■k b ar l |yo tno >e ■m lorn |lti; t an liab ai CukJ One of two tiilil of eookiig, must . cake to evaek. pastry flour onll delieutj cakes i| If you use, ordinl contain spring j course, is too tl cells in baking! more moisture tliL the given quantl responding mat/ Use, then. less ifj sav liuv the wi cake. Then aga too hot when may be place 1 t : Ail cakes shou-l the fib ir t { the <| form *<1 too m .; force tiie heat I escapes it break! of course, the ej-j too bo! an iiven kind of flour tli.. Tim same authi". miik in th o s e col butter, as she bit Imire delicate ail Water, ofeourv.J added gradually! ■«» 'S'. 100 jnct Ifiel d c llati o sfc> :hh lO •iti a laui Ith ■rea lid _»wi lit, i llxe I bet proi I in New s t i Manv of the! Russian, Bolero! oper loose hlou<J lace, o! those broidered in a i backs of nli the JA to ike: m ic v ?r jess Iahi eni lies md lues in Cf s:ea Beg very snugly, nnj lav is a high M exceptional easl deep turnover,! instance a wide] beneath the ol loops in front! blouse in textui I nb Ivin lour phy teen A Vi! Wieknrs—I Jnueh differone insanity. Vlckara-oh, lunatic is sure * Indianapolis Jc lew; bin ■the (not so Id ] looc MUWMMu MM m m m m “1
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