The Cedarville Herald, Volume 32, Numbers 1-26
* yimi.i * tm***m**- SSUfUtm *.. . —L •■:■.; ^ 4 i»nrirtriirrr^ .r'w in fc tp raw ir iiiwj O s.; TMHttBIUI T o n i c o r S U m u i a n t ? W jr r ‘o?v j-c V o id a:l.i jnrant- >f.r_v£nionu praniyt, attention to Gil ilM iie:» SntrustcC r» Jtu. NCW YORK DRAI m T and BAftKMONRViORDRRS, fjux eUoapci/fc and jsm > s £ con- ■vVri’out way to r-'nd money by mail. L ords Mule on Real Estate, Persona! or Collateral Security* Banking Hours: B. A. M, to 3, P. M. S. W. Snw ’H, President. O, I j . S mith -, Cashier, ••Ttee Is an immense dif&re :o between a tonic and a ! Up one day, way back the next; that’s a 1 iFimiilant Steady progress dav hv day toward perfect r ^ t i e a i n i r l® ^ A y tfs S a rsapM a IF"a tonic, K^inMni NOTICE ; ‘ ; M,;- * •-.*• t * t _ ia « _ “$ 2 ,M.OO” Mv. Luther Guthrie, of Beaufort, N- G, spent money freely in employing doctors to cure his v/lfo from couttnual hssdache Ho writer; “ Ona bottle of Cardui did my x?ifo mom good than any thing she has token tor ten years past. She had suffered with headache for ten years and I had spent $300 00 for doctors’ blits for her, but noth ing did her any good. s & m u i She has taken two bottles' | of Caydyi and it lias done her I’ two thousand dollars (32,000) worth of good. Ju st as long as It is made, t shall have Cardui in my homo '* For all forma o f . female ;pain, like headache, side ache, pain in limbs, dizzy feeling*, dragging down -sensations, etc —Cardui has bean found to bo S'an effectual remedy. Pon 't wait till you are "’all rundown." Try Cardui at once. Sold everywhere.' BAD BREATH Aim■* ftUtn.it r«erxmin*Ttde3 ..l JU'iAt*: i of m ►INH0P8WN h«qtQAriroh©«ttff®rlHKfrom*ach.troubles.” &w. tt. U%ipnn,mmvlnztQit 8 tMNewyori,H.YV Best For The Bowels r p r in oo i j r CANDY cathartic _PlMWinl,PulutAlc, patent,WasteGood,t)oflood, S.v.r Sicken,Weakenor (irtpe. lOo.Sja.Ma,1,'ever ■eld Inbulk. The genuine tablet stamped U O O. Onazanteadtocureoryourmoneyhack. Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y, 538 MKUALSALE, TEXMILUOI[BOXES F O A M O The New Economical and Convenient S H A M P O O T A B L E T The ur,e of Foamo Transparent; Shampoo Tar Tablet will cause th a t dull appearance of the Jia'ir to vanish, giving place to th a t en chanting satin smoothness; the loveliness for which you have so long sought for will bo yours. P R IC E 25 CENTS , To introduce Foamo we will mail (for a limited timo only) a full size tablet on receipt cfflGo. Rockwood Medical Co STATION B. CINCINNATI, O i s a p a n u u i a strong tmk, The only Sarsaparilla entirely free from ,infcnhil. Do not stimulate unless your doctor says soF siHe knows. Fskiiiiii, Do as he says. t^Au^Co^loiceUMass'i is it;e caa treat causa cf #iek-heada?hG, biliousness, indigestion, bad t ,f '% <1' ’3u¥, uervcasnscs. i!::o yoar doctor cvcrrceaminendbd Ayce’c Pillsto you? -VPive ia i>vr«by th a t all tvaults,rnbl.iiditruthnmlariias I must, be eh-giitxf iq. Bud car ofi ■•*4**^-fry c o m p ly w ith ib * itb o V d n o ti c e s h a l l i m m The Cedurvffle Herald 5 ft*.oo l» e v Y e a r . r rA R I v U D U L L - - E d i t o r . FRIDAY, A PR IL S3, 1900. *» The Great Dianhoea ind Dysentery Remet'y, Cores auJc! cad diaDir dfculioc,!, djoeiv | toy, cTvi!- wmcdaV* car,icier v ai;,l Asiaijjd;o! r.i, or.! p;ctc;.txfca Cc!cp*S c ra i uf te jltH fever, £ii:s,a cceXeeitil M's* Ci.luined I:: fill jo in tftSia voild. ^wefiHa is s e m rm ? <s& h - tz £ fjKi i‘ir, u « tK- -m m ? v .n , C.0 Price eentc per be t. >« C- . n 1^1 “test i f .. X',-,., rrtsII.-* ’*!:,«il 't JO«Utdbtt*6 ci!.-!- i n t f "j. e.ir TME t*Mr Ai!13 CHEMICAL CCMFViy, di r |L « .Y o tf.# .A . WITCHCRAFT IN ENGLAND. Th* Last of the Judicial Prosecutions and Executions- Sir Matthew Ifule, it id true, had hanged two i>oor women' at Cam bridge in 106 - 1 , but a few years later Lord Chief Justice Holt set him self strongly against such charges and in every- case tried before him directed the jury to bring in a ver difet of acquittal. In a celebrated trial at Guildford in 1101 not only was the supposed witch found not guilty, but her false accuser, one John Hathaway, was condemned to a year’s imprisonment and to stand in the pillory three times. Yet, horrible to relate, a woman named Hicks and her daughter, a child of nine, were hang'ed together at Huntingdon on July 28 , 1716 , for raising a storm of wind in league with the devil. The last judicial sentence for witchcraft in England was in 1736 , one Jane IVenham being actually found guilty, according to tlie in dietment, ’of “conversing familiar' ly with the devil in the form of a' eat." The judge, however, procured a reprieve for poor old Jane, and she was ultimately released, to end her days in peace. Last, the witchcraft act was re pealed for the United Kingdom in the same year. It was quite time, for only nine years earlier, in 1727 , a woman was brought before Gap- tain David lloss, deputy sheriff of Sutherland,, charged with “causing her daughter to be shod by the dev il,” and so making her lame both in hands and feet: *The fact having been proved to the captain’s satis faction, the old woman was put into a tar barrel and burned at Domoelu The weather being cold at the time, we are told that she “sat composed ly warming herself by the lire pro-, pared to consume her while the oth er instruments of death were get ting ready.” The last attempt to execute a witch in England ended disastrously for the perpetrators. In 1751 at Tring two old people named Os borne, man and -wife, being suspect ed of witchcraft, were seized by a crowd, stripped, cross bound and thrown into a pond. Both died of this brutal treatment. But the witchcraft act had been repealed, and, a verdict of willful murder hav ing been returned against one Col ley, the chief instigator of the as sault, he was in due course tnied and hanged.—Cornhill Magazine. Embarrassing Fop the Lecturer. Civilized people when they listen to a lecture on some abstruse scien tific subject applaud even if they do not understand. But there is evi dently more frankness among sav ages, according to a story told by Captain Guy Burrows. A white man one evening tried to explain to some members of an African tribe, the Mobunghi, the wonders of the steam engine and steamship. He drew diagrams on the sand, and the audience listened and looked with apparently intense interest. At last he asked his hearers whether they understood- “Yen,” they . replied; they thought they did. “There v/as a deep silence,” Cap- lain Burrows said, “for come time, and then a voice in the center of the crowd expressed the unspoken sentiments of the whole assembly in one emphatic word, uttered in a tone of the deepest conviction-— 'L ia rf ” Embarrassing for the lecturer!—- Westminster Gazette.. " Jfinnfcp as an Eater. Dr, Jemior, the famous English •physician, wao a great tea drinker anil very abstemious, sever taking any stimulant except a measured •'lass of brandy when he had indi gestion. Once for that cause he lived on stewed chops and rice for luncheon and dinner, with tea, for a couple of years, but ordinarily be was a great feeder. “I recollect,” eaid bio friend, Dr. Cooper Bentham, “on one occasion Beyjiuldrj came to see him. Jenner was at dinner. He had soup, ilsh, the- greedor part of a chicken, anil he was in the middle of a huge rice pudding when Reynolds entered and asked him how he was. Jenner drew a pitiful .sigh and replied, 'I rim not at all well- no appetite/ ” Claim Ancient Uaeaye. Native lilctorlano of Afghanistan ft# neit that the lnlifttotants of tjielr e«un try eve the lost ton tiibrg of Israel.. iWcmdini; to tin ts chroniclers, the Afghan# t,vo descended from Af ghaun, who tia# the soft of a certain tcremlth, who wa* the eon of a rang Sitji. The eastward removal of ’{ti& s m f %t A f gMm is attributed to NtbuchtUtaemr. PENROSE’S LOYALTY. Philip Pcnrcse and John Carleton had been chums nine© boyhood. Ever cine© that memorable, day at an early stage of their school life v.hen John Carleton had fought and vanquished the bully of the class for his cowardly assault on the “new boy," Phil Pen rose, the two had beeu the stanchest Of friends, albeit they were quite' un like in temperament* and disposition. Philip studied medicine and became a successful practitioner In his native New England town. John adopted a 1 business career, connecting himself with a Chicago firm of which his unclo was a member. John fell In loVewllk the “dearest girl in the world” and married her, while Philip, who for some reason had always disliked and avoided women, remained a bachelor, the despair alike of maneuvering mam mas and scheming spinsters. . About two years after John’s mar riage Philip was stunned at receiving a letter from his friend apprising him of the fact that his wife had left him for no other reason than that they had quarreled and.that John, in a moment of temper, -had said something for Which he was afterward sorry. Tho shod: to Philip was all the greater for the reason that np to that moment ho had believed John’s marriage "to be as ideally happy as any marriage could possibly be. I t was about six months after learn ing of John’s marital misfortune that Dr. Penrose called one day to attend a patient In a neighboring street It proved to be a young widow named Mrs. Felton, residing wlih her mother and evidently a newcomer to the neigh borhood. He saw that she was seri ously ill and showed marked symptoms of pneumonia and also that she was laboring under strong nervous excite ment. I t was needless to say that Dr. Penrose treated ’ser to the best of his professional skill and with such suc cess that by the next day there was a marked improvement in her condition. He found his new patient and her mother to be extremely reticent about their affairs, yet during his attendance on the former he learned that she for merly lived in a. western city. Philip continued to call on her long after one would have^supposed there was any need of his professional serv ices. Perimps it was tho appealing sadness ih her large, dark eyes that at-! treated him; perhaps it was the un wavering reserve and dignity of her manner and the fact that there was not a. true# of eoqpkrtry ftfcsat hoc; ft* tbs doctor had a horror of coquetry and until recently had believed it to be a dominant feminine trait. Tim upshot of the matter was that Dr. Philip Penrose, without having any certain, knowledge of Mrs. Felton’s past life, asked her to be his wife and was firmly refused. PreBEed for a reason, she answered that she did not love him, to which bo calmly replied that as she was the only, .woman he ever would or could love he intended to win her affection and was willing to wait years, If need be, to attain that result. Philip’s determined attltudo forced 'a more explicit reply from Mrs. Felton, and she finally admitted that there wns an Insurmountable obstaclo to their union In that her husband was not dead, hut living! Quivering like a stricken deer under the blow, Philip began involuntarily piecing together in his mind certain ideas, the chief of which was that Felton had been tho maiden name of John’s wife, and on a sudden the aw ful truth flashed upon him. “John Carleton-r-lie Is your husband?” he said huskily, For answer ahe burst into uncontrollable weeping. When a little calmer she fold tho story. Whatever may have been the state of Palllp Penrose’s mind that night as . he sat in his study, his pen never fa! tered in the message it was writing to John Carleton. The ans\ver that came by return post was to the effect that John Carleton utterly repudiated his wife. He never would forgive her de sertion of him and was about to seek a divorce. And co there came to Philip Penrose the greatest temptation of his life. Ail through the long, weary night ha wres tled with‘It, and when-morning came it found him aged and worn, but with a grim, determined look on his face. Into tho letter that was to pic-fid for the honor and happiness of the two beings he loved best on earth lie threw* all the eloquence and passion of which he was capable. With what magical power he wrote may he judged by the reply: Deer Old Boy—Von have conquered you Iiavo shown mo plainly wherein I wao wrong nr.d tho way to happiness again. I long to clar-p my wife in rny arms. God blccs you, I’M 1 p. And Philip? Well, he is one of the ablest physicians of the day and has amassed a fortune. His hair and shag gy beard are quite gray now, and lie Is still a bachelor. But- standing on Ms desk in a heart shaped frame there is n picture of a young girl whose dark eyes hear a singular resemblance to those of John’s wife. It may be that It is while gazing abstractedly at the counterfeit presentiment of Mrs, Carle- ton’s girlish beauty and sometimes pressing it fondly to his lips that-he duels inspiration for the brilliant and learned tioallres with which 1 m chal lenges tho admiration of tho medical and edf-nliile world.- Boston Post, Smallest Wild Guttle. Celebes, an island in the Malay ar chipelago, bar: the distinction of being the home of tho smallest living repro- sontattvon of the wild eat tie, *A:i Ides of tho extremely dimhntitve pfofmt*-- tlon# of tho aiioa, as the animal in question, which lias some vf the diav- w-toflsthr-n of tho buffalo, is calk'd, nmy ho gained when It is stated that its height a t the shoulder is only throe ftet ind four Incite#. -je coimiiter*'! * niiMidiijesnof and punished accordingly. By ordr v of Board I f H. -aUh. Hamuel A lbright. H ealth Officer, A WORD ABOUT SAFETY DEPOSIT BOXES. How much bettor to have your deed# and personal paper# where they are safe from lire and readily accessible. A nitopUecd paper often causes world# of trouble. Wo have them fo r ren t a t l«#g th an oue-third of a cen t per day, THE EXCHANGE BANK, O da rv ille, Ohio* FENCE FOR SALE. I s till hav« Borne wire fence for sale a t a bargain to close ou t soon. . 0 . M. Crouse. NOTICEOF APPOINTMENT. § I n th e m a ttor of Publication of Notice in the E sta te of Harrison Johnson, Deceased. Notice is here by given t h a t the undersigned has been appointed and duly qualified by the .Probate Court" of Greene County, as Adm in istrator of the above named estate. All persons in debted to said esta te m ust make immediate paym en t; those pav ing claims Will presen t them for settle ment, R, F . Kerr, FREE ESECTRIC LIGHTS, SPRAYING SOLUTION, To #pray trees and shrubbery, get Bex Lime an a sp lp iiu r eolation, the ,lWf» M . Otmm*. ' PAINT SH&P OPEN. Tho Wolford p a in t shop is now oprn and ready fo r spring and sum m er business. Have your bnggy, carriage or wagon painted now so tb'afe i t will be ready when good weather comas. Columbus, $1 Sunday Excursion. Pennsy lvan ia Lin** April 18. T rain leaves ( ’edarvIlU 8:23 a, m. S tateof OI jio , G itv or touno ,: L ucas Coimxx : tis F bakk J, C'nxsRy make* o»th that ho la Soulor partner Ol+h» firm olF . J. C iirnby & Co., ao5ng bn*:**** in the city of Toledo, 'county, *n<l#t*te afore*©}, *nd that said ffirm will poy tli* atimt ON.fi HUNDRED IXH-I,Alts for Moh eyerjr ease of Catarrh that cannot be cured bv the use of H ale ’ s C’ATASrwtt’rRr, FRANKJ. CHENEY, Sworn to before me **.t subscribed in my presence, this G,hday of December, A. D* 1880. , A. W. GLEASON. | seal j- Notary Public Hall’s Catarrh cur* is (taken internally and ects direally on the blood **d mmcous surface* of the system. Send for testimoni- lte, free. gyggatjwgtti! CASTOR IA Por Infant# and Children. The Kind Yoa Havt Always Bought Bears the Signature of < J. H. McTOLLAN. Funeral Director atul Furn iture Hosier. Manufacturer of Cement Grave Vault# and Cement Building Blocks. Telephone 7. Ohio. Very Serious It in * very oerlou* matter to ask for one medicine and have the wrong one given you. For this reason we urge you in buying to be careful to get the genuine— B U C T i k H T Liver Medicine The reputation of thi* eld, relia ble medicine, for t o m t i n u t t o - digestion *rtdfiver tre.ubV?, h Jitm* 4y established, It d<y# l.at imitate other Medicine*, It il better tk ni others, or it would not be the fa vorite liver powder, with a large-: sale than *Uother* combined. SOU) IK TOWK to By j*t(*en*th«nli** the hMvee which ..ntrni the artkm «# the JWer and bowffa >r„ Mil#** Nerve and U**r MU# cur* onatiittiMK. I# # mmi i l «*»*• I will give one month free curran t for electric ligh ting where I wire the residences pr business rooms. H . It. GaUigher, opposite from post- office. Cedarvilk*. „ ’ I “Ambitious young men and la dies should learn Telegraphy; for since tho now H-hour law became effective there i s » shortage of many thousand, telegraphers. Positions pay from $30 to $70 per month io beginners. The National Telegraph In stitu te of pinciinintl, Ohio and live o ther cities is operated under supervision of 3ft. B . officials and a ll pupil# a rep lacsd when qualified. W rite them fo r particu lars.” T im K i n d Y o u H av e A lw ays B o u g h t, a n d iv liieli Has been, i n u so f o r o v e r 3 0 y e a rs , lia s b o r n e t l i e s ig n a tu r e off a n d lu is b e e n m a d e u n d e r b is p e r so n a l Buporvision sin ce i ts infancy* A llow n o .on* t o deceive y o u i n th is . A ll C o u n te rfe its , Im ita tio n s a n d “ J u s t- a s - g o o d ” a r e b u t E x p e rim e n ts t h a t tr if ie w i t h a n d e n d a n g e r t h e h e a lth o f I n f a n ts a n d C h ild ren—E x p e rie n c e a g a in s t Experim en t* What is CASTOR IA C a s to ria is a h a rm le s s s u b s titu te f o r C a sto r O il, P a r e g o ric , D ro p s a n d S oo th ing Sy rup s, I t is P leasan t* I t c o n ta in s n e ith e r O p ium , M o rph in e n o r o th e r Narcotic* su b s ta n c e . I t s ag e is i t s g u a ra n te e . I t d e s tro y s W orm* a n d a llay s fev e rish n e s s* I t c u re s D ia rrh o e a a n d W in d Colie* I t re liev e s T e e th in g T ro u b le s , c u re s C on stip a tion a n d F la tu len c y . I t a s sim ila te s tlie F o o d , r e g u la te s t h e S tom a ch a n d B ow e ls, g iv ing h e a lth y a n d n a tu r a l sleep* T h e C h ild re n 's P a n a c e a—T lie M o th e r’s F r ie n d . G E N U IN E CASTORIA A LW A Y S - . | Bears the Sigpatiira of The KindYou t o AlwaysBought In Use Fo r Over 3 0 Years. THCCCNTAUll<OMKAtoY, 77MUHBAVKTHCET, NEWYOKKCITY. TH E B E S T VEH IC LES FOR TH E M ON EY . T H E M c K A Y BUGGIES, SURREYS Springi Road & Oilfield W A G O N S Best quality—Select Ma terial, Carefully' m ade. Built to stand Hard Service. The cheapest In the end. Write for complete Catalog and Prices. MoKAY CARRIAGE C0„ . GROVE CITY, PA. \ Hutchison& Gibney Great Corset House Redfern .& Nemo Two most popular corsets now used. Have . taken premiums a t fairs. “ TAKE THIS CUT*’ A -n. “ We rooomroend i t ; there is»'» nay better.,, In mid-summer you have to tru st io a largo Jog e to your butvher. Well Cared For Meats in hot weatbej;are the only kind to b u y ; we have proper appliances for keeping them righ t, and they’re sweet and safe when sold. Don’t go m eat shopping when it’s hot. Buy of ns and bo sure. C. H . CROUSE, CEDARY IDLE , O. UflRKS Why Suffer? I f you suffer pain from" any cause, Dr. Miles’Anti- Pain Pills will relieve it —and leave no bad after* effects. Tbat’s.tbe impor tant thing. Neither do they create a habit. More often the attacks^ become less frequent, or disappear altogether. Dr. Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills have do other effect except to re lieve pain and quiet nerv ous irritation. *'*We are never -without Dr. lilie s’ Anti-Pain Fills. My husband end son, aged 15 were always subject to slelc headache until we began using these Fills, and they havo broken "hem up entirely. Don't ihlttic they lave bad to use them for six months, I recommend then, to every one. A ■few weeks ago X heard an old iady friend was side. I Went to, see her. She was down with DaGrlppe, ana nearly crazy with awful backache, I gavo her one o f tho Anti-Fain Fills and left another for her to take in . / , a short time. They helped her right ^ away, and she says she will never bo -without them again, Last winter *my husband .was taken with pluerisy oil both Sides, and X know he would have died if-it'-hadn’t, been for tlio Pills, In loss than half an hour lie was sweating, and w ent to bed and slept.” ' MRS. <3, H. WEBB, Austlnburg, Ohio. Your- druggist sells Or. Mile*’ Anti* Pain Pills, and we authorize him to return the price of first package (only) ir it fail* to benefit you. Miles Medical Co,, Elkhart, Ittd The Bookumltep ...Restaurant... IN THE BOOKWALTER HOTEL HIGH STREET C/^^^^Eiy-t?EDUCIND N*4D5 mT"RruEFB ands ------- — CARPET HOUSE— ------- Ruffs, Linoleum, Shades, Curtains. ------DRE S5 GOODS ------ SILKS, WASH GOODS and WOOLENS SIITGHISQK & GIBJEY ’S, XE iJIA , OHIO o ELASTIC sm ROO F F A IN T *vyYfor tin, mc-ial, paper, fe'.t and rubc-rold roofs. r M " ............................................................................... Is ;f proof erpinnt the v.'eatiu r or i uot. Absolutely non- Will noicr.ul;, psei, bli .ier orcc-aie. Will W a / parous, u°t evaporate after onto ct t. Io a fine v/afer proof- ** ^ *lngmaterial. Confahio no ingrcdionta such ns salt and lime which cater Into tlie composition of the major part of the co-calied roof and iron paints on tho market to-day which have no elastic qualities and are destructive to metals and fibre 3 , and are bound to erystaiko any racial. I t in germ proof. Szttdf i r xt'rfpnudpriei list. V/>y nol purehosi the lest tyhstt it tests tto t::src. T h e D A L L M A N C O O P E R S U P P L Y G O , , F o m b d u . | a c ,W l s . DINING ROOM FORLADIESUPSTAIRS ALSO REST ROOM. M E A L S N O W a s C E N T S . Lunch Counter on Main Floor ' Open Day and Night. Tlie Best of Good Used in the Cul inary Department. Piles or Smiles? A POSITIVE GUARANTEE to immediately rcllere and ultimately cure with DR. HEBRAS UNGOID tho most wonderful scientific discovery of modern times far tl:oEevevtstc.secs ofltching T-ilcH, Drzrma. Totter, ficilfc Ilhrr.m, King Worm, BaTber'oItch, etc. ri his highly medi cated antiseptic Calvo tilts tho gr-rmss, re moves tho trouble and lies!a tho irritation permanently. Absolute satiefaction guar anteed c,s sut.nrv refunded. Price C3etc. at Druggists, or mailed. Trial camplo 2 cento to cover mailing. T H E G. G. B ITTN ER CO ., Toledo, Ohio. Meat is Healthy, The human system needs meat, not the tough, in- digestable kind which makes it a labor for tlie diges tive organs to asimilate it, but the nutritious, juicy kind which gives you muscle and nerve for daily duties. G W, Crouse & Co, Successor to C, C, WEIMER, TRY OUR JOB PRINTING PILES FISTULA and Ann DISEASES OF THE RECTUM 2 ';$*KC?^P‘fiftnr.ur.fiej !$<!#fratotea ^4 fed* L*3*.Ld ciaktj il i^sdatty ofth«aYlfog&s •■n j baahad£0yea'atdnrtanfctsmwlcnfs. Korain »:;.1 ns tct-rtl. n ft,-,a I;:«ir.t£3. r:b.te;r( Kl.'.r.c'y, ftt-c*asa fife,a *B4DiasstS«t Woiscn! wmmton ftoos os kw . xjiii mstisrs <Miist *r.l lr.„o:«c^si.Utf cj ;;3. EinUULgl1E3J, DR. J. J. McQ,ELLAN C olumbus , 0. IT Gives THI5BESTRftSUlTS, jil-Th^SM lTHSON IA ffl coRRicr **Z**,.~M J k T R U S S -A, \ in any Sold By l ##«6 Wl*t*rm#n, The H o S 7.-« SIC. 821. $21 A th is , last Skir Skir Skir Skir I n i less Skir Skir A. ve lire r inotit ever. r Jurors For Tho grand a May t* nil of e the ju ry whee ju ry Mill mcf ju ry May 11 a re : G in V. A. Borer l-Tank Heit Jacob H. B 1). rf. Dixon j , P. Pauli Joseph A F rank Bri William V, H. B. C’hr: t ’, A. Jaen J . W. Ban John ri nii John I'b ’i*. riomnol IB J . C. Balt P t \ K. BeW f ’harit'O W WTUiatn John B- to f'aiiuU'l K riiark-M S ley tp. John Mv<‘ F-Imer Ffs» W illiam 1 H . ( ’: Bar ( ’harles HI Jor.c-ph Ta llob- H- Ti David Bto f ’yrun Bi> Hemy l»ii Joseph. A. A. J . Knot A C. \ r--1' 'il 5 1 ; V 1 ->U* 1 '. ft. ro t1.*. ft, * n t ' s. : ; r r e :g to lT»i> t <ii-;> {.J t.p t'e”o-ii
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