Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 5 November 1897 — Page 6
Remember every customer of H.A.GRAY'S
MUSIC HALL GROCERY Gets a combined bin and Flour Sifter Free.
MONEY TO LOAN.
On improved Real Estate at.low rule of interest, on lonf,' time. Farm loans a specialty. Abstracts of tlt.h furnished on short notice. Deeds and mortgages carefully executed.
X. X. MUMHALL, 10 7 South Jroou St.
ELAM T. MURPHY CO.,
MONEY TO LOAN.
At 6 per cent, on first class farm and city securities in sums to suit the borrower. Also do a genera! Insurance business, life and fire. Office f'TUiorly occupied by C. N. Williams & Co.. 101
Hi Kast Main Street.
Osteopathy
DR. H. J. JONES,
Has arranged to be in Crawfordsville Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays of each week. Office at Dr. Duncan's residence.
Fred X, McCain,
Attorney-at- Law.
O
PI'ICK—110 South Green Street., Crawfordsville. Ind.
IMdf
W1,h a
per in \v rite your wants.
reliable com
pany. Oue good risk
Is worth a harrel of cheap ones. You've never had a tire, but can't tell when you might. See
LOUIS M'MAINS,
ATTORN EY-AT-L, AW Office Koorns and 4. Fisher Kuildiug
A. C. JENNISON.
THE ABSTRACTER.
LOANS MONKV ON
4
MOUTGAGES,
SELLS REAL ESTATR OF ALL KINDS, INSURES PROPERTY AUAINST KIRK. See his complete Abstract Books. The best nlace to have deeds and mortgages prepared as well HS A IJSTRACTS OF TITLE
jri£s!s/
Phone 17.54.
Blnokforti Block, IndiaiiaocJis.
Urg«iand fshortofiiiMi'ow?tl rats: positions secured:er.te-any linoi iliustr-i'ed cilaingue free. HERVR" P. 'NCP- O. •, O.,,»
CHAS. B. MARTIN,
ilKKL!I)}.K (IK—
DUROC JERSEYS
I have a few extra due Duroc 'ersey Hoars, all well bred HII1 eligible to regist ry which I will sell hi a reasonable price Crawfordsville, Iud.
Poland China Hogs.
Elllglbleto register. 2 choice yearling boars March and April boars and sow pies Par
ties buying hogs within the next, thirty days will be given a cedit of 10 months If desired.
I
have some extra indiv'duals and in the best, -of condition Come, you are welcome. MILBERT SA YLKK, Now Market, Ind.
GEORGE W. FULLER,
Crawfordsville. Iud. Breeder und Shlpperol thoroughbred POLAND
CHINA hogs,II.P.Hocks, White Guineas and Fan Tall Pigoons. Stock and K«ra for sale. Eggs II. 25
ROCK RIVER HERD of..
Poland Chinas
Farm )4 of a mile southeast of depot. I'igs large and growtliy with good style, .quality and gi:t ed^o pedigrees, for sale at. all times. Prices as low as is consistent, for good stock. Visitors and old-time customers always welcome. tf you can't call anit see my stuck write me for particulars. Address DAVID CROSE, L'liorntown. Ind.
Be Clean
Cleanliness is next to God' liness but you cannot be clean without clean clothcs. Therefore patronize the^V
Eshelman Laundry.
Work guaranteed to be harmless to fabric-.
MONEY TO LOAN
On Farm and City Property, Good Notes Cashed.
FRANK C. EVANS & CO.
j.t (Successors to Evans & Cox.) 111 North Gt-eeri Street.
Ripans Tabules
ttEQCLATE TUB
STOMACH, LIVER and BOWELS.
RIPANS TABUKJES are tbe best medicine known for Indigestion, Billlousness, Headache, Constipation, Dyspepsia, Chronic Liver Troubles, Dizziness, Bad Complexion, Dysentery, Offensive Breath, and all Disorders of the Stomach, Liver and Bowels.
Ripans Tabules contain nothing injurious the most delicate constitution. Are pleasnt to take. safe, effectual and give immelate relief. May be ordered through nearest ruggist or by inaiL
THE RIPANS CHEMICAL CO. 10 Spruce St. New York City.
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
KSTAUI.iSTIEn IX 18-1S.
FRIDAY. N0VEM HER 5. 18W7
UMCM.gK
CAPTAIN GENERAL BLANCO.
lias Created a 1'nvovablo Impression. Cuban Keloims. HAVANA, NOV. 3.—Captain General Blanco is receiving deputations from all classes of the inhabitants without the slightest reserve, and is listening to complaints as well as hearing felicitations.
He goes about the city unattended, and is generally creating a favorable impression. UJTlie Spanish offer of reform is looked
CAPTAIX EXEI! A I. lU.ASC.'O.
upon as one of little importance by CU bans generally. The general impros sion is that Sagnsta is simply fencing for time. Tlie Unban people in the field and in the cities neither believe in nor will they accept the autonomy offered by Spain. Gomez says his answer to autonomy will be given with his rilles.
General P.indn entered yesterday upon his duties as general of the Stianish stall in Cuba under the e.iptain general?
WILL HAVE ENOUGH.
Provisions Now on llanil In Klomlil-:" Will Lust Till Sprint VAXCOCAKR, Nov. IS.—Minister of Interior Sifton, who has been investigating the different routes into the Yukon region, has arrived here from Dvea on the Dominion steamer Quadra. Mr. Sifton is of the opinion that the Uhilcat pass is a better one than the White pass. Regarding the reports of starvation at Dawson City, Mr. Sifton stated that his latest advices were to the effect that there would be provisions to last until spriug. Major Walsh, the administrator of the Yukon, who is now on his way, will on his arrival there make a report to the Dominion government on the situation ancl the necessity of the government sending in provisions.
The Quadra brought down meager details of some more rich strikes on the creek near Dawson City. The steamer City of Seattle sailed from here for Alaska last night. She took up 00 head of oxen and a number of men, who will form part of the expedition sent, out by a Boston company to carry supplies into Dawson over the Dalton trail.
SOLD HIS CLAIMS.
English Syndicate 1'nys a Klondikcr
SI,OOO,OOO
Fur llis Claims.
BENTON* HARBOR, Mich., Nov. 3.—An English syndicate has purchased Frank Phiscator's gold mines in Alaska, paying $1,000,000 for three claims—No. 2 on Bear creek, and two rich claims on Eldorado. The syndicate pays §20,000 down and the balance of §980,000 at the end of one year.
Phiscator went up to Alaska in February, 1S!)G. and cleaned up §96,000 in 70 days from claim No. 2 oil Eldorado creek. Since his return to his homo'in this city he has purchased homes for all his relatives and paid off mortgages for others, spending about §15,000 in that way. 1L does not like the climate of Alaska and therefore concluded to sell.
Pleaded Guilty.
HKI.NA, Mon., Nov. 3.—B. D. Hatches yesterday pleaded guilty in the United States court to misappropriation of $90,000 of funds of the Northwestern National bank of Great Falls and was given a sentence of live years in the penitentiary. Fortv-livo other indictments against Hatches were dismissed.
'Mi: HAS A NEW ATTORNEY.
Sausageinalier Luetgert Will lie Defeudtnl By K.v-K«»vcrii»r JohiiMon
ST. LOUS, NOV. .'5.—Ex-Govornor C. P. Johnson, oue of the best-known criminal lawyers in Missouri, and almost as well known outside the state, has been retained to conduct the dedefense of Luetgert, the Chicago sausagenutker in the coining second trial for the alleged killing of his wife. Mr. Johnson gained great prominence in his connection with the defense of Dr. Duestrow, the St. Louis millionaire, who was recently hanged for the murder of his wife and child.
Shot Herself In IJed.
DECATUK, Iils., Nov. 3.—Lenora Bowlby, aged
22,
daughter or John iiowlby,
despondent because of continued poor health, slyly got possession of her brother's revolver, took it to bed with her, pulled the quilts up over her and sent a bullet into her head. She was dying when her sister called her to dinner. Recently Miss Bowlby made a trip to Ohio, hoping to have her health restored, but phe did not improve.
A couon is a danger signal of worse troubles to come. Cure the cough and prevent its results by using Dr. Wood'B Norway Pine Syrup.
The Journal Co., Printers, Leaders in Type Styles,
ONTRIAL FOR MURDER
Samuel R. Hull Charged With Kill
ing His Father.
STOLEN SILK SENSATION.
Dropped a Spark In a l'owderkog—Active Measures Taken to Stamp One Diphtheria at Huntington—Proved llis
Innocence of Highway llobbery—l,atter Day Saints—Indiana Postmasters.
PRINCETON, Ind., Nov. 3.—Samuel R. Hull, indicted for the murder of his father, Samuel A. Hull, which occurred in May last, has been called for trial. The elder Hull and wife had separated, due, it is said, to waywardness of the accused, the mother taking her son's part, it being claimed that the accused made threats of killing his father. On the fatal day the senior Hull undertook to drive some hogs out of his wheat field, and his body was soon after found with live bullet holes therein. The case was transferred from Warrick, the alleged murder having occurred in that county.
A I'T It STOI.KN' SILKS.
ISaltimoro and Ohio Kailroad Special Claims t.o Have Found a Ouantity. SOUTH BENI, Ind., Nov. 3.—A shipment of 3,000 yards of silk consigned to Madel Bros., Chicago, was stolen from a Baltimore and Ohio freight car some time ago. A special agent was sent out und he claims to have traced it to this city. When he arrived here he swore out a writ, of replevin against Miss Ivate McCullom and several hundred yards of the alleged silk were found in her possession and seized. Miss McCullom claims the silk by right of chattel mortgage, and the. man who brought tlio goods here says iie accepted the same in payment of a debt due fro.n a Chicago firm that failed. A great deal of the silk has been sold to privato customers and these dress pattarns are being hunted up. The authorities claim to have struck a trail that will lead to extraordinary developments. Miss McCullom will fight tile case bitterly, having put up §3,500 security.
Proved His Innocence.
GosPORT, Ind., Nov. 3.—Charles Cash three years ago was indicted for highway robbery in Owen county. He evaded arrost and went to Central America, where he accumulated some money. He returned to his home two months ago and demanded trial, giving as his reason for going away that he had no money to employ an "attorney and that he was innocent. He has just been tried and acquitted.
Have Uiven an Ultimatum.
ELWOOD. Ind., Nov. 3.—The Windowglass Manufacturers' association, representing 1,780 pots, have issued their ultimatum. They state that they have agreed to give their workmen the same wages paid under the McKiniey bill, and to restore all tlio reduction made since the repeal of the bill. Unless the manufacturers' scale is signed shortly, they say they will not resume opeiations this winter.
Brother Aqainst Hi oilier,
Foivr WAYNE, Nov. 3. Jacob Carey Robinson, formerly a wealthy Allen county farmer, was found guilty of forgery by a jury here yesterday and sentenced to live years in the penitentiary. He forged his brother's name to a series of notes, as security, aggregating $4,500. The defense alleged that his brother was prosecuting him to escape liability of llis indorsement.
Fighting Diphtheria.
HUXTIXOTON, Ind., Nov. 3.—A number of cases of diphtheria have developed here in the last few weeks, and several deaths have occurred. Yesterday the city board of health quarantined all affected houses and placed officers on guard. The officers patrol the streets in the neighborhoods, and allow no one to approach any of the houses.
Fell Over a Fifty-Foot C* 1 iIT*. .lEi'-FEitsoNVii-LE, Ind., Nov. 3.—John Conn, 27 years old, while on the edge of a cliff 50 feet in hight, at Charlestown landing, was seized with a fit and fell over. His fall was broken by a treetop, or ho would have been killed, lie received serious internal injuries. For half a day ho called for help before assistance came.
Latter Day Saints.
SPENCEK, Ind., Nov. 3.—The church of Latter Day Saints lias just closed a 3-davs' conference here. Twentyfive missionaries, who have been at work in southern Indiana, were in attendance. Reports showed a number of conversions and the building of a new church in Washington county.
Ten Tons of Cabbage.
'HUNTINGTON*, Ind., Nov. 3.—J. II. Van Curren, who lives 011 a farm three miles from the village of Warsaw, set out three-fourths of an acre of cabbages, and has just marketed a fraction over 10 tons. .He says it. made him more inoney thau anything else he could have raised.
Will Ilavc tr Answer a Murder Charge.
FRANKFORT, Ind., Nov. 3.—Thomas Good, a farmer, seven miles south of this city, who was twice shot last Saturday night during a quarrel with Robert Lane, a tenant on his farm, died yesterday. Lane is in jail here to answer a charge of murder.
Dropped a Spark In a Powdcrkeg. CLINTON, Ind., Nov. 3.—William Nel
son, employed in the Bruillette Creek mine, while smoking, dropped a spark from his pipe into a keg containing powder. The explosion set his clothing on fire and fatally injured him.
Indiana Postmasters.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 3.—Indiana postmasters were appointed yesterday as follows: Coffee, J. O. Woodrow Prospero, Kate Sparrow.
HIGHWAY CONSTRUCTION.
The Employment of l'rec Labor Gives the Best Iiesults. Commenting on the employment"of convicts 011 the public highways, the New Orleans Times-Democrat points ont that the best results have been obtained in road building when the best free labor only has been empioyed. It says:
Road construction is a science requiring a more careful study of the subject than is generally imagined. The prevalent idea that any one can build a good road will not hold good. Tho matter requires study, care and a thorough knowledge of the soil and country through which tho road is to be built. The department of agriculture lias lately been doing good work by laying boforo the people exactly what ia necessary in road construction.
The employment of convicts in road construction is very popular just now, as offering simultaneously a solution of the two troublesome problems of what to do with our prison population and how to improve our highways. I11 view of the fact that tho convicts in New York, Indiana and other states are kept idle, as the law makes 110 provision for their support, it is well that Louisiana should take some steps to utilize hers when it has them on its hands, and road construction seems an ideal employment for them.
On the other hand, tho experience of those states which have been most successful with their roads is that only the best labor (and convict labor is not tho best) should be employed in their construction and maintenance. No state which has made any material improvement with its highways has employed convict labor, and 110 state which has employed that kind of labor has secured much improvement in its roads. The best results have been accomplished by road taxes and the giving out of contracts.
GOOD COUNTRY ROADS.
The Hurdrii of Their Cost Should Ho Alike
011
All the l'eople.
It, has been estimated that 500,030,000 tons of farm produce are hauled to market annually in the United States and that the cost of marketing it is $2 per ton, or just about §1,000,000,000. This is not money paid out, but is the value of the time spent by farmers with their teams in marketing crops or what these men and teams would have earned if they had been hired for cash to do this amount of hauling. The secretary of the farmers' national congress and the United States department of agriculture agreo in estimating that about GO per cent of this vast amount, or $000,000,000, would be saved each year if farmers were able to do this hauling over good roads.
This, then, is the amount of the annual mud tax to which we have been submitting, say3 the Cedar Rapids (Ia.) Gazette. Railroads, telegraphs and steamboat lines have been assisted by the states and subsidized by tho government, but nothing has been done for tho common country road. The farmers alone have had to build country roads, without assistance from the cities, from wealthy corporations or from the state. Every citizen will be benefited by the construction of good roads, directly and indirectly, and every taxpayer should contribute llis share to their cost. No wonder the farmer opposes the good roads movement, if he alone is to stand the expense. He has rightly suggested that he Should be assisted through the medium of a state road tax, under a system of state aid, as now employed in New Jersey, Connecticut and Massachufc lis .J.-:-:..:*
Good Road* Object Lesson. Four or iivo ypars ago the town of Hempstead, Queens county, N. Y.t voted to spend §400,000 in road improvements. Farms at tho time were worth from 530 to §50 an aero. They fire now worth several hundred dollars an aero and return good interest for those who purchased them at that price. This has been such an object lesson to their neighbors that I understand something like §1,000,000 will be spent this year in other parts of Queens county and neighborhood in building good roads. This may seem a large amount of money to be spent for the purpose, but owing to tho character of the soil and the fact that good road material must be brought the cost of construct ion is higher than it would bo in most parts of the slate.
Fifty Miles to Market.
It is not an uncommon thing in France to see a farmer 40 or 50 miles from home in wot weather with a heavy load. If he sees a prospect of a three days' rain, he puts his tarpaulin over his load, a cover over his horses anil a waterproof coat on aud starts off to market. Ho may go 50 miles before ho finds a market that suits him, or he may know in advanco just where ho is going. You do not often see anybody driving 50 miles through a rainstorm in tho United States to hud a market for a load ef hay, but it is not at all uncommon to sec fanners' wagons 40 or 50 miles from homo in Franco. They chooso the wot weather for that purpose. Their roads aro just as good then as at any time.— General Roy Stone.
Convlot Labor ou Itoadn.
Convict labor in road building is feeing employed in Duval county, Fla., and in North Carolina. In the latter cas*: 21£ cents per day per head is said to cover the cost of food, clothes medical attendance and guards, as compared with 28 cents per day for maintaining the same prisoners in jail. The Duval Good Reads association of Florida advocates the nse of short term convicts on such work and makes the claim that they would in this manner pay back some of the money expended upon them, and they would also stand a better chance of being called back to an honest life than if they were made to associate with more hardened criminals in a is
1
SPOOLS AND SHOE PECS.
Some Facts Aliout These Articles Made Up In Maiuc* "Oxford county, Maine, turns out nearly all the spools on which the sewing thread of this country is wound," said a wholesale dealer in such articles to the writer. "The spools are made from white birch timber, and they are producad by the millions in Oxford county. There are many other parts of Western Maine also where the industry is important. There are numerous saw mills in that part of the state which are kept busy all the year round sawing white birch logs into strips four feet long and from one to four inches wide and of the same thickness. These strips are sent to the spool factories, where they are worked into spools by the most ingenious labor-saving machinery. The strips of white birch are fed into one machine, and they are not touched—in fact, are hardly seen again —until the spools, all finished for market, except polishing, drop out by the bushel from another machine several rods away from where the strip starts in. The spools get their gloss by being rapidly revolved in barrels turned by machinery, the polish resulting from the contact of the spools with the barrel. In the backwoods villages of Oxford county one s°es scarcely any other industry but spoolmaking, and every person in the neighborhood is in some way interested in the business. The factories have been eating into the Maine birch forests for years, but there still seems to be enough of the timberleft to feed the machinery for many years to come. Hundreds of thousands of feet of logs are cut and sawed into epool lumber annually. Shoe peg factories are also an important branch of business once peculiar in Maine, although it has of late been followed to some etxent in other eastern states, and is spreading to the hardwood forests of Northern Pennsylvania. Maple is used largely In the manufacture of shoe pegs, although white birch is used at some factories. Shoe pegs are sold by the bushel, and are worth all the way from 75 cents to $1 a bushel, according to quality. More than $150,000 was received by Maine shoe peg factories last year for goods. A curious and profitable business has grown up in the Maine woods near the saw mills in the utilizing cf the immense quantities of sawdust 'by compression. Thousands of tons of this waste material are bought for a mere nothing, and are pressed into compact blocks and bales, and in this form is finding a ready market for kindling and fuel in eastern cities."
UNION HILL.
Quite a number of the farmers have finished gathering corn. James Pat'.erson is no better at this writing. J. Walker is improving slowly
Rev. Williamson preached another one of bis excellent sermons Sunday morning
Isaac N. Linn and W. Wright did most of tne shredding for this neighrhood
A. Smiley went to l'utnam and purchased a wagon load of apples for his winter use. Price per bushel 35 cents
Mrs Coener, J, Linn and daughand W. A Dice and wife attended he Endeavor convention at Shannonda.«
Saturday.
The Ladies' Aid Society will give an oyster and ice cream supper at Mace public hall. Saturday evening', Nov. 13 A quilt made by the young Indies will be sold to the highest bidder.
LAPLAND.
James Sandlin and wife, of Hoone county, visited at Henry Allen Hicks' part of last week.
Mrs Mattie Harrell and Mrs. Rice, of Crawfordsville, visited Mrs. Mary Davis last Wednesday.
Mrs. .las. McDonald, of Jamestown, visited relatives in this locality last week.
W. Davis is buvingcorn for Johnson & Gott at this place A crowd from here attended the box supper at White's school house Saturday night
Straughan and .Tesie Davis spent Saturday nieht and Sunday with Arthur and Hessie Rice, of Crawfordsville.
MRS. PETERSOFS ST0EY.
I have suffered wfth womb troubla over fifteen years. I ftadinflammation, enlargement and displacement of the womb.
The doctor wonted «e to take treatments, but I had just begun taking Mrs. Pinkham's Compound, and my husband
said
I had
better wait and see how much good that would do me. I was so sick when I began with her medicine, I could hardly be on my feet. I had the backache constantly, also headache, and was so dizzy. I had titjart trouble it seemed as though my heart was ir my throat at times choking me. I lould not walk around and I could not lie down, for then my heart would beat so fast I would feel as though I was smothering. I had to sit up in bed nights in order to breathe. I was so weak I could not do anything.
I have now taken inoveral bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and used three packages of Sanative Wash, and can say I am perfectly cured. I do not tViinly 1 could have lived long if M»s. Pinkham's medicine had not helped me.— MBS. JOSEPH PETEMHON, 513 (S&st St., Warren, Pa
1
.. •i*
Catarrh.
Though the disagreeable effects of Catarrh are felt all the year round, coldand 'disagreeable weather aggravates the
disease and it is during the winter season that its severest form is felt. Each succeeding year seems to intensify the disease, so that it gradually fasteus its hold upon the sufferer with a grasp that becomes firmer each season.
Catarrh often appears as only a cold at jfirst, and is hardly noticed. But gradually the cold returns, and it is more 1 difficult to cure,and stays longer than formerly. These symptoms cannot be mistaken they mark the first appearance of a disease that will develop in severity and stubbornness, and which it is impossible to cure with the local treatment of sprays, washes, and similar applications. Being a disease of the blood, only a blood remedy can have the slightest effect upon it. S.S.S. (Swift'sSpecific) is the only cure for Catarrh, because it is tbe only blood remedy which goes to the seat of all obstinate and deep-seated cases, and forces out the disease.
Mr. T. A. Williams, a leading merchant of Spartanburg, S. C., writes:
"For four years I had nasal catarrh, and though the case was a mild one at first.it was not long until I noticed that it was gradually growing worse. Of course I was under treatment of first-class physicians, but their remedies were applied locally, and the disease seemed to be getting a firmer hold on me all the while. "After spending so much money for treatment which proved to be all in vain, I was urged to try S.S.S. This remedy proved to be the right one, for tgot at the disease, and a few bottles cured me perfectly. The cure was a permanent one, and I have not had a touch of the disease for many years. Swift's Specific is the only remedy that will have the slighest effect upon Catarrh."
Sufferers from Catarrh should get a start on the disease before the cold weather aggravates it. Those who have been relying upon local treatment will find winter weather is all that is needed to show that the disease is still with them. A course of S.S.S. (Swift's Specific) will prove all assertions made that it is the only cure for Catarrh it goes to the cause of the trouble—the blood— and forces out al 1 traces of the disease.
Swift's Specific is the only remedy which reaches real obstinate blood diseases it cures Catarrh, Rheumatism, Cancer, Contagious Blood Poison, Eczema, Scrofula, and in fact every other disease of the blood. It is guaranteed
Purely Vegetable
and is the only blood remedy containing no potash, mercury or other mineral. Booksmailed freetoany addressby tha Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga.
Ohionio Sufferers, Has Medicine Tailed? Do u' forget that F.lecIncity as produced by
THE. DR. SPALDINQ PATENT ELEOTRIO BELT
WILL. CURE
YOU.
Dont pajr $15 to $30 jor others when yon can set the best in the world from us for
SO
to £12.
guarantee. Call or write us for facts. Korsalu by Mn!l' t.t & Morgan.
with
gHOOSIER Building and Loan ^Association Has plenty nf
rT
MONEY TO LOAN
On ba^is of 4 and 5 per c-nt. on 1 short notice, on easy terms with1 out commission. Apply to
JOHN fl SCHULTZ, Sec.
MONO IN ROUTE.
so.rci. UOUTB 3:16 a. ..Night Express 1:40 a. 1:15 p. in ....Fast Mail 1:15 p. p. in Local Freight 8:46 a. m.
Big 4-—Pcorin Division. KAST 'VEST 8:52 a. m...Daily, except Sunday... 6:15 p. m. 1 :lf p. m...Daily, except Sunday... 8:55 a. 4:59 p. Dailv 1:15 p. in 2:02 a. 111 Dally 12:37 a. m.
VANDALIA.
JR' WORTH 9:24 a. 8:18 a. •40 p. tn r:17 p. 12:15 •. »»•. Local Freight.. 12:15
C. H. & D. Ry.
-To-
Cincinnati,^
Dayton,
Toledo,
V\
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