Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 3 February 1896 — Page 4

Heinous Murder in Kentucky Near Cincinnati.

SHE CRIME A DEEP MYSTERY

Headless Trunk of a Young Woman Found Near Fort Thomas—The Murderer Undoubtedly Carried His Victim's Head

Away With Him—The Victim Unknown And the Murderer at Large. CINCINNATI, Feb. 3.—The discovery oi

the decapitated body of a woman Saturday morning between some bushes in an old archard at Fort Thomas, Ky. trithin 100 yards of Alexandria pike, was grewsome evidence of a horrible crime committed in the darkness of the preceding night.

The head had been carried away, with view, most probably, of concealing the identity of the victim.

Everything in the surrounding conditions pointed to a terrible struggle Jjaving taken place before the woman teceived her death blow. Who she was «r where she came from are mysteries.

From the position of the body it was evident that the woman had been throw down violently and then her head deliberately severed with a dull knife. The severance was made below the fifth vertebra. Judging by the pool of blood, fife had been extinct from four to eight hours when the body was found.

The clothing of the woman was of poor quality. The dress was light blue and white, small pattern check, of cotton, worn tight across the back and loose in front. She also wore a dark blue skirt and a union suit of underwear. On her hands was a pair of tan kid gloves, well worn. The black, clothtopped shoes were of fine quality, in contrast to the other clothing, and were marked within "Louis Hays, Greencastle, Ind., 22-11, 62,458." Her stockings were black^and quite new. The rubbers were old. "and worn at the heels. The corset had evidently been ripped open and torn from her body during a struggle which took place near where it was found. Close by was a piece of the dress, also with blood on it.

Undertaker "White of Newport, under the direction of the coroner, removed the body to his establishment, where lnmrtivds were gathered throughout the after: non and evening to see the body and discuss the horrible tragedy.

The woman appeared to be about 30 years old. and Dr. Tingley gave it as his opinion that she had been a mother. He found a cut across the lingers of the left hand, received as she grasped the blade of the knife in the hands of her slayer.

Search was begun at once for the head of the murdered woman. Several ponds in tie vicinity were dragged without success. There was not the slightest clew to the direction taken by the murderer. Parties were formed, and every foot of ground within a radius of half a mile searched. The searchers were stimulated by a reward of $50 offered by Campbell county authorities for the recovery of the head.

Sheriff Hummer sent to Seymour, I?id., for two bloodhounds to assist in the search for the head. They arrived about 6 o'clock and were taken to Fort Thomas at once, after first visiting the body at White's morgue. 'They were upon the trail, and it was with the utmo.. difficulty that they could keep it, owing to the tramping of sightseers in the vicinity. They followed the trail along the fence from the srcne of the murder to the Alexander pike, which they followed for a distance of 20 yards or so. The dogs made so many breaks that the plan was temporarily abandoned.

Later in the evening the dogs were at-ain put

011

the trail. This time they

were more successful. Taking the same direction as at first, the dogs kept on the pike for several hundred yards. Leaving it they climbed over a little liii.1 on the Fort Thomas side of the road, going in the direction of Covington reservoir No. 2. Arriving at the south end of the reservoir the hounds kept the trail along the side until they reached the middle of its south side, wliere they stopped.

The officers came to the conclusion that the head, which they suppose must have beeq. wrapped in the woman's cloak, which is also missing, was thrown into the reservoir. The reservoir will be dragged.

Who could have committed the heinous deed is a question that has not yet been solved. At first it was thought that some soldier of the fort might be j*^tlie guilty one. Colonel Cochran, the 5bfft commander, ordered a rigid search to re made of the barracks and the accoutrements, which was done. No suspicious circumstance that could connect any soldier with the crime could be discovered, and Colonel Cochran was satisfied that the guilty man was to be looked for outside the fort.

1

v**

JVIusician Ulrey of Company E, and Private Grimes of Company D, stated that they were standing in front of A. Eiedematter's saloon

011

Friday night at

11 o'clock, when they noticed a woman .. and man coming across from the opposite

3ide

of the street. As they were

standing near the crossing, and just under the light, they got a fair view of the couple.

They said the woman's stature and color of dress corresponded with that of the murdered woman. She was a blonde and wore a dark, broad-brim hat, with a large white plume across the crown.

They took particular notice of her, owing to her attractiveness, and to the fact that she was strange to them. She wore a dark cape with an opera collar, -which reached well down over her dress.

They thought her companion was one is-,

0f

the members of Company E, in citi-

*m*~ jsen's clothing, and as the couple passed & up the street they followed, and upon overtaking them Ulrey said: "Hello,

Manning." He received

110

sign of rec­

ognition, and after walking ahead for some distance they turned around and passed the pair again on their way back to the fort to be able, if possible, to identify the man, whom they supposed was one of the boys belonging to the fort.

As they passed, the woman's companion said: "Wait a minute I want to see you." Whereupon he walked up to Ulrey and looked him closely in the face, and then said "I am mistaken in the man exevse me."

Grimes stated that while the man Was talking to Ulrey the girl looked fenxio isly at her companion, and said, fct'Come on, Oharlie, we will be late."

He/ companion then turned around,

tad the two walked off in the darkness. Ulrey and Grimes describe the man as being well built, weighing about 180 pounds and wearing black suit of clothes, the coat being of the cutaway pattern. So minutely had they noticed the man. that they were able to testify as to his hat, collar and tie, the former being a black durby and the latter a laydown one with full points and the tie a neat black butterfly pattern.

Saturday morning, about 10 o'clock, while a number of soldiers were assembled in the saloon of A. Riedmatter, on the Highland pike, near the fort, a man whose appearance tallied with the above description entered and sat down. He ordered a drink, and, sitting apart, seemed to be preoccupied about something. Mr. Riedematter's attention was attracted to the man because his clothing and shoes were mudstained, the shoes having the appearance of having been cleaned with a tuft of grass. His swollen eyes and paleness showed that lie had evidently not been in bed for the previous night.

Another thing that struck Riedematter as singular was that the man's interest did not seem to be in the least aroused at the conversation of the soldiers, who were loudly discussing the finding of the headless body. Without taking any notice of them, the stranger approached the bar and asked Mr. Riedematter if there was a steam railroad between Fort Thomas and Cincinnati. No, sir, there is only the electric line," was the reply.

He then asked for the nearest steam railroad, and was directed to Brent station, on the Chesapeake and Ohio, which is about a mile from Fort Thomas.

He went toward the door, but before going out turned and asked the inconsequential question, "Where are the headquarters of Company H?" Being informed, he asked if anything had happened in the place. He was told the nature of the affair, and then walked out.

The soldiers noticed the man's peculiar actions, and remarked upon them after he left, but made no effort to question him.

PUBLIC DEBT INCREASED.

Decrease of Cash in the Treasury Causes the Change. WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—The monthly

statement of the public debt issued by the treasury department shows the public debt

011

Jan. 31, 1896, less cash in

the treasury, to have been $953,046,237, an increase over last month of $5,747,975, which is accounted for by a decrease during the i£-utli of $6,435,422 in the cash in the t. -. asury.

The debt is classified as follows: Interest bearing debt, $747,302,820 debt

011

which interest has ceased since maturity, §1.(573,190 debt bearing no interest, $375,602,005 total debt, $1,124,638,015, which does not include certificates and treasury notes outstanding amounting to $562,542,773, which is offset by an equal amount of cash in the treasury.

The cash in the treasury is recapitulated as follows: Gold, $99,693,356 silver, $505,421,818 paper, $153,279,225 bonds, disbursing officers' balances, etc., $16,159,324, an aggregate of $774,553,725, against which are demand liabilities amounting to $602,961,947, leaving a cash balance of $171,591,778.

Mints Coining Silver.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—The monthly report of the director of the mint show? the total coinage during January te have been $13,033,560, classified as follows: Gold, $12,914,600 silver, $35,000 minor coin, $53,960. The mints at Philadelphia, San Francisco and New Orleans Saturday began the coinage of silver dollars at the rate of $1,500,000 per month. Is is expected that the work will continue until from $18,000,000 to $20,000,000 have been coined.

GREAT DAMAGE DONE BY FLOODS.

Tennessee, Arkansas and Mississippi Olio Vast .Sea of Water. MEMPHIS, Feb. 3.—The unprecedent­

ed rainfall in the lower Mississippi valley during the past 10 days has caused all streams to overflow and the lowlands in Tennessee, Arkansas and Mississippi are one vast sea of water. Bridges have been washed away on several of the railroads and traffic is seriously delayed.

In Arkansas the damage from the flood will reach high figures. The Ouachita river rose 30 feet within 36 hours and the torrent of waters swept everything before it. Many fine plantations and farms in that fertile valley have been submerged and outhouses and fences swept away.

Iiain has been falling almost steadily during the past 48 hours and the water will go still higher.

News has been received here of the drowning of an entire family of children

011

the Reid place, four miles from Canton, Miss., the parents having gone to a festival, and the dwelling being flooded before their return.

Port Gibson, Miss., reports that all streams in that vicinity are overflowed, and bridges destroyed or badly damaged. Dave Barnes, colored, was drowned by the upsetting of a dugout, in which he was attempting to cross an overflowed field.

COIT NOT GUILTY.

Jury's Verdict in the 'First Indictment Against the Colonel.

OiitCTjEViLTjK, O., Feb. 3.—The jury in the case against Alonzo B. Coit, for manslaughter (first indictment) for the killing of Smith Welch at the Washington C. H. riot, returned a verdict of not guilty at 10:45 Saturday night. It began its deliberations Wednesday evening. There was no demonstration except a little applause from the military element present.

Hon. Ulric Sloan of the prosecution asked the court to assign the hearing of the second indictment for the killing of W. A. Sams for uly next, but Judge Walters replied he was not ready just then. As the colonel left the courtroom he was taken in charge by members of Company A, who gave him quite an ovation.

Fatilities still follow this trial. Judge Walters received a telegram Saturday morning that his eldest daughter, Harriet, had died of heart failure at St. Mary convent, Columbus, where she waa attending school. Hon. H. G. Worthington of Washington O. H., one of the attorneys for Ooit, was called home Saturday morning by the death of his mother. Jnror Mitchell of Scioto township received a telephone message that his mother was lying at the point of death.

SILVER BILL PASSED.

Long Struggle in the Senate Finally Ended.

SUBSTITUTE FOR THE HOUSE BILL

The Final Vote Was 43 to 35—The House Will Probably Not Concur in the Senate Measure ancl the Bill Slay Never Become a Law—Program of the House and

Senate. WASHINGTON, Feb. 3. The long

struggle in the senate over the question of the free coinage of silver terminated in a victory for the friends of free silver. The substitute for the house bill was passed by a vote of 42 to 35. Its title was changed so as to make it read: "To restore the coinage of silver dollars and for other purposes."

The bill as it now stands provides that from the date of the act the mints of the United States shall be open to the coinage of silver, and the dollar shall b6 of the present weight and fineness, and also provides for the exchequer certificates. It further provides for the coinage of the seigniorage now in the treasury, and authorizes immediate issue of certificates upon the same in advance of its coinage.

One section of the bill provides that no bank note of less than $10 shall here after be issued, and those outstanding of less amount shall be taken up and canceled as soon as possible.

Section 4 provides that the greenbacks and treasury notes shall be redeemed in standard siiver dollars, or in gold coin, at the option of the treasury, and the greenbacks, when so redeemed, shall be immediately reissued.

All the sections of the house bill are struck out. The bill now goes to the house for concurrence in the substitute.

PROGRAM OF CONGRESS.

Probable Proceedings For the Week in Both the House and Senate. WASHINGTON, Feb. 3.—The important

features of the week's proceedings in the house will be in connection with the resolution to censure Ambassador Bayard, adopted by the foreign affairs committee, and the senate free coinage substitute for the house bond bill. The resolution censuring Mr. Bayard will probably precipitate an exciting contest on the floor, but will doubtless be adopted when it reaches a vote.

When the free coinage substitute for the house bond bill is returned to the house an effort may be made by the silver men to concur in the substitute. Such an attempt would, of course, be defeated, as the majority against silver in the lower branch of congress is overwhelming, but it might be made in order to put the members on record. The bill, according to the recent program, will be immediately referred to the ways and means committee and reported back with a recommendation that the senate substitute be nonconcurred in, which in parliamentary language would mean that the house insists upon its bill. It will then remain for the senate, which also will insist on its bill, to request a conference. It is there that some of the members at each end of the Capitol hope to effect a compromise, but the prevailing opinion is that the bill will die in conference.

The week, except the portion devoted to the bond bill an^l the Bayard resolution will be given tip to a continuation of the work on the appropriation bills. The District of Columbia bill is still under consideration. The agricultural and army bill have been reported and the Indian bill is almost ready. They will probably be taken up in the order named.

The senate has no well defined plan for this week's proceedings. It is possible, though by no means certain, that the finance committee will be able to report the revenue tariff bill on Tuesday, the matter still depending on Senator Jones of Nevada. If the bill should be reported there will probably be some desultory speech-making, based upon it, but the consideration of the measure would scarcely be seriouly begun this week even though a report should bo secured as promptly as is hoped by the friends of the bill.

The committee on appropriations will claim a good share of the time that the senate will be in session. The urgent deficiency appropriation bill has already been reported, and the military academy and pension bills will be put in early in the week. None of these will excite any prolonged debate, and it is altogether probable that all will be disposed of before the week closes. The Cuban and Monroe doctrine resolutions are also on the calendar, and can be taken up at any time.

There is more or less executive business to claim attention, and the general calendar has been growing rapidly as the result of committee work, while the silver bond bill lias been claiming the attention of the senate. Under these circumstances the week bids fair to be one of diversified interest with no one topic claiming attention.

TIRED OF LIVING IN BROOKLYN.

One Woman and Two Men Suicide in One Day. BROOKLYN, Feb. 3.—One woman and

two men committed suicide in this city yesterday. The sensational suicide, however, was that of Mis. Augusta Schwartz, a wealthy widow, who owned a handsome residence in Berkeley place, the aristocratic section of Brooklyn. For some time past she has been a constant sufferer from neuralgia, and that, together with the fact that her husband, Anton Schwarz. a prominent member of the Brewers' Exchange, had been found dead about a year ago under peculiar circumstances in New York city, had given her great mental worry. She shot herself through the mouth yesterday morning, and when her son rushed into the room he discovered that his mother had placed several rubber tubes over the gas jets and run them across to the bed where she lay. He also found an empty bottle, which, it is believed, contained a quantity of laudanum.

Henry Burnse, a German, 50 years old, killed himself by drinking a mixture of strychnine and lager beer during, it is said, a fit of temporary insanity.

Because he was reduced from the position of foreman te that of conductor on the Reade avenue trolley line, Raynor E. Roger*, 36 years old, shot kimself in the head and died soon afterward.

4

COBHAM OF DICKENS.

A VILLAGE IMMORTALIZED IN THE "PICKWICK PAPERS."

Article* of Interest In the Room Which Is the Pride of Mine Host of the "leather Bottel"—An Antique Church and the

Brasses It Contains.

Less than an hour and a half from London is the quiet little station at Stole street, named, I suppose, in honor of a Roman road and trodden by travelers as they approach the manifold glories of Cobham.

Cobham, the Kentish Cobham, is one of those places in which Kent is so rich, favored alike by nature and art and historical association. For what is called park scenery it has few superiors in England. The church has memorials of its fourteenth century lords as fresh as when they felt the last touch of the workman's tools, while the inn opposite is redolent with the memories of Charles Dickens, and the ruddy old Elizabethan hall is one of the stateliest homes in England—a real home, constantly lived in.

To see Cobham in its glory one must of course visit it in summer. It is hardly fair to go there, as I did, on a weeping autumn day, though it was full of a charm of its own. In the first place, the season precluded my approaching Cobham in the orthodox way—from the back of the ancient buildings which form the new college. The boy who acts as porter at the station did not recommend the short cut for a very wet day. It had recently been plowed. So, passing first an old Kentish black and white house to the left and then a fine red brick Georgian mansion (described by him as a farm) to the right, I strode up the main street of Cobham village to where a putative leather bottle swings in front of the inn which Dickens immortalized in "Pickwick. The leather bottle, which, proudly labeled "Ecce Signum," swings over a sign of Dickens' Mr. Pickwick standing on a chair with his hands under his coattails, is, as matter of fact, made of cast iron and a weighs no less than 40 pounds, the real bottle being kept on the top of the clock in the bar parlor, guarded by an uncertain looking monkey and a dog. It is shaped like a barrel, with a combined stopper and handle on one side, and has a large hole cut out just below the handle. the reason of this being that when it was dug out of afield hard by it weighed so heavy that the finder hacked a hole to see what was in it. He was rewarded by finding mcney, which was probably exactly what he wanted to find.

The inn claims to be as old as the chancel of the church opposite, which would make it fourteenth century. Even the aspect of the much repaired exterior does not make this impossible, and the rough, worm eaten, dark oak beams in the low ceiling of the Dickens room certainly look old enough.

The Dickens room is the pride of mine host and brings Cobham visits from a host of theatrical people, who certainly would never visit it for the sake of its lords, ancient or modern, and tlieir hall and church and college. In the visitors' book I read such names as W. S. Pen ley and J. L. Toole, the latter accompanied by Mr. Clement Scott, and over the mantelpiece hung a pretty theatrical portrait of Miss Mary Anderson, with her hands tied together in some character which I did not recognize—her memento of a visit here.

The walls are hung with prints of various characters and scenes in Dickens' books, Dickens' programmes, sketches, and what not, among them being The Graphic's picture of the "Empty Chair," which made Luke Fildes' name, and Dickens' last letter (in autograph), dated June 8, 1870, in reply to a Nonconformist minister named Matcham, a letter about "Edwin Drood," and with a pathetic and particular interest, because Dickens in this last letter of his life avows that he had always cherished Christianity—even written a book to bring it home to his children, though he had not proclaimed his belief from the house top. Jingle, Sidney Carton, the devoted, and Pecksniff are among the more prominent characters on the walls. All around the room there are rows of old fashioned chairs, the place of honor being occupied by the Dickens chair—a flat topped article of the variety known to old furniture dealers as "The Windsor.

Whatever the claims of the "Leather Bottel" to fourteenth century honors, there is no doubt of the antiquity of the church, though the age of the exterior, except the tower's, is obliterated with a facing of flints. Two gigantic flints, one of (hem at least 4 feet by 2, lie on the gra:w below. The interior of the church, once mined with plaster and whitewash, is

now

carefully restored and highly

interesting. First in importance, of course, cume its monumental brasses, some 30

of

them, not erected, but laid

down on the chancel floor to the honor of the lords and ladies of Cobham and the masters

of

their college. These

brasses have no superiors in England, and go as far back as the beginning of the fourteenth century. Not a line is obliterated in these graven images of the knights and dames the one in full armor, the other in the lieigbt of fashion. Tradition says that in Cromwell's time they were saved from the heavy hand of the spoiler by being first whitewashed to escape notice, and then covered with deep litter for the stabling of my lord protector's horses. I think that they must have been further saved by wooden floors being laid over the flags on which they rest for a few odd centuries.—London Queen.

A Chicagoan Gibe.

"I see they're going to change the name of Wall street," said Mr. Putsankall. "Is that so?" "Yes. They're going to call it Wail street." "What a crying shame I"—Chicago Journal.

A

THE DAILY NEWSPAPER.

tto Development and Its Worth Excellent* ly Set Forth.

The evolution of the daily press into more than a newspaper is forced by public expectation and custom. It is to a majority of people, at least on this continent, the sole library. It must satisfy a wider demand than that of the man who merely wants to know if stocks have risen since yesterday or whether Senegambia and Bolivia have gone to War overnight.

Matthew Arnold said, with a suspicion of tears in his voice, that if he lived something like 50 years longer than he expected to, he would probably be the only man in Great Britain who would be found reading books. He took an extreme and rather pessimistic view. As a matter of fact the press has been largely instrumental in encouraging the reading of good books, and while it engrosses the attention of many millions of readers to itself the fact of the increasing literary output of tbe country and the world refutes the notion that the public is losing its appetite for matters of enduring moment. Thoreau, the apostle of high thought and individualism, took no care of the changes that are recorded and forgotten every day because he lived apart from men and studied nature. He it was who cried: "Do not read the times. Read the eternities." But he lived in a day when the press was small, of little influence and servile. In his own state it supported the demands of the slaveholders, to his infinite disgust, and it was first and last a mere record of the day's doings.

But the press of this day is more than a record. It is a mirror of the world's thoughts and intentions, a critic, a judge, a guide, a friend. By many the news pages are glanced at, and attention is bestowed on the contents that exhibit deliberation, research and scholarship. There is as good writing and as purposeful and helpful writing in the daily papers today as there was in the magazines of the first half of our century before. Moreover, it is writing to some purpose. It is not for mere display of style, but to accomplish the betterment of governments, of society, of institutions and arts, to stimulate effort in right causes, to encourage industry, thrift, honor and content. The condition of the world in our century without the daily press is unthinkable.—Brooklyn Eagle.

DANGER IN EARLY RISING.

A Doctor's Theory Tliat the Kabit Helps to Make People Insane.

Dr. Seklen H. Talcott, the medical superintendent of the Middletown State Insane asylum recently, started the theory that nothing conduced so much to insanity as early rising.

In proof of his assertion Dr. Talcott calls attention to the relative frequency with which farmers, their wives, sons and daughters become insane. The cause of this has hitherto been thought to be their isolated lives, their hard work and perhaps the excessive use of pie and potatoes.

On the other side, it has always seemed to Dr. Talcott and other eminent alienists that there must be some other deep seated cause of insanity among the farming classes than pie and potatoes. Farmers have always pure, fresh air in abundance, which city folk seldom have they are less liable to mental and nervous strain than city folk and also less liable to infectious diseases and the bad effects of alcohol.

Dr. Talcott's view, after a careful consideration of the advantages and disadvantages of farming life as a predisposing cause of insanity, is that it is the excessively early hours of rising which increase insanity in the rural districts out of proportion to the urban and suburban rate. He thinks growing children in particular suffer severely from the "artificial cut off" which is applied so rigidly to their lives.

The report of the state commission in lunacy shows that during the year ending Sept. 30, 1894, 370 farmers, gardeners and herdsmen were committed in New York state as lunatics. This is a larger number than in any other class except laborers, of whom there were 607 commitments.

As against these large classes there were only 54 members of the professional classes committed, including clergy, military and naval officers, artists, authors, civil engineers and surveyors. There were only 45 men committed olit of the large class of waiters, cooks, servants, miners and seamen. The class of male teachers, students, housekeepers and mu\ses gave only 23.—New York Times.

Chinese Idea of Fires In Winter.

Although in some parts of China the weather during winter is very cold, the Chinese think English fires very uncivilized—so destructive to furniture and so apt to smoke. "Their way of getting warm is to add jacket over jacket and skirt over skirt, and when sitting quiet to embrace a little charcoal burner hidden by the wide sleeves of the tunic." Sometimes this unseen warm friend was forgotten during Mrs. Stewart's class hours, and there was a cry that somebody was on fire. All hands would then hasten to the rescue, and the fire would be put out amid much amusement.— Westminster Gazette.

Strong: In Their Opposition.

"Weak woman repeated time sadly. "Ah, if you could but encounter the opposition I have to meet from that source!"

Occasionally, he confessed, he was prompted not only to turn back in his flight, but to abandon it altogether.— Detroit Tribune.

The engines of the Northwestern railway, in England, are worth £5,000,000. To maintain this value an old engine is withdrawn every five days and replaced by a new one.

At thQjjresent time the United States has 144 garrisoned forts, arsenals or military posts occupied by its troops.

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ennsulvaniaiinEi

Schedule of Passenger Trains-CentralTime,

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lumbus and intonnodiato stations. Arrive Cambridge City

t12-30 mid

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of

35 p.

m.

JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD, General Manager, General Passongar Agent 10-20-95-E. PITTSBURGH, PENN' A.

For time cards, rates of fare, through tickets, baggage checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Agent

the Pennsylvania

Lines.

Indications.

Rain or snow northeasterly shifting to westerly winds.

Cincinnati Tobacco Market.

Hhds.

Offerings for the week a,025 Rejections for the week 616 Actual sales for the week 1,409 Receipts for the week 1,183 Offerings of new 891 Offerings of old 1 634

The range of prices on tihe week's offerings was as follows: 391 hhds new: 10, $15@17 75 20, $13 25(314 75 10, $10011 76 23, $8 0009 85 63, t6@7^96 87J|4@5 95 188, $1Q3 96. 1,634 hhds old: 3,

78, 916018 7ft 140, S1801* 76 114, $100

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