Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 19, Number 23, Jasper, Dubois County, 8 June 1877 — Page 3
WEEKLY COURIER.
0. OAVI( VaMItktr. - - - INDIANA. 5ASPKK ITEMS OF-JNTMEIT. lVrtiHHHl hhiI Literary. The Queen has granted tho throe MiswiS I)ofoijt lineal dcseendents of tho author of "Hobluson Crusoe," pension of $375 iur annum each, I'mids are being raised In Loxlngtou, Ky., to transport thy remain of Jik-'I T. Hart, tho sculptor, from Italy t that citv for burial. Tho oxponso Iwh7fi2. Tho French Academy has finished tho dictionary on which Its members have ho long boon at work, - Tho last word of the now edition is "zlgomnninuo," signifying H niau with his facial muscles so organized us to produce a iwrinanont grin. Tho editor of tho Radical fl'arls) m been sentenced by tho Kronen Government to two months' imprisonment and to pay a lino of 2,000 francs for insulting tho army. Tho editor of Hoohofort's iMHtcmc also received a .similar .sentence for article subversive of social order. -At a complimentary reception given to Die Hull in Boston a short time sinco, the violinist presented the committee on the Norse memorial a check for 2,000, the result of recent concerts given in tho West. Tho monument which it is proposed to erect to the memory of the early Norse settlors will cost $1-1,000. Miss aiurio Wainwright, granddaughter of tho Bishop of that name, made her debut at Booth's Theater, in Xcw York, tho other night, as Juliet. "The impression of tho endeavor," says the lYwen, "was that Miss Wainwright, in semi-sentimental roles, would in duo season bo an acquisition to the theater." .Tudah 1. Benjamin, tho Confederate Secretary of State, is one of tho most popular 'lawyers in Loudon, and has an income of over $100,000 a year. Ho is (ft, was born in St. Domingo, is a Hebrew, went to New Orleans after graduating at Yale, was u Whig, then u Democratic United States Senator, and then a Confederate. Dr. J. Marion Sims has written a lKM)k to show that Dr. Crawford W. Long, of Georgia, was tho real discoverer of anaesthetics, having antedated Wells, Morion and Jackson by several years. Dr. Sims suggests the appropriation by Congress of $100,000 to bo divided between tho families of Long, Wells, Morton and Jackson. Tho Now York Graphic, in a lato issue, gives tho portraits of fifteen prominent newspaper humorists, and a liner looking lot of men could not Imj drawn from any other profession. The follow ing are the names: C.H.Lewis, Detroit rnc Pram; Stiles T. Stanton, Norwich IMktin; It. .1. Burdotte, Burlington JlawkHW; J. V. Goldsmith, New York Hcrntd; A. K. Sweet, San Antonio Her ald; h. M. Bowey, Worcester Prcsx : Geo. lu Catlin, New York Commercial Advertiser ; Krwin Wood, Chicago .Toxrml ; S. W. Small, Atlanta Constitution ; .1, it. Williams, Nornstown Herald; G. F. Babbitt, Boston PoM ; I. M. Gregory, UocliCterCMocra: N. Burbank. New Orleans liepHblimn ; G. D. Bavard, late of the Brooklyn Aryui C. 1 1. Clark .unxAueier), rtilhtdelphia Bulletin. School anil ChHreh. A bill for nnifonnitv of text-books was defeated in the Illinois House of KcprcsentativM. Tiicre are 42,120 pupils in tho Chi eago schools, tho average daily attend anee being 87,018.8. Yale exnoeta In thm Hiitmmi In rn ceive a number of Japanese students miiii uie imperial College. Hie Trust (a of iha Fifth AvAiuin lYesbvterian Cliiirnl,. m VWL-. l,rn adopted a rule that no one shall be adimueu io me church after the sermon is begun. I'rof. Moss HnSt MVW nt tlm TTni versity of Michigan, who lias long been a member trf tbitditnwrnu-utiiiiint r'lim oiihas united with the Episcopal Church at iu iiruor. 'The KliiiMiriir Aluvum'W hua thank ed the Holy Synod for finishing, after wnum jimrs oi incessant laoor, ma translation of the Bible into the Russian yernaetilar. This is fhe first translation into Russian approved by the Czar and i c uiwrch. The .British and Foreign 'hole Society's translation is now pro minted in ltussin. I'lio Chinese students have made wonderful progress sinco tho establishment of tho educational headquarters: at Hartford. They show good abilities to contend with American students. One thincsu scholar has taken the seeont l'nze for declamation in tho Hartfort High School, ami another the first in the South lhi.llnv VaU lticrl, and now Leo Kwai IVtu takes tho first 1 laumr ponnmnship In the West Mid die Public School at Hartford. -Jtllicrn I'itltlkiitM- , Tiita Tit "" 'ft-' ui.iimjj w& wining "as decided that tho directors of a pubio school have a right to dictate what woks shall bo studied and used, anil Can, tllQl'nfftt'n. nviW liu lt'.liln tn I w a text book in connection with other ut..lf.. .... . , oumios. i ms iteolsion was rendered in a suit brought by a Homan Catholic, Win, l.o.l .?.. ....l i I attOlltiotl wllHIl I tin llil.lii tl-ilu v.al no in bo school, but to go on studying lessons. Tiw tail tJiio .v..it.wi ,.vi his the tetion of tboHohoolniistrtw waa justifies hu uv uio trustees ami tho court -Tho union of tho two principal non Jm'Hcopal Methodist bodies, in conven
tion at Baltimore, has Immjh the principal
anniversary event. By a ooiunrnmle of ttubordinato teneUi and matters of lbwlplino, tho Methodist Church (socalled) and the Methodist Protestant Church have become a United Church, and will unquestionably gain immcinwly by the move, Tho Joint Convention i appointed a number of committees on tho various matter which now need. special attention, and agreed to tho .!! I ll... !,. I.'..!.. JIOpOMIUMII III 111(9 1IUU illUlllMlllHl IVI'lAcopal uenerai uomerence lor an u-.ou-monioal Conference of Methodism. HolfHOH hhiI iHdustry. Sixty thousand spindles aro soon to )0 in o)ereration at Columbus, Ga, Live lobsters are the latest imported edible from tho United States to Great Britain. One steamer recently carried a tank containing 700, A constant How Of sea-water wa kept in the tank by means of a small engine. Twenty varieties of California grapea have been painted from naturo in a uimiy sopuiaie muuiii uy artist in that State. The Wine-Growers Association of California is about to issue chromes, exact reproductions of tho paintings, in book form, The rapid extension of tho cultiva tion of peanuts is tho use now made of them for tho oil thev contain, lnst .sea son's product reached 2,000,000 bushels, valued at !L000,OO0. The oil i iu large demand as a substitute for olive and al mond oils, and keeps a much longer time without becoming rancid. The Martindale Zinc Works shut down work on tho 19th, throwing 120 men out of employment, J no main rea son for the stoppage of the works is tho i .. ? ...i.ii. i i low puces oi 7,iuc, wiuuii hhiuij umur the cost of production, 'ihe company has a large stock of metal on hand. At the I'aris School of Art and Trades experiments were lately made with a paper alleged to oo mcomoustiblo. Sheets of it were exposed singly to the fierce Humeri of a spirit lamp without other effect than to slightly wither !. -t'i .......... .........! :.. H, nun l mi injtt;r tvua uAjnipuu 111 bulk no effect was apparent. It was thought very desirous lor the manufacture of bank notes. Tho secret of tho manufacture rests with tho experiment er. Tho Scientific American suggests that it would be an excellent plan for persons contemplating building to have models of their houses constructed in paper or thin wood. Few peoplo can obtain a perfect idea of the aspect of any proposed edifice from the architect's drawings. Kngineers very frequently adopt this plan in building bridges and similar structures. Map hhiI Mlhap. Wfifllov J. Morrison, of Snriinrvale. Mo., was diot while leaving his doorway by the accidental discharge of his gun, the charge tearing away "one side of his face. He died in three horn's. The daughter of Charles Happ, re siding at Cherubusco, Ind., while suflerg from ague, sent to a dnig-store for me uuininc. The druggist made a mistake, gave her morphine, and death ensued in six hours. Near Dubuoue, Iowa.William Long, while milking in a barn, waa killed by lightning and the barn set on lire. Mrs. t tj , , ...i .it.. i.ong wa very sevewjiy iniriieu wmiu trying to rescue the body of her husband from tho flamed. At Tolcston, Ind., Mrs. John Wilkes was struck by lightning and instantly killed while sitting at the front door of her house. She had two children in her lap, both of whom were unharmed. Chauncey Cheswell, of Newmarket, N. II., was at work on tho machinery of his mill, when the pointed tube of an oilcan was driven into his leg. His arms and legs began to swell, and he finally died from blood-poisoning. Mrs. Gilpin, wife of Alfred Gilpin, hardware merchant, of Appleton, Wi., was burned to death in her own hftuse a few nights ago. Mrs. Gilpin w.w alone In the Tiouso at tho time the tiro broke out, and from the fact that portions of a lamp were found under her remains it Is supposed that she fell down stairs, and, tho lamp being broken, caused tho lire. Clans Broek,agcd 78,a farmer living 10 miles from Omaha, Neb., hung himself in his barn. C. Y. Tifiany, a railway conductor, cut his throat with a penknife and bled to death in the sin-tlou-house at Omaha. He had boon on a snrce, John Scumbel, a Terro Haute, ImL, brewer, cut his throat from oar to ear. Henry Smith, of Detroit, Mich., shot himself on account of domestic troubles. At East Monmouth, Me., William Gatcholl, 18 years old, first shot himself twice through the head, and then, io make his taking-off sure, threw himself into a pond Sarah Cole, of Watcrbury, Ct., 20 years old, committed suicide by taking poison. She was to have been married in two weeks, and no cause for tho act is assigned. Henry Steinbacher, a goldchain manufacturer, shot himself in tho head, at his residence In Brooklyn, N. YM it is supposed on account of tho death of his wife, who also committed suicide a few days previous. A respectable merchant of New Castle, l'a., becamo possessed of the insane notion tho other day that he had committed a murder and was pursued by officers, and to ofioetually escape his persecutors lie fatally cut his own throat. ForelRH Notin. Sir John Lintorn Arabln Simmons, the man spoken of as the active commander of the Hritish forces iu case of war, Is only 50 years of age rather young for a Ueutunant-Gonenu. lie served In the Crimean war, and afterward In Asia Minor, ami Is thoroughly
familiar with the tmt of war a well In Asia at) iu Kupope. A Hussian commissariat officer at Odessa was detected adulterating Hour alout to lie sent to the army, with lime and other Milwtances. Ifo was inmmllatoly tried, and shot within twenty-four hours after tho discovery took place. Tho Uussian Government trust that this summary execution will put a stop to these practices, which caused so much sulloring to the Russian soldiers during tho Crimean war. Switzerland is a republic of hotelkeepers, and now its business is seriously threatened by tho war. Knormous capital has been Invested of lato years In putting up new hotels, and the coming season was counted upon as a profitaide one. Tho war at one stroke cuts oft all the Russians, a vast band of moneyed tourists who delighted in those mountains, and many of other nationalities, upon whom hostilities will Indirectly aut. Lordly Dudley Is in treaty for Baron Albert Grant's house at Kensington, London, but between the price asked and the sum oll'ered there is a trilling ditlbrenoo of 00,000. The building is almost fit for a royal palace, and, with the seven acres of pleasure ground, is freehold property. To every bed-room and each of tho twelve best bod-rooms is about the size of an ordinary drawingroom in Mayfair there is a large bathroom, with hot and cold water laid on. In tho garden there aro a rink, an American bowling-alley, a lake, several fountains, a largo plat of ground adapted for lawn tennis, another' for archery, and a third for croquet ; to say nothing of an orangery, a boat-house and hothouses. Lord Dudley oilers 200,000 for this suburban palace, which, if not sold by private contract before the first week in June, will bo put up to public auction. Mr. Layard is tho subject of a romantic anecdote in Figaro, It says that when ho was 20 years old and lounging through Mesopotamia ho was captured by an Arab tribe and made tho chief's cook, in which position ho was greatly admired, and called by the women of the tribe u the blue-eyed." Ho did not enjoy Ills slavery, and after a while managed to communicate with his friends, and at tho end of a good deal of talk the Arab chief consented to exchange his prisoner for a greyhound, celebrated in it . ....-V" f tt!..
inai country ior iiiuuuig gazenua. is first halt on his return to civilization was at t he encampment of Botta, who had been making longitudinal excavations, and to his despair without result. Layard was struck by a clever ides to cut transversely. This was done, and Nineveh was discovered. That happy thought decided his vocation ho liecame an archaeologist. "Tho only memory I don't like," says Layard gayly, " is that I was once exchanged for a dog. My only consolation is In the fact that a Selongui greyhound is con sidered by Mussulmans as an especially noolo animal." Oildf RHd Kailt. Cleanly but economical persons dislike hot weather, because they aro una ble to make a paper collar last longer than one week Since the introduction of tho horse power and thresher, "there is no such won! as flail" in the bright lexicon of the agricultural youth. Somebody says always face the per son you are talking to. It is evident that this writer never stood in front of the man who conies into tho office as soon as ho gets sober to have his name kept out of the police report. Only a man with his nose on the back of his head could do it. Native clergymen in tho Sandwich Islands so barefoot winter and summer, and are' therefore not inflicted about Christmas time with 23 pairs of worked slippers, of assorted sixes, presented by . t . ... ,1...! , . . young laoy nicinocrs oi wiuir cougregst lions. This exemption more than com pensates them for three or four too nails knocked off during the year. In tho Vght of a recent event tho Boston Trai -Jcr says : 41 Better give the baby a rattle. Ho can get lots of fun out of a revolver, but it is apt to go off, and hurt somebody. When you see the baby in tho back yard with a revolver, and a reporter looking over tho fence and whistling, I hear an angel singing,1 it is as well to go out and take the weap on away from the child. " The following story is told by a Hartford clergyman : On his way homo from the church lie found himself be hind three ladies engaged in a lively discussion oyer the music ot uie service; one condemning tho soprano and tho other the tenor, while the third stoutly defended both. As tho discussion be came warm the third lady sought to pour oil on the troubled waters, ami, in tho words of tho clergyman, "did so io perfection by a judicious and truthful remark to which all of them at once as sented; sho simply said: 'Well, it was a miserable sermon, anyhow I' " TKV SOT TO V.VSS, k " Try not to paw," the old man tmU, " I call; my Ik ; 'twas you tlmt loU." A Umr stood in the euudl man's oyti, And from his llp.n K'apod, " Ace Mali" Draw poker, York CtmmereiM. Next hand' Old man, I rallW J on too." I call; display your tint attain." "Two pair." " Not good." Ho Of Jaokw." Which fit his sleeve ! HUU(Hl tna o had bcea Draw tinker. ' liewaro the bob-tail flush's power, Beware thewubchtof aces fourl" This vn the liarnwV last ood night. And Muffed the otliom out ot Igltt Draw poker. -TMo tiltutt, ThOKSUiu waMo'ur. The victim ro). " I'm utt !" ho Bald ; I'll wek reiMW 1" He mushed Ida homo bereft of " Mttuli" But, look J HlHwifol And in her hand r .... .
The Ups mi IteWNH f KhhImsss Mh.
Tho recent death of on of the ojdImo merchant-princes of Boston, who eaves an insolvent estate, and the still more recent failure of an old-established tostnu house that had weathered tho three great financial storms of 1837, 1HT7 and 187.'$, recalls' to the Traveller some emarkahlo instances of financial ruin caused by speculation in untried fields. in loon there was a large nrm engaged in t lm boot and shoo hiisiiioas. nrobahlv at that time the largest in Boston, which concluded to dissolve. The aggregate of tho available cash means of the firm was $1,200,000. The senior partnorincsted Ins money in paying securities, and died a few years afterwards, having ioublcd his capital ; the junior partner did tlfusame, and when ho died he had nearly trebled the amount. J lie other partner accented the honorary position of president of a bank, and became interested in wild-cat speculations in minnsr and new inventions, and to-day ho is almost a pauper. About, forty years ago a young man began as porter in a arge concern on aoutn .Market utreet; io rose (rraduallv from one nosition to another till ho had acquired knowledge and money enough to start for himself, and he chose the then new field of St. ouis. By industry, application and shrewdness lie became one of tho leadng merchants of that city. About twenty years ago lie decided to retire from active business and return to ids native Stato. Ho had a clear cash fortune of $800,000. Pur chasing a beautiful estate withn twentv miles of Boston, and adding thereto by elegant and costly buildings and outbuildings and conservatones, ho settled down to enjoy down nmself. But ho was not satisfied. He saw that others had more than he pos sessed ; he could not go back to tho old i i . ....... i. . i tiruogeiy oi uusinoss iu inuruase ms puw, and iu an evil hour ho came' across one of those plausible men who pointed out to him the sure way through which bv a single stroke he could double his fbrII. ... 1 1 t.S -.1, tunc, uv vieiueu, aim imoeiuu jus ku n a patent that was not worth the paper it was written on, and that man to-day is laboring hard to gain daily bread for umsclf and family. In 1858 one of the leading commission dry-goods merchants in Boston overreached his competitors in trade and made himself whole in that terrible financial crisis, when most of our leadis went to the wall. As colateral security for notes given for about $30,000 ho took shares in an uncomileted railroad connected with a coal mine. iJiscovermg inai tins siock ncm is collateral represented more than a majority of the whole stock, ho employ ed brokers in Wall Street to bear the stock and buy it up for a song. He succeeded, and he afterwards admitted that le cleared s?4UO,wo by the operation. I'lio war came on, and ho succeeded in obtaining from tho Government several large contracts. At the close of the war be could chink out at least two millions of dollars In solid cash. But he was not satisfied. There were such men as Oakes Ames and John B. Alley, of the Union Pacific: Tom Scott, of the Penn svlvania Lentrai; .lay iiouio, oi uie Erie, and Vanderbilt, who could dis count him four to one, and he wanted to beonewiththem. Government lands and Government appropriations and (ireat Western Bnilroad schemes were all tho rage, and ho went In, seeing in me uuui e ins lwu jiiiiiuui sntuuug iu il . . I . . ..... .,!!.... ... ten millions. He lias lost his own money and led his neighbors to nun, and is to-day an object of pity. Thirty vears ago a young and prom ising lawyer was retained by a railroad corporation tn iSew .bngiand, then laborinir under srrcnt diiheulties. lie soon got at the true inwardness of the situa . . . i w.i l tion, ami, availing himseii oi uiOKiiowi edge, invested right and loft in its socu rities at low figures. Those securities afterward became appreciative values. and ho found himself almost a million aire. Ho purchased a splendid estate, became a liberal patron of the arts, a leading agriculturist, and was estoomeu for his benevolence. His income was almost princely, but others were worth more, and he was still young, mis am ... ' .... ... bition was to mount to tho top, and in one brief year, from being possessor of 5pyuu,UUU lie was io an imems a pauour . r .1 f , . . . 1 , 1 .... . ........... and died a recipient oi charity. In 18-13 a young man from u noigli boring town, who had been a fortunate business man till the crisis of 183, started afresh. A few years found him at tho top of th'e ladder, his credit good ami his transactions Immense : he had acquired a second and handsome for- . T ... t. l. V. ..11 tune, in a uay, as it were, uu usa nu, and lie had not money enough to buy bis noondav meals. Not discouraged. lie beirau again at the bottom, and laid the foundation for a third fortune, which was destined to be threefold greater than tho other two. But he was a man never to be satisfied. Three years ago lie could have sold out his immense real estate and realized $3,500,000. Three months ago ho was forced to borrow money from his friends for tho actual necessities of himself and family. Mr. Henry Varlej, tho Kngllsh evangelist, has "started on a tour through Australia. Ho will return home by way of California. Tn parting with his people he stated that u lie had never received, nor did ho Intend to receive, one shilling for his ministry" in the West London Tabernacle. Uv. said ho hadn't been iu swimming. Ho had on the Brown boy's shirt, but he accounted for that by saying that he and tho Brown boy had been wrestling, and it was likoly the garments got changed that way. jsrHnswicn avows.
How tke 0 Herae Was Appraised. A horny-handed old farmer enterd the offices of one of the big railroad companies Saturday and inquired for the man who settled for horses which was killed by the locomotives of a bloated corporation, They referred him to the company's counsel, whom, having found, he thus addressed: "M inter, I was driving home one evening last week " "Been drinking?' sententlouBly questioned tho lawyer. "I'm Centerpolo of the local Tent of Bochabltes," said the fanner. "That doesn't answer my question," replied the man of the law: "I saw a man who was boiling
drunk vote the prohibition ticket last year." "Hadn't tasted liquor since the big Hood of 184G," said the old man. "Go ahead." "I will, squire. And when I camo to the crossing of your soulless monopoly, it was pretty dark, and zip! along camo your train, no bolls rung, no whistles tooted, contrary to the statutes in such cases made and provided, and agin the granger deCisslons, and whoop! away went my off boss a-scootin'over the telegraph wires. When I had dug myself out'n a swamp some distance off am pacified the other critter, I found that tliar oll-hoss was dead as Berry Smith ; nothing valuable about him but his shoos, which mought have brought say eight cents lor old iron, wen " "v on, you want ay for that 'ere off horse?" said tho awyer, with a scarcely repressed sneer. 1 kinder should. von see." said the farm er frankly, "and! don't care about suing it, though possibly I'd get a verdict; for juries out in our town is mostly made un of farmers, and they kinder help oach other as a matter of principle in those cases of stock killed b' railroads." "And this 'ere off-hoss," said the coun sel, mockingly, " was a Hamblotonian colt out of an Abdallah mare, with seventeen Messenger crosses, wasn't ho? He was rising four years, as he had been for several seasons past, and had shown 2:25 on a half-mile track in the mud, hadn't lie? And you had been offered $ 16,500 for him the day he was killed, but wouldn't take it because you were going to win all the purses in the grand circuit wan mm, hiiuuiuu going loiuuvo to Nevada and buy a silver mine and Senatorship with the proceeds ? O, I've heard of that horse before." " I guess there's a mistake somwhere, sonny," said the old farmer, with an air of sur prise ; " my boss was got by tho old man Butt's" roan pacing-hoss, Pride of Lemont, out'n a wall-eyed, no account mare of my own, and now that he's dead, I may say that ho was twentV-nino next grass. Trot? Why Fred Erby's boss that he was fined for furious driving of, was old Dexter alongside of him! Sixteen thousand dollars? Bless your soul, do you think I'm a darn fool, or any one else is? it is true t was matte an offer for him the last time I was in town, and for the man looked kinder simple, and you know how it is with boss-trading, I asked the fellow more'n the animal might have been worth. I asked him sixty-fivt dollars, but I'd have taken forty dollars. ' ' ' Forty dollars! "gasped the lawyer, " forty dollars!" "Yes," replied the farmer, meekly and apologetically, "it kinder looks a big sum, I know, for an old boss, but that 'ere off boss could pull a mighty big load, considering. Then I was kinder shook up, and the pole of my wagon was busted, and I had to get tho harness fixed, and there's my loss of time, and all that counts. Say $50, and it's about square." The lawj'er whispered softly to himself: "Well, I'll be bulldozed!" and filled out a check for $500. " Sir," said he, covering the old man's hand, " you are tho first honest man I have over met in tho course of a legal experience of 23 years, tho farmer whose dead horse was worth less than $1 ,000, and couldn't trot better than 2 :31 without training. Here also Is a free pass for yourself and your male heirs in a direct line for three generations, and if you have a young boy to spare wo Will teach him telegraphing and find him steady and lucrative employment." The honest ohl farmer took the check and departed, smiting his brawny log with his horny hand in triumph as he did so, with the remark: "I knew I'd fetch him on the honest tack ! Last boss I fot killed I swore was a trotter, and all got was $165 and interest. 'Honesty is the host policy."' Factory and Farm. Mirder and Incendiarism. Nicollet, Hebron Co., Minn., May 25. On Sunday morning, Ma)' 13, tho barn of Louis iJode was found to be on fire. It burned to the ground with all its contents, except tho horses and har v4 t -w- . ' HU.Te l VxV'Mim 11 v;i& MHU?) tlM elf Tt 1 and farming utensils. Whole loss $ 4,t The family some time ago, from kindi ness, it contained oats, corn, wneat, UW.kindness of heart, took a poor girl to educate.making her one of tlie family, and reposing confidence in her. Saturday they were away, leaving her in charge. When they returned she said a trampliad been there and threatened to burn their buildings. They watched the premises carefully all night. While at uroakfastthenre uroKe out. it was noticed that mo gin, aner pouring tho coffee, ran out for a mo ment, then returned and sat down to breakfast. Sho was arrested, examined, and sent to jail. Sho now confesses to setting fire to the bam, and says it was done when she ran out at. breakfast time. Siva also confesses that sho killed their baby that died a few days before very suddenly, by putting a chip in its throat. An examination will be made to ascertain the facts. She does not gcem insane on other point?. When asked why sho did so, she answered, sho couldn't holt) It. Chicago TrUmnc. Sjhhc Cake. Two cupfuls flour, 4 ggs, li cupfuls sugar, 1 teaspoonful cream, i toaspoonful soda.
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