Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 30, Number 38, Jasper, Dubois County, 1 June 1888 — Page 3
WEEKLY COURIER
O. DOANK, lbtismsWii INDIANA JASPERggNOE LITTLE WiLIV WENT. ... .. m MOM rni'4 oueenu in osg sfspssp uv a ear 'at he uiillUi m twufta loan p - ....u&ta a tM M4 hmwuw. llltl WMlV tl alt la dO ttMCM Mm ti Vi J ltrOOtT BSiB"t MM! ofl Um 1 .WAMwitti Uh eean wbe they bawl ta(Mrwl' we, er M dw mm! Omh, te nssjhf' beys at .. hat Met M M. . -...nm-kt4 M ttMtm'v't We'!"1 U tHo, o' lfkU when Jsjetber's 9 A WtaPr !'. I m4 WStt, TalUMBU" t thee the wuMMwdea't look Mfr ' adiaa, ib4 taton fftii' twIcr-attiter-ftttUcr Hlb UW ' .Ttk,UM4nrM,(ft-wtoMft 1h-m I stoma TwitdttcaUok, M X her oHr awe iftr A-vWi"tMMtMlM4MMfr teete lht wttk er iMt prayer, sad ear tMi Inn, mm Htito Wetfey'a dt Iatcreetimr of a Leaf from a CHrl's Skctob. Book. WiWnr to consult Mr. Mel . nell-kaown lawyer, upon a matter of importance and learning that be was detained at horn by a sprained ankle, I went to hi bouse, and was abowa into a small library, whore I found the disabled attorney hurd at work among bit paters. It was evident that the place wm not usually devoted to Mich Imslnes. The book-shdves showed little of th convention h1 sHeep-akin of a lawyer's library, but were Jf lied with a miseellaweoua assortment of Action, poetry. history and school and college text books. In one corner of the room stood a lady's work-basket; in another artist's easel, with a half-finished fruit-itinlv unon it, while various bits of art work in oil, crayon and penoil. aostly without frames, were Making iWmMlre at home in the plaee, tome kufing upon the walls, some standing r mn if about her and there. Ur. McQ. laughingly allndod to W unnrofsoai sMwewndfriML Md at once wtsdod esnsMier m oaoe ses. When I rose to Uke my feavo. hour or two later, I ventured to ask an explanation of a penetUketeh which fend excited my curiosity. appeared to be a lent torn from an artist's sketek-book. In the center was the figure of a man, roughly dressed. Ivinc at full-length, face downward, on a grassy bank, apparAly asleep. The loft arm was thrown isto support the) head: the hat had yen off; the right arm lay stretched ma Mm grass, with the clumsy hand, inns half of the middle Mager, turned palm upward. Th foot crossed ach other, toeing in." and showed the profile of one worn, old boot, and the hobnailed sole of the other. Every line in the Igur. and even the very wrinkles in the ill-fitting clothes, ex pressed the relaxation and unconsciouseR of tird-out tramp asleep. Eljewbor on the page were special studies, on a larger scale, of the boots. toe hands and the head. Kvery touch bowed keenness of observation, fidelity to details, and a knaek of catching the most striking and picturesque point. The sketch of the head was especially remarkable. The face was entirety concealed by the beading left arm on which it lay. The neck was marked with those deep spiral seams whkh are occasionally seen winding wound a laak, weather-beaten neck, wking it look like a section of the twisted trunk of a red cedar. The "iron the back of the need lay h matted locks, among which was Tbifci a white Y-shatfed scar more an an inch in lenrtk. Under the picture was written, in a Kmintneannd: "Steeping Innocence," M4 under that, la n masculine hand: "ftuhful in that wkte is least," In ""corner was a wtne seraten of a ""negrsm, witn a date and a memoruaunt of the length of time spent "Pon the sketch. "The first title," explained Mr. MeQ -, refers to the subject of the lktch; the aeoond to the artist." . "It is then a picture with a hhv wj?" I saM. "xes, and with a moral, toe," be "Pa. "The sleeper was a client of "'ft! In fact, all thkags consider sd. we nut m-a.u t mm ki J wtist was the dattrhter of the late 7- Mndisfm Evan, and a pupil of cetNM, Renault, the refugee. Fr "tr father h inherited aoutenes of mm si it . --"ttmhw, and by Mm she was Urilt SO IMMlM MlUl.1 mmA 7VH fidelity in whatever she underiVoin wt Jacques she get through plenty of sooidlnf and an VVJMBi MMI -J MAM m m M. m a nm nv aer worn, h eemM to - Qer el eeaecieaee with her to
mliai with her
to at she Baser a el
Qs( J((na-'(ffcBWp sKT JJnsnn'enHei of view t her Uke teUtaf a li. ettt (Msi 4fc(MMInsnpB? ssksisChnBie' Her walking drosses were always made with a wide pocket la the skirt, anew as lady tmok-ageatf use, where a thitt shteh4ook could he earriod without attracting attention. Living ia a suburban village, she had easy access to Jsoth the city d the country, and found, wherever she went, plenty of subject for her pencil. "Sometime she made sketeaiag caeursions to the eity parks and museums: sometimes she rode with her father on his professional visits, and occupied herself with drawing cattle, barnyard fowls and country ragamuffins while she was waiting for him at the farm-house gate; sometimes she rambled through the fiehls and woods, attended by a middlo-aged maiden eocwia of the family, and usually also by old Hannibal, her father's mastiff. "On the day noted ia the sketch yonder she had spent the afternoon ia making (era and moss studies In Pig eon Hollow, n picturesque little ravine in what are called Indian Woods, a mile or more from her home. Her usual body guard accompanied her. As they came out of the hollow they spied a sleeping tramp stretched on a sunny bank. Hannibal was for war. The frightened maiden cousin was for tight. But Miss Evans silenced both, drew out her sketch-book, reoonnoitered for a favorable point of view, seated herself on a convenient stone. and proceeded to represent the uavconseious vagabond as accurately as if she were under oath to tell the truth. the whole truth, and nothing but the truth abonthim. It was past sunset when she finished the sketch, and dusk when she reached home. "Through a more distant part of the Indian Woods was a highway leading to the city. On that highway, just at dusk on that same evening, a market gardener, driving home from the eity with a considerable sum of money iu his pocket, wae assaulted aad robbed by two men who made their escape Into the woods. The alarm was quickly riven, and in half an hour the woods were alive with men in search of the miscreants. The gardener was able to rive an accurate description of the man who took the money from kirn of his complexion, beard, stature, hat. coat, and the cudgel with wwiua Ms was armed. Half-way to Pigeon Hollow a man was found completely answering the description, and having the identical cudgel in his hand, and the empty wallet of the gardener in his pocket. But he stoutly denied all knowledge of the robbery. He gave his name and represented himself to be a discharged farm-hand ou his way to the dty to look for work. He had no accomplice, he said, and no companion. He had been asleep on the other side of the wood. It was not half an hour since he awaked. He had seea no one, had not been to the high way, and did not know where it was. The wallet and the cudgel he 1 - - T m nicked up ia the woods aad that was all there was about it. "Of course the poos laughed at hi story, not one word of which they be lieved. The gardener positively Mentified him, wallet, cudgel and all. They tried hard aad long to make him tell what he had done with the money. and where the other man was. but they got nothing out of him but the same absurd den ink, aad the same incredible story. They Had no doubt that he bad concealed the money, or passed it over to his accomplice: but, as it was now too dark to look for the other offender, they gave up the chase for the night, and turned back with their prisoner.. The next morning the gardner re turned with the detective, and searched the woods through and through, but without result. In a piece of soft ground near the entrance to Pigeon Hollow they found some prints of the hob-nailed boots, and not far away a lady's handkerchief, with the mono gram M in in one corner? out mey at tached no importance to ettaer, ana did not imagine them to have any con nection with each other. "Well, to make a long story short, the man was in due time Mrtrnght to trial for highway robbery, and by some chance, which I then thought rather unfortunate, it fell to my lot to undertake his defense. I was then a . I .1 I. L young attorney, passing isnafa starvation period ot my career, ann was glad of almost any thing la the way of business, but I did not enter into that ease with much enthusiasm. I expected the man's conviction, and was strontiy ineiinea to notwve mm be deserved it. But before the day for the trial arrived, i had become fully convinced wf his innocence, and though I saw little chance of proving it to the iifaetiou of the jury, 1 became in tensely interested in the poor fellow's case, and resolved to do my beet for him. Tht mornlnc while ou my way down town in a streetcar, my eye fell unon an advertisement in the paper whMh I was reading. TsMp aahl i n ntf IMHIWsMu IfcG . aad tne Unhw , T tateiMftMMkrtelt sunn sriie4 JL The taoar Witt esahw a treat hw-ej Jt ttMtacieset steel mem, aad wal belieerattf leweeead.' "The advertisement made no im Heaaaioa on mv mind. audwOUM MCVer hava received second thought if I had pot, en alighting from the ear, found fit. nVPAtatt of dlrtv Arabs on the steps leading t my office, examining with .t interest a thin oaper-eovered vmunte which one of them held lit his hd. Ieu4n over their shoulder, saw that the pales wore covered with neuoil drawiuam asm thutlu some nor of everr picture was the atnter-
lous monogram JUL An unaccountable eVadrs seined me to poiacos that book, ud give myself the phnmure ef ooafsrriug upon the unknown M the great favor' to which the advertlsemeut referred." "The present nossoasry did not respottd very readily to my preposition. Indeed, I could hart bought a cornerlot with less dimcullyi but I know the streeUAmb eharnctor well, and after a good deal of cbafiUg and Jockyiag, I secured my prise aad retired with It to my oeace, secretly sahasaed of my folly. "Opening the book almost at ran
dom. I eame upon this sketuh, the snbktot of which I reoogaiaed at a giauoe. There was the figure of my client the dot hen, the unmistabie loots, the hand minus half a finger, the spiral seams of the neck aad the white initial on the back of the head. And there was the date of the alleged robbery! "I looked up my memorandum con cerning the handhmrihief found by the detective, to which neither the proseeution aer amen aad attssasii aay importance. The monogram upon H was the same M which appeared ia the sketch.1 ' " Here was a mystery which be investigated without delay. It was now nearly nine o clock. The case would probably be reached by eleven. Why could I not have known this sooner? Yet two hours was worth something. At any rate, I resolved to find the owner of the book, learn the nature of her connection with my client's affair?, and, if necessary, get the trial postnosed till I could use her testimony to advantage. Hurrying to the Union station, I accosted the package-boy, a bright aad rather ffenUemanly little fellow, but not disposed to be communicative on the subject of my inquiries. "Ye, a young lady had spoken to him about a lost sketch-book. Did he know her name? He guessed it Mis Evans. What was her first name? He guessed it was Alios. Where did she live? He gueosed it was at Corry Green. When did the train go to Corry Green? It had just gone. When would another go? At 10:48. When would the train from Corry Green arrive? At 9:90. The next one? At 10:17. Was Miss Evaas to call for the book? He guested she would. When? He didn't know; but if I would leave the book with htm, he would give it to her.' She was sure to call for it some time or other, and it would be O. K. aad no questions asked. " Having special reasons for wishing to deliver it in person. I declined his rather pressing offer, and sat down to wait for the 9:90 train. It came in punctually, bringing plenty of passenrers. but no one in search of a sketch book. The 10:17 train arrived, bring ing me only another disappointment There was no applicant for the sketch book. "What was I to do? I could not oJkrtket picture in open court as a reason for postponing a criminal suit. I dated not promise to produce it owner, or to prove any thing by her testimony. Yet I could not help feel ing that it would be unjust to my client to neglect this clew. "I was walking slowly up the street. revolving these thought in my and trring to devise some way out of the difficulty, when, just as I reached the court-house steps, I heard i one say, in an excited undertone: It is! It certainly is! iMt you suppose I don't know it? I should re cognise it in Patagonia. Do pi sneak to him. Cousin Kettle, ft yon don't I must.' "Looking up. I saw a pretty girl of eighteen, all Mushs and agitation, aad middle-aged lad v. with a snocKeo look npon her face, both of them eag erly staring at the sketch-book in my hand. The truth flashed upon me m an instant, and I beame as e ad ted as the you us ladv herself, and, I have been toM, Mushed as deeply. This is. I presume. Mies Evans? I said, raising ray hat. Yea. sir.' said the two ladles at My name is McQ .' I snid. 1 have the great pieaeure of restoring Muni Evaas' sketch-book to her, at ia so doing take the liberty to ask' Thank rou.' Interrupted Cousin Nettie, taking the book and passing It to its owner, aad evidently not dis posed to allow mo tho liberty of asking any thing whatever, it w, 01 oohow, a mere trifie, of no value except to my potuiin.' Pardon me. madam,' I replied. von are mistaken. There is another person to wnoea tne cook m vt wmr aap oonaMuenoe laan ro one mm "7 . . . . even to Mim avaas; ana x mm as that person's repressntative Allow me to remind you, sir. Wika In Cousin Kettle, sternly, 'that this interview has already passed the twtuiuU at arenrietv and oaa not be further prolonged. If you wish the reward offered you must apply to Dr. imi oi ajorrv ureen. vww. You may go If you wis,' wncad the riri. withdrawing her arm; I shall hear what the gentleman wwi . i j. - .a . A taw words of expUnatieu served to sot mo right asm to lutorsst both of the Iwlie in the case of my mieni. kad no tifllenltv in persuading tfe t aaaaiid with um to the lobby of the MHrtAaaMi where we could confer Mam auietlv. With the sketch before a. Mies Evans recalled the Pigeon MiUw tneldettt and verified the memMaamiaur tha dav and the f v iof iveeo w--- sj) - m t .... "Sho wns terrwoant r ... . inTlitsnnnVrT OSmeeeHi mmm mmm ,i
'But they can make rou go.' cried
Caenda Nettie, 'aad they will Mow you see the result of your imprudence aad obstinacy.' Thc result, madam.' said L wflL i hone, be the liberation of an inne t man, and shall cost Mia Evaas o neriott aauoraace. Meantime. I will go into court and move a postponemeet of the caea Will vou ubUge mo by waiting hers tiU 1 have done so?' ie laout eoasented, aad l went my way. Fortunately, no motion was acces sary, i found ou visiting the courtroom, that the mate's attoraey was sirk, and that the eatire crimiaal docket was postponed. I attended the ladie to their hrafat, and made an appointment to visit Corry Green the next day. Ia passing the package room Miss Evaas stopped to reclaim a wrap for whieh she held a oaeck. 'It's all right, ('barter,' she aahl; I've found the sketch-book I spoke to you about, this morning.' May I ask.' said L at what jou reached the airy Una moraiag? " At eight o'clock,' aha matted. At eight o'clock! Asm this pudent Httle rascal kept me hours watching for yoet, whoa he know all the while that you were ia the dty!' 1 didn't keen vonr retorted Char ley, indignantly; ! told you you'd bet ter give It up. Why didn't you toll ate that Miss Evans came oa the early train?' You didn't ask me aothin' about that train!' The root scarcely needs telling. I went the next day to Corry Green, with proper credentials aad letters of introduction to Dr. Evaas. We visited Pigeon Hollow and the Indian Wood togeter, and secured diagram aad measurements. A few days Idler the trial took place. The diagram was shown; like wise the sketch, whieh wan carefully compared with the original Miss Evans and her cousin made oath to the correctness of the date and hour mentioned; and the jury unanimously agreed that the prisoner could not at one and the same time have been fast asleep la Pigeon Hollow and com mitting highway robbery two asUes away. I hope the man was worth sarmg," I said. "He was an honest, Industrious mat, though of a very ofdiaary sort. He is new werkTug for the who caused his arrest I oftoa him." "Hew do yon account for the Uke in bis identity?" It was a ease of blnace. The real robber afterward turned up, and was brought to justice for the crime. He provad to be nis's counterpart in face, figure aad dree. He had seen Dennis in the dis tance, and had dropped his etub the wallet aad run." Aad the young lady does she sUU wield the pencil as skillfully as everr" She has not abandoned art alto gether." replied Mr. McQ . with e-laace around the room: but of late she has become a good deal occupied with matter pertaining to the law In fact, she is in partnership with my self." As he limped with me to the door. lady came down the stair, leading little rirl. Mrs. McQ ," said 1 " I want you to know my eitoat, Apr. g . I have been telling him how you saved poor Dennis by the nnpe of his neck." Years afterward I a tion ia the elegant Senator McQ . in Washington, ventured to remind the hoot aad eos of the affair of the sketch hook. Ya " uld lb Senator, lookinc proudly upon his wife, "it is that minnte fidelity and palaatakiug i which the sketch dlsplnvod that her her jsreeent position and helped to give mo mine. She was faithful la that whieh hi least and she is faithful also la pjuoh." feerys itniiWasesn, fet leatfat' "Kever heard of silvcrplaied ribbon. aid you? Bo? I thought act? for it's aonmthlng qnito new. This prayer book mark is a good spedaaen of tho Tho silver cross aad text on the deep purple ground produce quite a. a aa . la. sfi f i ! a nanaaome emwt. yw tmumm. wot A picture could he Minted Iu sitvor the same way. Ia short, there ia no end to the fanciful designs that might be mad iu silver on silk. The process? Oh! it hi simplicity ItseU. First you make a solution of nitrate of silver, to which you add a little gum arable to prevent it running. Then with a quill pen or camel's hair pencil you draw your design on tne silk. When the drawing is dry hold K or or a vessel containing water, sine and a BUle sulphuric ncht In a short time the silver will be reduced and will adhere suite strongly to the fabric, the i,etgas standing out dear and bright at the Ariaona hag his head ou the butt end of blssUsheoter, "I believe the next waits Is mine, hurt itr "I think you aWiaduB." snid aaothev TOUUg who was standing by, a hojpotated ha n earahnw, easy manner at Mho Eeektu' card with a bowte-knJh eighteen mokes long. my name hi dowa for that waits.' T(M , right Mr. Lariat r
Mr. Lariat Wns Right. "Mia tUcktua," saMyeuug
ABaes
hi the channel of It. WUkofbarre, Pa. hi of the late Bhthop Steveaa There are signs of a growing termiaatioa ia the West to nUndoa the German laaguage Iu the aommoa j scstools, fcdlowing the example of the eity of St Loob. -John Wesley's Bible, printed hi liTL b) la use by the Methodist Conference in Mow York. It is asmsiloo tavo volume, aad the Book of Commoa Prayer (a bound with it Fifteea years ago the Metbodhrts suWpusl nsftu JuaW lMB'e?JjPe?uuuflep' ism tessu) fssUjonp Out Kaasua, with only 11,000 member. To-day they have four eoafcreacoa ami 70,000 church ntemfaer. aad 8,000 scholars ia their Sunday-ecaools. The annual public exaeaditnre for education in Italy has reached the sum of fit,70itl& rWnumhor of public primary day-sehools it elJfO. ia whieh are about 1,873, 791 pupils. There are also 7,199 primary private scaookv with 18, 102 pupils. --Some of the Western eithut their public school tenesmi tala years of service. Ia twenty-one years of faithful work entitle a teacher lo a pension; and Cleveland to considering a proposition tola a recent religious eaavaat of Buffalo, M. Y.. In which eight deaominatious partidpated. only forty persons were found In a total of fiOtfi who reported themselves unbeliever in Christianity, and only three who claimed to be infidels. A German has taken out a patent for using bone slate pencils for writing. They do not wear quick, and do not require to he sharpened. It is also to he supposed that youag laeuos will not acquire any mot bid appetite for as is commonly supposed sou of do for slate pencil. The greatest trouble expTrleneed by the young ladies who teach in Chi le Sundny-schoois lu UHs city as to keep the Chinamen from thinking they are in love with taem. Tney are intensely vain as a rule, aad the ugliest Mongolian wiU imagine he Is admired on the slightest provocation Phdispaia Time. Rev. Dr. Francis L. Patton, press dent-elect of Princeteu College, has frequently declared hlinaaff heartily Iu favor of ail torts ot awieoe practiced by college men, provided that the nines are placed . nnder the proper restriction. Ho gave a tical instance of this Inst week, whoa ho presented four tennis courts, which bad boon mwuaiod under hi own in struction, to the students of the logical Seminary. m mm KAUTirUL CHURCHES. Are Perhaps so. from a strictly viow-polat, thoaagh of that I ana Mtre. Inm willing to great that Is no return in hard money for mormon outlays, if admitting this will give our atWturiuu friend aay Mtisfaction. But it is useless to attempt to strike a money balance ia There is a value m tae mamive mountain that no hook of valuation c There Is a value ia the mighty ract that has nothing to do with water-power. So there Is a value hi the cathedral spire that is not eoseMit.ble in coin. A spiritual value iahereut ia tho sublimely beautiful I pass St Patrick's evry day, aad to always some one gaaing an at towert that take tiv though as as the eye. away from the Tattling pavement and hundreds, y sands, owe tothsve some moments of ami some moment of suiritual nplifting, which to. la portion to Its power, a mount of trans foration. Xns mom sonuwrn eavanai I ever saw or ever expert to sea, til 1 womhin ia the "house not with hands "-to not a church; It Is only a low building, put up at an mbont a thousand noUars. ttw fnL because the cellar wall Is a win osnwina? from poor farsanrs who had a right to etaua a claim a wiater's rest iter tit busy harvest each timber of the frame-work sents hours of toil ia mnking mnU holders, by the sale of which to raise a few doUaia hours Ui-ad hands: bscaass tcib of a pipeful of totmoeo loss aar the father: every shlagla, a cap of tea la for the mother aad the aad every aafL a stick of candy for Urn child. It to beautiful hi turning an organ. waBe there are no organ ia the houses of the grrors; hi haviag picture ou Bs ia no while the fkors of tho are ho ful if H wore taken up on Fifth nveuae? There, In si sad ofa temuie of self-sncrifioe, it near an ngly, wooden Unssa Tho church Fifth nasouat of far, ifear. uiag ajats bulb tho of the people who Dwight's cjhamd. beauty of form aad If of oar larger dty churches IbW Iuw0nwuu9sji the spirit of sdf-fieaml that bault Um mnpel ia the little hilLtown ot Msaaaehueett. wo should hava tamslss svery way worthy of tha Most High
benutlful churches a waster
fftlffBOtua. m MIlsMsW.' juaiSnusTr shesieBtesy fiW wile. Sue be eH of nxyswoaamuu snUs snusoof my oe)eettN Baaeveft, the hhrtotian. sjommi
duty. Hewsatoery asatoaoe it soahedy a fact or a tram aad sMUsut snmthlnseit. Maeaulay eenm wrote of a Freaoh writer, feareae, who hated bgtuml, that "the one saaall service wMoh ho ootiid reader to England was to hen
Miss Braddoa. MnxwelL her poUbmer. hi saake her infiueaee felt no well labor kiteaea as In her drawing room, being a heusekseper as wott as a aovoMst The journalisu of Vm Cat. have foamdod a colony of own at Bemoan, hi the Sea Gabriel vaUev. Aatoag them, it It wttl make his! Lord BeJistmry. Premier of gUud. who wan fwmwlj' a joonrnalnU. In always as am position will allow aad frequently in meti s bowbpp who were formerly bis The Loudon fptrfofor says at General Grant's "Meatoir'' that thaw are "the true Isaacs of a maa ia the purely personal pleasure of ease ia battle was red need to aad who was geaeraUy sorry at baring id aawn aaa vrvmj aww. Mono of Mr. France Harnett's stories has been ful as aer -Little Lord Fasmtleroy," which ha paid her thoaaead of dollar in royalties. It still keep up He popularity aad Is now near ita fcfthnm ia amfnfu wuus aaaay thousand copies of it hawo 1 England. An Italian edition of w at a a m 1 ami a Berlia newspaper is It serially. CoIIjut. aataor of -Talks to Toemg Msu." was twentyseven years old whoa ho easne to that country. He brought bis bride over with him ia tae.stosrage. roratao years be worked at hiacksmtth ia Pennsylvania; then he became a local Methodist preacher, butt later ho bea Unitarian, anal wont to Chifinslly called to tho Camrch of the Messiah ia. New York. A letter by CbattOMbriand. Outoher. 189ft. aad disposed of atxty francs at a recent sale of graphs, coatalas the foUewing ngo: "I am art at all BepuMmsn 1st nay priaciplea. although I see very clearly that the mcapaetty of snsaa sad the sanoriority of others. Is leodina; aa ia the dirootiea of the sVpublie. mad ahhoagh I am fully able to eomthulonui of popmsr uasrcj (ssatimeatslry is Pitt? He Wsil wo tothobiggsft wintef1 Ho.1 . A tioa oa boms nek domhtotory the Uaitsd mat aejvorwiU (A rVea. (to Mrs. Coloael of atucky) " aaas tho nightl" (with a grave iook)--aTas--till fufaxy." Ho. sin as two psrssas Baggs O.yos her do I owe vou two doHnra " Doa't lot that bother you. Ii I'd pay h, nayway.se1 Tlnam you ago; say - " , - - CtohmeWef ntth baad) iioro, Dutohy, to a fivedeOsi km a? vau wfil siajr for nn luum 07 ("gwj of dot m uses tho big a nana for nut to i who had a vary being la fact nislnsd tn hrr .... "ttow saaa ifumu --Why so eeatonrre. to her father, the -Is iateatr lMt stu9v4l9uBsa pVnsaUsmj gently; "and you mueta t mow. I have tmrfoatod a
who anarrktd John
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(cosamereasiiy lnotinon haadls varisus brands.
margin hi real
mMslsaged hast rich wiaaw;
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system ay
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vers for the gsrmsu, aad I natrytgej to think out somethlug that wiUn cent the grunt from ranaing satiroaf
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