The Syracuse Journal, Volume 26, Number 31, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 23 November 1933 — Page 3
THURSDAY, NOV. 23, 1933
THE GUNSyWib $ OF THE 1 HOLY 4 -J By Henry C.Rowland JujHgf T- .- 4 - x--f WKU SERVICE. ’ , - pre s
CHAPTER VI
The water was still and clear, not transparent as In the tropics, hut nfhkIng It/posslMe to see the weed on the rocky bottom at a depth of about fifteen feet. Then suddenly they found themselves over a great mass of the aline that Jessica had mentioned This will , float when detached’., and the current having now stopped running, the big flat rubbery elephant ears were spread out Just beneath the surface; Anchored by the tips of their long tenuous tails, these sleek hrown. spatulate fronds were »swinging and swaying with undulatlonM of their lateral flukes, scalloped along the edges and seeming to be (.possessed of a crawbng movement. There were always vagrant eddies over the reef and the stirring of them now set the unit* of this mass of vegetation to oscillating In different directions, so that the whole, as one looked down upon It. suggested nothing so much as a mammoth school of stlngarees nosing aboiit In quest of bait. “Here wo are.' said Jessica eagerly. “The roots of this kelp are on the wreck.’’ “Beastly stuff to dive through. Jessica. " “There's no harm In It. Gardy. Can't foul you up. because It tears like wet blotting paper. But It Is going to be pretty dark down there.'* “Oh.. let It wait for another time. Jes slat.” “No. I'm In a lovely glow and I’d rather have a plunge than not. l et's have your electric torch. Gardy.' It will keep going M tong »• 1 ‘‘ire to. The trouble fs going to.be finding. ✓Something about the corvette to catch ■a turn on.” . Doctor White handl'd her the torch. \wlth a wad of Cotton into which he )had worked vaseline. I”tig yoiir ettrs ' and -..nostrils. 1 Don’t take a chance with earache a.few days later.” “All right. The pearl divers use wax, you know, but this ought to an •wer. We are directly over the Wreck, I think. This little patch of kelp lifts Up from It. W»-t the line. Gardy. so there will be no tug on It.” Doctor White picked up the coil of new flag halliard stuff and soused It overboard. Jessica stood up. slipped ors het toflg woolen gown and taking the end of the line, throw a loose bowline hitch in it and slipped her gleaming arm through the bight. “Well, here goes. Gardy—” She fixed the rim of her rublwr bathing ;j||KM®'* i* •Wall, Hara Gora, Gardy." cap securely under her ears and took a few deep, rapid Inspirations, the more thoroughly to oxygenate her blood. Then, filling her lungs moder- * ately. ahe kissed her hand to the anxious doctor and went down head first, like the sea otter that her supple body suggested, and leaving no more of a commotion where the brine enveloped her. Doctor White leaned over the gunwale of the boat, paying out the line* and trying vainly to follow with his vision the downward course of the white limbs. The kelp fronds stirred and eddied and spread out to curtajln what was underneath them. The snaky colls of the line straightened like l a circular spring stretched out. A few bubbles came gyrating upward. Then all at once there was a stalling Illumination down there below, a bright blur of light that moved along In a curve with wavy punctuation from each stroke of the arm that was bolding the torch. The effect of Jt was weird, yet extremely reassuring to the doctor, because it signaled the vigorous movements of the diver. ‘ Doctor White could see the dark ■MM that was described by this radb ance, but the abundant growth of submarine vegetation masked its character. At the end of fifty seconds that aeemed like as many minutes, the doctor was about to give an admonitory tug on the line, when the light was quenched suddenly. At the same Instant be discovered Jessica coming up with speed. She bobbed out of the water bosom high, expelled the exhausted air from her >n«»ga, refreshed them with a gasp er two, then laughed. But even In his rouaf at her reappearance Doctor
White observed that she was clear 0? the line, and that Its trend was downward at an angle. “Are you all right, Jessica?” ho asked. She nodded. “Then climb aboard aqd put on your wrapper, before you catch cold.* “Let me get my breath. I'm catch-* Ing gold.” “The deuce you are! Is the line fast?” “All fast, sir. I landed on a ragged hole ab< -»t the site of your head near the garboard strake. Where she plumped down on a sharp rock. I should say. The swell must have bumped her up and down on it along the length of her. She seemed all gouged and stove In abaft It. I caught the bight of the line around what seemed, to be a shattered butt. It ought to hold. I think.” “You certainly are a living wonder, Jessica.” “Nothing hard about it. I never noticed the cold.” She slanted her head. “Listen—there’s a boat.” “Oh. never mind the boat. They’re passing all the time. Climb In.” The doctor dropped down on a thwart, shoving himself against the other side to balance her. Jessica, with a downward thrust of her strong round arms, raised herself across the gunwale and backward to the thwart, then swung her legs In after her. Then all at once she seemed to petrify, staring into the gra.Vjjfog that had thinned a hit. “I.o<>k. Gardy” she gasped In unmistakable alarm, paling visibly. |><»etor White glanced over his shoulder. vexedly. This would be the diver from Friendship, who had preferred to wait for daylight before starting round Pemaquld point! The doctor wlshed that the man had come a little earlier or a little later.. It annoyed him to be found apparently In the art of emplnyitr: h * beautiful ward. Capt. Warren Poole's daughter, as one might make use of a Kanaka pearl diver. Doctor White was annoyed at the Interruption. But ns his experienced eye swept over the details of the boat assembling out of the fog. this motnen tary vexat on gave place to aston Ished chagrin, to dismay. Here was not their belated diver., nor even the T»r <’i>rl:tys nor Torn. It was a heavy yawl-rigced semi cabin cruiser. As ltforgod slowly down on them, swinging off a little, the. doctor discovered a stnqll French flag flying from the mizzen truck. The significance of this was very evident. No boat hailing from a neighboring French possession, especially .Miquelon Island, of which the com merce now deeply Interested the United States revenue service, was going to advertise her nationality unless she felt herself tn be a virtuous craft and entitled to the protection of her flag. This could be no other than that Sehastien. described as a scoundrel by Jessica and Robert and now come to have a go at the Fmirquet? In the shock of this forbidding complication Jessica sat and stared at the boat as It drifted slowly up to them. Three men were in her cockpit, one of them holding the heavy, old-fash-ioned tiller. This would be Sehastlen. the doctor thought, his fists clinching, and the fellow looked indeed the sort that the girl and Robert had described In a day when pirates still are quoted nt par Sebastian had all 'the visible traits of high efficiency. < His face look is! Intelligent and alert, less stealthy than scheming, and merciless rather than of the type that goea with slinking treachery. There was a sort of Tartar suggestion about the wide cheekbones, hooked nose, square angled Jaw and narrow, pointed chin. His black, wiry mustache showed the glint of strong white teeth tinder It as. utterly Ignoring Doctor White and Jeasica, he ordered one of the men to let go the anchor. __ Doctor White raised hlmaelf a little tn the boat “You are too late,” he said In a crisp, authoritative voice. “I’ve got a line fast to thia wreck and I claim the salvage froth her.” Sehastlen utterly Ignored this statement. So far as concerned himself and his Immediate operations the elderly gentleman and girl to the Whitehall rowboat might not have been there at all. The swarthy, stolid youth who - had gone forward cleared the turns of chain cable from the winch and let go the anchor. Jessica, as If awakening from a trance, whipped up her gown and enveloped her dripping body tn Its folds. Sebastien stepped nimbly forward to the well deck of the boat and threw a' tarpaulin from something placed there. Doctor White saw this to be a diver’s air pump. The third man, who had gone into the cuddy aft, came out with his arms full of the helmet and other gear. The youth forward stoppered the cable, then took off his oilskin overcoat The two other men did likewise, then carried on briskly their preparations. During these rapid evolutions not one of them so much as threw a glance at the rowboat and the pair aboard It, almost alongside. •'Are we going to stand for this, Gardy? Tm afraid of that—that man, I—l really wouldn’t care to elope with him, the—the way he’d do It I” Doctor White glanced at Jessica and shook his bead. He had been watching silently the rapid preparations going on aboard the vtaasL Jessica shivered q little, but not from cold, be-
cause tier woolen gown was warm and heavy, and the night chill bad by thia time left the air, while the sun, trying to burn Its way through the fluffy fog. gave It a muggy warmth that promised a little later to make a hot. still day. The shiver was one of nervous tension and expectation, due to something in her guardian’s silent waiting. At the end of several minutes this began to tell on Sebastien’s nerves. The strain of Indian blood that first had motived taciturnity was unequal to the/support of it when flung back at him in so assured away. The predominant Latin blood of the mongrel started to fume and seethe and to demand some sort of safety valve. Sebastien began to breathe lurid curses at his men for their slowness. and from under his black eyebrows he shot more frequent malevolent glances at the calmly vigilant watcher tn the rowboat. Then all at once, the volltile principles tn his cosmos fetched away from their container, blew out the plug of It, so to speak. He had picked up the helmet and seemed about to try It on when, glancing at thej rowboat, he flung It down on deck again and strode to the main rigging, seizing a shroud in one grimy hand. “What you want?” he snarled. “Why don’t you clear out *bout your business? What you t’lnk you goln’ do?” Doctor White did not move a muscle. He neither smiled nor frowned, but continued to regard the furious Sebastien as If he had been a violent Inmate of an Institution for the criminally Insane. Jessica's heart beat a little faster, but she. too. preserved her disdainful calm. Sebastien seized the other shroud and shook both parts enragedly. like a great ape might tug at the bars of his cage. “1 know you, mister,” he snarled. “I see dem French officers go long your house. You fink you find out what dey lookin' for and beat ’em. You fink you play ’em one lousy tr’rick. I fool you, by dam’!” This frenzied outburst brought no more response than before. Doctor White took out his watch, glanced at it. then returned to his fixed contemplation of Sehastlen. Wheeling frvm the rigging, Sebastien picked up the helmet again, half raised It. then scowled across at Doctor White. A curious Indecision seemed to possess the man. Doctor White, as if observing it. half turned in his seat and. drawing In the line that anchored the boat to the wreck until It led nearly at an angle of eighty degrees, caught a turn of It through the ringbolt Then all at once the fog that had obscured . his motive from Jessica’s mind cleared as the sea fog that enveloped them seemed almost ready to do under the hot rays of the mounting sun. She suddenly was able to appreciate the reason for Sebastien’s fury: the man was afraid to go down ’while this unknown quantity of a doctor was there alongside in a rowboat. And even going down, he would never dare loose the doctor’s line with that telltale tension on It. If there Is any one Job at which the worker requires full assurance of his helpers' nndlstracted attention. It Is that of the diver In armor. Witot if while he were down there some ruction were to arise? Or even a temporary diversion? Such would not need to be protracted very long to finish his interest In the affair. As Sehastlen could not help but see the situation, there was this Internal doctor, possessed no doubt of all his cult's coldbloodedness, claiming the wreck by virtue of his having got a line fast to It. and now waiting calmly for Sehastlen to submerge himself for the taking of measures that might result In a shortage of free air. Viewed from this angle. It was by no means an attractive proposition for the diver. If that girl were amphibian enough to take a line down and make It fast to some part of the wreck, then It would not tax her resources greatly to slip overboard with a knife and gash his air pipe and hoisting line. Tn fact, she looked quite capable of some such fiendish act. sitting there regarding Sehastlen with a fixed glare of waiting vengeance that made him want to cross himself. Here was the coll in which Sebastien found himself, and It left him to take his choice of three courses, none of which he admired. The first was to go ahead and dive and take a chance on what might happen. The second was to call the bet a dead loss because of his delay In playing It. The third most appealed to the savage nature of the man, to seize and destroy and obliterate all trace of three two In the rowboat who seemed all set to blast the success of his venture. If Sebastien’s present errand had been rum-running. Doctor White would not have taken such a chance. Being what It was. he did not believe that there were any firearms aboard the boat, because Sebastien knew that he might expect a minute overhauling at any time, as tong as bl* »usplcloustooklng craft was tn Yankee water*, and he would be clever enough to avoid the slightest evidence against him of preparation for offensive or defensive action. But the doctor’s Intuitions were marvetonsly keen and swift, and as Sebastien dow stood glaring at them across taat perilously short space of separate water the doctor received such an Impact of murderous Intention as to shatter hl* psychology, or more property, to stimulate It. It was borne In upon him Instantly that his estimate* bad been faulty, and tn a surge of horror he realized how easy It would be for thl* hot-headed desperado to whip out a gun, fire point blank at Jessica and himself, then sink their bodies with the boat, made fast to a few pigs of iron ballast The chance* were strong that no one ever would know. The doctor acted tn swift obedience to hl* Impulse. He jerked out the slip hitch that he had caught through the ringbolt with the line, threw overboard the buoy he previously had attached to the end of It, whirled to the after thwart and grabbed the oara. A* he did so. Sebastien. a* If galvanized into sudden action, pitched into the cabin of the cruiser. Like any other savage beast of primal Instinct, bls ferocity was Inflamed by the startled flight of a quarry that had faced him boldly uo to this moment
THE JOURNAX,
, No doubt Doctor White was correct In his perception of • murderous assault on the verge of Its discharge, and it is fairly certain that his anticipation of It was all that saved the lives of Jessica and himself. That —and the fact that Sebastien’s movements were clogged by the leaden soles of his diving outfit. When he plunged out on deck again, snarling with rage at his Indecision and waving a big automatic pistol, the doctor had come near to establishing a rowing record for one hundred yards single sculls In a badly trimmed Whitehall boat, and presented a poor target In the fog. Sebastien, although perceiving that he probably had missed his coup even then might have trusted to good marksmanship to retrieve It But as he steadied himself to ascertain how big the target looked against his sights the sound of a motor boat’s exhaust pulsed on his ear drums. Caution gripped him. and the reflection that so far he had actually committed no overt act of violence. He lowered his Weapon and peered Into the fog. Jessica also had heard the approaching boat So likewise had Dpctor White, but not until he saw dimly 'through the thinning mist that Sebastien’s arm had fallen to his side did he rest upon his oars, panting. “That.” said he to Jessica, “was a pretty close call.” “How did you guess what he was up to, Gardy?” “Call It radio telepathy. The wave lengths hereabouts are equal, and the messages of international code. Who Is that coming? You know the bark of all these boats.” “Ed Gammond’s —Tom,” said Jessica, and added fiercely. “If Tom sinks that loupgarou that tried to murder us— I'll marry him. I will If I have to make a stake for him. myself!” And then, as if realizing that a swift tongue had betrayed an innermost, secret thought, she blushed a rosy hue which even the mantling fog could not obscure. CHAPTER VII ' To follow briefly the oblique movements of Dave MacFarlane’s diver, Mike Castello, the night before, and after his departure from Friendship. Mike was a steady, rellabto Portuguese who was thrifty to a fault—that same being the higher distillation of thrift, which Is avarice. Mike had got hold of some liquor at a bargain, and it struck him that here was a good chance to dispose of it at a profit. New Harbor was not much out of his course around Pemaquid point, and Mike knew that there were Just then several Portuguese mackerel boats fishing out of that port. Hs decided to duck in. dispose of his wares and proceed upon his voyage. This little trading venture met with gratifying, but limited success. There was not enough ready cash in the foreign crowd to pay for the whole lot, so Mike decided to dispose of the remainder as a market offered. Then. Just as he was about to put out on the last lap of his voyage, a French Canadian from a Miquelon boat that had blown In there came over to find out what all the Joy was about. He bought a quart of it. paying from a big roll of money that he dragged from some recess of his sash and that left a hollow until replaced. He was the “patron,” it appeared, and on learning that Mike was bound out around the point from Bristol, to do a diving Job for Doctor White, a sunk boat or something, the Miquelon skipper asked Mike for a ride around there with him, saying that he wanted to get a new stuffing box for his ship’s tail shaft at Roothbay Harbor the next morning: and that a friendly lift would save him running around to East Boothbay In his own boat What Sebastien, for he wgs the “patron,” really wanted, of course, was the chaqce to tamper a bit with the diving gear heaped up tn the forward part of the cabin. He had seen the De Corlays leaving Whale Island that afternoon, concluding, naturally. that Doctor White had offered them aid In their endeavor and had looked up a diver for them. With true sailor hospitality, Mike not only offered to set him on his way, but put a spare bunk at his disposal for the night. . It may therefore be understood how thoroughly the skids were greased for the launching of Tom and Robert Into a cross chop of troubled waters. Mike, bls thrift loosened by the practical demonstration that hi* wares were wholesome, had gone below to serve himself another little nip just when Tom's launch passed them. So Sebastien was steering the vessel His keen eyes sighted her white side, and followed her as she made her turn to fall tn astern of him. Sebastien could not guess just what was afoot, for radio telepathy has its limitations, but be scented trouble The chances were he thought, that they were being followed by an official launch en the lookout tor bootleggers. He had a frantic moment. They were towing a dory, and he was tempted to haul It up under the stern, drop Into It and cast off. Bat he reckoned that he could not manage this without being detected from the following launch, when such action would be token as a proof of guilt. Besides, there was the chance that their pursuers might not be officers at all. but gentry with a thirst, who on sighting the cruiser sneaking along the shore without lights, had made a good guess as to her possibilities. And fbr Sebastien to decamp would be for him to lose bls chance of spiking his rival’s guns. v Glancing astern, Sebastien saw that the launch was rapidly overhauling them, not more than a furlong away. He called to Mike and told him of the pickle, then advised the jettison of the incriminating evidence. But Mike's thrift flared up at this Idea. Nevertheless he was nervous. Tell Ing Sebastien to haul the dory alongside, Mike ducked below, tugged oijt the whisky case and towering It into the dory threw over It a worn old sail that served as a coverlet when he slept aboard. The darkness was opaque enough to prevent the discov-
ery of this maneuver from the dto- < tance of the following boat And at that moment the fog siren on Monhe- < gan began to bellow like a cow moose. ( (TO BE CONTINUED.) < 1 FOUR CORNERS. j Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Snyder 1 entertained at a pot luck supper Friday ’evening, the Messrs and Mesdames Brown, Blue, Workman, Bobeck, Juday and Sargant. A good time was enjoyed by all. < Mr, and Mrs. Earl Darr and two 1 children of near Goshen called at the home of Crist Darr Saturday even- ’ ing. ! James Myers was a business caller ' at Warsaw Friday afternoon. Messrs and Mesdames Geyer and J Snyder and Wagner took Sunday ‘ dinner at Charles Deithrick home 1 near Goshen. Miss Diana Deithrick J returned home with Mr. and Mrs. ’ Geyer for a few days visit. 1 Raymond Hibschman and-, family 1 are moving near Mentone the last of this week, where Mr. Hibsch- S man has a farm. Mr. and Mrs. Snyder, Mr. and ! Mrs. Geyer and Mary Ulery called 1 at the Darr home Saturday evening. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Alva Pinkerton entertained Mr. and Mrs. John Hibsch- ] man and family of north of Syracuse, ] Raymond Hibschman and family at Sunday dinner. j Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gawthrop, Mr. j and Mrs. Joe Bushong and sons of Syracuse spent Sunday with Mr. qpd Mrs. Earl Darr of Goshen. , DISMAL Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harper, Mildred and Robert Harper and De- < Los Maggart drove to Lafayette Sat- ( urday to visit Howard and Harmon Harper over the week end, return- f ing home Sunday evening. | Harry and Theodore Voris were in ] Fort Wayne Saturday. Lung and family entertained ] at Sunday dinner: Messrs and j Mesdames Stanley Lung, ! Dora < Clingerman and Harman and Betty Lung. ] Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Himes of . Chicago called at the Dora Clinger- ( man home Sunday evening after spending the night .with the latter’s! mother. Grandma Clingerman, of Indian Village, her mother returning home with them to Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Cole, after , spending the summer with the latter’s parents, Sherman Morris and wife of Cromwell, are now located in Tennessee, where Mr. .Cole is working on a dredge for the government. Mrs. Sarah Sloan, who had her; lower limbs fractured in qn automo-1 bile accident now has them in a cast and is returning to the home of her son Chauncey, in Fort Wayne, this week. Dora Clingerman spent Sunday evening in the Alfred Ramsby and Will Carlson home near Topeka. CONCORD Mrs. Helen Howe spent Thursday with Mrs. Katie Edgell. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews spent Saturday with Mr. and Mrs, * Orvil Neff. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey C6y spent I Monday at the Chester Stiffler home, i Mr. and Mrs. John RPop celebrated both of their birthdays Sunday ' by having a fine goose roast, and had as their guests Mr. and Mrs. , Ernest Mathews and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Groves and son Junior. Here’s hoping they will enjoy many more birthdays. Mrs. Marie LeCount was a caller Monday at the Dewey Coy home. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Stiffler and family spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Susie Rookstool of Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Fisher spent Sunday in South Bend 'ht the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Good. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bucher had as their guests Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Dewart, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Buhrt and family and Tobias Fike. Those who assisted William Wyland at butchering Tuesday were El-
/so ROUND TRIP TO (Chicago Every Week-end Travel In csmfortable coaches. Yott will have ample time in Chicago for WORLD’S FAIR and other sightseeing and visiting. about other Barf ! n Fares Every Week-ena to BtfOpoints. Ver dst*a* eoarsk Ticket Arent Baltimore & Ohio
don Wyland and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Coy, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Miller and Mr. and Mrs. Charley Brady of Ligonier. Everett Tom and family spent Sunday evening at the Guy Fisher home. Lester Dewart enjoyed dinner on Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Mathews. Mrs. Ollie Miles returned to her home in Chicago Sunday, after spending a few weeks with her brother and family, Bertram Whitehead. AFRICA. Miss Luella Wingard was a Sunday dinner guest of the Misses Catherine and Geraldine Click. Eli Shock and family spent the week end in Mishawaka with their sons, Elvin and John and their families. Jonas Cripe, Elizabeth Shock, Alice Shock, Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Shock, Jacob, Michael and JerryHamman, Henry Kolberg, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brown, Mr. and Mrs 4 . George Mellinger attended the funeral of Adam Gipe at Eel River Saturday. Sunday dinner guests in the Elmo Shock home were Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Warstler and daughter Alyerna, Mr. and Mrs. Ercel Wright and Mrs. Carol BeMiller and daughter Wilma. Mrs. Ella Kline and Mrs. Vada McClintic called in the Jacob Click home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Brown, Mrs. Frank Brown and Miss Lydia Mellinger spent Sunday afternoon in the Jonas Cripe home. Miss Virginia Culler spent Monday night with D’Maris and Doris Shock. SOLOMON’S CREEK Chester Firestone and family spent Sunday with Lester Darr and family of Syracuse. > Harold Straus moved his family to Avilla one day last week and expects to get their household goods later. The Ladies Aid met with Mrs. Bertha Darr last Thursday and planned to have a Bake Sale at Ligonier Saturday. A cottage prayer meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Maggie
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Rex Friday evening. The members are urged to be present. Miss Jaunita Gushwa spent Sunday and Sunday night with Miss LaEtta and Helen . Hilbish and visited New Paris High school Monday. Mrs. Louise Miller and son Bobby with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Darr spent Sunday at the .Dan Lingofelter' home of near Milford. Sunday school Sunday morning. C. E. and Preaching services Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Moats of New Paris called at the Grover Hilbish home Sunday afternoon. Charles and Frank Bunger and Belle Juday of Millersburg called on George Darr and family Tuesday afternoon. SOUTH SHORE Mr. and Mrs. Irving Bishop spent Monday "evening with Mr. and Mrs. Timberlake. Mrs. Martha Jordan and Mrs. Pearl Mock called on Mrs. Raymond Lung Saturday afternoon. F. A. Bornaman moved from the Russell Warner house to the Bert Searfoss cottage Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Niles and son Burton spent Sunday evening with Dwight Mock and family. Martha Jordon spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Bert Searfoss. Wm. Gilbert and Clell, Longacre called on Bert Searfoss Monday evening. Dwight Mock and family spent Saturday evening in Goshen.
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