Tosefta for Shabbat 121:3
ואף רבי יוחנן סבר לה להא דרב הונא דאמר ליה ר' יוחנן לרב שמן בר אבא הב לי מסנאי יהב ליה דימין אמר ליה עשיתו מכה
Now, R. Johanan too holds as R. Huna. For R. Johanan said to R. Shamen b. Abba: Give me my sandals. When he gave him the right one, he [R. Johanan] observed, You treat it as though it had a wound.<span class="x" onmousemove="('comment',' R. Johanan holds that the left sandal must be put on first (infra). Hence if he put on the right, the other foot would have to be left unshod, and people would think that his right foot was wounded. Thus he holds with R. Huna that the sandal is donned on the wounded foot as a protection. ');"><sup>3</sup></span>
Tosefta Demai
[The produce sold by] a merchant in every place presumed to be Demai, regardless of whether he is a Gentile or a Jew or a Samaritan. What are we talking about here? [This refers to] a situation where they bring him [produce to sell] from a Jew, but if they bring him [produce to sell] from a Gentile or from a Samaritan, it is presumed to be certainly untithed. What is a "merchant"? Anyone who brings [produce] and comes back a second time and a third time (see Shab. 61a:16 re "וְשָׁנָה, וְשִׁלֵּשׁ").
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