Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Oct 1909, p. 6

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K '% '= 'Mm* 4 K i c o s j r &tam* ® if '-•; •- -v£ L; - *„ . ... L'J-i • : HERB had been some dispute to what constituted the boundary of the country bought from Russia by the Uiiiled States in 1867, but until the real value of the territory was known, no one cared. The miners of the early days managed very well with an ap­ proximate boundary. They held .min­ ers' meetings and any decision reached by them constituted the law For the opening up of Alaska we are Indebted to the panic of of 1893. Throughout the west the hardier spir­ its preferred to brave the dangers of that almost unknown region than to accept the starvation wages then of­ fered. They knew that grubstakes ff r\ PLATFORM! m m iwn&W of being able to throw himself down ;:j|o rest and enjoy the glorious pan prama, there is immediate work to e done, and a few clouds hovering oyer some distant mountain, instead of lending beauty to the view, majr send the poor surveyor behind some sheltering rock to wait, shiveriug with cold, until morning will allow him to take up his stand by the theodolite and complete his observe tions On the 141st meridian an astro­ nomic longitude was determined at a point on the Yukon river. Amerl can and Canadian astronomers worked together, bringing time over the wires both from Seattle and Vancouver. An azimuth was then observed and this azimuth is be- r-.-w -Wii&M ' v«.VXva ^ ^ ' ' r/7/r//ye /j£tmffr/iG£ of# r/?/x b m W/HD m (1/v* ) &JLAC/JT/* or/ r/t£- &£S£r/< /?/ k»? -A. tJSL.r •i:"x ' MINISTER MUST CLEAR HIMSELF W THE EYES OP TH*. / " ; - Secretary,-. .r-"A: REACHES WASHINGTON j7£t/Af/r/c/v jBO£///j0W Z ////-• HetA independence were to be found on the bars , the Forty Mile, the Stewart, and at Circle 1' <Ptty. • - - ,, ' .With the increase of population came the rep- • i$sentatlve* of the American and Canadian gov- • • •ernments, custom-houses were established and •court decisions took the place of the rude jus­ tice dispensed by miners' meetings. \$>Tith the -n^w order of things came also the necessity of ' ^determined line between the two countries. The United States claimed, under the old Rus- . «gan treaty, a line running up Portland canal to "€te 56th parallel of north latitude, thence to fol- * iqvtr the summit of the coast range to its inter­ section with the 141st meridian. In the absence oH a definite mountain range near the coast, the like was to be not more than ten marine leagues djstant from tide water. '^Canada claimed that the line should follow the «oast range paralleling the general contour of tte coast, and cutting across all inlets and fiords. ; ? * 1 There Were other contentions of miftor impor- * tnce, but the ; real trouble was th^t Canada ought she was entitled to a seaport which would allow of shipments through Canadian tef- rltory to the now valuable Klondike. • *>" As to the 141st meridian being the rest of the ? boundary, there was no dispute. This line starts J< at a ridge of Mount Saint Elias and. runs through ,r. 1© Demarcation Point on the Ardtle ocean; «; ' Maps shewing a strip of land along the coast ** **; %(erte made.^archlves were rummaged, every avail* ! Able bits" of history and tradition were searched, , sand the whole mass submitted as evidence to a "tribunal of three Americans, two Canadians, and •one Englishman, which met in London in 190&, . "The sifting of the evidence required three months.'" The opposing counsel helped by the geographic ; «*perts put forth their best arguments, a vote < was taken, and the result showed four to two for ' flie United States, the lord chief justice of Eng­ land, Lord Alverstone, casting his vote with the ; y .Americans. Y Nr.Rurally the Canadian representatives felt flatly disappointed, but ,the evidence was too V conclusive to allow of any other outcome. Jh Then came the question of what mountains oon- "^Sitituted the coast range. In places a eompro- •u'*iise was effected departing slightly from the t^4elaims of the United States. ?r ^ was decided that certain well-defined peaks ;^%ln the mountains fringing the coast should con- v, jftltute the main points on the boundary. Lord ^ Riverstone, wielding a blue pencil, marked on the •• *iaps what appeared to the tribunal to be the f _ proper mountains. The members of the tribunal were all eminent jurists, but this did not make i * them proficient in the Intricacies of contour maps, ^ • 'fmd the advice of the experts was constantly re- guested. The location of the boundary was left to two vH* ^jommisisoners, Mr. O. H. Tittmann, superintend- of the coast and geodetic survey, for the ' yV /tijnited States, and Dr. W. F. King, chief Domln- v<*>* Ion astronomer, for Canada. {$fnferenee May Result in Diplomat's Termination of Hit Connection with Service -- Discussion of Eastern Trtftitea Regarded aa Indiscreet. Washington.--It was known in well Informed quarters in Washington Sun­ day that unless Charles R. Crane, whose sudden, unexpected and hithier- t» mysterious recall to Washington by Secretary of State Knox, is able to clear himself in the eyes of the sec­ retary of an acccusation of a serious breach of what the state department regards as the first principle of diplo­ matic discretion, the conference with his, official chief may result in the quick termination of Mr. Crane's con­ nection with the diplomatic service, Mr. Crane was on the point of sail­ ing from San Franeisco to assume his duties as minister to China when he received his recall to Washington. When Minister Crane arrived in Washington Sunday from his hurried Journey across the continent he reiter­ ated his declaration of ignorance as to the occasion for his rather dramatic recall from the water's edge of the Pa­ cific and declined to discuss the mat­ ter in any of its aspects, beyond say­ ing that, while he expected to be here several days, he had reserved new ac­ commodations for the trans-Pacific voyage on the steamer sailing from San Francisco on October 20. The state department has in hand, it Is said, what it regards as more or less convincing evidence that Minister Crane, on the eve of his departure for the far east, became responsible for the publication in a Chicago newspa­ per of what the department views as a most Indiscreet discussion of the at- tude of the United States toward the two treaties recently negotiated be­ tween China and Japan. This the de­ partment holds to have been the more serious because that attitude Is still under confidential consideration, no decision having been arrived at. While the speeches delivered by Mr. Crane before the American Asi­ atic association, and at a dinner given in his honor at Chicago, are viewed at the state department as having been at best unwise and undiplomatic, they had been carefully considered after their delivery and before Mr. Crane started for San Francisco, and, al­ though deprecated, were not regarded as justifying any change in his plans. DETROIT TURNS THE TABLES l>; - Wherever the blue-pencil mark appears on-vthe jaiap, this point without any recourse is a bwin- /;V*lary point, even though a higher and better point ^*%nay te but a short distance away. To follow the sinuosities of the mountain ranges in this country would be hopeless, so the commissioners ' will probably decide that a straight line connecting the various blue-penciled points shall constitute the boundary. The actual demarcation of the boundary, to be satisfactory to both governments, must be done jointly. By this it is not meant that there is a dl: -"'Wtt'"' 1 1 1 * vision of labor in ev­ ery party. There are American parties ' and Canadian parties, and with each locating par­ ty, or party which de­ cides on the line, go representatives of the o t h e r g o v e r n m e n t There are line-cutting parties, leveling par­ ties topographic parties, triangulatlon parties, and monumenting par­ ties, which work separ­ ately, their work being such that joint repre­ sentation is not .always ilec&ssary, as the line will be subject to in­ spection at some later date. These parties re­ port yearly to the commissioner of their respec­ tive governments. The commissioners meet sometimes in Washington and sometimes in Otta­ wa, and either accept or reject the work done by the field parties. Their decision is final. The magnitude of the task is little understood ej^ept by those closely connected with the work. There are 600 miles of boundary from Portland filial up the coast to Mount St. Elias, where It hooks abound on to the 141st meridian and shoots for another 600 miles straight north to the Arctic ocean. All the land lying along the boundary must be mapped on an accurate scale, and a strip of top* ography four miles wide must be run the entire* length of the 141st meridian; peaks which can­ not be climbed, or rather those which would take too long and would be too expensive to scale, must be determined geodetlcally; vistas 20 feet 4a width must be cut through the timbered val­ leys, and monuments must be set up on the routes of travel and wherever a possible need for them may occur. The field season is short, lasting only from June to the latter part of September, and along the coast operations are constantly hindered by rain, snow, and fog. Rivers abounding in rapid* and qulcksandB have to be crossed or ascend- * ed. A man who has never had the loop of a track­ ing line around his shoulders little knows the dead monotony of lining a boat up a swift Alas­ kan river with nothing to think of but the dull ache in his tired muscles and the sharp digging of the rope into his chafed shoulders. Vast glaciers are to be crossed, with their dan- «• ger of hidden crevasses. More than one surveyor f has had the snow sink suddenly beneath his feet, / , and has been saved only by the rope tying him to his comrades. Several have been saved by* throwing their alpine stocks crosswise of the gap, and one, while crossing the Yakutat glacier with ing prolonged In its straight shoot across the penln-' sula. This line has been accepted as the 141st me­ ridian and consequently the boundary. It has been hm into the mountains fringing the Pacific coast Topography, triangulatlon, line-cutting, and monu­ menting are now being carried along the located line. ' For the present the line will not run to Mouiit St Eljas. It would be possible, but ndt practical, to ruh it across the intervening 80 miles of snow and ice and towering mountain ranges. To complete this part of the boundary the use of an airship is contemplated) t In the interior the difficulties of the work are changed. Long wooded stretches, interrupted by barren ridges, take the place of glaciers and crag­ gy mountains. In place of snow fields there are heart-breaking "nigger-head" swamps to be crossed, where the pack-horse becomes mired and exhaust­ ed and the temper of man is tried to the breaking point. Supplies have to be ferried across the riv- 0TB on log rafts, while the hcrsss swim. There is no longer the guiding line of the coast to follow, and the surveyor must rely on his in­ stinct for topography and on woodcraft to pHot him through an unbroken wilderness. .The Inconveniences of transportation have to be overcome, and year by year they are becoming worse as the work carries us each year farther from the Yukon with its steamers. For the season of 1909 the American party of 30 men will have to walk 300 miles before they can even start work. Then the topographer with his theodolite tries to Bake up for lost time. Regular hours for work are ignored. A day's work is reckoned as ten hours, if. the work can be done in that time; if uot --well, in midsummer the days are 24 hours long. Holidays and Sundays/see the same old routine- even the Fourth of July. Usually bases of supply are established at cer­ tain known points before the opening of the sea­ son. These are called '.'caches." Mistakes in the pack on his back, caught only on his extended locating of a cache are sometimes made, and last Defeats Pittsburg In Second GNma- pionshlp Game by 8core of 7 to 2. " ^ _ Pittsburg, Pa.--Detroit evened up >tltie count in the world's championship series, Saturday, defeating Pittsburg, 7 to 2, in a one-sided game at Forbes field. The Detroit players batted Cam- nltz hard in the early innings until Willis was substituted for Camnitz in the third inning, and Detroit scored two more runs off him.' The first in­ ning was all Pittsburg, but after that the National league champions Were nevev in the running for a moment. Two two-baggers and a base on balls oft "Wild Bill" Donovan in'the first in­ ning was the end of their ability to hit him. After this he became better every inning and the hard-hitting Pittsburg men were absolutely help­ less before his brilliant twirling. Only three hits were made off Donovan after the first inning. One of the sen­ sational features was a brilliant steal of home by Ty Cobb in the third in­ ning on the first ball pitched by Willis. Gibson was so surprised at the unex­ pected feat of Cobb that he dropped the ball as Cobb slid to the plate. Score by innings: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9--R. H. P. Pittsburg.. 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0--2 5 1 Detroit ...0 2302000 0--7 7 3 Batteries--Camnitz, Willis and Gib­ son; Donovan and Schmidt. Scats World's Records. Ibefttegton, Ky. -- In winning the futurity for two-year-olds, which was the feature of the second day of the Kentucky Trotting Horse Breed­ ers' association, fall meeting, the bay Ally, Native Belle, driven by Thomas W. Murphy, trotted the second miie in 2:07%, and established a new world's record for horses of her age and gait. The time is likewise equal to the world's two-year-old pacing record. SELLS POEM FOR BURIAL PLOT HAQ NEITHER WIFE NOR CHtlr, ' 'J' DREN TO BURV HIM. •IS '1^ FREED AT LAST Legal Battle May Ensue Before Poet Can Rest In Peculiarly Pur-/ chased Grave. York.; -- Naphtali ber, a Hebrew poet and Zionist leader, who died here after a sudden attack of paralysis, probably will be buried in a grave which he bought many years ago, giving in exchange a 14-line poem in classic HebreWi Legal documents found among Im- ber's papers told the story of this unusual barter of poetry for a burial plot. "As ,I have neither wife nor children to bury me," says a memorandum in the poet's handwriting, "I have en­ tered into this contract, whereby my friend, Usher Marcus, in consideration of a poem written by me and herewith conveyed to him, shall take charge of f; ~ my body when I die and bury me ito a plot which he has furnished." When Marcus came to fulfill his contract he found that his right $o take charge of the burial exercises Of the poet was contested by a commit­ tee of Galicians, who declared that inasmuch as Imber had been born in Galicia theirs should be the honor of burying him and furnishing his grave. A legal battle may ensue before the poet. is laid to rest. Iinber's death will be observed with a long period of mourning by many of New York's prominent East siders. He was best known among the Jews as the author of "Hatikvah," the Zion­ ist national hymn, which Is chanted by -Zionists throughout the THAW KEEPS UP THE FIGHT Appeals from Order Denying Writ of Habeas Corpus and Refusing to Release Him. Albany, N. Y. -- Former Gov. Frank S. Black appeared before the court of appeals for Harry K. Thaw and attacked the constitutionality of the act under which Thaw was com­ mitted to the Matteawan State Hos« pital for the Criminal Insane, and the law under which Thaw is being de­ tained in that institution. Mrs. Thaw and her daughter, the former Countess of Yarmouth, listened to the arguments. The case came up on an appeal from an order of the appellate di­ vision, affirming an order of Supreme Court Justice Mills of White Plains in dismissing a writ of habeas corpus and refusing to order Thaw's release. Mr. Black contended that that sec­ tion of the code under which Supreme Court Justice Dowling ordered Thaw Front .tfw Awful Tortures oi Kidney . -'Disease. Mrs? RacheMvie, Henrietta, Tesas, would be ungrateful If I did not tell irhat Doan's §? K i d n e y P i l l s h a v e ̂ done for me. Fifteen years kidney trouble clung to me, my ex- istence was one of / j misery and for two <"'{ • whole years I was un- able to go out of the f.J house. My back ached all the time and % I was utterly weak, unable at times to / walk without assistance. The kidney ; ; secretions' were very irregular. Doan's i'l Kidney Pills restored me to good > health, and I am able to do as much work as " the average woman, f nearly eighty years old." . vl ReTiienfber the name--Doha's, gold by all dealers. 60 cents a box. Foster- .lis Milfrarn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. } •• . ... . : : ' MOT A FAIR QUESTION HP" your Mrs. Henpeck--John, what's honest opinion of my new hit? Rtr. Henpeck--Don't ask me, Mary. You know you're much bigger jmd stronger than I am! • TOTAL LOSS OF Seemed Imminent--Scalp Was Very If Scaly and Hair Came Out by Hand. U Scalp Now Clear and P '.jNew Hklr Grown by Cutlcur*. t * ' ' • -- i "About two years ago I was troubled f ? with my head being scaly. Shortly |f.. after that I had an attack of typhoid pi; fever and I was out of the hospital ff , possibly two months when I first no- p tlced the loss of hair, my scalp being :r still scaly. I started to use dandruff cures to no effect whatever. I had ^ actually lost hope of saving any hair || at all. I could brush it off my coat by the handful. I was afraid to comb It. But after using two cakes of Cutl- < | cura Soap and nearly a box of Cuti- rf cura Ointment, the change was sur- prising. My scalp is now clear and |§ healthy as could be and my hair thick- ft er than ever, whereas I had my mind ;Hl made up to be bald. W. F. Steese, 6812 •£ committed was unconstitutional be- ; ®roa^ Pltt3hurg, Penn., May 7 and cause the commitment was ordered 21« 1908- without due process of law. He held that there was no proof that Thaw was insane at the time of his~ acquit­ tal. "When the verdict of that jury," said Mr. Black in referring to Thaw's acquittal, "Was brought in. Thaw stood in that court a free and inno­ cent man." 17 MEN KILLED; 10 INJURED Sfenta Fs Freight Collides with Work Traln-r-M.ost of Victims are Kin.--SevehteMi were" killed and ten severely injured.] In a collision between a freight train** and a construction train on the Atchi­ son, Topeka & Santa Fe railroad near here, Friday. Among the dead are 11 Mexicans, the remainder being section men. The injured* are all Mexicans and It is believed some of them are fatally injured. The work train was backing into Topeka with 60 Mexicans riding on the flat cars. As the train was round­ ing a curve the north-bound freight; crashed into it. The engine on the freight ran over the four flat cars comprising the work train and almost a score of men SWlap Drag * CbM*. Corp., Sole t>rap«» True Representative of Race.. ,y • Dr. Bethmann-Hollweg may claim |j this distinction, that he is the first || German chancellor to wear a beard. Bismarck hastened to shave his off >: when he entered upon diplomacy, and showed his rivals and enemies a massive jaw and clear-cut chin; and || he shaved to the end, wich an Inter- ^ val enforced by neuralgia in the early ^ '80s. As a soldier, too, Caprivi shaved, all but his mustache, and so did ?• Hohenlohe and Bulow. But Beth- ? ' mann-HoUweg is gaunt, rugged, hir­ sute, pan-Germanic. , , Poverty and Consumption. ./ that poverty is a friend to cbnsump- tlon is demonstrated by some recent German statistics, which show that of 10,000 well-to-do persons 40 annually die of consumption; of the same hum || ber only moderately well-to-do, 66* of ^ the same number of really poor, 77; f| and of paupers, 97. According to & John Burns, the famous English labor ! leader, 90 per cent, of the consump­ tives in London receive charitable re­ lief in their homes. ---- ^ / fe Proper Love for Wife. ; s £When a man really loves his wife I- he ought to eombine all his nicest sentiments toward other women into || were pinned down ^nd It was several] one big sentiment for her. *| • - - - »He should show her the respect he | feels toward his mother, the polite- ness he shows other women and the arms. High mountains must be climbed; if they are not the boundary peaks themselves, they must be high enough to see the boundary peaks over the intervening summits. And these climbs are not the organized expedi­ tion s of an Alpine club, with but one mountain to conquer, but dally routine. Heavy theodolites and topographic cameras must be carried, and Instead reason one surveyor In consequence of such a mis­ take was without food for two days, finally reach­ ing another camp in rather disheveled condition. It happened that this other party was moving south toward the same cache and was on short ra­ tions; so nothing remained to do but beat a. hur­ ried retreat 60 miles northward, arriving at an­ other base with belts pulled In to the last notcn. Social Museum in Barcelona V '̂i *' many exhibits will be removed after 1 Not Finished. the close of the opening exhibition, it I "Americans are so unfinished," has is hoped that as many as possible will | been the complaint of Europeans. We vf'Jj A Spanish Museo Social will be vfv opened in Barcelona in November, ' 1909, supported by the provincial as­ sembly and the municipality. The ob- *: ^ Ject of the Mueeo Social is to gather fin a single exposition data of all sorts, Instruments, apparatus, models, chart*, statistics, etc., referring to !&«$social questions and problems and at Tf' the same time create a permanent or- jg„i.t^ation for study and development. The committee in charge will reserve space for each nation, grouping its en­ tire exhibit, The opening exhibit will comprise the following sections: Edu­ cation, living conditions, working con­ ditions, social contracts and conflicts, action of public authorities philan­ thropic and moral action. "The com­ mittee calls special attention to the section of appliances for the preven­ tion of industrial accidents. While be the permanent • y '...it i iii i > i ' ' " 1 1 *'t •* ! taw. Physicians' Fees FTxed A German antiquarian has found documents showing that in ancient Babylon, 4,160 years ago, the sums due to doctors for treatment were ex­ actly prescribed by law. They varied according to the social position of the patients. » are and glad of it. Yankees are start­ ling the world with their achievement* and will, we believe, stick to the hnKl* I - v Uneasy .Lies- the Head, -JM*. "When you feels a hankerin' fob great authority, son," said Uncle Eben, "do a little preliminary practic­ al as a baseball umpire an' set whether you really enjoys it" Whisky Goes Down. Peoria. -- A crop of two cents in the basis price of alcohol was an­ nounced here by Secretary Lofgren on the local board of trade. The Peoria price to-day is $1.35 Instead of $1.37. This decrease is accounted for by a reduction of nine cents In the price of cash corn during the past 30 days. r Ruth Bryan for Congress. Denver, Col.--Determined that the house of Bryan shall land somewhere politically. Ruth Bryan Leavitt, daugh­ ter of the Commoner, Thursday for­ mally announced her candidacy for the nomination for congress ium the First dlstrtct of Colorado. ^ . Must Pay Extreme Penalty New York.--Frederick Schliemann and Carlo Giro Friday were sentenced to execution at Sing Sing during the week beginning November 15 for the murder of Mrs. Sophia Staber. Platform Falls; Boy Kilfesd. Springfield, Mo.--A boy was kilted and eight other persons were injured here when a platform on the grounds of a street fair collapsed. Oliver Mur- rill, eight years old, was taken out dead. It is believed none of .the j®- jured will die. . 1 » Ohio Town Hit Hard^" 1 Van Wert, O.--The department store of Bonnewltz & Co. and the hardware : etore of Jones & Tudor were totally j destroyed by fire Wednesday. The I loss is $100,000; insurance, $176,000. hours before they were extricated It Is said the wreck was caused by the crew of the work train disregard­ ing orders. JUSTICE MOODY VERY ILL Advlees from His Home Art TWl His Condition I* ;>• Desperate. ;v Washington. -- Associate Justice William H: Moody of the supreme court of the United States may never again sit on that bench. Information received by friends in this city Indi­ cates that his condition as he lies ill in his home at Haverhill, Mass., la desperate. It Is said those admitted to the sick room have found Justice Moody so emaciated and racked by disease aa to leave them slender hope of his res­ toration to health and strength. justice Moody was seized with rheumatism just before the close of the term of court last May. v . wv® Killed In Auto Wreck. I-;,Jv^ Chicago. -- One man was insiantty killed and four other persons were in­ jured severely Saturday when a swift­ ly moving automobile swerved, crashed into a tree and turned turtle in West Jackson boulevard. The,_ J^- chine, was wrecked. ^5^' Married 12 Hours; Kills Self. Baton Rouge, La. -- After only 12 hours of married life, John Elam, sec­ retary of the Baton Rouge Life Insur­ ance agency, Saturday shot and killed himself here. Confesses te Murder of Girt. Woodland, Cal.--Wllbixr Benjamin, a full-blooded Indian, confessed to the murder of Violet Gilmore. a 15-year- old schoolgirl, whose body was found near Rumsey. Threats erf lynching are freely made. , , Accidentally Kills Wife. 4TOMteon, O.--While taking rhotgun to shoot pigeons, Henry Flory, a t'armer living at Archbold, near here, -tccidentally discharged the weapon and killed his wife, the mother of seven children. responsibility he feels toward his sis­ ter. "To all of that he should add the great love he should feel for a wife." :* *»* *rm- wtwmesamix FOOD QUESTION || Settled With Perfect Satisfaction" to tf a Dyspeptic. It's not an easy matter to satisfy all the members of the family at meal p<- time as every housewife knows. And when the husband has dyspep- sia and can't eat the simplest ordinary food without causing trouble, the food |§ question becomes doubly annoying.. ^ An Illinois woman writes: || "My husband's health was poor, he had no appetite for anything I could * get for him, it seemed. "He was hardly able to work, was taking medicine continually, and as soon as he would feel better would ge || t o w o r k a g a i n o n l y t p g i v e u p i n a l l few weeks. He suffered severely with stomach trouble. "Tired of everything I had been able |# to get for him to eat, one day seeing ^ an advertisement about Grape-Nuts, I J| got some and tried it for breakfast the f next morning. , M "We all thought it was pretty good || although we had no idea of using it ? > regularly. But when my husband came I: > home at night he asked for. £ra,pe- p Nuts. |f, "It was the same next day and I if had to get It right along, because when we would get to the table the question, |J| 'Have you any Grape-Nuts' was a reg-1| ular thing. So I began to buy it by ?*» the dozen pkgs. ff "My husband's health began to hn~ff prove right along. I sometimes felt ; offended when I'd make something l|f thought he would like for a change, and still hear the same old question*!-? 'Have you any Grape-Nuts?* fi "He got so well that for the last ||-: two years he has hardly lost a dayfs from his work, and we are still using Grape-Nuts." Read the book, "The I Road to Wellville," in pkgs. "There-a'V a reason." Ever read the above letter f A »ew nir nnprnrw (rem time (o time. Tfcej; •re frenulae, true, u4 fmll et kuuui #»te*e»«. r/\ * • it ' m ~>'r

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