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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 31 Jul 1889, p. 7

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~auiulhtu . J tatt$tuitu. WEDNESDAY, JULY 31, 1889. HOUSEHOLD. New Curtain Materials. Suggestions for buying or arranging window draperies may be gathered from the following taken from "Harper's Baza.r:" . For curtains of summer houses the new reversible cretonnes a.re made up to hang straight from the rod, and be pushed back to show sash curtains of figured or dotted Swiss muslin or of white Madras. The shades are ecru or sage green bolland with fringe at the ends. English houses have flowing curtl\ins of Madras muslin trimmed with a g11.thercd ruffle fi\'e or six inohea wide down the inner sides and a.crass the bottom; a similar ruffle is set across the top, and edges the band for looping each curtain biu::k. Brussels lace is for sash curtains and for flowing curtains of summer parlors furnished in French style. Cross stripes of rich colors are liked for country· house curtains, and may be had in the new mohair stuffs and in thinner fabrics, with snow-flake stripes of white Madras alternating with silk stripes in Roman colors. (rhln India silks in solid colors, or with printed fiuures are pretty for curtains that are meant mere· ly to .soften the light but not to shut ib out. Oretonnes that a.re not reversible are made up rather heavily with slleeia lining and fringed edge, and are hung on rings and rods bo fall straight to the floor. Thin cottons that imitane India silks in colors and design make pretty and inexpensive curtains, also the printed Madras lawns, with ecru grounds strewn with ia.rge flowers of gray colors-a semi-transparent smooth fabric quite differ· ent from tJhe M!ll.draa muslin. La.ri;ie coin spots, yellow, blue, or red, are on white 8wise cottagedrapedes. The Japanese bead and rattan fringe· like port1ere6 are still used for country houses. Portiers are now hung inside the door between the jambs. Scrim, with Cluny or antique lace and in· sertion, is still used for flowing curtains. Egyptian laces with large meshes make pretty sash curtains attached to the top of the sash and looped back with ribbons. Japanese cottons in porcelain blue and white in large figures are used for curtains, wall· hangings, cushion covers, etc., of country houses, and are quite inexpensive. ,.! ' appolntment, is then tossed aside and forgotten. But ladies who read of Dr. Pierce's Fa~ '\'orite .Pr~scriptio~, read it .again, for they dls~over m 1t somethmg to prize- a messenger of JOY to those suffering from functional derangements or from any of the painful disorders or weaknesses peculiar to their sex. Periodical pains, internal intlammatiou and ulcerntlon leucorrhea and kindred ailments readily yield to its wonderful curative and llealiog powers. It is t.he only medicine fbr women, sold lly druggists, nuder a po8itive guaraulee from th~ manufacturers, tbat it will give satif!.. faction ID every case, or money will be refundecl. This guarantee has been printed on the bottle-wrappers. and faithfully carriecl out for many :f!la.rB· $1.00 by druggists, or six: bottles for ~.00. · ' Coprrlh t, 1888, by WORLD'S DIS. MED. Ass·x. i. 'THE NEW PRIZE STORY is eagerly sought for, rC'ad with pleasure or dl&- \ .. · . ~W nn ···., 1J/2 . ~ea~~u~ PELLETS · 't~~~~ ~ Purol11 V ogeta"""~· ._, bU&:~armless. · ~~ .. -. ee.s DOCTOR PIERCE'S Unequaled as a Liver Pill. Smallest, cheapest, easiest to take. One Pellet a Dose. Does not gripe, Cures Sick Headache, Bilious Hcadnellc, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attaeks1 and all derangements of the stomach anct bowels. Put up in glass· vials, hermetically sealed. Always fresh and reliable. Goutly laxative, or an active cathartic, according .to size of dose. ..~~ r:ents, by druggists, A Familiar .Picture. A writer in an exchange tells of an overburdened wife struggling with a sick head· ache, who was urged to go and lie dftwn. "Bub here ie this basket of clothes." Well," said her husb;wd, "it will be there to·morr ·, w." "But the dinner must be got." "0, we can make you a cup of tea, and we will feast on bread and milk." "But there is no bread," wailed the sick wife. "Then we ca.n make a pob of mush," ea.id the considera.te huaba.nd. Now, I cried, here Is a sensibJe man I [t Is not alwBys the husband's fault that the wife overworks. Sometimes it is-often it is ; but in moat oases the wife is herself to blame. Ambitious and anxious to help, to save, and "get along," she docs the wildest thing she can possibly do-the most extravai;iant and wasteful- in wasting horseli ; in selling her own and her children's health a.nd happiness for a. few Improbable pennies. She hides her w11aknesses, because sne does not like to be always complaining. For often the huaband does not realize her condition, or what a strain she is undergoinl(, a.nd thus insists thab what hi11 mother, or hers, or some other woman has done she a.lso would do, NEW MILLINERY MRS. DONNELLY lla.s just received an immmem se new stock ot all kinds ot Millinery consisting or Hats ,Bonnets, Flowers Velvets and Ribbons in a.ll the newt st styles and sbapes to be procured, Ladies should ce.ll ee.rly and roa.ke their seleoUona before the stock Is picked over; Thie-stock is one of the largest ever brou11ht to tcwn. OYER $1,000 WORTH OF RIBBON s pection Invited. STA.NDARD BAN" F CANADA. Capital paid up, Sl,000.000, Best, $:.Ge,. . - - Farmers notes discounted ; Depo11lt! fresh milk ; two cupfuls of atoned cherries ; ireoelved and Interest paid on amounts of a half cupful of sugar. Rub the shortening 15 upwards in Savings Bank Department. into the flour, wet up with ~he millt ; roll into a sheet a quarter of an inch thick; and DRA.FTS cut into squares ahout four inches across. Issued a.nd Colleotious made in Eurepe P11t two gro11ob spoonfulll of cherries in t he United Sta.tee, and Canada, centre of each ; sugar them ; turn up the edges of the pMte and pinch them together. W. J. ,TONES, Agent. L11oy t he joined edges downward, upon a floured baking-~an, and ba.ke half an hour or until browned. E11ot hot with crea.m and sugar, or sugar alone, MOUNTAIN CusTAB.D.- Two quarts of milk, two babl~poonfuls of sugar, vanilla or other Savin~s essence, two teaspoonfuls of liquid rennet. Pour the milk, slightly warmed; into a glass Pal1l up CapUal, $300.000. Jlest, $UO,OOO. bowl; sweeten, flavor, and stir in the rennet. Set in a rather warm place until it is firm, like "loppered" milk or blanomangn ; then 1 beg to notify the public that I am receiving put on ice. If at the ·md of ·an hour it deposits for this company, 11nd allowing a remains liquid, put In more rennet. Do not higher rate o l interest than the banksit stand until the whey separates from No NOTICE oF WITHDRAWAL REQUIRED leb the curd. (rwo hours in warm weather I am also prepared to grant snould be enough. Ea.t with cream and Loans on REAL E § TA.Tll eugar. . LADY FINGEBS.- Take six eggs, 8epa.ra.te on favorable terms. them and beat the yolks with one-half pound 1 OFk'ICE: of sugar, until they are ,so light no hair McMur~y'a Dry Goods Store, lines will torm on the foam. Sift in one W. F. A.LLEI1 q uarter of a pound of flour, with as much Bowmanville, Oct, 11, 1888. !l2- 3m ' soda a.a you can Jay on a three · cent piece, and twice the quantity of cream of t11orta.r, which stir Into uhe sugar and yolb as ·Iight· ly but thoroughly as possiole in al berna.tion with the whites of the eggs which must be continuell\tO no a Ge neral Bankmg Buslnel'· be11oten perfectly stiff. Make a pa.per funnel Bowmanville Branch. of stiff brown paper a.nd put the dough DEPOSITS through it preMsing it out in strips about a finger long and the thickness .of a lead pen· iecelved in Sa.vings Bank Department and '811 a.nd Interest allowed at current rates. N ell. Put on unbuttered paper and sprinkle 1otlce of withdrawal nec68sar:r. All depatlt with granulated 8Ugar, ba.ke in a quick oven pa.yable on demand, and when oool wet the under aide of the EXCHANGE pa.per with a brush and put the fingers to· !loughtand sold and Drafts i ssued upon Xnr op gether back to back. iJnited Sta.tee and Canada, also Gold, Silver Bii PoTATo·.SooP..- Fry in butter seven or united Sta.~ea Greenbacksbouitht and sold, eight medium.sized potatoes and one small onion till somewha Q/ · ".red. Put them into C::OLLEVTIOl'f~ iyou have no stock, Promptly ma.de at current rates upon a.11 pa·r one qua.rt of stock,1 cf Great Brittain, the United States and Do into hot w.i.ta·r ' \ itablespoonful of minion o! Canada. chopped parsley. I iilthe potatoes are soft then put bb.rJU~.eoolander and simTelegraph Ti.·ans:f'ers Ma.de !or large or small sums on a ll par ts of mer all over the fire fo1 ghree minutes. Add Ca.nada. This la eepecla.lly adva ntageous to salt and pepper to tal!te and the beaten persona living in Manitoba or the North·weet yolks of three eggs. Do not boil the soup as It makes the funds a.va.ilable at once at he after adding the eggs or it may curdle. plaoe o! pa.;yment. TOMATO .SAUOE.- P our into your sa uce Forrurther partloula.re oaU 11t the Banld l'g pan the juice from one ca.n of tomatoes. uouee. Add a couple of slices of onion and after T, BRODIE, G.lW. McGILL Accountant. Mun age boiling a. few moments remove·. t he onion. In another be.sin melt one t a blespoonful of butter, and .when at the bubbling point stir into it one t ee.spoonful of flour; stirring t ill smooth. Add this to the toma.to, stirring briskly. Season wit h pepper, ealu, and a pinch of ground Moves, ~WEET POTATO DULOE,- Take six of the finest, whitesb sweet potatoes, p eel and slice and leave In cold water while you pr epa.re a syrup by boiling one pou~d of out 2ugar imd one pint of w11oter, until it will drop l!aavily from t he spoon. After the syrup he.a boon cooking olowly for half a.n hour, put the pot atoes on to boil in hot waber, when - : BY the syrup is ready, ma.ah the potatoes unt il very smooth, add thesyrup a.little a.t c.tim(·1 ~ be11oting constantly, allowing no lumps to · Iamtullypre paredtoattendFnnera.lso · form, until it is rather thick er than batter. the shortest .notice, at the lowest possible ra~e Put be.ck on the stove, cooking slowly, and aa.skets i:- · Burla!Casesready on short notice stirring carefully unt il it looks clear ar d First-cl& nearse on very moderate terms tt th" k dd t [ l f Shrouds aiid Coffins constantl y on ho.nd, Fun · qu e ic · a one ea.spoon u 0 orange flower water, cook for a momont longera.I cards supp rd at once. lrnrni~ure $ hop er. ['hen drop in spoonfuls on a. plate Show R oom s-Boun sails l\ew Block , Thia ).J \!lnk la prepared to do Legltl· sifted with two heaping tei.apoonlule baking powder and a p!nob of salt; two heapinl( mate Banking in all Its branches, Ilablospoonfuls of Jard or butt.er ; tW<1 cups of .. ,Ohoioe B.eoip3s. CnEBRY :ronNOVEB.s, - One quart flour The Ontario Loan and Co. - -o- - THE ONT ARIO BANK that has been dusted with sm;~r and duab THE BRIDEGROOM DROPPED DEAD. sugar over them. In Havana tiJ1·Y a.re rolled into .ilives and wrapped in t"psue paper Anti Arter his Rtll'IRI the A1111clc4 Bride Mnulc·l IL Rlvnl Suitor, and sold by the confectioners. A large crowd of people assembled at Mount Hope Chnrcb, Le.mar county, Ale.., The Canadian North-west. on Sunday morning, to witness the ma.rriage ' Until withi.a a very few yearn. the aooept of Julius Shearer and Miunio Moran. two ed opinion, as to the oba.raoter of the Cana. prominent young people of the neigh· dian Northwest, was that, except as a. hunt borhood. Just as the pre!!ocher began the ing ground for fur.bearing animals, it WM ceremony Shearer S:lnk to the fl(lor a.nd died of little value. Even now well·iDformed in a few momenta, He had heart disease, people have, as a i;<eneral rule, a most inade- and the excitement of the ooca.sion brought qua.te conception of it" resources a.nd im· on a fatal attack. Among those present in the church was William L'lngley, a rejected mensc natural advantages. for and ~he C:ln!l.dian Sena.lie has recently col· suitor of Miss Mman. Ab the first oppor· zrzrm mirnrmFSeMMB7?1! lee ted. a grea.t ma.as of information in regard tunity Langley approached the yol!ng lady to this territory, and e.s a. resulti have re- and told her that Providence had interposed ' "Castorfafs so well adapted to children tha.\ Castorlsa cures Colle, Oo21Stlpatlon, vealed to the world the existence of a. vast to prevent her marl"iage to Shearer. He [ mcomrnend it as superior to any prescription SoUl' Stomach, Dia.rrhcea., Eructation. region, possessing a highly fertile soil a.nd a insisted that she ought to marry him, a.a itDowutome." H. A. Allcm<u M D Kill.'! W!Jrms, gives sleep, ancl promotes a. ' · ·· gestion genial summer climate in a latit ude surpris- the Lord was cloa.rly on his 2ide. Miss 111 Bo. Oxford Sl., l3rookqn, N. Y. Without mjuriollll niedico.tion. Moran fine.Hy consented to marry L'lngley ingly near the polar sircle. Tim CRNTA.VR CoMPA~tY. ~7 :durray Street, N'. T. It has been shown that whee.ti c~n be such as soon as Shearer was buried. Shearer's oaaafully grown at Fort Simpson, on the funeral took place yesterday morning, and Mackenzie River, in latitude 61°51', or La.i:Iglev and Miss Moran were married with· eight hundred and sixty-two miles north of out Ptovidential interference. the northern boundary of the United States; He :Refreshed bis Memory. that barley is a safe crop at Fort Norman, FOR SALE BY J. HIGGINBOTHAM & so;;r, BOWMANVILLE1 on the same river, in latitude 65 °; and tha.t Absent·minded Youth-Dear me, I was potatoes ca.n be grown with fa.ir success going to say something to you, Mies Jones, within the Art io zone. It is a revelation to but it hll.S esoa.ped my memory. be Informed th11ot the Peace River country, Miss Jones-Can't you refresh yonr mem· which lies between 56 and 59 north lati· ory ? tude, is " almost semi torrid ; it is the Let me see. I had It on the end of my region of the cactus." tongue. Oh, yes, now I remember I Mias The Peace River is a feeder to the great Jones, I love you with all my heart. That's river and lake system, of which the Mac· it I knew I'd recall it. What do you ee.y? . kenzie is the outlet. :rhe Mackenzie has - [Texas Siftings. its source in the Great Slave Lake, a. vast inland sea, rivalling Superior In magnitude, .M.yateries of Navigatiox:. The whole stock belonging to the est ate of the and e!l'pties into the Arctic Ocean, after a Sweet Girl(in a ro'V boat)-"What is this course of one thouaand one hundred miles. place in the baok of the boat for ?" With the great lakes whioh it dr,.lnr, and Nice Young Man- "That is to put an oa.r the tributary rivers received by them in turn, in when you want to acull the bo!\t, Row· it forms one of the most extensive waterways ing requires both oars, one on ea.oh side ; in the world. but in sculling one oar onty is used. That 1s being offereu F·rom t he source of the Peace River in the is placed e.t the back and worked with one mounhina of Brirish Columbia to the ocean hand." t he distance is upwards of two · thousa.nd Sweet Girl (11ofter meditation)-"! wish five hundred miles, and for the greater pa.rt you would try sculling a while." of the way the naviiration is excellent, in Bear in mind it is one of the best a ssorted Millinery stocks in town. some places for the largest steamere. The She Had Been Rude. CA.LL AND INSPECT. A thaba.3ca is a.nother river of this ·system. Smith-I think Miss Da Blank is very It~will just cost you ONE HALF of the prices usually paid to have It is a thousand miles long, and empties its waters into the fake of the eame name, rude. your order filled. Fancy Goods at the same terms. Jones-What causes you to think that? I which, in its turn, finds an outlet to Great never thought her so. Sl11ove Lake bv means of the ola.ve River. Smith-I met her down town this after· The rivers named fl<>w for nearly two t house.md miles through a region hi'1hly noon and a.sked if I might see her home. adapted to agriculture. (rhe Canadian Sen- She said ys ; I could see it from the top of ~Grocers' due bills taken. ate Committ.ee reports that they, with the high school building, and tba.t ill wasn't the Saskatchewan River, drain an area. of necessary to go any further. eil(ht hundred and sixty thousa.nd square mileB, of "which there is a possible areA of tihree hundred and six teen thousa.nd square miles-over two hundred mllllon acresCleaned, Died,!Pressed a.nd.Repalred by eulta.ble for wheat." If this is even approximately correct, its bearin~ upon the food supply of the hundred· - --M.A NUFACTURER OF- of millions of people who will inhabit North America within half a century, at present Dyer and Clothes Cleaner. rates of increase, 011.n hardly be over.esti· to be as no one will know mated, The whole area sown to whea.t in G<Jods warranted them from new when done. KING STREET, BOW M J1NVJJ,J E the United States in 1888 wa.s, according to as now on h and a n umber ot vehicle> (and is m.anurnotur ing " ~ ree.t mt1ny more) ot th fl ne Corner of King and Ontario Streets, the reports of the Department of Agricul· Bowmanvillc. patterns and best tlnlsh. which I am olferlng !or ~o.i!! e.t t ho w w oot )ll'ic~ s oonsisten· I ture, thirty-six million acres. wit h due rega,rd to workmanship and quality. 'f hc followl.nii i~ a llat ot the pr incipal vehicles manufactured b y me On first considerations it will seem in: credible that conditions favorable to agricul Double C overed Carrtages . . . .. ........... . .. ......... .... .. ........ .. .... .... $150 Upwnrda ture can exist at such high lAtitudes, but Single Phoot ons .................. ........................... .................... 101) 11 when the explanation has bten given, the Open Buggy............................................... . ..... .. .... . . ....... 70 case appears plain enough. Top As is well known, elevation above the sea D emocrat Wagon........................................ ... .. .... ... ............ 65 level has ·potent effect in determinlnei temperature. The ()a.nadlan Northwest Is much Lumber Wa.go·n s... ......... . ..... ....... ................ .......... .............. 55 lower than the Western States, For a dis. L ight Wagon.................. . .................... .... .. ................ ........ 40 bance of fifty miles east of the Rocky MounE xpress Wagon...... ..... .......... ....... .. .... . ...... .... ............ .. ....... i 5 tains, the average elevation above the sea Skeleton.......... . ............................ . .. ........ ... .. .... .. ....... ....... 50 level of the Union Pacific Railway is five Sulky..................................... ... ..... . .. ..................... . ..... .... 40 " thousand feet, Possessing auperlor tacillties for ma.nnt'aoturlng c.urriagee, I lntood to eel I \·c iry cheav tor As we go northward t here is a gradual or appro·ved credit, and by & o doing I hope to grev.tl> iffcres.s" Ill} number o t aales. Wou descent, until when the Mackenzie Rlvor sell tho wood parts only , or t he gearinKB o r b u1rnieH ironed. A list ot 1000 newspapers divided mto Valley is reached, the altitude is only threi. STATES .AND SECT10NS will be sent on aphundred ieet. lb is asserted that this dif· plloation- FRll;E. 'l'o those who want their advert.lain" to pay. ference of 11.ltitude is equal to thirteen de· we can offer no better medium for thorough grees Qf latitude. At the Shortest N otioe, Painted and 'frimmed if D eaired. and effective work tha.n the various selections If a close exa.mination of any good map of our Sel ect Le1eal List. At t he Factory I a.lso do Planlng, Matoh i o.g , Tur ninK auu S a.wi n.,;: with. C!r cle, B11.nd GEO. P . KO WELL ·t: «JO., of America is made, ib will be seen· that no 8awa. and prepare all kinds or l uml>er ror carpenters un or.h ers tor building purposes. Newspaper Advertising Bureau, Orne.raental and Pinin P ick~t.~ f~r" f un no9 tn A'~ Hr Y ~tY .lP.· r ·HJnirttd. tUiiod e to order. great river enters the Pacific Ocean along 10 Spruce street. .New York. the coast of Cu.lifornia and Oregon, a.nd, as T most peoplu know, t he mountains form a lofty barrler to the warm winds, which sweep eastward over the Pacilio. But just at the northern boundary of Oregon, the Columbia R iver debouche, a.nd still further north, a shorb dista.noe abovo the interna· tional boundary, th11 Fraser River empties its floods into Queen Charlotte Sound. ~be numerous tributaries of these great rivers p enetrate far inLo the mount11oins, so far, indeed, t hat they interlock with the upper branches of the Saaks.tchewan, which flows into L i ke Winnipeg, r.nd of the Athabasca and Peace Rivera;e.lready spoken of. Through the pa.sees thus forooed, t he Pacific winds, the Chinooks, as they are called, find their way out on the Vana.dian plains, and c11orry a genial summer climat e far beyond ' he Arctic circle. Iu addition t.cdbe P.iclfio wlndg, tliere is a. constant current of air, warmed on t he pfa.ins west of the Mississippi, flowing northwar d. 011.nada ha.a !!.ll ~ne d!sadvantu.ge resulting trom t he co1:. Jurrent from the Pola.r region, a.~ i:-a.sa .u > 1.own over '- abrador it d rives the isother mal Jines < M b elow the> lat itude they occupy in Euro·x . It is oniy a just compensat ion, 1iherefore, that the wa.rm current d, which aS<.end to supply t he vacancy at the North, should render the climate of t he CIU!adian Northwest, fo1· a large pa.re o! t he yea.r, very de11ghtful. An important iDflucnce in detormining the agricultural capabiliby ot this north land is t he ltmgth of the summer days. In t he oent re oi! the Peace River country, the longest summer da.v if seventeen hours twenty· eighb minutes long, t h at is from sunrise to sunset. :rhe prolonged sunlight promotes rapid and vigorous growth. G U.A.BANTEED TO 00 VEB 50 PEB OEN7 MORE THAN_ It is a recognized fa.ct t hat all plants are produced in th 9ir gre11.teet perfect!on at the ANY OTH.EB OXIDE IN THE MABE.BP. northern limit of the zone which they ch11or· e.cterlze. Whean, 01tots a.nd ·barley are ee· J!OBHS BE.A. UTLl!'UL W A BM' TINTS 'With WHITE LE.AD. sen tially the produots of t he north temperate zone. Hence we would expect to find them in t heir ~reatest p erfection in high DOES NOT SO.A.LE OB PEEL OFF. l11otitudes where th e conditions neoesm uv for their g rowth can be found. I t is therefore ,:.:;:;.;..,;;;;;;~;;...;;;;;.;..;;...;. COVERS 100 PER CENT MORE TH.AN LE.AD. not a mat ter of surprise nhat t he b eau wheat shown at the Centennial E :rliibitlon in Phila.delphia. was grown in the Peace River valley.- [Chas. H. L\lgrin, in "You1Jh's Companion." Infants I ChHdren. ~ ° ° , Ml.LLl.ffEll Y · Spring and Summer LATE MRS. MORRISON at 75 cents on the VVholesale $ Stamping done as usual. "W. MOR,RISQN. Gents' Clothing HAlNES'. CARRIAGE WORKS GEORGE C. HAINES, Proprietor, TH OS. PEAT, OARRIACES, SLEIGHS, GUTTERS, WAGONS, &O. DU N~S BAKINCI .P OWDER THE COOK'S BEST FRIEND Buggy........................................................................ 9 0 TO ADVERTISERS. All Kinds o f Vehicle::; He p ai red ~ MAG ETIC ~IRON PAINT 92 PER CENT OXIDE OF IRON. _______________________________ ABSOLUTELY PURE. A Novel Undertaking. The Vionna. correspondent of bhil Londnn " Times " says :- A novel institution, which has noti been tried in any count ry in Europe, is going to b e introduced into Austria for the benefo of the travelling public of thiG country. T<·-morrow railway I .ending li!>ra· ries will be opened a t about wrt stf> tlone 1 of the Western State railway. ::r'lH1 lJook:d are in six lang 11agea·- E uglish1 l!'rrr r.lt, (11>r· man, I talian, Hungarian, and :bohemian, and will be lfmil a.b th e r!l.be of 2d, or 4d, p er week, the · volumes t o b . eturnod at any stat ion where there is a bolllrsta.11. Wit hin t he next t wo months from 150 bo 200 such libraries are t o be opened on the various lines in Austria. (rhe under taking has been I launched by an Englia compa.ny called t he 1 "globus,'! I UND ERTAKI NG LE 'BI MORRIS.

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