Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Woodville Advocate (1878), 21 Jul 1881, p. 7

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in the peaceful home of Benjamin F. Shuart. assistant pastor of Plymouth Church, on the blufl west of Time. Lowry’s residenoe. Mr. Shuart was sleeping in a room on the east side of the house, and at 11.30 o'clock was awakened by aorash of glass in the dining-room, and was further startled by hearing a volley of oaths of the most shocking character. At first he imagined some drunken man had entered the house, and so informed his startled wife; but this theory was soon dis- lled when a swaggering form entered rom the dining room and a strange voice yelled out. “I'm a burglar and I want mono ." By this time the position of the intrn or was defined, and the peaceful clergyman picked up a heavy old-fashioned chair and banged away at the burglar with chair and banged away at the burglar with good effect. The two men clinched, and then followed a hand-to-hand combat. Around the room. hugging the wall, went the two men, at last settling near awindow in the sitting room, when Mr. Shuart called to his wife for help. She grasped a five- und Indian club and made for the com- nts, dealing two heav blows. but unfortunately they fell on t e head of the preacher instead of that of the burglar, and she was compelled to desist. All was dark as pitch, and the uneven battle continued. Finally, the burglar got the preacher in a corner and kept banging away with a pair of brass knuckles until the preacher was forced to ask for quarter. The burglar then let up on his victim, pulled a match. and made a light in the student’s lampon the table in the sitting-room, and proceeded to ransack things. Meanwhile Mrs. Shuart went out in the yard and vainly called for help. At this moment the hired girl came down stairs, and the burglar, unsuccessful in his hunt for booty, started to leave the house, goingoff with muttered curses. Twice during the hunt for valuables the burg- lar’s back was turned, and Mrs. Shuart, armed with a small pocket knife, was about to use it. but didn’t. And so the burglar departed unmoleeted and without anything to show for his exploit save a bloody head. Mr. Shuarttoreofi' the burg- lar's mask during the struggle, and is positive he can recognize the man again. A Tribune reporter called at the house yesterday, and a sight met his eyes never to be forgotten. On three sides of the sitting-room the walls and doors and the floor were spattered thickly with blood, showing plainly that a terrible struggle must have taken place. Mr. Shuart is badly hurt about the head, his left eye is cut terribly, and he presents a sorry appearance indeed. He says the burglar evinced no fear, and from the start was noisy and careless. It will be several weeks before the reverend gentleman will be presentable for pulpit duty. Mrs. Bhuart is suffering from nervousness and a kick received from the burglar on her left side. Could he be found today, that burglar would no doubt be free to confess his sur- rise at the warm reception he received cm a messenger of peace. Griscom. the Chizago faster, was very 'nbilant yesterday over the foot that he as commenced the last day of his last. He has made all arrangements to fine to- day on the stage of the Olympic eatre. His weight at noon was exactly the name as the day before and Saturday. 149 pounds. 1:51“, 50; respiration, 13; temperature. 9 . How he (lave a Burglar - lurprlu l'unv. Minneapolil (Minn) Tribune. Probably the most. peculiar burglary in the criminal history of this country occurred ahort}y_be_fore ruid_uig_ht 9n Ifridgy A Thrilllng Escape Irons the Horrible Siberian Mines. The political refugee who has just reached Switzerland after escaping from Siberia. may fairly claim the credit of an all but unparalleled feat. The only other man who has ever escaped with life from the world-wide dungeon of Asiatic Russia was Count Piotrowski, one of the Polish insur- ente condemned by the Czar Nicholas to ' e-long exile after the abortive rising of 1830. Having succeeded in obtainin a ficti- tious passport and eluding the vigi ance of his guard, this indomitable man com- menced his flight in the depth of winter amid a series of hardships rarely equalled and never surpassed. ~ Robbed. while he slept, of his passport and the bulk of his scanty funds, he was compelledto avoid the beaten track by constant detour: through the frozen forests, often assing whole days without food. and flu ing no shelter at night save the snow drifts in which he scooped a burrow for himself like a wild beast. On one occasion he found himself in the same room with several of his late guardians. who were luckily too much intoxicated to recognize him. At another time, when every moment‘s delay might throw him into the hands of his Dureuers, he _was compelled t9 listen his way by slow stages to St. Petersburg, where. knowing the impossibility of passing the frontier undetected. he persuaded a German shipmaster to give him a passage to Dantzic. The moment the ship was clear of the Russian coast he fell aslee from sheer exhaustion. and remain unconscious tor a whole day and night. The narrative which he subsequently pub- lished in London was turned to good account by Alexander Herzen. the famous Nihilist editor, in his attacks upon the Russian Government. poses. the total cost to be042..600 The second was to furnish water for fire pro- tection and street watering' in consideration of an annual rental of 88 000, the company to retain thep privilege of disposing of water tothe factories ate houses. etc Mr. B. B. Osler. Q. 0., spoke in favor of the artesian well system. The Council were divided in their ideas. and a long debate ensued. which resulted in a committee being appointed to consider all schemes brought before them. At the meetingof the Dundas Town Council on Monday eveninglast two proposals were submitted. on behalf of a company. to construct water works for Dundas. The first was to build the works, lay mains and hydrants on several of the principal streets and supply water for fire protection. for the manufactories and for drinking ur- poses. the total cost to beMNSOO. he stiently to the msunderings of s. half- unksn Cossack, whose suspicions would have been at once aroused by 5mgl attempt to give him the slip p. At lengt having joined the crew of a canal boat. he worked AN UNPABALLELED FEAT. Water Works for Dani-I. A P111113“ " PA 8601‘. TRAVELLING UNDER 'I'IIE BEA. The English Channel Tunnel and the Advantage- I. be Gained by ll. (London Telegraph.) Any amount of capitalâ€"a gigantic amount if necessaryâ€"wluld be forth- coming if the practicability of the tunnel were brought to demonstration and the Southeastern Railway Company, who have borne all the risk of the reliminary experiments. would achieve the triumph of supplying a long-missing link inasystem of railway communication which weald reach from the north of Scotland to Brindisi. to Cadiz and to Odessa. The advantages arising from the abrogation of the short but miserable sea passage from Dover to Calais would be almost incal- culably beneficial. The old diligence journey over Mont Cenis was full enough of discomfort, and the cars on the Fell Rail- way, albeit a much swifter, were scarcely an agreeable mode of conveyance. Still the Alpine passes laboriously clambered up and plodded down by lengthy trains of mules dragging cumbrous caravans full of travellers. the dust, the flies, the snow in winter, the ill-supplied and extortionate posting-houses, did not deter English tourists from visiting Italy. It may, on the other hand, bejustiflably assumed that " the silver streak,” so dear to poetry and to patriotism, every year practically prevents thousands of English people, especially ladies, from visiting the continent. We sufier less, perhaps, from sea-sickness than any other nation in the world ; and for one English lady who can thoroughly enjoy a passage across the Atlantic, and cheerily report herself at the captain’s table at breakfast, luncheon, din- ner and tea, there are probably ten Ameri- can ladies who pass their ten days and nights on shipboard moaning and groan- ing in their narrow staterooms. Yet is sea~sickness not unknown among us, all hardy and seafaring from our earliest youth as we habitually are, and even case- hardened travellers and old sailors by profession dislike, if they do not dread, the channel passage. The railway companies do what they can; praiseworthy efl‘orts have been made to improve the steamers; ampler harbor accommodations may be eventually provided on the French side; yet the channel passage can scarcely fail to remain what it is, and what it has ever been- the most miserable of ordeals. The embarkation and debarkation, the tranship- ment of the luggage, the hanging about the station until the train starts, are in them~ selves productive of discomfort, annoyance and irritation, and these are aggravated to an intolerable degree when the weather is tempestuous and the boats are crowded. The construction of the channel tunnel would. again, lead to a much bet ter feeling between the peoples of the two countries now separated by “ the silver streak." The working-classes of France and England at present know comparatively little of one another, but could the journey between Charing Cross and the Cam du Nord be accomplished in a six hours’ railway run, with no dolorous trial of a sea passage, immense numbers of tradespeople and workingfolk in London and Paris respectively would be brought in }frequent, and, it is to be hoped, into jfraternal contact. Surely the final cause of the channel tunnel should be the further- ance of the interests of peace. Once com- .pleted, the neutrality and integrity of so l thoroughly a cosmopolitan work should be 3 acknowledged and guaranteed by the whole civilized world, and it should be no more internationally warrantable to destroy or injure the channel tunnel than to bombard the Parthenon again or pull down the pyramids. " I've duct 3 better thing than thnt." whispe re Willinm, so he lounod over the neat. " I'm running away with his win."â€" Detroit Fm Prm. The vindictive spirit shown in some of the ontragesin Ireland assumesaludiorous form. The practice of obliging bailifl's to eat their processes has been exceeded in an instance which is reported from Moate,County West~ meath. A farmer residing near the town had the misfortune to find one of his cattle very ill. A village veterinary surgeon re- scribed a copious dose of castor oil, ut. unfortunately, the only vendor of the drug in the neighborhood had been “Boycotted." The farmer had no alternative but to lose his cow or enter the forbidden shop. He waited until nightfall. when he ventured into the shop and procured halt a pint of the oil. He was not unobserved. however. and had not proceeded far on his way home when he was met by some Land Leagners, who asked him if he did not know that Reilly's shop had been “Boy- ootted." He pleaded dire neoessit . but in vain. The bottle was taken from im. his mouth held open, and the whole contents drained slowly down his throat. He is not likely to incur again the penalties of the unwritten law. On a Canada Southern train the other day a Detroiter had a seat behind a couple who got on at a little station near St. Thomas, and he thought he had seen the man‘s face before. He was looking at him sharply and trying to remember where he had met him. when the man turned and asked : “ Aren‘t you Thomas , of Detroit 7" " Yes; and aren‘t you William ,of Buffalo ?" “ Yes.” " I thought so when you came in. And ain‘t you running awa with old Judge Blank'adaughter2 of St. homas '1” Fro:- n somber-n Negro Point of View- [Is Slranxe Elk-cu. Ricnuoun. Va., Jul 10.â€"The negroes here are greatly excite over a series of dire events,includ1ng the attempt tomurder the President. the illness of Rev. John Jasper, famous for a sermon on the revolution of the sun and earth. and the death of a popular colored man. all of which they attribute to the appearance of the comet, which colored philosophers declare has burst, and its fiery contents are fast approaching the earth. which will soon be enveloped. Hundreds are being converted at remarkable times and places. In the tobacco factories the miraculous visions and conversions seriously interfere with business, and the mania has actually taken the form of lunacy. Mode lllln Drink Cow Medicine. THE COMET Bauer I cl. She Silently Follows Her Betrayer for Twenty-three Yam. A WRONGED WOMAN. CLOSE OF AN EXTRAORDINARY CAREER. A despatch from Louisville. Ky.. says: To-day came news of the death. in Missis- sippi, of Major John R. 'I‘hrockmorton. of Louisville, a man of leisure and of style. a bachelor of 65, a famous beau of a quarter of a century ago. and the lover of the beautiful Sallie Ward at the time when the bewitching Southern girl captured the son of the Puritan Governor Lawrence. of Massachusetts. When the young bride went to her New England home. Throok- morton followed. It is asserted that jealousy of Throckmorton, which Mrs. Lawrence was too proud to resent by explanation. was in reality the cause which led to the separation of Lawrence and his wife. Sallie Ward came back to her father’s house. and a divorce was granted Lawrence on the ground of desertien. The lady gave no explanation. Throckmorton still hov- ered around devotedly, but was not rewarded by the lady's hand. She married Dr. Hunt. and. after his death. became the wife of a wealthy pork man named Arm- strong. When this gentleman died. it was rumored that at last Major Throokmorton was to be blessed for his lifetime devotion, but the handsome widow drives about in the finest private turnout the city affords. and has paid no more attention to the addresses of the Major than in the days of her girlhood. The beauty of the Kentucky belle, Sallie Ward, made her fame world. wide, and the persistency with which the Major followed her gave him a certain interest in the eyes of the multitude. but it was another woman that held him upto the gaze of mankind. a woman who shadowed him more constantly than he haunted‘the path of the famous belle. Throckmorton was a pleasing and frivolous man of the world when he first met the school girl. Ellen Godwin. He was about 30 years of age; she was 15. Her family was at least the equal of his, and to an older sister he had been paying atten- tion. The girl was impulsive. interesting, and innocent. He deliberately set to work to feign love and togain her heart. Having gained it, he threwit aside without concern and wenthis way. __ Soon after a veiled figure appeared on the streets of Louisvilleâ€"a. girlish form that moved silently after the man wherever he went. She never spoke to him, neither u phraided nor reviled. When he entered the hotel she stood at the door; when he emerged from his club house she was wait- ing. In New York, in New Orleans. she wasat hisside.p hsntom- like. He jyocularl spoke of her toP his friendetmhieJ "Hell's Delight. ” T611 years passed. Her old friends do- cideflnher crazy for keeping the_thi_ng up:_ Fifteen years rolled around, the‘ police knew her, they watched her faithfully, as some harmless. demented thing. and passed her from best to beat. as she ploughed her way homeward in the wee sma’ hours of the stormy night. No human being over offered her harm or insult, although she often stood all night before the places where her guilty lover was hidden. Twenty years were gone ; old friends had diedâ€"father. mother. schoolmates. Her hair had thinned and whitened; her form stooped, a cough sounded hollow on the air; her step was more feeble; yet none the less it tracked a portly. gray~haired. fashiona- bly attired man from mansion to mansion on New Year's Day. from theatre and club roam, night_after night. Twenty-three years passed. Even the little children grew to know the plain, shabby, black~robed woman. and tiny fingers pointed at Throckmorton’s ghost. Young girl’s looked wonderingly after her as she passed them silently. Wives sighed or smiled pityinglyâ€"they were so secure and shelteredâ€"when her garments brushed their own. Mothers grasped their girls more closelyâ€"suppose this woman’s wrong shouldbe the fate of their sweet daughters in the days to come. So. for twenty-three years, the phantom, silent. certain. dogged the betrayer’s steps. At last friends cf his had her arrested as a lunatic. and, through their misguided pre- caution, the man and woman were brought face to face in the court-room at Louis- ville. Then it was that all the city woke up to the knowledge that this woman was neither crazy nor a fool. Her language was eloquent, her manner refined. her face firm. The whole sad story of her life was toldâ€"~her vow to follow him until the hour of retribution. her persistent watching. her silence and revenge. Before the woman he had wronged Throekmorton quailed. and his bravado was not equal to the cross-questioning to which he was exposed. At last. one even- ing as I was walking on Jefferson street. near the Court House. a great about ascended ; cheer after cheer went up. The old Court House rang with applause. Men threw up their hats. Ellen Godwin was acquitted and Throckmorton’s ghost was laid ; for the woman. having brought him to the bar and having told the story of his perfldy, said that her work was done, and shewould haunt him no more. During the law storm. says the Port Hope Guide. the house of Mr. John Boyd. on Rice Lake road. near Bewdley. was bodily carried completely over his barn some distance away, the floor and founda- tion being left. To this circumstance Mr. Boyd owes without doubt the preservation of the lives of his two children, who were alone in the house at the time. Throckmorton. conscious of his guilt. had refrained from arresting her, greatly as she annoyed him. during all the twenty- three years. and the story would have been untold. and she would have lived and died. regarded by the present generation as a moncmaniac. had not the gallant Major's friends interposed their well-meaning blunder. There neVer was a trial in the city that equalled this in inter- est. At its close the entireroom was filled with shouts, which those outside took up. until the whole city rang with the news of the vindication. The jurors crowded around and shook hands with the accused, and persons who for years had passed her without recognition asked pardon of their old friend. After the trial, mi] friends tell me that Ellen Godwin never n any way noticed or spoke of Major Throokmorton. Archdeacon Lander,“ Ottawa. is ill at Caoouna. Mr. Roy Allan baa been appointed travel- ling agent of the Grand Trunk, with head- quarters at Buffalo. At the Botanic Gardens’ evening fete the other night the London Truth 33 ePrinoeee Louise looked “particularly we I and very young." Sarah Bernhardt is announced to give a series of performances shortly iu Edin- burgh. Rev. W. McGregor. of Onondaga. has received a. call to the astorate of the U:- bridge and Goodwood aptiet Churches. Mr. William Black is said to have re- ceived from his En glish publishers 82. 600 for his latest stogry, “That Beautiful Wretoh. " Lord Elphiuatone and Sir John McNeil have gone up the Grand River, and will go down the Rest-igouche to Metapedia. Mr. Joseph Blackburn, editorâ€"In-ohief of the London Free Prcu. left on Friday for a. month’s trip in the upper lake country. While in Manitoba the Governor- General and suite will stay at '- Silver Heights," the residence of Hon. Donald A. Smith. Miss Richards. the daughter of Governor Richards. of British Columbia, has returned from Paris. where she had been studying painting. Rev. A. W. Nicholson, ex-Preaident of the Nova. Scotia Methodist Conference, leaves in a few days for England to attend the Methodist (Ecumenical Council. Mr.H. S. Northcote. M. P., Sir Staf- ford Northcote's son. is coming to Canada with a view of inquiring into the fer- tility and climate of the Canadian North- west. The Manchester Unity 0dd~fellowe insti- tuted a lodge of that Order at Fall River, Mass" last week. This is supposed to be the first lodge of the kind in the United States. Sir Alex. Galt. who is now in Canada. it is said, proposes to visit Manitoba. and the Northwest Territories during the summer, and will probably return to England in October. Walter Savage Lander said : I feel that I am growing old, for want of some- body to tell me that I am looking young as ever. Charming falsehood I There is a. vast deal of vital air in loving words. John Pickard, M. P., has issued invita- tions to the Warden and members of the York County Council. New Brunswick, to a dinner at Fredericton, to meet the Hon. Edward Blake on his arrival at that place. Edward Triokett. ex~ohampiou onramau. is at the Queen’s. Toronto. Dion Boucioault met with an accident to his foot while playing in “ The Colleen Bawn" at the Crystal Palace, London, on Saturday. He was unable to proceed with his part, but became better in the evening. Mr. A. M. Morris, B. A., Headmaster of the Ingersoll High School, died at 9 o’clock on Friday evening. after a short illness of a couple of days’ duration. The cause of his death was inflammation of the bowels. ‘ The man Lefroy, who has been arrested for the murder of Mr. Gold in the Balcombe tunnel, was of such well-known romancing tendencies that all round Wallington and Carshalton he was known by the name of " Ananias." Whilst William Donnelly was sitting in a wagon on the Clandeboye road, near Luoan, on Saturday, he was startled by the report of a rifle and a bullet passing within a few inches of his breast. It appears that a young man h3g1 111;qu at s. sqnirrel in an Rev. W. F. Kerr, B.A., curate of Grace Church, Elm street. Toronto, the newly- appointed Professor of Classics and Ancient History in the Western University at London, is about to be married to Miss Daniels, daughter of Mr. Daniels, St. John, It is understood that Bishop Walsh, of London. intends spendin the remainder of the summer months on t s shore of Lake Erie. A commodions residence has been rented for his accommodation. 3 short dis- tance from Port Stanley, and immediately overlooking the lake. 3p lé'tree. The bullet mine?! the squirrel an came near killing Donnelly. Mr. Ray, 3 merchant tenor or menheim. Ont.. has a. walking stick which was originally presented to Robert Burns, in Edinburgh. Scotis’s greatest poet. At the death of Burns the stick passed to the heirs and eventually to Mr. Rey. It is e stout. well preserved cudgel. of curious shape, and would make sgood defence even against the witches of " Allowsy Kirk Yard." When Louis Lessard. oi Montreel. led to the alter a blushing bride of 51 years he was in his 108rd year. He was born in Paris. France, in 1777. and he recently did the duty of a coroner‘s juror. When his ego was doubted he produced 5 silver snnfl‘ box which he said was resented to him by Napoleon I. after the sttle oi Austerlitz. He served under Napoleon in most of his great battles. including Waterloo. He came to Canada in 1830.7 and hold A commission in the British militia during the French Csmdim rising of 1837. The will of Millionaire Burnside. late of New Orleans, written in 1857, has been opened. He makes bequests of $150,000, and appoints Oliver Bierne, of Virginia, universal le etee of the residue. valued at six million ollara. It is a fall for Sitting Bull tobe no longer spoken of as a terrible chief. but as a. cor- nor-store loafer. A storekeeper at Qu’ Agpelle w_ri_t_es _to__Winnipeg_ as follows: “We are deily feeling trouble concerning Sitting Bull. Today he called et my store for sugar. It wee given him. but he remained in the place. refusing to go until Ihedgiven him something to eat. Subsequently I wee compelled to hustle the noble red man out of the place.” The death occurred at Meigle, Perthehire on the 17th ult.. of Sir George Kinloch, Bart.. of Kinloch. He was the descendant of a very ancient family, and for nearly half a centurfi he exercised a werfnl influence in t ehi heat intereeto State. and the industrial evelpment of the coun~ try. He was the eldest son of George Kinloch. who took so active a part in the Reform Bill 'tetion that his eetetee were forfeited, an he had to take refuge in iFrance. Sir George was created beronet n 1878. Peru-III. Over 100 armed police attended at Laur- encetowu. lately, to protect a process- server in serving writs. On entering two houses the process-server was met by women and deluged with dirty water. However, he served the write in several Rev. Dr. Hutch. in preaching one Sun- day recently on the occasion of the conse- oration of a. bell for a Romcn Catholic church at Ballymccoda. said it was dis- tinc‘tly laid down that a bell should not he After a protracted debate the Irish Pres by teriau Assembly. sitting at Dublin decided to prohibit the use of instruments music in the churches under its jurisdic- tiou. Ex-Preeident Guillermo, of Sen Domin- go, has arrived at St. Thomas With Gen. Perez, and is purchasing on armament and repering for an invasion of San Domingo. file has two schooner-e of 400 men ready to start early in August. Reports from Ben Domingo say the greeteet commotion pre- vails there over the threatened invasion. Over ten thouund acres of land were recently advertised for sale within n oom- pnrntively small portion of the Province of Uonnnnght. for eny secqu purposes without the express permission of the Bishop. The observation had reference to the recent practice of using the chapel bells for the summoning of the populace to resist evictions. At Monte (County Westmeath) Quarter Sessions more than half the civil bills given to rocess servers were not served. and afli avits were made that non-service was owing to attacks. The process servers were unable to attend from injuries. The judge said that owing to the open resistance to the law, and the desperate state of the country. he would. if applied to, hold post- ing write on the court house door as service. The frost has done terrible havoc in West Clare; beautiful potato etc are burned, in some cases to the groun ;the potatoes sown near the sea. are not as bad asthose inland, but in the vicinity of Kil- rush the stalks are burned and shrivelled upsoml‘lioh that it is feared they won’t again rllly. Machine Oil LATEST IRISH NOTES. And for sale by dealers. Ask your merchant for Lgdine and take no other. I N THE WORLD, [3 manumctured by McCOLL BROS.CO.,TORONTO This oil under the severest test and most active competition was at the Toronto Indus- trial Exhibition awarded the highest prize; also the GOLD MEDAL at the Provincial Exhibi‘ tion, Hamilton and the highest award at the Dominion Exhibition, Ottawa, the silver medal. Farmers and all who use Agricultural machin ery. will save money and machinery by using none but LARDIN E. LARDINE! COUGIIS, COLDS, ASTHMA WHOOPING-COUGII, GROUP. This old established remedy con be with confl deuce recommended for the above complaints. TRY IT. nyour merchant has not got it. he can get it It; you. JOHN. W. BICKDE .. qurmerly '1‘. Blckle 5 Son)“ "-Â¥A 1h, , fliclde’s Anfi-Cunsumptive Syrup "232,803 "Ail; LANDS ON THE LINE OF THE WISBDNSIN CENTRAL II. II. For full particulars. which wil be sent £1!) M'oorol 6.1 gnlvezul 53.1“.“ aind 0013 low 111 an . on (1:581; bofiauboomlg'n boat 13:3."3Jh; to ~oxon "um ; mama-co. 3315331502! 0 33°01wmm. ” I1. TIVE, respectable employment for town. on during no“ on. or Ion or, or permanent, for few energetic oung men n this Ind odJolnlnu counties. To one who can show {air success and odfltcbllity expenses. liberal commission and m onto so will he paid. - Addreu with references, Drawer 1. Toronto. For c loading mainly. Cm be said in an section of 0m 3. Bond pom! can with ad draw for descriptive circular. JUDGE FOR YOURSELF Addrou ‘ II. C. BENTON. IT. TIIOMAB. ON'I‘ AGENTS WANTED GENTS 3’ WANTED FORTUNEB FOB FARMERS” 50.000 I'll-II. 6,000.“. km. lest lint Ind. lkl Inflow. Chico Timber, Pull-g. stock hill- . Burying. Yul and Water in I Induce. 8150 per acreandu vnrd. Ono-sixth cash and five nunu pa manta. Bo- ducod Pure and Freish to settlers. ngto [or “ gnblicgtlona No. 83." ‘ Goo. Dow,"riai7¢ilrllbr "A’ééiit: '7'! Yonge gt, ljopntq. 3.3!. 9!!)011, General gniggsag a}; rim; mas: GENTS WANTED. â€" LUCBA- NORTHERN PACIFIC MINNESOTA. UIIABLIQ 1.. COLBY. mud Commissioner Hmunkoo. Wis. ASK FOR By sending 85 cents money with ogo,ho ht, color of oy on on hair you wil receive by return mail correct picture of your future hus- bond or wile. with nume sud data '. Forms: 3. Fqltonvmo. N. Y. RAIlROAD LANDS. THE VERY BEB Prépiiiitor.

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