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Woodville Advocate (1878), 18 Aug 1881, p. 7

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Rev. Philip Brooks, In one of his Yale leetureson “ Preaching,” tells a story of a beekwoodeman who, after hearing an extemporsueous sermon from Bishop Meade, remarked. “ He is the first one of them pettiooat fellows that I have ever seen that can shoot without a rest." A few days since the second of the two great bells for the new Eddystone light- ouse, each weighing about 42 owt., mea- suring 5 ft. 1} in. diameter at the mouth, answering to the note 0, and intended to act the one as a fo signal to leeward .and the other to win ward, was east at the foundry of \Messrs. Gillet, Bland 1% Co. The Prinéo 01 Wales has hold‘ his ymilxt Formosa to Mr. Bischoflchcim. The mother-in-law seems to be the same everywhere, yesterday, today and forever, in every clime, among all peoples. and in every country on the face of the globe. In France the pursue,. her even beyond the portals of t c cemetery. and make para- graphs about her upon the tomb. As for example, in a Parisian grave yard: “ Here lies Josephâ€". He lived for twenty years after his wife‘s death in the society of his mother-in-law, and died in the blessed hope of going to a better world.“ Wno Wouw' us A Smxsn ?â€"-â€"In the Shaker communities, it is well known the sat virtue is aseetioism. There are no amily ties, and the assion of love is trampled under foot. 0 brother Shaker shakes hands with a sister Shaker. lest it should awaken the afl'eotionate nature. No Shakeress dare adorn her hair or dress even with the commonest garden flower. Yet every brother has a sister specially assigned to look after his clothes, 0 his mending. sew on his buttens,audi form the Eldress when he needs a new garment. Some of the Shakers who theorize about the finer features of their faith say that thereshouldexistbetweenthesetwoaspeeial spiritual aflinity. but this does not seem to be the ease in practice. “Probably,” says a visitor. " a sister would be more likely to be drawn in sErit toward some brother whose oldstoo 'ngs she did not have to darn." usnu, L‘s “a, lyU .I‘UICSG uuu Dllculli, uuuu DU tried a dozen prescriptions for repelling mosquitoes, flies, and similar pests, and found none of them effective until he came across the following. which are dead sure every time : “ Three oz. sweet oil, 1 oz. carbolio acid. Let it be thoroughly applied upon hands, face, and all exposed parts {loarefully avoiding the eyes) cnce every all hour, when the flies are troublesome, or for the first two or three days, until the skin is filled with it. and after this its ap- Klliloation will be necessary only occasionally. other recipe, equally efiioient, is: Six parts" sweet 011, one part’ creosote, one part pennyroyal, Either of these is agreeable to use. and in no way injurious to the skin. We have both of these in our camp with us, and all files keep a safe distance.” Mr. Ivers \V. Adams writes from Bath- mtst! N. B., to Forest and Stream, that he was no cruelty or meanness there. She read love so fierce and violent in it that it startled her. He did not look' like one who weuld wantonly and wilfully make her sister wretched for life. Hope grew in her heart as she gazed. She respolved to plead with him for Beatrice, to ask him to for- get a. childish, foolish promiseâ€"a. childish 61'1'01‘. “My sister is very unhappy." she said. bravelyâ€"“ so unhappy that, I do not think she can bear much more; it will kill her, or drive her mad.” "It is killing me,” he interrupted. “You must wait at least. until she is willing,” said Lillian; and her calm digni- fied manner influenced him even more than her wordf, 11.8 she looked earnestly int_.o Hugh Fe‘rqely‘g face. “ Has she sent you to excuse her ‘2” he asked, gloomily. “It is of no use. Your sister i_e my promised wife, Miss Lillmn and see her I will.” “ She is really ill,” réturned Lillian. “ I am alarmed for her. Do not be angry with me if I say she is ill through anxiety and fear.” “Wait!" he cried. “Ab, must I wait yet Ion get? Tell your sister I have waited until my yearning wish to see her is wopriqg my _life away. ” ' Hugh Fernely took the letter from Lil- lien’s hands, and read it with a. muttered imgrecation of disappointment. The moon, wh oh had been struggling for the ,last half hour with a mass of clouds. shone out faintly: by its light Lillian saw a tall man, with a. dark handsome face, browned with the sun of warm olimes, dark eyes that had in them a. wwtful’sadness, and firm lips. He did not look like the gentleman she was accustomed to. He was polite and respectful.‘ When he heard her name, he guy-1...“. .4vw. u‘- took of bigI hat, and stood uncove;ed ing ‘1’." #3?”me frightened at the silence and darkness, but went bravely on. He was there. By the gate she saw a tall figure wrapped in a travelling cloak; as she crossed the’ path, he stepped hastily forward, crying with a voice she never forgot: “ Beatrice, at last you have connel" “ It is not Beatrice,” she said. shrinking from the outstretched arms. “ I am Lillian Earle. My sister‘is ill, and, has sent you this." , The night was dark, heavy clouds sailed swiftly soroes the sky, the Wind moaned fitfully, bending the tall trees as it were in an or. then whispering round them as thong . suing for pardon. Lillian had never been out at night alone before. and her first sensation was one of fear. She crossed the gardens where the autumn flowers were fading; the lights shone syly from the Hall windows, the shrubbery _oolged dgrk and rnysterious: _She was steel out of her father’s house at night to meet a stranger, and plead her sister’s cause with him l The thought horrified her. but the beautiful face in its wild sor- row. the sad voice in its passionate anguish, urged her on. Lillian went hastily to her own room. She took a large black shawl and drew it closely around her, hiding the pretty even- ing dress and the rich pearls. Then, with the letter in her hand. she went down the staircase that. led from her room to the garden. _ _ A Cc ntlnuod Itom Iooond DISC). plague. to be mind n in a. wretched olmdeatiue-love-tflair ' this! She to steal out at her father}: how at night to to Hugh Eernely‘s face. It was not 9 bad face, she thought; thgre CHAPTER XXXVI. To be continued. Mosquitoes. Miss Elizabeth Fleming, who died re- cently at Edinburgh. was one of the links between the present time and that of Scott. Her mother, Isabella. Rae. was the daugh. ter of James Rae. the father of surgical teachin in Scotland, and another of Dr. Rae‘s aughters married Mr. Keith, of Ravelston. at whose house Sir Walter Scott.aareat friend of the family,was in the habit of meeting Miss Fleming and her sister almost daily. Marjorie, or “ Maidie," as he always called the latter. was an especial favorite of Sir Walter‘s until the time of her death, at the early age of 11. Her little tale was beautifully told a few {ears ago by Dr. John Brown, under thm itle of ” Pet Marjorie.” 5 It is undeniable that Americans of the Eastern States are steadily decreasing in stature. There was a time when the Yankee was proverbially long and lank, but at the present day the lon variety exists only in the backwoods of filaine and New Hamgbirs, while the Yankee of Boston, New aven, Providence and other large towns is about the size of the average Frenchman. In New York the mean height of its native born inhabitants is still less. The young men of society and broking proclivities are more frequently ‘ under than over five feet. In the country ; towns the height of the men seems to vary inversely as the size of the population and among the farmers we meet with tall and welLformed figures. As we go west the average height steadily increases, except in the large cities, and in the North- western and frontier States a man who is less than six feet high is regarded as a peculiar and unfortunate erson. If, new, we look at Europe, we nd thatin certain countries men are small and in others they are of respectable height. The Scotchmen are as long and lank as the men of Maine or Minnesota. and the En lishman is ordinarily fully five feet ten inc es high, exce t in London, where a smaller variety of nglishman is occasionally met. In France, on the other hand, the men have dwindled so steadily durin the last hundred years that the standard of eight for admis- sion to the army has been repeatedly lowered. In Spain and South Italy men are small. whereas in North Italy and in most of Germany they are as tall as Eng- lishmen. Wherever we find a small race of men we can easily ascertain that they have decreased in stature withina century, and that this decrease is still in progress ; while in countries where men are of medium height no tendenc to grow either shorter or taller is perceptible. a. month ago two other dogs with some boys were in the river bathing near the old Maid of the Mist landing. The dogs, getting out too far, were elect carried down the river upon this island by the swift current. They attracted much attention by their scamperings on the rocks at the water’s edge, and were ‘watched by the travelling public passing over the bridge on the trains. The canines huvihg nothing to exist upon the citizens fed them by throwing pieces of refuse beet over. the precipice. .Several unsuccessful 1attempts were made to rescue them from their hermitage by means of a. trap worked by crepe from the bridge. Yesterday a young man named J es Brown, living at Suspension Bridge, N.Y, volunteered to descend by means of n. rope-ladder and secure the dogs. He secured two of the three, placed them in bags, and they were drawn to the top of the bank byarope. The other dog. not desiring ‘to quit his hermitage, placed himself beyond reach. The dogs being much valued by the difieb ent guests stopping at the hotels, it is expected that the boy will be fully rewarded for his daring adventure. Niagara’s Imprisoned Dogs Rescued by n Bold Youth. Early last spring a black and white bull- dog was thrown 011’ the railway suspension bridge at Niagara. Falls, a distance of 150 feet, by its owner. After striking the water the dog made a desperate effort to reach the shore, and in so doing it was cast by the rapids upon what is commonly known as Taylor’s Island, a large pile of rocks a few yards below the bridge. About into the truth of the report in thejpape're there that a. fatal accident had befallen her mother. From this it would appear that Marvin had concocted and published the story of the accident in the hope that his wife would return home and give him an opportunity to desert her. Friends went to Albion to her rehef, and she is now on her way home. Nothing; has yet, been heard from the detectives sent-after the impoetor and forget. who ‘ie'helieved to have escaped to Canada. bridal parpy was a telegraui from the lady, dated Albmn, N.Y., July 251.511. inquiring :nc- LI..- L-.-A.L ‘1 AL_ , flow a Virginia Young Lady was Decent-d and Ruined by an Advertisement in a Religiou- I’c-rledlcul. Early this month an estimable and highly connected young lady, whose widowed mother keeps a boarding house in Richmond, Va... and is extremely poor, in search of honorable employment readin the Hartford Churchman an advertisement for agovcrness to takecharge of the young child 1 of a widower. She applied for the position, forwarding letters of recommendation from an eminent judge and an Episcopal divine of Richmond. The advertiser came to Richmond in person. representing himself as Thomas Marvin. a wealthy widower from the West. and expressed such satisfaction with the character given the lady that he came on immediately to engage her services. He remained in Rich- mond several days. and the result of his visit was that instead of a governess he secured a bride, upon whom before‘ marriage he settled 330,000. The‘ contract was drawn by the judge who had in part been . the cause of bringing the parties other. Marvin's fine appearance, plausib e character, and the letters of credit and introduction he presented established the utmost confidence in him. He also succeeded.withont trouble. in negotiating at the First National Bank a draft of $800 upon Chicago, The, parties were married‘ last week. and left'for an extended tour. The return of the draft, with the statement that it and the letter of credit were forgeries. revealed the true character of. the impostor, and detectives were put upon his track by the bank officials. The first intelligence from the bridal party was a telegramfrom the lady, 2-4-3 ILA-4r, ‘vuv ' -.... Shaving and Shortening. “ STILL 'I‘IIEY 00MB." THE 3110 \V OVER. Iwhéin dressed, of eighty-four pounds and ‘ filled sixty-nine: cans. ~ ‘ . 1» A salmon, su posed to be the largest ever equght‘in the_Co )1!qu a_ Riyer. bad 3 Aweighg, A Chinaman started a laundry in Kings- ton and fared badly. The boys, whose ages ranged among the twenties, pelted stones. eggs and other missiles at his shop and cut down his clothes lines when full of clothes. The contents of a bottle of ink were scattered over some of the lincn. John went for the rascals with an axe, and but for the fact that they were fleetet thsndze some of them would doubtless be sufl'erets now. A Staynor J. P. fined a. pethmaeter for cutting down a shade tree which he found on the road, opposite the farm of Mr. Gilchrist, in Nottawnsega, and used to fill a culvort. The Magistrate held that shade trees had to be protected and could not be cut down with impunity by pathmastera or any one else for any purpose. Mr. D. Muchwauger. of Bright, has two cows which he claims cannot be beaten by any other two cows in the Province for givin milk. They averaged forvthe lest mont over 100 pounds each day and he got a. cheque from the cheese factory for 820.66 for the month. The Village Council of Steynor have rewarded the little girl who for an hour and a half fought th fire in the grass that caused considerable omega recently in the cemetery there. Says the Detroit Free Press : " For five years after a. man‘ leaves Quebec and settles in New England he is carried along in the census of that city. This is to give him a chance to get home-sick and return.” From time to time intelligence reaches' England from the Soudan which leaves no room for doubt that the African slave trade continues to be in vigorous operation in that country. It is. indeed, stated that no fewer than 50,000 or 60,000 negroes are still annually conveyed to the Turkish and Egyptian ports of the Red Sea, where they are disposed of to dealers from all parts of the Sultan’s dominions. Yet it is unques- tionable that in 1879 Col. Gordon dealt what promised to be a death-blow to the slave, trade in the Soudan. H13 Lieu- tenant, Gessi Pasha, who has lately died after suffering terrible hardships,fought and beat the slave traders in a pitched battle, in which they, relying upon superior numbers. made the first attack. Gesei Pasha inflicted a crushing defeat upon the slave traders, and liberated immense num- , bers of slaves. 'If Col. Gordon had been properly supported by Tewfik Pasha, there is reason to behave that the slave trade would have been driven out of the Soudan. Since his departure his old enemies have to a great extent regained their former influence, and have succeeded in reviving on a large scale the traffic in negroes. -It is quite true that that traffic cannot be efiectually suppressed until domestic slavery is abolished in Egypt, but at Col. Gordon’s experience show that y the adoption of a vigorous policy the number of victims may be greatly diminished, and the trade rendered both hazardous and unprofit- ableâ€"London Times. There 18 likely to be a lively contest for the representation of Birtle' n {he Manitoba Le elature. There are already four can- di ates in the fieldâ€"Messrs. Crear and Woods, of Birtle; Major Bolton, of Shell River, and Mr. Templeton, of Shoal Lake. The other day a gold medallist of McGill College. Montreal, was ignominiously plucked at his primary law examination because of his ignorance of Canadian history. Apples are a comparative failure around Belleville, and the curculio has brought destruction on the plum crop. Mr. Becker made his appearance. When confronted by the woman he recognized her as his wife. Mrs. Becker said that she had been living in New J ereey with friends and had not heard of her funeral. Appearing to lie:- Ila-band, Who Sup- posed lle [lad Buried Her. A despateh from New York says: On August lat, 1880, Mrs. Becker, the wife of John Becker, of 410 Fifth street, disap- peared from her home. Her husband con- cluded that she had either fallen or jumped into the river. Three weeks after her dis- appearance he found the body 0' a woman in the Morgue that he recognized as his wife's. It was delivered to him and he had it interred in Calvary Cemetery. Last evening, while Mr. Becker was absent, a woman calling herself Mrs. Becker made her "appearance at his house and asked for her husband. She was told that Mr. Becker had buried his wife ayear ago. She insisted, however. upo remaining until her husband returned an she was allowed to do so. to return home, and for this purpose money was sent to her. But instead of returning she was abducted by her .lover. That was the last that has been seen of her. She was taken to a house near 001- ‘linsby and there kept. Her stepfather came to this city but a short time ago in search of her. He went to the one whom he believed knew where she was, and asked, “ Are you the person who ruined my child ? " He said he was not, but the pro- duction of a revolver made him promise to get her. For several weeks the foolish girl had been hidden. She is in the hands of badly-disposed persons. The girl's family are in great distress on account of her con- duct. One of the young men who is inter- ested in the case borrowed 8100 from an uncle, and is said to be spending it in keep- ing her from her friends. As a last resort a warrant has been issued for the arrest of the principal. Seduction and Abductionâ€"The Girl Can. not be Found. A Kingston despatch says Gleuburnio is somewhat agitated over a scandal of con- sidemble magnitude. In March a young lady about 18 years of age, in poor health. was sent from her home in the vicinity of Belleville to friends in Gleuburuie. She was good-looking. nrd hence had many ad- mirers. About April she became acquainted with a young man who had returned from the States. He got into the confidence of the lady.and is said to haw ruined her un- der piomise of marriage: The relations of the young couple were dlwovel'ed and the girl’s relatives notified; 8.110 was requested A _ __ Ann.“ The African Slave Trade Vigorous. WAY‘VABD ONCE M0815. Latest Canadian Jottings. A W! FE’S RETURN. The death is announced of Mr. Wm. G. Fargo, President of the Amérilsan Express Company. [16 min the pioneer of that syatom, and died worth over twenty million dollars. , ‘~ - ~ ‘was in an adjacent room, immediately stopped the engine, while the employees hastily ran in the direction whence the unusual noise came. Oliver 00 and Edward Sh less, two of the mac inists, arrived on e scene just in time to see the form of a man being rapidly whirled around the main shalf leading from the machine shop to the planing mill. With every few revo- lutions his head and shoulders struck the roof of the shed above knocking the boards loose and flying two of them clear to the ground below. When the engine stopped the man’s head and arms were dangling from the shafts. His legs and body were completely wound around the shaft and strapped tightly to it by the belt, which had to be out in several places before the body could be removed. The bones of the left leg below the knee were broken and mashed into splinters, while the thigh bone was broken and‘ protruded through the skin. The other leg escaped with bruises, no bones being broken. Both arms were fractured at various places, the bones at the elbows being literally torn apart. The trunk of the body was terribly crushed. while the head and face Were unded almostbeyond recognition. The load oozed from both ears and from cuts on various parts of the ‘ body. The shafts and pulleys were bespat- ‘ tered with blood, drops of which discolored the shed roof for a distance of several feet from the shaft. The shaft was making about one hundred and fifty revolutions per minute, in every five of which it is estimated his head and shoulders struck the roof, as stated above. The scream uttered by him when he first realized his situation was distinctly heard over as uare off. as was also the sound of each col ision with the boards of the roof. It is most probable that the shock caused by the first collision knocked him senseless, and that he Was unconscious of the terrible bruises and mutilations to which his frame; was subjected. | a very sad one. Burns and his Wife separated about two months ago, and Jimmie had lived first with one parent and then with the other. When with his father the two slept on a dirty and dilapidated mattress in a stable, corner of Vanderbilt and Park avenues. As the father squandered almost every. cant be earned for rum, Jimmie fared badly, and it is thought that exposure and want of proper nourishment caused his deathâ€"New York Herald. (From the Pottsville Journal.) Issue Esbin, an employee of the Sharp- less Iron Works, West Chester, met with 9. frightful death on Thursday afternoon. About half-past 2 o’clock the hands employed in the works were startled by s. shriek, followed by sounds like displaced machinery whirling and oollidingwith loose boards. The engineer, John Morgan. who “Here comes Mr. Burns, and he’s drunk!” exclaimed the little son of James Irving last evening. as he looked from one of the windows of his father’s apartments, at No. 398 Kent avenue. Brooklyn. Mrs. Irving suggested that they.loek the door, but her husband, who knew Burns, said “No. Let him come in.” And so John Burns staggered into the room, with a coat thrown over his left arm, and leading his little son James, 9 years of age, ‘by the hand. The child looked Ill and could hardly stand. Casting the coat on the floor Burns said: “ Jimmie, lie down there; I’ll be back soon." He then staggered out of the house, remarking that he would return in a short time with some clean clothing and medicine for the boy. He had been gone but a few minutes when Irving was visited by aneighbor, who, upon looking at the child ' on the floor, said, ‘= That’s a very sick boy.” Mr. and 'Mrs. Irving, together with the neighbor, then went into an adjoining room and held a consultation as to what ' they should do in the matter. They finally decided to notify the police it the father of the child did not return within a few minutes, and have the little fellow removed to a hospital, After some further talk Mrs. Irving re- entered the kitchen, and a moment- after her screams brought the others into the room. There lay Jimmie on his back, dead. The, police were informed, and when the father of the boy returned, some time after. still under the influence of liquor, he was locked up for intoxication. The case, when investigated, proved to he, neck, arms and little finger. Besides all this glitter of precious stones the gossips credit her with possessing 365 (images, a. fact that is intensely mournful and truly heart-tending when it is remembered that a. wateringplace season hardly lusts over sixty dnys. and that three dresses 8. day for all that time will leave ninety-five gowns not worn. - Mrs. Astor's regslia is the only famous one that surpasses this Baltimore collection, and it would seem as if the lady had been no Binbad’s osve or in a shower of diagnonds, so thigkly do they fever he); to lan the spectacle of the coming day, and toi s when others rest that she may surpass the rivals in her chosen cult. A Hrs. Greenway. of Baltimore, now reigns as the “ diamond princess” of the season. setting herself ablaze from crown to girdle with her dazzling jewels and making all the other diamond-wearers in a ball-room pale and green with their lax admiration. The lady at Congress Hell with (.11 one hundred and thirty-nine - dresses i still astonishing the natives and the strangers two or three times a day. and finds her path a. pleasant one. There is one rodigy here in the person of a dame who as not repeated a. toilet once in three weeks. although straying herself in two or three difl'erent dresses daily. and yet announces to her‘edmiring sstelites that she has no maid; that she would not trust one of them. The tales of her sixteen trunks and one room full of wardrobes and racks of her finery are not half so astonishing as the fact of her having no neethsnded Phyllis to sort out and senior the innumerable bonnets and boots, gloves, fans, flowers and furbelows that match with and accompany each toilet. It must he that my lady lies swske nights DBEUHY WOMEN AT SABA'I‘GDGA. (Bantam letter to St. Louis GlobwDemocmt.) A Boy’s Dad Death. A Death Whirl. 1'1. TIVE, res ooublo omplovmnnt for Mach. on during no“ on, of longer, or mrmanmt. for few onergogo {oung‘mfim In thin and adioinh‘m counties. 0' bone w 0 can nhnw fn‘ir “mucosa and Ma Why-expenses, "hm-m non mimhn {and m onto uni-twin be paid. Add my will: references, Drawer 1. Toronto. . ~ , canons; coLns, ASTHMA wnoopma.covan, Bickle’s Antiâ€"Eunsumptive Syrup And for sale by dealers. Ask your merchant for Leanne 931d take no other. This oil under the severest test and most active com etition wssat the Toronto Indus- trial Exhib tion awarded the highest prize; also the GOLD MEDAL at the Provincial Exhibi- tion,Hemilton and the highest awn-d at the Dominion Exhibition, Ottawa, the silver medal. rel-mm sndmll who use Agricultural machin ery, will save money and machinery by using ‘ none but LARDINE. ' Machine Oil â€"A fellow who had been eating unripe fruit said something was wrong in the Department of the Interior. faultless. IN THE WORLD, Is manufactured by McCOLL BROS.CO., TORONTO Of all the Queen’s deughtcra none has ever mixed so freely and so Imquently in general London society. 8.8 the Princess Louise has done this peagou. Baldheaded men are informed that there is but one avenue of escape from their affliction, and that is Carboline, a. deodor- ized extract of petroleum, the great hair renewer. which being recently improved, is more efficacious than ever and is absolutely £__-ILI_-A, . LARDINE'! ‘f What] don’t you know yo'iuw: m1 daugh- ter’s age ?” . ‘ “Barter!" said the applicant, and the puzzled expression passed away. “ Darker! Why, Jedge, Lillie'a my wité.“ ‘ she can wallop any one'ot her fining-3 our block." ' “ You shotildn"; give; be} up w quickly, said the magistrate; “little girls will be) littlggirlg.” , “ I guess not. Lillie’ s not strum: on the reform. and none of ’em won Id do her a. poyg'rful 13952 _0 "good epnyho“. “ " Biu uctin' mean. very menu. I’m-gets I'm a husband and a. father and nughtel‘ hev my fumily'q rgppoct. Soc !" ll 1"... ‘LA I‘_ “ 1138 she liee'n ill-any refornmtory instiâ€" tution before ?" He was a huskyovoioed and very inaudible man, but he was doe ly in earnest. when ho‘ unwound the cotton wdkewlnuf from Liz: ueok yesterday and said to the muggintruto in the Tombs Court. “ I mun. my Lillie sent up.” Honor. A'sumxiiohs wasrgrantedr-N'. Y. Herald. "Bfitahgain'b little, Lillie ain't, GENTS WANTED. -- LUURAi She FORTUNEB Iron FARMERS. 50.000 Farm. 0.000.000 km. Best Wheat Land. llch mm. Cholca Timber. | Pinning, Mock Rulsln . Dairying. 1 Fuel Ild Water III A an'dnm-c. ‘ 850 per acreandu ward. Ono-sixth cash and five aunun pa outs. Rey ‘duced Fare and Fn-lgh to settlers. :ngto 13): " gnbliogflons No. 03." i Geo. Dowfirfiifififfi’ ‘Kééfi'fih Yonan at... Toronto. B. M. owport, Gene-ml Land Arggpgist. Pam, Minn. NORTHERN PACIFIC MINNESOTA. Epsom Land Agent for Unmmnfi, Ont. at has she been doing 1'” asked Hi3 “ Dillon“ “Noam-ship.” T. C. Ll VlNGH'l‘flN. jfiilma WEE THE VERY BES

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