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Durham Chronicle (1867), 1 May 1902, p. 6

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v'vvvvvivvvvvv l' 1113 OLD STONE FOUNDRY .JNDERTAKING Mains in all principal points in Or.- E' tario. Quebe 1‘. Manitoba, United E State: and Englaml well Binders and Mowers. actor Machinery. all kinds. ’ Waggon“). po Buggies. Poa~harveszers and Pulpers. fichford Organs and Pianos. y’s Stoves and Ranges. New \"illiams Sewing Machines. yor-Massey Engines and Separators. Knoll Washer and Wriuger. all Charm and Barrows. tford Windmills. and Gasoline Engines. Em. Etc. L genera! Bank pend. Draftais nude on all p.‘ .1 V0“ (in FU RNITU RE Men! i0 lumen": Interest Ltandatd Bank of Canada. §hewell «if Lenahan alclay Nob “CLAY NOBLE desire to inti- mate to the public of Durham and vicinity that they have now opened out in the Calder Imple- ment. Warerooms a full line 0! Agricultural Implements and Domestic requirments including Capital Authorized armers, Threshers and Paid U Reserve Lnery, Band Saws. Emery Machines ' bend or power. Crestings, Farm. |’ Kettles, Columns, Church Sent do, Bed Festeners, Fencing, Pump lers’ Supplies, School Desks, Fen- ng Hill Castings, Light Coatings lBuilders’ Supplies, Sole Plates I Points for difierent ploughs in D, sud Costing Repeirs for Flour and Sew Mills. P REID DURHAM AGENCY. HEAD OPHCE, FORUITU. CHARTER SMITH, nace Kottlos. Power Strut Cut- », HoiAix: Eurnurfs. Shigglg .Ma- foundrymm . Du than, ’RO“I’I‘\ \'l'l‘B.\'l‘IO\ TO of the host makes Engines. Horne Powers, Soy :, Howe" and Respere. Also we end X-CntoSnwe gamed. filed nnd set. THE SAVINGS BANK. o1. HE SHINGLES FOR SALE. [3 H I)EPAR1‘.\IE\T. Fur all kinds of allow WE MAKE am and av Ban: [It king hasaiuess trans issued and collection: Joints. Dcposits H: REPAIR TR 3 on Savings Bank d LLY, Agent. lpwards. from! 'y facility «Horde L a distance. ay 81 Nob aflowe MANAGER CALDER'S OLD STAND. 9,000.000 1.000.000 600.000 at can 'H-S Alcide Jolivet and Harry Blount, al- though they had promised Michael Strogot‘f to keep his secret, yet did not leave his side. They spoke in a. low voice. and the blind man. putting what he already knew to what they now told him. was enabled to form an exact idea of the state of affairs. He was ccrtaln that the antars were actually investing Irkutsk and that the three columns had already formed n junction. One could not therefore doubt that the emlr and Ivan Ogarefr were before the capital. cd Harry Blouut. “Would you wish us 10 help you to accomplish your task?" “I prefer to act alone.” said Michael “ :nt those scouudrels have burned out your sight.” said Alcide Jolivet. “I have Nadia. and her eyes suflice.” Half an hour later the raft. after having left the little port of Livenitch- naia. was fairly in the river. It was 5 o’clock in the evening. Sight was fast coming on. It would be very dark and very cold also. for the temperature was already below zero. But why that haste to arrive there of the conrler of the czar. now that tho emperor’s letter could no longer be rc- mltted by hlm to the grand dnke. and he dld not even know Its content” At Strugut'f. clde Jollvet and Harry Blount could no more understand than could Nadla. Besldea. they had not spoken at tho past up to the moment when Alcldo Jollvet thought lt hla duty to any to Mlchael Strogofl: “We almost owe you some excuse. for not having ahaken hands with you before our separation at the poathouo or lchlm." “Anyhow.” added Alclde Jollvet. "you have splendidly whipped that vllltln. and he will carry the marks of it l long A deep feeling of pity was pictured on the face 0! Alcide Jolivet and his companion. Au instant afterward both of them. 803th near Michael Strogofl. warmly shook his hands and waited for him to Speak. "On my honor." answered Alcide Joll- vet. In half an hour after the departure from Livenitchnaia Alcide Jolivet and Harry Blount had heard all the detaila ot the cruel trials through which Ml- chael Strogofl and his companion had successively passed. They could not but openly admire an energy which the devotedneaa of the young girl alone had been able to equal. And 0! Mi- chael Stroxoi! they had formed the “Gentlouwn. he does not see you," said the young girl. “The Tartars have burned out his eyes! My poor brother is blind!" “Gentlemen.” said Michael Strogotr In a low voice. “you must not know who I am nor what 1 came to do m Si- beria. I beg you to respect my secret. Do you promise me?” “On my faith as a gentleman," added Harry Blount. "Very well. gentlemen.” "Can we be of any use to you?” ask- “No; you had a right to believe me 3 toward.” “No, not a long time.” simply answer- ed Michael Strogofl. But if the surprise of the Journalists was great at meeting Nadia on that raft it was without limits when they perceived Michael Strogofl’. whom they could not believe to he still alive. Mi- chael Strogofl had not moved at their approach: vet! same oplqimxmch M beg Io Alcide Jolivet was then installed on the fore part of the raft. when he felt a hand rest on his arm. He turned round and recognized Nadia. the sister of him who was no longer Nicholas Korpanol'f. hut Michael Strogofl‘. cou- rier of the czar. A cry of surprise was about to escape him when he saw the young girl place her finger on her lips. “Come." said Nadia to him. And. assuming an air of indifl’erence. Alcide .lolivet. making a sign to Harry Blount to accompany him. followed her. Alcidc Jolivet had turned himself to- ward the young girl. Alcide Jolivvt at in comnmnivmiou and asked pzlssngs and himself. offvrl: fixed. whatever it I fixed. whatever it might be. "Here one does not pay anything,” gravely answered the old mariner. “One risks his life; that is all.” Harry mount was always the cold Englishman who had scarcely address- ed a word to her during tlzt- whole jour- ncy across the Ural mountains. Alcide Jolivet seemed a little more grave than usual. and one would acknowledge that his gravity was justified by that of the circumstances. They had lwon tlu-re for three days. and very much embarrassed. when the raft arrived. The two journalists embarked, and Nadia saw tbom take their place in the (are part of tlw raft. T110 «11 sign of the fugitives was com- mumcmcd to 1111111. 'l‘lwre was cer- tainly some 011111110 of their being 31139 to pass during (hp 112;. I11 and penetrate into Irkutsk. Tiny tlwrvfure rescued to make the attempt. n [CONTXXUEDJ once plm'od himself with tlw om mzn'izwr -- for his companion n: to my thv {are he “I am ready.” Nadia. refreshed by some hours of re- pose. had recovered that physical en- ergy which misery had sometimes been able to subdue without ever having shaken her moral energy. She was thinking also that in case Michael Stro- gofl' should make a new effort to attain his end she must be there to guide him. But at the time that she was approach- ing lrkutsk the image of her father was pictured more vividly in her mind. She saw him in the invested town. far from those he cherished. butâ€"for She did not doubt it-strnggling against the in- vaders with all the dash of his patriot: ism. lei'ore many hours. if heaven should at length favor then). she would he in his arms. reciting to him the last words of her mother. and nothing should again separate them. The raft still moved nil. unperceived. amid the mass of floating: lee. Meantime the situation became more and more serious. It the raft once ceased to make headway. the fugitives would not only never reach Irkutsk. but they would be obliged to abandon their floating apparatus, which, crush- ed by the ice blocks, would not be long in sinking under the waters. The wil- low bindings were already breaking, the lit trunks. violently separated, were becoming entangled under the hard crust. and 'soon the unfortunate people would have no other refuge than the ice itself. Then, when daylight should come, they would be perceived by the Tartars and massacred without pity. amid H: e I‘mss of 11:): :1 21:1: ivv. Up 10 this timv uo"lm'1:n'(lvmchmvm had lu-vn signalm: m) Hw Ingln mu!» of mu Amnu'a. and 12124 Wham: mm the raft had not as yet come on a 11m wit.) their outposts. Meanwhile it was necesrary to ma- neuver with more care in the midst of the ice, which was fast closing. Michael Strogofl‘ and Nadia. lying down at the back part of the raft, en- dured without complaint this addition- al suffering. For a man who was reck- oning soon to attain his end Michael Strogol‘l’ seemed singularly calm. Be- sides. in the most grave situations his energy had never abandoned him. Al- read y he looked forward to the moment when at last it would be permitted him to think of his mother, of Nadia. of himself. He only feared one last and evil chance. It was lest the raft should be absolutely stopped by a barrier of thick ice before having reached Ir- kutsk.- He did not think of anything but that. being. moreover. decided if it were necessary to attempt some su- preme act of daring. Michael Strogon’ returned to the hack part of the raft. where Nadir was wait- ing for him. He approached the young girl. he tool: her hand and put to her that invariable question. “Nadia, are you ready?" to which she answered as There was a very keen frost. The fugitives suffered dreadfully from it, not having any other shelter but some hrnarhes of the birch tree. They press- ed close to each other in order to better support the low temperature, which during that night had reached 10 de- grees below zero. “If God wills it!" replied the old sail- or. “Against his will nothing can be done.” “You hear them ?” said Alcide Jolivet. "I...” replied Michael Strogoir. “but 999 " 1"“ 2*” _ Michael Strogofl had moved softly to the fore part of the raft. Alclde Jollvet had followed him. Both listened to what the old sailor and his men were saying. “Guard there on the right!” “Look! The blocks of ice are thlck- enlng on the left!" “Before an homgwe shall be stop- ped :9. This drifting of the ice, after all, was a favorable circumstance as long as it did not oppose an insurmountable ob- stacle in the passage of the raft; for indeed this apparatus alone on the tree waters of the river would have run the risk of being perceived even through the thick shade. whereas it was now confounded with these moving masses of all sizes and all shapes. and the din produced by the grating of the blocks drowned all other suspicious noise. The old mariner rose up. and tho um- jiks took up again their boathooks. All had as much as they could do. and the management of the raft became more and more diflicult. for the bed of the river was becoming obstructed. At 8 o’clock at night, as the aspect- of the sky had forewarned them, an ex- cessive darkness enveloped all the country. The moon. being new, would not rise above the horizon. From the middle of the river the banks were visi- ble. The cliffs at not a great height were blended with those heavy clouds which they displaced with dlfl’iculty. At intervals a breeze would come from the east and seem to expire in that nar- row valley of the Angara. “Keep it 0!!! Keep it 03 with your boathook!” The old mariner. lying down on the fur-o part of the raft near his men, oc- cupied himself altogether in turning aside from the ice blocks, a maneuver which he executed without making any noise. well expressed by the czar at Moscow- “In truth. be is a man!” ’ tinned to make its way through the , floating ice. It the Angara should be ‘ choked up with ice, it would form a 5 barrier, and consequently it would be impossible to follow the current. A!â€" ready the passage down the river was slower. At every lnsn‘rr there were * collisions. or time was- by having to make long turnings. - they must escape landing on the there. they : must take a narrow pass between it: in fine. many anxious drawbacks. For half an hour the current quickly carried along the block of ice which was hearing Michael Strogoir and Na- dia. At every moment they feared that they might sink under the water. Be- ing caught in the stream. it followed the middle of the river. and it would not be necessary to give it an oblique direction until there was question of making for the quays or lrkutsk. Michael StrogoflJwith his teétn set and his cars ready to catch the least sound. did not utter a single word. Never was be so near attaining his end. He felt that he was about to we Michael Strogofl and Nadia could hear the firing of guns, tho cries of dis- trvss. the shouts of the 'l‘artzzt's that made themselves heard up the river. The!) little by little those cries of deep anguish and of ferocious Joy were lost in the distance. "Oh. those poor companions!" whis- pervd Nadia. CCU?” v- v - At length, at half past 1. in spite of all their united ot‘fdrts. the raft struck against a‘ thick barrier and stopped al- together. The ice which was floating down the river cast itself upon it. and forced it against the ohstacie and lmhi it motionless as if it had been (lriwn upon a reef. ~râ€"A_.MAII l_ u-.." â€"â€"â€" And now only a few hours of (12(- night remained. It the fugitives did not reach Irkutsk before 5 o’clock in the morning. they must gi' ‘ up all hope of ever entering there. â€"--'4_ -‘P At this place the Angara becomes nar- rowed to not more than half its normal breadth; hence the accu: miation of ice blocks. which were by little and little piled one upon another under the action of the double pressure, which was con- siderable. and of the cold, whose in- tensity was redoubling. At 500 paces down the river again became wide. and ice blocks. detaching themselves by lit- tle and little from the lower edge ot‘ that iield,continued to float down to Irkutsk; hence it is probable that without that narrowing of the banks the barrier would not have been formed.and the raft could have continued to descend the current. But the evil was irreparable, and the fugitives had to give up all hope of reaching the end of their journey. 11' they had had at their disposal the tools which the whalers usually employ to open out canals across the icetields. it they had been able to cut this field as far as the place where the river be- came wider, perhaps the time would not have been wanting, but not a single saw, not a pickax. nothing with which to cut the crust. which the extreme cold had rendered as hard as granite. What should they do? At that moment ritie shots were heard on the right bank of the Angara. A shower of bullets was directed upon the raft. Had the unhappy men been perceived? Evidently. for other deto- uations resounded on the left bank. The fugitives, caught between two tires. became a target for the Tartar marks- men. Some were wounded by these balls, although in the midst of the great darkness they only fell by chance. “Come, Nadia." whispered Michael Strogoi'i' in the ear of the young girl. Without making any observation. ready for ovorytlnin". Nadia tool; the hand of Michael Strogot‘f'. “1 am thinking of crossing the bar- rier,” be said to her in a low voice. “Guide me. but let no one see us leave the raft." Nadia crept on in front of Michael Strogotf. The halls fell around them like a shower of hailstones and crashed upon the ice. The surface of the field. rugged and with sharp edges. made their hands bleed. but still they kept advancing. Ten minutes afterward the lower border of the barrier was reached. There the waters of the Angara again became free. A few large blocks of iee. becoming by degrees detached from the field and heating: with the current. descended toward the town. Nadia obeyed. Michael Strogoff and she glided quickly over the surface of the ieetield in a silence that was broken here and there by the firing. THURSDAY. MAY 1. um: h H H11 rk mum!) to make its way hwy le I'h'vr itself be- A". and the route was free. rfi __ _-- â€"â€"â€"v v all-u“. VI the Tartars. At the-same time as that last news the grand duke learned that the emir of Bokhara and the allied khans were directing the movement in person, but what he did not know was that the lieutenant of those barbarous chiefs was Ivan Ogarefl. a Russian oil!- cer whom he himself had cashiered. I Those works were begun on the day on which Tomsk fell into the hand: of AI.- News of the taking of lchim. ot Omsk. ot Tomsk. came successively tc Irkutsk. They could not count on he lug soon relieved. but they must pre vent at all price the occupation of the capital of Siberia. The few troops scat- tered over the province of Amur and those in the government of Irkutsk could not arrive in sutflcient numbers to arrest the Tartar columns. Besides. since Irkutsk could not possibly escape being invested. it was of the utmost importance to put the town in a posi- tion to sustai a siege of some length. ML-..‘ -â€"- - The grand duke could do nothing but organize resistance. a thing which he did with that firmness and coolness of which he had glwn under other cir- cumstances lncontestable proofs. The grand duke. after having visited the principal cities of Siberia. traveling in military rather than princely style. without any retiuue. escorted by a de- tachment of Cossacks, had gone even as far as the countries beyond the Bab kan mountains. Niehoiaevsk. the last Russian town which is situated on the shores of the sea of Okbotsk. had been honored by his visit. Having reached thehoundaries of the immense Muscovite enmire. the grand duke was returning to lruntsk. from whence he would soon return to Eu- rope. when the news reached him of that invasion. which was as sudden as it was menacing. [1e hastened to re. enter the capital. but when he arrived there communication with Russia had been cut off. He still received a few tel- grams from St. l’etersburg and Mono cow. He could evenanswer them. Afterward the wire was cut under the circumstances already known to the render. Irkutsk is the residence of the gov- ernor general of eastern Siberia. Un- der him is a civil governor. in whose hands is concentrated the administra- tion of the province, :1 head of the po- lice, who has a great deal to do in a town where exiles aoound. and lastly a mayor, one of the leading merchants. an important personage by his im- mense fo'rtune and by the influence which he has over his fellow citizens. Besides. it is known that on account of particular circumstances the brother of the czar had been shut up in the tonn since the commencement of the im asion. Irkutsk was Isolated from the rest of the world. “Toward 2 o’clock in double row of lights lit horizon on the two ban On the right was t lights of Irkutsk. on of the Tartar camp. The garrison of Irkutsk was then composed of a regiment of foot Cos- sacks. which numbered about 2,000 men. a body of foot gendarmes. who wore the helmet and blue uniforms striped with silver. It was a journey of political impor- tance that had led the grand duke into those distant provinces of eastern Asia. - Michael Strogoff was not more than half a vcrst from the city. “At last!" whispered he. But suddenly Nadia gave a cry. At that cry Michael Strogon‘ rose up from the block. which became very un- steady. His hand stretched out toward the head of the Angara. His face. all lit up with the reflections of blue lights, became terrible to look at, and then, as though his eyes had been reopened to the light, he cried: Seen from a certain distance. from the top of the mountain which runs along the great Siberian route at a dis- tance of some twenty versts, with its domes and belfries. its graceful spires. like those of minarets, its spiral domes, it has a somewhat oriental appearance. But that oriental appearance vanishes from the eyes of the traveler from the moment he enters the town. The town, half Byzantine. halt Chinese, becomes at once European by its macadamlzed streets, bordered with sidewalks, with their rows of gigantic birch trees. by its brick and wooden houses. some of which have several stories, by its many splendid cquipagesâ€"in fine, by the whole body of its inhabitants being very advanced in the progress of civ- ilization. and to which the latest fash- ions of Paris are not at all strangers. At that epoch Irkutsk. refuge for the Siberians of the province. was crowded. It ahounded in resources of every kind. Irkutsk is the emporium for all that countless merchandise which ll ex- changed between China, central Asm and Europe. They did not fear to draw there. the peasants from the val- ley of the Angrara. the Mongols-Khal- kas, people from 'l‘oungouze and lion- ret. and to allow the wilderness to stretch out between the invaders and the town. That situation must be given in de- tail. [culla tows.” l v‘-.___ of 30.000 souls. A high hill of solid rock, skirting the right bank of the An- gam, serves as a splen- did position for its churches, crowned by a high cathedral, and for its houses, built in picturesque disorder along its slopes. CHAE‘TER XVII. Rli L'TSK. capital of east- ern Siberia, has in ordi- nary times a population was the glare from the 51:. on the left the fires US: yn Send for free sample. ‘CO'IT BOW’NEj Tmtq. Scott’s Emulsion wakes it “Huts it to work again making new flesh, That’s the way to get fat. Scott’s Emulsion can make him use it. How? By mak- ing him hungry, of course Scott’s Emulsion makes a thin bOthungl'yallover. Thought a thin body was naturally hun gry didn t you? Well it isnt. A thin body is asleep-not workinsâ€"11011:: on a strike. It doesn’t try to use it’s food. You 0352 Lead a Horse You can’t make him cat either. You can stuff food in- to a thin man’s stomach but that doesn’t make him use it. to water but make him drink. W'ben the composition camp to an end. Richter expressed his Grim-ism i I. very few words. “\VOH." 110 said. “I. (00. hat written compositions In make a pile 80 high"-â€"mising his hand three feet from the groundâ€"“but l lmt‘ burn- ed them !" A Richter Anecdote. It In not always the great conthzvtor that shlnes as a composer, though un- fortunately he often labors umlcr the delusion that such is the case. (m one occasion Hans Itlt'htor was prwvnt at I concert given by a brother cm; nufit‘l'. at whlch the latter performed a lulu; and not partlcularly interesting work of hls own. It was. then. in works of fortification that the hands were iirst minim-m1. They worked day and night. 'i‘l.t~ grand duke found a Spirited pnptilzttinti in supplying that need. and ni'tt-z-wu'ti he found them most Draw in its di'fuuse. Soldiers. merchants. exiles, ptnszznts, all devoted themselves to the common .satety. Eight days before the Tat-tar. had appeared on the Angst-a rampart; of earth had been raised. A moat, flooded with the waters of the Angina, had been dug between the inner and outer wall of the fortification. The city could no longer be taken by a sud. .den assault. It must be invested and besieged. One can see that things had turned out otherwise than he had reckoned. On the one hand. the march of the Tar- tar army delayed by the battle of Tomsk; on the other. the rapidity with which the works of defense had been carried on by the grand duke. For these two reasons his projects had {ail- ed. He found himself therefore under the necessity of carrying on a regular siege. The junction of these divers corps took place on the 25th of Seplmnhvr at the camp of Angara, and all the army, except the garrison: left in the princi- pal conquered towns. was concentrated under the orders of Feofar-lihun. Ivan Ogarefl, a clever engineer, was certllnly able to direct the operations of a regular siege. but he had nut the material to carry forward uis opera- tions quickly. So he had hoped [0 sur- prise Irkutsk. the end of all his eii'orts. The passage of the Angara having been regarded by Ivan Ogarcfl as im- practicable betore Irkutsk. a strong body of troops crossed at some wrsts down the river on some bridges of boats which had been established for that purpose. The grand duke did not attempt to oppose that passage. He could only have harassed them without preventing it. not having any field- pieces at his dlsposal. and this is the reason he remalned cooped up in It- kutsk. The third Tartar columnâ€"that which had ascended the valley of the Xeni- seiâ€"appeared in sight of Irkutsk on the 24th of September. It immediately oc- cupied the abandoned outskirts. of which the very houses had been de- stroyed in order not to impede the ac- tion of the archduke’s artillery. which was unfortunately very insuiiiciem. The Tartar: organized themselves while waiting the arrival or the two other columns which were commanded by the emir and his allies. had been ordered to abandon the to and villages. Those who did not w" refuge m the capital were commnjfek retire beyond Lake Baikal. to Wh to the Invasion would not likely extender ravages. The crops or corn and fora“ were rcquisitioned for the 1mm an that last rampart of Russian p0\}.'0:nd the extreme east was prepared m in slat for some time. re Irkutsk, founded in 1611. is situated at the confluence of the Irkut and u! Angara. on the right bank or the river Two wooden bridges. built on piles and no arranged as to open the whole Width of the river for the necessities of mm. gation. joined the town with its 0m. skil‘ts which extended along the left bank. The outskirts were abandoned. the bridges destroyed. The passage of the Angara. which was very wide at that place. would not have been possi. ble under the fire of the hesiegmi. But the river could be crossed Qiilinr 31.0“ or below the town, and as :1 («inset quenee irkutsk was in danger Ur lwing attm-lwd on the east side. \\'iil(‘li no rampart protected. [To an CONTINUEDJ 111E “Wm Lakiwsflim SS K.- .jsln 1» my "mason momma M mums H'JUSE. MRAFEAXA 3‘ _--â€"--A-- A‘l-‘ its 2"?” at Ur; ufagan; etc. ~ 50* “Mug bscqucmi _j -......_--nu-nt \t ‘ v DEPARTm;.\ , flours 9 m 12 a. u and ofiive. Old Town, Durham. Bl EM 131:? _ i:m~‘_:4 'I Foursâ€",8 to 10 n. 111.. .. [1. III. 898033” aflmfli 0‘ women and child r011 UV 'hO Durham Fianna“ Block. . 1{85ide||('0* Lamhh n he Stulou. cording facil D Uflice “\m ( Store LUW'GI 'lmnn of money to luau propertv. ARRISTICR Mclutyre’s ham. Culluctiun attended to. 50:1 try Oflice. Fl-‘ICl-I l. B. Hutton. I) wear l-ln reasonable 3 ate ~ borrower. “Hi (1‘ the Bank ) Arthur Gun. {:3 HYSICIAX A.\‘ 1y .sl !. EMBER onto. Imvilr: we 'l‘ul'uh‘u h in “WW. Pupik UL! corner but sum FFICEâ€" FIRST in u m 11‘ Ln! (1 ear in: mm attended no Gfey. Lard \ DIVIMUH. (fund “temptiy mm uished If rm ABRISTER, $0le m Tm: Cm addrc>~,1 . . yearm ‘- Em'rm: itns and Dr. T. G. Holt. L. D. ARRISTEII AMES 1’; Iiss Margas‘t ONOR H 7; \- Tnfisicm AM ES CA1 sending a -‘ ”certain mu on m prom“ ’.“ {'1 l MGM”! mm!“ ‘ “he" " |T NIL m wiihnlll U -‘A. , DURHAM, om: mu vs II": "' " 118.!‘1. sum W" : (our mom a Go‘sslflmdwu. . a F St“ “'38!“ CG H Marri euseti "w'vx. " " '- Scimifit 1W G. Lefroy Nucuaui said IS lo pal Dc’llidl I)! \\' . over McLachla resbyteri ”.P‘!‘ .ie 3 l. P. Telford. Ill lam 1! Dim a nu“ urchc fl Davidson. 80th (‘K ll :OI'I l'l Al

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