Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 30 August 1883 — Page 6

THROUGH IMA.

Prom Pyramid Park to the Mammoth Hot Springs.

Glendiv*, Billings and Livingston, and I the Cattle Banges of Montana.

Up the Valley of the Yellowstone and Through Paradise Valley to the National Park.

Leaving the Little Missouri on Saturday afternobn, August 4tb, the ride was uneventful. After a few mileB the "Bad Land" buttes sink into lower swelling lillls, which run off at length into a billowy expanse ot plain. It is at about the place where tbis transformation has •completely taken place, and some twenty railea (rmu the Little Missouri, where big aiirn bo-rd9, by the 6ide of the track, not uuliUo those used to caution the unwary to "1 ok out for tbe locomotive when ihp bell rings," announce the otta«rwis° (indistinguishable boundary line between ih- territories of Dakota and Montana. At a little after six in the evening the train reaches ....

Glendive is a tolerably old settlement, though all that now makes it a town of import u-ce is attributable to tbe railroads. ll^re shops are located and the most considerable industry is that connected with the railroad. Years ago, I do not remember how many,

SIR GEORGK GORE,

an Irish nobleman with plenty of money from some large estate whose agent is probably in these times having some difficulty in collecting the rents, came out bore to hunt. He had, as already stated, plenty of money, and had absorbed a plentiful lack of zest in the d«ii»jf8 of fashionable life at hoise. In tha' d«y—this was some twenty or thirty years a.iro—the whole valley of the Yellowstone fairly abounded in game, the buffalo being as plenty as blooded cattle will be in afewyears. Locating himself .Jiere, at about tbe place where Glendive now stands, for two or three years he devoted himself to a wild and reckless and .ruthless slaughter of buffalo. He did not Kill to eat, for he probably contented bimseif with feasting on the tips of their tongues, or such other choice bits as seemed most pleasing to his Epicurean taste. He does not seem to have even saved tbe bides, though doubtless bis Irish tenantry would have been glad enough to have been warmed and fed by the robes and ilesh that he left in heaps rotting over the plain. He killed for tbe sake of killing, and finally left fairly reeking in gore. His going was as peculiar as bitj coming was capricious, and bis staj was sanguinary. Offended at the cupidity of some of his large following of retainers, he one day gathered together all his munitions of war and household effects, his tents, his wagons and everything, and piling thom in a heap burned tbem up, without, however, 'having tlio decency to mount tbe pile atid finish his own career, which came to an end shortly afterwards, though how or when or where I did not care to ask and do not know. Tbe name ef 'Glendive was given to the place by him.

ALONG THE YELLOWSTONE

the road runs three hundred and forty miles, crossing it in tbe rtoinity of Livingston, which was the terminus of our ride on the Northern Pacific. From this latter place the road continues on in its tremendous stride across the Rockies and down into tbe fertile valleys ef Washington and Oregon territories to its terminus at I'uset Sound, from whioh place the sea can &e reached in any one of several ways. All night long our ride wae along the banks or the Yellowstone. tbe lower bottom of whiob, now narrow iod aeain magnificently wide, is of wonderful fertility and some day will support a teeming population. But .at this present tbe amount of land under cultivation is inflnitessimal. It is all ONE TKKMKNDOUS RANGE FOR CATTLE. As ret even tbis industry is in its infancy. Hut the cattle men we saw at the stations and on the trains are enthusiastic. Every one is a near relative of Col. Seller*, aud in cattle raising on the plains of Montana is sure that be has struck a bigger thing than tbe redoubtable Col thought he had after he had found the mi.ssi«.g ingredient tor his eye water and was about to introduce it "in Asia, wtiere sore eyes was a national infirmity. The way these men talked reminded me amazingly of the conversation of toe people of Leadville, when 1 was there two years ago and every citizen was arranging to ride home In his special car and astonish tne natives with his opul*noe just as soon as he struck pay dirt in soae dozen or so promising mines. From what they say Montana is an amazing plaoe for cattle raising. Herds can stay out all the year through, and at the spring round up will be found fat and plump and in splendid condition, ready for the market, after a winter of pasturage on the buffalo ranges, ami with no ether care than a hcrdtr to keep there from wandering off the face of the earth. The great shipment of these beeves to tbe Chicago market, their condition when they arrive there amJ the prices they command, tbe army of new men daily going into it'and the perseverance, not to say the enthusiasm, with which those who have been

Most

Editorial Correspondence. NO. IV. AT HOME, Aug. 25,1883.

MONTANA.

GLEN DIVE, ..

on the bm.ks of the Yellowstone river. FJowii-g lrom this poiut a little to the «ast of ii'U tii the Yellowstone empties at Ft. BJford into the Missouri, the moBt considerable tributary of that ®reat river. The head waters of both •an not far apart up in the mountains eontiiMious to the National Tark, though «ai one flows many hundred miles before this union. From its mouth up to •Glendive the Yellowstone is navigable for sin ill steamers, though the traffic by that route, with all its difficulties and delays, is likely to diminish from now on in the face of competition with the swifter moving and always manageable irou horse.

in it increase their ventures and mnlti- glistening with snow and presenting plv tueir nerds, is a pr Uy toleral-le jus- iews and atmospheric effects which are «—r however, many more cattle are being oramic succession unfold a series of the shipped into the territory than out of it. grandest pictures. These mountains

of tbem are young cattle and many blooded animals" of the Durham and Hereford breeds. During the month of Julv, I was assured by one of the railway officials, the shipment of cattle into the territory over tbe road from points east bad been two hundred car loads a day. This seems an amazing amount, but he assured me it was a frozen fact. That oattle is the great industry is apparent from the number of herds to be seen from the car windows, from the immense number of cattle cars observed on all tbe side tracks and from the large and well arranged feeding pens along the road at which the living freight i9 unloaded from tbe trains in their progress east, to be fed and watered—sort of dining stations—on their funeral march to their man-i-feast destiny.

FORT CUSTER.

During the night the train crossed the Big Horn river, which flows north to empty itself into the Yellowstone at a station called Big Horn. Thirty or forty miles south of tbe road tbe Little Big Horn flows into the big Big Horn at Fort Custer. It was near tbe junction of those rivers and not very lar from the Rosebud, a small river which has its source in the neighboring bills, that the gallant Custer met and was overwhelmed by the savages under Sitting Bull. A splendid monument is to be erected on tbe battle field to Custer and bis men and the local papers, for every place has one or more papers, had something to say about the ba tle and and the monument as we passed through this region made historic by the heroism and" the death of the brave men who met their fate in that wild region.

Sunday morning found us at BILLINGS. Th'e railroad has done wonders for this town—in fact has made it, though it is rather an old place, as age is reckoned in Moutana, and is a future metropolis of magnificent distances and valuea in the eyes of the pioueers who hav«* ranches within ten miles of the station which they have, with rare foresight, platted and are willing to sell at so much a front foot. Of Billings a story is told which runs as follows: One of G. r. R. James' "solitary horsemen traveling alone by himself" was on bis way to the town several years ago, probably to see his newly bought home. Stopping tbe only man be met, be asked where Billings was. "Billings! Why, you are in it now." "And where is Starr & Bullock's store?" "Just you keep eighteen miles down the left hand side of this avenue its on the first corner." But that was several years ago, for now Billings is quite a wide awake little frontier city, though it is about as idiotically located as any place on tbe continent. There is no water in the place. Had its locaters gone less than a fifth of the distance to Starr and Bullock's store, say four miles, they could have had it on tbe banks of tbe river. But where it Is now it is four miles from water and for some singular cause, the reason whereof my informant could give no satisfactory explanation, wells are not a success. At anv rate, water must be hauled four miles and sells at 40 cents a barrel and is used, to be sure, but very sparingly and for just what purposes I do not remember, though for ablution and as a beverage were not, I believe, in tbe list.

Noon found us at LIVINGSTON, ''I •. the terminus of our western ride and just 1030 miles west of Chicago, or 1439 from Chicago, or, to reckon things from a universal center, 1515 miles from Terre Haute. Here the regular train left us and went on its way to tbe terminus of tbe road, where by a daily diminishing ride in Concord coaches (the gap has just now been closed) tbe traveler could be taken to the Pacific coast. Livingston is another creation of the Northern Pacific road and what with the round house and shops is a bustling place. It has a population estimated at 2,000, has two or three hotels, two daily newspapers, a multitude of gamblers, wayward jwomen by tbe score, any quantity of saloons, and dance bouses and is altogether almost as turbulent a place as our Wall Street. During tbe eight days we were in tbe Park, three men had been killed and one was dying from a pistol wound, and, as the local papers said, it was getting monotonous. But Livingston is a young place and is an outfitting point for hunters and miners and the rallying point for a boisterously jocular class of plainsmen. After awhile trees will grow on the treeless site It at present occupies and gentler manners will come with shade and opportunities of restful contemplation.

THE YELLOWSTONE PARK BRANCH. From Livingston the Northern Pacific is building a branch road down to the Northwest boundary ef the Yellowstone Park. This road will be when complete 57 miles long and will land the traveler within five miles of the Mammoth Hot Springs and its spacious and elegant hotel. When we were there only about forty miles of the road was built, but probably it is all finished'by tbis time, for when they start to build anything out in that region they do it and in short order. The road runs south from the main line of tbe Northern Pacific following tbe Yellowstone river up through a gorge in Snow Mountains and into and through

PARADISE VALLEY—1

a fertile plain extending a distance of thirty miles up tbe river and stretching out to a distance of ten or twelve miles in breadth. For all that it is so far from Terre Haute,Paradise Yalley, hid way out there in the mountains, is a beautiful place. Numerous irrigating ditches have been dug through it, and it is tolerably populous and a decidedlv prosperous place. It is peaceful now but the early settlers wco^e substantially built houses dot the plain, and are sprinkled aloug the river bank and up the green terraces of the sloping mountain sides, had to tight for their ground. Game abounded here and the river was full of fish and every prospect being pleasing Mr. Lo took a'liking to the place —bad a liking for it perhaps for centuries—and it required some argument to persuade him to move on. That tbt rauchmwu of Paradise Valley are prosperous is evident at a glance. A look of cosy comfort pervades their houses the door yards aie gay with flowers the barns are full the hay rioks mighty and the cattle fine and sleek. Almost anything will grow there except tropical fruits, but 6took raising is the favorite pursuit, the rich, plentiful bunoh grass of the lower slopes ef the mountains affording excellent pasturage the whole year through. The mountains are said to be full of game, though our party saw none, and trout and grayling are in the river fairly beseeching anglers fo come and catch-them.

On the south and east the ,c,, SNOW MOUNTAINS border the river, their lotty pinnacles

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZ&TF.&

lift their well rounded forms to the height of 3,000 or 4,000 feet above the elevated valley. For a groundwork of color there is the old gold tint of the dried grass that spreads a garment over all tbe slopes and down tnrough which can occasionally be seen a crinkled streak of vifid green, in the channel of some spring-fed stream, that gives the effect of a flash of lightning having been fastened there and turned to emerald. The golden-hue of tbe slopes is relieved by the "twilieht gloom ot the forest primeval" in tbe profound ravines that seam and iurrow the enormous masses. Sombre gorges, through which foaming torrents plunge down tbe steeps, harbor in their black recesses the wild creatures of the woods. The bald summits of limeetone or granite, having resisted the storms of centuries, stand out in frowning outline against tbe cloudless sky, or else veil their awful majesty in fleecy mists or purple haze. But to the perfect picture presented by the glorious mountains there are many charming accessories. On the west the mountains are not so commanding or impressive. Born of volcanic forces, their steep and rugged sides show evidences ot volcanic action. Stratified conglomerates and snormous thicknesses of breccia, variously colored, attract attention. Long ago streams of lava coursed down the heights, hardening into basalt or closer textured trachytes. The capricious sculpture of wind and water is seeti upon the softer material, which has assumed strauge forms of slender pill *rs, detached mounds, peaks, pinnacles and other odd and fantastic shapes.

In this neighborhood is BOTTLER'S RANCH, the home for many years of a hardy pioneer and near it is the massive bulk of Emigrant Peak, which is 10,629 feet above the sea, and 6,000 feet above the vally. In the sombre gulches of this mountain, gold has been found in great quantities, and a colony of placer miners are still finding a rich reward for their labor.

To get into Paradise Valley the railroad ran through what is known'as tbe lower canyon. To get out of it at tbe southern or upper end, tbe road runs lor three miles through the middle canyon. Precipitous mountains rise to towering heights from tbe edge of the river which, seething and chafing in its narrow limits, makes thunderous music among tbe reverberating rocks. Along this perilous edge, in a mere niche blasted^, from^he side, the railroad runs.

BY WAGON."

SLIDE,

a handsome peak standing out lrom other elevations and making a fine picture. Its name was probably given be cause a broad stripe of vermilion hue girdles the height half way up its face, but no trace of cinnabar (the ore from which quicksilver is obtained,) has been found, so that tbe name is a misnomer. The south face of tbis bare mountain is traversed from apex to base bv two enormoiis dikes of trap-rock, which curve slightly at the summit. These walls are, perhaps, 200 feet high and 50 feet broad, the space between them at tbe top beiug about 150 feet, and gradually increasing until it is doubled at the bottom. Tbe material between the dikes has been washed away, leaving the gigantic walls as smooth at vertical as if built by masons' skill. The broad, level top of each wall is dotted with pine trees, which grow tall and straight, in keeping with their exalted station. The early explorers christened tbis place the "Devil'* Slide," and the smooth and perfect plane between the walls, sprinkled as it is with a broad band of bright red -and brown clay down its center, does suggest the idea that tbe Devil had done some coasting down it. He would seem to have got hurt, too, at his sport and to have bled pretty freely, but that :ru6t have been a long while ago for he is spry enough now, as everybody knows. Devil take him, if ne had broken bis neck, nsbody would have oared. Adjoiuing this incarnadined slide are bands of red and yel low, which follow (he curves of the dikos, and arrest the eye by their brilliant and contrasting colors.

THE GARDINER RIVER.

Beyond this a short distaace the wa-gon-road crosses a spur of Cinnabar Mountain, near the boundary line or the National Park, and leaving the valley of tbe Yellowstone passes over into that of tbe Gardiner River, on the banks of which is Gardiner City, an ambitious young place wbicb attained a mushroom growth in anticipation of being theternimus of tbe branch road and the depot of supplies of all kind?, chiefly liquid judging from the character of the groceries, for tourists entering the Park. But the greed of a squatter who sought to dictate terms to tbe railroad for'tbe only level piece of ground for terminal facilities, killed the goose. Tbe road will end a mile or so further back at a place to be called Cinnabar City, »nd poor Gardiner City has been killed a-borning. A rain came up a little before dark and with our open wagon we put under cover. This made us traverse a wet a'-d steep and slippery road for several miles, landing us in tbe Park and at the Mammoth Springs Hotel, late at night, wet and dry, hungry.and tired, and sleepy.

cpsam THE

I -Admiration rr

OP THE

WORLD.

Mrs. S. A.Allen's

WORLDS

HairRestorer

IS PERFECTIONt Public P—FCIIFRNM MB. & A. ALLEN h*i justly earned this title,

1

and thousands are this day rgokang over a fine head of hair prod need by her unequaled preparation for restoring, invigorating, and beautifying the Hair. Her World's Hair Restorer

iw quickly cleanses the scalp, removing Dandruff and arrests the fall the 4 hair, if gray, is dunged to its natural color, giving it the same vitality and luxurious quantity as in youth.'... ... 9 n4.fl.frg- •ft***"

COMPLIMENTARY. "My

^fe hair is now restored to its youthful color I have not a gray hair left. I am satisfied that the preparation is not a dye, but acts on /the secretions. My hair ceases to fall, which is certainly an advantage to me, /f who was in danger of becoming bald." This is the testimony of all who use Mrs. S. A. ALLEN'S

WORLD'S HAIR RESTORER. "One Bottle did it."

jsaas 3 iflfrrj ",i

ifcji

to**

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Just beyond the worst ot this mountain railroad the temporary terminus of the line was reached, and there, after leaving our extra luggage in the care of the faithful porters of tbe cars which had come from long occupancy to seem like home, and were to await our return from tbe Park, wagons were taken for a sixteen mile ride to Mammoth Springs and its hospitable hostelry. In mountain wagons and Concord coaches the ride was made, up steep hills, along rolling plains and down percipitous inclines. Going, it seemed to be a pretty rough sort of a ride, but after a week's experience in the Park, when the samt road was gone over on the return, it appeared as if it had been flattened and paved, so wonderful a leveler of small it equalities is experience of rerl roughness. In tbis ride we passed CINNABAR MOUNTAIN AND THE DEVIL'S

13 PHYSICAL PERFECTION WORTH STRIVING S^o you wish to be perfect in mmd and body? Do you wish to be healthy and strong in all your parts 7 Use Allen's Brain Food. It will surely infuse new life and new vigor into the whole system it gives perfection to every part, increases the muscles and strengthens the brain.

A Mrs. McNeil, of Vicksburg, accuse her husband of murder and arson, com mitted long ago, no clew as to who was the perpetrator having ever been discovered.

.-Mi

W. C.B,

Baron de Steiglitz is the richest man in Russia. He lives about balf his* time in Paris, and quite inconspicuously, being a man of quiet tastes and mean person.

WASHINGTON, D. C.,May 15th, 1880. Gentlemen—Having been a sufferer for along time from nervous prostration and general debility, 1 was advised to try Hop Bitters. 1 have taken one bottle and I have been rapidly getting better ever since, and I think it the brat medicine I ever used. I am now gaining strength and appetite, which was all gone, and I was in despair until 1 tried your Bitters. I am now well, able to go about and do my own work. Betore taking it.

I

was completely prostrated. MRS. MAST STUART,

A CARD.

the er

To all who are suffering from rors and indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early decay, loss of manhood, &c., I will send a recipe that will cure you FREE OF CHARGE. The great remedy wasdwcoveied by a missionary in South America. Send a self addressed envelope to lue Ku,«. JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station D., New York City, wj* m- -it,

Decker Davis, treasurer of toe Chickasaw Guards of Memphis, has embezzled $2,000 ol the company's monoy and, disappeared.

Cured My Wife's Weakness. *4 From Evansville, Ind., the home ot our correspondent, Mr. Jno. R. Patterson, comes the following: "Samaritan Nervine cured my wife of a case ot female weakness." It's an extract from Mr. Patterson'letter. $1.50.

The commissioner of pensions will make no effprt to keep the list of pensioners. which are being put, in type, from the public.

Horsford's Acid Phosphate. Valuable Medicine 4,a

Dr. W. H. Parmelee, Toledo, O., says: ''I have prescribed tbe 'acid' in a large variety of diseases, and have been amply satt&fied that it is a valuable addition to our list ot medicinal asents."

Pasteur, the famous French medical investigator, has received a pension ol 25,000 francs lrom the French government. 'r-

IMPR0VEMENT FOR MTND AND BODY. Brown's Bronchial Troches for Coughs and Colds: "I cannot very well do with out them. There is nothing to be compared with them."—Rev. O. D. Watkins, Walton, Ind. Price 25 cents a box.

The Bellbrook magnetic well, near Dayton, has been sold for $8,000. The well was visited last Sunday by 3,000 persons.

Enterprising local agents wanted in this town tor an article that is sure to sell live druggists and grocers preierre j. Address Humision Food Preserva tive Co., 72 Kilby street, BotslOD.

Mrs. E. C. Kinney, the mother ol the broker-poet, Mr. E C. Stedman, is herself a busy writer, and is a sister of the late William E. Dodge. She resides in N a N

EW"Explicit directions for every use are given with the Diamond Dyes. For dyeing Mosses, Grasses, Ejgs, Ivory, ilair, &c. Only 10 cents.

There'll be a heaping honev crop in the state. [Cleveland Press.

If you have tailed to receive benefit from other preparations, try Hood'n Sarsaparilla it is the strongest,, the purest, tbe best, the cheapest.

An exchange talks of "the Marchioness of Slugbury's rules."

Chills, fever, ague and weakness are cured by Colden's Liquid Beef Tonic. Colden's no other. Of druggists.

Baltimore is building her Oriole fete into a big institution.

M.H. Ingram, Winamac, Pulaski Co., writes. "My wite is using Brown's Iron Bitters wi Ji marked good effect."

During the pail three weeks 125 men have been discharged from the Ohio Falls Car works. Tat re are now 1,100 men employed there. 1 JO-"* iirir

for

Hvj

lu

That is

Mi exp^oTof bany who have had their gray hair restored to its natural color, and their bald spot covered with hair, after using one bottle of

MRS. S. A. Aixwr's WORLD'S HAIR RESTOKM. It is Mt a dye

'{J

I [•.'

Infants

Castoria promotes Digc and overcomes Flatulency, Co:

tion, Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, and Feverishness. It insures health and natural sleep, without morphine.

Castoria is so well adapted to Children that I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me." JEL A. AKCHBK, M. D.,

it

$

ft,- *f« *1 4 -w fihl ,vt v? -vt' U.A.vts ft* A

:MtJk

I 'fiat*.

1

One

and

S3 Portland Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.

lot Victoria Lawd at 12£e. Sold elsewhere at 16%. Others at 15,18 and 20, fold elsewhere at 20. a&d 25.

yards

ft*., •fs ito4

Children.

:estion nstipa-

What gives oar ChOdren rosy cheeks,

What Sour Sto

WE LE 4D THE TRADE

SHAM REDUCTION SALE

viliUT A GENUINE

SLAUGHTER

—OF ALL­

*T'

"JTiS,'^1 SUMMER GOODS!

O E re el

%y

Even if Ihey do cot wish to purchase a dollar's worth ot

A.beautilul line ot dotted Swiss 25 percent, lower than at any other place in the city. It will pay to see them. An elegant line of Hoop Skirts at 25, 35, 45 and 50c cac-h sold elsewhere for double. 2,500 jards Bleached Muslin at 5c, sold elsewhere at 7c. 2,000 yards fine Brown Muslin at 3J^c, sold elsewhere at 5c. 1,500 vards Linen Toweling at 5c, sold elsewhere at 7%c. 800 yards Linen Toweling at GJ^c, sold elsewhere at 8J$c. 1,000 yards I)res9 Goods at 5c, sold elsewhere at 10c.

Elegant Dies? Plaids at 25c, reduced from 40 and 45c. Elegant Dress Plaids at 8^c, sold ftlscwbere at 12£c, i. 4,500

all wool filling Brocade at 10c, sold elsewhere at 20c. ,,, Our Corsets at 25, 50. 60 and 75c, sold elsewhere at 40, 65,75c and $1 00. 1,000 doz. Ladies' Hose at 5, 8%, 10,12% and 15c, cheap at double these prices. a Come early and bring your relations and your neighbors with you, so that you may all see that there really i3 one store in Terre Haute that sells Dry Goods for less than the regular prices. The above Bargains can all be found at the

O a S on or E as of

A. R. JESERICH & SON, Proprietors.

JAMES McCANDLESS,

...

wn

%'fSlST Vl ,#1^1

Assortnmet of

Caxiiagres,

r,

A*V

Minneapolis, Esterly and Osborne Binders, Hanilton Cultivator

And a Large Stock of

General Farm Implements.

I feel confident of my ability to meet the wants of any ore,, in need of agricultural implements.

Thos. B. Snapp NewtonRogers.

Lumber, L&th, Shingles: Office and lumber yard First and main

streets. Planing mills corner of Second and Vine streats. u: HO'S s*

r's

v"

What cures their fevers, makes them sleep Tig Castoria. When babiesfret and cry by turns. What cures their colic, kills their worms.

Bat Castor!*.

cures Constipation, Colds, Indigestion, Bnt Castoria.

Farewell then to Morphine Syrups, Castor Oil and Paregoric, ana Hail C*stor)#t

^CENTAUR^LINIMENT—an absolute cure for Rheumatism, Sprains, Burns, Galls, &c. The most Powerful and Penetrating Pain-relieving and Healing Remedy known to man.

j*

'S a -Mt .•i,

it will pay anyone to come fifty miles to see

i,oods.

a few of the many

BARGAINS.

1»§

iM

is#

1

&

Wholesale and Retail Dealer

il

ISlgS

ipi?

We quote only

..

Terre Haute, nd

in

TW

Buggies,

\TJ

Paim and Spxin.gr ^XTagroiis-

i-.

$

v*

"4

SNAPP &!ROGERS. I

Manufacture to order window and door frames, mouldings, bracks etfl, and casings, —DEALERS IN

.*

1

Terre Haute, Ind.

-rTHEBEST

W«nated 6 yyni wWlM^limiMiauiatdoriBouei jefumhd. The S j**1***8 Wukr la th» mrU.

wxarcana en do SNvort, tyi

PWWHI WUB55| towmt prtoa, Mi mm JUtom MUM. W- GO.

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tab. ridflad tern one tab to •potter &!t'