Zurich Herald, 1924-08-07, Page 4So Shall Ye exp!"
�] !
:VS ARE CONSTANTLY SEWING ON THE BESTGTIBS
'f [CANE i ;CAN BU Y. *`
liVE ARE REAPING SATISFIED CUSTOMERS. NATURAL ISN'T
Ate WUEN WE SOW OUR ADVERTISEMENT IN THE . NEWS`
1:PE , STATING A PRICE le011 A SUIT, COAT, TROUSERS, OR
AnikrAvtR THREAD MIGHT SUGGEST, WE INCLUDE THE BEST
' /EVERYTHING IN THAT SUIT. THE BEST CLOTH, THE BESt
4lagIN'GS, THE BEST PADDINGS, THE BEST THREAD,ETC., AS
LL AS THE BEST OF' OUR ABILITY IN .CCUTTiNG, FiTTING
'SD'%1ISD MAKING. SHOULDN'T WE REAP OUR REWARD? THIS
SOWED TO REAP YOU AS ONE OF OUR CUSTOMERS.
'MAHN• YOU NEED A SUIT, • COAT, !TROUSERS, OR FANCY VEST,
Y9.'HIS ADV. LEAD YOU TO OUR SHOP, WHERE WE CAN
• ISOV E TO YOU' THAT WE LIVE UP TO OUR WORD.
YOU WILL LIKE CUR WORK
I.E. Wild, Tair, Zurich
HERALD PRINTING
OFFICE
.VERTISIN a RATES
lassifteel Wednesday noon Frons the
eellieeellaneous artieles of not
than live lines, For Sale, To
awe, or Wanted, Lost, Found, etc.
Igatelb insertion 25e.
Zicieldress all communications to
lepiay Advertising -Made known
Via 'application.
atm Senimalo--One insertion 50e
Urea inaertions $1.00.
Warm or Real Estate for sale
i9 for first month, $1 or each sub-
e2seaexat insertion.
.WUCTION SALES—$2 per single
''';iielertion, it not over five inches in
'The !Herald Department is al-
dye ready to turn out first -claw
asaork at moderate prices consider
tSieg the great increase in cost of
llerodnetion. Every farmer should
S many have already, have a
tinted supply of note paper and
itterce'lopes, with No. of Telephone
Ansa Aural Mail route, and perhaps
ie hatever specialty he follows in
*healz:, grain or fruit. It looks_
'ienees'likeand costs little. more
'titan the retail price of the blank
etti+ceieirte
.reading mattes,,'''
'OMNI Thanks, In ]Memoriam, 'c,
total and Legal advertising not -
/lest insertion and 5o per line for
a feetive after Jan. lst. 1920
THE HERALD
ZURICH, ONT.
`?CHse Province of Quebec will
$gave as surplus of $1,000,000 for the
iscaal yeas ending June 30th'. Thins
'si et he 25th surplus recorded in teeenvince.
7. r'r- -.i tr
IE THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
.liml $ ��� o»mG '.ad w fl 171
9QI AIG
fi iwc af'Far 7AiTa..;:y
Vie, that loveth 'silver hilas not
'e rsatiefied with eivelr; nor he that
sVeth abundance with increase;
Male is also vanity.
?Jul now is /three fl i t iron, the
ad. end bt sorrae the first fruits of
em that slept. —I Cor. 15.2'
, U.
eeret1 ereni, if 'a man be over-
Iteeken in a fault, ye which are° sp:.
ia'ttuul, reetore such a arae in the
"mart of n',e kir? •s; considering thy-
lfy lest thou, also be tempted.-
, ii ;1.
'E o•v-e,'Jeyru peace, Longsufferine
egeutleness, goodness, faith, rneel
41aless, temperance, against scull th-
aere is no law. --Gel. 5;22, 23.
.$f thine enemy be hungry, give
aaim bread- to eat; and if he be
West, give him: water to drink.---
Z!i'oV; 25;21..-
This is fire coy fidence that we
'Neve in him, that if we ask any -
letting Recording to his will, he
1'`iSt' .w eth us. -1 John 5;14.
31ye hath not seen, nor ear
Ili'eard, neither have entered into
* i heart of man, the things which
'xod hath prepared for them. that
"lee :ham, -1 Con. 2;0
;Seek ye the Lord while he may
ratteedir tall ye upon him }while
neax.4Isa 50;;6,
P+eelee I leave -with youe rai
• the splendid success attained by
irrigation -ism in Alberta is evidenced
by the last financial ,statement of
the Taber Irrigation District. The
report reveals a total surplus col-
lertable or on hand of $30,000, of
which $7,000 is on deposit in the
bank. Operations have been so satis-
factory that negotiations have been
entered into with the Canadian Pa-
cific Railway' to set up a sinking
fund of $3,000 to $5,000 to redeem
bonds of the district held by the
railway. In this way it is hoped
that the district will be cleared of
debt in a few years.
The Canadian Pacific Railway an-
nounces that it will resume its win-
ter cruises in 1925, one round the
world and the other to the Mediter-
ranean. The 22,000 -ton Empress of
France has been selected for the
former cruise, which will last four
months and will completely encir-
cle the globe. She will start from.
New York on January 27th. The
ship has been recently converted ire
to an oil -burner and entirely reno-
vated. The Empress of Scotland,
42,500 tons, will make the Mediter-
ranean cruise, lasting four months
and including all points of interest
en that sea.
'The Trans -Canada Limited, :the
crack daily train of the Canadian
Pacific between Montreal and Van-
eouver, and the longest distance and
fastest long-distance express in the
Id will resume service May 18th
"• ` 'the route. The r
Vancouver, fone rmerlyn92 hourswee, has
been cut by two hours and the
running time between Toronto and
Vancouver, formerly 85 hours and
50 minutes by.one hour and ,15
.minutes. These cuts. will ?benefit
those going to Europe and the Or-
ient. C
BLAKE
Mr. J. A. Douglas and son o
Hyde .Park, spent the week -end
with frlenclsin this vicinity.
Mr. and (Mrs. Wm. Sw:azie and
family of Tornto,, accompanied by EXETER
Mr. and MY.Lars:. C'olvert of Londor, -
called on friends ,in the village on
Sunday
Miss -Clara Zapfe, whowas vis
iting friends in this vicinity ret-
urned to her home in Brucefield.
Miss AIberta Finlay spent a few
clays with friends o
inL radon,
Mrs. W aite:rts and daughter of
Tavistock who were visiting at the
home of Mr. and Mns. H. Wa.lteles, was in town the other day engin-
have returned home engin-
eering the sinking of concrete po-
ises for the erection, of a fence at
the River. Park, which is undertak-
en by the Horticultural Society.
Mr. and Mrs. Theo. Willert and•
Mrs. ITalievay, of Carl), Mich., are
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank Triebn
ner of Stephen.
Capt'. Rowland, of the .Salvation
Army, .conducted 'services at Sea-
iVirs. J. L. Nelson and daughter forth's Old Boys.
!Miss Kathleen of Ft. Wayne,. Ind+,
are visiting + Samuel Martirrr, who has been on
!ting with their- •cousin, Miss, (a visit to .the Pacific Coa;st•, retur-
Edith Walper. ned: ii'o his. home here and reports
Mr. Ernest Weiner of Lot An- a verylease
gele, Cal. is a guest at the p at trip.
of C. g Koine Wam>i. Baker of town was.painful
ofi C. L Walper and other rel- ly injured while engaged on the
11es, fraunesw'ork of Win. Sander's beim;.
,Bank b IM -Isaac has rented the Stephen Tp. He was attempting
rilding from Mr. George to wady across on a joist over' the
Xellernran. and is having it remod- granary, when thetimber
elled for• an tip -to -date Tele ho efe the lor, 'tarred
Telephone and he fell to fait floor, alighting.
'Central chid Undertaking. parlor. on his head and !shoulder from wh-
Mr. Mcisaac, will .move into his•new ich he received a bad �shakin
!remises the beginning: pf "the Another o f i
pnoari:h: - of our ies..dent�s has pas
se clammy, in the person of Hen-
. Mr. and Mra. Russell Baynhain;of r'etta wife
Grand Bend have moved to town. .Alfred Wilds, bene h wsie of Ir.
Me. and Mrs,. J � Tied°riitans`u*ho died •at her
H. Ehlers off Kama here on July.. 24th, at the age
Indianapolis, Ind.,; are vi�sitirifg with of 63 years
the forrmer's parents, 'Mr. and Mrs e and 11 .rnontlris,' ,she
H, Ehlers. liaad been sicl: since last Septeiu-
Mr. and M. Tod Willert �• - ber with gall istonee and 'suffered
'ire, Midi;, visited relatives of re mucle. About thrice months she
t ea here was operated on at London and
I Mrseek. showed. feigns' of ilarm•ove'ment. Be-
S mpson of Kitchener spentsides
> lm her husband ,she leaves six
la furl days, at the home of Mia Li of a hely; a
i leinstiver�, Sr, lust week. , else i Sister e in Six
M`r, and, .Mrs• :S. :Ghon and thilr - brotli^rs, het, eel -veins. were laid to
ren or -Saskatoon,
l rest at the Grand Bend cem�etxer •.
, are visiting y
re-
latives int this v'icinity.
Mr. ] . Walper. of Los,' Angeisv �N
COU. .,
Cal., ancl' Mx'. Abel Ti.lrins." COUNTY I't�E4'�S.
P. Huron � K truer of •.,;.,,,,,,.+~.�,
are visiting in town .rtr
iSre unto, . very L
you;, . A. ,
not sr Ii.i
g a the: 4v ali, i occapied the •pulpit iia the t e scrn death by drowning
giveth, give '1' tinto you. Let Evangelical church, Sundayto`y`s plies` nxi, - h a* relay 'Afternoon
a' tita't yogi h; sir 1,.., t+ r nblr d neither ii, •, ewers IAA wli rr Jo>ai� : li 1! 'r
•l. - y. �, /.a7 - li 1Ce, haw. Hld(N ,
't be afraid. rrohit I4aiY Art \Vnl It nn, sr toee eye Me„ o Mrt 9. jaw. C .�7a:11
Li9'I;CT Zimmer, • j+d' � :.. � ,
cYZ;!7i0 : lts t .i
lya *1 7co lrft.
what, zn t ax
motored to Pt, Stanley Monday..
1‘1.r, :Reginald Armstrong and isis
ter ,Terirraine of London, are vis
iting relatives here.
M'. and Alrsi. Otto Restarneyer
wad family t ai 1 spent n the w
yweek-end
l end'
London.
Mrs, P. Al, Humble and childr-
of Sarnia are visiting her raothez
Mrs. Finbkeeinev, '
111r. homer Guenther of St. Th-
omas
'apenj tthe week -end at his
home here.
iVir. and Mrs. C. Powell and fa
ily of Thedford, were Sunday ,vis-
itolis with Mr. and Mit. D. Tiernai>i.
1Viis. Wickens of Ingersoll :is vis-
iting at the home of 1%1r. P. Fras.-
sold.
Mrs, John Hoffman of London,
visited with relatives in this vic-
inity last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Kraft of -Kit-
chener called on friends and 'relati-
ves. in town on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Guenther -
of Windsor, are visiting with the
former':s parent's, Mr. and Mrs. AC.
Guenther.
Rev. Eifert of Tavistocck, laeeoa:
panied by his two daughters, are
visiting with friends.
HILLSGREEN.
Misses Louise and Annie Turner,
of Clinton, visited Miss Agnes Love
on Sunday last:
Soilry to report that Mr.Robt
Stephenson of the Parr Line, con-
tinues very poorly.
Mrs, Thos., 'Con?sitt is able 'to' be
out and around after her recent
illness.
Thomas, Patton from Clinton 'was 'N
visiting friends in and around kills 1i
green ttpie past week. 7
Miss Viola Stelck of Zurich; is' .n
visiting 'among friends this week. .a
Sorry- to report that Mrs. Jays. fi.
Maitland river' in Hullett, Tp., :a
bout ?size wiles frons Seaforth,
'party of four Young men; W, E
liott, C, !Dolnaage, E, 'Brownlee an
eph McQuaid went out for
r
athe ii
the:
z,t river, :tai o
'�nleeian
olmage could swim, while McR
d and Elliott were unable to
'hes point the river is made treat
rows by several deep holes an,
cQuad go tbeyond his depth t
wade and sank,
A sudden death took place a
Geeenway, on July 91h, when.Joh
Foster, a farmer, about 45 year
of Wei' wins' found dead in a fief
back of the orchard on his farms
He !seemed to be in his usual health
and went out early to bring the
cows up to the barn for milking
His wife became alarmed at his long
absence and upon going to look
for him( found his. body, heart fail-
fre was the .cause of death, he le-
ages'a widow and three Small chil-
drens.
Thee new pipe organ which has
been installed in the Methodist ch-
urch will be used for the first ti-
me on Sunday, Rev. • David Rogers
and Rev. 'Capt. Edward's former
paistoi, will preachl.
Wni;. Simi& has resigned the pos-
ition of Postmaster of Blyth. His
continued ill health has necessitated
his coning to this conclusion. Mr.
Siin�s has been Postmaster of Bly-
th' !since' 1910,. receiving the appoint
ment under the Laurie administr-
ation.
Ant old and highly esteemed re-
sident of Goderich' Tp. was re-
nved by the death of Chas. J.
' .'NNaftel, which occured on July
!19 h; at the home of his son K.
ails] of Goderich Tp. He was a
felong resident of the Tp., born
5 years ago on the old homestead
ear Bayfield and married in 1871,
nd est • i
ablished his home I
on the,
n?e: farms on the Bayfield Road.
Cochrane had been quite poorly the
'Rev, McConnell and 1•sxmily;
A left for a month', 'vacation visit..
1 1 in.g eastern pities. Dr. 0. Fleischer
d has clearge oft he work here.
b
at
h
d
0
t
n
s
Veit
Chas, Cook or Chicago, visited
his brothers, Norman and Cornelius
•CCook, oft own.
Mrs, T; Murdock Wes returned
!from Toronto, where ;she visited
with her daughter, M.rs;. B. 'Camp-�
bell and family'.
Mr. and Mrs. David Smith of De
troit, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. R,
Higgins.
Wm, Dougall., accompani'e'd his
son, W. R. Dougall end family tip"
London, where they visited with
Dr. Roswell :Dougall,
Win. McKay, Principal of our.
. public school has returned' from �a•
tVeelc's vacations at Hamilton.
Gordon MoC onneil•, 'of .Detroit, s
spent a visit with i 1 hie r:arent ev
1 ,ski
J. A. McOonneli.. ' " ' d
day, Au rfet eth, f:92!
!spent some week's with a�'elatiVele
sand friends,
David A1, Cantelon and .'olais
Passmore• returned from 'a ten tier
tripi r i n the pBruce ii Peninsulei, whom
they enjoyed hunting, fishing teed
!scenery,
Fire,!t he cause of which .cannot
be accounted for, broke otit on the
lower flooi7 of the ressiden�ee owned
and occupied by J. D. yyil.son, of
the village, at 3.30 .last wedr>iesday
morning. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson we-
re sleeping in the. upstairs, . sand
when awakened, faced raonie filler
with smoke and fire, Mrzs. .ViTil..
son did not wait to save any pro„
erty, but rushed to a winidowandl
called for help and soon wars 'salt!••
by the aid of a ladder. Mil. Wil..
on, thinjing doubtless, to save+
orne property, endeavoured to go
own stair to where the -fire had,
reached quite an advanced stage,
and was badly burned about thee
face and hands!, but luckily mane
aged Iv get out of the ?seethin
mass ofj falls -tee(
la
•
5
Jessie A 13e11 id visiting 'in Tor-
onto.
Mrs. Hugh J. MacDonald hays re-
turned from Toronto 'where she
fi
4.
4.
4.
i'
past week.
Quite a' number of the. y
Qpeople attended the shower
en in Honor of Mr. and Mris,!
McBride, on Wednesday eve
last.
puns HENSALL
giv �II
Roy
ning
CREDITON
Mr. and Mrs. Haylock and two
boys, Mr. and Mrs. Pope !and da-
ughter visited with Miss Lena:Sch-
weitzer .and Sai and Joe Wein.
Last Tuesday 'evening a number
of young people 'spent a very
enjoyable tie at the homme of ,1VIr
and Mrs. Wan. Switzer at Shipka.
Martin Morley, wife and daugh-
ter, Miffs. D. McTavish and two
childznn: are camping at the Bend..
Mrs. C. Zwicker, Gerald and. Mrs
Hallam and Dorothy, are holidaying
et the Bend.
fiitich. Finbekiner es laid up
as the result (of a tad fall. e
Albert King returned;: home Trek
nWindsor' last week.
Mrs. Wilson and two daughters
of London, visited friend's here.
' The Ladies' Aid of the Evangel-
ical church entertained the'Zurich .
Aid on: Thursday afternoon July 31,
in the afternoon, at the home of
I1rrs. J. Wein?, when a good. rep-
resentation of the visiting ' Society
were present. A fine programme
was given) followed by a well pre-
pared lunch, •after which a few af-
terdinnex 'speeches were made by
a few ladies and the men present.
Mils. Birke, left for Lilydale, .N
Y., the dreat spiritualstic camp,wh-
ere 'she, will spend a short time.
L. E. Rutherford, accountant of
the Bank of Con.merce, Iate of
Dashwood, has moved to town and
is occupying Mrs. Cottie'a house
non Ann, St.
Roy Patterson, County Engineer•,
ogre .
Miss McLean, of Kippen, spent
the week -end with her friend, Miss
Grace Monson.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Waldo of Zur
ich called on friends in the village.
Monday evening.
•
DASHWOOD.
J. Nei Ortwein has purchased a
new Ford !sedan.
Hensall :Civic holiday was o -b
served on August 4111.
Hy. Volland and Miss Volland
were recent ' visitors with relatives ,
in. Goderich'. ;
Mrs. Stevens and family, of Tor-
onto, are visiting at present with
Mr, and Mrs!, e e. Reichert.
4.
4.
4.
fi
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'
rm' w : 4
rra �J � � � i¢ fi, „:ry
c
HAS .ADVANCED IN PRICE
AND THE MACHINE COMPANIES WANT INTEREST ON THE
CUSTOMERS' NOTES: WE HAVE A FEW PIECES IN STOCK a
WHICH WE WILL SELL AT LAST YEARS' PRICES,ALSO
LESS INTEREST. IT WILL PAY YOU TO SEE US EFORE 4
YOU BUY.
FOLLOWING ARE THE GOODS ON HAND AT LAST YEA.!$'
PRICES TO MAKE ROOM FOR GARAGE WORK.,
1 Wagon 1 DeLaval Cream Separators
1 Bissell Disc Harrow 1 Peter Hamilton Cultivator el: -
1 riding plow 2 Fleury Walking plows
1 tractor plow at $110.00
THESE ARE ALL NEW GOODS.
GARAGE! GARAGE!
Mr. Peter Kroff, mechanic
"GENUINE FORD PATS" always stock :
L. A. Prang, Zurich Ont.
•i ' q .P:.•.•.; 4'•1,fi •4+dr ;44e• ..il• le ++x•+•F+°x+
Indian Treasure Hidden at Bon Echo
::;til: `iJ.. �,t'.„4,:;�',y.♦y ig,.*::
Rvi
3v�
Above, left -The Big Rock in which the Silver Hoard is said to be hidden; right -The Reck viewed from Bon reho
Below, left :Tile Landing Stage; right -Another View of the Big Rock. - -ti"
ong before Jacques Cartier sailed up the St. Lawrence One tells of a: fissure
to discover H9chelaga, a now -forgotten race ofpeoplelong between two huge masses of reek; I
were Bigtowering
entranceway through whichthe trader crawlede
pilgrimages to the Rock above and of a'cavern at its end.
the waters of Lake Mazinawe in Eastern Ontario to• carried When the fat pine torches,
observe religious ceremonies, to worship before this Mey found drunken i guides illumined rlthe interior
' yers• e film§elf inside e8 irregular pug ea
great natural altar and to'propitiate the gods who dwelt feet�in size and alongwhose `
within its granite mass. In the backwoods now, five bars of native silver, as ones! pilede were piled rough cam
hundred years ago the Big Rock of Bon Echo was in the cordword.
metal
center of the greatest white pine forest the world has The trader took what quantities of the metal he eta &
ever known and on a main highway between the north place in his knapsacke and in his pockets, and depart -wee
and. Lake Ontario. -There were no backwoods in those malting as accurate a mental record of the location
days, and the streams were the travel routes for theentrenceway as he could. His companions d flit•:
pagan people who .followed the seasonal migrations would rat,
allow him to blaze a tree, or to place a cufor et thee,
animals with which the forests teemed. s of the time they were becoming fri htened
To them the. Big Rock at Bon of the secret,.. The small frightened
overotheir me ul,'
a thing ofe m sten Echo must have been p set out for home ve
mystery,. as it remains today both to arche- crossing the lake at the headwaters of the Skoot d tth
-: ologists and geologists. lNone can reconcile the sheer their canoe was swamped by a heavy storm, and tier:
untouched face with the glacial markings aim its top,Indians abandoned Meyers who had made his w,ey tom'
and in the same way the paintings along the Lace are.ashore with difficulty. Int order to save himself from,.
unsolved. riddle. "Who put them there"? and "what drowning he was forced to throw away all but a smelt!
do they mean '? are unanswered uestio geatrtity of silver caritie •
the face of the Big Rock a few feet a questions. Along Without food,his d go e, ill,
ll wetkets of his coat,,
are the hieroglyphic retards of abone the waterline s firearms gone, ardp and ,hungry a e t Iva,
an unknown people. reachedrBelleville after ten clays hardship. As a rcslf
Painted in a 'virtually imperishable paint, whose cone mo exposure he took pneumonia and died in the course oit
position is unknown, and which has defied the weathering few months.
eftected of wind and water, these records battle the It. is an improbable storybut
"archeologists of the continteit, one thing is certain, Tea
the Meyers family there are spoons made from the ,ilvef
Whether they have a, warlike or religious significance i he brought down with hi
not known, although some people hold that s memory, and m, into
left amap,-dfawnfrom,
a: great victory of the Iroquois over the they record geyMerrill, time this fell into the hands of a 1<axs7tves,
Aigonquins and have Hurons and George ,, wlio`went.north and relocated
v been written in some involved in company with another man: Loth to divu e ' is -
and' mystic code, covert', he dial nothing for1g the`
A mote° conservative -inter retation return the b some years and when he ,dry
paintings of the Big Rock are P claims that the frres•had swept through the baCkeountr .t3
trail marks, records o£ the had altered its typography ee such an extent that m
hunt, signboards for other travellers. The natives of the never able to locate it again: t lxe w
backcountry shin that they hold the secret to the Several comfortable•
treasure save located in the Rock, and thatfortunes has been ie spent
of their riddle would open the cnran • the solution ato locate the cave. One man, lived Tor fourteen tr'�n
lost Bir riddle
of the Indians• entranceway to the long top of the Big' Rock going ever every ' ch, a aee
it
tirr�eand tune and again, certain to te square inch, Baa it,
From I3roik.vine to Trenton, on the shoreedy of his rle'a.
'Ontario,the le ,.- s of Lalte that his perseverance' y
legend of Me er s Cave has longsheltered hollow here would be rewarded. Today atv sirs,
The hint of such a cave first came when the Inian persisted. an les to`t are a few rotting logs right
front the country to the north brought in. bars of natives . g mark his home.
silver to exchange for ood and firearms. "door . o Another expeditionspent thousands of doll ` '
refused texel tiass'Lh°source of i their ms. years they the earth off the central portion of the ars n searebx
but led tmei a ssthe by the f th wealth anyone, for the cave. 'Cance or twice rock, a vain ro u t
a of John Meyers, who'. prospectors will 'e .neer at everya lie Ina group, srt old:.
had been brow ht up in association _With Indians, was' !with p. Bon Byhn ,Inn, and a POtt ;
able to ingratiate, himself into the confident ` ei iron
staircase
ana hammers, Will m gtRo ksl "
Members of the tribe and in exchange � ce of two ;wp the zran stairease.inourztin �' y' drs, ped
nge for libel'd1 ua t- g the Big Rock, serfs y
ties el fire -water, s U ntl, at last they
vas, i .. he
oliy are n. +,
e agreed of tofind
Late Y d to. -going rad '
g tongthe lost
,t himmillions.
ns.
nor
in the f,;1I they set out north, two later they creep down the�+ t'�
Moira t and ::' , made their €i' up the abo`ar the .. staircase, homeb silent
,.kootarnatta Rivets,, or h Canadian :e Pacific trail! and
. ;..r .. . w portaged �ir�nis Lou -La r go aa.triaa
wiz athLzgouciie '1,, '.e into Lake Maxinawe arid came to the nd overall all the Big (Rock watches as it has watched
,Eiu X ock, "Or, ?lietlna stories tell,xof Meyers asttzu'' i.
' prillians Years, soreno and indissoluble, . • '
ste
1
•
•