HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1919-03-07, Page 7H 7, 919
-ME
;
&MIS
hark a p
avored Tea
*gal
r an hour or so after
sent Wassaquaza away
use, Wassaquam had
feeling any anxiety a-
imed Next -Week),
FontIMMIMINIM•0111111111MINVIMIK
(WEN AND ee
BEAUTIFY THE SIN
eauty Lotion cheaply for
'peck, arms- and hands.
inn•••••••••••••••••11011.11.
fa sm&11 jar of ordimary
prepare a full quer-
he most wonderful lemon
and complexion beautifier,
he juice of two fresh lem-
tie containing three camas
ite. Care should be taken
juke through a fine doth
'?tilp gets in, then this 10-•
fresh for months: Every
that lemon juice is need
remove such blenxishes
ATTIeSS and tam and irs
ti softener whitener and
Get three ounces of
at any drug store and
nn the grocer and make u
t of this sweetly fewer%
ried massage at daily into
-., arms and hands. It la
oothen rough, red hands.
IS FOR SALE
rM FOR SALE
7, concession II. Township a
ireing lee acres. This farm '
a for a number of years, and
1 crops. Writ:afar Particulars
terms to JAMES L JOHNS -
ha Hotel, WhanIneg, Man.
saeal--fott seem len 3,
H.R.S., Tuckersmith, con -
S. There are on the premises
bank barn 4005 good win,
7hree miles from town of Sear
!•3 cultivated and balance in
rticulars apply to PETER
rtb R. R. No. 4. or Dhana
2668-tf
01 FOR SALE
acres,. all cultivated, lot 11.
ckersmith, 31.R.S., with barn
one foundation, pig nen, driv-
e house, 6 roomed frame cot-
vith wind mill. Also 50 a4.1rez
est haIf of lot 6, concessien 7.
mindmill; a good grass farm.
S P1NLAYSON, R. R. NO. 5,
-182. Seaforth. 2632-tf
LRM FOR SALE—LOT
-whip of Hibbert, on Huron
ies west of Mitchell. Brick
a, and all modern convenien-
xsiclered the best farm in the
d i well worth looking over
UR a farm. Price $16,000. Of
000, or any portion of the
in c -ash, balance may remain
ti Per cent. For further Par -
FRANK McCONNELL, Dub-.
2&71-t!
WO HUNDRED ACRS IN
..dioining the town of Sea.
premises are a bank barn
'Wing accomodation for 10e
:einent silos 1636. The barn
water, feed and litter carrier
conveniene. Comfortable
onvient to schoo/ and church -
well drained and is first cIass
of condition. This farm ha.s
az a stook farm. Posswsion
spring or in the fall. For
rs apply to ROBERT GAR -
P. 0. 2672-2
OR SALE
rable property just off Main
ie. consisting of one-half acre
, is situated a 1% story brick
rooms and good cellar. There
remises a stable, good well
apple. pltun and Dear trees
1 fruits. 'I'his is a splendid
taxes are low. For further
to Mrs. M. A. Cbarleswerth,
2650x2-tf
ALE — BEING LOT U.
oncession of the Town-
ley, in the County of
Ninety acres cleared under
0 acres of bush.. There ars
•,•e and woodshed and barn
cruises, and a good orchard.
,ever failing spring on the
well. Will be sold cheap.
ulars apply to Mrs. G. W.
3, -lot 16, Tucicersmith, or
• to J. M. BEST, Seaforth,
2670-tf
LOT 84, CONCESSION
h, L.R.S., consisting of
res seeded down, 88 acres
res of bush. There are on
rn 54:640 feet with sun*
shed 28x80. Also a frame
itchen 18r24„ in reendid re -
and cistern In cellar. The
d and til o drained. One
eld. For particulars SPX,
MRS. WILLIAM 110
2888 -ti
ooze, • BEING LOT 24,
urou Road. 8 miles *Vett of
wrabip of TackersMith. The
buildings: ths Urn is 41
ne foundation, Wood &ars
o /and is eleared all but
Good water, sari= eraek
; 136. store* trick heap
In; also asraire„ Istre
• Will be gold reasoned*
whites te retire. W. 3.
2, Eleafortb. 21148•41X
_
tea
49
By
WILLIAM MaclIARG
and
; EDWIN 'BALMER :
homes Allen, Publisher,_Torno
fifth, 'While the storm was blOWing
...f terribly, they ,heard the'deum beating
and anew that a ship was going down.
They countar the sounds, 'as it -beat
the roll of dead. It beat twenty-four
before it stopped and then 'began to
beat again sael teat twenty-four; so,
later,_ eyerabady. koeww it had been;
beatmeg for the Miwaka; 'for every
other ship on the lake got to port;
but there weretwenty-five altogetheo
on tae •Miwaka, SO either the 'drum
beat evaerig or—" she hesitated.
"Or what?"
"Or the drum wesight, and some
).
one was saved. Many people believed
• that,. It was years 'be ore the fanaliee
befeeathuesem. °el'. thile bDruc)ardrn;gam"azub! 'hsorneope,
haven't given up hope yet."'
' Alan made no comment, for a' mo-
.....e....---.. tment. Constance had seen the blood
, flush to his face ilia then- leave it,
Continued from last week. idea what else iscoming or wheth and her :own pulse had beat as swiftly
an hine . •
.
Yt more at all is coming" A as she rehearsed the eteperstetion. Aa
servant entered, bringing cereal dish he gazed at her and then awe)", it was
and two' bowls before Constance,, and Plain that he heard something, ad-
.. "And- if any one lea* ditional about the Mievaka—something
Alan went on; "had, man which he was 'try
eting to fit into what
Uncle Benny's son! That suggested
to Constance's mother only something
unpleasant, something. to be avoided
. and considered as, little as posSibIe.
But Alan—lincle Benny's son—was
not urtpleasant at all; he was, in fact,
quite the reverse Constance had
liked him from the mament that, con-
fused a little by I3enjamin Corvet's
absence. andrSimon's manner in greet-
ing him, he had turned to her for ex-
planations she had liked the way he
liad openly studied her and approved
her, as she was approving him; she
had liked the way he told her of him-
self, and the ,fact that he knew ho -
thing of the man who proved to be
his father; she had liked very much
the complete absence of impinge to
force or to pretend feeeling when she
ad brought him the picture of his
ther—when he, amazed at himself
for not feeling, had looked at her;
and she had liked most of all his re-
fusal, for himself aria for his father,
to accept positive stigma until ,it
should be proved.
She had not designated any hot*
for breakfast, and she supposed that,
coming from the country, he would
believe breakfast to .be early. But
when she got don -stairs, though it
was nearly nine o'cloele he had not
come; she went to the front window
to Wateh for him; and after a few min-'
,utes she saw him approaching, look- ,
mg often to the lare as though amazed
aa the allange in it.
She went to the door and herself
let him ia,
"Father has gone down -town," she
told him. as he took off his things.
"Mr. Spearman returns from Duluth
this morning. and father wished to
tell him about you as soon as possible.
I told father you had come to see him
last night; and he said to bring you
down to the office."
"I overslept, I'm afraid," Alan said.
"You slept well, then?"
.rVery Well—after a while."
"Pll take you down -town myself
after breakfast."
She said no more but led him into
the breakfast room. It was a delight-
ful, cozy little rocan, Metall famished,
with a single wide window to the east,
an enormous hooded 'fireplace taking
up .half the north wall, and blue Delft
tiles set above it and paneled in the
walls all about the room.' There
were the quaint blue windmills'the
fishing 'meta the aleaggy-breeked„,
wooden -shod folk; the canals and bar-
gees, the dikes and their guardians,
and the fishing ship oh the Zuyder
Zee.
Alan gazed about at taese with
quick, appreciative interest. His qual-
ity ca instantly noticing and apprec-
iating anything unusual was, Con-
stance thotight, one of his pleasantest
and best characteristics.
like those too; I selected them
myself in Holland," she observed.
Sae task her place beside the coffee .
'pot, and When he remained standing—,
-Mother always has her breakfast in
bed; that's your place," she said. ,
He took the. chair.tippogite her.
There was fruit upon the table; Con-
stance took an orange and passed the
little silver basket across. .
"This is such a little table; we never
lea it if there's more than two or
three of us; and we like to help.our-
:eaves here."
like it very much," Alan said.
"Coffee right away or later?"
"Whenever you do. You see," .he
explained, smiling in a way that
pleased her, "I haven't the slightest
went ou
-Rapids,"
waiting
1
in `the dining -robin. and ae she told him..
on other in the kitchen, they ! "That's all "1°3'34 knows"
would net speak of our activities here
gaze came back to her at last.
as, 'helaing ourselves' I'm- not sure 't
I
just how thea would speak of "Yes; wha did you, ask about it—
them. the Miwaka? I mean,how did ou
we—the people .1 WAS with in Icansah
i : y
i hear about it so you wanted to know ?"
engaged her, she
efaarsmice, d
—hada maidservant at one time when 1 He considered an anatant before re
wewere -
a,u'dDowhyeollu we
to the Miwaka—I supposed it must be
PlYing*.
encountered a reference
o .
your own ' stretching?' That meant a ship—in my father's 'house last
serving from the stove tthe table
night"
usually." , His manner, as he looked down at
He was silent for a few moments;
'table his coffee cup, toying with it, pre -
when he looked at her across the
again, be seemed about to . speak Ser- vented her then from taking, more; he
seemed td know -that she wished to
then caMe back.
iously. His gaze left her face and Paess it, and he looked up qUieltly.
"Miss Sherrill," he said gravely, s "1 met my servant—my father's
le le ? A ervant---this mormng,'.' he said
'what is, or was.
p theM
_: a a " in
Yes; he got back this nuirning. He
His
. ship?"
came here early to report to father
that he hadeno news of Uncle Benny;
and father told him you were at the '
house and sent him over."
Alan was studying the coffee cup a,
gain, a queer expressionon his face
which she could not read.
"Ile was there when I woke up this
morning, Miss Sherrill. I hadn't heater
anybody in- the house, but, I saw a
little table on wheels standing in the
hall outside -my door and a spirit lamp
and a little coffee pot on iteand a man
bending over it, warming the cup.
His back was toward, me, and he had
,straight black hair'so that at first I
thought he was a Jap; but when he
turned around, • I saw he was an
American Indian."
"Year,- that was Wassaquam"
"Is that his name? He told me it
was Judah."
"Yee—Judah Wassaquam He's a
Chippewa from the north end of the
lake, They're very religious there,
most of the Indians at the foot of the
lake; and many of -them have a Bib-
lical name which they use for .a first
name and use their Indian' name for
a last one."
"He called me 'Alan' and my father
"The Wiens almost always call
people by their first names.," •
He made no attempt to put the
question casually; rather, he had
made it more evident that it Was of
concern to him by the change arhis
manner.
"The Miwaka?" Constance said. .
"Do you know what it was?"
"Yes; I know; and it war I ship!"
"You mean it doesn't exist any
more?"
'No; itavas lost a long anre ago."
"On the lakes here?"
"On Lake Michigan."
"You mean by lost that it was
sunk?"
"It was sunk, of course; but no
' xnerely foundered."
Zihee tliii3eirbvivt8
i or
wwashat happenwreeeoredbutarn
The thought of the unknown fate
of the ship and crew—of the ship'
which had sailed and never reached
port and of which nothing -ever bad
been heard but the beating of the
Indian drum iet her blood tingling
as it had done before, when she 'had
been told about the ship, or when she
had told others about it and the euper-
etition .connected with it ' It was
plain Alan Conrad had not asked a-
bout it idly; something about the
Miwaka had come to him recently,
and had -excited his intense concern.
"Whose ship was it?" he asked.
"My father's?"
"No; it belonged to Stafford and
Ramsdell. They were two of the big
men of their tiara in the carrying
trade on the lakese, but their line has
been out of busine,ss for years•' both
Mr. Stafford and Mr. Ramllsdewere
lost with the Miwaka."
"Will you te, 11 tie about it, and
them, please ?"
"I've told yau almost all r can about
Stafford antla Ramsdell, I'm afraid;
I've just heard father say that they.j ed a share in; afterwards he. came here
were men Who could have amounted 11 to Chicago with Uncle Benny. He's
to a great deal on the lakes, if they been lookbag after -Uncle Benny now
had lived--espically Mr. , Stafford for more- than ten years—and he's
who was very young. The Miwaka verv much devoted to him, and fally
was a great new steel ship—built the trastworthy; and besides that, he's
year after 1. *as boni; it was the a wonderful cook; but I've wondered
first of nearly a dozen that Stafford sometimes whether Uncle Benny was
not the only man in the world who had
an Indian body servant," ,
"You know a good deal about In-
dians,"
"A little about the lake Indians,
the Chippewae and Pottawatomies in
northern Michigan"
. "Recollection's a funny thing," Alan
said, after considering a moment.
"This morning, after seeing Judah
and talking to him --or rather hearitig
him talker -somehow a story kat run-
ning in my heeri. I can't make out
exactly what it was—about a lot of
animals on a raft; and there was some
one with them—I don't Imow who; '
I can't fit any name to him; but he had
a name."'
Constance bent forward quickly.
"Was the name Mieha.bou?" she asked.
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"He said that he had always ser-
ved 'Ben' his coffee that way before
he got up, and so he had supposed he
was to ao the same by me; and also
that, long ago, ,he used to be a "leer
bandeon one of my father's ships."
"Yes; when Uncle Beriny began to
operate ships of his_ own, many of
the ships on the lakes had Indians
among the deck hands; some had all
Indians for crews and white men only
for officers. Wassequam was on the
first freighter Uncle Benny ever own-
and Ramsdell had planned to build.
There was same cleubt among lake
men about steel boats at that time;
they had begun to be built very large-
ly quite a few years before, but re-
cently there had been some serious
losses with them. Whether it was be-
cause they we -re built on models not
fitted for the lakes, no one knew; but
several of them had broken in two
and sunk, aid a good many men were
talking about going back to wood.
But Stafford and Ramsdell believed
in steel and had finished this first
one of their new boats,
"She left Duluth for Chicago, load-
ed with ore, on the first day of Decem-
ber, with both owners and part of
their families on board. She passed
' the Soo on the third and went through
the Straits of Mackinaw on the fourth
into Lake Michigan. After that, no-
thing was ever heard of her," -
.`"$o probably she -broke in two
like the others ?"
"Mr. Spearman and your father
both, thought so; but . nobody ever
knew—no wreckage came ashore—
no message of any sort from any one
on board. A very sudden winter
storm had come up and was at its
worst on the morning of_ the ,fifth.
Uncle Benny—your lather ---told rne
once, when •I asked him about it,
that it was as severe for a time as
any he had ever eaperienced. He
very nearly lost his life in it. He
had just finished laying up one of
his boats—the Martha Corvet—at
Manistee for the winter; and he and
Mr. Spearman, who then was a mate •
of the Martha Corvet, were crossing
the lake in a tug with a creweof four
men to Manitowac,- where they were
taring to lay up more shins. The cap-
tain and one of the deck hands of the
tug were washed overboard. and the
rengineer was lost trying to save them.
Uncle Benny and Mr Spearman and
the stoker brought the tug an. The
storm was worst about five in the
morning, when the Miwaka sunk."
"How do you know that the Miwaka
sunk at five," Alan asked, "If no one
heard from the ship?"
"Oh; that was told by the- Drum!" I
"The Drum?"
"Yes; the Indian Drum! 1 forgpt; I
of course you didn't. 'know. It's a
superstition that some Of the lake men
have, particularly those who come
from people at the other end of the
lake. The Indian Drum is in the
• woods there, they say. No, one has
seen it; but many people believe that
they have heard it It's a spirit
drum which beats, they say, for every
ship lost on the lake. There's a pare
ticular superstition about it -in regard
to the Miwaka; for the dram beat
wrong for the Miwaka. You see the
people about thez.e ewear 'that about.
five o'clock in the morningof' thee
Ile returned her leek, surprised
"That's it; how you know':
"I think 1 lat thestory;- and
'Wassaquam Would- have known it ,too,
I think, if you'd ask aim; but pro-
bably he would have thought it im-
pious to tell it, becauSe he and his
people are great Christians now.
Michabou is one of the Indian names
for Manitou. 'What else do you re-
member of the story." '
"Not much I'M afraid—just -. sort
of scenes here and there; but I .ca re-
member the begining now that you
have given -me thit name:. 'In the be-
ginning of all things, there was nly
water and Michabou was fleeting on
the raft with all the -animals' M eh:
abou it seemed, wanted the I nd
brought up sothat*en and ani
could litre on it, and he asked on of
the animalsto ger, down and brin it
"The beaver,"Constance suppl
"Was the 'beaver the first .o.
The beaver dived and. stayed d
a long' time, tia Jona that: when,
came up he was breathless and -c
'plete/y exhausted; but he had
been able to reach the bottom. T
Michabou sent detina:i-"
"The otter."
-"And- he 'stayed down much,ion er
than the beaver, and when he Came. p
at -last, they dragged him on to • e
raft qattee senseless; but he. had t
been able to reach the bottom eith r.
So the animals and Michabou hims If
were ready to give it up; but_th
the little muskrat spoke up—am
right? Was this the • muskrat?"
"Yes." • •
"Then you can finish it for O."
. "He dived and he stayed dovn, t
little muskrat" Constance continue
"longer than the beaver and. .the otter
both. together. Michabou and-. the'an-
imals waited all day for him tolozne
up, and they watched all through the
night; so then they knew he must
be dead. And, sure enough, ;they mine
after a while across the hodY floating -
on the water and apparently lifeless.
They dragged him' onto the. raft and
found that his little paws were all.
tight shut. They. forced open time-
d the paws and found nothingin
-
them, but when they opened the last
one, they found one grain of sand
tightly -clutched in at .The little musk-
rat had done it; he'd .reached the bot-.
toils! And out of that. one grain of
sand, Michabou made the world."
"That's it," he Said. "Now what lel
it?"
• 'Olen she returned to the breakfast
room.
"Ready to go down -town?" she
asked. •
"Whenever you are,"
"I'll be ready in a minute. I'm
planning to drive; are you afraid?"
He smiled inehis pleasant way as he
glanced over her; she had become
conscious of saying that sort of thing
toi tempt the smile, "Oh, take
the risk"
"The Indian story of • creation'—or
one of them."
"Not a story of the plain Indians
surely."
"No; of the Indians who live about
the lakes and so e got the idea thet
/everything was water in the first
place—the Indians who live on • the
islands Ind peninsulas, That's how
I came to know it."
"I thought that must be it," Alan
said. His hand trembled a little as be
lifted his coffee cup to his lips.
Constance to flushed a little with
excitement; it was a surprisingly
close and intimate things to have ex-
plored math • another back into the
-concealment of his firet child con-
seiousness, to have aided another in
the sensitive task: of revealina him-
self to himself. This which she had
helped to bring bade to hiro must have
:been one of tht•stories tad hint.
he had been a ery Titate aoy, When he
had been taken to Ransas, away from
where he ihust have heard this story
—the lakes. .
She was a little nervous els° from
watching. the time as told by the tiny
watch on her Wrist. Henry's train
from, Duluth must be in now; and he,
had not yet called her, as had been his
custom recently, as soon as he re-
turned to town after a trip. But, in
arminute, a servant entered to inform
her that Mr. Spearman wished! to
*peak to her, he excased herself to
Alan and hurried 'out. Henry was
calling her from the railroad station
and, he said, from a most particularly
stuffy booth and, besides having a
poor connection, there was any ameunt
of noise about him; but he was very
anxious to see Constance as soon as
possible. Could she be in town that
morning and have lan.cheon with him?
Yes; she was going down -town very
soon and, after luncheon, he could
come home with her if he wished: He
certainly did wish, but he couldn't
tell yet what he had te do in the
afternoon, but please would she save
the evening for him. She promised
and started to tell him about Alan,
then recollected that Henry was go-
ing to see her father immediately at
the office.
Alan was standing, waiting for her,
CHAPTER VII
The Deed in Trust.
Her little gasoline -driven car—del-
icate as though- a jeweler had maAe
it—was waiting for them under the
'canopy beside the house, -when they
went out. She delayed a moment to
ask Alan to let 'down the windows;
the sky was still clear, and the
sunshine had become almost warm,
though the breeze Was sharp and cold.
As the car rolled down the drive, and
he turned for a long look past her to -
Ward the lake, she watched his ex-
pression.
"It's like a great shuttle, the ice
-there," she commented, 'a monster
shuttle nearly three hundred miles
long. All winter it moves back and
across the lake, from east to west and
from west to east as the wind change, .
'blocking each shore half the time and
forcing the winter boats to fight it
always."
"The gulls go opposite to it, 1 sup-
pose, sticking to open watea."
"The gulls? That depends upon
the weather. 'Sea -gull, sea -gull!" she
quoted, " sit on the sanda it's 'never
fair weather when you're on the land,"
Alan stated a little "What was
that?" he asked.
"That rhyme? One which the wives
of the lake men teach their shildren.
-Did you remember that too?"
"After you said it."
-"careen to green—Red to red," Alan
repeated to himself. "Green to green"
and then something about—how is it,
'back her --back and stopper.'"
"That's from a lake rhyme, too, but
another one!" she cried. "And that's
quite a good one. It's one of the pilot
rules that every lake person knows.
Same skipper and wheelsman set them
to rhyme years ago, and the lake men
teach the rhymes to their children so
that they'll never go wrong with a
ship. It keeps them clearer in their
heads than any amount of government
printing. Uncle -Benny used to say
they've saved any amount of collisions.
"Meeting steamers do not dread,"
'she recited,'
"When you see three lights ahead!
Port your helm and show your red.
For passingsteamers you should try
To keep this maxim in your eye,
Green to Green—or Red to Red—
Perfect safety—go ahead.
!Both in safety and,in doubt,
Always keep a good lookout;
Should there be no room to tuna -
Stop your ship and go astern."
II "Now we're coming to your 'back
and storaiere
'If to starboard Red appear,
Tia your duty to keep dear;
Act as judgment says is proper.
ort or starboard—back or stop her!
ut 'when on your port is seen
steamerwith et. light of green- -
There's not much for you to do—
The Green Haat must look out for you"
7
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DOMINION INC
DEPARTMENT.
'WAR TAX ACT
TO WHOM APPLICABLE.
Every person who in 1918 resided or ordinarily resided in =Canada or
was employed in Canada or carried on business in Canada, including
corporations and joint stock companies.
WHO SHOULD FILE RETURNS.
1 Every unmarried person or widow or widower,_ without dependent
children under twenty-one years of age, who during 'calendar year
1918 received or earned $1,000 or _more,
-2 All other individuals who during calendar yew 1918 received or earned
$2,000 or more. .
3 Every cc#rporation and joint stock company whose profits exceeded
$3,000, during the fiscal year ended in 1918. •
FORMS TO BE FILLED IN AND FILED.
FORM T1. By individuals, other than fanners and ranchers. .
FORM T1A. By farmers and ranchers.
FORIVI T2. By corporations and joint stock companies.
FORM T3. By trustees, executors4administraton: of estates and assignees.
FORM T4. By emidnyers to make return of the names of all directors,
officials, agents or other employees to whom was paid $1,000
or more in salaries bonuses, commission or other remunera-
-- lion during the calendar year 1918
FORM, T5. By corporations, joint stock companies, associations and
syndicates to make return ofaN dividends and bonuses paid
to shareholders and membein during 1918. •
Individuals comprising partnerships must file returns in their
individual capacity.
GENERAL INFORMATION
• All returns must be filed IN DUPLICATE.
Forms may be obtained from the Inspectors and Assistant Inspectors
of Taxation and from the Postmasters at all leading centres.
Returns should be filed irinnediately.
Postage must be prepaid on letters and other documents forwarded
by mail to Inspectors of Taxation.
.Addresses of Inspectors of T.:math:6 for this District :
LONDON DISTRICT.
Inspector of Taxation.
Carling Block
LONDON, Ont.
Assistant Inspector of Taxation.
WALICERVILLE, Ont.
Assistant Inspector of Taxetion,
STRATFORD, Ont.
1. She had „driven the car swiftly on
the balevard to the tura where the
Motorway makes west to Rush Street, -
t en it turned south again toward the
b alge. As they reached the approach
to the bridge and the cais congested
taere, Constance was required to give
all her attention to the steering; not
uiti1 they were crossing the bridge
was she able to glance at her corn -
melon's face.
To westward, on both sides of the
river, summer boats were laid up,
their decks covered with snow.On •
the other side, still nearer to.' the
bridge, were some of the winter ves-
seas; an, while the motor was on the
span, the bells :began ringing the a-
larm to clear the bridge so it cella'
tura -to let through a great steamer
just in from the lake the sun glisten-
ingi on the ice covering its bows and
and, sides back as • far as Alan cold
see.
orward of the big, black, red -band-
ed funnel, a cloud of steam bellowed
up end floated bade followed by an-
other, and two deep, reverberating
blasts rumbled up the river majest-
ically, -imperiously. The shrill lit -
(Continued on Page Six)
•
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