The evening world. Newspaper, May 26, 1903, Page 13

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{ er, | St ovelng a ghostly white form like that of This Story Began Monday and will End on Saturday. ee @y Permission of George Munro's Sons.) @eing an extract from the singular journal of @ohn M’Alister Ray, student of medicine, serving as Bhip’s doctor aboard the whaler Pole-Star.) SYNOPSIS OF PRECEDING CHAPTERS. John MoAlister Ray, a Scdih medical student, is engaged to @ young in money to marry cot Ee the polat of mutiny, #o great ra hom @ strange man whose history no one knows, but who labors Qerrible biddea sorrow or mystery. Tho discontent of the erem ts a Rented ‘by 4 rumor that the ship is haunted. Weird sounds have throughout the voyage, and Mangon, the second mate, Toman gliding amose tie terrified bellet that some Rowever, refuess to. return, TR floes. Ray {8 unable to shake tho cr (@uperndtural presence 1s following the ‘Pole tar. ae) CHAPTER II, Haunted? LAT ts his story, given as far as I can in his own words. 7 I fancy what he saw must, in spite of his denial, have been a young bear erect upon its hind legs—an attitude fwhich they often assume when alarmed. In the uncertain light this would bear a resemblance to a Buman figure, especially to a man whose nerves were already somewhat shaken. Whatever it may have been, the occur- gence js unfortunate, for it has produced a most unpleasant @ffect upon the crew. | Their looks are more sullen and thelr discontent more pen. The double grievance of being debarred from the her- wing fishing and of being detained in what they choose to all @ haunted vessel may lead them to do something rash. ; Even the harpooners, who are the oldest and steadjest ‘among thom, are Joining in the general agitation. Apart from this absurd outbreak of superstitidn things fare looking rather more cheerful. ‘The pack which was forming to the south of us has partly @eared away, and the water is so warm as to lead me to Belleve that-we are lying in one of those Dranches of the @ulf Stream which run up between Greenland and Spltz- Bergen. | ‘There are numerous small medusae and sea lemons about he ship, with abundance of shrimps, so that there ts every possibility of “flah” being sighted. Indeed, one was seen Blowing about dinner time, but in such @ position that it was fmpossibfe for the boats to follow it. ‘The Captain had strange theorles of his own. As we sat fim the cabin that ovening he entertained me with them thus: “The solar system, am!d a countless number of other sys- Jams as large as itself, rolls ever silently through space in the direction of the constellation of Hercules. The great gpheres of which it 1s composed spin and spin through the feternal’ void ceaselessly and noisclessly. “Of these ono of the smallest and most’ insignificant 1s Mhat conglomeration of solid and of Iiquid particles which me have named the earth. “It whirls onward now as it has done before my birth, and will do after my death—a revolving mystery, coming one know whence, and going none know whither. * «upon the outer crust of this moving mass crawl many mites, of whom I am one, helpless, impoient, being dragged ‘aimlessly through space. Yet such is the state of things ‘mong us that the little energy and glimmering of reason qwhich I possess is entirely taken up with the labors which are necessary in order to procure certain metalic disks, wherewith I may purchase the chemical elements necessary to build up my evor-wasting tissues, and keep a roof over me to shelter me from the inclemency of the weather, “I thus have no thought to expend upon the vital questions ‘which surround me on every side. Yet, miserable entity as # am, I could at ono time feel some degree of happiness, and was even—save the mark!—puffed up occasionally with a wense of my own tmportance. “I dislike my fellow-mortals. Justice compels me to add that they appear for the most part to dislike me. I hate their Httle crawling ways, thelr conventionalities, thelr de- ceits, thelr narrow rights and wrongs. They take offense at my brusque outspokenness, my disregard for thelr social Jaws, my impatience of all constrdint, I could once let the great drove of the human race pass onward with thelr poli- fics and inventions and tittle-tattle, and I remained behind stagnant and happy. Not stagnant elther, for I was work- ing in my own little groove, and making progress. “At night I read Bacon, Descartes, Spinoza, Kant—all those who have pried into what is unknowable. They are all fruitless and empty, of result, but prodigal of poly- syllables, reminding me of men who, while digging for gold, have turned up many worms, and then exhibit them ex- uultantly as being what they sought. At times a restiess pirit would come upon me, and I would walk thirty and forty miles without rest or breaking fast, On these occa- gions, when I used to stalk through the country villages, gaunt, unshaven and dishevelled, the mothers would rush into the road and drag thelr children indoors, and the rustics would swarm out of thelr pot-houses to gaze at me," Sept. 13,—Had an interesting conversation with the chiet mate, Mr. Milne, upon the bridge. It seems that our captain fs as great an enigma to the seamen, and even to the owners ‘ot the vessel, as he has been to me, 7 Mr, Milne tells me that when the ship is paid off, upon “geturning from a voyage, Capt. Craigie disappears and {s not @een again until the approach of another season, when he “walks quietly into the office of the company and asks whether is services will be required. He has no friend in Dundee, nor does any one pretend to ‘be acquainted with his early history. ‘His position depends entirely upon his skill as a seaman @nd the name for courage and coolness which be had earned ‘wm the capacity uf mate before being intrusted with a sepn- rate ‘command. The unanimous opinion seems to be that ne ## not a Scotchman, and that his name js an assumed one. Mr, Milep thinks that he has devoted himesif to whaling for reason that it is the most dangerous occupa- tion which he could select, and that ihe courts death in ater? Possible manner, He nientioned several. instinces of this, ‘one. of which is rather curious tf true, Lyte o ea Tak eadoetha tbat mye i ance at the office and a substitute had to bo selected in his place, That was at the time of the last Russian and Turk- ish war. When he turned up again next spring he had a puckered wound In the side of bis neck which he used to endeavor to +conceal with his cravat. Whether the mate's inference that he had been engaged in the war {s true or not I cannot say. It was certainly a strange coincidence. The wind {s veermg around in an easterly direction, but tm still very alight. I think the ice is lying closer than it did yesterday. As far as the eye can reach on every side thero 4s one wide expanse of spotless white, only broken by an occasional rift or the dark shadow of @ hummock. To the gouth there !s tho narrow lane of blue water which {s our sole means of éscape, and which is closing up every day. The captain {s taking a heavy responsibility upon himself. T hoar that the tank of potatoes has been finished and even the biscuits are running short, but he preserves the same ‘Impassible countenance and spends the greater part day at the crow's nest, sweeping the horizon with bis glass. His manner is very variable and fie seems to avold my society, but there has been no repetition of the violence which he showed the other night. My deliberate opinion 1s that we are commanded by a madman. Nothing else can acoount for the extraordinary vagaries of Capt. Craigie. It {s fortunate that I kept this journal of our voyage, as {t will serve to justify us in case we have to put him under any sort of restraint—a step which I should only consent to 4s a last resource. Curlously enough it was he himself who suggested lunacy and not mere eccentricity as the secret of his strange con- duct. He was standing upon the bridge about an hour ago, peering as usual through the glass, while I was walking up and down the quarterdeck. The majority of.the men were below at their tea, for the watches have not been regularly kept of late. ‘Tired of walking, I leaned against the bulwarks and ad- aired the mellow glow cast by the sinking sun upon the great ice felds which surround us. What companion {s there like the great restless, throb- Ding sea? What human mood is there which it does not match and sympathize with? ‘There are none so gay but that they may feel gayer when they Isten to its merry turmoll, and see the long green aurges rgcing in, with the glint of the sunbeams in their arkling crests. But when the gray waves toss their heads in anger, and the wind screams above them, goading them on to madder and more tumultuous efforts, then the darkest-minded of men foels that there 1s a melancholy principle in nature which is as gloomy as bis own thoughts. When it is calm the eurface is as clear and bright as a sheet of silver, broken only at one spot, where a long black Une projects out of the water looking like the jagged back of some sleeping monster, When the wind blows from the east the waves break upon it lke thunder, and tho spray is tossed far over the ship, I was suddenly aroused from the reverie into which I had fallen by a hoarse voice at my elbow, and turning around I found tha: the captain had descended and was standing by my side, He was staring out over the ice with an expression in which horror, surprise and something approaching to joy were contending for the mastery. In spite of the cold, great drops of perspiration were cours- ing down his forehead and he was evidently fearfully ex- cited. His limbs twitched lite those of a man upon the verge of an eplleptic fit, and the lines about his mouth were drawn and hard. “Look!” he gasped, seizing me by the wrist, but still keep- ing his eyes upon the distant ice and moving his head slowly in @ horizontal direction, as if followng some object which was moving across the fleld of vision. “Look! ‘There, man, there! Between the hummocks! Now coming but from be- hind the far one! You see her-—you must see her! ‘There still! Flying trom me, by God, flying from me—and gone!” He uttered the last two words in a whisper of concen- trated agony which shall never fade from my remembrance. Cilnging to the ratiines, he endeavored to climb upon the top’ of the bulwarks as if in the hope ofobtaining a last glance at the departing object. His strength was not equal to the attempt, nowever, and he staggered back against the saloon skylights, where he leaned panting and exhausted. His face was so livid that I expected him to become un- conscious, so lost no time in leading him down the companion and stretching him upon one of the sofas in the cabin. I ‘then poured lim out some brandy, which I held to his lips, and which had a wonderful effect upon him, bringing the blood back into his white face and steadying his poor shak- ing Ilmbs. He raised himself up on his elbow, and looking round to see that we were alone he beckoned to me to come and sit beside him. “You saw it, didn't you?” he asked, still in the same sub- awesome tone eo foreign to the nature gf the man, ‘0, I saw nothing.’* His head sunk back again upon the cushions. “No, he wouldn't without the glass,” he murmured. ‘He couldn't, It was the giass that showed her to me, and then the eyes of love—tho eyes of love. I say, Doc, don't let the steward in! He'll think I'm mad!’" (To Be Continued.) QUEEN ALEXANDRA’S BAD TEA. When her father was a struggling Prince, with large prospects and a limited income, Queen Alexandra ts said to have done Nght housekeeping and sewed her own frocks, She atill takes an absorbing interest in dress, but since tho day of her marriage she has never ordered a meal or pit foot in the royal kitchens, She frankly owns that she detests things domestic. She en's sparingly of simple food, in order to keep tho siimness of her figure, but as an ndyocate of tea drinking she makes her own brew every day with a service of solid gold. So complete, however, {5 her ignorance of the art of cookery that her family avold acceptance of even tca when made by her hands; says the Detroit News. “Tt fs no better than plg wash," sald a disgusted and too plain-spoken peer, who could not refuse to drink an after- Ie prepared by the noon potion when brewed by his sovereign lady, ‘The King {s the only member of the royal household who dares confess that he can't and-won't drink the beverage en, In consequence he has a separate hip rarer heer: iterated UiSic tn tray, LST TT I I THE w« EVENING w WORLD'S «# HOME « MAGAZINE iTHE GOLD BRI |Rakea © SARIN FSRRY TP ait ee Les cpdbat BRIEF CHAPTERS IN THE HISTORY OF NEW YORK. 42 WRITTEN EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE EVENING WORLD HOME MAGAZINE. “The Father of Greater New York,” I.—THE RULE OF THE ENGLISH. | J from the Dutch and he governed from 1664 to 1673 through Col. Richard Niccolls, a gentle administrator, who changed the name from New Am- sterdam to New York. He was followed by Francis Lovelace. Then the Dutch as ensily retook the city and Capt. Colve, an old sea dog, held it fifteen months. The old name o f New Amsterdam was restored. Colve was quiotly dispossessed when by the treaty of Westminster the Dutch abandoned their claims to New Netherland. Edmund Andros came as Governor in 1674. He was knighted by Charles and on his retirement Thomas Dongan came. The city had grown to Wall street; the Dutch were still dominant in the population and riost numerous in the councils of the city. They were strenuous advocates of government by the people, and through insistence won concession after concession until in 1686 a charter was granted, the city corporation was created with the priv- ilege of election by the people of six Aldermen and elx assistants, the Gov- ernor reserving the right to appoint all other officers. The Dutch officers Schout, Burgomasters and Schepen were replaced by Mayor, Aldermen and Sheriff. In 1687 meagures were taken to bulld a new street along Past River on the line of the present Water street. The city gates were ordered closed at sunset and opened at daylight. The sale of liquors was regulated, sanitary measures established and markets provided. James became King and consolidated the provinces of New England, New York and New Jersey under Andos, one of the ablest Governors, who appointed a Lientenant and rested much of the time in Boston, On the re- cetpt of news that William of Orange had landed in England Boston {mpris- oned Andros and Nicholson fled. New York had a emall garrison and four train bands of militia, the latter recruited principally from the Dutch, although the population was so cosmopolitan that one writer says eight languages were spoken by the citi- zens of New York. Jacob Jaisler, who came from Frankfort, Germany, in 1660, was senior captain. When news of what had been done in Boston reached the people of New York the militia gathered at the fort. The cap- tains took command, and, ignoring the council of the absent Lieuten: Governor, ruled for ten days, when, a Committee of Safety having been formed, Leisler was named by it Lieutenant-Governor. Then William and Mary, having established themselves upon the Eng- Msh throne, considered the far-off colonies and sent a Governor, Sloughter. Troops were sent on another ship under Major Ingoldesby, who arrived in January, 1691, nearly three months in advance of Sloughter. He demanded the fort of Leisler, who asked for Ingoldesby's credentials, and, being re- fused, declined to surrender any part of his power. When Sloughter came the obstinate Leisler, his son-in-law, Milborne, and six of his Council were tried on charges of treason’ and convicted, al- though they had yielded to the firet showing of the William and Mary com- mission to the Governor, Leisler and Milborne were hestily hanged and ‘behegded, but later Parliament and the Throne vindicated them, restored their estates to their heirs and released the six mem ‘ofthe Council. To the common people of the city Leisler and Milborne were martyrs, and from their adherents grew the great party of the Revolution. Sloughter died in office, and historians speak sightingly of his charac- ter and acts, Ingbldesby ruled briefly, and was succeeded by Gov. Benjamin Fletcher in 1696. ‘There were then 594 houses in New York, and the city was flourishing, Tts citizens had long held a monopoly in the bolting of flour, in which Fletcher confirmed them. Nassau streeet was opened and a night watch of four men with rattles was established. But Fletcher had a large territory to govern and gave little attention to the city’s growth or its needs. Trinity Church was established in the early days of his rule, against the opposition of the Dutch and the independent English. The building was completed in 1698 on the site of the present church. William Bradford, a printer, who had been thrown in prison at Phila- delphia for printing a pamphlet against the Quakers, was invited to New York by Gov, Fletcher's Council and established the first press of the first newspaper, the New York Gazette, on the island of Manhattan in 1693. During all these years of English rule Long Island settlements had paid slight attention to the King’s laws and the Governor's demands, There was much smuggling from New England, and under Fletcher a form of Piracy arose, New York merchants were said to have backed the enterprises of Long Islanders, gaining great profits. Ships commissioned as privateers against the French sailed from the port of New York and merchantmen were sent out to revictual them and bring in the goods they gained. It was freely said that the privateers became actual piretes, and Robert Livingston, of Albany, who went to London to press claims for money advanced by him to Fletcher during an expedition against the French, charged that Fletcher was a partner of the pirates. The charges were tried before the Lords of Trade at Whitehall and sustained, but William disapproved of the finding, although he retired Fletcher and appointed Lavingston’s greatest friend, the Earl of Bellomont, Governor in bis stead. It is notable that Livingston and Bellomont were the Kidd, whom they fitted with a ship and a King’s Beene oe lee the pirates. Kidd recruited 150 seamen in New York, “desperate, necessitous men," wrote Fletcher to the Lords of Trade. “It is generally believed that they will have money per fas aut nefas; that if he miss the design intended, for which he has commission, ‘twill not be in Kidd's power to govern such @ horde of men under no pay." In this he was justified, for Kidd became t! end it was many years before New peculiar trafic, THE COOK'S FAILURES, In making custards young cooks fri quently fall. Here are an expert's rea- sons for such failures and how to avold them: Bolled Custard Curdles During the Cooking Over the Fir. Reason—It was allowed to overheat. Remody—It not very badly curdled, for @ pint of custard mix two tea- aspoontuls of corn flour smoothly and thinly with a little cold milk; boll. Add to the custard while quite hot’ another beaten egg. he most famous of pir: York ceased to profit through ‘that @nt greetings, all the harmless ohaff, ail the sprightly badinage that go to Mfe worth Living. Special Notices, THE REASON WH Because it strengthens the system and bullds up the body is why Father John’s Medicine cures colds and is so valuable as a tonic an@ body builder. Prevents pneumonia, consumption. Guaranteed, ee Amusements. HERALD SQ.7 fee CHARLES PRONMAN SEE THE conic SENSATION! KLAW & ERLANGER present DAN DALY IN THE NEW AMERIQAN FARCE, “JOHN HENRY,” BY GEO, V. HOBART & EDW. FE, ROSE, Founded on Comic Incidents tard Fall of Holes and Liquid at Hottom of Dish, Reason—Oven too hot, so custard dolled. Preyention—Stand the ple-dish in deep tin of cold water, and bake slowly. a FALLACIOUS ADAGES, This would be a «ud old world if everybody in it lved according to the rules set down by the maxim-~makere For insts Silence may be golden, but few of us would advocate a soci3! geid standard. Most of us are bimetallists and want a Oe GaRRick SReATRE, 38 a, AMNKY'B,DIXEY 10 FAUING THE MUSIC | BY ANDREW H. GREEN, ‘ | AMES, DUKE OF YORK, held patent to the territory so easily wrested | '}at Rome of a supe PPT TT UPTON TUESDAY EVENING, | MAY 26, 1903. OK HAS BEEN TRANSPLANTED IN- EUROPE, | P, MORGAN Is sald to have beer J. spurious art treasures. But he America. The gold-brick operation America {s not the home of tha gol years Europe has had dishonest arehac facture for collectors and museums bi necklaces, ctc., which wise men write Heve that these counterfelts were worn of the past. A number of these frauds exposed, In 1395 the Berlin Museum bought gold tiara which was said to have been ancient Greek work. Paris, in 1887, were essed to be co} furlous campaigns against them In the now among thelr bronzes a gellation atello which !# In reall() the very cracks being repr director, Herr Bod Urbino,” which he a 1s elmply a cast from a painted the collection of Count Wemys in Lond most Important ivories, “the gospel cov are modern coples of an original in Library, __As for paintings, the histofy of G Here are two Caesare—the first and tleman in the prehistoric sanitary und gentleman in the derby and overcoat Is looks at the other it would be hard exponent of the Caeyar industry. The visit to Rome, where he inspected the great predecessor. - It Has as Ready a Market on the Champs Elysees as on the Bowery. Russia and which the German historian Curtlus said was} It has been recently from a bas-rellef in the Louvre, uced—in high relief. ed triumphantly the acquisttton | THE FIRST C/ESAR AND THE LATEST KAISER Corot fixes us on the value of expert assurances. Alexandre himself a judge, bought this first-class Corot from the celebrated dealer and valuer. One day a visitor ‘ou have there a fine Trouillebert!"" ‘ou mean a fine Corot,” said Dumas. , it is a Trouillebert,”” insisted the other. So they, went with {t to Troulllebert's studio. 1 duped Into buying was not duped in oceurred in Europe. a brick. For many) It 1s mine,” sald the honest and conscientious painter. ‘olog: sts Who MANU) “Here is where my signature hi een scratched off. I hope, reastpiates, crowns. pumas, you do not doubt my good faith in the opemie books about and be! tign7" by great personages | have recently, been| 4 Trouillebert ts over sixty years of age, an artist of high standing. He was not even a pupil of Corot’s. Georges Pollt returned the money, and both he and Dumas agreed to keep silence. A few years later,;/however, the tale came out Ina country paper, Then Georges Petit explained hime | self to the pubite. “The painting was sold to me as a Corot by Tedeseo for a dug up ! large sum @ n Southern found to be a fraud and has been removed from the muroum. ne x The Moabite antiquities bought by the Berlin Museum in) Bros." he sald. “On taking it back from M. Dumas Tre 1876 and the terra cotta objects bought at the Hotel Drouor, | turned It to them, and they still aMrm it to be a Corot. 1 am no longer in the dispute." Tedesco Bros. threw the responsibiity on a M. Cordell. “He had exhibited it to many judges, including Melssoniér. | Besider, Georges Petit did. -C. buy it trom us, but from & he| private party, to whom wv fad sold it."* M, Cordeil 1s a “restorer” of paintings. ‘The t of a Duchess ef| was brought to ine by M. de Reum," he explained. “Mf. ‘a da Settienano, It! ‘Tedesco liked it and paid M. de Reum 4,000 francs for it. To- stucco belonging to day the dealers, Tedesco and Petit, who sold for 12,000 franca on. So two of thelr| what they bought for 4.000 francs, want to throw the blame” ers of St.-Lupicln,| on me, who made only a modest commission!” the Paris National| M. do Reum might, of course, have explained that Se — | received the painting from a masked man on a dark nighty faise| but Instead he proferred to say nothing. unterfelts only after! Landtag. They have attributed to Dons In 1888 eorges mets Amusements. MADISON | SQUARE GARDEN. Be NE: DUSS? Metropolitan Orchestra, KE. Lox office; also at Tyson's hotels). Rullman's, 113 DF way,4 Mi s, Breray. Prices (opens ngt.),$1.$2 & $3.0en.Adm.$L. ROCKIES; OR, Brooklyn Amusements, PARK. Black Patti ‘Troubadours. | 40 Cel'd Artists. facluding the Great Black Patth the latest. Take your choice. ‘I'he gen- jerwear is the late Julius Caesa ‘The the present Kalser, Wilhelm, As each o say which considers himself the picture was taken during the Kaiser’ ar’ gallery containing the statue of his MATINEE, RVERY DAY, Excursions Amusements. ay. SULTAN SU LU CASINO To-Night IRCLE 3% THE GREAT FoLaoRAS VBL, YORKE & ADAMS, {4th S Street Theatre. .... POSITIVELY LAST 2 THE 4 COHAN Weeks. RUNNING FOR OFFICE. GRAND--FRANCIS WILSON) [) “THE TORBADOR.”* AMERICAN, 23,5 JACOB ADLER near Canal 6t The Harpers, BELASCO THEATRE bast gi DAVID BELASCO prevents [oo “THE DAR = Bh HE BATES 1 cans. 2 OF THR GOD: ~ ,TRY PROOTCR'S ES Amusements LEHIGH ) VALLEY Reserved Every A Fall Orchestras, RAILROAD NIAGARA FALLS on totum MAY 29th Return to MAY 3fst ITHACA Boat Race $6.10 PARLOR AND SLEEPING CARS INING CARS ALA CARTE MAUCH CHUNK | GLEN ONOKO ‘And the SWITCHBACK ‘mer. Trumpeters, &¢, FLORENCE REED, sa ASL en ith St) THE SMART SET, (426th St.) AER PASTOR'S NTS, cent, Mr. and re. Barry, Assote Richmoad Glenroy, Bijou HE WABASH. |, WILLARD. Wel. Mat, B1y oo eee and ‘Saturday hE} MATINEE TOba¥|¢ DEWEY Bowery Burlesquers. UMMING VAUDEVILLE ST. 00 J 00 DECORATION DECORATION DAY, MAY 30th a EXCURSIONS ERIE RAILROAD. Shohola Glen. In the Blue Mounteing, one hundred and savem miles from New York, of the beautiful Delawaa ROOF GARDR: sioner & ‘id st. Eves Mats, Wed. & Sat. 2.15 .| Manhattan GREEN WooD LAKE GLENS _ ‘$1.00—-08, NER ia ore ie Special express train leaves Wott 35 chambers 3t. eran Chay 10.00 Ae ie es NIAGARA ROUND FALLS $9. 99 TRIP Summer pcesre Hotels and Boarding ° Houses on Long Island. Lith 8, Pr Rvgs, $.15, Mata, AS, i weTKOPOL ' Resurrection, DEN WORLD IN W AX. New Grours, | E MATOGRAPH, | cl MUSEE,! eral CD At ea artis & 8 Lilian Durkha: Julian Rose, The & De Forests. | w | something of silver speech. Sounding. ir brass, of course, we can get along KNICKERBOCKER THRATAS, Reha hed gomfortably without, says the Pittsburg poaiorsas ee ‘c's ROMEO and JULIET, be eae a eeay Woe: wares wand he se | MABELLE GILMAN Xese happy. It would eliminate all pleas x tag MAT. “THE MOCKING BiB" ulaledboaell cll: Saale ‘a i“ C Lax. Ave. & 107th ot, Mat. Wel, 5e A WIFE'S SECRET. HUA AeADEAY ° WEE T |THE ROYAL LILLIPUTIANS— —Next “END Week, Kate Clastoa, “Two Orphans’? we taeda ical tine Tickets ‘May 29:5 a9, totlowes ghambers. 8, fn or Is Mt Pt 8 minute ee carton A TERRITORY SWEPT BY THE ae PREVAILING COOL SUMMER SOUTH WINDS FROMTHE OCEAN —THE IDEAL PLACE FOR HEALTH, RESTAND RECREATION. ererl us "pon. R. ticket aces, 1 16 “wlastee on oF before Switchback & Glen O EXCURSION, DECORATION pay, Re

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