The North Platte semi-weekly tribune. (North Platte, Neb.) 1895-1922, August 17, 1909, Image 2

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    Elephant
Ivory
'Ctnn How
MM M ! OH W IB K jri X w w
It Is
J3y Copt. Fritz Duquesne
lapl. b'uh Ituqucsti" wis born of
itocr parents in South Africa, edu
cated in Europe (where he won con
siderable tdistuu lion as a swords
limn), and hat lirtti a professional
hufilcr of big game most of his life.
At llic age of 17 he wits a veteran of
the Kaffir warn. It" served in the
liScr war mid also in the Congo. In
the recent events of South Africa's
kahtthstopic hislorij Capl.Duqitcsne
tool; a conspicuous part. He act
ed hi many ra pari I its during the
hostilities between the liofr and the
llriihh. beimj in turn spy, in Hit art
detective, engineer, censor, dispatch
carrier and propagandist, fie wan
wounded twice in the fighting
around Colcuso. When the BrilUh
siicrcedrd in cutting cable coinmuni
cation between Iloer republic
and the rest of the world. Dunuesw
curried the news of the Iloer virtu
rita over the Mozambique border,
and frolil there he wrote dispatches
10 the Petit Bleu, the official Euro
pean organ of the Hoar government.
Ifc wan once captured hi the Por
fnpnexe and thrown into prison at
Lorntta Marquis, Later he was ta
ken as a vrison"i' Jo Europe at the
request of the British government.
When the ship that conveyed lain
m0 hi guard touched at Maples he
,was suffering from a fever and in
consequence was placed, in an Italian
hospital. On his recovery he wait al
lowed to go free. lie went to lints
sets and was sent back to the front
by Dr. Letda. with plans for the
seizure of Cape 'J own by the Boer
covimuntlers, then mobilized in Cape
(lofting. Ei'erfflhing was ready for
VmSfqking of the city when, a traitor
hitfiiia revealed the viol. Dunuesne
fjmd'n number of others were cap-
"uh defenses, This was the climax
of what has come, to be known as the
"Cape Town. Plot." omv of the
prisoners were sentenced to deulh
who httev had their sentence dianged
to lifnmprtsonment, ('apt.Utiquesue
was among the taller, Ten months
later he escaped from the Bermuda
prisons, got aboard the American
yarhi Margaret of New York white
she teas coaling at the dock, and was
conveyed to Baltimore. Back to Eu
rope 'he went again, as war corre
spondent and militant writer on the
Petit' Bleu; thence to Africa, where
he took a commission on the uonqo
In East Africa he hunted bio name
for spor) and profit, and finally he
came to nr 1 or,' lo do newspaper
and .magazine work.
flM experience lrol
dent lloosuvclt has
gained h u n t I n g
game on tho North
Amorlcan continent
will be of little use
to him on his expo
dltlon Into tho wilds
o f Kant Africa,
iluiitlui: In America
la a sport, something to be played at:
hunting In Africa Is n trade, almost n
liroicHHlon, In America one merely
tultes n rifle and goes out. to shoot. In
Africa, to limit a la mode, one takes
a hntlery of arms, usuully thrco mid
BomotlmeH ifmir. high power, rifles of
different caliber, ranging from a six
and five-tenths millimeter to a COO
cordllo express. Tho cartridges for
thC8o rifles are charged with varl
otis bullets, solid nickel, steel, aoft
noso long, soft noso short and unlit
J- Each of these bullets was designed
by expert h for a npeclal use, and on
tho way they are used depends tho
success of one's Hluit. Often tho uso
or (ho unsuitable bullet ends In the
huntcr'x death. On small game the
light caliber nrm, six five-tenths mill!
motor, Ih miuH. and on large and dan
gorous game the nlno millimeter Man
Her nnd 000 caliber cordite express
give the best results. The last-named
rlflo strikes tho enormous blow of
8,700 pounds, and has a recoil of close
on n hundred weight. That the man
whoso hunting experiences has been
confined to bird shooting with shot
guns, or small game, with, say, a 1)2
caliber rlflo, may understand the
meaning! of these figures, lot mo state
that tho ordinary U2-cnllber rlflo has
a recoil of perhaps ton to twelve
pounds. The doublo-barrelcd shot
gun, which to tho ordinary hunter
seems to have all tho "kicking" ca
paclty nny weapon needs, has a re
noil of from 25 to SO. pounds.
Tho GOO caliber cordite express la
the most deadly hand nrm mudo.
Notwithstanding tho torrlflo force
of thlu $00 express bullet it must be
uiaccti in. uto correct part or nit
phanl's h rhinoceros' unatoisf lo
Obtained
I hn 1
brltiK hi m down. Tim hunter must
put the Hhut Into tin; unitiHtl's hoad or
hoart, or ho mutit men ft chnrso thnt
will prohahly end In IiIb destruction.
HtlluH of varlou caliber aro carried
for economy. It Ih cheaper to use n
Rtnall six (1 volant hn millimeter rllla
on small gumi1, a nine millimeter on
medium gumo, and a 600 oxproa on
big game, than to enrry one weapon
for all-round work, which would have
lo bo big enough at least for the
larKoat i;ame. N'othInK smaller than
a 4150 expreaa would do for that, and
It would bo distinctly uneconomical,
not to say foolish, to shoot n small
antolopn, tho size of ti goat, with a
COO express. It would be like using
u pile driver to kill a mosquito. Again,
cartridges become Vtry costly by tho
time they reach tho Interior of Africa.
A cartridge for a COO express rlflo, for
Instance, costing .sixpence (II! cents)
In London, reaches an enormous price
by tho time It gets Into tho hunting
grounds of Africa. I have seen thorn
bring Ave shillings ($1.20) each, and
t-ry scarce at that, Nor is this such
an extravagant price when one takes
Into consideration that every ounce
has to be carried by portors who plod
for mouths through swamps, across
rivers, ovor mountalnM.'traverHlng tho
parched veld and penetrating the dis
mal forest, often fighting their way
foot by foot boforo they reach their
destination. It Is easy to soe that
weight Is an Important factor In cart
ridge economics. Four six live-tenths
millimeter cartridges aro equal In
weight to one GOO express, That is, It
Is four deaths against one, for tho
same weight.
These are the things President
UooBOVolt must learn before he can
conaldor himself up on tho wayB of
safari. If the president hunts like
an Africander and not like tho av
erage Huropenn that visits tho dnrlc
continent, ho will corlalnly find
danger, danger that tries a hunter'tt
WITH A ROAR
norve, that requires un alort Intolll
gonco and u quick eyo to pass through
It and live. i
Mr. Cunnlnghamo, wtio Is organiz
ing tho Hoosovolt expedition, iu ono
or tho most experienced and clevor of
African hunters. Ho will hnvo com
plete charge of ovoryUIng from tho
largest to tho smallest dot nil. With
him nt the head of things tho presi
dent cnu depend on having u success
ful hunt. That Is, If ho is going for
sport and not merely ns a scribe look
lug for locnl atmosphoro for his book.
Many great African huntorH hnvo
killed nil their gunio In tho narrow
and dark confines of an Ink bottle,
Africa Ih a menngorlo 11,500,000
miles In urea, with J ho, greatest, com
bination of hikes, rivets, mountains
and veld Imaginable, n vorltablo para
dlso for wild animals. Notwithstand
ing tho destruction of big gjuno, thoro
are still thousands ot hords or every
thing Africa possossos for tho hunter,
roaming ovor tho void only a fow
days' travel afoot from tho coast.
Thoro nre hundreds of rivers that
have rarely boon visited by tho whlto
man. On the hanks of these streums
hippopotami, rhinoceroses, elephants,
leopards, lions, gorillas and dozens of
varieties of antelope, tho names of
which havo never boon hoard by tho
majority of HuvopeniiB or Americans,
gambol and fatten In gluttonoiiH plea
tltude undisturbed by tho crack of tho
GOO caliber express. It is only In
renqhahlo dlstrlctu thnt tho gumo Is
killed to any grout oxtout. The cost
and danger of hunting In most ot tho
country havo protected It and will
protect It for many years tit come.
Frightful Diseases of the Jungle.
Where gumo Is most abundant tho
flight Till dlseuROs that nature seems
to have placed as u barrier against
tho white man's Invasion aru also
abundant, In Africa's wild, beautiful,
mysterious forests, more to be foarcd
than all tho llous and rhinos, lurk the
gorniB of tho deadly blackwntor fovor,
malaria, sclonce-dofylng slooplng sick
ness nnd tho unknown rouson for tho
veld sores that drain one's life out
In u fow mouths. Those, with tho
ICast African lorm for on expedition of
nny Kind, expvcln)' a liuniltic expedition.
nifusrnal swamp, the noxloi.j Insects,
tho slimy, poisonous spnrs of tho
natives, make hunting In Africa no
gatno for the chlcken-heartod.
Of course, hunting as a business Is
one thing and hunting for pleasure is
another. It Is possible. to kill African
gnmo to a limited extent without tho
slightest hardship. One can go on
safari accompanied by natives who do
all the work, even to carrying tho
sportsman In a hammock up to the
game, selecting the correct rifle,
loading with the proper ammunition,
pointing out the place to shoot at
and handing tho hunter tho weapon.
Tho hunter merely pulls the trigger,
after seeing that them aro a number
of shikarees (nntlvo hunters) in
readiness to protect him should
ho miss his mark nnd the game
charge. As often as not he misses,
a shikaree shoots the game, and
his employer gets tho credit. It
Is the dangerous sldo only of African
hunting that has ony attractions for
tho man with any sporting Instincts
In him, and It Is only that sldo or
tho hunt that is of Interest to the
laity.
According to present Intentions, Mr.
Cunnlnghamo will take tho Iloosevelt
pnrty over tho route I have corered
twice, tho last time very recently.
WhatN havfl passed through Uoose
volt must face. Ho will be lucky it
ho comes out nllve.
Like most floors, T hnvo been hunt
ing, on and off, and associating with
hunters slnco I was ten years old.
Danger nnd hairbreadth escapes huvo
happened bo frequently to mo that
most of my hunting experiences ap
pear almost too commonplace to
record. Yet some of them stand out
vividly from tho rest, especially those
of recent occurrence. It would bo
Impossible to hunt nny length or time
In Africa without having some adven
tures worth relating; adventures In
which a Bteady ryo, nerves of steel,
HE CHARGED DOWN ON ME. LIKE AN WALANCHE.
nnd a brain as quick as lightning aro
life-saving essentials to a big game
hunter.
Most game drops at tho first shot
from tho rillo of an experienced hunt
er. "Tho gnino that makes the story
is tho gamo that's missed," ns tho
.Swnhllt (cast coast natives) say, nnd
thoro is nothing truer than that. say
ing, ns far aH my experiences go, for
a bad shot nearly ended my trek a
little while ago in the Lake country.
I wnn troklng between Lalco Albert
I3dwnrd N'Ynnza and Lake Klvu, tho
gieatest stretch of hunting ground In
tho world, with a caravan of a hun
dred men. Wo hnd marched steadily
through tho early part or tho day and,
now that tho merciless white-hot sun
wnB directly overhead, I called a halt,
Kach member or tho caravan threw
himself down In the uhude excepting
my shikaree Nick, a "boy" from the
other side or tho continent, a native
or Senegal. Ho never rested, and, as
he got a percentage ot tho Ivory we
socured, ho never lot tho solos of his
feet grow soft for want of exorcise.
About an hour passed before Nick
same swinging Into camp with his
white teeth gloaming like now swords.
I know by his smile that there was
something afoot. He walked straight
to my olophant guns and beckoned
mo. I know ho had struck u rresh
spoor (trail). Seizing my arms, I
signaled my gun bearer and struck
out, Nick leading.
If there are any elephants about at
midday, the hunter is pretty imro to
make a good bag, for at that time
they rest out. of tho direct rays of
the sun, dozing the hot hours away,
and nro easily approached.
A Terrible Battle with Elephants.
After half an hour's walk through
grass that was ut least 20 feet high,
wo camo across a herd of about
twonty olophants, among which there
were some fluo bull tuskers. As I ox
poctod, they woro nil rostlng out ot
tho suu. They wore difficult to got at
on account or tho thickness of tho
undergrowth. It meant a long, pa
tient crawl to n good shooting posi
tion, for to shoot at anything but
close quarters In such country meant
that tho bullet would be deflected by
the hush. I put n solid nickel hall in
tho right barrel of my GOO caliber ox
press for a head shot, and a soft nose
split In tho loft barrel for a body shot.
With tho shlknreu at my side and the
gun bearer nt my back, wo crept
silently, inch by inch, root by root,
through the hugo tufts of grass till n
good view of the game presented It
self. 1 took off my coat and hat, hung
them on n low limb nnd crawled a
few yards farther on. As I could not
get a vital shot at any of the ele
phants in thulr lying position, I gave
a sharp whistle. In an Instant they
were upon their feet thrusting their
trunks up In the nlr to get a scent of
their enemies and holding out their
enormous oars to cutch tho slightest
sound. At Inst nn old bull worked
into tho right position. I aimed at
his weakest point, between the eyo
nnd car, and gave him the solid shot.
My aim was had; a ploco or his tusk
Hew Into the air. With a roar ho
charged down on mo Ilka an ava
lanche. I leveled my express for a second
shot and tho natives stood ready.
Down he came, the grass waving be
fore him In billows. I waited 50, 40,
:!0, 20 ynrds, another second's sus
pense and bang! I gave him tho Boft
bullet full In tho chest. It failed to
stop him. A screeching roar of pain
burst from tho charging monster and
blood gushed from his trunk. I
snatched my Mauser and jumpod
asldo ns ho passed. My hat and coat,
which woro n fow yards behind, at
tractod his attention. With a snort
of oatlsractlon ho crushed them down.
1 gave him all my Mauser shots In
tho ronr. With extraordinary sudden
ness ho turned. Ho sighted mo and
chnrged, his tUBks level with his body.
My magazine was empty. I throw my
rifle down nnd ran, the elephant gain
ing on mo at each step. I saw Nick
ahead or nic with leveled rlflo.
To keep running monnt that I
would soon be overtaken. Instinctive
ly I throw myself on the ground nnd
Nick tired. With a thud thnt mude
tho earth trcmblo tho elephant
dropped. Tho huge trunk twisted like
n wounded snake for a moment, and
then the gigantic, body rolaxed In
death. It all took about two minutes
to happen and was a protty close
shave, but It wan worth the trouble,
for tho tusks wo got woro big, weigh
ing closo to n hundred pounds.
The Killing of Nick, Hunter Boy.
A toy months after this occurrence,
on tho same trip, I lost Nick, my
Senegal "boy," under terrible clrcutn
utanceH. This brave man who had
hunted everything In Africa from tho
Capo to Cairo, and from X.unzlbar to
llanana, boasted many a ttmq that he
would never bo killed by anything but
old ago. Hut ho wus too sure; Loug
association with dangur had mndo
him careless, and this cost him his
llfo.
Wo wore treklng south toward Lake
Tanganyika nlong a native path run
ning parallel with tho Kusizl river. It
was frightfully hot, so hot that tho
gun barrels burned our hands. Tho
porters staggored under their heavy
loads in a loug string, mumbling
songs, each In his native tongue, to
kocp up his fagged spirits, and the
suu rays danced In misty vibrations
from tho parched earth. Suddenly the
Jungle ceased and we broke Into tho
open yeld. Kour hundred yards away,
coming, In tho opposito direction, was
a herd of at least twenty olophants.
They had ovldently nindo a long Jour
ney nnd woro aufforlng from tho In
tonso heat. Some of them woro occu
pied in thrusting their trunks into
their mouths and drawing water from
their stomachs. With this water they
woro Bprlnkllng their sunburned
hacks, This Is a habit thnt elephants
nlwnys practlco when they are over
hoatcd and cannot find the shade of u
friendly forest.
To mo tho sight of tho approaching
herd was welcome. I saw Ivory which
meant thouaunds of dollars to ua If
wo could get In a row good shots, I
ordered my caravan back Into tho un
drtrgrowth, and, bringing up tho shik
arees, prepnred ror the slaughter,
loaded my nlno millimeter Mauser
with solid bullets for long shots. At
300 ynrds I opened fire and the leader
a fine bull, dropped In his tracks. The .
crack of my rifle threw tho herd Into '
consternation. They were not surd
where tho nolso came from, nnd they
as yet had not caught sight of us
After u little Indecision they kept on
the old route and marched toward us
A hundred yards nearer and I gnv6
the nearest, another bull, my second
shot. It went wild. He shrloked nnd
throw his trembling head back and
forth frantic with pain. I had ovl
dontly given him n bad face wound. 1
fired again and must have missed. He
saw me, and, trumpeting loudly,
charged down on us. rollowed by the
whole herd, I emptied my tnaga.lnf
Into thorn with no effect. Nearer they
came, their Ivory gloaming in the sun
nnd the dust curling up In clouds be
hind them. The ground vibrated like
a beaten drum top under their thun
derous charge.
I sow a tusk-crested wave or mam
moths sweeping down to destroy us
It was no time ror Inaction. The gun
hearer handed me tho COO caliber ex
press. At n hundred ynrds 1 gave the
leader one barrel after the other. IU
fell, and those behind tumbled ovot
hint In a heap. Ir a moment thti
mnd charge was broken. I thought
wo wore out of danger, but anothei
leader forged ahead and boro down
on us. "ftun!" I shrieked, nnd every
mnn made for Baroty, excepting Nick,
the coolent In tho race or danger and
always the Inst to run. I threw my
self behind a tree, Just escaping bo
lug crushed to death. A screech rose
above (ho thunder of tho hoors nnd
the next instant I saw Nick hoisted
Into the nlr with a blood-stnlned tusk
through his body. Tho Infuriated
mass swept past, leaving a red
marked trail. I Immediately set out
on (he upoor ol tho herd In hope ol
getting tho body or tho shlknree. Al
though I searched till sundown I was
unsuccessful.
Thnt night I heard tho lions roar
ing down toward tho river. The next
morning, with a few natives, I con
tinned the search, in the direction
that the lions' routs came from dur
lng tho night. Wo soon sighted a
flOcH of. .vultures, n sure sign ot dead
game, and, coming up with them, we
found tho chewed carcass of an el
phunt and the scntterod bones of t
human being, among which I found
Nick's hunting knife and belt. Tht
wounded olophant had carried him oc
his tusk till It fell exhausted through
loss ot blood, and died. It was ono ol
tho best Ivory IuiuIb I over made al
quo shooting nnd it wan the saddest
Nick was a great shikaree. He pos
sessed every attribute of manhood
Ho died ltke many a hunter has died
Nick was tho twentieth native thai
I have lost on my various expeditions
It was In the same country that on a
previous expedition a rhinoceros In
vaded our camp and killed two native
porters, wounding three nnd giving
mo a close cnll.
(Copyright, 190!), tiy KenJ. B. Hampton.,
TAKES TOLL OF HUMAN LIVES
Venturesome Explorers of Grand Can
yon of the Colorado in Con
stant Danger.
"Kvery year tho river and the Grand
Canyon of tho Colorado tako their tor
In human llfo," recently said Freder
lck S. Dollenbnugh, tho nrtist-scholar
who has painted pictures and written
books nbout that wonderful river that
rushes for hundreds ot miles througt
gorges hundrods of feet deep.
"When I was with Major I'owoll on
his exploring expedition through tht
Grand canyon 40 years ago wo losl
several men, and tho few other expo
dltlonB that hnvo followed ours since
then all havo had to pay the river tht
prlco In tho same way," ho continued
"Powell's party was the first Joumoj
whlto men over made down througt
that perilous portion of tho Coloradc
river, and almost every day of the
mnny months It took us was full ol
danger. Every year some lives ar
lost there. Two years ago n skeleton
of a man was discovered In Marble
canyon lying on a rocky shelf a little
abovo tho whirling waters of the
river. A newspaper dated In 1900 was
in tho pocket of his coat, so that It
was llkoly tho mnn perished eight
years ago nt least. Whether ho was
killed while trying to scale the Insur
niountablo walls or whether he died
or starvation no one knows,
"That part of tho Colorado rlvei
never gives up Its dead. Thoso whe
tall Into tho water'B clutches literally
are dashed to pieces,. and no trace ol
them evor is round.
"Tho Whirlpool rapids or tho Ni
agara river below tho Tails aro terri
ble to contemplate, but It can be said
without exaggeration that the Niag
ara rapids arc peaceful waters com
pared to some of the long stretches
of foam on the Colorado. Tho whirl
pools of tho Colorado arc of the true
typo the water Bwlrls round and
round nnd there Is a broad, hollow
funnel-shaped hole In the contor of
them through which ono might peer
down u good many feet If he could
hover over It.
"Not nil the canyon's toll, however,
Is collected by tho river. No ono
knows what Immeasurable mineral
wealth is hidden In tho canyon walls,
nnd every year venturesome prospect
ors go Into thoso gloomy-depths soek
lug the treasuroB that thoy guard.
These men, through somo sudden risa
of water or for somo other roason,
frequently loso their lives In trying
to escape from tho canyou, Most of
them, I fancy, go mad with hunger
nnd die In trying to scalo tho preci
pices. It Is the most awsomo place
In tho world down thero where tho
river flows, where It nover Is fully
daylight except for a few brief niln
uttm t midday.
THE LAW'S DELAY.
Hlx What's tho best way to never
icttle n question?
Dlx Go to law about It
CHILD HAD SIXTY BOILS.
And Suffered Annually with a Red
Scald-Like Humor on Her Head.
Troubles Cured by Cutlcura.
"When my Httlo Vivian was nbout
six months old her head broke out in
bolls. Sho had about sixty In all and
used Cutlcura Soap and Cutcura
Ointment 'which cured her entlre.ly.
Somo timo later a humor broko out be
hind her cars and spread up on to
hor head until It was nearly half cov
ered. Tho humor looked Hko n scald,
very rod with a sticky, clear fluid com
ing from It. This occurred every
spring. I always used Cutlcura Soap
and Ointment which never failed to
heal It up. Tho last timo It broke
out It becamo so bad that I was dis
couraged, nut I continued tho uso of
Cutlcura Soap, Ointment and Resol
vent until Bho was well nnd baa never
been troubled In tho lost two years.
Mrs. Sr. A. Schwerin, G74 Spring Wells
Ave., Detroit, Mich., Feb. 24, 190S."
Totter Drag Si Cbem. Corp., Bolo Props., Boston.
Couldn't Blame the Boy.
"Young man," said the stem parent,
"when 1 was your ago I had to work
for a living."
"Well, sir," nnswercd the frivolous
ly inclined youth, "I'm not to blnme
for that. I have always disapproved
ot my grandfather's attitude in the
matter."
Ftto threat Is no trifling aliment. It
will ("omctiinei carry infection to the en
tire Hvstcin through the food thnt U eaten,
llaiulins Wizard Oil ia a sure, quick cure.
Faith.
Faith makes us, and not wo it; nnd
'alth makes Its own forms. Emerson.
Lewis' Single Binder mnfle of extra qual
ity tobacco, cost more than other 0o
cigars. Tell the dealer you want them.
Too often when tho heart Is willing
the purso is weak.
INVALUABLE
for Summer
Complaints
Dysentery, Diarrhea, Cholera
Morbus, Cholera Infantum, Colic
nndCramp3. AI30 relieves Grip
ing Pain3, Sour Stomach, Vom
iting, Sea Sickness, and Hys
terics and Nervousness due to
bovel affections.
DR. D. JAYNE'S
Carminative
Balsam
stops pain Immediately and al
most invariably brings about
speedy recovery. This medicine
is just as cafe as it 13 effective.
Get a bottle at your druggist's,
and keep it always in the house.
For the children's sake, don't
go away for the Summer with
out taking a supply along.
Per Bottla, 25c
Dr. D. Jayne'i Expectorant U a
reliable remedy for croup and
whooping cough, coushd and colds.
Nebraska Directory
KODAK FINISHING
attention. All uuiiillct for Him Amutrur xtrlclly
fn-Mli. Send for i-tnloinie and flnitihliiir nrli-t-s.
THE ROBERT DEMPSTER CO.,
Box 1197, Omaha, Nob. '
THEPAXTONe"
ltoouiii from 11.00 up Hlnglp, TS centu up iloubli-.
CAFE PRICES REASONABLE
MARSEILLES GRAIN ELEVATORS
ant tlio bht ' liulut on having tlicin.
Ask your local dealer, or
JOHN DEERE PLOW CO. OMAHA
JYPEWRITERS
4 WH Mfr nprUe. Cu or time
"-"'- ..wMnTu, rvui apuueH. nautili
u; wnrie ionmeiiulDtlou. .NoU
ni.liUiUiiuBli.i,,,.it
U r.S....t..,Ul WMjiaialiUf hit.
M. Splcsbcrgcr & Son Co,
Wholesale Millinery
The Doit In tha Wtt
OMAHA, NEB.
BoM bjr Ui nt lUtitn. W will Mnd to puplla did
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ButpU.bnwwUodriJl. JOHN Q. WOODWARD
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