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from Parry Sound then, and we I had to be off. Sat on the dock (with a loquacious man & others) till about seven, when the "Britannie" came in from Collingwood, and there we ate breakfast on board before it started north. The three men came down from the hotel to say Goodbye & Mr. & Mrs. Moss of Milwaukee, and presented her with "Charlie's" hat - which was very awful. The loquacious man was the first at table and the last away, and about 11 o'clock I heard him asking another man what he could eat the most of (!!) the morning was bright and lovely. We stopped at Depot Harbor. Such a queer place - with ice docks and a railroad (!) and nothing else. I took Helen a Cabot poster - all yellow the brown - which we called "Depot Harbor" ever after. We watched the gulls and I read a little a "The Leavenworth Case" and we got out to open water and saw a tow &c. Then got among the lovliest island of all - wooded - and pretty soon went around the "Devil's Elbow" and past Sings camp (as I afterward found out) and he megaphoned something about getting ready to get off the boat and I said I guessed they meant me - and another lady said she was "Mrs. Wagoner" - and I


from Parry Sound then, and we I had to be off. Sat on the dock (with a loquacious man & others) till about seven, when the "Britannie" came in from Collingwood, and there we ate breakfast on board before it started north. The three men came down from the hotel to say Goodbye & Mr. & Mrs. Moss of Milwaukee, and presented her with "Charlie's" hat - which was very awful. The loquacious man was the first at table and the last away, and about 11 o'clock I heard him asking another man what he could eat the most of (!!) the morning was bright and lovely. We stopped at Depot Harbor. Such a queer place - with ice docks and a railroad (!) and nothing else. I took Helen a Cabot poster - all yellow the brown - which we called "Depot Harbor" ever after. We watched the gulls and I read a little a "The Leavenworth Case" and we got out to open water and saw a tow &c. Then got among the lovliest island of all - wooded - and pretty soon went around the "Devil's Elbow" and past Sings camp (as I afterward found out) and he megaphoned something about getting ready to get off the boat and I said I guessed they meant me - and another lady said she was "Mrs. Wagoner" - and I


from Parry Sound then, and we I had to be off. Sat on the dock (with a loquacious man & others) till about seven, when the "Britannie" came in from Collingwood, and there we ate breakfast on board before it started north. The three men came down from the hotel to say Goodbye & Mr. & Mrs. Moss of Milwaukee, and presented her with "Charlie's" hat - which was very awful. The loquacious man was the first at table and the last away, and about 11 o'clock I heard him asking another man what he could eat the most of (!!) the morning was bright and lovely. We stopped at Depot Harbor. Such a queer place - with ice docks and a railroad (!) and nothing else. I took Helen a Cabot poster - all yellow the brown - which we called "Depot Harbor" ever after. We watched the gulls and I read a little a "The Leavenworth Case" and we got out to open water and saw a tow &c. Then got among the lovliest island of all - wooded - and pretty soon went around the "Devil's Elbow" and past Sings camp (as I afterward found out) and he megaphoned something about getting ready to get off the boat and I said I guessed they meant me - and another lady said she was "Mrs. Wagoner" - and I

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