The land of open doors; being letters from western CanadaWith foreword by Earl Grey . ?^: THE dump(Constructing a high embankment). INTERIOR OF TYPICAL BUNK-HOUSE(Notice spruce pole bunks) Head of Steel, and Beyond I guess so. Wait a minute. And he kindlyfished me one out from somewhere. Owing to slides from the grade, the bunk-houses, which consisted of three tents, had beenplaced on some rising ground above. I went intoone tent. The bunks, built of spruce poles, linedthe two long sides, and were indescribably all seemed to be occupied, and I was glad,because the place had an extre
The land of open doors; being letters from western CanadaWith foreword by Earl Grey . ?^: THE dump(Constructing a high embankment). INTERIOR OF TYPICAL BUNK-HOUSE(Notice spruce pole bunks) Head of Steel, and Beyond I guess so. Wait a minute. And he kindlyfished me one out from somewhere. Owing to slides from the grade, the bunk-houses, which consisted of three tents, had beenplaced on some rising ground above. I went intoone tent. The bunks, built of spruce poles, linedthe two long sides, and were indescribably all seemed to be occupied, and I was glad,because the place had an extremely evil gave up the quest till after supper, of which Ifelt in need, having had nothing since breakfastat Fitzhugh. We had supper in an immense log must have been 200 of us and more. Therewas plenty of food on the table, but unless onewas very hungry it would be difficult to eat agood meal, because the conditions under which itis served are distinctly unattractive. One mansticks his fork into the potatoes, another puts thespoon he has just had in his mouth into the sugar,or dumps a dirty plate right
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectfrontierandpioneerli