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Her character is very good. We are well satisfied with her so far, and hope her position will be mutually advantageous. Your obedient, E W Scane. Chatham Town. This is an excellent girl and well cared for.

My wife desires to be remembered. Yours truly, Geo Latimer, MD. Has 3 girls. Lived 14 years in present neighborhood. Lived in present neighborhood only two months. Has one child. When are you coming. I wrote you a month since; Mr.

NOTES FROM NIAGARA" - NIAGARA PENINSULA BRANCH NEWSLETTER

Shearer also. Can you not devote a little time to your Raymond friends? The Doctor has asked me to write in his stead, as he is engaged at present.


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Very respectfully, Mrs S M Dupree. Oshawa Twn. I have not heard from her since Lizzie left her place. Henry Roberts, 9, who came on the Prussian is also living here. An excellent home, well cared for. Has house and property in St. Two children.

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In a good home, well spoken of, a fine healthy girl. My Dear Mrs. Rye I am getting well, and I like my home very well, and I am very happy; and if you please, will you be so kind as to let me know wear my sister Matilda has gone? My mistress has brought me a great deal of clothes. My eyes are very bad and I cannot go out, and I am taking medicine and powders. Jane Taylor and I have been writing to each other. Amy E.

Has 2 sons and a daughter grown up. I am at Mrs. I hope you are keeping well. I will soon be eleven years in America.

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Mary Ann McGill; 12; orphan; workhouse 3 years; brother in school; another in town not known; Rev. From Danville, Kentucky. The children you left here have given much satisfaction, and Old England may well be proud of them. He fears you have been ill. Tis true they work, but not so hard as even to jade their appearance in the least or cause them to be the least discontented, and they seem to be cheerful and happy. Dear Friend: Your circular has been too long unanswered, not, however from intentional neglect, but we are living in a small inland place, where we have no artist, and consequently we have been unable to comply with your request to all; the weather, too, has been extremely inclement during our winter.

So that is one excuse we have to offer. As to the misrepresentations of Mr Doyle, so far as we are concerned, his representations are entirely at variance with the facts. Our girls have greatly improved, having been treated more like adopted children than like servants; they are as well dressed when at church as most of the children of parents in good circumstances anywhere; they are cheerful and happy, none having excessive labour to perform. The one I have, Maria Grant is a delicate child; growing very rapidly in height, but naturally quite thin; she calls me Pa and my wife Ma.

I read your letter to her and asked her what she thought of it? She laughed very heartily at such a misrepresentation of matters, at least as far as we here are concerned.

As soon as it is possible I will have the photograph taken and forwarded to you. I hope you will succeed in refuting any statements contrary to facts, and that our good work may prosper always. Mary H. Mainhood; 10; orphan; Oxfordshire workhouse two years; stepmother and uncle in England; with a married aunt in Iowa, United States.

Mr Winter met her there. She is very well, and as happy as she can be. Her trunk has not come, and she has no cheque for it, and she says she never had one. The last time she saw her trunk was at the station after she left you. I will send, for your kind acceptance, a view of our Iowa home, and the future home of Mary H Mainhood. Thanking you again and again for all your kindness to Mary, I remain yours truly, Sarah Winter. S - Please to accept my sincere thanks for the nice books you sent me.

I shall value them very highly indeed, and Mary is now reading the one you gave her.

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She wishes me to give her kind love to you, and to tell you she has never felt so happy since her mother died. I hope, nobal lady, that you will accept my warmest thanks for the trouble and care you have had for my little orphan niece. Please to excuse this poorly written letter, for I am suffering from weak eyes this winter.

No children. Robert Ball was the Inspector for Niagara.

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It could be that Elizabeth went to his home until a placement could be found for her as she is with a different family on the census. Rhind, Niagara, Ontario in June Elizabeth Emma Hughes; 11; orphan; workhouse 2 years; No relations; Mr. Fred E. Lived all his life in present neighborhood. Has one son. This is an excellent girl in a good home. I call her. Dear Madam: I have taken the liberty to ask you for another girl, fourteen or fifteen years old, as we are sending Lizzy to school; and my wife is taken with her so very much that she would like to have one to wait on the table as a dining-room girl, to give her wages; and if you will be so kind as to grant her favour.

Lizzy sends her kind love to you, thanking you for your kindess to her, and if you grant our favour, will bring her down when I come after her, so that you can ask herself how she likes to live with us. I hope you will pick out a nice bright girl for me, and I will be a mother to her. Answer this letter and you will oblige. Mary A Ellis. Emily Clayton; 8; father deserted; Mother dead; 18 month in workhouse; 3 sisters in Liverpool; Mr.

W—, Canfield, Ontario; Adopted; has 4 sons, 3 at home.