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HowTo : How toA how-to is an informal, often short, description of how to accomplish some specific task. They are generally meant to help non-experts, and may leave out details that are only important to experts, and may be greatly simplified from an overall discussion of the topic. See procedural knowledge[?] for a discussion of what sort of knowledge is imparted, and how far it can be imparted, in how-tos.Other types of documentation include FAQ, guides. Wikipedia contains some procedural knowledge, partially listed below. For a list of how-tos related to Wikipedia itself, see Wikipedia:Help. Note: You cannot search on the words "how" or "to" in the Wikipedia search. To view an alphabetical listing of How-tos, you can visit this Search Results (http://www.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Special:Allpages&from=How,%20Wisconsin) page.
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There are four.html">four.html">four off-lying rocks, the farthest
always breaking.
Reaching Cape Knox, to the north.html">north-ward five or six miles may be seen
breadth of three.html">three and a-half miles, covered with spruce down to its
exceeding four hundred feet.html">feet.html">feet.
There are four bays from one to two miles in depth on its eastern.html">eastern and
order reached in circumnavigating the island.html">island from Tadense
cabin on the shore of Edith Bay, with a garden patch adjoining. They
but is open to westerly storms. The small cove on the south.html">south side of
the safest anchorage.
PARRY PASSAGE, about a mile and a-half in width, separates North from
rapid--except at flood tide--to less then 2000 feet. The deserted
on the south shore of the passage.
It is about twenty miles from North Island to the entrance of Virago
low and thickly wooded; the shores being generally rocky with sharp
occasional short beaches of gravel and sand. There are several exposed
Passage. Here vessels sometimes anchor, though exposed to strong
about a hundred feet in height, standing near its eastern side. It is
to north-east winds. The
JALUN RIVER, the largest stream between North Island and Virago Sound,
from forty to fifty feet in width at its mouth.html">mouth, and navigable for
huts, and a wooden boiler made from a hollowed log, for extracting
for the native fishermen and hunters.
KLAS-KWUN POINT--Seven or eight miles to the eastward from the mouth
from the shore to two or three hundred feet, known as Klas-kwun Point,
Indian village on the island, the sites of which are almost.
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