Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Oct 1902, p. 9

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THE DAtLY - WHI, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1 ---- ---- EDUCATIONAL. KINGSTON LADIES' COLLEGE KINGSTON, CANADA. Residential and Day Schoel for Girls, Address MISS M. GOBER, M.A., - SCHOOL OF ART Classes Re-opened on MONDAY, Oct. 6th, 1902. Afternoons of Monday, Wednesday and Fri day, from 2:30 to 4:30. Saturday mornings, 10 to 12 o'clock. , CHAS. E. WRENSHALL, Principal. "w= MUSIC MRS, CLERIHEW WILL REOPEN HER classes in Flatcher Music Method on Septem ber lst. For terms particulars apply at 211 University Avenue. PIANO LESSONS Miss C. M. Clerihew, undercraduate Toron- © College of Music. 211 University Avenue. KINGSTON COLLEGE BUSINESS, KINGSTON. TORONTO BUSINESS Co LLEGE TORONTO. Largest and best equipment in Canada Jnequalled facilities for securing positions. "821 Queen Street. Kingston. » SEND FOR CATALOGUE Confederation Life Buildings, Toronto. TO-LET. Fr rr 100) FURNISHED ROOMS, WITH OR without board, 101 Queen street. Principal HOUSE 191 BROCK STREET, 9 ROOMS. All m improvements. Apply to C. Livingston & Bro. ROUALS MTh oonv 8 L)UR GOOD FURNISHEL board, with all moderna at , wi 191 University Avenue. 43 KING STREET, WEST, BEAUTIFULLY situated, facing the Harbor. Rent $240 and taxes. Apply to Kirkpatrick, Rogers & Niekle. AND 13 WEST STREET, 5 ROOMS; 338 Montreal street, 6 rooms; also other dwell- ings, stores and offices. J. S. R. Me- Cann, 51 Brock street. BRICK RESIDENCE, 199 BROCK STREET, A 1 condition; modern improvements; 11 rooms. Apply to The H. D. Bibby Co., 78 to 82 Princess street. STORE OCCUPIED BY R. ALEXANDER, NO. 1 Brock street, with refrigerator, fix- tures, etc., for' pork and meat trade. Ap- ply to John McKay, Jr., 151 Brock street. POSSESSION AT ONCE, THAT AIRY DE- sirable house on the corner of Bagot and | Gore streets, near the park. Modern in every way. Daisy hot water heating and in perfect order. Apply to Felix Shaw, 115 Bagot street. ARCHITECTS. WM. NEWLANDS, ARCHITECT. OFFICE, second floor over Mahood's Drug Store, i and Bagot streets. En POWER & SON, ARCHITECTS, MERCH: ants' Bank Building, corner ane Wellingten streets. Phone 212. ARTHUR ELLIS, ARCHITECT, OFFICE site of New Drill Hall, near corner of Streets. Queen and Mon HENRY P. SMITH, ARCHITEOT, ETO. Anchor Building, Market Square, 'Phene 348. : Mayoralty 1903. To The Electors of Kingston : LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :--I am a can- didate for the mayoralty for the year 1903, and respeotiully ask for your votes and fn- fluence on my behalf. J. T. WHITE. Mayoralty 1903. To the Electors of Kingston: LADIES AND GENTLEMEN :--1 respeot- fully solicit your votes and influence to eleot me as Mayor for 1903. J H. BELL Don't Cough WE SELL MITCHELL'S Magic Cough ~ Cure: H. B. TAYLOR, 124 Princess St. 'Phone 89. Pharmaceutical Chemist FOR THAT COUGH ASK FOR DR. HOWARD'S SYRUP OF TAR AND WILD CHERRY THE BEST COMPOUND EVER MADE FOR ' COUCHS, COLDS AND BRONCHIAL AFFECTIONS. FOR SALE BY . L. EBBELS, cHEMIST and" E 'King and Market Sts. naLag1sy INVESTMENTS ; --~IN-- REAL ESTATE Mining and Oil Stocks HOW CAUSTIC BURNS. Take a piece of woollen cloth, or a plece of a blanket, and boil it thor- oughly in a ng solution of caustic (80da, and you will find the wool will gradually be eaten away, leaving nothing but the skeleton. . Women do not realize how "soap substitutes," which are genefally surcharged with Soda, or how common alkaline soaps destroy their clothing; fabric to such treatment. © The hands also .are immersed for houfs in such solutions, resulting in eczema, coarse skin, and brittle nails. The caustic soda may loosen the dirt, but it eats away the fabric and ruins the hands. There is no economy in such work. t is 80 easy for a woman to test the difference between an alkali charged soap and a neutral washing soap, that it is strange that there is room for any but a pure soap on the Canadian market. Sunlight Soap has been tested by chemists and analysts the world over, and its freedom from free alkali or caustic has been demonstrated Consequently the true saying, *" Sun- light Soap reduces expenses." 602. Carriages Carriages EVERYBODY Who has rubber tires on their carriages are well*"pleased with the ease and comfort they enjoy in driving, if you have not got them on your carriage you should send to LATURNEY and have them on and enjoy your JAMES LATURNEY, CARRIAGE MAKER, 390 Princess St. Kingston. BEDS OF ALL NATIONS. Resting Places in Vogue in Foreign Countries. Considering that a third of our whole lives is spent in bed, it is not surprising that much care, trouble, and money should be spent on our sleeping places. In' England the unhealthy feather bed has been alomost entirely suc- ceeded by the more hygenic mattress- es, which also is the rule in America. French beds are so short that The av- crage foreigner often complains that it demands a special education to fold one-self up to the right size for them. Many Norwegian beds are made to pull out from recesses. In South and Central America the hammock reigns, and the Indians of Guiana plait the most beautiful hammocks of grass, which they dye charming colors. In Japan the bed consists of - the matting-covered floor with a curious wooden neck-fést; a form of bolster that to a European would be a sim- ple instrument of 'torture. The Chin- ese. use low bedsteads, often elabor- arely carved, with mattresses and coverings of matting. In winter they sleep in heavy garments wadded with cotton. No one is more easily suited with sleeping accommodation than the negro; he, like a cat, can curl up and take his rest anywhere. How Ome Housewife Makes Fuel. Utica Observer, Here is |the manner in which one housewife has to a certain degree ov- ercome the pressing question of fuel : She took four common bricks and placed them in a pail. Over the bricks she poured a gallon of kerosene oil and let them stand until the bricks had absorbed all of the oil they would take up. Then she took out two of the ~ bricks and placed them in the kitchen range and set fire to them. They burned fully two hours, and the fire that they made was one by which it was possible to do any kind of cooking or othér work" requiring con- siderable' heat. The lady says in this way it will be postible in her home. to get along with the cookingy washing and ironing without resort to gas. There was no unpleasant odor or anv trouble whatever, for the oil Just blazed away like a stove full of good wood. = . The Canadian Girl. Toronto Star. And perhaps the chief reason after all for these marriages is the influx of American visitors during the summer. These tourists "cannot see the Cana- dian girl without admitting them hugely, and winning them in marriage if they can. People who go to Mus- hoka have recognized the difference between the average American and Canadian girl. The former tries to be "a good fellow," and the latter does not. The former is noisy and tom- boyish, and while her rompish ways are not unpleasing; they are not al- ways just what a marrying man would most admire, A Slight Change. "There was a witty fellow out in a Michigan hospital," said William Alden Smith, Detroit, "who had to be fed on a daily diet of egg and sherry. His physician asked him how he liked it. 'It would be al right, doctor," he said, 'if the egg was as new as the sherry and the sherry as old as the egg." " ; To Help Him On. "Your father," he said, 'seems to be able to appreciate a joke about as well as anyvhody 1 ever saw." "Oh, I don't know," she replied, "He said last night that he always laughed at the ones you tell because ha thought vou meant well, and he hated to hurt your feelings." They live in the upper alMitides of the mountains, where the catthe run wild from the time they are born un- til they -are sent to the slaughter house. Except possibly for two or three months in the rainy season there are na streams or pools of water in any part where the cattle roam, but everywhere there grows a recumbent, jointed grass known by the native name maninia. This is both food and drink. ; That the, Berlin an order forbidding public chouses sell, 'cold drinks' below a certain tem- perature ? . That a clock which should be used in of police have issued strikes thirteen the Bridgewater See GEO.CLIFF, . 115 BROCK STREET. a Trustees' "extensive collierier, Lan cashire, England ? consequently ; they, week by week, subject costly ' by the highest medical authorities. . to WANT OF FUEL 1S NOW MAKING THE MILL. IONS THINK - A Wrong in our Economic Condi- tions That Needs Redress--So- lution Lies With the People. . Toronto Junction, Oct. 7.--(To the Editor) : The pressure of want in the matter of fuel' is making millions think. A strike is a clumsy and costly attempt to redress a wrong which ar- ises out of certain economic conditions. If the men are granted a slight con- cession, the relief can only be tem- porary, because the economic condi- tions remain unchanged. The only hope for a permanent betterment lies 'in getting the millions to think. Anthracite coal is a natural mono- poly, because, while abundant in quantity, and intended by God for the benefit of the people as a whole, it is to be found only within a limited area of country. Railroads running from the anthracite coal regions to the sea- board and the lake ports are a pub- lic franchise, because the people have the right to grant or refuse a public way across their country. In days past the people were not sufficiently careful to safeguard their rights and their interests, because they thought they could depend upon the principle of competition to keep down exorbi- tant prices. There were numerous in- dependent coal operators, there were many rival railvay companies, 'but, while the people have been slesping. a few shrewd and powerful men have been steadily working. To trace this economic evolution, one has to go back thirty or forty years. First the rival railways com- bined and passed into thé-eontrol of a few men who formed a syndicate to accomplish their far-seeing scheme. Then began their process of squéez- ing out of the business the individu- al mine owners. Cars for the shipment of their coal were withheld, excessive freight charges © were imposed. Once in possession of a few mines the rail- way companies could undersell the in- dependent operators, making up for their freight charges. It was an casy matter then to buy up more mines, until now the evolution has reached its climax. According to a report made to the United States congress, practically the. entire supply of an- thracite coal has passed from the ow- nership of private citizens, many thou- sands in number, into the possession ot the railroads controlling the high- ways of the coal fields. President Baer, representing the coal and railway combine, makes the state- ment that forty per cent. of the coal produced is sold in the market be- low cost, and unthinking people re- peat this statement in cosy drawing- rooms and comfortable club houses as though it effectually proved that the miners could not receive more for their hard and dangerous toil; but the cost includes - excessive freight rates. As a mine owner, Mr. Baer poses as a pub- lic benefactor, selling some of his coal, the poorest grade, below cost, hut as a railway king he reaps a rich har- vest in the freight charges, which he controls absolutely. Thomas P. Fow- ler, president of the New York, On- tario and Western railway. testified, March 14th, 1900, that if an indepen- dent railroad was given permission to construct its line to tide water "coal would be a drye on tne market at $2 a ton." The experience of the past, however, has proved bevond question, that such a railroad would not long remain independent. The only solution of the problem lies with the people. A natural mono- poly involving one of the necessaries of life should*be owned by the people. A public franchise, such as a highway of commerce, afiecting the whole busi- ness of the country, should be kept in the hands of the people. Too late the people in Pennsylvania in 1873 passed a law forbidding .railways to amine or manufacture articles for transporta- tion over their lines. The railway kings defied this law. Téo late the United States congress in INST -pass- ed an interstate commerce law to check railroads from squeezing out of business private citizens by a dis- criminating freight tariff. The rail- way kings treated with silent con- {empt this enactment, knowing that they could over-turn the government that tried to enforce it. © Public con- trol of privately owned natural mon- opolies is impossible. Let the neople of Canada take warning from the ex- periéhce of the United States. Public ownership is the only absolute safe- guard. The spectacle of a railway king telling the President of the . United States that "the government of the country is a contemptible failure." be- cause it does not further the ends of a huge private monopoly, should make the millions think. and act.--F. H. DU VERNET, St. John's Rectory. South Carolina club women, through thetr--state federation, have awarded sixteen scholarships in various educa tional institutions of their state; rang ing from kindergarten training schools to colleges. Not Even Crazy People would scour their faces with brick- bats, but thousands of persons uo things infinitely more foolish. The skin of the ace, though Bel cate, is rhinoceros hide compare with the mucous membrane of the stomach and bowels. Yet these sensitive organs are con- stantly scoured with drastic medi- cines, to their incalculable injury, - The Cure for Constipation is not a violent cathartic, but a mild and tonic laxative--which is another way of saying IRON-OX TABLETS WIVES OF NOTED MEN, Bach Married on $35 a Year-- Wrote Immortal Music. Fielding, the novelist, marriec a maid-servant. * : Bach married on 835 a year and wrote, immortal music. Hazlitt's wife cared nothirg for Be ability. Her temper was an intensity and the tragedy of the unsympathetic played itseli to the bitter end. Milton had troubles with both of his wives. Nor was his: the monopoly of the martyrdom. Moliere, at the age of forty, married an actress aged seventeen summers. She ran away and it snowed and cov- ercd her tracks. Coleridge' left. his wife ana children without apology or farewell and never would see them again. Napoleon conquered the world ma- terial, but he often swore at .Joseph- ine (a woman who was once hiswife), and when she cried, said : "Hush! it makes your nose red." But he was a great man. Catherine 111 of Russia had her hus- band assassinated and from his death to her own ruled alone--very much alone. - Shelley married . an innkeeper's daughter. It was a problem in in- equality, 'with a demonstration in the disaster which followed. He left her. She committed suicide. But they did not hang the man. Alexander the Great was accustomed to beat his wives with the flat of his sword whenever they "talked hack' at him. This was a custom peculiar to him, as old records show that the sword in the hand of a gentleman was used to protect the gentler Sex. "Ben" Jonson's wife went to the inn after him, if he stayed too long, and brought him home, tongue-lashing him gall the way. And vou all know "Ben" Jonson. Boswell's "Uxorana" is 5 colléction of his wife's sayings to him which do no little credit to her gs a scold. Richard Wagner's first matrimonial venture: was a pathetic sonata, the tragedy of the ingarmonious. But the realization which is ever the bitter, of the inadequateness was spared him until after the mistake had been hap- pily rectified in mating with a con- genial understanding. To this second wife, who impressed upon him what he had gained in the second instead of lost in the first. he owed a debt of gratitude which speaks to the seeing in his latter works. Bible in Literary Course. St. Louis Republican. The = Carthage, opened yesterday. M. Holliday, in consultation with sixty teachers, Saturday, recommend- ed some important changes . in the management and the curriculum will be affected some. Mr. Holliday has aa- vised that the Bible be studied more in the department of literature in the hich school. The particular places, to be studied, according to his recom- mendation, are the story of John, Isaiah, the Sermon on the Mount, Paul's address before Agrippa, and the Epistle of St. Janes. In speaking of the matter, Superin- tendent Holliday said : "The bible is the basis of all our moral life and it is a fine work of literature. It should be studied as such in the schools and be this year. In the past the schools have not stuaied the scripture enough to appreciate fully its literary: value. The story of John isa type of the best literature." . i -------- Women's Strange Vocations. Women are entering the competition with men at New York as office cigar sellers. In some instances they act their husbands' agents, = the men folk doing the manufacturing at home. In other cases, these women represent retail houses and work on commission basis." -A bright, middle- agea "woman visits buildings along Broadway. soliciting orders to sharp- en penknives, scissors, ete. She sup- ports her family - through this. man- ner. In the. wholesale dry goods dis- trict wives and daughters of boss truckmen assist in booking sidewalk orders and 'keeping an eve" on pack- ing cases. It is a--matter-of economy not to employ nen. and the carters wouldn't trust boys. ® Mo., public schools Superintendent i. the as Municipal Ownership. . Manchester in the © transition stage, but will 'have in the course 'of .a few vears 150 miles of electric lines under municipal -operation. London has 4 working balance of £102,861 from its northern and southern tram- ways, but it is absorbed, by interest und sinking fund payments. Hudders- field 'is the only town having a deficit for- working expenses, although Dun- dee barcly- balances its account. Alb- out fifty new. schemes for the munici- palization of tramways are now in progress, 18 Neatly Turned. A tirey county newspaper published the other day an obituary notice of a nian "still living. The .editor humb led himself, on hearing of his mistake but in so pretty a fashion that he is now quite a hero. This is how: he did it: "We are "truly glad to learn that our dear old friend lives, though it will be a disappointment to many of his friends in heaven that he mot been permitted * to join them there." " What Comes Next. "And when vou had burned gll the woodwork and furniture in the en- gine room to get the vessel in port before she sank." said little "Rollo, cagerly. to Marlinspike Midship, «the old sador, 'what happened 7° "Why," replied Marlinspike, shifting his chew of tobacco to starboard, and thinking hard, 'we burnea the' ship's loo." The President A Slave To Catarrh D..T. Sample, president of Samples Instalment Company, Washington, Pa., writes: 'For years I was afllict- ed: with Chronic Catarrh. Remedies and treatment - by specialists only gave me temporary relief until I was induced to use Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder. It gave almost instant = re- lief. 50 cents, For sale bv H. B. Tay- lor and Henry Wade.--49. m------ It is probable that the temperature of the moon's surface at-ite mid-day Fahrenheit. "Fhe drop LO degrees, to is 730° degrees at night is probably 250 degrees below. , That a letter mailed from Yankton, SUD. inthe August of 1585 should just have been returned to its writer? STATISTICS SHOW IT IS IN. CREASING IN BRITAIN. Deaths of Women From Intemper- ance Increased From 31 Per Cent. in 1877 to 40 Per Cent. in 1899. London, Oct. 10.--As the country prospers drunkenness increases. A year of high wages and good trade is also a vear of deep drinking. The year 1899-- the latest for which we have complete statistics for Great Britain--was a year of greaf prosperi- ty. It was a year of unprecedented drunkenness. Yet to some extent this was foreshadowed by the preceding years. For during the five years from 1892 to 1896, there annually occurred 175,628 Prosecutions for drunkenness. During the 'next two years they rose to 203,357 per annum. Then in 1899 they sprang up to 214,298, Now, the late Sir Andrew Clark stigmatized alcohol as "the enemy of the race." Applied to men--potential fathers--he regarded the increase -of drink as alarming; but applied to wo- men--potential mothers--he deplored it as a national disaster. That the vice of drunkenness is on the increase among women is- admit ted on all- hands. Since 1877 the deaths of women from intemperance have increased from 31 to 40 per cent. Since the same year the ratio to population of such deaths has in- creased from 25 to 51. During the period in which the deaths of men from the same cause have increased 43 per cent., those of women have in- creased no less than 104 per cent. As a serious criminal, woman is not comparable to man: Of those, for ex- ample, who are convicted at the as- sizes and quarter sessions--that is, of the graver crimes--women only form about 11 per cent. and that per- centage is decreasing. On the other hand, as a comparatively petty of- fender, woman must be taken serious- ly. The returns 'of the last few years show a steadily increasing number of female offenders, and the great maj- ority - of their | offences consist of drunkenness or of acts committed when drunk. In the last ten vears their number has increased 19 per cent. It is obvious, of course, that statis- tics are not available to prove the increase of drink among women of a superior class, for they drink within doors, and are carefully looked after by relatives and attendants, whose chief aim is to keep the fact un- known. In addition to this many wo- men drink secretly, unknown to their relatives, until they have reached a stage when shame is lost and the veil is flung aside. Even in the case of the very worst' dipsomaniacs, they are either guarded at home by a profes- sional nurse or incarcerated in re- treats under conditions af the most rigorous privacy. Unless some unto- ward circumstance occurs, at no point in their career do they come within the cognizance of the police, and con- sequently they are entirely unrepre- sented in the criminals statistics. In order, then, to ascertain the preval- ence of drinking, among women of this class, recourse must be had to the medical and nursing professions. And here 'there is also emphatic evi- dence of increase in drinking among women. The Richest Baby. The prospective heiress to the great- est fortune in the world--g tiny, blue- eyed, blonde-haired baby,--lies bliss- fully unconscious of her wealth in her father's cottage at Ardsley-on-the- Hudson. - Her $50,000,000 father is Percy Av- ery Rockefeller. Her §110,000,000 grandfather is William "Rockefeller, the Standard oil magnate. Her $15,000, 000 maternal grandfather is James Stillmay, president of the City Na- tional bank. Her £3005000,000 great- uncle is John D. Rockefeller, -the rich- est man in the world. What Miss Isabelle Rockefeller will be worth when she: comes of age, no one will dare *to estimate, for the for- tunes of her father and her grandia- thers are increasing daily. The occasion -of little Miss Rockefel- ler's coming was welcomed the more for béing a girl, for thoughe William Rockefeller has several other grand- children, they are all boys. The day after her coming presents began to shower upon her from wealthy rela- tives and friends. Were Got In Free. The English colony in Valparaiso, Chile, has a cricket club, the officers of which recently sent to England for a large consignment of bats and a few stumps. On arrival they wero liable to a duty of thirty per cent.. but it occurred to i had had a good deal ore enstom house business, it would be a good move-to enter the goods as "utiles para agricultura,"' i.e., agri- cultural implements, allowed to enter free of duty. It was pointed out to the vista (the custom - house official who examined the goal that with the end of the stump a hole was made in the ground -in which the seed was placed, till, by the aid of the bat, it was securely located therein. This ex planation was considered satisfactory 'and the entry paper marked (free). . em -- M. Michonis, a French millionaire, has bequeathed £120,000" as a fund to enable ereh students to study philo sophy sand 'religious sciences in Ger- man universities, and $25,000 more to the College de France to provide a German university professor to lec ture in Paris. M. Jacques Stepn, the Paris Banker, who married * Sophie Croizette, died recently in Paris. He was inconzol able over the death. of his wife year, and when his only son was kill ed in a steeplechase number of faculties." Munster was callixl complete many years "Academy," testant, and a philosophical faculty, 'Phomas Lewis; twenty-five vears oli; who claims to ke the son of a native chief in Liberia, is studving medicine and surgery in a Detroit hospital. It is his intention to return to his na tive land after he has completed . his education. : DRINKING VICE Waltham Watches. "It is good to 'be sure." "" The Perfected American Watch," an illustrated book of inferesting information about watches, will be sent free upon request. American' Waltham Watch Company, 2 Waltham, Mass. FALL OPENING of Bhe » Leading Shoe Styles of Canada and the United States. Men made in North Abington, Mass. FLORISHEIM & CO., Chicago. GEO." A. SLATER, Montreal, | Que. J. D. King & CO., Toronto, Ont. VICTORIA SHOE CO., Torom- to, Ont. SOVEREIGN BRAND, London. JAS. McCREADY, Montreal. J. & T. BELL, Montreal. JOHN McPHERSON & CO. Hamilton. We have just received a ocarload of Trunks and Valises, which we will sell at a very low price for the next two weeks. We are showing in our windows this week samples of the best and latest styles of Men's, Women's and Misses Fall Shoes of the best makers in America, a few of the names of the up-to-date manufac- tures here given will be positive proof of the excellence of our im- mense Stock now open for inspec- tion : ORNE & GROVER, Boston, Mass. KROHN Cincinnatti. WALKER & WHITHAM, Cam- pello, Mass. The famous Crossett Shoe & FECHHEIMER, for 123 and 125° Princess Street. A. ABERNETHY, er ---- BURNISHINE For Cleaning and Polishing Nickel, Silver, Brass, . Copper. Zinc and Tin. Burnishine works easy and quick and is specially good for stove platings. 4 t Nothing better for door knobs and trimm ings. polishes as easy in cold as warm weather, McKELVEY & BIRCH, 69 and 71 Brock Street. GOLD MEDAL AWARDED, WOMAN'S EXHIBITION, LONDON, 1900. For Fi And Infants, {The Invalids, Aged. Nearly 80 Years' Established Reputation. DR. BARNARDO and T'have no hesitation in saying it has proved very Says = satisfactory. ™~ July 27th, 101. Manufacturers: JOSIAH R. NEAVE & CO., FORDINGBRIDGE, ENGLAND. Wholesale Agents: ~-THE LYMAN BROS. &Co., Ltd., Toronto & Montreal. "We have already used Neave's Food in two ot our Homes (Rabigs' Castle and the Village Home), TE. The Ideal Beverage JOHN LABATT'S [ _ondon Porter Ful of the Virtue of Malt and Hops. - 59 , Perfectly Agreeable to the Most 7 Deficate Palate. for | last | a little while ago | he was stricken down with paralysis. | «Germany has a new university, Mun ster in Westphalia, which naw had the | Por | an | JAS. 'lcPARLAND, AGENT, : KING STREET, KINGSTON. | as it had only a double | theological faculty, Catholic and eee ry me "For Comfort and Ease use our | VICTOR MATTRASS, Lock Weave Spring, Wear a life time, | Iron Beds, Odd | 'Stands to match. 'JAMES REID, m= 15 a . ' ¥ 'Packing at- We pay sall freights. . free. Mail orders promptly Dressers and | tended to. DING UNDERTAKER, 'PHONE 147.

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