IRE INTERESTING BELICS INFORMATION IN REGARD TO ROMAN BATHS OF BATH. * The Hot Springs That Feed These Baths Were Known to the Britons Years Before the Roman Invasion--No Baths Were Built Until Claudius. Visited That Place About A.D. 44 and Constructed A Wall to Enclose Springs. The Roman Baths of Bath are among the most interesting relics in England, and form a "happy hunting-ground for the antiquary who gathers from them and their specimens of .sculptare, pottery and coins, valuable in- formation concerning a highly interesting period of history. The hot springs that feed these baths were known to the Britons years before the Roman invasion, but no baths were built until Claudius visited the place (abbut A.D. 44) and constructed a huge wall twenty feet high to enclose the springs. Other Ro mans after him continued the building opera- tions, until a fine system of baths and bath- rooms was erected, Solinus, whom many. authorities believe to have written as early as 80 A.D. mentions the "Calidi fontes," and the baths and bathing-rooms. For years Aqua Sulis (as the place was called) was of considerable importance, being Ohi ong; of the great roads (the Fosseway) that the tomans built to connect the chief points of the island; the fame of the medicinal value of the hot springs spread far, and the baths were much frequented. After the withdrawal of the Roman legions 410, when England was overrun by the barbarian hordes from the north, Aqua Sulis was practically undisturbed, being protected by King Arthur; but in 577, the Battle of Dyrham changed the state of affairs. Twe Saxon kings defeated three British, and took three cities--Gloucester, Cirencester and Akeman (as the town Aqua Sulis was then called). Bath was sacked, and columus, statues and sculpture were destroyed and the conduits which carried off the superfluous water choked up. The water flooded the whole area of the baths, covering it with a mineral deposit, and to this may be traced the excellent preservation of tle remains Previous to 577, many of the bathg had fallen into disuse and had been walled up, and the sacking of the city completed their ruin. Many years later, 'however, portions of the baths were restored or rebuilt by John de Villula, physician and chaplain to William [LL Buse was not till 1755 that the importance 76 the buried buildings was fully realized, In {the course of excavating a fine hall was dis- covered, with _a large bath surrounded by wide schol or platforms. Adjoining this was a series of rooms evidently used for varying temperatures, as in the modern Turkish baths There was the frigidarium, or disrobing room, which was not heated; the tepidarium, which was slightly heateq by a prafurnium or stove, and the elothesium, which was furnished with oils and for the use of the Roman dandies. Other baths were excavated by de- grees, and in 1880, a very large bath (known as the Great Roman Bath) was unearthed, and also a smaller circular bath believed te have been reserved for women. These latter baths are open to the public, and a visit to them during the summer season, when ex- cellent concerts are held, is an experience not easily forgotten. The visitor 'enters an fm- posing doorway, pays & small entrance fee at a turnstile and proceeds along a spacious corridor, where luxurious lounges are arrang- ed. Down a flight of winding stone steps he goes and enters a strange atmosphere. le is standing on the very pavement trod by Ro mans sixteen hundred years ago. He stum- bles over the uneven stones worn by their sandalled feet. He looks down at the water welling from the same spring that supplied the baths many years ago. Green and steaming it is, with a curious odor of warm metal, and in it tiny goldfish dart about. Over in a corner battered and silent, stands an image of the god Sul, who is believed to have presided over wells and springs and to have had a temple erected in his honor. Would that those stone lips could speak, for the they could tell would be of virile interest, Once he looked out on stone white and new, and down the wide schole or walks went a long procession, Stately captains of legions, strong, rough soldiers, plump and prosperous merchants, all were there. Through the pillars came the sound of voices speaking in the sonorous Latin tongue. From the further end comes the sound of singing, then a burst of laughter, where idlers are gathered round an itinerant musician, for at these baths were always singers, jesters and tellers of tales, who regaled the bathers with song and quip. The chime of feminine voices comes from behind the wall of the woman's bath, But an hour before he had caught a glimpse of elaborately-dressed heads entering the portico. Wondrous, indeed, was the head- dress of of the Roman ladies--busts carved in stone remain to this day to testify to their vanity and their ingenuity--curled and puffed and dressed with coins and jewel- lery in front, and twisted into curious circular coils at the back, From his corner he views rows of modern 'seats, filled with a modetn crowd Filmy dres flutter up and down the rough, stones, like bright flowers in a grey garden. Many colored lanterns and fairy-lamps hanging from the columns throw soft, hazy lights on the water and the people. In place of he deep Roman voices are the high tinkle of fem- inine tones, a few words of gutteral German, a shrill American laugh. In place of the odors of oil: and spices is that of tobacco and modern scent, The spring, after its journey from four hundred feet hnderground, ¥all§ back into the water with a soft, unceasing plash. And then, drowning: the voices and the rustle and the plash, comes the sound of music. The haunting strains of Wagner's "Star Eve" float across with penetrating carrying the listener into a world of dreams. In that realm of fancy his mind wanders till he is roused bythe loud tones of an American march. Brisk, loud, rapid, the stirring air rings out, till the very air seems to pylse and vibrate in time with the conductor's regular beats. Bat is is desecra- tion to play such music in such a place--an insult to the venerable Stones and.to the me mory of the men who carved them. It should be a funeral march that should echo through the thick pillars a' funeral march for those dead Romans, slow, solemn, mournful It should be a dirge to lay to rest those shades! that lurk in every corner and whisper strange fancies, strange memories, in the ear It should be and sweet, till those restless in spices 18, story some Ses Or of clearness, low ADL shadows should be at peace and fade away into the misty air. The stone face of the god sgems to frown, but the music suddenly ceases and he is placid again. FIRST METHODIST ORDINATION. The Document Issued in the Handwriting of | John Wesley. recently in an ald book, being the ordination papers of the first superintendent of the Meth- odist church in North America. Wesley ap- pointéd Dr. Coke to the position in 1784, After the American Revolution many of Wes- ley's early helpers were driven out of the United States on the charge of being British sympathizers, and from 1773 to 1783 the min- utes of the English Methodist Conference are without records of work in Aifierica. Wesley had intended the Methodist organizations in America.to be dependent on the Church of England clergymen for the Sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper, but the Civil War destroyed all possibility of it. Twice he wrote to Bishop Lowth, of London, asking him to ordain some of the Methodist helpers, and thus give them authority to admin'ster these sacraments. But Bishop Lowth refused land clergynren in America already! waiting for four, years, Wesley, assisted by | Rév. Mr. Creighton, ordained Thomas Coke. | The ordination paper in Wesley's handwriting | "To all to whom these Presents shall come, John Wesley, late Fellow of Lincoln College in Oxford, Presbyter of the Church. of Eng- | larid, seéndeth greeting. "Whereas many of the People in the South- | ert Provinces of North America, who desire to continue under my care, and still adhere | to the Doctrines and Discipline of the Church of England are greatly distrest for want of | ministers to| administer the Sacraments of | Baptism, and the Lord's Supper, according to lghe usage of the said Church: And whereas | there does not appear to be any other way of supplying them with ministers: "Know all men, that I, John Wesley, think | myself to be providentially called at this time ministry in America. And therefore under the | Protection of Almighty God, and with a single eye to his Glory, I have this day set apart as | a Superintendent, by the imposition of my | hands, and prayer (being assisted by other ordained ministers), Thomas Coke, Doctor of | Civil Law, a Presbyter of the Church of Eng- land, and a man whom I judge to be well | qualified for that great work. And I do here- | cern as a fit person to preside over the Flock of Christ. In testimony whereof I have here- September in the year of our Lord, one thou- sand seven hundred and eighty-four. John Wesley." Too Much Dogmatic Insistence. Goldwin Smith. tendom as the foundation and the bond of Christian character and life will deplore the renewal of heresy trials and the disruption which they entail. At the time ol the seces- sion from the Papacy and when Christianity was desperately struggling with that power for existence, recourse to some special name and profession of a dogmatic character by way of bond and watchword of defence was na- tural, perhaps inevitable. But political local- ity and circumstance had much to do with the formation of the several churches, and it cannot be supposed that all Genevans held precisely the opinions of Calvin or that all the people of the reformed districts of Germany held those of Luther as the vital truth. Among Protestants dogmatic tests as con- ditions of spiritual life and fellowship have outlived their day. byterian creed? Cast-iron fetters of dogma retain their force only in that church which believes in the infallibility of the Pope and in the' Holy Coat of Treves. A Grand Tomb and Guard. With the permitting of foreigners to wit- ness the procession carrying away the body of the late Chinese emperor, Kuang-Hsu, it secret of Chinese mysteries was about to be solved by Europeans. Never before has a foreign eye rested upon the funeral car of a member of the imperial dynasty. No foreign footstep had ever approached the vast palace- like tombs in which these monarchs have been laid to rest. A million dollars and two years will be spent on erecting a tomb for Kuang-Hsu, and: the:late emperor's body will not be given final burial until the work is finished. Then the whole colony of priests will be placed near this tomb, which will also be a temple. The late emperor will be wor- shipped in the name of the Chinese people as a god, as is still being done with emperors who died two hundred years ago. The cost to the poverty- stricken millions of the Chi- nese Empire is practically beyond calculation. Field Day For Brooklyn Ladies. Mrs. Fannie Kerschneff, returning from a shopping excursion, found a strange young man in her parlor, threw him down and sat on him till another lady called a policeman, who gathered him in. Mrs. Elizabeth Stein- man saw a man run out of the basement of her home with a rug she had bought recently. She raced him for a block, tripped him up, and so lady-handied him that he was glad to ac- cept the escort of Policeman Christiansen. Mrs. Agnes Harding's Purse was snatched from her hand by a nkgro boy in a Fulton street car. She managed to get information about him and went with two detectives to a negro settlement, where she found the boy with her property still in' his pocket. This speaks well for the courage and alertness' of Brooklyn ladies, but has it no interest for the police? Have citizens got to go all that sort of work for themselves? Biblical Conundrums. At what time of the day was Adam creat- ed? A little before Eve. Where is paper currency first spoken of in the Bible? Where the dove left the ark and brought a green back. When did Moses sleep five in a bed? When he slept with his forefathers. Who was the straightest man in biblical | history? Moses, for Pharaoh made a ruler of him. 1 After twelve bolts of lightning had struck a New Mexico house #t was as riddled as the | proverb that lighting never' strikes twice | in the same place. A. Toronto gentleman contributes to Satur- | day Night a relic of John Wesley, discovered | stating that there wese three Church of Eng- | After | to set apart some persons for the work of the | | by recommend him to all whom it may con- | unto set my hand and seal this second day of | All who desire the preservation of Chris- | How much does a large- | minded Presbyterian now think of the Pres- | would seem as though the most sacred and | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1909. WAS A GREAT "REVOLUTION | woman IN HINDUSTAN 18 NO LONGER: A TOY. | She Is Being Steadily Taken Out From | Privacy of Apartments and Trained to Take Place in World--Leaders of Public Opinion Realize That Renaissance of India Depends on Education of the Girls. ' » The greatest revolution of our times has taken place in India. Woman in Hindustan has ceased to figure merely as a half-toy, half- slave, penned up in a harem, and is more and more recognized as the pivotal point of In- dia's regeneration. The leaders of. public opinion realize that the renaissance of India depends mainly upon the manner in which the girls of the land are educated to take up their responsibilities as mothers and wives. Schools designed for girls are springing up all over the Indign peninsula. The woman is being steadily taken out from the privacy of her apartments and trained to take a place in the world. Early marriage is becoming passe, and the marriage of widows is receiving the in- dorsgment ' of blue-veined, high-caste men. Fatly marriage and enforced widowhood | never have Been esséntial tenets of the Hindu religion. Ignorance led the people £0 believe that iv was their religious duty to marry their | daughters early, and not allow the widow to | remarry, and the regulation was made so strict that if the would-be boy husband died | before the nuptial ceremony was performed, | the wife-to-be was considered a widow, with- | out prospect of marriage. J The Hindus long ago realized the folly of | burning widows on the funeral pyres Of their | deceased husbands. They, too, contrary to the general impression," have mever treated | their widows tyrannically. These unfortunate | women are treated with consideration. The widowed mother or aunt in India is usually fat the head of the home. She 'is the promin- | ent figure of the family. Hindus are establish- | ing widows' homes in all parts of India, | where young widows are initiated in tlie art | of teaching and other professions, so that they can earn their living and take care of | themselves, independent of their relations. In | several parts of India the high-class women | still veil their faces heavily in public... This | does not, howevér, mean that thes¢ women | are held: in captivity or forced to cover their | faces by some masculine tyrant. ~ Moreover, it is only in the cities that the Hindu woman | lives in seclusion. In the country she'is 'as | fre as the air. Over 65 per cent. of the peo- | ple are farmers, and so the bulk of Indian | women live on farms, The farmhouse is usually of mud, with | thatched roof. In some localities poorly burn- ed bricks or unhewn stones are used.. Where wood is used for rafters and girders, it is rude- ly chopped. The walls, as a rule, are bare and there are no curtains or shutters at the win- dows, which are without glass panes. The household goods consist of a few earthen ves- sels, roughly built wooden cots, and mats of straw or coarse gunnysack. The people, as a rule, squat on the floor, and know no- thing of chairs and tables. Stoyes andicook- ing ranges are unknown. The women bake their bread in earthen ovens; and cook in earthen pots over a fire made, in many cases, of cowdung cakes. Mustard oil, or some other vegetable oil, is used in almost all the rural districts for illuminating, a poor, uncertain I'ght. Frequently one room serves many pur- poses, for a kitchen, dining room, drawing room and bedroom. In most instances the | the room is overcrowded and is uncomfortable as well as unsanitary. People use their fing- ers for forks and knives, and sop up their food with pieces of wheat or' corn bread. Many millions of East Indians subsist on a vege- tarian diet. Divorce Topic In England. English church papers take the ground that changes in the law that will tend to make divorces cheaper and easier to obtain will in- crease the number of separations of man and wife and work evil. When, as is now the case in the greater part of Canada, divorce in Great Britain could only be obtained by act of Parliament, they say, dissolutions of mar- riage were few in number. When a court was established in London, though the costs were still high, divorces increased. If the power to grant divorces was. given, as is pro posed, to the county courts, further cheapen- ing the process oi obtaining them, they would become more common; and scandal would en- sue. There is the experience of other coun- tries to support this position, which is that of the strongly religious element of the popu- lation, and which, regarding all divorces as evil, would prevent the granting of any. It has against it the fact that the precedent of a divorce court has heen established, and .in Great Britain precedents broaden rapidly. Church Bells From Guns. "God grant that the guns of battle may be melted into bells of worship." That was said the other day by Dr. Alexander, Primate of all Ireland, and it was done years ago by the man of whom, perhaps, it was least to have been expected--to wit, Field Marshal Von Moltke, the "battle thinker," the greatest war- maker, or, at least, war-wager of his time. After the war of 1870 the old Kaiser pre- sented Moltke with several guns that had been captured from the French, and one of these the marshal managed to have melted down and converted into a bell for the village church of Kreisau, near his Silesian seat. The sound of this converted bell, pealing across the peaceful summer meadows, said Moltke onte, was the sweetest music he had ever heard. Divorce Court a Superfluity. Newfoundland has no divorce court, and there is no evidence of the need of one. A United Stateser who visited the island was much surprised to hear of this, and under- took to discuss it with a married woman of some prominence and with a good physique. "What would you do," he asked, "if your husband came home drunk and undertook to ill- -use you? Surely you would seek a di- vorce." To this the woman replied: "No, sir, I would try the poker first, and if any official was needed within five minutes, it would be The report of the first year's work of the Emmanuel movement at St. Mark's church, New York, is interesting. Rev. Dr. Batten and his associate treated 300 cases. The num- ber of cases which have not been materially improved is small, and already many have been certified as completely restored to health. ENGLISH TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT. To Restore the English Public House to its Traditional Use. A movement to restore the English public house to its traditional use as 3 place of ease, recreation and refreshment has been initivted in England. Lord Halsbury, the ex-lord chancellor, presided over a gathering of peers, members of parliament, clergy and others, at which it was decided to establish a True Temperance Association, The aim is to as- sociate moderate people all over the country who dissent from the extreme and destructive proposals of puritanical teetotalers, in a reasonable policy of improving licensed hous-~ es by rendering them more like the continen; tal resorts, where the ordinary man feels no shame in sitting with his wife and children-- and of thus reducing drunkenness. Lord Halsbury drew a clear distinction from the methods of total repressibn. "The great aim of our organization," he said, "will be to try something .not tried yet--appealing to the will and heart 'of the people. I you were to train up a body of abstainers who were so becausé they could not get drink, they would not be men, they would be slaves. The temperance- party would improve the public house out of existence instead of im- proving it for the public use. They regard the public house a§ a disgraceful place to go|- to, and as a place-which, if a man visited it, he should leave as soon as he had a drink. 1s it surprising that the public house should have become a mere drinking shop? We want to alter that, and to make every public house a decent place of refreshment and re- sort." "The very essence of this movement is to remove the stigma," said Lord Salisbury. "It is very hard that a respectable man should be debarred from a drink and from friendly intercourse with other men simply because to 'frequent' a public house marks him as a less respectable member of society. It is also a dangerous policy." "The more open drinking is the "better," said Rev. H. R, Gamble, of Holy Trinity. "English people are not prepared to be dra- gooned into total abstinence, or into adopt- ing the organized hypocrisy of total prohibi- tion." He supported the scheme in the in- terests of free and healthy social life. Wonders of Seed Life. Few objects in nature are more wonderful than seeds. their tiny' forms may enfold the food and raiment of countless hosts for successive generations. One single seed may vena realm with briars or bless it with bloom; may crown its mountains with the glory of Lebanon, or curse its vales with thistles and with thorns. Within these tiny forms slumber germinant energies which may unfold themselves .in myriad shapes of strength and beauty, or flow out in lowliest types of vegetative life, which, yet partaking of a Divine vitality, outlast the proudest monuments of human skill and power, and cast their veil of verdure above the ruined relics of that mortal grandeur which sinks with its authors beneath the blight of time. Happy is it that the seed is the chosen emblem of the word which God has spoken, and which, as the expression of the Divine mind, i$ charged with immortal pow- ers. . ; . Bound To Be Commemorated. Saturday Night. Ya the diocese of Nova Scotia is & laudable custom of placing on record in churches the names of the man or men chiefly instrumental in providing the funds for building, and each new church bears, in some form, an inscrip- tion bearing the names of those who carried the burden of collecting the means. But the church at Mill Cove, on St. Margaret's Bay, is unique in a personal tribute. When the building was being erected a committee of the parishioners was appointed and the work was divided ambng its members, one undertaking the supervision of the wood work, another looking after! the furnishings, and so on. The duty of obtaining a bell was allotted to George E. Jollimore, who sent to Boston for a bell of most metallic sound; but he took the precaution of having it inscribed: "Sacred to the memory of George E. Jollimore." The bell has done duty ever since, but Mr. Jolli- more is still alive, although the bell flourishes as a post-mortem tribute. He evidently does not propose to hide his light under the steeple. Growing British Benevolence. The Prince of Wiles, accompanied by the Princess, performed an interesting ceremony in opening the new headquarters of the Church of England Waifs and Strays Society at Kenning- ton, consisting of the old Town Hall of Lambeth. The Society was founded by the Rev, Edward de M. Rudolf in 1881, and has been energetically worked by him ever since, caring for 14,400 chil- dren, with 4,000 under care now. An anonymous gift of $500,000 has been made to the newly founded Home of Recovery. The scheme was initiated by Miss Fraser-Tytler, and has been taken up by well-known members of the surgical and medical professions, being in- tended chiefly for surgical cases. A building will be erected near London. An anonymous gift of $125,000 has been made to the Queen Alexandra Sanatorium at Davos, which enables the building to be completed and equipped. An Electric Punkah Does It. One of the indispensables of torrid India is the punkah, a large fan, operated by a colored servant to secure a draught of air and keep insects from disturbing the sleeper. The native is not always reliable, being apt to doze, and for this reason efforts have been made to devise a mechanically driven punkah. These efforts have failed owing to the diffi- culty of duplicating the action of the hand-|® worked punkah, the special value of which consists in the sudden jerk given the fan by the native at each turn, Recently an-electric- |< ally driven punkah has been devised in which this jerking motion is perfectly imitated by a "lath: shaped spring" covered with leather, which slaps the fan to and fro. A Scottish poet has just entered into rest Alexander Anderson, better known as "Sur- faceman," died in Edinburgh in his 69th year. Originally a quarrymdn he was for seventeen years employed by the Glasgow & South Western railway as a surfaceman, and under that nom de plume he published several vol- umes of poetry which showed that, as in the case of Ferguson, Burns, Hogg, Tannahill and nwmerous others, a poet had emerged from the humblest ranks. He was truly a self-made man. He was familiar with the language and literature of France, Spain, Germany and Italy, and was a valuable chief librarian at the University of Edinburgh, Minute, inert, insignificant, yet|S Kellogg's is a Delicacy and a Food Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes furnish a delicacy and a Food in one lus. cious combination, dis- tinct from ordinary ~~ ==Purified by Kellogg's Secret Method. The name on the box must be x pellog gd Toasted Corn Flakes |:: Farm Laborers' Excursions To Manitoba and Saskatchewan. Additional e $10 %5¢ $184 Return Kingston, A . Fito amy 1 bin, 7.4 Hrd EXHIBITION -- TORONTO AND RETURN Aug. i 1st, a and Sth, sas Next Homeseckers' Excursions Will leave on Aug: 24 ; Sept. 7, 21. Tickets good for 60 di Fall articulars at Pr. 'icket Office, Ontario st ¥. CO. ONWAY, Gen. Pass. BAY OF br APINTE RAL RAILWAY, Train | 8 for Td? yy daily (Sunday olain mm Sold J att il re: The ma (Non-Alcoholic) LEMON SYRUP, LIME JUICE, RASPBERRY VINEGAR. D. COUPER, Dealer In Pure Food Groceries. "Phone, 76a. 341-3 Princess St, Ignition Dynamas, Storage Batterics, Spark Plugs, Carburetors, Ete. TRY OUR DRY BATTERIES. Turbull Electrical Mfg. Co. "Phone. ATS, 878 Bagot 84 Asphalt Roofing Gravel and Sand Surfaced P. Walsh, Barrack St., Kingston M. P. KEYS Antiseptic Barber Shop ye ng rt, Si, EAE ronage solicited. 836 King Str:z2 Next door to Wade's Drug Store: A A A AAA Sa 4404804444040 3% Cleaning & Pressing 4 Done in shortest notice. "Phone 4 685. , JAMES CAMPBELL, Tailor 4 109 Brock Strest. + PTT TT TITIIYIY: aa ¥ VN ¥ TO CONTRACTORS & BUIIDERS The Perfect Brick & Tie Oo Fash burn, Ont. PAISLEY & CHISHOLM, Lessecs OUR ROOSTER BRAND OF T0BACCO and Ohewing at forty-five is tobacco: & good to Why Rmoking cents & pound, pay eighty-five cents, Ontario streets /| 6.00 a.m. and 2. Ontario SCE ina tn ton ae, Grad Thousand Island and St. Lawrence River Steamboat Companies Bay r further DICKSON, ' Agent, In connection with the New York Central and Hudson River 0. R. BR. Co. ay leave Kingston, Sunday, 7.80 s.am.g and 2.00 p.m. at Mak connections Oape yilskiog, 4 all points in New 'York State. Through sleeper Oape Vine cent to New York. Week end round trip xate, X Ky to Watertown, good Honky. satura" ot Sunday, returning Brockville and Thousand Islands, feave Kingston For sxcursicna to Ogdensburg and the see local advertisements. Lake Ostario & Bay of Quinte Steamboat Co., Limited. STEAMERS North King & Caspian (1000 Islands --Kingston-- Rochester. TAL BR be bin Tor Ba Bay rajngs Sian leaves Port Th. AT TH Ay eaves on Mondays at §5 p.m., for Picton and Intermediate Bay of Quinte porte. Full information from E. E. HORSEY, J. P: HANLEY, General Manager, 0. 8B. KIRKPATRICK Kingston, Ont. JAS, SWIFT & ©O., Agents, Kingston. STR. ECELWAT start lar tri to June Tach rare Oi 's Whast, foot of Princess root, 10 a.m., return 12 a.m. Leave 3 p.m., return at six. Return fare, 26c. Children hail OAPT: L: WHALEN, 'Phone, 5715 EN als, It's as Good as Money And very often Real Estate turns out to he a great deal better. It jumps in value much more than eash can earn fin- terest. It often doubles itself in a very few years; Wé have some most desirable parcels for investments ard you coud not put your spare cash to better vee Call and talk it over with us. Remember the biggest fortunes are now being made in Real Estate. \ © 1 have investment propositions paying 10 to 12 per cent. Full particulars, ------ D.A.Cays 57 Brock Bt. WAH LONG'S LAUNDRY R REMOVED oR 3 Se. Find Gres ington Sta, Sta. Best lax called for and