Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Nov 1909, p. 7

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YS -------- . NO REST FOR TERRIBLE ITCH Till Oil of Wintergreen Cg mpounc Made His Skin As Pure Ever, James Rulloch, 'of Iron Bridge, Ont., considers the D.D.D Prescription of oil of wintergreen, thymol, glycerine "te v wonderful oufe for skin He bas goed ceording to h, 19609 uflered for "crema, 'and tthes of your as pure' ak Wis WO sleep # terrible Think red trou to thinl letter of r'ason his years," he now through wonderful cure it ever was Lad | could ot see. |) I could "not rest at al iteh 2 your wonderful says using ay medicine} wo As eczema iv a germ disease, and as the gerne nre right in the skin, blooe medicites wil not eure it. The only. effective way i¢ to treat the itch where the itch is. D.LD, Prescription pene the pores of the skin, kills the which cause the eczema, gives instant relief from the awful itch and permanently cures, « For sample bottle of D. D. D Prescription write to the D.D.D La boratory, Department "kK. N.." p. jordan , Toronto. For sale by*all druggists. trates germ free Nt DOES YOUR SCALP ITCH ? Are Your Hairs Dropping One By One ? scalp itches you are doubt ufiering from dandrufi. The dandrofi germ is digging up your scalp in little flakes, ealled dandruff and apping the Hie of the hair bulb. No préparation that is a mere hair mulant and tonic will cure dand- iff it won't kid the germ the trouble. Newbro's the latest scientific dis and "it will kill the dandruff Destroy the cause, and you re- e the effect; kill the germ and vou have more dandruff, falling or bakdnes, Sold by leading druggists. Send He. in stamps fot sample to The Her pieids Co., Detroit, Mich. One hottles guaranteed. Geo. W. special agent, H. your " because that causes Herpivide i avery, genn will no dollar Mahood, Thi Old English Floor Wax AND Powder. The perfection of fin- ish for hardwood floors. Tuaere is no Floor Wax Justas good as Old Eng- lish. be ware of imita- tions. Sold in 1 lb, 2 1b., 4 Ib. tins. 50c. Lb. AT Marsh I's Hardware. 3 : : x : : | : 1 i | Aresisccsceeessene THE BEST POSSIBLE 'KMAS PRESENT Present your wife with the home lighted with Electric Light. She would be DELIGHTED. Sd idbdAbs It is our specialty and we take pains to do it right. Gas and Electric Supplies. SBM4ihoh™n H.W. Newman Becti Co. Phe ne, 441. 79 Princess street, NR LPB OBLAMAAMLLDOASLS FEF VEE GEER YEREvee A AAA CAA AA A AA a LLVARXR RAILS wn KINGSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE 3 (LIMITED) HEAD OF QUEEN STREET. 'Highest Education at Lowest Cost" Twenty-Sixth vear. Fall Term - begins August 80th: Courses in Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Tele graphy, Civil Service and English. Our graduates get the best posi- tions: Within a short time over sixty secured positions with one " of the largest railway corpora. tions in Canada. Enter any time. Oall for information, H. OALFE, Principal. ITITIIIT ~aA-Ae or write F. MX rm 3 VY For Scranton Coal Wood and Lumber. Try : S. BENNETT & CO, Cor. Bagot and Barrack Stas. 'Phone, 941, All kinds of 4 Why She Had A Happy Old: Age he 'ongregationalist to forget disagreeable knew how flicted them on no one She believed in the wighhors » culfivated a good digestion the art of goodness of her mastered ant words sid not expect too much from her shying nade whatever work came to her nial retained her all the and did not was wicked illusions world ve evé that nkind e relieved the miserable «d with the sorrowful She retained an even disposition made the best of evérything he did whatever came to her cheerful- nd well never forgot that Xind words and tile cost nothing, but are countless sures to the discouraged did wnto others as she would be and now that old ago has © her, she is loved and considered and and sympa- ih and to flatter a woman can't. © way is to that you PROPHESIED A DISASTER HOW NEW GLASGOW WOMAN WARNED PICTOU MINERS. pe Mrs. Coo, Who Told Fortunes For the Young Folk, Foresaw a Falling In of Coal In the Foord Pit of the Albion Mines at Stellarton--She Also Announced the Date of an Ex- plosion Which Killed a Hundred. The efiect of recent sermons on the coal strike in Cape Breton, which called forth the action of the Papal representative jn Canada, has been iikened to that of Mrs. Coo's sttempts % frighten the miners of Pictou county. This recalls a strange story of bygone years, which perhaps many Janadians never heard. The Mrs. Coo predietions referred lo were a series of strange prognosti- 3ations of disaster in the ecal mines »f Pictou County, N.B., made by a local "seer" at New Glasgow, nearly thirty years ago. Mrs. Coo was a widow, living in what was then the outskirts of New Glasgow. She was a large and almost masculine-looking nerson, who told the fortunes of lads and lasses through the medium of the mysterious tea cup.' With a wad of tea grounds upon which a little water had been poured, she could see pic- tures and foretell the fate of those who crossed her palm with silver. Often she seemed as though looking hrough a glass darkly, and her pro- phecies were regarded as a joke. Then she became ambitious and soared into the wilder realms of the inknown. When the stalwart Mahat na handed out the prediction that 'here would be a falling in of coal in me of the mines, and gave the date ipon which it would happen, nobody stopped 'work. When the accident wtually did happen on the date fix- :d, and a wall of coal fell in and rushed several men to death, there were those who recalled the prophecy. The circumstances was forgotten, until the witeh of Pictou County hap- pened to be looking in the cup to while away an hour when business #as dull and she saw more trouble. This time she predicted a "falling in of water" in the Foord pit ofthe Albion mines, at Stellarton, to be at- tended with fatal results. There was aothing indefinite about her jere- miads; she gave the date, and indi- ated about the number of lives which would be lost. The Foord bit was the leepest coal mine in the world, the *hief entrance to which was straight lown into the bowels of the earth in a huge, two-storied steel cage or ele- vator. The workings were <a very catacomb of passages and galleries, one series under the other. They ex- tended away out under the East river, which is there an inlet of the sea, but there was a solid roof of rock and coal hundreds of feet thick between the waters and the workings. There- fore her prediction seemed so impos- sible that few people heeded it. On the day fixed, half-a-dozen or so of the miners were working away at what was supposed to be a solid wall of coal when there was a sudden rush and roar and a mighty volune of water broke in upon them, crushing and drowning all who| were working there at the time. It turned out that the men had unconsciously been cut. ting their way into an old abandoned working, when they thought that they were driving into the solid coal of centuries This old working * had taken fire, and years before, as the fire could' not be extinguished, the mine was flooded. There are only three great sources of disaster which imperil coal mines, and she had used up two of them. The third was fire, which in a gase- ous mine like that at Stellarton al- ways meant explosion of 'fire damp" (carburetted hydroden), followed by deadly "choke damp" (carbonic acid gas). The 'prophet of evil now pre. dicted this, and again gave the date, and "saw" a large loss of life and destruction of property. The miners there at that time were chiefly hard-headed Pictou Scots and Cornishmen, not given to supersti- tion. Few of them left work, but one, who was a Swede, decided that he would leave and visit his home. He had his luggage at the railway 'sta. tion, and his 'good clothes" on, ready to go in the morning ol the day fixed for trouble. 'He went down into the pit to bid farewell to his old comrades. He never came back, and away off in Sweden a sweet. heart waited in vain for a lover who had been engaged to her for many years That same morning the wife of ong of the miners who was to have gone down in the day shift, stole her hus- band's clothes while he slept, and fle from the house to prevent him goin to work that day. It saved his life. That morning there was a rum- bling boom beneath 'the earth, and it soon became evident that the explo- sion had come. What caused it no opie knows to this day. Some of the miners escaped by making a long detour and going up the slope of the Cage Pit, which con- nectel with the Foord Pit. They could not tell what the fate of their comrades was. A large number of lives were lost. The next day a_ party of managers went down to investigate, and almost right up to the very cage they found corpses of men and horses. Tt was found that the mine was a cauldron of flames. Further explosions might occur at any moment. A hurried exit was made, everyone driven away from the pit-heads. For hours they waited in silence for the sound which would mean the doom of one of the most valuable properties in America. At last it came: the cage shot up from the pit like a rocket, the ven- tilating shaft house was wrecked. There was nothi left now but to flood the mine. he New Glasgow fire department, with their steam en- gine, pumped into the mouth of the pit for days, while a large force of men dug a deep. trench from the East river to an old pit and the waters of Northumberland Strait rush- ed into what the work of years had fade a mighty underground city, of miles_and miles of passages. Feord Pit whs abandoned, and the mine was the tomb for a hundred odd men. And Mrs. Coo said: "I told you so." » at South Au- morging, of Mrs. Thomés-Binns, aftor an illness ex- tending over several months. De- ceased was in her seventy-fourth year, We are often tempted because our are in that direction, The "death occurred gusta, Sunday de ires THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 24.1009. STRANGE BEQUESTS. British Footballers Receive Some Queer Letters. Football champions receive all man- ner of applications. from their admir- ers, according oo a famons player. The first-class footballer is the pam Pered pet of the British crowd during the winter months, and is constantly receiving presents, showing the re- gard and admiration in which he is held by the sport-loving members of the community. They receive many queer applications as well. is Only a few days ago I received a pair of handknitted stockings from a lady living in Surrey, says one of- them, who, in return, requested me to send her my autograph and a frag- ment of a discarded jersey. She was collecting pieces of cloth which had formed a "portion of the attire of crack footballers, glueing each piece into a book which she called her "footer albums" I didn't like to send the stockings back and refuse the re- quest. Having an old jersey, which 1 wore when doing odd jobs in my garden, I snipped a bit from the back and sent it ng with my autograph. The lady was so pleased with them that shé sent me yesterday a hand- knited tie to match the stockings. A brother "knight of the leather" told me recently that he had been the recipient of a dozen letters from a young woman, each pleading plain- tively, not for his heart, but for one ot his old football boots. She and a friend, it appears, were forming a small museum of football curiosities and it was their intention to make cast-off boots of famous 'soccer' play- erg the leading exhibit. My friend was asked to send along his footwear with a label bearing particulars of his foot ball career and his autograph tacked 10 the sole. I fear that lady will wait a very long time for that old boot, as the player in question passes on his old football boots to his son, who wears them to school during the win- ter months. The strangest request I ever receiv- ed came from the owner of a wax- works show in the Midlands. He want ed me to have a plaster cast taken of my head and face and sent to him to- géther with the bill, when he would send me a check in settlement, to- gether with three guineas for myself. 1 didn't like the idea of being put on show to a crowd of gaping provincials, and politely refused to accede to his wishes: 1 was very pleased I did, for I. learnt later that he had imagin- ed me to be a man, having a similar name to my own, who had won fame in the north of England as a burglar! On the eve of his departure for Aus- tralia a certain successful footballer was asked by a strange lady to send her football cards from the colonies as well as picture postcards, while the representative of a country newspaper wanted him to send home weekly a column of football "talk" for the munificent payment of 5s. a thousand words ! . When footballers have to go into training for an important match it is not unusual for their club secretary to be bombarded with invitations from hotel-keepers in the country and at the seaside, offering to give the play- ers free board and lodging on condi- tion that they will do all in their power to draw guests to their estab- lishmenta, A Picturesque Function. One of the most important functions in the daily life of the English blue- acket is-what is called on board the ritish men-o'-war "'grog time." Grog is composed of rum and water and is served daily to the bluejackets on all British warships. Dutchmen and Germans have their beer, Frenchmen and Italians their wine, but the Brit ish "handyman" gets grog, the same as his forefather in the days of Nel- son. The grog barrel is generally a very elaborate affair, embellished with motloes, "God Save the King" being most in favor, To be deprived of grog is one of the punishments meted out for serious breaches of discipline and one that is keenly felt by the culprit, Bluejackets who do not indulge in spirituous beverages are allowed a small amount of mamey in lieu of grog, but abstaining from grog for several days in order to draw a large quantity with intemperate motives is made impossible by the regulation that grog must be drawn daily and that no more than a daily ration may be served at any time. HIGH-0-ME That's the Way Pronounce Hyomei, the Money-Back 'Catarrh Cure. As doubt exists in he minds of many readers of the Why, let uz say that the above is the proper pronoun- ciation of America's most wonderful catirrh cure. ®& W. Mahood is the dgent for Hyomei in Kingston, and he will sell you an inhaler, a bottle of Hyomei, and full instructions for use, for only $1. And :f it fails. to cure acute or chronic catarrh, asthma, bronchitis, croup, hay fever or coughs and colds, he will give you your money back. The person who suffers from catarrh after such an offer as that, must like to sunife, spit and wheeze, and be generally disgusting. Read what Mrs. Higginbotham, a re- spected citizen of :Guelph, Ont., says of Hyomei. "I have the best kind of reasons for giving Booth's Hyomei my hearty en- dorsement. 1 had suffered with an itching sensation in my throat, swell ing of the nasal glands and glands leading to my eves, in fact a genuine catarrh for several months 1 used several remedies but received no re lief until I used Booth's Hyomei I am glad that there is on sade a re- medy that relieves like this one and also glad to endorse the use and speak a gocd word for = Booth's Hyomei."" 'N, Higginbotham, 63 Queen St.. Guelph, Ont. to Your money back if it don't. Gives im- mediate relief from heartburn. sour stom- ach, stomach distress and sick headache, 50 ceats a large box at G. W. Mahood. WHAT SHOOTING COSTS. Huge Prices English Gantlemen + Spend on Sport. Right through the month of A in Great Britain the great aust of eternal hill, empurpled with hea- ther, tinselled with swift-running streams, and fringed with coppices of birch and "alder, are overrun with companies 'of men in coarse home- spun and thick-soled boots--barris- ters, members of Parliament, men of wealth - and title, all of whom are 'wholly given over to the worship of St. Grouse. Sport is the keynote of life in the North, and with the close of the Good- wood race meeting in' the dying days of July the "Land of Cakes" becomes the land of dukes, for a large major- | ity of the wearers of strawberry leaves seitle in their castles and baronial mansions for the shooting : The art of making money out of the game on his estate was unknown to the Highland laird of sixty or seventy yeurs agg. It was not until the late Earl of Dalhousie, who owned some 162,000 acres of land in Porfarshire, had planted 1,300,000 trees at a cost of $350,000, with the result that the thirteen shootings they provided yielded a revenue of $65,000 a vear, that the Frighland landowners made haste to follow his example. This season Mr. Harry Payne Whit- ney, the American millionaire, who derives his wealth from banking and railway enterprises, has laid out ibout $50,000 upon the Holwick Hall grouse moor, Upper Teesdale, and has engaged more than 100 beaters. This is probably the largest sum ever spent by one man on a season's shooting. How much money is spent by sportsmen on grouse shooting every year cannot be totalled to a penny, but it has been estimated that at least a million birds are August and December at & cost of something like half a million Jorn. The Highlands possess to-day be- | 'ween 2,000 and 3,000 grouse moors, or shootings, Perthshire of the red wing." Some years ago the Duke of Suther- 'and cut the coufity of Sutherland, of | which he is the virtual owner, into ifty-orie shootings, with a gross ren- | tal of about $150,000 a year. The Duke wres from the Duke of Sutherland, 'or which he paid over $60,000'a year, n addition to another $1,000 for the right of fishing in the river Laxford. | While the lordly grouse is paying tribute on a thousand hilltops to the | rich sportsman for the care and ex- vense lavished upon him during the | 'lose season, the pretty deer are call- | xd upon to satisfy that bloodthirsty | passion the French profess to abhor | so much in the Britisher. Shooting grouse is a costly pastime, | but. it is not half so costly as deer- stalking. In the third week of August the wealthy go after the deer and sontinue to do so until October the 12th. During the few weeks decr- stalking is permissible the. money tpent by the guuners for their sport runs into hundreds of thousands of | pounds. Each stag costs*the sports- men anything from $150 to $250. Barons de Clifford. One of the ancestors of Baron de Clifford, who_was fatally injured in | \ motor accie¥nt near Brighton, and who made a romantic' marriage wi 1 the charming lady known on the stage as Miss Eva Carrington, and was playing the part of a Gibson Girl in "The Catch of the Season' at the time of her wedding--was- Walter-d¢ Clifford, the father of mond." - The first Baron de - Cilfford wag killed 'at Bannockburn, and the second was executed at York eight years after. Roger de Clifford, the fifth baron, distinguished himself on the battlefield. The seventh baron married a daughter' of Hotspur, and 'heir son, the eighth baron, fell at she battle of St. Albans, in 1455. The ninth baron was slain n 1461: The tenth baron was brought up by his | mother in seclusion, and beeame tnown later as the "Shepherd Lord." He died a natural death, and, in the words of the poet, "Ages after he was laid in earth, The 'Good Lord Jlifford" was the name he bore." ' "Nowt Never Happened." No one is fondér of a good story, or can tell one with greater effect, than Dr. Clifford, who will lead the Nonconformist Emergency = League igainst the Lords, should necessity irise. Both his father and mother worked in a Lancashire lace 'factory, ind when the preacher was ten years ld he "too entered the factory, and »ften worked 'twelve or fourteen hours at a stretch. Of these days Dr. Clifford has an amusing remini- scence. A piece of new machinery was | being hoisted to the top room of the factory, when the rope broke and the machinery gol a damaging fall. "Well, I never!" exclaimed the man- agar. "To think I've hoisted with that rope for fifteen years and nowt never happened." John Strange Winter's 100th Book. For thirty-six years John Strange Winter (Mrs. Arthur Stannard), who is about to publish her hundredth book, bas been writing. She is now fifty-three, and at seventeen years of age wrote her first story. Her curious pseudonym was chosen on the rdviee »f her publishers, who thought it bet ter that the public should assume that her military books, such as "Cav- alry Life," and "Regimental Leg: nds," were written by a man. It was not until she wrote "Boetle's Baby" that her identity was revealed. As a matter of fact, it was a long time before it was believed that the books were written by a woman. Literaty Men From the Postoffice. Mr. W. W. Jacobs, who attained his forty-sixth birthday rocently, is one of a long list of literary men who have been employed in the Genera) Postoffice--a list which includes such names as Anthony Trollope, Edmund Yates; Sir Spencer Walpole, A. B. Walkley, and H. Buxton Forman, the editor of Keats. Mr. Jacobs' father was manager of a wharf at Wa, --a citcumstance which in. all/prob- ability accounts for the large part (which river life plays in the son's novels and stories. * Frank Perrin, a farmer residing near Throoptown, appeared in Brockville police court charged with gelling fro- 7en potatoes. The women withdrew their charges upon the accused paying costs amounting to $3.43 and agreeing to remove the potatoes. shot © between | being par | :xcellence the home of "the little bird of Westminster rented 116,000 | A i | «doin Mi:eArthur was the first wool | prince of Australia, and as such de. | "Fair Rosa- | ing -- "THE SHEEP RO EN a Ea Australia Produces Fine Wool For the Whole World. was known of, just as there were brave men before Agamemnon, but the fine wool sheep of tically an Australian production--one might almost say invention. Australia started its national lite half millions some $125,000,000 a year --more than $25 a year for every man, woman, and child. . Of - much more than Australian mo- ment was the growth of this grand wool industry. It gave to England a new source of wealth. Before the days of Australia, Spain was looked | upon as the only country in the | world which could produce fine wool. Spain of that day was not willing that British looms should have any ad- vantage of her preduction, and the British woollen menufacturing indus- { try, confined to the usé of coarser staples, languished, Now, Australis--and Australia prae- tically alone--produces the fine wool | of the world; and if, in the course of i id Zollverein confined ine elothés would perforce cease. surves to be honored as one of the onnders of the Commonwealth. From | im streteh, in deseant of industry though not of blond, a. long line of big hearted, big-brained men, who hive "under - the curious name of 'squatters and ¢r:, the chief pillars of Austra lian prosperity, and the dominant | 'vpes of Australian character. The squetter eerned his name from 'he fact thet in the early days he pushed out with his flocks and herds beyord the borders of then known ivilization, and "senattod" where he istod. His title to the land was his of it. As settlement progressed, that free and eesyv method of occupy- ne the country hed to give. way to more elsborated and not, in all cases, such satisfactory tenures, The squat- ter, however, remained still in title a squntter,.though he was now a ten- ent of the erown on a long lease, or { an aetuel frecholder by right of grant or purchase. J: 8t are the arcas now held by pas. 'or; lists in. Ausfralia, Tn the north- rn territory. where primitive condi- | tions still rule, some of the runs are ! «= big zs the priveipality of Wales. | Fven in" tho more settled parts ot \nglralia it is not uncommon for one man to héld vp to a 'million acres of {-Lomd for + eottle or sheep run: Generous hospitality marks the Aus- | tralien wool-grower. The stranger within his gates mav be assured of a lordly welcome, which stretches even to the loan or gift of fresh horses to 'resume his journev This gracious rustom of hospitality -- born' of the i Jave when traveling was rare and dif- fiecvlt--nmow dies reluctantly as the railroad earries on its campaign against primitivism. § 180 | A quiet ¥en ook place at the , MethoCist parsonhge, Addison, on | Wednesday, the parties being Albert E. Forsythe, Greenbush, to Gladys Suffel, Soperton. purchased the steamer Salsbury and wll make extensive repairs to her for the passcnger trade on' the bay. H. F. Forward, arwell-known citizen of Belleville, was, on Monday, the vie tim of a paralytic stroke. His illness 15. Serious, Heavies: At Pit Of The Stomach A Teeling * of TUneasiness Before and After Meals is Quickly Cured With Nerviline. Nearly everyone gets an occasional attack of indigestion and knows just what that heavy feeling means in the stomach. "l was subject to stomach derangements and my health was se- ter meals I belched gas, had a weighty sensation in my stomach and over my left side. .The first relief I got was from Nerviline--I used it three times a day and was cured. I con'inued to use Nerviline oceasion- ally and find it a wonderful aid to the stomach and digestive organs." The above. let- NERVILINE ter "comes from " rs. P. R. Btet- RESTORES son, wife of an portant mer- WEAK chant in Brock- ton, and still STOMACHS further proof of the' exceptional power of Nerviline is furnished by A. E. Rossman, the well- known upholsterer of Chester, who writcs : "Let everyone with a bad stomach use 'Nerviline,' gnd 1 sure there will be few sufferers left, 1 used to have cramps, rumbling noiser; gas on my stomach and severe fits of indigestion. Nerviline was the only {remedy that gave me. relief, and 1 found it so entirely sati-factory that I would like to have my letter of re- commendation published broadcast in order that others may profit by my experience." You'll find a hundred uses for Ner- [that sells to the extent of a million {bottles per year--that's the best proof that it must cure and give un'imited | satisfaction. Refuse anvthing offered {in place of Nerviline, 25¢. per bot- tle. five for $1. All dealers.. | son who purchases a 25c. bottle o Joday ia prac: | » g 5 A ton of Coal will be delivered free from James. Coal Yards, to the one guessing the nearest , the x of Coal in the Scuttle in Mahood's ; Store f hye t . Now is ] We Have Them. THE SAWYER SHOE STORE. ---------- TOE IAGSIGIISIISISICIISIICINEE 3O0IK0 | "City Brokerage" 18 MARKET STREET, KINGSTON. Jd. 0. HUTTON J. R. C. DOBBS Aa the fect that they weree Miss | Captain James Collier, Picton, has | viline--it's a trusty household remedy | any future developments, an Imvper- | Australian | wool to the mills of the Empire, a | {lgre-t part of the foreign production of | | | | 1 | | riously hampered on this account. Af- |i T am | WILL BUY: Silver Leaf, 8,000 Rochester, 5,000 Cobalt Lake, 100 Nipissing, 5,000 Peter- son Lake, 1,000 Nova Scotia, 1,- 000 Foster, 500 Cobalt Central. A Phosphate Property 'in Front- enac, WILL SELL: 5,000 CHAINER: Farm, an.) List Your Buy and Sell Orders Now. AACRAAIOK P If cocoa is your favorite beverage by all means enjoy it at its best-- as made with Cowan's Perfection Cocoa. The acme of and flavor, THE COWAN CO. Limited, TORONTO. 138 WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO WITH YOUR FEET? | We carry everything yom | think of in warm foot covering. , Overshees, Rubbers, Felt Boots, Moacassins, both Oil Tanned and Moose Hide, Rubber Boots and many lines of Heavy Soled Shoes, in Black and Tan. / purity, richness Reid & Charles. HAAG AGH A When U Want. | oA | Plumbing & Heating bs ON Work Done In any part of your home, store or factory, and want it done in_first class style. S:nd For Us 'David Hall 66 Broek St. Malaga Grapes Large Clusters of Sweet Grapes at 20c per Ib, Pine Apples, large and fresh, at 20c and 25c, Grape Fruit at all prices. Fine, large, Red Snow Apples at 30c pk. i R. H. Toye, *" "$35. 1a

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