Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Feb 1902, p. 5

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JO BE LET. enw ROOMS, 10% Quen stress. Bar Gooy FURNISEMD ROOMS, WITH with all moderns = somveaientes, of Avenue. Wotae J JAUCHN TERRACE, WITH and . sion, ATTRA wTH or ] h yi THE SuOP WiTH SLATE GLASS FRONT, near Princess on Sydenham Nithatto Seouled by, Bgbinaouy 2% KIKKPATRIOK, Cares : ARCHITECTS. OF; FIC ¥ 173 dexigns, ap guaranteed. E. 8 ST0HEY, ARCHITECT, Wellington street. All pianos, fleiked to. Batislacdon Feline, BOS. Ladd vt ae ARTITOR site of | ANCHITECTS MBGCH. Building, Sormus Brock . "Phose 213. ARCHITECT, OFFICE I, bear corner. of mm : SE eR. TRE IN LARGE Oi »sNALL v Palés of interest on sity Property. Loss grand on ty debentures. Apply 10 8. Tg sannnie of Franwoae Loss Society, Ullics opposite : he Powe. wo TTUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS IN ms from _ thousmnd a wo thous an re. or particulars nr Gabwin INBURANCE. urOOn, prone Ollice, Market Sguare -------------- ct. Kiverpool, . London and Globe Fire Insurance Company. race, $61.187,215. In addition 'the policy holders hava for secur: x Miaite linkility of all the stock AND CITY PROFERTY insured a4 lowest rates. Felore renewing old or giving new business get rates from STRANGE & STRANGE, Agents, The Toronto General Trusts Corporation Office and Safe Deposit Vaults, 99 YONGE STREET, TORONTO -- £1,C 00,000 880,000. Capital, Reserve Fund President : JOBN HOSKIN, Q.C., Vieo-Presidents HON. 8. 0. WOOD, W. 1. BEATTY, Beg J. W. LANGMUIR, Managing Director A.D. LANGMUIR, Assistant Manager JAMES. DAVEY, Becretary to aot as Executor, A Al istrator, Trustees, Receiver, Comm a of Lunatic, Guardian Liquidator Loh to rent, All sizes and 2 Ringe Tom. Parcels receixed Sus i and ot! yaltshles Guarantess fel oN 3 Seinging Estates, Adminis frations, 0, to Corporation are continued 2a in the aro asonn care of the | Wor further informatien we the Uo» poration's Manual. LL.D. CLEAN COAL. You might as well have a clean tou fof your grate fire--it's easy 5 casts 80 more than the rag x annel coal is clean coal--u splendid general purpose fuel and' particularly good for use in grates, THE RATHBUN Co. WOULD WIPE OUT FAMILY ANGRY SUITOR KILLS FATHER OF GIRL HE LOVES. Chicago Man Sought Revenge Be- cause His Persistent Demands For a Dowry Sufficient To Start Himself and Finance in Housekeeping Were Refused. Feb. 21. Angered because feisistent demands for a dowry hc rent sigrt o-keepir and seek revenge His etheart, a steno itll and her ber sis Chicago, to give him a were refused on the family of George Childrose, { yesterday, shot and Beiry Meversr, the girl's father, alightly wounded Emma Meyerer, str, Wer mother er eeciped another thai by and anot whot i rush nto the street Then. bélieving had killed ntire family, Childrose throngh his own brain at the door of kis The couple became Pvaclay and the voung man 'at Lean hig demands that retired mechanic and inventor, f morey to start the couple inh Lee dng The demands were so sistant that the the propose! un When he was vouned to kill the te tragedy follow sent a | and fell dead sweet tt ® room engaged and per consent . to withdrawn Childross ant large paternal i was ismizsed whole fan ME MADE MER SAY "OBEY." How a Facetious Bridegroom Caused His Bride to Take the Vow. *T remember," said su old clergyman the other day, "that I was suddenly hard put to it to decide whether I should roar with laughter at a solemn service in the house of God or whether I should be very angry. The upshot was that I had such Lard work to keep a straight countenance that I forgot to be angry at all. The in- cident arose in this way: "It was in my early days in the minis- try, and 1 was marrying a young farmer to 4 country "lass in a backwoods chuteh. About that time the women of America were just beginning to kick against the clause in our marriage service which makes them promise 'to love, honor and obey' their spouses, The bride in this case wanted to escape the vow, but did not have the courage to refuse utterly to take it. Instead she tried to slur the sentence when it came her turn to repeat the words after me, and she said, "T'o love, honor and *bey,' leaving out the '0' in the hope that 1 would not motice the omis- sion. But I did notice the omission and stopped. " 'You must say "obey" clearly,' I an- nounced, 'or I eannot go on." "The bride hung her head, but a stub- born look came over her face, and I eonld sce that it would take a Jot of persuasion to make her change her mind. " 'Will you not say "obey? ' I asked. "She only shook her head. " 'Come, mow,' sald I coaxingly. 'T will repeat the words again, and you say them after me.' "1 did so, and the bride murmured, 'Lave, honor, and "bey. "J looked at the bridegroom to see if he had any suggestion to make. The irrever- ent fellow actually gave me a wink. "Try her once more, sir,' he said. "The third time's the best, She only wants coaxing.' "The bride shot him an indignant look and exclaimed tartly, 'I'll say the same thing over a hundred times and not a syl- lable more.' "I was getting weary of this nonsense, so I rapped out the words very suddenly and shortly, 'Love, honor and obey,' at the same time shooting out my index fin. ger at the girl, This seemed to startle her, and with equal rapidity she began to repeat, 'Love, Honor oud'~ "Just here the bridegroom gave her a sharp dig in the ribs with a huge forefin- ger, and the girl emitted a pained 'Oh' But, determined not to be interrupted in what she had intended to say, she finish ed her own rendition of the vow without a second's pause and ejaculated * "bey.' THE SMOKE CONSUMER WORKED. That Was the Lanndry"s Great Ob- jection to It. "About a year ago" said a Chicago patent lawyer, "1 secured a patent on a smoke consuher-for-a client of mine. Ha came into the office the other day, and 1 asked him what he was doing with his in- vention, * "Well," he said, 7 baven't had mach success with it. It's hard work to get a thing like that infroduced. Last spring, after & lot of arguing, I got a west sido laundry firm to try it, with the under- standing that I was to take it out at my own expense if it didn't give satisfaction, After it had been in use a month or so I thought I'd go over and see how it was working. "As 1 approached the laundry I saw that there wasn't a bit of smoke rolling out of the stack. In fact, it was almost impossible to see from the outside that there was a fire in the boiler. It made me feel mighty good to see that the thing was working so well, and I went Into the office full of confidence, "+ "Well," I said to the senior partuer, "how do you like your smoke cousumer I" "4"I've been going to write to you ehout that," be replied. "We want it taken ants" "+ "What's the trouble?" I asked him. "4 *You agreed to take it at your own expense if it wasn't sa ctory, you know. We have the contract in writing." " "That's all right. I'm not denying that I agreed to take it out, but I'd like to know what's the matter with it. I looked at it just now, and it seemed to be consuming the smoke all right." CM ESCh it denanmies; ax far as that's concerrod, but since the smoke bas quit rolling out of the stack a lot 9 tne nr pases ops drag pangs inthe ] Bernd mt Y ees oe Boer air BE WN Bi Ko Toponie amd | man as he ps { which seemed to deeply | af the territory. { end of Indians. } party of prospectors, THE DAILY WHIiL, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24. -- NO USE FOR THE CACTUS. After Seeing is Friend Lashed to Oue by Apaches and Teortared. , 1 can't say that I have a a speci od aca st the lobby at a b her too ma Sus gieat cactus in have seen alg: and thet re is a « asked ¢ hat was « affect him began: "1 have lived in Arizona a great many years. In fact, 1 am one of the piones Wheo | went ther 1865, there were few white people, The Indians were pot all It was a year or so after enn with a small friendly. ing to the territory that. great Arizona desert from [henix We were all provided with food and wa- ter and were making the trip over the hot { sands and onder a scorching sue with as much cothfotelas was possible until we were overtaken by a straggling band of Indians, | think they were Jicarillas. "There was nothing to do but to make a run for it, and we gave them a hard race for five hours until Archie Hazzard, one of the party. fell behind and was tak- eti. Then we turned and made a fight, but it was po use. The Indisns made off with their prisoner. a part of them keep- ing us off from those that had him in charge. We followed until night, when the Indians made a halt, and there, before our eyes, they stripped [Hazzard of bis clothes and lashed him to a big cactus. "Such suffering! They raised bim just far enough above the ground that his whole weight fell on the sharp needles of the plant, thousands of them pidréing his flesh. © While half of the Indians held us away the otbefs danced about our suffer ing partner. There were only four of us and sbout twenty Indians, but we sue ceeded in driving them off after a fight that lasted until near midnight. "When we refiched Hazzard, he was nearly dead from the loss of blood and the terrible agony that he suffered. We got him back to Phenix, but he died in a few days. "I have been caught in the desert and have been saved from dying of thirst by drinking water that is contained in the eactus, but 1 never can feel any gratitude to the plant after that first experience. Aud I never can tolerate sn Indian."- Mutton as a Motor. Green, the English bistorian, one day asked a friend which of all the inventions of their day had done the most for the people as a whole. His friend guessed this and that, but the answer was: "Beyond doubt sixpenny photographs." A reply involving quite as gréat an ab- siurdity as that was made by Cecil Rhodes in answer to a lady who, seeking to draw him out, suggested that he owed his phenomenal rise to the impetus of noble sentiments. "Madam," returned Mr. Rhodes, "I owe my fortune simply and solely to cold mutton." "Cold mutton!" gasped the lady. "Oh, Mr. Rhodes, what do yon mean?" "When | was young," continued the South - African millionaire, "lI was so dosed with cold mutton and 1 hated it so cordially that 1 resolved to grow rich in order to put it on one side for the t of my life. Yes madam, cold mutton was at the root of my success. Noble se ments had npething te do with it."-- Youth's Companion. How Should Bobby Know, The density of the Euglish "bobby" bas often been told, But here is the experience of a young woman just back from Lon don, . Happening out on the street one morning. she noticed that the reflected light suggested afternoon rather than mening. The sun. to all appearances, seemed to be in the west. To the first policeman she met she addressed this query: "Officer, which is the west? He pointed to the direction from which the sunshine seemed to come, "Oh." sbe said, "then the sun rises in the west in London #* "As to that, miss,' really cannot aay * replied "bobby," "1 A Poor Plare For Architects, There is a little village on the west const of Ireland in which there is only one house, and that sheiters no famile, fer it belongs to and is ocenpied by the loesl priest. There are something over a dozen families living in the village, and each of them occupies an old fishing beat. As no large tree is found nearer than eight miles, no earpenter's shop.or architect's office is found in the village. Primitive Savages, Morally we are still primitive savages. We are still combating murder, arson, theft, . Like the cave dweller fighting the physical mammeth, we are fighting the wammoths of moral detormity. Eventa- ally they will disappear. Murder will be unknown, and theft, rendered unnoces- sary by detent §6&idl organization. will have disappeared also. Further Amputation. "You'd better see to Jobnuy, dear' said the wife. "I think he's chipping off a piece of your cork leg to make a stop per 'for the molasses barrel. Bless his cate little soul!" --Atlanta Constitution. er More In His Line. "Do you think I will make a player? asked a singgish applicant for football. "You may make a chess player," said the coach. "You are slow enough in mov- ing."--Boston Commercial Bulletin. 'GOT IDEAS _ FROM DREAMS. | INVENTIONS THAT HAD THEIR BIRTH rs §¢ but vo | " s "proved to be a ship. 1 was crossing the | , to | where is now the King of Arizona mine. | 'sto my sea, himself 'adrift in the open IN SLUMBERLAND. The Design of the Whaleback Boat Appeared to Its Originator In a Dream ~The Shot Tower and the Sewing Machine Needle. Every ove "has heard of the whale type of ships, first ased on the =n Igkes and since adapted suc to the transatiantic carrying lie inventor says the idea came to him ile asleep. He dreamed that be was Hog in a smsll boat across an un- wn and tempestuous sea when he be- e suddenly aware of the approach of vhat he at first took to be a marine mon- rer, but which on closer examination It was, however, of kind sueh ss bad never been seen by mortal eyes before, It looked very much like a buge cigar, 20d the dreamer noted that its deck curved upward toward the center and that there were practically no balwarks, the resalt being that the water broke abeard did no damage, but tied off again almost immediately into Lie ocean whence it came, No living creature was apparently aboard the strange craft, but the glare from her furnaces copld be plainly seen as she drove onward through the fast gathering gloom. The sleeper followed her with his eyes as long &s he was able, and when she disappeared he cried out aloud: "Splendid! I will build such a ship as that myself some day!" In the, morning be had forgotten entirely his strange vision of the previous night, but hix wife, who had been lying awake by his side and had overheard his ejaculation, re- ed it to him and questioned him con- corning its meaning. Then, like a flash, the whole scene came back to him--the 'and the queer looking craft with the ded deck and cigar shaped prow. 4 ping up from the breakfast table, he flew to his study--he was an engineer's draftsman by profession--and ere evening dawped he had the plans drawn up for a ship designed in exmct accord with the phantom vessel which had been evolved Ly & disordered imagination in the dead hours of the night. . Before Watts, the Bristol workman, dreamed the dream which bas since be- come historical the making of shot was a slow, laborious and consequently costly process, Watts himself was a shotmak- er, and he knew. He bad first w take great bars of lead and pound them out into sheets of a thickness nearly equal to the diameter of the shots he desired to make. He then had to cut these sheets into little cubes, place the cubes in a re- volving barrel and roll the barrel round and round until, by the constant friction, the edges wore off from the little cubes and they became spheroids. Watts had often racked his brain trying to discover some better and less costly scheme, but in vain. Fioally, after spend- ing an evening with some boon compan- jons at an alehouse, he went home and to bed, He soon fell into a profound slum- ber, but the stimulants he bad imbibed apparently disagreed with him, for his was disturbed by unwelcome dreams. He imagined he was out again with the "boys" and that as they were stumbling homeward in the dark it began to rain shot. Beautiful globules of lead, polished and shining, fell in a torrent and compelled him and bis bibulous cempan- johs to drag their heavy limbs to a place of shelter, In the morning when Watts arose he reiggibeted bis dveam. He turned it ver in his mind all day and wondéred what shape molten lead would assume in falling through' the air. These thoughts tormented him so persistently that at last, to set his mind at rest, he carried a ludle- ful of molten lead to the top of the tower of the Church of 8t. Mary, Redcliffe, and dropped it into the moat below. Descend- ing, be took from the bottom of the shal- Jlow pool several handfuls of the most per- feet shot be had ever seen. His fortune was made, for he had conceived the idea of the shot tower, which ever since has Leen the only means employed in the manufacture of the little missiles so im- portant in sport. Even more weirdly romantic is the story of the luvention of the sewing ma- chine, or, rather, to be strictly exact, of the needle which made the machine a working possibility. The unhappy lo- ventor had practically beggared himself before he discovered where the eye of the needle of 'a sewing. machine should be placed. Naturally, in constructing his ex- perimental working models, he followed the plan adopted for the ordinary needle und drilled the eye in the heel Never for an instant did it occur to him that it should be placed near the point, and, although he expended thousands of pounds and years of labor, he would prob- ally have failed altogether in realizing bis ideal if be had mot one evening, after a toilsome 'and disappointing day in his workshop, visited a variety theater. Here he heard a song sung, very popular in its day, entitled "The King of the Cannibal Istands." On refurning to his home he was haunted by the refrain. His unfin- ished model also troubled him. Small wonder; therefore, that on retiring to rest be dreamed that be was building a sewing rinchine for the king of the Cannital is- lauds: also he was perplexed about the position of the needie's eye, just as in his actual waking experience. He tried and tried, bat the machine would not sew. At length the king got wild and gave the imveptor twenty-four hours in which to compibte his work. If the machine were not finished by then, death was to be the penalty. fle failell and as a result was ordered ent for execntion. As he walked between » file of soldiers be noticed that they car vied spears that were pierced near the points, and instantly, Hike a flash, came to bits the solution of the preblem.. While Le was begging for an extension of time he awoke. It was 4 o'clock on a bitter cold winter's morning, but he jumped out of bed, flew to his workshop clad only in Biv nightshirt, and by 9 the first needle' that had ever been forged with the eye at the point was lying before him. After that the rest was easy.' \ Modernizing It. "George, dear, you must ask papa's ; consent before another day goes by." "What's the barry ¥ "He ought to know it, George. He | wouldu't forgive me it 1 failed to bave yon tell him." "Jt seems to me like g foolish custom. 11 naught to be reformed ont of existence. 1'st too progressive Zo sabmit to it. IB 1:4 you what I'll do. I'm going to Pitts burg tomerrew, sud [Nl phone him over the long distance from there," Cleveland 'isie Deg ler, sleep Nes. Ross Cook, a mires, planged | down a Fight of Wiairs at the home of | Mis, i Syracuse, NXY., and! way dic. Her hull wes, fractured, | Mre. C. W. Lave: Gore street, is spending a few day with relatives in Gananoque, CLERICAL AN GDOTES. How the Parson Is Sometimes Worst. ed by the * 1ayman, He very as in the classic fate Dean Ramsay, ¢ a sultry summer Se vr afternoon a countsy congregation felt and yielded to the temptation to drowsiness with a re markable unanimity. Almost the only person apparently wideawake was the village idiot, who sat ia the front of the * with steady gaze fixed ou the min Singling him out as an example, the parson sharply rebuked his flock for their sleepiness. "Why," he exclaimed, "even the poor afflicted one, Daft Jamie, as ye call him, can manage to keep awgke" "Aye: but, minister," retorted Jamie, not guite comprehendiog the situ- n, but dimly resenting the sudden city given to his doings, "if 1 hadna en an idiot I wad ba' been sleepin' too." In a small church ia Yorkshire well known te the writer one of the most regan lar and attentive attendants was a coan- tryman who always closed his eyes to lis- ten to the sermon. It helped him to think, he used to say, and shat he really listened no one who undertook to question him about the discourse could doubt. On one oceasion-when the pulpit was occupied by a youthful cleric from a neighboring pt there came a pause io the sermon. Suspecting what it meant, but not trou- bling to open his eyes, old John said: "Tha can ger on wi' thy preachin'. I'm noan asleep." Out of church the parson sometimes re- ceives a "nasty one," deliberately admin- istered. T regret to say that my own grandfather once, in a ..oment of angry outspokenness, likened his viear--in the presence of that worthy--to the guide. post at the cross lanes in the parish; "for," said the irste and blunt old man, "it points people the road, but doesn't travel in it itself." The astonished vicar was too much taken aback to reply while his censor was within hearing, or he might have made the retort which was made by a Kentish clergyman to a similar charge, "What!" gaid he. "Why, you're never content. Here I tell you what you ought to do on Sunday and show you what yon ought not to do the rest of the week. What more do ven want? You're wvever satisfied." TWO CAPTAINS. occasion ister, One Dies For His People, the Other's People Die For Him, Ruskin in his "Essay on War" says: "It is wholly inconceivable to me how wall educated princes who ought to be of all gentlemen the gentlest and of all no- bles the most generous and whose title of royalty means only their function of do- ing every man 'right'--how these, I say, throughout history should so rarely pro- nounce themselves on the side of the poor and of justice, but continually maintain themselves and their own interests by op- pression of the poor and hy wresting of justice, ind how this should be accepted ns so nataral that the word 'loyalty,' which means faithfulness to law, is used as if it were only the duty of a people to be loyal to their king and not the duty of a king to be infinitely more loyal to bis people, "How it comes to pass that a sea eap- 1 will die with his passengers and lean uvver the gunwale to give the parting boat its course, but that a king will not usual ly die v th, much less for, his passengers thinks it rather incumbent on his pas- songers in any number to die for him? Think, 1 beseech you, of the wonder of this. "The sea captain, not captain by divine right, but only by company's appoint- ment; not a man of royal descent, but only a plebeian who can steer; not with the eyes of the world upon him, but with feeble chance, depending on one poor boat, of his name being ever heard above the wash of the fatal waves; not with the use of a pation resting on his act, but less to save so winch as a child from mong the lost crowd with whom he re- solves to be lost, yet goes down quietly to his grave oh than break his faith to those few enfigrants, "But your captain by divine right, your eaptain with the hues of a hundred shields of kings upon his breast, your captain whose every deed, brave or base, will be illuminated or branded forever be- fore unescapable eyes of men, your cap- tain whose every thought and act are mneficent or fatal from sup rising to set- blessing as the sunshine or shadow- as the night--this captain as you find in history for the most part thinks only how he may tax his passengers and sit at wost ease in his «abin.* A Duck's Sutcide. Sportsmen who hunt ducks eon inland streams and lakes have frequently known them to dive when wounded and fail to appear again, A professional guide who has shot ducks for many years slong the upper Indson says he has solved the mystery. Iie shot a wood duck that fell wounded oud-dived in still water. It did not reap- pear, aud when he came to look for it un- der water he could see the bird hanging with its bill to a root. It was quite dead, and considerable force was necessary to loosen its hold. The hunter firmly believes that the duck committed suicide by "drowning to keep from falling into the hands of its mortal enemy---man. "alr Planting a Vine. Remember when you plant a vine that you aré planting for time, and make a good provision for its growth. Don't dig a hole just large enongh for the plant and thrust it in, leaving it to "sink or swim, survive or perish," as best it may. Rath er-do you give it a fair show for its life, Clioose a place in good sunlight. Dig a bole two feet deep and a foot and a half square. Cart away the earth and 61 the bole with 'well rotted compost. putting good garden soil on top in which to set the plant. You have thus supplied it with something to grow on, and the plant will reward you accordingly. Nosebleed. To stop nosebleed apply cold water or tee to the forebead and nose or Ice to the back of the neck or to the roof of th mouth, If this does not check the bleed: ing, insert in the bleeding nostril a plug of dry cotton oF wet the cotton first in a strong solution of slnm water. Raising the srms high above the head sometimes stops the bleeding. : The Jar Domestic. Wite--1o ve know of what you re mind me ASA AY Niaz birt 1 baw of What yin remind me. Wife--~What? Husbaod--0t pen to forget. every little thing 1 bap From 10 to 15 pe. discount on wall [ papers dueing February. A large as sortment to choose. from, at W. N Lemmons, 7% William street, success ot to Savage Bros, ; RMS or GRID and all such disorders as prison' bronéhitis, colds, 'lung trogble apd incipient consumption, * make their successful attack whe. } « Lolls of the body can't throw them «if. Now you will make a mistake if you think you can guard against the at- tack of these germs by alcoholic stim: ulation or drugging. You will only suffer a word depression after and leave the vital parts of your body mere unprotected to these terrible germs, "For the last four years my itngy wee sf ard L 3nd 4 medical silt had determmed that ly is ring an frack Sngpat arated to bring m fe to Fy wdich cine, commen ig Oreoe, "The New Sato ot rirtg Bis rst hottie gave relief, and several bottles, my lungs were guile 2H Ay night sweats ceased, apd m| mproy ~My recovery is a marvel to all who kno thank God for it. T with you Sirs, much success with this medical wonder, and will warmly roe ommend at all times. Yours very truly, Gordon MeDonaid, €22 Mcleod , Ottawa, Out.' You must strengthen your wy naturally increase. the oxygen carrying power of your blood by Powley's Liquified Ozone Give your different organs nourishment by this means and make surs the red and white corpuscles of your blood are in their proper pro- portion. You can defy these germ attacks because every tissue in your body will become healthy, Ozone is not a combination of drugs, not a medicine, contains no alcohol, Simply oxygen in liquid form, "Prope 50 that the system can use it. 50 Goats and $1.00 ot all Draggists. Te deed. of Fre, it, Tris wd Sst. using se ing con condition aod 1 THE KERN BURNERS, delayed in ship ment, arc now to hand. In order to make room for same we will dispose of our stock of AUER L'GHTS COST. Pear Shape, 55c. Large, with Shade. 65c. The Last Week of Our Special Prices on Enamelled Kitchen Ware. Discard the heavy black pots and pans and invest in some of our FAMOUS WARE at prices that are 20 Below Regular. Considering quality and price together you may not have such an opportunity for another 12 months. McKELVEY & BIRCH, 650 and 71 Brock Street, [.abatt's LonponN ALE and PORTER AWARDED THE GOLD MEDAL AT BUFFALO EXPOSITION. 1901, For their excellent qualities in comparison with similar exhibits from all parts of America. JAS. McPARLAND, AGENT. Ar---------- rp -- PPPS 99% LLIAVLABRVEI VS ' 29598944 JELLY LAYERS Welhave them fresh andin all flavors== Orange, Lemon, Cocoanut, Chocolate, etc. These are the finest goods on the market. TOYE. KING STREET. § 8 as 29H FTV ALBL LLDPE VANS I -------- : : : : s TEV EL VRIES PVRS WE Are Going To MOVE The Latter Part of This Month to Nearly Opposite Starr and Sutclifl's. D. J. McDermott, 175 Princess St. J. W. OLDFIN, %34%, ey 115 Princess St., Next to Routley's.

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