THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. Erm -- . 89TH YEAR. NO. 76. KINGSTON, ONTANIO, TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1¥02 LAST EDITi1ON R. J. REID, rt. UNDERTAKER, 2 Doers Above the Opera House. TELEPHONE 5/7. We Are Full of Snaps. HERE IS ANOTHER FOR YOU. ron Beds © With Best wits Iron Mattress, ~ 1 nly $4.50. Strictly UpetosDate Goods and Prices. Robt. 5B Reid, 3 doors above ihe 95ers House. We Think That as spring has opened so early, and with trade promising as good as it does, everybody ought to wake up. Speaking of engagement rings, pros- perous times will bring many engage ments and marriages, we supply all kiods of rings for this purpose. SMITH BROS. 350 King Street, Jewellers " Opticians, DAVID HALL, Practical Plumber. Steam and Gas Fitting. Baths, besine and range boil- orn, bh lomats, s pricos; sanitary i Shection a spocialiy. All jobs promptly a 66 Brock St. 'Phone 338. EASTER SPECIAL. BEFORE WEANING YOUR NEW HAT don't forget 10 have some of MATTHEW'S FAMOUS ROSE BRAND bacon or hams for breakiast, for they are the fnost made, and don't take any cheap substitute so called "Just as good." CARD OF THANKS. THE LADIES OF SYDENHAM STREET vary highly 3 ¢ . Sasborn. CO. Wd atoliont Arn of their Jat anne of the NEW STORE OPENING. RR JERVAS WILL ho OBEN A NEW CON. noes Strect, Wi Bod, with ull khwds of and Ruite. An bwitation bs extended to an to visit the mew store and test the woods, * TO-LET. THAT PLEASANTLY SITUATED BRICK Stevot, Frog th and WO. good Yard - 8 at 461 las? NIGH rincess Street, LOST, BETWEEN OPERA HOUSE niversity avenue, corner Upper "otros - BEAR BOA please retum to Whie offion. WANTED. AN EXPERI HOUSEMAID to Sin Macmstay. 308 Kine Su APPLY vet. MEN OR. wl, AT Hous, Tats Veer oon rad ONS WITH st 24 Swart el et AT ONCE AN Fair, SMART BOYS FOR STEADY WORK RY EE Tames ingre per BN OF URS , EARNED ENCED COOK. He Avply Mrs. W. J, et LOCAL MEMORANDA. The Daily Note Book For Whig Readers to Post Themselves By. This is All Fools' day. Celebration committee meets to-night. Separate school board meets this evening Grand operas house tonivht. "Lovers Loa." Aggressivences in sume peonle borders on rashmens. dt takes two to make a quarrel, can end it. Love's young decom sysiost a rude awakening. Don't think thet sensible girls sdmire men because of their plvsical beavty . The dovtor's son may follow in bis fe thers footsteps by becoming en undertaker. St. Andrew's church Doress Society's sale of work asd afternoon tes, Thursday. April rd, 3 10 8 o'clock, St, Andrew's bail General meeting Fol those interested in Victoria Day celdbration todeht, council chamber; eight o'clock. Maver Bhaw, chair man The actress seems to think that she Must from her husband part, Apd get divoreesl ere she con be Quite weikhsd to ber art but one oftets bumps wp CHINAMEN _ SHUGGLED. Details of An Important Capture of Ctlestials WERE DISGUISED AS NUNS. CARELESS REMARK LED TO THEIR DETECTION. Were Conveyed Across the United States Border By An Assumed Priest--Paid Fine And Cus- toms Duty--How the Trick Was Done. Hull, Que., April 1.--"'Say, Dave, did you notice anything strange ab- out that party of nuns ? They seem to me to be a most peculiar Jot.' "No, I didn't notice thet" particu- larly, why 7" This duy in the world's historv: Rand start work agaie, 1901: Bismarck bors, 1515; Napoleon Bormparte and Marie Lovisa of Austria married, 1810; Gen. Lee dufentd at Five Forks, 1865; Foul Zola born, 1540; funeral of Louis Kossuth ai Boda Pesth, procession bein~ five miles lone 1804; Americans and Enclish ambushed near Apia, three officers awd four smilors killed, 1599; baroness Clare 'de Kirsch de Gerenth left $100,000,000 to charity in Paris Toilet Sets All Colors Best English Makes $1.45. ROBERTSON BROS. GR AND OPERA Joss A. J. SMALL, Lesses an TUESDAY, April Ist WM. A Rave Artistic m of Clyde Fitch's Famous Play LoverS' Lane IE ORIGINAL SONrANY which presen it for 5 months in New York and sll summer in Chicago. Prices -$1, 78¢., 50c. and 28e Seats now on sale ale at Hi Hanier's. WED'Y APRIL 2nd The World Renowned HERRMANN Gre: Great IN A NEW AND MARVELOUS Programme of Sensational Won- ders, Accompanied by McWATTERS & TYSON AND COMPANY In Their Latest Vaudeville, SCENES IN A DRESSING ROOM, Prices, $1, 75¢.. 80¢c., 2e. Seats now on sale at Hanley's. TRANSFER OF LICENSE. TAKE nell E THAT I HAVE DISPOSED mivos WITH ed of my bh operty at Westbrook, known as the Westhiook Hotel, in Mw Towashin of Kingston, to Wil Carson the city of Kingwion, awd have made ee to the license commissioners for the County Frontenac to consent to seid transfer im. The commissioners will meet at the Wind: sor Hotel, Kingwton, on SATURDAY. April 12th, 1902, at 10 o'clock, to conwider said rans JOS, A. yunoed at Kingston this 20h 202 ol w MeCONNFLL, March, A. D. TO-LET. PLEASANTLY SITUATED corner Brock amd Clergy Sis, comtatpine ten rooms, bath room, Tirmacs, electric lightete, also the howse next door con taining § rooms, aud with: all modern im Jrovements, Apply to Dr. Fowler, Brock THE HOUSE, KRUGER IS DISCONCERTED. Acting President Schalkburger Styled Weak-Kneed Patriot. London, April 1.--<The Brussels tele- grams indicate that the peace move ment of the Transvaal executive has greatly disconcerted Mr. K Am: ong the immediate retainers . the word, it is said, hes revisets, he discredit Mr. Schalk- burger. The jueeaident, Ao Sham Ur. - _--. There is no news from South Africa throwii of the "Oh, nothing much. Only their queer yellow faces struck me as fhey came aboard in Montreal, and they were too meditative or too holy to say one ! blessed word, far as 1 could hear, all | the way out." That was all. A careless remark and a laugh between a couple of drummers, but it led an acute Yankee customs officer to make an important discovery, which has already had an effect upon the United States nation- al treasury. This officer quietly arose from his corner of the smoking compartment wherein the short conversation had occured, and just as the Canadian Pacific railroad train was approach- ing Sutton, the last but one of the Canadian stations before entering Un- ited States territory at Richford, Vt., approached the conductor with the query: "Do you remember where the six nuns in the car ahead are booked for 7" "8t. Johnsbury, if I recall it right- ly," was the reply. "The old priest who sits on the other side of the car has their tickets." The officer turned and walked slow ly along the aisle, turning his eyes upon the priest and well . shrouded nuns as he did so. Choosing a seat_as close as he could to the sombre par ty, he spent the next few minutes in vain to catch some word or action which should confirm his suspicions. At Richford, Vt., he went his rounds among the passengers as usual, and the little reticules of the nuns and his own bag were handed to him by the priest. These contained nothing out o the ordinary, though the Book of Hours in each one was evidently quite new and unused. The clergyman was in his bland French way most af- fable to the officer. As he bent over in conversation with this courteous gentleman, he caught sight for the first time of the faces of two of the nuns, who, from under their voluminous head cover- ings, were intently watching his movements. Of their Mongolian ex- traction there could be no doubt, and the officer probably showed the effect upon his mind of this discovery by his tool expressive countenance, for when the train next stopped, having doubled back again into Canadian territory, the priest rising in his place made a signal to his friends and with them left the car. A few hours later the whole party was arrested while tramping along near Troy, Vt., by officers of the Unit- od States customs. A short search re vealed a natty quene neatly coiled away under each wimple and veil of the nuns, and also the fact that four of the six were males. The supposed priest, whose language was rather un- clerical under the provocation, most unwillingly doled out the fines and the amount of the duties upon such com modities as Chinese men and women and returned to Montreal by the next train. It was preity evident that he was a professional "Chinese steerer" who had guaranteed--for no doubt a good large consideration--to conduct the party safely into the land of the free. The capture has been kept as quiet as possible in the hope that the illicit porsolation of Chinese into the United tates from Canada might be dimin ished. Within the last three weeks it has happened that on two other routes the same ruse has been discovered, and in consequence the religious dis guise appears now to have been dis carded. In one Canadian village some of the bovs, who, as is usual in small places, take a keen interest in the doings of wirangers, have remarked that when one of the celestials visits Montreal, two return, and all kinds of theories are advanced as to what becomes of the visitors. In all probability these laundries are merely deposits for the use of smug- glers of Chinese, the surprising resemb- lance between these foreigners making it exceedingly difficult to keep tally on those arriving and departing. But given dark nights and "bad weather and it is not difficult for the Chinese contraband to smupgle themselves across the imaginary line between the two countries: -- A farmer near Pigeon Hill, Ont. lately heard his mastiff having an ar gument with some one in one of his fields at night. Next day he found a loose coat made of dark glazed ma- terial lying at the door of the dog's keonel. What had become of * the Chinaman to whom it had belonged has not nt Sranspired. But the farmer's next door neighbor farms United Sta- tes soil. so that it may be taken for granted that Uncle Sam received an immigrant that night who lacked the upper portion of his attire, _ The Treaty Ready. ROOSEVELT AND THE KING. Whitelaw Reid - May Not Go To The Coronation. New York, April 1.--William Wal dori Astor's Pall Mail Gazette pub- lishes a letter from its New York cor respondent which, in its way, is quite entertaining, says the London corres pondent of the Herald. The correspondent says: "At the present moment it is by no means a foregone conclusion that Whitelaw Reid will be aceredited as special am- bassador from this counwry. The out- ery against his officially represent this country is so great that 1 wou not be surprised to find the president eventually hacking down on this point. The truth is, Mr. Roosevelt is expect- ing re-election, and the votes have to be considered. In this way ey the president cannot always obey the in- nate promptings of a gentlempn in ex- tending the courtesies of his 'country. This ix one of the studies of a repub- lie. Tt is to be neither praised nor blamed, but simply understood." TO BUILD CRUISERS. Contracts Placed--Windsor Castle Opened To The Public, London, April 1.--The Glasgow cor: respondent of the Central News says that Mr. Beardmore, of Glasgow, Mr. Brown, of Clyde Bank, and Mr. Scott, of Greenock, will each: build a first- class cruiser of 10,200 tons for the Jritish government. vessels will be 450 feet long, and ve gn speed of twenty-three knots. Contracts for the torpedo destroyers, 0 be the most powerful in existence, have been plac- ed at Birkenhead and 'on the Tyne. The state departments in Windsor Castle were reopened to the public yesterday for the first time since the death of queen Victdria. A great change has been m in the apart- ments, which have been redecorated end re-arranged. Many pictures have been taken there from Buckingham palace, and the tout ensemble is har monious. To-day 24,300 persons were admitted to view the rooms, while many more were turped away. WIRELESS MESSAGES. Accident Reveals New Possibilities of Marconi System. New York, April 1 ~The Umbria, in to-day. from Liverpool and Queens town, had a wireless chat with the outward-bound - liner. Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse, east of Nantucket, receiv- ed from the Campania, bound east, eight messages for friends of her pas- sengers in America. The bamboo pole to which the Um- bria's wires are attached was carried away and fell overboard, trailing astern. That didn't afiect the sending or receiving of messages between the ships, each invisible from the deck of the other. Operator Brooker = said this showed that the messages travel by water. HUGE TUNNEL TO BE BUILT. Southern Pasific Plans a Gigantic Undertaking. Auburn, Cal, April 1..--A corps of Southesn Pacific surveyors and ¥ngi- neers has completed the survey.' lor the new tunnel through the Sierras, which will be one of the longest in the world. According to the records of the survey it will be five miles and 500 feet in length. It will eliminate nearly 1.000 feet of grade, and will reduce the length of snowsheds twen- ty-cight miles, or from forty, their present aggregate length, to twelve miles. Chicago Mending Its Ways. Chicago, Ill, April 1.---Not the least important feature of to-day's municipal elections is the referendum vote being taken on the proposition to wipe out the town government an achronism., For years the govern ment of Chicago has been grievously handicapped by the retention of the form of township rule adopted when the city was little more than a strug- gling village. It is proposed now to centralize the management and re sponsibility of the city's affairs by do ing away with the cumbersome system of having three town supervisors, col- lectors and clerks, which will mean a saving of 8500000 , vear in salaries and fees. The civic federation has been, working strenuously te bring about this reform and has high hopes of a successful issue at the polls to day. Immigration Officials Retire. New York, April 1.--Thomas Fitchie, commissioner of immigration, gnd his assistant, Edward F. McSweeney, re- tired to-day. Many charges were from time to time made against the offi cials, but were never sustained. The chief complaints were for alleged vio- lations of the law in accepting fees for the admission of objectionable im- migrants who could not come up to the physical or moral requirements, or who did not have sufficient money to insure their not becoming a public charge. ~ Wages Of 6,000 Raised. Chicago, April 1.--The Allis-Cha) mers company, one of the largest pro- ducers of machinery in the United States, today, granted an advance of five per cent. to all the men in its em- ploy and hall a day off every Satur « iv. All the men in the company's em- ploy, about 6.000, including those in the shops at Milwankee, Buffalo, Wil- hastarre und Sermon, Pa., are gffect- Will Defeat Ths Government. Toronto, April 1.--A Globe special, from Victoria, BC. sayy : As the mavonic hanquet at Vancguver on . Yardy sinkiy Sone Joseph Martin ansovn t the govern- a be Oe Ae jpaasds and at omer appeal to the i SHiL ats cosmary hy wk a | 000, NEWS OF THE WORLD What Comes To Us From AN Quarters. CONDENSED PARAGRAPHS. TELEGRAMS FEOM THE FOUR QUARTERS OF THE TH. Matters That Interest E y --Notes From All Over--Little of Everything Easily Read and Remembered x The Dea: Public. Sixteen dwellings were wrecked at Hamtown, Pa, by a mine cave-in. the viceroy of India unveiled the statue of queen Victoria in Calcatta. Nine United States pugilists have signed for the coronation tourney in London. The grand lodge of the Somns\ of England for American meet in Winpi- peg in August. Fred Brown, a little son of g Lind say hotel-keeper, foll into the river and was drowned. An increase of wages has been granted cotton mill operatives in southern New England. Gravenhurst ratepayers have carried a bylaw to raise $15,000 to purchase the electric light plant. The petition against the election of E. Tolton, M.P., for North Wellington, was withdrawn at Guelph. The five-year-o'd child of Mr. and Mrs. William Muxlow, Boissevain, perished in a burning: house The United States will place an ex orbitant duty on wines and mah § gquors imported from Germany The new union railroad station Washington will cost $5,000 000. will be built of white marble. Thomas M. Smith, barrister, Chisi wick, England, was Struck off the rolls for keeping his clients' money At Montreal Mrs. Doris stabbed a letter carrier named Tetu twice in the neck. He is expected to recover, Services were held on all the ships of the North Pacific station to-day in memory of the men of the Conlor Twenty-two men gre known to be dead," gs the result of gn explosion in the Nelson mine at Dayton, Tenn The municipal council of the of Paris will name a treet Richard Wagner, the German musical composer . . P. Morgan's son in London de nies that his father has any intention of taking up his permanant residence in England Laliorers to the number of 2,000 are being hired at Christiana, Norway, for railway work in Canada, by an American congressman ' It is asserted at Pombay Russian subsidized steamer Komitoff, on her last visit to the Persian gulf, lended 60,000 rifles at Bender Ablos, Persia. By a return it is stated that of all the large bicycle factories in Ger many, only six paid dividends last year Fifteen large factories have gone into insolveney A storm at Wellshurg, West Vir ginia, wrecked the Franklin Methodist church, killing two members of the congregation and woinling several others, including pastor Allshouse. At Winnipeg the propertv known as "The Creterion" was sold for 860 Property on Main street, south of Portage avenue, Winnipeg, ~ was sold on the same dav for 8850 4 foot Vast ice floes are doing great dam age to shipping' on the Atlantic. The banks of Newfoundland end the Streits of Belle Isle are surrounded by ice bergs and shipping is in Jan at It city after that the | ger. Farmers in the vicinity of Brandon end Portage La Prairie have lost thousands of dollars by heavy floods Homes and harns have been swept away end numbers of live stock have perished, A steamship arrived at Queonst reports sighting March 25th the abled Conard line steamer Firurin which left Faval. Arores, March 17th for Liverpool, She was in tow of two tugs and a steamer was steering her. The Etruria was making but little headway. CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC. Preparing For The Coronation-- Want A Sugar Bounty. London, April J. Westminster Al bey is closed to the public. The duke of Norfolk and the board of works oflicials, today, take charge of the sacred edifice, and (he necessary pre parations for the coronation will be commenced without delay. Altera tions on a most elaborate seale will have to be made in order to provide accommodation for . the numerous guests who have been invited to wit ness the ceremony The West Indian committee of sugar prodiicers has written a letter to colonial secretary Chamberlain, ur ging, in view of the gravity of the sugar situation, and pending the operation of agreemint reached at the niernationsds sugar conference at Brussels, for the abolition of boun- ties, which agreement is to go ino efort on September lst, 193, the government shall pay the West Indian producers a bounty of pot less than £2 per ton. ACTIVITY INCREASING. Using Miss Stone's Ransom Money To Further Their Work. Constantinopde, April 1.--The sultan is taking stringent steps to break sup the Macedonian committee. as well as the hands of brigands which infest the border country of Turkey und Mace dona. Abdul Hamid has offered 4 re- ward of 1,000 francs for the head of Saralofi, the head of the Macedonian committee, end 500 frames for that of Delchofi, leader of the brigands. There has been an extension of brigands and activity. I the ransom for ihe reledse that of Miss Ellen M. Suid 3 the American fm 0a?" Me dle the | ee i the funda Baker's TO BOOM QUEBEC. WEATHER PROBABILITIES, (10 am Avril} Sone orth westor winds, cloudy and gwite eool: few Jocal sleet showers Wadnnsdav . Quebec, April 1.--Messrs. Meyer and] STORE, be orth westerly winds, vartly fair and Regenburger, representatives of the | S000 Steaey & Steaey South Shore Railway To Have A Terminal There. | Toronto, Ons, ool Shore railway, and in the Canada Atlantic, inspected yesterday. gt Sorel the South Shore railway, under struction at that point. They expect | to have the latter road completed to | levis by the fall, when trains will] commence running and plans for an extensive traffic mapped out for next! vear. The South Shore people expect | to make this port on the South Shore a terminal point for 4 large export to | Europe. In connection with this en- | terprise an elevator will be built at} Levis, also saw mills to prepare lum- ber for export. The Vanderbilt ater ests also intend to invest largely the pulp inlustry, and at the same | time provide for the export of ashes | tos and cattle from Levis to Europe. | The SS. Duro commenced loading | this morning for Esquimaux Point, to | sail to-morrow evening i - The contractors' con ASTER bas come and gone and ESE are set. The next thing vou know it will be bot weather, Nope too early to mt a lair start and evervthing is here 10 begin with, but its dross goods and vour dress poking, wot ours, that's in mied to- day. laborers, who have | been getting twelve and a half cents | an hour, have made a demand for fifteen cents, but the contractors have refused their request. A number of men were discharged by their em- | ployers vesterday and the others left work this morning. t STILL A MYSTERY. SPRING DRESS GOODS Looms never stop click-clnoking "new wears, amd printers never stop print fing come and po--some go xl others go, Hterallv, -- mysterious sow thin Police of Brantford Are At Work | On The Case. Brantford, April 1.--The Quirk mur der case still remains unsolved, but they lack the there are several signs that & soi | | and are foilues Fie tome and rare tion is rapidly drawing nearer. It is | Pr eves and sharp wits are alert said that the police suspicions have | est. and falwios rich veered considerably during the past | vd couple of days, and that they are now | after another man than the one first | suspected. The police, however, are | holding their own counsel, and every- thing ss largely left to surmise, It now thought that the murder was! committed by some curved instrument | and not by a hatchet or axe, such as | a horse No trace of the weapon | has been found as yet, er | | Floods In Manitoba. West Selkirk, Man., April | water has steadily risen god is flowing the fats. The joe is firm Portage La Prairie, April | The | i situation here still serious, but many think the worst is ove The ice has not yet moved. Railway ! communication is cut off | Winnipeg, April 1.~The river here is rising at the rate of two feet in twenty-four hours. It has stil four | or five feet to go before the danger | mark is reached. Winnipeg rowing | club house and canoe club building | are threatenod and their contents | have been removed Workmen are i ng. Nove with vou in Steacv's est in prom OOn AN an themselves ters oak { wl PIRLE 46 to 54 moh, 20. colors wis $1.15, $1.75 finish ox c., $1, EOLIENNE shavks shoe all $1.50 wilky $1, very new howe The | VOILES, 42 so 48 inch f 60c., 75e¢., $1 over in Ladies' Tailor t do-sometipes we whody alse Foo is | Steney & Steacy tryin to break up the resting against the piers of the bridge Sudden! at} on Sanday | Christy A. Kidd, in { White, aud fityuine + i Faperal private, Wednesda DWYER --Dhed at the family resitohos, rie Street, Mary Ellon Dwver University March 830th, o of J. T, WHITE home Avenue, Natives Are Destitute. Nome, Jan. 17., via Seattle, April | t~R. 7T. Chestnut, under date of 1 January © 9th, writes concerning the | | G8 LEE AY re doh Dwyer destitution prevailing at Native Vil | Funeral peivase no flows Revstiown mane lage, west of Cape Nome. He says | Si. Mary's osthodeal at 9:30, Wednes many natives, mostly women and | or, mn children are absolutely destitute. They | y Toi ig are without food or clothing The | r miners have furnished these na tives meal after meal and have given | them provisions to take back to their huts. The limit of their charity has | o. TOF "0 FC March been about reached, however, and it MeAvoy, aged Bity five is suggested that government officials | Fuovral, Thur should lend a helping hand | A 10 am Bare voungest on March Alef, twenty-two Kingston, OU Neti, aged poor od acanale te to attend 81m, Charles A solemn reguleom apwetiully invited alin ¥ union me Canadians Ill In Africa. ey Ottawa, April _1.--A eable to lord | PELOW~In Minto says that Roland Agassese, of Row the Canadian' mounted rifles, is dang erously ill at Charleston, and Georyr Pyle is slightly wounded. Pyle wa reported missing. Capt. Harold Aus | tin Neahan, of Peterboro, is reported dangerously ill of enteric fever Sydenham It is reported that the British gov vernment has accepted Canada's offer of 2,000 mounted troops, but su far nothing official is given out Eiragete m. on March, Bis " » oo. t Anu or ol "Tho mas Pelow, Fume rol private ~~ ----THE--- Return ren Calvary AN IDEAL EASTER PICTURE and most suitable | Easter Gitt. CALL AND SEE IT. K'RKPATRICK'S Jen ee TORY JOTICE TO LONGSHOREMEN. | THE INTERNATIONAL LORGEHORY- men's Us No. 2v 4 » Railway Safety Apparatus. Paris, April 1.--A remarkable in vention for preventing railway sc dents has been tried with success the western railway of France invention is placed on the engine. the driver for any Passes danger signal the apparatus blows a whistle on the engine continnously and also throws up a small light un der the front of the engine on The | If a cause A Cure For Cataract April 1.--A Bordeaux oculist has taken up with remark of catarait | Paris, M. Cadel able success the treatment without by the application | of baths of salicviate of soda. He bas | arrested the progress of opacity of the ervetalline lens for several years ir numerous and 1s sanguine of success if the treatment is begun at an early stage cuested to atten Ww. Moder CrELBTY FOR SALE, HIGH GRADE BICYCLE, CHEAP. Apply "Hi. 8." Whig Offs, operation LAMIFS Nently mew i German Tariff Altered. | Berlin, April }.--=The new tariff hill to abrogating all communal dues atthe, meat, corn and their products, i th the exiomption of beewing malt, went into effect to day cases, on Becomes A College Professor. New York, April 1. Rev. Dr. Her bert Newton, rector of All Souls' Ire A fire at testant Episcopal church, will go % | 4 500 houses San Francisco to become' a special | versity, "after "thirty three wears con | IMPORTANT : ANNOUNCEMENT tinuous serviee in New York city, i We desire to call your |: When | in Doubt : attention to the fact that we have just completed SEND YOUR PARCEL arrangements for COPPER Pate Excravixe or TO Nawe Prares, Wedding Invitations and Cards. £4 AOANSTN S Bi0.} @ rvvvrvrreavrnran @ Tukui, Japan, destroyed ' ' 4 ' ' ' ! Steam Laundry.