Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Nov 1909, p. 12

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=~ Se rm Mh FIRICN 7 RECRUITING AMONG NA- TIVES IS HAZARDOUS. In Olen Times Labor Agents Sur- yrised Villages and Carried Off > the Likely Looking Men For Service. . labor agent--fhe recruiting sergeant of commercialism--Ileads an ordinary enough life in other cities, but in Africa the work takes on the charm of adventure. For on the "dark continent," , which consists of recruiting natives for work in the mines, has Ww i miles away from any . Then it is that has to literally take his life & hands. years who has + od the big diamond cE on 0 many labor agents, even in British territories, were than slave raiders. I have going out with a dozen nl g g d a village after nightfall re all the likely looking . In the Portuguese colonies the were carried out on an even scale by ar uniformed , though latterly the ugly tem- per of the natives themselves has made the business a risky one. I feet remember well an alarm in one of the | big vilages, when within a couple of tes there were over a hundred sturdy savages, armed with long bows and poisoned arrows, crouching in the jungle just beyond the huts, waiting for the raiders. "On another oceasion some Portu- guese native soldiers tried to exploit what was to them a new district. I saw them going down, but never heard of their coming back, although 1 had a camp a few miles away. Months after | learned the story of their fate. They passed through a number of tiny, poverty stricken vil- lages, where they found ro one but women,' though, everywhere they were told of the big kralls on ahead down to the southwest, and so they tramp- ed on, right into the deadly thorn jungle, where the m'chopi, the 'arch- ers, or 'bushman,' are, the archers killed them to the last man. It was a grim trick to play, but the old chief who told me the story chuckled over it. To him it evident ly had a humorous. side." SUFFRAGETTES LOSING English Editor Declares It Is Mainly | Due to Lack of Decency. Thousands of supporters of the cause of woman suffrage have been lost, says Mowbray , editor of The London Times, because of the mili- | tant tactics of the suffragettes. "They have displayed a shocking lack of decency," he declares. "Why, ook at the time when they forced themselves into Asquith's house un- invited and while they were holding his hand demanded 'votes for women." friend -of mine from New. Zea land was at the press conference some time Both of us had been long ol ns of the woman's right to vole. 'Women suffrage in New Zea- land is a good thing,' he told me, 'but 1 never could support it here. We do not have this kind of woman in New Zealand.' "It is the militant tactics of the English leaders that have hurt the cause, there is no doubt of that. Those women have labored unceasing- ly to prove that woman is unfit to be trusted with the suffrage. All the men + 10 were friendly to their cause at fir. . have become disgusted and the s. trage movement in Great Bri- | tain \o-day has lost greatly in ndfm- bers and is not anywhere near as strong as it was a year ago "1 don't kpow how a scheme of lim- ited franchise could be werked out, but if I could have my way I think I would let only-the women who did not done in the remote districts often | served many years | elsewhere, | police,' whose business it was | A a -- --- - THE LONGEST WORD A Short Cut to Some English Claim- ants to the Honor. i ! isfnctarily settled. a new word of gargantoan dimen- sions, "velocipedestrianisticalistina- rianologist."' . | An Edinburgh journal followed with "ultradisestablishmentarists," an extension of Archbishop Ben- son's previous *'antidisestabhishmen- i tarian," given in his diary. | A junction might be effected if one | is ,anxious to see a friend carried | freshment room) that a good long 'word | is "nltrantidisestablishmentarianists" | (only thirty-three letters). | breaker, | cally," which appeared in a . It is highland enough in all | conscience, Sir Walter Scott has in his journal | a word, "floceipaucinihilipilification," | "which, like a wounded snake, drags its slow length along." Then Rabelais takes some doing | | with his '"'antipericametanar 8 damphicribrationis." Wyntoun tibus," which Shakespeare uses in "Love's Labor's Lost" (twenty-seven | letters). Dante also has it in the abla- | | tive singular form in hig "De Vulgari | Eloquentia." Byfield in a treatise on the Colos- | | sians (1615) wrote "incircumscriptible- ness," S But the Englishman's real jaw- breaker is a Welsh word over which Mr. Justice Lawrence omce at the Anglesey assizes asked an explanation | from Mr. Bryn Roberts, M.P., "What | is the meaning of the letters 'P.G." al- ter the name Llanfair?' The answer | was, "It is an abbreviation for the | village of Llanfairpwligwyngy ligoge- rychwyrndrobwilandysiliogogoch. How | is this pronounced! It will take some | beating. This word of fifty-four letters | if repeated often enough is said to be an excellent cure for the tooth- | ache. But the jocular man will tell us | there are longer words, "smile" | "beleaguered," for instance, i because | one is more than a "mile" and the | other more than-a "league," and an- | other will insist that the longest word | in the English language is "longer," | for, however long any other word may | | be, it is always "longer." This is on | the principle of the wily Scot who bet { his chum that Glasgow was not the | biggest town in Scotland. . "How's | that?" he was asked. '"There'sia big- ger. "What is it?" "Biggar," was the | prompt reply.--hkondon Academy. Viscount Morley. "Honest John is a title often ap- | | plied to Mr. John Burns, but the | prior claim to it rests with Viscount | Morley, Secretary of State for India. | He earned it years ago by his stolid- {ly unchanging attitude on all ques- | tions once' he First entering Parliament as mem- ber for Newcastleon-Tyne in 1883, John Morley soon fidence of Gladstone, and was Chief Secretary for Ireland in the Home -Rale--Goverament up the same office on turn to power in 1893, largely responsible for both the Old Man's Home Rule Bills. From 1895 until he was raised to the Peerage Lord Morley represented the Montrose Burghs. Besides being a politician, Lord Morley is journalist, barrister, and author. He was ihe become a Cabinet Minister in this country, and was actually engaged in writing a "leader" when he received the letter offering him the post. He accepted, and then returned to finish his article. and was thus Grand "Be sure power on earth uestion of mending the Sommons from that other question of mending or ending the House of Lords." can separate the want fo vote have the franchise, and | those who were insisting on it would | have to 'go without. I think that ible women all right. "Then there are the troublesof the | poor policemen in. protecung antl | suffragette windows from suffragette bricks and flatirons and the difficulty the Government had in treating sui- fragette prisoners. Ii has been sug- that it would be a good thing to shave their heads, the. way they shave. men prisoners, for a woman would sooner part with most anything than her hair. That would be depriv- ing them of ohe of their chief assets, but I don't know. -- I don't know -- 1 fear they would Jind a sheven head just right to fit & hale." ------------------------ Dainties Fordhe King. i Edward has wecently enjoyed! the ights of a lamprey-pie, which is what very few people have the of doing. No one knows when the custaa started, but for many, many years has annually contributed a lamprey-pie to His sjesty's table. The custom was temporarily dropped in 1838, when the old corporation was abolished, but it was revived by per- poisson of Queen Victoria in 1893. Another epicurean dainty which the anjoys season. be the frst Majesty to Buckingham Palace; but they have been sent by spe- are the first plovers' | Aamo all searchers to |, to these eggs for the | A $20,000 Animal. of .the North and South Polar regions | that one is inclined to forget that oth- er parts of the world possess tracts | where the foot of man has never | trodden. | Probably, towards the end of this {month Mr. Walter Goodfellow, the { wellknown traveler, is to lead an ex- | | pedition into the interior of Dutch | New Guinea, a land which is totally | unknown. Zoological exploration is | the objeet in view, and the expedition has been organized by Mr. W. jubiles of the British Ornithologists' h soological treasures is expecied to be found, the | most interesting of all being a very large mammal, whose footprints have already been observed. A member of the expedition of Dr. Lorentz, the Dutch explorer, two years ago, is said to have animal, and described it as very large, like a tapir, and a face like a devil. of a huge tapirlike marsupial would alone justly the 000, which is the estim. cest of the expedition. Singer's 70,000-Mile Tour. is in London they i cial messenger to Biarritz when he | was staying there. At the beginning of the season plovers' eggs fetch three shillings or four shillings apiece. ------------------ One of "The Devil's Own." Sir Lees Knowles, who is retiring from the 7th Battalion Lancashire Fusiliers, has divided most of his «€n- between volunteering mnd is hardly a game, or in which Sir Lees does notiex- and at by and Cambridges he jsti ished by his brilhancy athletics. He was called to ithe Bar twenty-seven years ago, and .on i Lincoln's Inn at once joined Inns of Court Corps, commonly as "The Devil's Own"'--a title ¥ to them by ome of the Georges, , during a review, asked what men were. "Lawyers, your Ma- y," was the reply "Then," said genial 'monarch, "call them "The Devil's Owa'™ of the small a gathering of friends. There were I'mo flaring advertisements or news paper puffs, but eme or two critics were invited to be present to hear 'a "promising" artiste. rise when they found they were voices ever heard. That was her first footing on. the ladder of fame. "Whe is this girl?" asked Queen Victoria, and added, "She has a beautiful voice, and is a true artiste." : Crossley was "commanded" to sing before the Queen five times within two years--a unique Tq a | | | | | { shape | But A -- This moot point has never been sat- | About 1570 The! Liverpool Daily Courier came out with | the labor agent's | out in a state of collapse (to the re- | Then there is another short jaw- | "antitranssubstantiationisti- | ] in -his Chrouicle sup- | | plies us with "honorificabilitudinita- has made up his mind. | gained the con-| of 1836." He took | Gladstone's re- | first 'editor to | Over twenty years ago John-Mor-| | ley made his celebrated declaration: | that from henceforth no! House of | . &! . i 8 been heard i would limit the franchise to theisens- | o much has recently R. | year: traveling abroad. Ogilvie-Grant to commemorate the | seen the | striped bisck and white, with a nose | It is considered that the discovéry | expenditure ef $30,- | in London before | Imagine their | listening to one of the most beautiful | Mme. | | i A LADY'S MEMOIRS. | { Countess of Cardigans Book Causes | i a Sensation. No book of recent years has created | such a sensation in London as the| "Recollections" of the Countess of! Cardigan, which have just been pub-| Jished. It is the main topic of con-| versation in the boudoirs of Mayfair | and the West end clubs. If has been | characterized as a 'volume of blas | ing indiscretions," and consternation | reigns among the elite on account of her ladyship's very frank revelations concerning members of their families. | There is no attempt to disguise | names, and the annoyance and pain | which have been caused by the, piquant character of the stories told | by the countess have led to many | protests against the manner in which she has raised the veil and exposed | the immoralities and wickedness of "high society." "] repeat emphatically," says a writer in The World, "that this is al shameless book. 1 cannot conceive | that the authorities are so feeble and | | so indifferent as to mit of this | book remaining on sale. I call upon | them instantly to withdraw | circulation." i Meantime, while the storm of in- dignation is raging, the countess has retired into the country to enjoy the sensation she has caused. As a mat- ter of fact, it was her original inten- tion, it is said, to make the book even more outspoken than it is. In .the heyday of her charms she counted among her followers royal as well as aristocratic admirers. From these she received countless love-letters, ' which she treasures as souvenirs of bygone triumphs. It was her inten- tion, so the report goes, to include | in her book facsimiles of billets. doux from high-born personages, some of whom are still living. When an inkling of her proposal leaked out, however, strong representations were made to the countess from very high quarters, and in the end she consent- | ed to omit certain epistles. 1 Here are some tit-bits from a book which will be talked about for a long | time. The countess resided in Mayfair at a time when, as she wittily puts it, | "Society was com of brilliant | men and witty women, beauties and dandies, who held sway without pufi- ing paragraphs in the newspapers." On one occasion the countess stay- | ed with Lord and Lady Wilton at Melton Mowbray. His lordship's free | and easy life had gained for him the | sobriquet of "The Wicked Earl." One | Sunday the countess and Lady Wil-| | ton went to church, unaccompanied by his lordship. "1 saw the clerk look at us as we ! entered the church," says the coun-| tess, "and he evidently noticed Lord | Wilton's absence; but I was not pre-! pared for what followed. The vicar duly commenced, 'When the wicked * but he was stopped by the clerk, who turned to him and, looking across at Lord Wilton's vacant seat, said, in a loud voice, 'Please, sir, his lordship's not come yet.!™ On the journey back to town the | countess traveled with the old Duchess of Cambridge "Directly | it from | { the train started the duchess opened ' a large reticule and took out a Ger- man sausage, which she devoured "with relish, cutting slices ofi-it with a silver knife, with which she transferred them to her mouth." the same chapter a story is told of Lord Ward, do had very curly hair, | which could never be induced to lie smoothly on his head. One day his valet went into his master's bedroom and saw him sitting in his bath with his hat on. had gone mad and promptly left, al- | though Lord Ward only wore his hat to try and keep his rebellious curls in order. There is an amusing story, | concerning Lord Ernest Bruce, who had a great weakness for leavetak. ing guest," says the 'and invariably went through the same ceremony whenever he said good-bye. This consisted of kissing everybody, and then, with a great show of generosity, he would present the porter with sixpence." The coun- | tess had invited a small party for a yachting cruise, which included his jordship's son, Robert Bruce. "When { oid Lord Ernest was preparing to say | good-bye to us, Robert called out, 'Now, father, kiss the porter and give me the sixpence," greatly to Lord Ernest's annoyance." A Stranger Lord. Judge George F. Lawton, of the Probate Court, London, Eng., relat od a story the other day of a minis- ter who was spending his Sabbatical | London, he made every effort to get an intimate view of the two branches | of Parliament in session. Of course, no stranger is allowed on the flosr of | the House of Lords, but the minister, | amount of American push, tried to | make his way in. There is a rule, | however, that servants of the various ! Jords may be admitted to speak to! {heir masters. Seeing the minister | walking boldly in, the doorkeeper asked "What Lord," repeated the aston ished man. "The Lord Jehovah!" For a moment the docrkeeper hesi- | tated and then admitted him. Turn- ing to the assistant standing Dear, he i said | "He muss mean one of those poor { Scotch lairds. | i The Drumnas of Mincing Lane. It was only after eleven years of i tile knocking at thes 1 do. rg with rolls of manuscript Mr. Alired Sutro, who would appear to have scored another success at the Garrick in London with "Making a| Gentleman," got his foot on the first rung of the ladder of the atrical fame. worked ig an office THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG | who, both | telephone lines, | in plan and may be easily compared. In' He thonght his lordship | ings. "He always loved to speed the | countess, | Arriving in | | Rutcheyah recently Venerable Arch- 1 | deacon McKay, in charge of Indian pot knowing this, and with the usual | x ish | dians were increasing except among | tents and fresh buffalo meat, to cheap | cotton 'tents on the reserve, where | insufficient rations were doled out to { them. PLAYED NO FAVORITES. How Sir Hibbert Tupper Called Down His Father-in-Law. A large body of people, and some members of Parliament, would be lad to see Sir Hibbert Tupper { n public life, whether le: ing th Opposition or sssisting Ma, Borden. Resentment is cherished in very few | quarters against this ex-Mimster, | in Parliament and in the | outside administration of his Depart-! ment, cared little what e yes he | made. Perhaps he strai Jet- | ter of the lations occasionylly, | but he play no favorites. n | Minister of Marine he was in high disfavor in St. John, because he in- | sisted that the ferry from the east to | the west side of the harbor, less than | i i : a third of a mile of smooth water, | must ats and life preservers. | Bir Hibbert married a daughter of | ex-Chief Justice Macdonald of Nova | Scotia, another of whose d ters is | the ile of Rev. Louis J for- | merly pastor of St. James iare | Presbyterian Church, Sime Sar | after the younger Tupper became Minister of Justice, Judge Macdonald | visited Ottawa and called upon his | son-in-law. He found the latter busy in his office, but ventured to inter- rupt him, with the greeting of an af- | fectionate relative. Sir Hibbert's re- sponse was to ask his father-in-law | how he presumed to be absent from his Jroxinee without leave. | "] didn't think that was neces- | sary," said the Chief Justice. "1 do," said the Minister of Jus- tice, and it is not recorded that there was any less harmony in the family | circle thereafter than previously. | ---------- A Forest Atlas. The forestry branch of the Depart. ment of the Interior has recently is- sued the first sheets of a new "forest atlas," which will include plans of which the surveys are now being carried on. i The "legend" is now being sent | out: this designates the marks used | to denote natural features, the differ ent species of trees and the amounts | of timber that can be obtained per acre from timbered areas, entries of | various kinds (such as homesteads, | mineral lands, etc.) burns or brules, | | cuttings and sales, roads, trails, rail- | flumes, telegraph and | buildings, etc. One | of the smaller forest reserves -- that | known as "The Pines," situated near | Prince Albert, Bask.--has already | been mapped, and the map of the | Riding Mountain Forest Reserve, in| Northwestern Manitoba, is now in | preparation. As surveys of the forest | ways, canals, | reserves and other forested districts are completed, maps of these will be | prepared and added to the atlas. | It is hoped that the general scheme | of indicating information, such as | the different colors for stands of tim- | ber of various densities, and the oth- | er special signs adopted by the forest | service of the Dominion may be put | into general use throughout Canada, | so that forest maps may be uniform | | | Hon. Dr. Montague's Oratory. | Though Hon. Dr. Montague, once | the silver-tongued orator of Ontario, | is seldom heard in his native land, | he occasionally is heard at gatherings | in cities across the line whither he | travels in pursuit of business. Only | recently he delighted a newly-formed | organization of expatriated Canadians | in Louisville, Kentucky, who have | formed a Maple Leaf Club, with the | graceful utterances that used to win | votes for the Government in the | palmy days of the Conservative party. | FRIDAY NOVEMBER 19. 1900. ------ "in Soap | Vou whb are used to ordinary soaps will be sur- prised when you first try Taylor's Infants' Delight Soap. , No other soap compares with it for every toilet purpose--the bath, massage, shampoo, or for wash- ing baby's rose-leaf skin. 7 For we make this soap of pure cocoanut oil from § the isle of Ceylon, and vegetable oils fro.n France. L\ w ns More Than You Expect « | We clarify and blend these oils and mill them by our own is left undone to make this soap supreme. ' is the product of forty-four years of conscientious effort and costly experiment. Over & million Canadian families find it superior. : Its use prevents chapping, roughness and other skin vegetable oils and essences. complaints. ae Containing a small amount of boracic acid, it combines much used antiseptic and cleanser with the stimulating and the healing qualities of this nourishing action of pure It makes a rich, creamy lather, cooling and delightfully refreshing. Prove for yourself that a cake w ordinary soap. See how delightful a.cake from your dealer Cents:a Cake times a day.dGet Ta Vr ™ ST 0) outlast any to use three today. , Everywhere Uohn!Taylor & Co, Ltd. ANALYSIS OF Sugar "THE. STANDARD OF PURITY Laboratory of Provincial Government Analyst. MONTREAL, 22nd February, 1909. 1 Hergny CERTIFY that I have drawn by my own hand ten samples of the St. Lawrence Sugar Refining Co's EXTRA STANDARD GRANULATED SUGAR, indiscriminately taken from four lots of about 150 barrels each and six "Jots of about 430 bags each. I have analyzed same and find them uniformly to contain 99-99/100 to 100 per cent of pure cane sugar, with no impurities whatever. (Signed) MILTON L. HERSEY, M.Sc. LL.D. Provincial Government Analyst, t "The St. Lawrence Sugar Refining Company Limited, Montreal. ,, He touched on many themes, and one { of 'his quips on the subject of the suk fragettes was not half bad. He maid: | "The suffragettes have paraded Lon- | { don in the daytime with lanterns. Diogenes in his time paraded the | streets in the daytime with a lantern. | He was looking for a man." } Railway as Farmer," One can imagine the #alk there and South Coast Railway announe- CHICAGO, ILL., NOV, 27TH, DEC. 10TH, 1909. Round trip tickets will at $24.25, good guing Nov, § 30th, Dec. 1st, 5th and Oth. good returning on or before Dec. 12th, ---------------------- Local Branch Time-table. Trains will leave and arrive at Oity Depot as follows. GOING WEST. Lea' Mail on woe Fast Ex. .. 4 Local . Int. Lat Mail .. Local . GOIN A 12.57 ami 8.17 sam 12.567 p.m. 3.51 p.m 7.88 pnd Noy 8 oe 3 11 i mig £3855 Eee 1311 12 Local 1 ol Trains 1, 2,8, 4,5,6,7 and 8 | other trains daily, except. Sunday. { Through Pullmians to and from Ottaws | via Brockville daily, on trains 2 and 5. Pullman accommodation reserved in ads vance and all other information furnishs | od on application to | J. P. HANLEY, Agen Corner Johnson and Ontario EEEFE io Er REMEMER woEaEse The Great Removal Sale hoe, and ceed any farm along its route, and also dig a well and build a house for the farmer. Yet this is | what the Canadian Pacific has re-| cently been doing without any flourish | of trumpets for settlers locating on | its irrigation block near Calgary. The quicker the land is developed | the sooner comes the traffic, so that | the railway which thus itself turns! farmer is by no means wasting time. | Rapid as has been the devolpment of Canada in the last ten years, no oi has been settled more quickly than Southern Alberta, once the C.P.R.| set to work to fill it.--Standard of | Empire. Killing Off Indians. At the Synod of the Diocese of Sas- work in the dipcese, said he wished to correct the impression that Tn- dians were dying out. In reality In- prairie bands, that had to change from the open air, in good leather h In due time the Indians would disappear, as did the Saxons, Danes and Normans in England. One-third of the Indians in the west belonged to the Anglican. Church, due to the Robt. J. Reid, Of Furniture, Commencing Nov. 8th, '09. The entire stock in both storehouses will be sold | without reserve for cash only. 230 Princess Street. Sha RAILWAY IN OCONNEOTION WITH Canadian Pacitic Railway Trains Leave Kingston 12.01 p.m. Express--For Ottawa, Mone | treal, Quebec, St. John, N.B., Halifax, Boston, Toronto, Chicago, Denver, Ren | frew, Sault Ste. Marie, Duluth, Bt | Paul, Winnipeg, Vancouver, ttle, Portland and San Franscisco. 5.00 p.m~Local for Sharbot Lake, connecting with C.P.R. East and West. | 7.45 a.m. Mixed--For Renfrew and Ine | termediate points--Monday, ednesday, and Friday. - Passengers leaving Kingston at 12.0% p.m. arrive in Ottawa at 5 p,m. ; Peter- boro, 4.38 p.m. ; Toronto, 6.56 p.m. 3 | Montreal, 7.05 p.m. Boston, 7.830 a.m; St. John, 12.00 noon. 2 KINGSTON-*OTTAWA Jeave Kingston, 1201 p.m, arrivg {~ Uttawa, 5 p.m. | Leave Ottawa 10.45 a.m. arrive King ston 8.55 p.m. Full particulars at K. & P. and O. Py A chocolate confection of rich milk choco- late and fresh sheiled walnuts. Simply exquisite. In ¥ and ¥ pound cakes. : church opening the first mission at | Pas in 1840. Not What He Wanted. A Scotsman walked into a Montreal bookshop and as the assistant | thought, asked or Robert Burns. On being told this the proprietor of the i shop himself got down three or four THE COWAN CO. LIMITED, TORONTO. N 'When You Buy editions of the poet and took them to | the waiting Scotsman. The customer, and said, "It's nae Robert Burns I ! askit for, but rubber bands!" n Mincing Lane," to quote his rds, "as thrilling as any that sn placed upon the stage." | : s a brother-in-law of Mr. K.C amd a distant] Sutro who drove the itro Tunnel through the Ne moantain, and thus made him 1 a midlonaire. S#acCs, f the { th 341 Buffalo for Alberta Park. The most precious cargo of live arrived a few days ago at Wainwright, Alta, in the form of 341 buff originally from the Pablo herd in | Montana, but now transferred from Elk Island Park at Lamont to Buf- falo Park at this point. Two died oa | route. Never worry about troubles that vou can put off till to-mor It's casy to have a good opinion of {people you don't know very will Lots of women h : he purpose o i DUEPOSY i ost things even, do or § geting 't expect to have good neighbors ou are one yourself. winting for h g ds. When a man - fs in business it isn't from lack of advice. » a lot of powdbe while stock ever carried in western i i | however, shook his head hopelessly, | t Extra Granulated Sugar, you secure the 1ctult of the latest process,--of madern machinery, and of years of experience. MANUFACTURED BY MONTREAL, The Canada Sugar Refining Company, Lid, R. Ticket. Office, ¥. DONWAY, Gen. Pass Agent: BAY OF QUINTE RAILWAY. Train leaves union station, strest, 4 p.m. daily (Bunday Napanee, onto, Tn sboth, ai points on » ooth, & Ontario, Toute your shipments via f Quinte Railway. For further uy HR. Wi DICKSON, Ageat, Phone, No: 8 Ae ------ 0 as ) to the ORIENT Salty. Re 7 od tor Ta dare, 1 Cruise Dept: White Star Line, Toronto, or Agents. HIGHEST GRAD ES GASOLINE, r= COAL OIL, LUBRICATING OILS, FLOOR OIL, | . GREASE, ETO. PROMPT DELIVERY, Ww. F. KELLY TT De oe SE | |OUR ROOSTER BRAND OF 10BACCO Smoking and ig at 1 : sents & pound, Myo] ; pay sight v-five rents Andrew Limtari: strest

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