Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Jul 1913, p. 1

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The Daily British Whi 1913. a _-- YEAR 80-NO. - 168 ONTARIO, JULY 23, Are Showing Signs of Siocoming} Exbausted. KINGSTON, WEDNESDAY, THERE IS NO DANGER ~ SIXTY WOMEN AND GIRLS RUNAWAY KILLED BOY. | SH p N WAR Then Crashed Into Buggy Injurin gz Driver. | CANADA'S OIL WELLS Cobden, Ont., July 23.-- Knocking! KILLED IN FACTORY FIRE When Trapped, They Lead : | or Burned to Death. A CARELESS SMOKER BELIEVED TO HAVE CAUSED THE HOLOCAUST At Binghamton, N.Y., On Tuesday Afternoon~--Single Stairway, the Way To Escape, Blocked By Wall of Flames. Binghampton, N. °Y., July 23.--Six- ty persons were killed, aceording to late estimates, and as, many injured, a dozen of them mortally, in a fire which swept the four-story building of the Binghampton (Clothing Company yesterday afternoon. The victims were chiefly women and girls, Some two score persons are known to have escaped, as by a miracle, from the building, which burst) into flame like a tinder 'box and became a roar- ing furnace almost in no time after the first alarm. was sounded. About 125 persons were in the fac tory when the fire hhoke out. The un- accounted for, or most of them, are believed be still in the red-hot ruins. Around the scene of the catastrophe, the greatest this city has ever, known, thousands watched the rescuers work in the glare of three big searchlights, many in the great throng being res- trained only by the closely-drawn po- lice lines from rushing into the ruins in an effort to find the bodies of re latives or friends. _ Water in many streams was poured into the fiery pit that«a few hows a- go was the cellar of the burned es- tablishment. As the ruins were cool ed a bit from time Yo time in a spot upon: which the streams were centered, men went forw, to dig as long as human endurande weald allow them to work. Occasionally a body was found and taken quickly away. It will take at least two days, thel authorities bplieve, before the cellar can be cleared and the whole truth nown, to bse J ? The , outstanding fact of the catastrophe is its suddenness. In this the disaster bear# a strong resem- blance to the Triangle Waist com- pany holocaust in New York City, where 147 lives were lost when the in flammable material upon which the employees were working and the waste which littered the floors blazed up swith inconceivible rapidity, and .while the imprisoned workers jaymped from the windows to their denth The par- ullels here fails only ih the lessor beight and different eonstruetion oi the building and in the length of the list of pi or injured. Another ri semblance to the New York disaster ic that the fire is believed to have bean started by careless throwing of a ei garette butt or match, In the tragedy of yestorduy after noon, the killing burst of flame fol lowed quickly upon the heels of the alarm.. There was small opportunity for any of those employed in the building to escape. The Suilding was equipped with fire escapes and an automatic alarm sys tem. The alarm tinkled at 2.30 o'clock. Mrs, Reed B. Freeman, wife of the proprietor, telephoned to the DAILY MEMORANDA. = Vaudeville, Lake Ontario Park. 8 p.m See top of page 3, right hand corner for probabilities. : After everything has: been said that can be said on the subject of women's rights, all trie women feel, no , matter. 'what their political ideas may be, that their first and most important duty is the thrifty and business-like management of their households. A The qiestion of pure foods is very much before the public" at the present time, and every housekeeper is desirous of having on her table food stuffs that are a8 nutritious and little @ as it is pos- sible to procure. . "There has been a campaign of public education on this subject and the woman who has kept up! with the times knows what to avoid in buying her, provisions. t A good housekeeper can pot spend her time more wisely than by informing herself on these points by\reading the ad- vertisements in THE WHIG and other newspapers of equal Jumped, even from the topmost floor, HARRIS 4 EWING, WAS DR. HUGH M. SMITH. UU. 8. Fish Commissioner, ceeding George M. Buwers New suc I'he usual alarm fire "$88 ion. $s for a still wl. Some excited person at Warren and Chenango street, four blocks away, saw a burst of flame and pulled the bax there. The pest of the com panies ran to the false alarm, That meant ten minutes of delay for part of the firemen. But even those arriving first were unable to do anything. The first puff of flame was hardly discerned before the fire leaped along the staircase, up' the walls, up the elevator shaft, along the floors and ceiling. There was a roar, front and rear, and the flames belched forth clear across Wall street, on which the building . fronted, withering the shade trees on the river bank and scorching the building across an al- ley at the rear. central appa- $ respond: eration performed Ottawa, July 23.--The Canadian oil fields as a base of supply for the admiralty in its newly announced policy of operating warships with oil fuel afford many interesting possibil- ties, but the extent to which the re- quirements may be furnished by Canada can only be regarded as problematical. The oldest and best producing wells are in Hamilton county and near Petrolea. Their discovery dates back to the sixties, and the flow is still maintained on a very profitable basis. It was stated at the geological survey, however, that the outpuf®is slowly diminishing. Another series of wells are in Kent county, Ontario, but there are signs of them becom- ing exhausted likewise. Albert, N. B., has an oilfield, but in latter years it has been operated little. Tn the west there are indications of oil at different places, but it is not being produced in large quantities. BLOOD TRANSFUSED BY SMALL SYRINGE New Method of Performing Opera- tion Tried at Philadelphia Successful. Philadelphia, July 23.--Physici- ans believe that the life of Mrs. Rose Roenhild, twenty-three years of age, has been savedNy a transfusion op- yesterday, when six ounces of 'her. young husband's | blood were transferred to her de- pleted veins. The operation was performed by a new method. Instead of the veins of the recipient snd giver of the blood being jointly directed by the tubes, 'the blood was transfused by means of a newly invented syringe. This method is said to obviate the possibility of blood clots or air bub- bles foiling the operation, and has the advantage of measuring the ex- act amount of blood taken from the donor, HAS FALLEN HEIR Bartender Must Keep Hard At Job To Win Fortune, Philadelphia, Pa., July 23.- Edward Musse, an American born German, of this city, who is now acting as a bar tender at a Delaware Water Gap ho- There was no booming sound, as "the "hut" 1 ! plainly audible above the rushing noise made by the mounting flames, Buildihg a Mass of Flames, ! After this" fierce blast the fire seemed to burst from every part of the building at once. Upon the fire escapes girls, women and men were clustered and inside others were waiting to get on -the iron laddens. But the flames were too quick for them. The slow starting of the fire drill may have contributed to the holocaust. The delay in getting all the firemen to the scene may have been recponsible part of the loss f life. But persons «who were early on 'he scene say that these things did not materially affect the result. When theyfiremen came in response o the telephone alarm they were unable to. get within 200-feet of the burning building and the ends of the streams from their hose were turned into eam, having no more effect upon the fire than a spray of vapor on the walls of a voleano in action. The life nets, the extension ladders of the firemen were useless. There was no chance of escape by jumping, and this many took, while others fell, shrivelled and crumpled with the heat. Women fainted hy dozens, realizing that death was sweeping down , upon them. A scene of indescribable con- fusion followed. Some of the men employees kept their heads and their best to rescue the imperilled wo- men. | Screamied With Pain. The fire éseapes were not big enough to hold all who. madly rushed to the exits and there was a rush to the windows the women screaming with pain as, the flames swept upon Ahem from behind and seared their bodies. Then from the windows and fire es- capes hodies began dropping. They fell thick and fast. The building was four storeys high and many who escaped with their lives, although most of them were badly maimed. It was on the fourth floor that most of the women operators were working adit was among these that the loss life and inj was greatest A sa --_y. of I tr to-day, bagan the gruesome work of search- ing for the remains of those who Jost their lives. Of fifty injured in hospitals, ten are fatally hurt and recovery is i le. Some of them are so terribly burned that they are unrecognizable. They are still alive but unconscious, A rigid in- vestigation has commenced. Conmee Seriously TIL. Port Arthur, July 23.--A message from Prescott, Arizona, indicates a serious turn of the iliness of James Conmee, ex-MP., who has been in the south since September, 1911, His ready there. Whest Crop Increase. ; Spokane, Wash., - July 23.- Twenty per comt. incremse over last-year's wheat evap is the estimate of the 1913 vield of the four Pacific North-western states, made by the statistical depart- a Thani Commerce from figures received from all wheat growing sections, : tr ---------- se -- X Cologne Bath Salts." Gibson's. Cp ig's begins to-de v did y {Three Pounds Per Acre Will | wife and daughter have gone to be;wall as elementary education in reach '| with him, and his son Arthur is al- tel, has just fallen heir to , 000 1 un "Germad unéle who imposes on him curious conditions. Musse is now twenty-four, and when he is thirty he will come into posses sion of the principal sum, "providing he say§ continuously employed at the Position™~he occupies when he learns that he is "heir to' my. fortune," the will reads. Hence he will continue to dispense Scoteh highballs for the nexs six years to become a wealthy man. To appease the nephew the uncle provides that he may receive an in- come from $65,000 eich year until he reaches the age of thirty, $100,000 FOX SHIPMENT. Valuable Cargo Arrives At Van couver From Skagway. Vancouver, B.C... July. 23..--One.of the most remarkable shipments from the north for some time is $100,000 worth of foxes included in the cargo of the C.P/R. steamer Princess May, which arrived in port from Skagway this morning. There are 126 animals of the finest specimens, including black, silver tip and red foxes. , All are cubs, and one pair of black foxes alone, it is estimated, will be worth $10,000 when full grown. The shipment is consigned to St.) John, N.B_, and Prince Edward Isl- 'and, where there are large fox farms The animals are being fed on con- densed milk. BIG DEMAND FOR TWINE Be Required in West. Mocse Jaw, July 23.--Owing to the heavy rains making heavy straw, far- mers here estimate that at least three pounds of twine per acre will be re quired for the crops and in, some places' in the south country the oats are four feet high. In addition less flax than usual has been grown around here, whick fact w il} also add to the larger supply. of twine re quired, . Hambourg- American and North German Lloyd. HAVE DAGGERS DRAWN THE KAISER MAY:BE DRAWN IN AS ARBITHATOR [ « As He Takes a Great Interest In the Shipping Affairs of the Fatherland ~The Storm Will Break At the End of t"e Year. Berlin, July 23.--1t is stated on high authority that a 'bitter and gigantic shipping war is brewing between Get- many s two great navigation compan- ies, the 'H&mburg-American and the North German-lloyd. Relations are al- ready highly strained, and the con- troversy has passed into a stage in which reerimimations are being .ex- changed, although the actual out- break of hostilities is deferred until the end ol the year. The lines are compelled by contract to work toge- ther in harmony until that time. It is admitted on Toth sides that un- less a settlement is arrived at of which there seems at present no pros- pect--internecine warfare in the Ger- man shipping world will ensue with the dawn of the new vear. The contract, the existence of ,which is now menaced, is the so-called ""Con- from the North Atlantic pool. The mainly passenger trafhe, ance with each companies' gross ton nage. According to the North company has long been with the ment is working out for it. It ap- MEXICAN REBBLS WIN Mekico City. July 23.--Af- ter a desperate fight lasting three days, the rebels have de- feated General Huerta's gov- ernment troops at Torreon, and are said to be rapidly marching on this place. Fo- #\ reign subjects here are in a 4% veritable he iia . = * Pll Bb ePdIbd & FRPP PlPbbIdbd * * + > Ld * Ld * * +» * +» * o pears that *the North German-Lloyd's possession of a fleet of four seven-day fast ships, enabling it to k up a fast service practically throughout the vear, has resulted in Bremen's getting both the best and largest share the trans-Atlantic in cabin and steerage. burg-American demands tion of the existing allotment, but the fication and insists must be carried out as it is now op erating. Unrelenting War. the declaration that the contract un- der thesgpéircunistances cannot be pro- longed beyond Dee. 31st. What happen then cannot, of course, be are at daggers drawn and in a of mind to make unrelenting was un- less a new agreement of a mutually satisfactory character can be up. If diplomacy does not find a way out, a German rate war, the first of its kind, will ensue on Jan. lst. al of the Hamburg-American line, .is conciliatory by nature, but a fearless and resourceful fighter once matters reach the war stage. Germany is entirely, without knowl: edge of the aggravated point which affairs have reached, and this is the first public intimation of it. The op- inion is expressed that a conflict be- tween the two great companies would not only be such an unlovely spec: tacle, but would have such,a wide- spread influence in the German indus- trial world .that the kaiser's govern ment would #etively intervere to pre- vent open hostilities. "The kaiser himself," said a dis tinguished authority, "would offer his own services as an arbiter if nothing else sedmed able to keep Hamburg RADICAL CHANGES IN EDUCATION LAW - - » y To Be Made by Premier "Asquith's Loadon, July 23.---Stung by the allegation that British children in the mother country have not the same opportunity to secure an edu- cation as their cousins in Canada, and® other. British dominions, the Asquith government will make radi- cal changes in the education law at the present session. - . It is proposed to put secondary as of taegporrest children of England. To do\this the age limit of compul- sory education will be raised above fourteen. z Right Hon. Joseph Peace, minister of education, has prepared a law en: forcing school boards in poorer lo ealities to provide meals for children and make other provision for physi- cal maintenance. The changes will materially increase the education Jaen, but Srrahgemants will he Has assist 'poorer d et thro the sailor-emperor's heart, and | tremendous "influence would unhesita- and Bremen from fighting. The Ham- burg shipping lines are very dear to his tingly be brought' peace between' A rate war would presumably 'affect not only cabin and steerage rates but freight rates also. COL. W. 6. GNATKIN NEW COMMANDANT According to a report in the Army and Navy Gazette, of England, Col. W. ©. Gwatkin, of the general stafi of the Canadian forees, is to be. Col. J. H. V. Crowe's successor as command- ant of the Royal Military College. Col. Gwatkin was formerly of the im- perial army, but for some years has been general staff officer for mobiliza- tion for Canada = In April it was reported from Otta- wa that Col. Gwatkin would be the to hear to preserve Intervention by the Great Powers conferences were held to-da tinental Pool." It is entirely distinct [foreign office between Sir Edward Grey and the other ambassadors relative to German lines a pro rata of business, [the Balkan situation, which is in accord- [at a anost acute .stage. 18 now regarded as inevitable, but the question is whether German- {hand or delegate Lloyd version, the Hamburg-American power. dissatisfied |mittedly the gravest that the way in "which the arrange- ambroglio has premacy must be PEEP PEPPES PR § SPPPPFPIPEP complications prgeipitated. '$iblé and mare of |drowned'" was the verdict rendered by passenger business [the coroner's The Ham- [sitting of the inquest a modifica- of Wesley Doran, the Brockville man rival line refuses to concede the recti- [whose body was found floating in the that the contract [river near Ogdensburg mysterious The Hamburg-American retorts with [other course to the jury but to will [son of responsibility in the matter. forecasted with certainty; all that can [ney Fmpey, the man who is be said now is that the two companies |ing frame charge took drawn [searching questions of the and crown Alltert Ballin, tht astute director-gener- |, rticular. 2 voung lad from his bicycle, the boy dying in' tweaty minutes, throwing the occupants out of the buggy. to ing: with another buggy, smashing it and injuring the driver, were among the fatalities caused by a runaway team here on Saturday last. The boy who lost his life was the son of Mr. and Mrs. W. Cole. . He was riding his bicycle along Main street when he collided with the team coming in the opposite direc- tion. The boy fell under the horses' Pel, was picked up unconscious, and died twenty minutes later. The horses became even more frightened and bolted, throwing the occupants out. They continued on their mad course, and when. about a mile from Cobden ran into a buggy driven, by W. Murdock, who also was hurled to the ground, sustaining an injury to his shoulder. Finally they becanie entangled in a fence and were thus brought to a standstill. The funeral of young Cole was held vesterday to Cobden cemetery. MOST ACUTE STAGE IN BALKAN SITUATION "is Now Regarded as In- evitable. 23. --Several hurried London, July at the now Intervention all shall take a the task to "one The situation to-day is ad- Balkan Su powers further brought forth. of the will of the maintained, but no Turkey To Invade Bulgaria. London, July 23.--The Morning | Post publishes a Constantinople tele- gram, via Vienna, asserting that af- ter a long ministerial council it has been decided to declare war officially against Bulgaria. The Turkish army according to this account has been ordered not only to occupy Adrianople but to cross the frontier as ly as pos- into garian ter- u ritory. BROCKVILLE MYSTERY "Found Drowned" Says Jury--Man- slaughter Charge Dropped. Jrockville, Ont., July 23.--"Found jury at the adjourned into the death which they were hitched. and collid-| | interview i nessy, president of the C.P.R., -- In Canada, Declares Sir Thomas Shaughnessy. HE FEELS NO ANXIETY THE FUNDAMENTALS ARE CONCERNED WHERE The Curtailment By the Tight Money Market Is Only Temporary--The General Trade of the Country Is Satisfactory. OF ECONOMIC CRIS | a | Montreal, July 23.--"With a fair crop we have avery - reason to expect {that the conditions will be quite nor {mal again in the late autumn." This is the opinion expressed today in an by Sir Thomas Shaugh- i and it continues to bear out the optimis- stic stand _ Sir Thomas has taken throughout the long period of world- wide depression. Sir Thomas feels no anxiety where the fundamentals of the situation in ('anada are concerned. "It cannot be denied that some lines of business are not a year ago," ad- mitted Sir Thomas. '""I'ne banks are not! emcouraging investment ii un- productive real estate. The high rate of interest has curtailed public works Jut. this is temporary. 1 no reason for anxiety. The general trade of the country appears reasonably sa- + tisfaotory."' | Sir Thomas made it quite clear that there is no need to anticipate anything in the nature of an economic crisis in Canada. The tide of immigration is greater this year than ever. Canada, in short, is still' comparatively a new field, a field which promises to be highly productive in the future, and the general situation is quite healthy. 30 active as see NIWS. PITH OF THE News Clipped From Our Many Ex- changes. Queen Amelie of Portugal is suffer- ing from a severe)attack of influenza. 1, + +1 3 abun alam clad to spend $1,000,000 for a mechanical filtration plant on Toronto Island. The Dominion Alliance is propa- gating a temperance movement under the Scott Act in the unorganized dis- 'tricts of Ontario. In London it is understood that a Winnipeg issue of $690,000 at 4 1-2 per cent, of consolidated stock at 97 has been over-subscribed in advance. That there is no possibility of a 12th and who disappeared on July { oun Sunday | last. The investigation absolutely to throw any further light on happening, leaving failed | the | no re- turn any open verdict without imput- mg to any -one, or relieving any per: | On the advice of his solicitor, Sid: awail- hearing on/ a mn connec- voluntarily and the coroner the .cross-examination of 'the attorney, Mr. Brown, failed his story in the slightest preliminary of manslaughter tion with Doran's death, the witness stand, a to shake Empey readily admitted that he and Doran, together with four other fellowayoulders whom they met at the' fishing grounds across the river in the vieinity of Taylor's Bay, had been drinking, but aflirmed that neither he nor the deceased was drunk when they left two of. the party at Black Charley's Island, to row home; in fact, in this respect his evidence | nouncement grain blockade, however large the crop this year may be, was the an- made by Sir Donald Mann at Brandon, Man King Alfonso and Queen Victoria will leave for England on Thursday, The Marquis Viana will accompany them « . According to an official announce ment of the Grand] Trunk railway ex- ecutive, W. C. holm, K.C,, has been "appointéd * Fanéral solicitor" of the company, with headquarters in Montreal. An overdose of morphine, a package of which was tossed to him over the wall of the Montreal city jail, in which he was confined for a nine months* term, killed Desire Jacquot, according to evidence taken a pri vate inquest. at BODY WAS IDEN I't¢ EL It Is Believed That Herman Wandike Commited Suezide, A report received here from ester states that the body of a man found floating in the water near the Frie canal has been identified as Her man Wandtke. He was sixty-eight years of age, and employed as a tailor. He had been missing from Roch was corroborated. ' A. doctor who made: an examination of the body on 'the warrant of the coroner testified that he found no ex- ternal marks of violence. The prosecution announces that the charge of manslaughter against Fm- pey will be dropped. PLENTY OF CEMENT T0 SUPPLY DEMANDS Two Big Canadian Plants Will Be Ready For Operation in November. Montreal, July 23. Important an- nouncements affecting the future of Canadian cement were made to-day by Frank P. Jones, manager of the Canadian Cement Co., who returned last nightyfrom Germany. Mr. Jones says the new Point Aux Trembles, the largest of its kind in the world, will be completed in November, with a daily capacity of twelve thousand barrels equal to two hundred tons. The Medicine Hat plant 'will be completed in November with a daily capacity of 4,600 barrels. With these two works in operation, Mr. Jones says the company can easily supply the demands. Toronto's New Theatre, Toronto, July 24.--Application has just been made for a permit for a new $125,000 vaudeville theatre which is to be erected at the south-east cor- gee of Richmond and Victoria oa, project is Charles A. Miles, or ive Ohio, premdent of the Miles Theatre com: home since Saturday and having been jill, it is believed that he committed isyicide. Identification was establish led by examination of a letter, con- | taining eight new $20 bills' addressed [to some one in Germany. ! i | | WEDDING . OF PRINCE ARTHUR Will Be Celebrated in October, Fro- bably at Sandringham. : New York, July 23.--A, London cable says : Prince Arthur of Connaught has taken & house near York, where he will live after his wedding. Queen Al exandra wishes the marriage, which, jt is stated, will be celobrated in Oecto- ber, to take place at Sandringham. Showery, Then Cooler. Toronto, July 23.--It is slightly warmer throughout the province to- day, with south to south-westerly winds. To-night local thunder storms are promised' by the weather bureau. It is moderately warm over the whole province and thunder storms are ex- pected generally. It will also be showery to-morrow mbrning but a good north-west wind will follow the ram. Crippen's Lawyer In Prison, | London, July 23.--Arthur Newton, {the famous London solicitor, who de 'fonded Dr. Crippen in his murder jtrial, was to-day sentenced at Old Bailey with another man, to thrée vears in prison for swindling a wo- man client. . ------------ci-- While laying a line at Cobalt, Onc, trom an electric line Gordon Mont- gomery was instantly killed. Mont- gomery was the electrician at Temiskaming mine, the THOMAS SHAUGHNESSY § for mal business condi in the autumn i enn STREET CAR TROUBLES. Ladies With Tight Skirts Have Difficult Time, "Tight skirts cause no end of trou ble to women getting on and off the street. cars," said a conductor to the WEig on Wednesday afternoon. The conductor said that he noticed by the papers that conductors on the C.P.R had been given imstructions to take special care of the lady passengers and see that they get on and off the trains safely The reason given is the prev: of the tight skirt among the fair patrons of the road. "The ladies here have their own troubles," said the conductor, "and it i8 certainly a great wonder we have not had serious accidents." SIR 1 mee RUNAWAY LAD ARRESTED --r Donald Wood Will Be Taken To His Home In Smith's Falls. Donald Wood, aged seventeen, who ran away from his home in Smith's Falls, last Thursday, was arrested, on Wednesday, by Constable James Bate ol and will by. juke back to his me. He was 1 in char, t tl request of hia AThe: Pie Tati hog an idea that his boy had ome to Kingston, and Constable Bateson, who 'was given the case, succeeded in finding the youth, who was staying at a boarding-house on Upper Prin- cess street. At New York, "Joe" Jeannette, the veteran colored heavyweight out. fought Lester Johnson, a South Am- erican negro, in a ten-round bout, At Geilenkirchen, Rhenish Prussia, fifteen miners were entombed by a fall of coal There ig little hope that they will be rescued. THEDAILY BRITISH WHIG IS ON SALE AT THE FOLLOW- ING CITY STORES Bucknell's News Depot. .200 King © Clarke, J. W. & Co 35% Princess College Book Store 160 Princess St Coulter's Grocery. 5.909 Princess Cullen's Grocery. Cor, Princess & Alfred Frontenac Hotel Ontario St. Gibson's Drug Store, . Market Square Homer's Barber Shop 307 Division MecAuley's Book Store +» .08 Princess MeGall's "Cigar Store | McLeod's Grocery, ....51 Union St. W, Medley's Drug Store 200 University Ave Paul's Cigar Store. ... _....70 Princess Prouse"s Drug Store 312 Princess Valleau's Grocery MARRIED MARSHALL In "Kingston, 18th, t the Rev. Dr. McGill Mar) Marshdll, to George ant of Kingston GRANT July VArY y 4 A. Gr bot DIED, In Montreal, T. ' DOWSLEY Dows- ley a5 . Funeral (private) will leave the resi of 1 aunt, Mrs. King,)21 » street Kingston, on lzabelia Makins and nine months (private) from her nephew's ence, Thomds H. Cooke, 32 street, Wedflesday afternoon 21at 5s July aged ROBERT J. REID, © The Leading Undertaker. "Phong 577. 230 Princess %. «JAMES REID "he 01d Firm of Underts! 254 and 256 PRINCESS 8 "Phone 147 for , STOVES AND RANGES. The best lot we have ever had, also Dressers, Stands and s. A full line. easonable prices. At Turk's, 'Phone 706. SUMMER DRINKS. Montserrat Lime Juice. Stower's Limie Julce. Stower's Lime Julce Cordial. Rose's Lime Juice. Sutton's Lime Julce, Sutton's Lime Julee Cordial, wwutton's Lemon Squash. )'Orangeade. Lemonade. vi Yaw JAS. REDDEN & Co. ik

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