Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Jul 1914, p. 10

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UURED AT SEVENTY-FOUR Little Digesters are a Great Help to Mr. John F. Becker The weight of years very often brings it a still heavier burden, that of or some Furm of Stomach Then "Little * come to the Mr, Becker, Here is his letter tell. him: ew Dundee, Nov. 10, 1000. Td Tax Corxmin Mrprcig Co. long meals, and my tongue Seeing the *'Littie advertised I bought a box, took that trouble away, box you oad not be jor more. They helpte =} baly. iY ; JORN F. BECKER. aa 7 ung with pencil, being na ectly. This 'neans that you can enjoy ry meal, the strength out of what you you fake a "Little Digester" ufterwards, 25¢. at your d sts or by mail from Coleman Medicine Co., Toronto. 86 SEE ar FLOUR * ur Robin Hood Brand of flour bas a guarantee in every bag Bood quality, + : ANDREW MACLEAN, f Street. ¢ 53-37 Barrack Street. rn nr Aa ~---- Thomas Copley . Telepnone 987 * Drop a card to 13 Piné street when Wanting anything done in the carpen- tery line. Estimates given on all kinds of repairs and new work; also hard- wodd floors of all kinds. All orders mill receive prompt attention. Shop, 40 Queen Street. DR.DeVAN'S FRENCH PILLS 3,2 Salads Pill for Women, $5 & box or three for Jo. wo id at all Shug Stores, or mailed to any [dress on repeipt of ce: Tre ScosxLl Drue Co, St Cutlhidrizies, h rio. pee feel PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN. ¥:2'ei Vim and Vitality; for Nerve and Brain; increases "grey matter' a Tonic--wiil build you up. §3 a box or two for $5, at drug stores, or by mail on receipt of peice Tus ScoBELL DRUG CO, St. Catharines, rio #BSold at Mahood's Drug Store." err Contractors, Attention! PHONE 1473 a lh Get Prices From : David Marshall on Plambing, Gasfttl Tinsmith Work, ny wna + Prompt sifention and vesson- bie rates guarsnfecd, BA AIA NN 101 Queen Btreot HERE'SA =~ BUSINESS POINTER A | n YAW] WHE You wail Eve w I bg V1 VY) J A OER husiness from na or us ro "3 DN LN NNN GEERT DAVID HALL 66 Brock St. 4 'Phone . - Res. 856 NON § EN -- a ASA Furniture Special HINTS ON LIVING ROOM PIECE, GD 4 JKERS, EASY CHAIRS, COUUR. | ES, DAVENPORTS. Nr ---------- you give them a chance, as time troubled with for ad TRANP STEAWERS OVER SEVENTY EXPECTED TO CALL NEXT MONTH. After Grain Cargoes--Will Clean up Nearly 30,000,000 -Bushels --10, 000,000 (Bushels Coming From Western States. Montréal Gazette, During the month of August it is expected that the port of Montreal steamers, or more than have eome to tliis port for the past ten years, It was stated at the Harbor Board yes- terday*that this recrudescence of the tramp steamer trade was one of the most welcome features of the present season. This month has been well to the front in the same t*ade, over for- ty tramps being expected to come here and take cargo during July. The significance of these figures is whole of last year there were only (two 'score tramps in port, while in 1912 there were but o, 1911 mone For years previous to that the ar- rival of a tramp steamer in port was a curiosity, some seasons being mark- ed by qne or perhaps two, while not a single one of these ocean wander- ers tied up here. This sudden influx will cause & good deal of figuring on the part of the harbor master and his officials in order to get the vessels properly berthed so that they can get their cargoes and cfear with as little delay as possible. It is, however, ex- pected that they willjall be placed without disturbing th¢ work with the regular liners. 7 it is the grain trade that is bring- /in so many tramps to port, most of those coming during August hav- ing been chartered by Montreal grain dealers in the hope of getting the field here cleanéd up, so as fo have plenty of room for handling the fall crop from the west as soon as it starts to move. While there has been little real congestion at the elevators of late there is a vast amount of grain moving aif' the time, and it is considered the part of wisdom to get it out of the country before the new wheat starts in Move Million Bushels a Day. That this will be accomplished is shown by the fact that the seventy- or eighty tramps expected to reach port during August will, at an -aver- age of 250,000 bushels apiece, be able to account for 20,000,000, in addition |to the 9,000,000 ordinarily handled {each month by the. regular vessels calling here, or a totdl for the month of ahmost 30,000,000, practically a million bushels a day. Such a de- mand will not mdrely clean up the markets here pretty well, but will keep the port elevators working over tine to' keep the tramps supplied with grain as they come. During the present' month with forty tramps loading grain for Liver- pool and European ports an extra ten million bushels of grain will have been handled, making nearly 20,000,000, bushels for the month In fact it was stated yesterday by F. Robertson of the Harbor Board, that the present year was by far the greatest grain handling sea- son ever known in this port, and that by the end of navigation it bade fair to so eclipse previous years that all records would look small beside it. At the Harbor Board it was stated that the tramps had been chiefly chartered by grain firms here, Messrs. Wight & E«daile having en- gaged fifty, Ames Brooke tem or more and Thompson & Eroh about sixteen while it was expected that other firms would have more tramps coming. It is not all Canadian grain tha is to be handled during the balance of the season. During August for tne first time large quantities of corn' afd other grain from the mid- dle west will be shipped "to Iiver- pool from Chicago via Montreal and the St. Lawrence, route. This grain will come down the great lakes and canals, and be elevatored here for trans-shipment to ocean-going boats. This is new traffic for this port, and it is expected to grow, so that pos- sibly in future the shipments of Am erican grain via the St Lawrence will counterbalance the shipments of we tern Canadian grain"by Buffalo ar | other American ports. AN AML SING STORY. Fold By Young Hindoo About His 5 First Trip to London. A young Hindoo tells an amusing story of his first visit to London. { His hostess, mindful of the great | chance in climate to which the traveler had béen subjected, wished to make him as comfortable as pop ! sible. Accordingly, when she pre pared his room for the night, she put into his bed, a rubber hot walter bottle, a contrivance quite unknown in India. The young man retired, undressed Land got into bed: As he did so his feet encountered a smooth, warm object which he supposed to be some kind of animal. In terror be | leaped from the bed . and' groped i about for the light. Unaccustomed { to his surroundings, he was a long { time finding it, and at every step | he trembled lest the unknown crea- | ture should attack him. [At jength he found the light and | looked about vainly for.a 'weapon He was on the point of calling for | help when he thought of trying tae | closet. There he Tound esevoial ! cnnes. He selected the stoutest of them and resolved to try couclusivus | with the intruder. | He approached the foot of the hed, where he was somewhat gro- | tected by tife footboard, and raised his weapon for a speedy blow, while | with his left hand he grasped the | hédclothes and began cautiously 10 | turn them 'down, Then, nerving | himself for a final effort, he tore | the clothes from the bed and struck viciously at the round black object that he had ia One blow enough to'convinee | him 'that the "animal" was lifeless, and always had been. His terror gave place to amusement, and after he had his laugh out he went back to enjoyed undisturbed Afepose sath morning. "-- Youth's bed and will 'be visited by seventy-five tramp shown by the fact that during the of freighters "TERRIBLE IVAN'S LIBRARY. Supposed In 1813, May Be " In Existence. A short fime ago a professor of theology in the university at St Petershurg purchased at a shop in Moscow a manuscript copy of the Gospel dating from prior to A. D. 1000. On examination it was found to have belonged to the great collected in his youth by Ivan the Terrible, when he believed that he had a divine mission. This library was supposed to have been burned in the great fire of Moscow of 1813. On a subsequent visit to Moscow t his book to family of a laborer, who said that he had found it with several af volumes in a subterranean pPASSAge near the Kremlin. The famous library of Ivan the Terrible is now supposed to be still hidden in some underground vault, which the efforts of generations have hitherto failed to discover. It was Ivan the Terrible--whose reputation as a great ruler has been obscured by the fascination of his ext ary excesses--who established the printing press in Russia. There is a wide field of conjecture as to what might not come to light in the event of this curious library one day being discovered. "Ivan the Terrible was in close communication with all the rulers from London to Pekin. One branch of knowledge is almost certain to be well represent- ed in this lost library, and that is the scienée of black magic. It is equally lfkely that new codices of Holy Scripture may yet come to light, for Ivan the Terrible under- took to print the Scriptures in the vulgar tongue. Only ome thing is certain, that such a library existed and has never been found, nor is it even known to have perished in any of the numerous fires that devastat- ed Moscow. References in the are- hives to its existence, as well a§ to the existence: of the subterranean roadways, are sufficient to whet the keenest curiosity, but not enough to afford much practical assistance to the investigator. Nightmare. Nightmare, according to one theory, is due to a suspension of power in the muscles of inspiration. The weight, the want of breathing and the sense of suffocation seem to prove this, and a still 'greater proof iz that after the sufferer can speak only one syllable the paroxysm is at an end. The word cannol be spoken without breath. Breath cannot come out of the lungs until it is brought in nor brought in without the action of the muscles of the breast and ribs, Nothing can be more simple than the cause. It is the temporary paralysis of the pectoral muscles, through the medium of the nerves which supply them with feeling. mee -------- Napoleon's Bible. An Italian journalist has the copy of the. Bible which Napoleon used during his compulsory sojourn in the isle of Elba. It is a copy of a cheap popular edition, illustrated with rough wood-cuts, with the initial "N'* and the imperial crown stamped upon its back. A number of texts are underlined, and the inference 8 that the exiled emperor searched the Scriptures for passages appropriate to his misfortune and his hopes. "I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep ghall be scattered," is perhaps the most significant of them. The Bible was discovered in the sanctuary of the Madonna del Monte, in Elba. The Worse Golfer. An amusing incident was witness- ed on the Braid Hill golf course. A gentleman, evidently a tiro, was go- ing over the course, making futile attempts to propel the ball in the di- rection required, and, indeed, some- times missing it. . His caddie meekly followed at his heels while he continued his exer- tions, and eventually the gentleman broke one of his clubs. At this he turned round and remarked depre- catingly to his caddie: "I don't sup- pose there are many worse players than 1?" "Oh, ay, sir," responded the caddie "but I dinna.think they play." -------- A Rabbit and a Whistle. Did you know that a short, sharp whistle from the mouth would stop a rabbit? It surely does. Next time you ase little Molly Cottontail leap from her burrow and make aff don't shoot; just whistle. Whether from fear o reurioaity I camnot tell, bat she will stop #311 in her tracks. An antelope has been known te do like- wise. n African hunter once said that tha"elaphant is the most timid of all animals and can be frightensd into a cold sweat by a mysterious noise. Medicine and Mortgages. Certainly no patient could receive a dose of medicine like that prescrib- ed to Brown and have the.patiehce to take it. Yet Brown's doctor was a land speculator. When not making out prescriptions he was making out mortgages. It was when in a dual state of mind that he gave Brown the following instructions along with the prescription: "One half down and the balance every six months for four years." Life In Liberia. The food supply of the African state of Liberia is so bad that a well known resident says he "resides in Liberia, but boards in Europe." The annual rainfall exceeds 160 inches, and the climate is extremely ener- vating. Malaria prevails in a disas- trous form, yet the Europeans living there are astonishingly indifferent, neglecting to mosquito proof their homes. Teaching Mamma Golf. Fozzler minimus returned from his first term at school to find his mother badly off her drive, : "Yoti've absolutely rotted your game, mum," he declared. "Wooden clubs take a lifetime to learm, yon know. You'd much better stiek to an {ron off the tee, considering that you bavgn't much longer t6 livel" = When a man hasn't anything else to do he loafs. A woman goes shop- ping. The less amiable a woman is the handsomer she thinks she needs to . THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, » Much the richest department ANCIENT MAKE-UPS. Rouge and Flesh Colors Have Been Found In Classic Rome. Thousands of years ago the art of 'make-up' as practiced in the dress- ing-rooms of actors and actresses of to-day, was known to the Egyptians and Romans. For proof of this one 'only has to study the many interest- ing theatrical relics in the British Museum, The Egyptians supply us with what is probably the oldest wig in the world--a wig, it is true, that was in no way connected with the drama, but one that will compare favorably with the finest creations of the thea- trical perruquier. Strangely enough, the tresses are made of plaited crepe haiv, exactly similar to that used by modern actors for moustaches. In the Graeco-Roman department, says the 'Era Annual, may be seen the cosmetic box of a Roman lady. |The white and flesh-colored chalks and rouges are similar to those used for "making-up" in the days previous | to the invention and manufacture of grease-paint. There'are also two ob- jects of the theatrical life of the past that have their replicas in the thea- tres of the present day. One ig a thin, oblong slab of stone, bearing the Latin-words, "Circus Plenus," which was occasionally to be found outside a Roman circus, and corre- sponded to the familiar modern no- tice, "House Ful." The other is a plain ivory disc displayed in the Egyptian room, but which would hardly attract attention. This com- mon-looking object is a theatre check or pass, but whether of a temporary or permanent character cannot be ascertained. in stage objects, however, is the Graecc- Roman room, where one case Of stage exhibits may be seen. Here are to be found specimens of the masks worn by actors, which were modelled ac- cording to Wtrict rules. They were made of terra-cotta, and must have been very uncomfortable to wear. There are also numerous statuettes in bronze and terra-cotta of actors wearing their masks in the various characters they impersonated, in ad- dition to models of masks of every description and kind. The Dignified Course, An army examiner once had a can- didate before him who apparently was unable to amswer the simplest question. At last the examiner lost his temper and, with sarcastic em- phasis, lost on the youth before him, said: "Suppose, sir, that you were a cap- tain in command of a company of in- fantry; that in your rear was an im- passable abyss; that on either side of you towered perpendicular rocks of untraversable height; that before you stood the enemy, a hundred men to each one of yours. What, sir, would you do in this emergency?" "Sir," said the aspirant to military honors, "I should resign," -- Pearson's Weekly. The Aurora Borealis. The aurora borealis, or northern dawn, is an electrical phenomenon which in high northern latitudes, es- pecially in "winter, -#lluminates the skies with streamers of light. As the streams of light have a tremendous motion, they are called in many places the "merry dances." They as- sume many shapes @nd a variety of colors, from a pale red or yellow to a deep red or blood color, and in the northern latitudes they serve to il luminate the earth and cheer the gloom of the long winter nights. The connection of the aurora displays with the disturbance of the magnetic needle is now regarded as an ascer- tained fact. The Roman Forum. he Forum Romanum, the first that was erected in Rome, served equally for the purpose of trade ang all public meetings as well as for the administration of justice by the con- suls and other Roman magistrates Later on, when the fora numbered some eighteen or twenty, they were divided into two classes, some for public meetings and the proceedings of the lgw courts and others for the various requirements of trade. The Roman forum corresponded to the agora, or market place, of the Greeks, and no Roman city was with- out this important centre of judicial political and commercial life. Japanese Hairdressers For Men. , The professional coiffeur for men is a much older occupation in Japan than that for women. There are records as far back as the thirteenth century of male bairdressers (or men, for the samurai especially were very particular as to how the hair was done up, though as A profession the samurai was of somewhat later growth. It may be said, however, that during the later Tokugawda days the men appear to have appreciated in their wives and daughters the same careful attention to style of hair as was observable among their lordly selves. It is not with some significance that the first profession- al hairdresser for women was a man | \ - Utterly Selfish. Nellie--That Clara Sharpe is jusi the meanest, most utterly selfish girl 1 ever saw. She never thinks of any one but herself. Dora--Tell me about it. Nellie--TI ran in there the othe: evening for a few moments, and while JI was there Mr. Spooner call ed. It wasn't long before he request ed her to play. He's passionately fond of music, you know. what do you think that girl did? She asked him to come to the pianc and turn the music for-her, so thai I coidn't talk to him. on Getting On. "How did you come to buy thal second-hand table?" exclaimed Mrs Climber's husband. "We don't need in." "That shows, hee mueh you know, repli) bis wife "In one of the drawers 1 found a.bunch of the most select visiting cards in the city. They will logk lovely in our hall." We imagine the angels smile when they see a fisherman with a $25 out- fit yanking a two-inch sucker from the water. The coming man is seldom noticed ugtil he arrives. 1 JULY 23, 1914. ~ Well, | GOT A NEW FACE. Horribly Disfigured Woman Finally Made Presentable, Surgery has progressed to the poin where it. can supply new nerves blood vessels, bones and even. new faces to men and women Who have been maimed and mutilated by acc dent or disease. European specialists have described to the congress of the American Surgical Association many examples of the wonderful results ob tained in reparatory surgery, Dr Erich Lexer of the University of Jena. Germany, showed a once beautiful woman whose face he practically re- made in two (years. Shé had been disfigured in the explosion of an'auto- mobile. JFirst she was shcwn without a nose and with the vestige of a chin, with part of an ear and witaoyt eyebrows and with her eye lids drawn own in hideous fashion. No more unpromis- ing subject could hav: been present- ed. First the surgeon mude a nose for her out of cartilage and fat and skin which he had obtained from oth- er parts of her body. After awhile he saw that the nose was shaped: up and molded anew. He made a chin for her, revised the disfigired mouth and put some artistic touches cu the re- mains of her ears. . He finished with a portrait of the young woman in gala dress and smil- ing. She had not been restored to her former pulchritude, but, taken all in all, the surgeon had performed a most remarkable feat. Then came a hare-lipped young man with a decidedly unprepossessing face. The surgeon literally trans- formed him in & few months into a Prince Charming and induced him to raise a moustache to coyer the lip line. The final state of the youth was aljpost handsome enough for him to qualify as a riding' master or a tango teacher. : . From a surgical point of view one of the most brilliant operations, which was shown by Dr. Lexer in color photographs on the screen, was tha tation of fat and part of a bone into = shattered patella, so that the free action of the knee was restored to the. tient. The surgeon demon 30 how he would ob- tain quantities of fat from legs and insert them under cheeks to fill up hollows or to smooth ont foreheads in which there were unsightly cavi- ties. For a patient who had no ex- ternal ears he 'built two perfectly good ones with graceful, scroll-like effects. A young girl whose face was her misfortune was changed into an attractive miss. Dr. H. Morestin of Paris told the congress that graftings and trans- plantations of tissues fiad consider- ably enlarged the limits of reparatory' operations. '""Ffhey have enabled us," he con- tinued, "to remedy under better con- ditions many grave Ceformities and to lead to many other restorations hitherto almost unattainable." He spoke of the use of small frag- ments of skin, of cutaneous trans- plantation in two distinct times, of the grafting of eyebrows and mous- taches and of the strengthening of the broken and mashed nose by graft- ing cartilage. Too Much to Ask. Little June Marie's mother is very indulgent, but there are times when even she draws the line, One very hot day, when all nature drooped, a neighbor saw June Marie and her mother toiling along the street under a blazing sun. June Ma- rie was weeping aloud, struggling and holding back, but her mother dragged her firmly on over the road. "Why, what's the matter with June Marie?" the neighbor asked. Her mother looked patiently at the neighbor, while the persp! on ran down her glowing face. *'She's erying because I wouldn't let her wear her mittens," she sald. A Queer Joke. A resident of Vevey, Switzerland, died some years ago and left a will, in which he bequeathed the whole of his property, of which he was stip: »d to have a large amount, to the "local hospital of the town." There being two local medical charities--- the town hospital and the Hospice de Samaritan--a suit at law was entered by the former in order to decide its right to the legacy. After a considerable expense had been in- curred the dispute was abruptly brought to a close by the discovery that the deceased had indulged in a most unseasonable jest avd, In faet, did not possess a penny to bequeath. An Original Oath of Allegiance. In the old days when the Spanish provinee of Aragon was a proud and independent monarchy the people used: when choosing their king the following singular form of election: "We, .the freeborn inhabitants of the ancient kingdom of Aragon, whe are equal to you, Don Philip, and something more, elect you to be out king on condition that you preserve to us our rights and privileges. If in this you should fail we awn you for our king no longer." What Might Have Been. Rosemary--Isn't it wonderful how prolific some of the old novelists were when it is taken into consideration that they had tn do ali their composi- tion with pen and ink? Thornton--Yes; I shudder to think of what they might Lave turned o.t if they could have had the advantage of typewriters.--London Answers Making a Show. "A man has to draw it fine these days." "What do yeu mean?" "Staying ten minutes after office hours each day will probably make a good impression, but staying fiiteen is liable to excite suspicion that you are monkeying wit" your books. eet In Political Circles. "How abouf my letter proposing matrimony?" "It has been advanced to a secoad reading," said 'the congressman's daugliter, "abd will come (0 & vote before very * Kind words are never lost--unless a woman puts them in a letter and gives it to her husband to mail. The gentleman with the cloven hoof may trot with the gentleman who has a cloven breath. wal ANCIENT SURGERY. instruments of Two Thou: nd Years Ago Are Exhibited In London. A Bet of 37 very remarkable an cient Creek surgical instrum®gts has been discovered mear the site of Kolophon, In lonia, and has been brought t. England. The instru- ments (says a correspondent of The London Times) show a type of vork- manship unequalled in any other ex- tant specimens, and generally reveal the very great progress in surgery which the ancients achieved. The date, though somewhat uncertain, is probably the first or second century A. D. With two exceptions, all the instruments are of bronze. The blades of the knives were originally of steel, but in each case this metal has been almost completely destroy- ed by oxidisation (rust). It is an interesting fact that in an- cient times knives were made either of stone or bronze. The custom was followed, mot because iron was un- known, but because that metal was held in superstitious fear. Amongst the five pairs of forceps or grippers in the find is a large and beautifully made instrument, the handles of which are shaped to represent two dolphins. This'is probably a pair of ""polypus" forceps, used for removing growths. The "bite" of the teeth is strong and close, Another interest- ing pair of forceps is that used for extracting w and lance-heads from wounds. An elevator for rais- ing depressed bome is another Inter- esting 'exhibit. * Its presence in the collection would seem to prove that after battle, efforts must have been made to treat surgically even the most serious wounds of the skull. Modern surgeons are apt to imagine that brain" surgery is a recent 'dis- ccvery, and that operations for the elevation of pieces of depressed bone were invented within living memory. Another and still more remarkable brain instrument is the "drill-bow" for operating a skull trephine. This instrument proyed a very great puz- gle at first, and was supposed to represent somq, sort of measuring appliance. 'Research, however, has shown that it is a bow which, when fitted in a string, was used to rotate a bone' dfill 'or skull trephine--very much as drills and {iréphines are still occasionally rotated. Far from being a triumph of modern surgery, skull trephinigg or trepanning is a very ancient manoeuvre. Skulle have been discovered again- and again showing trephine openings, and the natives of the South Sea Islands are actually known to prac- tice 'the operation. In classic times this was not un- dertaken, as at present, to relieve the pressure {rom an abscess or an effusion of blood, but to allow exit to the evil spirit supposed to be troubling an' insane or epileptic patient. That the Greek and Roman surgeons achieved good results is certain. Probably the purity of the atmosphere in which they worked made them fo some extent inde- pendent of antiseptics, They used mandragora juice or atropin as anaesthetics. Ancestral Pride. "Do you still want this genea- logy?" agked the man who digs up such things. "Sure, 'l do. Why not?" "Well, I've found that your great- great-grandfather --was hanged for murder, your great-grandfather was imprisoned for robbery, and your ; grandfather was tarred and feathered for beating his wife, That's not a very proud record, is it?" "I should say it-is. Shows how my family is getting better each genera- tion. I'm an improvement on the whole bunch---never been in jail yet. Let me have those records. I'm proud of 'em!™ Willing To Tell. Sometimes it is a pleasure to an- swer questions, even if the questioner may put them in an unpleasant way. "What do you do for a living?" asked a lawyer, frowning horribly at & uaatchet faced young man who was undergo! cross-examination. _ "I, eir," answered the witness, hastily diving into his side pocket, "am the agent for Dr, Kerker's cele- brated corn and bunion destroyer, greatest remedy of the age, used by all the crowhed heads of Europe, nev- er known €o fail to remove the most obdurate corns in less than twenty- four hours or money cheerfully re- fund"-- Here the court interfered. q + Whales, i The largest of all mammals are not the elephants, but the whales. A large elephant 'weighs about six tons, But the largest whale "reaches the fm- mense weight of 150 tons and would furnish four loads of flesh and . About forty different kinds dolphins are known, and, sithough they live in the open soa and' like fish, they are not fish at all, but are true mammals, breathing air and feeding their young on milk, ke cows and horses A man seldom pays a woman com- pliments after mayriage because it keeps him working overtime paying her bills. made dopa not contain alum for suming) ang which carpets and k housekeeper should use it. For BUILDERS! Have You Tried - GYPSUM WALL PLASTER? It Saves Time. P, WALSH Fresh Caught | Live Lobster inion Fish Co. AAA i aN J. McAuley, Furniture Dealer d Undertaker ' 281 Princess Street Ambulance Phone 861 Zbar'slce Cream deliver promptly parts of the city. £80 Princess St. The kind you are looking is the kind we sell Scranton Coal Is good coal and we guarantee prompl delivery HOT, is it ? Well, why don't you buy one of our Electric Fans. Lowest prices * in the city. Halliday's Electric Shop

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