Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Apr 1915, p. 10

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PAGE TEN EA -- ELDERLY PEOPLE SHOULD TAKE VINOL Aged Texas Woman Says: "Old People Who Are Weak and Feeble Should Know the Merits of Vinol. Grand Saline, Texas. --** I am an aged woman, and for a long time was weak and feeble, 'but I have found Vinol to be the best medicine to create strength for old people and for chronic colds | have ever taken. It has restored my health and strength so that I feel almost young again; in fact, I am now doing all my own housework. "Old people who are weak ond feeble should try Vinol and know its merits as 1do. 1 have proved Vinol a good re ble medicine and much cheaper a ing doctor's bills, and you may pub- what [ say about Vinol for the ben- efitof others." Mrs. Fannie E. Rop- GERS, Grand Saline, Texas. Vinol, our delicious cod liver and iron tonic, sharpens the appetite, aids diges- tion, enriches the blood, building up natural strength and energy, We have seen such splendid results from: its use that we return the m ey in every case where Vinol fails to buil up and strengthen feeble old peop delicate children and the weak, ne: run-down and debilitated, or stop chro colds, coughs or bronchitis, hary Geo. W. Mahood, Druggist, Kings- ton, Ont. SE ------------------ NO PLACE LIKE HOME---IF YOU OWN IT. Six room brick veneer house on the west side of city, for $2,150.00 for quick sale. Six room frame house, mear Frontenac Park, with improve- ments, for $1,830.00, Solid birck house on Clergy Street, with hot water furnace, all "improvements, stable, $3,250.00, Frame house on a corner with good stable, suitable for carter, must be sold by May 1. $1,200.00. Rough cast house; six rooms, on very easy terms, $1,300.00, HORACE F. NORMAN Real Estate and tesurance Office 177 Wellington St. DARKEN GRAY HAR LOOK YOUNG, PRETTY Sage Tea and Sulphur Darkens So Naturally That Nobody Can Tell. Almost everyone knows that Sage Ten and Eulphur, properly couipouni-| ed, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when faded, streak- ed or gray; also ends Dandruff, itch ing scalp and stops falling hair. Years ago the only way to get this mixture was to make it a: home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays, by asking at any drug| store for "Wysth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this famous old recipe for about 50 cents. Don't stay gray! Try it! No one can possibly tell that you darkened your hair, as it does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small Strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after ano- ther application or two, your hair becomes beautifully dark, thick and glossy. Agent Geo. W. Mahood. ~~, ~ Women's FOOTWEAR , FROM THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1915. AAAS A SOA | | 8 Frontenac FOREST. A gloom was cast over ghborhood by the sudden de- Mr Thomas Fitzgerald on inst The funeral Tuesday to St Railton, mise of Sunday, Pat where a sol- SUNE by Rev Staley for repose of Among the floral tributes tiful wreath from the students of Sydenham ook place rick h, €mn requien mass wis r her the ind schoo DEAD CREEK. I'he Ihe weed, was April 13. ndition a bad Miss to roads are in school teacher, unable me Monday, as she is suffering Miss Myrtle Gaylord number of her friends Miss Pearl Arney is home from Howard ~ Peck is at | Percy Gaylord's. Ransford Vieley hps moved his house on his farm. Mr. and Mrs Mervin Newton spent the week-end al her father's, W. sidy, Northbrook. J. A. Newton has moved his saw mill home. Cowan, 1 oack on from entertained measles last evening Cobalt. Cas ' BATH ROAD. April 14.--John Mvuldey has the sawing machine cutting wood. John I'rousdale has purchased a new auto mobile. A number of the farmers are getting the new parcel post mail box. School Section No. 3 has reopened. J. Greer is preparing for the building | of his new barn; he us drawing lum ber. from the city. . Mrs. Comelius Bridge and Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Ham ilton are at John Hyland's. Joshua Clifi has a beautiful herd of Ayrshire cattle. R. J. Bushell has completed his new fence. A pumber of hoyvs are catching a large quantity of fish the at creck. TONG LAKE. April 14.--Henry Drew has started drawing mail on the new mail route from Long Lake to Arden. People are very much pleased with the new sys tem, getting mail now twice daily, vin Arden and Parham. Mr. McQuar- ter, foroman of the Diamond Drill | here, went to Kingston on business | today. Dr. H. R. Barker is kept very busy day and night, there be- ing much sickness. Rev. Mr. Rich ards, Toronto, will preach the Methodist Episcopal Church on Sun day in 'the absence of Rev Mr Stainton. Mr. and Mrs, George Sweet have moved in William Robinson's tenant house. Wendell Smith, C.N.R operator, Trenton, is home for a few | holidays. in FERNLEIGH. The roads are Farmers report in bad poor | April 12. condition. a v dhdhdhdh ddd A number around here rchased evaporators Mrs. Levi emon and her daughter, Mrs. La :, nave gone to Belleville on a Miss Ruby E. Dowell, teacher to. her home in Althorpe for > Easter holidays. Miss Evelene der and Miss Freeman were the, sts of Miss Cora Godkin on Sun- William Smith of the Ma- nog Mica Mine is at Mrs. Davy's. Free Methodist Sunday School opened with Mrs. Ephriam Bab- as superintendent and Mrs. 'vlvester Babcock and Mis Mary 'ock as teachers. Mrs. Reuben Hicks still Very ill A number from here attended G. Ost- ler's sale last Wednesday Ervin Martin sold a valuable COW to J Thurston, Wilbur Leeds po run of sap )CK 18 MALLORYTOWN. April 13.--At the home Mrs. Charles E. Tennant, on Tues: day evening, about forty people ga- thered for a reception for Rev and Mrs. J. Cantrell, who arrived on Tuesday afternoon. Before the re- freshments were served Rev. W. GQ, Bradiord, Methodist minister, was asked to present Mr. Cantrell with u purse and to express to the new- ly-wedded couple before leaving for their new fields of labor at DBan- croft, the wishes of many happy years. Rev. Mr. Cantrell, who has been the Anglican minister for the past nine months, has made friends of the people of all churches. RESORT. April 13 The fishergen making good use of their licenses and good hauls are reported Mr. and Mrs. 8S. D. Wilcox spent Sunday with their daughter, Mrs. B. 'KE. Poole. Mr. and Mrs. Anson Andre spent a day last week the guests of her mother, Mrs. Ferguson, Dulce maine. Miss Elsie Wilcox has re- turned to Brockville to resume her studies at the Business College. Mrs. F.C, Kaunt intends remaining with her brother, Ford Davis for some time. Miss Evalena Haws is recovor- ing from an attack of pneumonia William Buell, who has been very ill for some time is on the road to recovery. School has reopened with a good attendance, and is progress- ing favorably with Miss Louise Ac ton, of Brockville, as teacher. éral from here attended the supper at Rockport under the. auspices the Epworth League on Friday nigl last. Mr. and | of POOL are 58 Sev- SEELEY'S BAY. April 14. --Warrem Falls, has become a Jackson, Jones' | resident of this { place, having secured a good position in the Brick and Tile Yard. Last Monday evening a large num- Tevewy j friends on | from an attack Myrtle McKhinl with Mrs. J Recent Mason- Mrs. Ro on Friday to Robert Hugh- Mrs. Hughés ber of the ladies met in the ic Hall to bid farewell tc bert Hughes, who leaves rejoin her husband, Di at La Pas, Man. was presented with some 'pisces of silverware snd an excellent address, which she réplied to in a fitting man- ner, Mrs. W. J. Berry que, visited friends ° here Captains John and son, H ara pawmtiag and fitting out boats in readiness for navigation. Captain steamer Buena Vista, will go to Ot tawa, to carry d, and Capt. H. Randall. steamer John Randall, will 20 into the eoal business from Oswe- go to Smath's Falls. < The water in the canal here is about three feet below high water mark and is rising very slowly. The Seeley's Bay Hockey team bas the trophy it won on exhibition J. C. MeKinley's store. It is ver mownted shield and js very admired. Miss Ella Gilbert, who was visiting friends at Kingston for the past few days, has returned home. Work in the Brick and Tile Yard will com- mence shortly. Frederick Wills has a new auto for use in carrying the mails. He nipde his trip to. King- ston, carrying the mail, on Wednes. thE day. : da W. Johnson, Athens school inspec tor, paid a visit to the public school last Monday. The Seelev's Say Methodist Sunday school is goi- ting in a prosperous condition. The ettendance is good, having last Sunday passed the century mark, the largest for a number of years. visitors and Roy Danby, Kelsey's; Mr. vens, Athens, Donnelly, O'Connor, Connor's; Saperton, at' and Mrs. George ge Mr. and Mrs. J. 2 Secley"s Bay, Mayor (Dr) que, at Charles 0'- MeNamee, lL.ans- M. Fodey, and' Miss Outlet, at Arthur . and Mrs. W. Moorhead, 's Corners, at John Moorhead's; and Mrs. Hilliary Smith, Lynd- at David Townsend's. and son, Ganano last" wuek Randall, B their the opening of H tandall, fowr Rev. hurst, ELGIN. April 12.--The Misses Carty spent Easter at Kingston. Misses Marjory Brown and Serenia Chisholm, stud- ents at Ottawa, spent Eoster at their home. Stanley Lavine, Queea's, is home for the holidays. Mrs. Perry- in { man went to Kingston for Easter, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Plunkett, who spent the winter,in New York City, have returned home. George How- ard, Québec, spent Easter at home. Miss Benedict, Athens sang ve'y sweetly, "Softly and Tenderly Jesus Is Calling," on Sunday morning to the congregation of the Methodist Church The Epworth League was entertained to a social evening at e Methodist parsonage Easter Mon- y. A a sil- much household shower was tender- led to Mr. and Mrs. C. E, Sliter at the Village Hall Saturday evening to welp replace their heavy loss by fire. Chess Sliter has moved into R. Halladay's vacant house Miss 'Mary McGui and Miss Jean Dargidvei ent ter at Westport. The little ins, Newbhoro, spent Easter Misses MeCam-~ guests of Mr. uchmore. Mrs, George confined to 'the with grippe, is improving. Mr Toronto, spent Easter Miss Elsie Ripley, Y., is the 5 re- Brown, Collingwood, of his mother. Nurse urned to the village. returned Mrs. Asher SrsOn's LONG POINT. April 12.--Thére is a. great deal tickness in this section. Mr Mrs. Paul Whittiker and little Schenectady, N.Y., are spending month at David Towasend's Gertrude Kelsey has returned Kingston. Mr, and Mrs. Arthur [ee, Herkimer, NY arrived on Weadnos- day to ppend the summer at lee's Rest. he cheese factory opened Visit Arthur F t of Ww N Mrs, from a guest n has ret 1 Priscil as on EUROPE'S HUGE COLONIES. Tremendous Issues That Present Conflict. The capture of German Togoland by British forces is a reminder that no part of the world is without the very real possibility of conflict be- tween the nationals of the contend- ing powers. Almost exactly' half the land sur- face of the earth is held, directly or as dependenciés, by the group of na- tions engaged in the present war. Roughly, there are about 56,000,000 square miles of world's land area with a total population of %,623,- 300,000. The warring nations of to-day hold sway over 29,000,000 square miles with a population of $98,440,000, re- presenting considerably more than half of the world's population, Germany has secured a foothold in Africa, where she controls about a million square miley in the southern part of the continent, German East Africa and German West Africa. Be- tween these provinces, which are about equal in size, lies the great South African British Empire. With Germany eliminated, Africa would be 'far on the way to becoming an Eng- lish and French continent. France at present holds. more Afri- can territory than any other nation, aggregating more than four million square miles, or a greater area than that of the United States with Alaska and the insular possessions. This includes most of the Sahara Desert, but also Algeria in the north, and a vast fertile area of the valleys of the Nile and Niger. Egypt is still nominally a depend- enty of the Turkish empire, but for all practical purposes, both upper Hang The Soudan proviné®s of Brilain new join the British territories in East Africa, which includes a frontage of about 400 miles on the Indian Ocean. In the very heart of tropical Africa lies the Congo Free State, with near- ly a million miles area, nominally a Belgian dependency, touching British South Africa and also British Sou- dan holdings. It requires no bold stretch of imagination to conceive that when the powers sit down around Europe's council board at the end of this war, Britain may ask, in payment for her services in sending an army to rescue Belgium, that the sovereignty of the Congo Free State be intrusted to her. France might be expected to as- sent, because her African holdings Wednesday. Mr I is 1 ednesday Mr. and Mrs. Morgan is in receiving Thursday Slack and family left on medical treatmen for their new home near Delta, hav- Ti v. funeral 5" for the late ing sold their farm here to William Mrs. Joseph Heron was conducted in Bryan! Misses Norah and Margaret | the Methodist Church Tuesday morn- and Maurice. 0'Connor, Gananoque, | ing, the remains aryiving from North spent Easter with their grandparents | Dakota the night béforé. Deceased's here. Miss Lenora Bryan, who | maiden name was Miss Knowlton, teaches at Soperton, spent the vaca Crosby Her husband predeceased Wilson, fome ten vears aro. Gananoque, wade a trip through here on Monday. Thomas Br and James Townsend have purch automobiles. Mr. and Mrs. Tye were "At Home" to their many Friday evening and a enjoyable time was spent by dancing and playing games. P. Whittaker and D. Townsend wisited K tion at her home here. W. April 14. The death _tecurred her in Elgin, on April Sth, Mrs. Atcheson, at the advanced of eighty-one years. eceased's hus. band died vears ago, and she is survived by two sons and one daughter, John and Frederick, Elgin, and Mrs. Albert Freeman, Forfar. The funeral took plaice Saturday from: the friends in Gananoque on Saturday. | residence of her son, to the Anglican Philip Kelsey, who was quite ill, is church. Rev. Mr. Dickinson, better. Jacob Bryan is suffering | boro, officiated at the services. at yan home of age some very New- BATTLEFIELD ETIQUETTE. Soldiers Have Many Rules Governing Their Behavior. The etiquette of the fiald of battle Is quite as important as that of the home, For instance, the Germans violated the etiquette of war by disregarding their promise to preserve the neutral ity of Belgium, and by invading France before making a formal de- claration of war, At the outset of the war it was falsely reported that a French doctor had infected the water supply of the German fortress of Metz with cho- lera germs. Had the*report been true, the doctor would have been gullty of an act of barbarism, oppos- ed to all the usages of war. | The rules of war allow the cutting off of an enemy's water or food sup- plies, but not the poisoning of water! It is not etiquette to try and kill | the enemy's commander-in-chief. He! may be captured, but if killed in the process that is but the "'fortufe of | war." An enemy has a perfect right to bombard a town which refuses to surrender, but fo deliberately destroy unpro.ected places and national in- Stitutions is an act of vandalism; that is, unless the buildings are used | for military purposes against the! enemy. i The reason so many towns in Bel- glum were evacuated on the ap-| proach of the enemy was because the Belgians trusted in the ood Ama ot the Germans to adhere to the rul of war etiquette. Louvain with all | | That Beautifies its glories would still be intact but | for this breach of good faith. i The rules in regard to prisoners of | = - Li SSSRlal Io Wear a shoe t is prettil shaped to obtain attrac. tive effects so much de- sired by all well dressed women. Our shoes have ~ grace of line and ele- 'gance of finish that "make them beautifiers of women's feet. Made in the latest American designs. war are.clear enough. Anyone wear- | mE The ti FO COR] od military force must if captured be | treated as prisoner of war, provided, | of course, that he can show that he is not a civilian masquerading in uni- | form. If a soldier in uniform is | within the enemy's lines he must not | be treated as a spy, But as a prisoner | of war. Secrecy and disguise make the spy who, of course, has no rights | 'whatever, } A prisoner of war cannot be com- | pelled to give his parole. Should he, not being on parole, attempt to es- cape he may be shot while in the act of escaping, but if captured he is not to be punished beyond being placed in more rigorous confinement. - A prisoner of war cannot be forced to aid in operati side, or to X doing mon-military work. ; A general is entitled to make full use of traitros and deserters, but he should not tempt men to be false to their allegiance, : | the manlik of a genéral to tell an officer | r soldier to go over to the enemy, nd pretending to be a traitor or de- orter, to give faise information and hen make his escape. On the other hand, if a soldier is empled to turn traitor he is justi- ei. in pretending. to listen to the empter, and in this way gaining any nformation 'be can. which in due 'ourse is conveyed to his command- mg officer, and then laid before the ommander-in-chief of the army, who may benefit thereby materially and by 'a change in his plans bring sue- cess to his troops. New Barglar Protection. Safe-blowars will have a new pro- tective device to combat in the near | future in the form of a chemical compound, designed to produce blind- ness. A glass container holding one pound of the gas producing chemi- cals is suspended between the outer and the inner doors or walls of the safe. When the casing of the safe is blown or drilled the glass. recep- tacle is broken, and when the door is opened the powerful fumes at once | render the burglar sightless, and if he falls to find his way out of the several hours. . The flask is held be- tween a number of felt rurfaces to prevent accidental breakage when he safe is being closed. The Industrious Bee. The bee has two distinct stomachs. In the first it stores away the honey it so industriously gathers the flowers until such time as it Is ready | f to yield it up, while the other stom- ach is used simply and solely for di- | gestion purposes. Thus the food and | honey are never mixed. When | ready to deposit the 'honey it has ! gathered it contracts the muscles of the stomach, in which act the honey is ejected through the mouth. As to bee food, it is various in kind, con- | caught trying to gain information /SSUOE largely of the honey it so pa- | mide of tiently makes for others. Not So Very Wrong. "Spell ferment and give its defini- tion," requested the schoolteacher. . ¥F-e-f-m-e-n-t, ferment, to work," | | a diminutive maiden. , "Now place it in a sentence so that I may be sure you understand its meaning," said the teacher. "In summer I would rather play ut of doors than ferment in the Nothing is more painful 'han the antics of a fat womsn trying to act RE a ems NR el ens | peace talk during the last few years i that it needs just such a spur to rouse it to the practical needs of the | all its martial strength for the over- oom % | throw of the enemy. Bas. 'should drop bombs on the Houses of force of gravitation. Unless the marksman is exceptionally fortunate he cannot hit what he aimg at. He strikes therefore in haphazard fashe fon. Third--Nearly always these aerial raids are conducted at night, which adds still further to the likelihood ZEPPELINS OVERESTIMATED, ~ German Aircraft Cannot Do Serious Harm, Says Hudson Maxim. Hudson Maxim; the famous war ex- pert, inventor and author, has the fol- lowing to say about the Zeppelin air of failure. raid on England: Fourth--The Zeppelin is a slow, The German air raid on England unwieldy craft and is therefore ex- fully demonstrates the impractica- posed to counter-attack from the bility of the Zeppelin as an engine of mere agile aeroplane or the fire of war. Germany has been threaten- high angle guns from the earth. ing to blow up the British Isles with I believe that the Germans must the bombs that her great gas bagf® have realized that their aerial war- might drop out of the iieavens, and 1 ships could mot really work much dare say many thousands of timid material harm and so planned these Anglo-Saxons have prayed against the raids more for their moral effect coming of that fatal day. upon the British. In this I believe Now at last the much vaunted and Germany has made a great blunder. long-anticipated Zeppelin invasion She has miscalculated the nature hag come, and what is the result? and temper of the Anglo-Saxon lion. Four or five peaceful citizens killed Most times the great beast appears and a few thousand pounds of pro- more or less stolid and does not show perty damage. Indeed, I believe thir | stealth. But twist his tail and you sort of fighting which Germany find a roaring monster. The Zeppe- thought would throw the 'British in- | Jin raid will do just this, to a state of terror and perhaps Parlor Stunts, hasten the day of Teuton victory, } will do England more good' than Prepare a large circular cardboard harm. target, and to this affix as many dark It will arouse the British to the red or blue bullseyes as there are still greater need of being armed to guests, having back of each bullseye the teeth. It will encourage enlist- J tiny slip of paper on which is writ- ment, England has had so much top directions for some sunt, such as whistling a tune, singing a song, | standing with the face in the corner (or any trick which suggests itself to the hostess as likely to amuse the Provide a bow and arrow and ask each guest in turn to shoot at the target until an arrow pierces some one of the bullseyes. The play- er then takes the slip of paper which his arrow has pierced and stands in | readiness to perform the stunt writ- | ten upon it, although he must not tell time----to the necessity of mustering I was asked not long ago what would happen if a German dirigible Parliament or Westminster Abbey. questioner was a man who had great faith in aerial attacks and be- tied by raids of fire out of the skies. amusing the company. I laughed at him. I said that even = p it 2 Scopetin should drop the mest | Buying Kitchenware. powerful explosive that cou! Cars | Avoid buying ware which has by such aircraft into the very ,. " the Houses of Pariament en CCracks and Joints. where simply break some piece straight handles are better than the "bail" kind, which becomes Martha, if you what will you "Thirty-nine, 1 suppose," meekly t, bit not 'more than one in would likely be consolidated and con- siderably extendesl as the result of {'her- participation-in -the war. With | the Congo state im her possession Great Britain would possess a great strip, running almost due north gnd south from the Cape to the Mediter- ranean littoral of Egypt. She would | control the interior lake region of | the continent whose vast bodies of navigable fresh water are fairly eom- parable to the Great Lakes chain of Canada; the Congo valley, the gold ; and diamond reefs of South Africa, { and practically every mile of the im- { mense and rich valley of the Nile. Holland, Germany and Great Bri- tain are about equal partners in the awnership of New Guinea, the second largest island in the world, lying im- mediately north of Australia. In addition to the African holdings, Britain has vast colonies and rich protectorates the world over, includ- ing the great empire of India; France has colonies and . protectorates in India, China, South America, the West Indies, the North Atlantic, and | Indian and Pacific Oceans; Germany has-colonial possessions jn China and the Pacific Ocean; Russian despotism, hangs like a dark shadow over the two continents of Europe and Asia and presents a lon> coast line on the northern Pacific. This very rough outline of ele- ments which will have to be weighed when the world's peace is restored, will suggest the tremendous issues that hang on the contest. Almost Hurt Him. Two negro men were employed in tearing down a three storey brick building. .Ope negro was on top of th) building taking off the bricks and sliding them down a narrow wooden chute to the ground, some thirty feet below, where the other was pick- ing them up and piling them. When this latter negro was stooping over to pick up a brick the former acci- dentally let one fall, striking him directly on the head. Instead of its killing him, he merely looked up, without rising; and said: "What you doin' thar, nigger? You make me bite my tongue." m------ Destructive Power of Shrapnel. The shrapnel! is really a flying can- non which shoots its charge while in flight or explodes on contact. Its speed of 500,000 feet per second is produced by a pressure of from 30,- 000 to 35,000 pounds per square inch from the powder that expels it from the gun. Is charge exerts & pressure of from 20,000 to 25,000 pounds per square inch. The metal of its case has a tensile stréngth of 135,000 pounds to the square inch and an elastic Hmit of pounds per square inch. Wrong Diagnosis, "I like your face, sir," said tha inquisitive stranger. "It is a cheery face, a face with a mission; it is the face of a man who believes in reduc- ing the burden and annoyances of his fellow men. You're the sort of man who believes in banishing the shad- ows," the inquisitive man went on. "Nope," replied the little man, with a vigorous shake of his head. "You've lost me this time. T'm the man who puts up the awnings." Progression, Grocer--You gave that woman a potato too many when you measured out that quarter peck, my 'son. Bo Whats one potato, I'd like to 2 Grocer--One potato in a guarter peck! Four potatoes in a peck! Six- teen potatoes in a bushel! Sixt-en hundred potatoes in a hundred bush- els! Why, my boy, you'll ruin me it you kee) on. : | A Zeppelin Bas been wrecked in'Bel- gm while flving over the District of pres. It was heavily shot at and : a thousand can make {t tally with badly damaged Nothing worries a liar like having to toll the truth, on |. Egypt and lower Egypt are British. 110,000 This is the Box to get if you have any Kidney or Bladder Trouble T 's nothing else like it ¥ good, that will do good, There is only tion known as Gin tit at all dealers ibove, "GIN PILLS" box you art offered : "» tlogrether w ug I Ch . a box, 6 for s may also be had in under the n 1 catment sent free if you write National 1 and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited Gin Pils MM ame A CANADA Trade mark Columbia Grafonola's and records » MADE-IN-CANADA Furniture IRON BEDS | BRASS BEDS $2.30, $3.50 up $10.50, $13.50, $19 82.50 $3.50, ete, Matéresséi Felts, Marshall Sauitary. Ex. Couches, all steel, upholstered in Dinim, $10.50, $12.50, $18.00, RR. J. Reid, Phone 377 Leading Undertakeg

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