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THE FIRE FIEND.

HOW TO AVOID HIM. One of the finest sights seen in Australia for many a day was the fire at the bonded warehouse on Circular Quay in the month of January last. The fire broke out about eight o’clock, and, as Colonel John Hay put it, “ burned a hole in the night ” in a very short time. An hour later, the whole southern part of the city was illuminated by the glare of several thousand cases of kerosene, ignited and burning fiercely. Fire Brigades and water in abundance were of course immediately available, but the flames bad too good a hold, and were fed by a material far too combustible to yield to any human efforts. The building and its contents were doomed from the first, and all hope of salvage had ceased long ere tbo fire had burned itself out. Two or three days later, when tbe ruins had been sufficiently cooled down, and the removal of the outside debris had commenced, some 4000 cases of “Luxene,” tbe new illuminant, were discovered intact and uninjured by the fire which had raged so fiercely all around it. Any Sydney daily will confirm this statement, and householders desiring a safe and absolutely perfect light will do well to ask their grocer or storekeeper to send them “Luxene” instead of ordinary low-test kerosene. "Luxene” is available for all tbe purposes of kerosene; is packed in tbe same manner, and suits the same lamps. Especially should residents in the country, whore fire organisations are few and far between, insist on receiving “Luxene” as the safest and beat of all illuminating oils. AH grocers and storekeepers.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LT18910811.2.42

Bibliographic details

Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXVI, Issue 9489, 11 August 1891, Page 6

Word Count
275

THE FIRE FIEND. Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXVI, Issue 9489, 11 August 1891, Page 6

THE FIRE FIEND. Lyttelton Times, Volume LXXVI, Issue 9489, 11 August 1891, Page 6