fThe Duke de Montpensler Is accused
by ParlB newspapers of plagiarizing
a book he recently published.
CnrM01dSorM,l)ther RemxIlM Won't Cane
Tb? worst cu?i no matter ot how long standing,
sr? cured by the wonderful, old reliable Br. Porter a
Antiseptic Healing Oil. Hellaraa pain and beats
M the same time. Tic, fOc. tl.QU.
Up* and Downs.
"I think the office force has been
doing some shaking down."
"Yes, it does need a shaking up." j
DORS YOUR HEAD ACIYTCT
Try Hicks' CAPUDINK. It'a liquid ?plena
ant to take?effect# Immediate?good to present i
Hick Hendachea and Nerrous Headache# also.
Your money back If not aatlafled. 10c.t tbc. aad
50c. at tnedlclu# atoren. Adv.
Her Interest.
"Your mother asked me If I smoked
cigarettes. Does she disapprove?"
said the fiance.
"Not at all. She's saving coupons,"
said the fiancee.
A Heroine.
"Is she ardent in the suffragette
cause?" i
"She is. I know for a fact that her
father asked If she wouldn't rather
have a French poodle than the ballot,
and she refused."
FAR RETTEn Tit AN QUININR.
Ullxlr Uabrk curus miliaria where I
quinine fails, ami It can be taken with
impunity by old and young.
"Having suffered from Malarious Fever
for several months, getting' no relief
from quinine ami being completely
broken down In henlth. 'Kllxlr llabek'
effected a permanent cure."?Wllliain
F. Marr.
ICIIxir llabek, 50 cents, all druggists, or
Kiouzewaki & Co..Washington, D.C. Adv.
Oh, That Was It.
"Where'd you get the black eye?"
"He was brngglng that he had the
finest boy In town."
"But a man should be excused for a
little vanity "
"But he was making his brag to a
mail who had a boy of his own."
it
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every Vittls of I ^
CASTOHIA, a safe and sure remedy for
Infants and children, and ass that It f
I
iu woo cur u?er iiu iears.
Children Cry for Fletcher's Caetoria I
Ready Thrift.
Kirby Stono?I hate to mention It,
dear, but I inuet tell you that business
has been awfully poor lately. If you "
could economize a little In dresseswear
something plainer.
Mrs. Stone?Certainly, dear. I shall
order some plainer dresses tomorrow.
?Puck.
Foolish Self-Condemnation.
No comfort for the living or the
dead can be won from vain self-con- j e
demnatton. No consolation can be a
gained while you nurse the imagining 1 b
that a certain trouble might have been f<
avoided. What we have to do Is to a
try to escape from other troubles that j o
are truly avoidable?troubles of a w
useless remorse, a present neglect, a
listless apathy that will not reach a
forth for the good things still to be fi
gathered.?Exchange. i g
? h
Vacillating. h
At a dinner not long ago Thomas u
W. law son was talking on the sub- v
Ject of ?ucce.8H. j p
"Success in Finance," said IawBon, j o
"Is due In a great measure to prompt p
action. The doubting, hesitating. Ham- j a
let type of maji had best keep out of u
finance. He is quite sure to be b
swamped. The street hasn't much | tl
uBe ror mm. I had a boyhood friend h
of this typo named Grimes. He was f(
a falterer, a doubter, a Hamlet of the h
most exaggerated type. g
"One evening I stopped to call on w
him and found him in a deep study,
bent over a white waletcoat, lying on n
a table. g
"'Hello, Grimes,' I said. 'What's the n
mutter?" d
" 'This waistcoat,' he replied, hold- c
lng the garment up to my view, 'it's 8
too dirty to wear and not dirty a
enough to send to the laundry. I v
don't know what to do about it.'p
Everybody's. v
c
MEMORY IMPROVED. e
Since Leaving Off Coffee. o
p
Many persons suffer from poor
memory who never suspect coffee has
anything to do with it. n
The drug?caffeine?In coffee, acts u
Injuriously on the nerves and heart, v
causing imperfect circulation, too d
much blood in the brain at one time, t
too little in another part. This often p
causes a dullness which makes a good t
memory nearly impossible.
"I am nearly seventy years old and .
did not know that coffee was the
cause of the stomach and heart trou- "
ble I suffered from for many years, b
until about four years ago," writes m
Kansas woman. s
"A kind neighbor Induced me to p
quit cofTeo and try Postum. I had
been suffering severely and was
greatly reduced In flesh. After using
Postum a little while I found myself "
Improving. My heart beats becamo 1
regular and now I seldom ever no- a
tlce any symptoms of my old stom- s
ach trouble at all. My nerves are s
steady and my memory decidedly ?j
better than while I was using coffee, i,
"I like the taste of Postum fully as tl
well as Coffee." I
Name given by Postum Co., Battle \
Creek. Mich. Write for booklet, "The y
Road to Wellvllle."
Postum comes In two forms.
Regular (must be boiled). v
Instant Postum doesn't require ?
boiling but Is prepared Instantly by v
stirring a level teaspoonful In an or- v
dlnary cup of hot water, which makes n
It right for most persons. r
A big cup requires more and some n
people who like strong things put In i
a heaping spoonful and temper It with a
a large supply of cream. h
Experiment until you know the a
amount that pleases your palate and t|
have It served that way In the future.
"There's a Reason" for Postum. "
L
J
I Know of One Argument Which Will
glary Doi
ill THE
OLD-IIMEBURGLAR
Frenchy" Rooney Reviews His
Career and Tells Why He Became
a Burglar.
By WILLIAM ("FRENCHY")
ROONEY.
New York.?I have been a burglar
vur since 1 was fourteen years old,
nd I know the business from top to
ottom. There Isn't a genuine proRBlonal
In the country that I am not
cqualnted with, and at some time or
ther I have not worked side by side
ith the most of them/
Until 20 years ago burglary was
pretty good business; that is, so
ir as any kind of crookedness can be
ood business. In the last few years,
owever, a whole lot of things have
appened. People have begun keepig
their valuables in safe deposit
aults. There have been some big lrnrovements
in police methods. Most
f all. the general public has come to
ay some attention to criminals intead
of Just sending them to prison,
rherfe they are bound to get worse intend
of better. The result has been
hat burglary as a trade has grown
?sh and less profitable and the young
ellows, instead of starting into it.
ave either turned straight or
one into some safer kind of crooked
fork.
I think 1 am right in saying that
ine-tenths of the professional burlars
alive today are old-timers like
nyself. We got our training in the
ayB when people kept the bank acount
under the bed. We used to have
ome pretty soft pickings, all right,
nd if things were still as easy as they
zero then 1 don't think all the po- i
Ice and prison reform in tho world
rould do any good. Hut times have
hanged and the profits aren't big
nough any more to attract the kind j
f men who turn their work Into a ;
rofesslon.
I don't say all the present-day Jobs
re pulled off by old-timers. There's
lot of work done now, Just as there
,as 20 years ago, by kids. The
Ifference Is that under tho old condl- |
ions the kids generally turned into
rofessionals, while, as things go now, |
hey get caught after a job or two,
nd when they've done a litle stretch
n state prison either reform or get
nto some line of work that pays
letter and coats less.
You can take my own case, for in- j
tance. I was a fourteen-year-old kid,
eddling papers on the street, when
Ked" lx?ary picked me up and taught
ie the business. You wouldn't see
nything like that happening now.
'he Juvenile societies would get busy
nd queer the game before it got
tarted. If tbere'd been a Juvenile
nriotv iA vaaro " ? ?1 -L* 1
? ? .? uisu i iuikiii nuvc
ieen saved a whole lot of trouble An
L wan, I learned the business under
no of the best professionals In the
ountry, and when I was eighteen
ears old knew enough about It tc
tart out on my own hook.
Even then If things had been the
kay they are now I might have turned
traight. I didn't have what you
vould call the criminal Instinct. 1
vus a pretty bright kid with a quick
nlnd, lots of health and a knack of
naking friends. I didn't have any
nore bad habits than the average boy.
liked to wear good clothes and chase
round with the girls, but I didn't
tave any desire for drink and things
.long that line. I came of honest.
iard-worklng parents, and the chances
re that with half a show I'd have
r ;
Convince the Average Man; Bur- j
san't Pay."
<
J
I tur:.ed out the same way myself. The j
actual business of stealing didn't
make any hit with me; Pknew It was
wrong and that there couldn't any (
good come of It. Right hero I want ,
to say that 1 feel the same way about |
stealing today, although I have been (
a thief all my life, anu If I got out of j
prison would probably be one again. {
It wasn't the wish to do wrong that
made me a crook. It was Just that
I wanted money and burglary looked
like the easiest way of getting it.
It was easy, too. The first trick I
turned alone netted mo $450, and at
that I only got about a third of the
real value of my haul, owing to the
fact that I did not know any reliable
fence and had to dispose of my stuff
to a pawnbroker. 1 then tied up with 1
a couple of experts named "Chuck"
Sullivan and Jim Rice?both dead now
I ?and we toured the country together
averaging $200 or $300 each a week. :
No professionals alive could do that
now let alone a kid Just starting in at
the business. When we got into a
house all we had to do was to locate 1
the place were they kept the Jewelry
and we were ready to beat it with a
good profit. That wouldn't work now. 1
because most people who have valu- '
able Jewelry keep it in the safe de- 1
posit vault. Hut it worked then, 1
and for six years I fnade money as <
easy as though I were picking it up
out of the street.
In 1883 I dropped for my first ex- 1
perlence in prison. I had got into a
house in New York city, and while 1
going through it was surprised by the
return of the owners. There were two
men. I put up the biggest fight of my
life, but they got me. I pleaded guilty '
to a charge of burglary, and was sentenced
to Elmlra reformatory. I want
to say right here that it would have 1
been better for myself and better for
the community if I had been sentenced
to die. Any reform I had in
me was soon taken out. The reformatory
is still bad, but in those days it '
was simply a school of crime.
It's a funny thing, when I stop !
to think of any of the fellows I've
worked with, it's fifty to one that I
met them in prison. Two months after '
I got out of Elmira I was working 1
with the former Lew Warner, who
while I was behind the bars had (
coached me for the examinations '
which I had to take before I could get
my parole! For years afterward I
kept remeetlng old prison mates, and 1
on at least two occasions when I had 1
determined to turn over a new leaf it
I was theso meetings which put me
I back where I hurt utnrioH vt.
? wu. ij' ilKl
my pals have been men I have met In 1
Klmira, Sing Sing or Dannemora?not 1
the people 1 have, become acquainted
with on the outside.
"It will be this way, I suppose, just
as long as prisons exist. Only those
who are acquainted with such condi- 1
tions can realize the advantages of the i
present system of y?iroling first of- 1
fenders. Any way 1 look at it the state '
was foollbh to send1 tne to Klmira. It
didn t impress me with the majesty of '
the law. because I got out by a trick. 1
just as lots of others do. Lew Warner
not only coached me for my exainlna- <
Hons but framed it up with a friend s
on the outside?a fence?to vouch for
my future good behavior. It was a i
careful frame-up and it worked. It's
Just as well that it did, because the i
reformatory wasn't teaching me anything
but bad. There were oat'ial
abuses, just as there are and always i
must be In all prisons, and these made i
me hate society. I
Now, I had been a thief for a good I
many years, but I hnd never before I
felt it was justified. After my re- ?
formatory term I always excused myself
with the thought that 1 was getting
back at society. My three bits in
Sing Sing and Dannemora?I have t
spent about 15 years In prison
altogether?served to strengthen this '
feeling. Experience has taught me I
that 99 out of every 100 professionals
feel the same way.
Any one can see that this Is a bad
thing. The recent prison reforms have
done a good deal to remedy It, but it
can never be made completely right
until things are fixed so that every
prisoner will feel be is getting a
Bquare deal. I don't mean by this that
he ought to be given feather beds and
porterhouse steak, but I do think that
he should be treated a little more like
a man. He ought to be paid, for instance,
at the rate of five or ten cents
a day for his labor, so he will have a
little money when he gets out. But
this is a long subject and 1 will not
Bay any more about It Just here. A
good deal has been done, and at any
rate conditions are a whole lot better
than they used to be. In proportion,
I think, to their future improvement
the number of professional criminals
will grow less.
About eight months after leaving
Elmira I invented the "gas Inspector"
game. It was the best thing I ever
thought u;?. Under cover of wanting
to inspect the meter I would Blze up
a house, and if it looked worth the
trouble, come back later and go
through it. If the opportunity was
good I sometimes did my work on the
spot. It was a good game and made
me many thousands of dollars, but.
like all such things>. It finally played
lit. I havpn't tniinhoH If
? ?. *? I
or 20 years, but It was so good that I
still read occasionally of some amateur
using It with success.
This is a good point to Illustrate the
difference between the old-timer and
the modern burglar, so-called. The
aid-timer, being a professional, turned >
ill his brains to his business. The result
was that he invented new games. I
The "burglar" of today, on the other
hand, doesn't invent anything. He | .
simply plays the old games. As every- j
body, even the police, knows them, he (
gets nabbed.
1 made?and spent?a half-million
dollars in 30 years of burglary. If
i were starting out today 1 would be
lucky to average the wages of a day (
laborer. 1 know of one argument that
will convince the average man when
everything else fails. That argument, '
so far as my experience goes, applies
In an abstract way to all forms of
crookedness; to burglary it applies
In terms of cash as well. It doesn't
pay.
CRIME AMONG THE ANIMALS
- i
They Imitate All of the Many Varieties
of Human Wrong
Doings.
It has recently been asserted by followers
of Lombroso, the great specialist
of criminals and their particular
brain processes, that every variety of
human wrong doing tlnds its counterpart
In the crime committed by animals,
and birds, and insects.
Among bees, for instance, are found
frequent Instances of deliberate theft.
These thieves of the hive in order to
Bave themeslves the trouble of working
attack the workers in musses,
kill them, rob the hives, and then
carry off the booty. After they have
done that a few times they seem to
have developed a criminal taste and i
form into large and formidable bandit
colonies that terrorize all peaceful.
hard-working and law-abiding mem- !
hers of the bee family. Curiously
enough, It has been proved that the
bellicose members may be produced '
artificially by giving them honey and
brandy to drink. After a few doses of
the mixture they become irritable, disinclined
to work, and if the drink is
given to them for any length of time 1
they refuse absolutely to work and 1
when they become hungry, turn to
plunder and attack the well supplied
hives. i
Owners of doves tell stories of how
In every dove cote there are birds
that are too lazy to gather materials
for their own nests, but will try by
every means to steal that which has | 1
been gathered by their more energetic
companions.
We have also the word of a dlstin- )
gulshed veterinary Burgeon that in \ '
every regiment of cavalry one can \ I
find horses which rebel against all 1
discipline and let no opportunity es- ! 1
cape for doing harm to their own i <
kind. It is necessary, therefore, to
be always on guard and sometimes to i
separate them from the others, as ]
they will steal their companion's food ; ]
whenever opportunity presents. What 1
is perhaps the strangest of all is ; 1
that the skulls of such criminally in- i
clined beasts have an abnormal for- ' '
ination, the forehead being narrow and 1
retreating. i i
i
un Modern Man.
"The late Emerson Taylor, our coit '
sul at Fort of Spain," said a Waslr
mgton ollicial, "hailed from Dry Run- 1
ind he had u fund of happy Dry ltur 1
liumor.
"Taylor once compared a disgruntles <
brother consul to a Dry Run house 1
wife. 1
"This woman, he said, often took ?? ! (
jueer, disgruntled view of things. Thuf
ihe said one day: | '
" 'I don't think the prodigal son wai '
jo bad. after all.' 1
" 'He wa'n't no good to his family,' 1
said her husband.
" 'That's a fact,' said the Dry Run 1
woman, 'but when he got home, all the '
name, he knowed enough to keep his *
mouth shet. If he'd been like the twen- 1
tleth century man. by crinus, the first
thing he'd done would a-been to find '
Tault with the way the fatted calf was 1
looked.' " 1
Handing It Back. *
"Women are certainly trying hard '
to become man's equal."
"Oh. I think you wrong us. All the '
women I know seem ambitious to go <
forward rather than backward."
Mtbmtional
SUNMrSOKJOl
Lesson ;
(Br E. O. SELLERS, Director of Evening
Department, The Moody Bible In- ,
atituta of Chicago.)
LESSON FOR JUNE 8
JOSEPH FORGIVES HIS BRETHREN
LESSON TEXT-Gen. 45:1-15.
GOLDEN TEXT?"Behold how good
and how pleasunt it la for brethren to
dwell togethe*- In unity." Ps. 133:L
No story of the Old Testament Is
fraught with greater dramatic Interest
than that which is presented to- ;
day. Let us get the setting of the picture.
An opulent oriental court; that
man who next to Pharaoh exercised
more power than any congress or assembly,
and Into whose hands had
been placed the destinies of a kingdom
by earthly power and. the outworking
of the plan of redemption
by a divine power. Servants, power,
resources, all at Joseph's command.
Before him his brothers who long ago
gave him up as being dead. Outside
a great calamity resting upon the
people, and none prepared to meet it
except these of Egypt whose provision
was the result of the work of
this man of God. (L Tim. 4:8). Before
this man, us humble supplicants,
we see those who "entreated him deBpitefully."
Judah's speech was a
revelation to Joseph, it satisfied him,
and what need, therefore, for further
delay in revealing himself in his true
character?
Saving Love.
I. Revelation, vv. 1-3.?Excluding
all from his presence, saving his brothers,
Joseph gave full vent to his joy
and rejoicing. "I am Joseph; doth
my father yet live?" Their astonishment
was so great as to leave them
Bpeechless, and again haunting memories
condemn them to fear and foreboding
for they were "troubled in his
presence." We have here a beautiful
picture of forgiveness and saving love.
The exaltation of Jesus was to
give repentance to Israel through the
forgiveness of sins. Acts 5:31. Even
bc did Joseph bring repentance to his
brothers and forgiveness of their
wrongs toward him 22 years before.
Joseph's severe dealings with his
brothers aroused them to a full recognition
of their evil deeds and prepared
them to receive his pardon and
forgiveness.
But the cup is full, no longer can
he restrain himself, and with a loud
voice, so loud that it could be heard
without he erlert "I om
Small wonder that at such a proclamation
by him whom they had so
grievously wounded, "they were troubled."
So shall It be when the brethren
of Jesus shall "look upon him
whom they have pierced," Zech. 12:
10.
II. Reconciliation, vv. 4-8.?1he
greatness of Joseph is here revealed
In a clear, true light. He Interprets
to his brothers their own actions with
all that God has involved in it, which
muBt have been a great surprise to
his brothers. Joseph does not wait
for them to fall at his feet and sue
for mercy, but Beeks to allay their
fears, "Come near to me 1 pray^you."
These who by their wicked works
were rightfully alienated from him
are invited to draw nigh, Col. 1:21
and Matt. 11:28.
Joseph's Grace.
Joseph was as one who was dead
and out of that came life for those of
his own family as well us those outBlde.
Even so God has brought life to
many out of the death of Jesus, working
salvation for all out of the most
colossal and infamous crime ever perpetrated?the
criciilxion. Joseph wus
"sent" fv. 7), to save those very ones
(John 1:11). It was a "great deliverence,"
see Heb. 2:3. Here, again, we
see Joseph's Intimate relations with
God, "it was not you that sent me hither,
but God." That is the right way
to look at life, Rom. 8:28.
III. Proclamation, vv. 9-15.?The
news of this meeting catne to Pharaoh,
vv. 2, 16, with the result that
tie commanded Jacob and all of his
household to be brought Into Egypt
Having received good things themBelves,
they are commanded to go
with baste, and tell others. Matt. 28:7.
The first call is always "come" (v. 4),
and that is always followed by the
command of to "go" (v. 9). Joseph
was not ashamed of his old father and
his brothers in the days of his prosperity,
and added that when they
Bhould dwell in Egypt they were to
be "near unto me," see Phil. 1:23,
John 14:3. When the brothers reached
Jacob and told him that Joseph was
alive and exalted in Egypt he could
not believe them, and bis heart fainted.
Can we be surprised? Yet convictioi
was at hand in the shapo of
the wagons laden with the rich spoil
of Egypt, /v 21, 27, 28. Again God
appears to Jacob, 46:2, 3, and adds the
assurance of his own word.
Lessons of the Lesson.?The greatness
of Joseph's character is revealed
in the hour of tho fulfillment of hla
1 reams?tears, not vindlctlveneBa,
manifest the condition of his heart.
Jacob recognizes God's great - plan. :
and that its outcome is an evident
blessing for others as well as for himself.
There is no evidence of pride
bs Joseph interprets God's dealings,
nod has made abundunt provision for I
is in ChrlBt. This lesson is the re- j
oioo ?> uduoi mucr iu uiai ma
lesson llustrates the golden text r&thjr
than the text Illuminating the lesion.
SOLEMN WARNIN3 TO PARENTS.
rPl. _ nnn nnM fnt* K/>U>o1 W1 ^ I _ M _ _ ?
I lie ocaouu iw? uuuuitJ 19 ItlSL
approaching and you should at once
provide your home with King s Diarrhoea
and Dysentery Cordial. A guaranteed
remedy for Dysentery. Cholera
Morbus, Flux, Cholera Infantum
and ail kindred diseases. Numerous
testimonials on our files telling of
marvelous cures can be had by request.
Mr. Robert Yount, who is employed p
by me'at Fullers, N. C., was quite ill
recently with a stubborn attack of
dysentery. He was treated by physicians
without benefit, and continued
to grow weaker. Half a bottle of
King's Diarrhoea and Dysentery Cordial
completely cured him, and he said
unless he knew where more could-bo
obtained he would not take ten dollars
for the other half of the bottle.?A.
W. Fuller. ,
Sold by all medicine dealers. Prlco
25 cents the bottle. Adv.
Poor Fellow.
The pretty storekeeper was unpacking
and assorting some new goods
when her best young man entered.
She stopped behind the counter a moment
and arose with flushed face.
"I'm glad to see you're stocking up,"
he said.
There's an unaccountable coldness
between them now.
NO. SIX-SIXTY-SIX
This is a prescription prepared especially
for Malaria or Chills and
Fever. Five or six doses will break
any case, and if taken then as a tonic,
the fever will not return. 25c.?Adv.
They Seldom Brag About It.
"Mis Dobble is very modest about
her painting."
"Ahem! I believe most women are
like her in that respect."
The Reason.
"There is a great deal of snap and
go about Jlmson's business methods.'
"How so?"
"He makes rat traps."
HOW THIS WOMAN
FOUND HEALTH
Would not give Lydia ELPinkham'i
Vegetable Compound
for All Rest of Medicine
in the World.
Utica, Ohio.?"I suffered everything
from a female weakness after baby
ji came. I had numb
i|rf'mp>M | spells and was dizzy,
..had black spots be- v
wfiT i fore my eyes, my 1
~ <? X ?jpl back ached and I
* V was so weak I could
r > JM hardly stand up. My
' a c 0 was yellow?
'if/. A wJBmr even my fingernails
'V: | /'^|':| were colorless and I
v\ *11 '/ had'displacement. I
? |f/ / took Lydia E. Pink
- 'ham's Vegetable
Compound and now I am stout, well and
healthy. I can do all my own work and
can walk to town and back and not get
tired. I would not give your Vegetable
Compound for all the rest of the medicines
?n the world. I tried doctor's medicines
and they did me no good."?Mrs.
Mary Earlewine, R.F.D. No.3, Utica,
Ohio.
Another Case.
Nebo, m.?"I was bothered for ten j
years with female troubles and the doc- |
tors did not help me. I was so weak and
nervous tnat 1 could not do my work
and every month I had to spend a few
days in bed. I read so many letters about
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound
curing female troubles that I got
a bottle of it. It did me more good than
anything else I ever took and now it has
cured me. I feel better than I have
for years and tell everybody what the
Compound has done for me. I believe I
would not be living to-day but for
that." ?Mrs. Hettie Grkenstreet,
Nebo, Illinois.
j/"> Al'. makes, sold, rented and H
skillfully repaired. Rented Bfl
JjSjjSsK^x $5 for 3 months and up;
*525^^ rent applies on purchase.
American Typewriter Exchange, Inc.
Home Office, 605 E. Main SL, Richmond, Va.
liril I ,atc?t ernicl " Artist's Model" Tlepln ?c. fll'H
MrN HtHkinu I'arlMun drawn llf?-likr flgnrr! H
til L II T.flurHrffd, 3tfT IloweUHt-,Covington, KrBB
/t\ i/nnivo ?nd H|fd> ora<t*HS
tJ*..Ck IvUIImRa Finishing.
Almn orders Riven
[i|LS clnl Attention. Prices reasonable.^^^V
Service prompt. Sena for Price
minis tax exou. uubuitoi.
Classified Column I
POTATO PLANTS "NANCY HALl^^H
$1.50 per 1,000. Satisfaction. guara^^H
teed. Glenn Moore, Hawthorne,
NEW BEAUTIFUL RUGS, woven fiV^B
your old worn carpets, superior to
in service; plain or designed;
size. Catalogue fre?. Oriental
Co.. Baltimore, Md.