Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS.
5
SENATE IS A UNIT J. WYLIE SMITH'S OWN STORY
I
V • V
Tells a 1 ale of Many Thrilling Adventures
+•+
He Fought Two Years for His Freedom
Poll Shows Overwhelming Senti
ment Against Naturaliza-
WASHINGTON. May 19.—If Japan
hoping to make a new treaty grant-
ng her natives citizenship in the
l’nited States, she is hoping in vain.
The New York American has taken
i poll of the Senate, which has the
M'le power to confirm all treaties,
and found the members all but unan
imously opposed to such a proposi
tion.
Senators Bacon and Hoke Smith, of
Georgia, are against it.
Of all who gave their views, only
one, Cummins, of Iowa, said he would
give thy Japanese the right they ap
pear to demand, and then only to
those now In the United States.
The Senator’s views follow:
Smith, Democrat, Arizona—No.
Robinson, Democrat. Arkansas—I
am opposed to it.
Works, Democrat, California—I am
against it.
Thomas, Democrat, Colorado—Of
course, I am against it.
Brandegee, Republican, Connecticut
Never.
McLean, Republican, Connecticut—
I am thoroughly in sympathy with
California in the Japanese contro-1
versy.
Democrat, Georgia—My
the question are well
Bacon.
views on
known.
Smith, Democrat, Georgia — The
laps should never be admitted to cit-
i enship with us.
Lewis, Democrat. Illinois—I have
never yet seen any proposition in
behalf of Japanese citizenship that I
could approve.
Sherman, Republican. Illinois—I am
opposed to it.
Kern, Democrat, Indiana—Of course
I am against it.
Cummins, Republican, Iowa—Let
those already in be admitted to citi
zenship, but I am opposed to unre
stricted Japanese immigration.
Thompson, Democrat, Kansas—I am
opposed to it.
James, Democrat, Kentucky—Never
should the Japs be admitted to citi
zenship.
Townsend, Republican, Michigan—
I am opposed to it.
Nelson, Republican, Minnesota—
The Jape have no right to be ad
mitted to American citizenship.
Vardaman, Democrat. Mississippi—
I would give citizenship only to cau-
* asians.
Walsh, Democrat, Montana—I am
opposed to it.
Norris, Republican. Nebraska—So
am I opposed to it.
Newlands, Democrat, Nevada—I am
against it.
Hollis, Democrat, New Hampshire—
Never.
Catron, Republican, New Mexico—
I am opposed to it.
Overman, Democrat. North Caro
lina—I am unutterably opposed to it.
Burton, Republican, Ohio—The Jap*
have no claim to American citizen
ship.
Tillman, Democrat. South Carolina
I am opposed to it now and for
ever.
Shields. Democrat, Tennessee—I am
absolutely opposed to it.
Sheppard, Democrat, Texas—If my
own State will not admit Japs to
citizenship, then I am bitterly oppos
ed to it.
Smoot, Republican, Utah—You bet
1 am opposed to it.
Swanson, Democrat. Virginia—I am
absolutely opposed to it.
Poindexter, Republican. Washing
ton—I am not in favor of admitting
the Japs to citizenship.
Chilton, Democrat, West Virginia—
I am also opposed to it.
Root, Republican, New York—I am
opposed to it.
Ashurst, Democrat. Arizona—I am
unalterably opposed to it.
Borah, Republican, Idaho — Or
course not.
Bristow, Republican, Kansas—l
would never think of such a thing.
Chamberlain, Democrat. Oregon-
Such a proposition would not be seri
ously considered by any one on the
Pacific Coast, at least.
Fall, Republican, New Mexico—1
am not in favor of such a proposi
tion. . T
Jones. Republican. Washington—I
should not favor citizenship for the
^Perkins, Republican, California—Of
course I should not agree to such a
thing.
Wylie Smith
as he is
to-day, a
mere phantom
of his
former
self.
10,000 Workers Are
Out at Philadelphia
PHILADELPHIA, May 19.—Over
10,000 union workers, men and wom
en, employed in various industries in
this city, are on strike to-day for in
creased wages, reduction in hours of
labor and the recognition of the
unions of longshoremen, stone ma-
som\ sugar refiners, teamsters and
textile workers.
There are over 3,000 longshoremen
on strike and the shipping industry
virtually is tied up.
Waters of Pacific
Are Let Into Canal
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
PANAMA. May 19.—Water from the
Pacific Ocean to-day filled a large
section of the Panama Canal. It was
let into the canal by the explosion of
32,750 pounds of dynamite that had
been loaded into the dike south of
Mtraflores locks.
Thousands of Americans witnessed
the destruction of the dike.
of it, patrolling the walla at regular
intervals.
In the center ore eight buildings
standing in a semicircle and*in front
of these is a two-acre playground.
The prisoners are paid if they will
work at the rate of 25 cents a day
Mex. If they don’t want to work
they are encouraged to take exercise
on the playground.
There is a commissary" owned by
the prisoners, the stock of which was
worth S3.75 when I was there.
The penitentiary is the manufacturing
center of the town, furnishing the
residents ttyeir bread, doing their
blaeksmithing. carpenter work and
everything else almost. That war-
At the right
top is
shown
Wylie Smith
as he was
when he
left Atlanta
two years
ago.
TALLULAH FIGHT
IT
Mrs. Longstreet Declares She
Will Continue Her Efforts to
Save Falls.
Mrs. Helen D. Longstreet Monday
sent The Georgian the following tele
gram from Washington:
The report printed that I had
abandoned the fight to save Tai-
lulah Kails is not true.
The struggle to save Tallulah
Kalis does not end with driving
me from the Gainesville post-
office. It does not end with the
dummy lawsuit which is being
pulled off In Rabun County, at a
special term trial four months
ahead of time and before the
lawyers employed by me, under
the direction of the men of Geor
gia who make laws for Georgia,
could have the case ready for
trial.
The struggle to rescue Tallu
lah Is Just In its beginning, and
if God lets me live that struggle
will never end untii the vandals
and pirates who are to-day crim
inal trespassers on the red old
hills of the land of my best af
fection have pitched their tents
in some other quarter of the
the world. It is true that they
have been successful in exiling
me from the land of my fathers.
But the -St. Helena to which I am
banished will not be so far away
that I can not be recalled. Re
called I shall be. ff not sooner,
then at last, at last, the red old
hills of the land on whose bosom
I was cradled shall open to re
ceive me, and within sound of
Tallulah’s endless anthems I shall
find sleep.
AMERICANS FLEE
WON $100,000 IN DAY ON
RACES, BUT DIES IN WANT
NEW YORK. *Jay 19.—Ed Gaines, a
former bookmaker and soldier of for
tune, who operated on both sides of
the Atlantic, is dead, practically pen
niless. Gaines, so the story goes, once
cleaned up 1100,000 laying against the
big bettors on the lawn at Gravesend
one day many years ago.
Transportation Provided for All
Who Wish to Leave—Anti-
American Feeling Grows.
Special Cable to The Atlanta Georgian.
MEXICO CITY, May If.—A number
of Americans to-day left Mexico City
through the instrumentality of Dr.
William H. Lllley, who had the fol
lowing advertisement printed in the
Herald Saturday:
All Americans wishing free
transportation home should send
their names and addresses to Dr.
William H. Lllley, Isabel La
C&tollca 69.
Dr. Lllley is the man who led the
Tepic relief expedition last year when
the lives of a number of foreigners
were menaced there by rebels.
Anti-American sentiment, owing to
President Wilson’s refusal to recog
nize Mexico, Is becoming more bitter
every day.
Rebels Closing In
On Port of Tampico.
MEXICO CITY. Mty 19.—A heavy
-force of rebels is closing in on the
port of Tampico. The insurgents al
ready control all the land approaches
to the port, thus cutting off the oil
supply of the railroads. Railroad traf
fic throughout ail the Northern part
of Mexico is netrly at a standstill.
The Government denied to-day that
it had entered into a compact with
Japan with reference to landing Jap
anese troops on Mexican soil in the
event of a break between the United
States tnd Japan.
Death Threats Made
In Paterson Strike
PATERSON, N. J., May 19.—Death
threats are being made by striking
silk mill operatives against the own
ers of factories unless all work ceases.
Savage rioting broke out at the siik
mills following an* order to the police
to arrest members of a mob which
was making a hostile demonstration
against the resumption of work there.
Another riot, led by women, broke
out in Main Street, where a woman
was so badly Injured that she had :o
be taken to the hospital.
William Haywood, Miss Elizabeth
Gurley Flynn, Carlo Tresca and other
members of the Industrial Workers of
the World, who are leading the strike,
warned the mill owners not to try
to operate with strikebreakers, de
claring that it would bring on fresh
violence.
UNION TO PHOTOGRAPH
MEMBERS IN OPEN SHOP
CHICAGO, May 19.—Every union
man who enters the plant of Lyon &
Heaiy, piano manufacturers, and
works alongside the non-union men
employed there will be photographed
and his picture will be hung In every
union hall in Chicago This action
was determined on by the officials of
the Piano and Harp Maker*’ Union.
A Physician’s Faith in
Eckman’s Alterative
Have used Eckman’s Alterative In
several cases of tubercular glands of
the neck, with excellent results every
time. In one case it cost me $50, for
the girl was put on it until she could
arrange to be operated on, and in a.
short time an operation was not
needed. I suppose your records are
Just as fine as of old. You know my
faith in it.”
(Original of this physician's letter
on file.)
Eckman’s Alterative is effective in
other forms. Read what Mrs. Garvin |
says:
Idaho Falls. Idaho.
"Gentlemen: I have gained twenty-
two pounds since last February and
my baby is in perfect health. I have
been waiting since she was born to
see how I would get along. I am now
doing all my work, have, been ever
since she was four weeks old, and I
am steadily gaining. I do not cough
or raise anything at all, so I think I
am completely cured of Lung Trou
ble.”
(Affidavit) MRS. M H. GARVIN.
Note—Mrs. Garvin has seven chil
dren.
(Above abbreviated: more on re
quest.)
Eckman’s Alterative has been
proven by many years' test to be
most efficacious in cases of severe
Throat and Lung Affections. Bron
chitis, Bronchial Asthma, Stubborn
Colds and in upbuilding the system.
Does not contain narcotics, poisons ,
or habit-forming drugs. For sale by
all of Jacobs' drug stores and other
leading druggists. Write the Eck-
man laboratory, Philadelphia, Pa.,
for booklet telling of recoveries and
additional evidence.
Jackson Man on Varsity Board.
JACKSON.—The news of the ap
pointment by Governor Brown of A.
H. Carmichael, of this city, as a mem
ber of the board of visitors to the
University of Georgia was received
here with interest. Mr. Carmichael
is a graduate of the State university
in the class of 1907.
The following article was writ
ten by J. Wylie Smith, the refugee
president of the defunct Com
mercial Loan and Discount Com
pany, who, after evading extradi
tion during two years of service
in the insurrecto army of Gen
eral Orozco, in Mexico, returned
to Atlanta to stand trial because
he is dying with tuberculosis—a
phantom of his former self.
By J. WYLIE SMITH.
1 have decided to tell my story ex
clusively through The Georgian—and
whdt a story it is!
It is brimful of intrigue and treach
ery, battle and blood, and the horror
of slow, certain death. As I lie on
my cot in the hospital quarter of
the Tower it seems too hellish for a
human being to have endured such
experience on earth. I would that I
could close my lips in silence and pass
into forgetfulness.
Then I think of the days when I
was strong in heart and hand. None
of the old knights enjoyed such ad
ventures. About it all there was a
tinge of romance. A woman, who was
fair to look upon reached out a help
ing hand and saved me once. A faith
ful dog kept me from being cut into
ribbons. I have known friendship
that would have warmed the heart
of the most fiendish devil. I have felt
the inspiring triumph over unscrupu
lous foes.
But now I am penniless and dying.
M.v wife, the little woman whom I
love so dearly and who has stood by
me so loyally, is working in San An
tonio as a cook to support herself
and my little six-year-old girl. I
saw the child as I came through; the
mother was too ill to come to the
train.
God, how I would love to go and
SLEEP DISTURBING BLADDER WEAKNESS
BACKACHE-RHEUMATISM, QUICKLY VANISH
Even Most Chronic Sufferers Find
Relief After A Few Doses
Are Taken.
Backache, urinary disorder* and
( rheumatism are caused from weak
> inactive kidneys, which fail to filter
> out the impurities and keep me
i blood pure, and the only way on
( earth to permanently and positive-
j ly cure such troubles is to remove
) the cause. _
i The new discovery. Croxone,
' soon relieves such condition.*-’ be-
) cause it reaches the very roots of
( the disease. It soaks right into
; the stopped up. inactive kidneys.
\ through the walls and linings.
\ cleans out the little filtering cells
; and glands: neutralizes and dis-
solves the poisonous uric acid sub-
\ stances that lodge in the joints
) and muscles to scratch andirri-
late and cause rheumatism: l ea.-
* { the* inflamed membranes • f
) bladder, and cleans out ano
strengthens the stopped up. life
less kidneys so they filter and sift
all the poisons from the blood, and
drive it out of the system.
So sure, so positive, so quick and
lasting are the results obtained
from the use of Croxone. that three
doses a day for a few days are
often all that is required to cure
the worst backache, regulate the
most annoying bladder disorders,
and overcome the numerous other
similar conditions.
It i« the most wonderful prepa
ration ever made for the purpose.
It is so prepared that it i.° practi
cally impossible to take it into the
human system without results.
An original package of Croxone
costs but a trifle, and all druggists
are authorized to return the pur-
Croxone fails to
s. regardles
how long
what else
of
you
live with them. But I’ll never live
to pay the penalty for my offense.
Death before me is too certain. The
terror of it all is their struggle to sur
vive their awful poverty. But to
my story.
I’ll begin with the day 1 realized
my business was doomed to collapse
and 1 left Atlanta. 1 will tell all my
experiences—experiences that were
thrilling but ended irf a horror such
as only Edgar Allen Poe could pic
ture.
I Left With Little Money.
I left Atlanta at 2 o’clock on the
afternoon of June 14. 1911, with an
amount of money that was a mere
bagatelle—?ome folk?* believed and
still believe that I have had a large
amount of cash hid away somewhere,
and it has caused me trouble more
than once—I was obliged to depend
on friends to get from place to place.
I spent the first night at LaGrange,
stopped at Talladega, Ala.. Meridian,
Jackson, Clarkesville and Lula, Miss.
In Helena, Ark., I wrote to my brother,
Berry Smith, and decided to wait for
an answer. 1 had not stopped long
enough for a newspaper to catch me
and I did not know what the situation
in Atlanta was. My brother’s letter
enlightened me as to the anger of
my former associates and I hit the
trail again.
At Tucumori, New Mexico, I wrote
and waited for another letter from
home. I learned they were after me
and I wasted no time getting across
the border.
I Reach Mexico.
On July 4 I arrived in Chihuahua, a
city of some 35,000 people in the State
of Chihuahua. This event and an
other on the same day the following
year have made July 4 a more im
portant day to me than the anniver
sary of American independence. It
was the begir/iing of freedom then
and the next year, not only for me, but
through me for others.
I had no money and at first I
strolled the streets* bewildered and
despondent. Then I ?*pied a hotel,
the Robert&on House. I have always
been able to talk, no matter how di
lapidated or downcast I was. So I
brushed into the hotel with as confi
dent an air as I could assume.
A dark, keen-eyed youth was lean
ing over the desk. Well, before I
went to bed that night I was calling
him “Honolulu George.” He took
me into his room and fed me at his
table. Then I began to look for work.
Promised a job In a lumber yard I
found a boarding house—run by a
Mexican ‘■•enora. While waiting for
that job “Honolulu George” lost his.
1 persuaded the kindly old woman to
let him live with me.
Mexicans are the most hospitable
people in the world as long as you
treat them square. But they want
what you owe them. When I failed
to get a place with the lumber com
pany and George’s funds gave out,
our trouble began.
George told the woman he had writ
ten his father, a wealthy man in
Honolulu, Hawaii, to send him money
and that the “good ship” would soon
arrive.
We had met a man by the name of
A. A. Franke and he found out about
the money we were expecting.
Oh. that little misstep has impressed
me how important little things in life
are.
Unless you have a box at the post-
office in Mexico, notice that there
is mail for you is posted on a bulle
tin If your name appears on that
list you < all cn the postmaster and he
gives you what is for you. It de
veloped laU . that as soon a** Franke
iearned of our plans he began watch
ing mat imi, aud be regarded
for his efforts, but not by money, at
first.
The letter he got was for me, tell
ing of my affairs in Atlanta.
Wise as to my past, Franke came
to me and told me I was about to
be arrested by a bunch of crooks for
a $600 reward that was offered. He
said it would take $1,000 to protect
me and he even wrote to my people
.here about it, posing that he was
shielding me.
It came to an issue In my room
one night. I told him he was a crook,
and grabbing an iron bar. rushed at
him. He fled but did not drop his
persecution.
Soon afterwards I Was arrested by*
the jefe, the chief of police, on orders
of Ambassador Wilson. Franke had
written him., Failing to get the $1,000
he was scheming to get the $600 re
ward.
1 submitted and probably would
have been Iwick in Atlanta within a
few w 7 eeks had not Franke acted s'tich
a crook. He came to me in jail and
posed as my friend, hut he was so
zealous before the American consul
to get the reward that the consul’3
suspicions were aroused.
The consul called on me and I
tell you I was glad when I discovered
he was a Georgian, Marion Letcher,
from Conyers, lie gave me money
and paid he wanted to help me in any
way he could.
A complication arose when my land
lady demanded her board money. I
owed her $75 “Mex.—$37.50 in Amer
ican money—and they can imprison
you for debt in Mexico. I was al
ready in jail, but “Honolulu George”—
God bless him- advised that if I re
fused to pay and was held on a
charge of debt they could not send
me into -the States. But I wanted
to pay that woman—despite the fact
that i owe her yet.
George had got a job at $5 a week.
Anticipating his check from home he
told the woman he would pay her
within ten days.
That promise caused George’s flight,
for Franke got his money ae be had
got my letter. Ponce, the old woman,
put the jefe after him. A year later,
when I returned to Chihuahua in
triumph I looked for him everywhere
but could not find him.
Franke Calls Again.
I was feeling very bitter over this
when Franke called to see me at the
prison and advised that I should not
resist extradition. I boiled all over
and tried to get hold of him. But
he was too sly. He slipped out of;
the jail like an eel, wriggling from
my grasp. And that was the last
I ever saw of him.
I learned later that General Orozco
had had his partner shot as a thief.
General Orozco told me the last time
I saw him that,if he ever laid hands
on Franke he would have him shot.
If Franke and I ever meet again
one thing is sure—one of us will die.
Somehow I made friends easily
with the Mexicans. Therefore I
was more angry with the men who
proved treacherous. 1 did not go
there to join a revolution hut to live
peacefully, hoping to. soon bring my
wife and child to me. When Franke
and others wrecked my plans I was
exasperated. The local paper came
out with a front page story that I
had offered the jefe $800 in gold to
free me. I was facing an indefinite
term amid what I thought to be the
most terrible of all horrors—a Mexi
can prison.
That belief brought me the most
pleasing surprise of my life. Mexico
would do well to model after our
court system but America’could learn
much from Mexican prisons.
The State prison of Chihuahau is
a flfteen-acre tract about a mile from
town surrounded by a 20-adobe, con
crete wall. This wall is twelve feet
thick at the bottom and six feet
thick at the top. with a guard station
at each of the four cornel-. A com
pany ot militia is always in charge
den is a keen grafter and he is get
ting rich.
Philip Baber, a rather prominent
man, discovered that I was a Mason.
He came over to see me and after
that all went well.
(Continued in The Georgian to-mor
row.)
IN MOTHER’S MEDICINECHEST
arc standard remedies which have '
stood the test of time—remedies ■
which their mothers and grand- ;
mothers had used before them,
such as Lydia E. Fhnkham's Vege
table Compound, which for nearly
forty years has been curing the
women of this country from the
worst form of female ill's; merit
alone could have stood such a test
of time and won such an enviable
record.
Keep your jelly closet
free from roaches
WWWWV F° r Coolness : Woodweb and Komi Porch Shades
RICH & BROS. CO.j
1 ———■ 2
All Hand-Embroidered & Lace Linens |
In the 30th Semi-Annual Linen Sale at
Rich’s 30th Semi-Annual Linen Sale is
to-day in full swing. It will grow better
with the days. It always has in the pre
vious 29 sales—we’ve taken good care that
it will in this 30th sale. For we offer such
wonderful inducements as
All Our Fancy limb’d & Lace
Trimmed Linens at Half
and the greater part of the regular stock at sharp reductions of a fifth to a third or more.
The fancy linens at half price include all our French and German hand-embroidered lin
ens, and all our fancy lace-trimmed linens. Variously in centerpieces, scarfs, squares,
d'oylies, lunch cloths and decorative pieces. Interest to-morrow will center in the
Handsome Round Lace Cloths at Half Price
These cloths arc in beautiful specimens of Florentine Lace, French Cluny Lace,
Russian, Antique and Austrian Cluny Laces. All at just half price. Diameter 45 in.,
54 in., 72 in., 81 in., 90 in.
Former prices $12.50, $20, $30, $40, $50 up to $125.
Now just half, $6.25, $10, $15, $20, $25 up to $62.50.
(Linens—Main Floor, Left Aisle j
No vermin can thrive
where CN is used, because
CN gets into the cracks
and corners and destroys
the breeding spots.
CN, in addition to being
a powerful cleanser, is a
disinfectant live times as
powerful as carbolic acid,
but safer to use.
Keep a bottle
kitchen shelf.
Many leading
hotels and cafes
use CN regularly.
All firoeem, I>rn«in1«'
and Department Stores
10c. 25c, 50c, $1 jrr:
The yellow package
with the gable-tcp.
West Disinfecting Co.
Atlanta. Ga.
CHICHESTER S PILLS
THE DIAMOND BRAND. a
r4
i Rkn no oiHer. liur of roar Nr
OrufalM. Ask for C' III-C IlKH.’
DIAMOND I1RAM) DILLS,
i?
THE DIAMOND BRAND.
L»4lra! A»k yoar Druggist for i
t bl-cbM-ler’i Diamond Braid/
l*1H* >»» Krd »nd told roeUlllcN
boxes, sealed with Blue Ribbon.
1 alt* no o*her. Buy nf yoar
■‘■TEW I
years known Rest. Safest. Always Reliable I
SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHf R5 ,
$6.50 Norfolk
Coats $4.95
Special New York purchase—
just in; now advertised for the
first time. Jaunty Norfolk jack
ets or short coats to supply the
needed protection on outings,
early morning walks or cool
nights.
Artistically developed In a fine
soft red or blue flannel in the ap
proved Norfolk style. Uarge white
pearl buttons. Sixes for misses ami
young women up to 36.
$15 Eponge
Suits $9.95
Smartly tailored suits in the
popular eponge or ratine. Sim
ple cutaway styles. Delightful
for summer wear and traveling.
Pink, white, blue, tan. brown,etc.
$25 to $30 Suits
Brand New Wool $14.05
Suits that went on sale for the
first time to-day. Light colors,
white with black or colored
stripes and staple blues and
blacks. All sizes.
A Summer Dress
of Ratineat $ 11.95
which is just about half of the
real worth. A maker’s surplus
stock. White and colors. Trim
med in pleasing ways—choose
the style you like best.
( Ready-to ~ Wear. Second Floor)
Big Sale of Stamped Goods
You will be pleased with quality of the pieces and
the little price. Choose from
50c, 35c and 25c pillow tops—\
staftiped on linen, burlap, linen
crash, and art denims.
25c centerpieces—all linen, pret
tily stamped, easy to work. Stamp-1
ed for French, eyelet and heavy em-/
broidery.
25c aprons—semi-made of lawn, \
prettily lace trimmed.
19c laundry bags—stamped on
mercerized repp in tan or white. /
$1 Gowns 59c
Stamped nainsook gowns,
semi-made, need only to be
embroidered. Pretty pat
terns. easy to execute.
75c Shirtwaists 39c *
Fine French and Irish all-
Unen heavy linen stamped
for French, eyelet, Punch
work embroidery.
50c to $1 Stamped Goods at 29c jp
All these goods are stamped on medium and heavy *=
round thread linens—warranted pure linen. All per- 5^
feet: merely a maker’s discontinued designs. 3c
75c and 85c scarfs, 18x45, 18x54 in. OQ JJ'
50c to $1 centerpieces 27, 30, 36 in. £••*** ^
Girls’ 25c & 50c Stamped Dresses %
Union brown linen, white pique and white 1 t
repp. Sleeves and front stamped for various ^
kinds of embroidery. 15c doesn t cover the bare cost
of the materials. *C
Finished & Unfinished Pieces of
Royal Society Goods : Half Price
Unfinished pieces are package goods in discontinued Sc
patterns: finished pieces are the 1913 sample pieces. J,
(Main Floor, Center.)
fWVWNWMMM M. RICH & BROS. CO.