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Algerines at Law._ A ii 'hiori,a ,oi ,u of Alas. . I. Iagruder, to mortgage. Tit 'he & Rogers., attor i ys.[4. Succession of Mr. and Mrs. A. Bau dier, petition to sll merchandise and ticxures at private sale. Edwin Schiele Distilling Co. vs. Frank W. Lahusen, $118.75 claim. Johnson & Fernandez. attorneys. ItiAI. FSTATE TRANSFERS. Succssioi of John Johnson and wife to 1lrs. .iary Schubert, 3 lots At lantic and P'ac:ifi Aves., Thayer and 'Ill, an. $27.",,0 cash. San,. It (to , .-r i Johnson, 2 lots in sa1tll" sill;ari', $1 .7,:; cash. Samen to Idali Savings and Home stead Assn. 2 Is samlle square as above, $I, ,ash. Charbonnet, no tary. Ferdinand Siretiby et als to the City of New Orleans. 4 portions fronting Od.eon street and (;en. M.le er Ave., do nation. Legier, notary. John Kleinkeunper to Lucas Lala, lot Plelican. Alix. lterllnda and Verret, $2.000) t-rms. Mahoney, notary. Widow Letitia .1. Shorey to Com nonwealth Ildg & Loan Assn.. lot D)elaronde. Pelican. Bonny and Seguin, $1,3010 cash. Commonwealth B. & I,. Assn. to Mrs. L,. J. Shorey. lot IDelaronde, Pelican avenue, Bonny and Seguin, $1,300 mort gage. Flynn, notary. Third Dist. Blidg. Asen. to Mrs. L. J. Shorey, lot Pa.ififc, Elmtra, Evelina and Eliza, $7t,) mortgage. Zengel, no tary. Mrs. Chas. Lea is to Ideal Savings and Homestead Assn., lot Belleville, Elmira, Newton and Homer, $400 cash. Purchaser to Vendor, same proper ty, $400 terms. Renaudia, notary. MIGHT FINISH THEM HERSELF Great Actress Given Opportunity to Show Wha* She Could Do In Way of Laundry Work. It IB related of Fanny Kemble that she carried the tragic air of the stage tnto everyday affairs. While in Bos ton she stopped at the Tremont house, and was accustomed to dine in her rooms at five o'clock. On one occa slon the waiter brought her dinner ten minutes too soon, and she make him take it away until the hour had struck. On another occasion she gave the ervant some clothes for the laundry. "When can these be returned to me, washed and reoned?" she inquired. "The day after to-morrow, madam, at noontime." "Be it so." was the dramatle reply, "at 12 on Wednesday." But on the hoar appointed the clothes had not been returned, and at tel minutes past noon a servant stood before her in response to the short ummons of the bell. "My slothe that werc to be re turne at 12 today-bring them."' "But, madam, we have not been able to ut them ready, owing to a diflculty to the laundry. You shall have them te-mrrow." "ring them now-they were prom bed tday. "I know it, madam, hut they are not tead7." "It matterso not to me; bring them lst as the are." The merant went out, and a few so m s later two me entered, bearlag a tuabl of mapsds and wet clothesL t It e the bouor, and went out. Cenurening Argument. OCertala people seem to arouse the rtO arguing in each other. Some es they are husb ad and wlfe: gNmtimes they are frlends, or merely aSO# satsmee. it bduUlly begins whea th people are involved in situatlons where their intaruts clasub. o they ague about those Interests. Gradu ally the state of amind excited by rg. ao becomes fed. It make the peo Ie argue even when there is no clasub t lnterest. Often they don't realse that thoey are arguling. They think they are mrely stating honest opl is What they are really doing is expressing resentment. Nearly al. ways it is feeuling that controls the l4ad..-Joh Barry io IHarper's B Su nower ueed. II B sm countries, notably in the s province. north of the Cauca. the nflower servee other par " SMs besides ornamenting gardens with Iti huge golden bosses. The Seed ar, used to make oil, which is emod in the manufactur, of soap ad bt cooklan. The stems and leaves are burd uad the ashe used to . e paM Lest year the snlower h r of the Caucaseus prortced 16, S ens of potash. Our Debt toLb Veme and prose in al apse han hemered the diltty of labor. Tbet i t o ar rman's undaunted saud amesas tell, as he ha won his way te by tetp to industrial mastry and t bamah evear the ore5 oe the al b a rneoet miemts e of tet L. atlli a t o vmLov r or toln * 14--b**Sto a O bbe. ,.. a' . - . *.P,? . - tolt. I liile2y et al to aiarco itosa ..ti, 4,,t ;,aid pow ion, Hlomer, New to(1. l, ivr and Brooklyn Ave., $1.300 l0.,. t, Mrs Alice R. George. lot . rli\ýi , \erret, Evelina and Opelousas, ..l.:;, tash. Mahoney, notary. .h.rry Kawood to thlt Realty and In vestment Co.. lot Eliza, Bonuny. Pow ider and Evelina. $:.00 (.ash. l)reyfous. notlary. Eli Rose et al to Jose Ruiz. lot Mon roe, Iapeyrouse, Franklin and Socra tes. $400 cash. O'Connor, notary. Cruciano Nicosia to Henry J. Sohae I fer. lot Belleville. Alix. Eliza and Val lette, $S00 cash. Hiennessey, notary. BI'ILDING PERMITS. Mrs. N. Charvouleau, owner, gener al repairs. 1012 Brooklyn Ave., $100. Richard B. Mlaher. owner, Albert Osborn, ontractor. repairs to property. 520 Patterson street, $985. O'Connor. notary. ('ONTRACTS. Mrs. Geo. Spencer owner. Felix J. Borne contractor, a double one-story frame slate roof cottage, Pelican Ave.. Alix. Verret and Bermuda, $1,800. B. Walter Borne, surety. E. I. Stenger, owner, rear canopy and rear shed building and general repairs, galvanized iron roof, 53:1 Pa cific avenue, $200. A. Bourgeois. builder. .MORTGAGES RECORDED. Ephraim McCullogh to Jose Ruiz, one note $187. one lot 5 th district. sq. 219, Teche, Lamarque, Nunez and Soc rates streets. O'Connor, notary. SALES. Eli Ross et als to Jose Ruiz. one lot and improvements, 5th dist., lot No. 9, rq. 19, Monroe, Lapeyrouse, Franklin and Socrates streets, $400 cash. O'Con nor, notary. BUILDING CONTRACT. Richard B. Maher and Albert Os born, property Patterson. Olivier, Amann and Delaronde, $985. Repairs and improvements. O'Connor, notary. WAITED FOR THE PERMISSION Little Ones, Tired of Church Services, Left Sacred Edifice as They Would the School. "When the late Philip Auld Harriaon Brown, rector of St. John's chapel, was a young man, he used to gq to Maine for the summer," said a Tria Ity trustee in New York. "Dr. Brown often told of an unforgettable incident connected with one of his first Maine sermons. "Two children had come to church alone, and the minister noticed them from the start of his discourse. They sat in a treat, high-backed pew, side by side, very solemn. "After awhile they got tired. Evi dently they thought that church eti quette was the same as the etiquette of the village school. They climbed down from their pew, and the boy too: his tiny sister by the hand and led her up the aisle..stopping In tror.t of the preacher. "'Please, sir,' he said, 'may we go home' "'Yes,' said Mr. Brown. "And they turned and soberly de parted, hand in hand."-Les Angels T'imes. MONGREL PIECE OF ARTISTRY English Captain's Head on French King's Shoulders a Curiosity in Isle of Wight. There was set up in the seventeenth eentury, at Yarmouth. Isle of Wlihi, what is probably the most curlou. piece o art extant, erected to the memaory of Sir Robert Holmes, a Brit ksh naval oeer of that period. The odd ireumstance is that the statue was not originally designed fo Holmes at all, but for a very diferent persmonage, no other, indeed, than Lams XIV. of France. This statute, finished uas to the fgure, I but t the rough as to the head, was being taken to France on san Itallan 'vessel, when it was captured by a British man-of-war commanded by Holmes. Upon pereeiving the uain ished condition of the statue, Ho mes with grim humor, compelled the artist, who had accompanied his work, to ehslel his (Holmes') head on the king's Ibody. And so it stands today. Holmes was eventually made goy ernor otf' the Isle of Wight, which tact accounts for the location of this, o grel bit of artistry. A "Le*tle Diffrenee," "Yes, sr, eUtlemen; thar's a leete difrrene between farmln' out wes sa' back here In old Varmont" sai Uncle 81 Eggmann to the cronies around the stove at the cross-roads store, on his return from a visit to hisl brother in Dakota. "Now, out thar la the west they don't thiak they've reelsly got a farm nless it totals about 2,000 or 4,000 acres; an' if they air raisia' stock they speak o' 5,000 head as eln' a 'leetle bunch o' cattle.' An' takes 'em 'bout half a day to hoe one row o' corn, the rows air so long, s' they harvest corn an' wheat enough ea .me farm to fill our town hll. Now, tht's a leoetle direat from what it is here tn New England, where we eal 20 acres o' ground, a couple o' dosen bas, an' a rooster, six or eight keows, Ua' a rosberry pateh, a farm? Yes, sir. gentlemen, tht's a turrible dil rence betweearn farmt~' east a' farm I' wrat-s most tarrible dirreaeei" Helmd Alwaysl la Dire Pr. The peat pmrt o d aas Is l et b w the level i the o SAVED BY QUICK WIT. Clever Rus of a Freneh Peasant Call ed For Ceneriptien. Two young men of a certain French village were called on to draw for a conscription. One only was wanted to complete the number, and of the two who were to draw one was the son of a rich farmer and the other the only child of a poor widow. The farmer made friends with the official in charge of the ballot and promised him a handsome present If he would only prevent his son from going into the army. In order to do this the official put into the urn two black balls Instead of one black and one white. When the young men came he said: 'There are two balls, one black and one white, in the urn. He who draws the black one must serve. Your turn Is first," pointing to the widow's son. The latter, suspecting that all was not fair, drew one of the balls from the urn and immediately swallowed it without even looking at it. "Why have you done that?" asked the official. "How are we to know whether you have drawn a black or white ball?" "Oh. that's very simple," was the re ply. "Let the other man now draw. If I have the black he must necessari ly draw the white one." There was no help for it, and the farmer's son. putting his hand Into the urn, drew the remaining ball, which, to the satisfaction of the spectators. was a black one. MUZZLING THE PRESS. A Much Favored Official Duty at One Time In England. There was a time in England when government officially viewed the press as a hostile power, to be destroyed If possible-to be curbed at any cost. In 1633 Roger L'Estrange, "overseer of the press," brought out his "Consider ations and Proposals In Order to the Regulation of the Press." He advo cated the severest restrictions for an thors and printers, as well as for "the letter founders and the smiths and Joiners that work upon the premises" and "the stitchers, binders, stationers, hawkers, mercury women, peddlers, ballad singers, posts, carriers, hackney coachmen, boatmen and mariners." A proposal of L'Estrange was that culprits convicted of having broken the law should be condemned "to wear some visible badge or mark of igno miny, as a halter instead of a hat band, one. stocking blue and another red, a blue bonnet with a red letter T or 8 upon it." A few years later L'Es trange went one better by declaring that newspapers ought not be allowed at all. He said that the reading of them "makes the multitude too familiar with the actions and councils of their superiors, too pragmatical and censo rious, and gives them not only an itch but a kind of colorable right and license to be meddling with the government." In 1685 L'Estrange was knighted. Chicago News. Seek knowledge as f thou wt to be re orever.--Heder. SAGG OR ZIMRI-WHICH? Demeetio Diffulty In the Cabin Passed Up by Brudder Ramehaek. ej WANTB to ax yo' advice. Brudder Ramshack," began an obfustl cated looking colored citizen. "Wants yo' to tell me. In yo' humble oplnion, bow to git out'n de melee I's in. l's so mixed in my mind dat -aw. dess lemme spaclate. Muh wife-broad, betty lady, as yo' knows-wants her rights, an' " "Dey all does, sah," interrupted old Brother Ramshack, who was no little of a philosopher. "Lady folks is all dat uh-way-wanmts delr rights." "But dis 'n gits 'em-rotches out an' snatches 'em away tum me. Dat's bher method of puhsoot-wants ber rights an' gtimt eml I done woke up In de middle o' de night an' found her goin' th'oo mah pants pockets-elsxty-l' cents, good money, In dem pants, too, "Why didn't yo' bop up an' lam her, Brndder 8aur" "Lam who? Yo' isn't talkin' to me, ahl Dat lady weigh nigh three han d'ed pounds. Nassah; de meanest I done was to set up in mub veratlee couch an' au her: 'Uh looky yuh, ladyl Don't yo' think yo' actin' sawtuh sm flar? What kind uh way am dat for a 'spectable mar'd 'ooman to be pub seedin'? An' she told me to shet muh meaont, uh-kase she was de 'joyln' her rights like de white ladles does. Well ah, dat made me ashy-did for a fact I'wus de last feather dat broke de Campbefllte's back. An' I hollered as I Jumped for de do' feticb-taked if I would sleep in de same edifee wid no eb-lh 0psson-I'd sooner sleep In de stable, I says. An' out de do' I went an' slammed it habd." "Ah-hah! Dat was de way to doe" "Was it? I 'skitvered dat it was staw min' outside-rain an' thunder an' igtanin'-plety! An' as de lady didn't call me back I hatter make mub blur good. So I boosted old Zlmrl, de bos. eut'n de stable, an' sot about doin' do best I could for mobse'L An' dea mob wife looked out an' seed de boes boonpad up dar in de stawm an' yell ed at me what did I mean, o'nesy sooun'rel dat I was. by treatin' po' old Ztmrt dat ub-way? 'Lady,' I hollered back with dignity, "It's eder me or ZlAmr. Once an' for de last time choose uh-twixt yo' husband an' dat hoer An' abe des th'owed de do' wide open an' yelled. Ubome on tin yub, Zmrinr. An' I axes yo', hab. asu a man o' de world an' a bradder In do Iodge, what'm I to do 'bout it? Whieb nb-way am I to tura In de 'mer gney.' "Go ahead an' git a dlvo'ee ftmn de lady; dat's what yo' getter do. An' bl goodnes-y' got plenty o arve ctIkon for it, too. Bradder Sagg." "Yasab. I s'pelon I hes: but. to telo de tNoo. Brudder Ramshack,. I kaln't uncaely bring mbuhse'f to do it. To see, 's had ar so long dai, she seems ik one o' do tumMbly"-Tom P. Hr gn Is Petk. bs. l, oweverm olde can a trr wish nq *wer. hP~~7· 3 i~r.i-F-'. ',*Yi.. kr~ 3 A Bit of Detective Work By C. L DAYTON. Copyright. 1910, by American Press Association. "Maggie, we're ruined!" "Oh, Harry, what is it'?" "Mr. Brant has been murdered, and I shall 1,e accused of the murder." "low? Why?" "We were together tonight since 8 o'clock in the bank. he to do some work on the statement to be made to the directors tomorrow, I to post my books. The Janitor saw us go in to gether. Brant worked in his private office, I at my desk. When I finished I went to him to ask If he was ready to go home. I found him lying on the floor dead, the carpet covered with blood." "And you came away without noti tying any one?" "Yes; the murderer will doubtless never be known. I will be arrested and made to suffer for his crime." The wife. trembling the while, thought what was best to be done and thought quickly. Presently she said. speaking rapidly: "Whether you were right or wrong in not calling the police. you have made a step which is Irrevocable. You must get away. Go and shave off your beard while I get some of my clothes ready for you." Half an hour later Henry Hunt left his house disguised as a woman. lie carried in a suit case male attire which he designed putting on as soon as be felt it best to do so. He was to notify his wife from time to time by a code as to his address. The murder was not discovered till the next morning. and, as Hunt had been with the cashier the night before and was missing, there was no doubt as to his being the murderer. Great sympathy was manifested for Mrs. Hunt. who had been left not only with the obloquy of her husband's crime resting upon her. but without support for herself and her children. She had had the night before the mur der was discovered to think over the matter and decided that it would be t best, when questioned, for her to say that her husband had come home at 10 o'clock, that he had gone out and she had not seen him since. Under exam ination nothing more thah this was to be got out of her. Mrs. Hlunt at once began the study of bookeeping and in a few months applied to the president of the bank where her husband had been employed for a position. Her request was granted. The new bookkeeper, on account of r her inexperience-so she told the of ficers of the bank-found it necessary to work nights. She was given per mission, and the Janitor was instruct ed to admit her whenever she desired to enter. Now, in all this there was a method. The more Mrs. Hunt thought over her husband's flight the more she was sat lsfled with the course he had taken. Not a scrap of evidence came up to incriminate any one else. It was be lieved that no other person could have entered the bank during the limit of time, and the murder could not have been done for the purpose of robbery, r for no funds were taken. She saw no - possible escape for her husband had " he remained and faced the charge of * murder. Detectives were for a time secretly *. put on the case by the president of the I. bank with a view to ascertaining a r motive for the killing of the cashier. But, no such motive being discovered, i the matter was dropped. There was Sa detective at work on the case of II whose efforts not a person connected with the bank was aware. Mrs. Hunt I' felt sure from the first that some one Sconnected with the institution had a committed the murder and that tbe e murderer had a motive. The most I' reasonable theory was that there was i' a secret between the cashier and the i, murderer that would explain the mo tive. SMtas. Hunt had been working but a few evenings when Horace Tit, .he bad bookkeeper, found it necessary to I- work nigbts also. He offered to help I Mrs. Hunt on her books, but she do ellned. One evening when they were I together Mrs. Hunt, who had brought - with her a sandwich and a bottle of a milk, ofered Tilt a glassu of the milk. I- He drank it and for several days aiter h ward was laid up with an illnessa. rI When he recovered he resumed his Smilght work on his books. He found L Mrs. Hunt there and said to her: e "There was emething In'that milk a yeo gave me to make me ill." S"Certainly there was. I put It o there." * "What for" asked Tilt turning pale t Mrs. Hunt raised the skirt of her Itres, unslung a revolver and laid It em her desk. Tben shre said: "To work on your books. Tom are n' soverlng up a large deficilency." t Tlt stood looking at her in terror. S"My husband'Is a fugitive for your . erime," added the woman. e Tft's head fell on his desk. b "P1 tell you what I'11 do," pursued a th woman. 'Il let you change places Swith him. Sign a confeMsion of the r murder and you may go into hiding." d The man took ten minutes to con d sider, then accepted the terms. r The nexat morning Tlft was midig. SMrs. Hunt suggested that his books he t examined. This was done and a de * Ilency of $100,000 discovered. Thekn * she produced the defaulter's confts STift was never caught. Huat was e Scalled aad put in his place and is now vice president of the beak. SIf. This would be a spleadid world t mo we could secure profits in any way that migsht increase the bardshtpl al Use Cotten a Fertilia'. The hul of e attom is used a Chi for fertiing apurpoe fr aS. lga about two dollars a t n i t. ~k~ll·~ t,. THE PILGRIMS' THANKSGIVING THE pilgrims landed, worthy men, And, saved from wreck on raging Theyr fell upon their knees and them ULpon the ai.,oritgires. In thankfulness they planned a feast On all thi c,iuntry might afford. (The gra'ce ,olur,,si an hour at least, Whence rose toe phrase "'Tbe festive bored.' ) And some throught.l g:\'ov of lino and oak Pursued the d.e. :mil .' iien s, All patriotic Yau ,kce f 1lk Unceasingly pursue tilh diugh. They bearded ibruin in hit lair Or stalked the stag in forests d ear. Alas, their festal dish was bear Or venison, though that was deer. Still, native viands pIleased tll(hem most The native maize, for that n;ws new. They ate the native boiled and roast And even ate the native stew. -Arthur Guiterman in Life. As He Heard It. The young man stood hesitating upon the steps until the shrill girlish voices died away and Alice opened the door. "Oh! Have you been here long?' she exclaimed. "Only about five minutes," he replied, availing himself in a hesitating man ner of her Invitation to enter. 'Then you heard us?" "Er-welil, a little, you know. I real ly couldn't help it. I was just about to go, you know"- he stammered. "About to go-why ?" 'Thought I might be inopportune, you know. Realize that such things are bound to occur once in awhile, you know-really can't be helped-even most sweet tempered persons" "What are you speaking of, Mr. Soft lalgh?" Alice demanded suspiciously. "Why-er-of course I wouldn't have presumed to mention it, you know! My brother and -every once in awhile we do, reall . "You do. really, what?" "Er-quarrel, you know." Alice looked coldly out of the win dow. "When you came," she said evenly, "my sister and I were singing our new duet."-Harper'a Bazar. While He Spoke. The gentleman with the well fed ap pearance who had motored over from the narest town to deliver his lecture. "The Art of Getting On," in the village oechoolroom, concluded with a fine burst. "Effort is the keystone of success," he said. "The successful man is the man who strives persistently. His motto is, 'Push and keep pushing,' for by that, and that alone, he reaches his goal." Before the bulk of the audience made much headway with their clapping a small man at the back got in a laugh that might have come from a mega phone. The lecturer held up his hand for silence. "You, too, my friend, will have to push"- he commenced. "8o'll you, I reckon," interrupted the small man. "There's 'arf a dozen youngsters been pinchin' the petrol out of yer motorcar ter light a bonfire, cocky!"-Tit-Bits. Essaped. Knicker-My forbears came over in the Mayflower. Bocker-I suppose they were perfectly safe, as there was no wireless then.-New York Sun. In the Smart Set. Pond Mamma-We have General sad Mrs. Fuddlestone and General and Mrs. Brassenbuttoms, and I don't know which should go In to dinny first. Smart Daughter-Why not open the boding doors and let them enter tour abreast? New Industrey. Guest-So you are hard at work studying French. What is the object of that? Waliter--I've been offered a steady jab at big pay over in Pari tif I learn rench before going there. Gaest-H'ml There ame plenty o( Wrench waiters in Pars. Water-Y-e4 ,but you m they can't an French as Americais speak N York Weekly, Idm Changed Sin The., "Augustus," satid the boy's paremnt, "yoper head muaster inormas e tht py desire to become- a mloary. This noble asptiration" "Pa, that was so. But it's e6. Irve swapped my foreign stamp colectim br white mie."-tray Storie. Kaenke-Does his auto smokeT Bocker-es, but he hates to make It sisp till after be is mar rled-Harper's Brsar. The Airship NMa. Athounh mistaken n his amsse About the spet where be' arrive, A ilsht tn always a seem When every one gets beak salIve. -WuLashista S tar. ODt of Man's ReNh. The old my have their yearsm stretebe out beyoed the fourascore, but they must die sooner or later; no eueh necessarym limtt affects the btrths, sad It is conceivtable that there may eome a year when there are no birth. Immortality Is the only eective am swa to a eemsation of reprodetlm, aml, alas tale Ka of rrrs adS he earalese-ai Sr ku C2 p~A~ *1 &-~6~-sU * I]~ C~c ~tL~C141 u/t~i ~-II gc~c~I. ~8~/_L~0 ~-u0 Nac ~xc~c~4 awl~R dc;-t 1/u rt444. AgLn Not Strictly Ortbezo. Young DI~td loaf uted on trying his primiftive weapon on the giant Gollth. At Iemgth the generala coumntkd. ~ourth wQil have Its Sltag," thy Ir markted resgndly.-Dos~ton Tram. VEAL Quality and Honest Weig PORK Theodore DUBRET BEEF Foto Market "THE KIND THAT GROW FOr yet ears tof loathera seed selling Is our record. Quality 8ebdr 5 e b.t t So tackler Seeds are sure to grow and produce results Q l tiamons. Platers, Tuckers, and Florists, write to-day or oar tlsted ied Catal1s. Beet weork t its kind ever issued South. Turnip Sed the l ellng varleties; carload in stock. Also a ftll line of Beans, Cabbage, Lettuce, Mustard, Onion, Ka;e, RadY S lnchk Parsley, Cauliflower, Onl0o STECKLER'S .n lofer Hot Oardmdl ; Aalhl f, atB, ' e - Crlmsoa and Burr Clover,.. Re,su. f .sh )tRe Italian R.Te, -MrTail .Halr,,. 8 Y o Ireee I r, winter S E E D U DwIarf Mes Rape, Rye, tBarley, OstL te. We ear the largtest stock to the ead ,* " let of your wants for 1; tEC tlER SEED CO.. Ltd.. ,'L"' New Or T'he i:.io "i It ,! fill rant ,ti I ,,. . i. . so P' Iart,. bain piart t.,"i, 7 '.rv A t( !!a and I,, . t l":ýý ),t. tb. ti, .n rt, e to abot the o111. $ . I ' " he rpa of all . ' ', know r _ ithe ,,q,~' ,r f ~.t , ' · , ... . . c" ,l d. AN EXPOSITION IN ITSELF The Furnituto t'ulr h aser wile wants to sei.: a , ,::.,i. e line_of goods on a*xhib .t,,,:t. mald . ufactured by th. ;ilRg furIl. ture factori,.- s tr-i~hout the I'nited Stat;,-. . -' l vsiit the A. BURGLASS Furniture Display 3224-21-28-30 Magazne Street Corner Pleasant Your entire lFurl;ure wants can he supplied thi.re He can save you money, whether you buy for Spot Ca& or on Open Account. For the benefit of those who desire to purchase on Open AC. count, he has adopted the most complete and convenient CHARGE SYSTEM In the South. SMALL ACCOI'NTS ARE AS WELCOME AS THE LARGE ONES. YOUNG COUPLES Let Burglass furnish your home. He has good Outfits for $169, $185, $225, $250 and up. WHEN BUYING YOUR Piano Rl-member the best guarantee to th purchaser is the standing and reepee. sibtllty of the manufacturer. e. ilpnslble manufactrers are caroel to see that their instruments cess up to their standard of excellerse When you select a piano coming tire such a maker, your mind is at rest you have no anxieties over its per. formance. NO ONE HAS TROUBLE with the ADAM SCHAAF PIAWi the CHASE BROS. PIANO or aý HACKLEY PIANO. Years oft and practlcal experience are led in their making. They are perfect as It Is possible to make thgL, Your inspection of new lastreuuI now arriving is Invited. 131 DAUPHINE ST. HAKENJOS ONLY HALF BLOCK FROM CAAL.. ... SPECIAL... Some used Pianos are better thka w. tale cheap new ones. We have W eral $50, $60. $75 to S150 e- am $3, $4 and $5 mostbly. IT A YOU FEEL T T GERMAN TAVREN Ladles and GIlim The best the market fat fords, properly cooked and expertly served at popular prices. Music 6 p. m. to midmnight. Conrad Kolb, 125-127 St. Charles U.' nldersy the bleek bdtwee OM c.mml.