I 'fiR $ 4 EVEttlttOr T.-rcnftTiTC-PBIKADEKPHIA-, THTJBBPAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 101-t It "GAY PAREE" PASSES AS WARTIME GLOOM ENVELOPS CAPITAL 1 Cafes Deserted, Curfew Law in Effect, City's Cen tres Are Like Main Street in Country Town After 9 P. M. PARIS, Sept 21. Th llil la on gny 1'nreo! Llk a lot of other fp.itutos of tilt Wnr ot 19U It Is Inpnnrchnblo, unthinkable! Yet It is true The lid ilocs not (It. tl chnfes, 13 un becoming and robs tlio wool of uf lvi natnrnl charm But theto It 19 pinned on by the cirdB of several thousand faiis lan police. Todn. with every otllelnl "communlauc" bcatinc Increasingly thrllllnK reports of the success of the Fronch and Knsllth arms in turning back the German tidal Rav which only it week ngo threatened to engulf the Kronen capital, the li.nf of the population which did not flj south wnid is so oddly quiet and undetttohstia tive a to startle an old acquaintance The Paris that n.f, simply "Isn't."' The lncongrultx that remains Is a song with out mush, a icifiime ttltlmut nn odor a champagne without a taste or a spniklc Paris, th' municipality, ivmnlns, but, islthout flrlns a shot or Setting within sight of It, the ticimans have rnzed gay Parce. GLOOM Ml.VrS CREPE. In Irl.n women have been forbidden to Aear crtpe because of the possible de pressing effects. Ciepe could odd noth ing to the fog-like solemnity heie It W rs though Pails was doing penance un der oideio not from choice Imagine the Rue cle la Pali. -sealed two-thirds of the hotels U.isid entirely, and four out of evw live hop and store3 hoarded up and sealtd with a tag bearing the most overwork,. 1 word In the French languag. "Feimi-' ioloedi. Imagine French new-slnns, foi bidden to cry their pnpeis and fi.n.d to carry signs In their caps telllrm uhkn paper they handle. Imagine Pans pap.rs limited to a single edition a da ind forbidden either to Issue extras or to indulgo in a headline of greater width than two columns. Imagine the opera and eveiy theatre ehut. Imagine the Latin quarter and the Montmrut" closed Imagine .Maxim s cutting out the light at 3 oelotk pieparatory to shooting every one out into the stieet half un hour latfi. Imagine ery diess suit and dinner Jacket in Paris put awa in moth halls And Clo-Clu. Do-Do und Flo-Flo and the other girls from the Ca:o de Paris gone-no one knows where. Imag ine the fafu De La 1ax 'J S"B "k1the tow" 'ern In 1'alnW I ost. and then you mav be able to snse L""0P v"- half comprehending w.,y what Pans i, like, not under the mo n archj. not under the Empire or he Cum mum.., but-under The Lid inm Ilk. this. France had planned n t'r!l ,Tlu;n cani(- ' r.l that the German hoide was coming thut it I ,ln s,ix miles ui ti,v Wr ring of fortinratlons. The esodus began for th cameTheLl'd0- Mt beh!nd A week followed filled with horror and nervouw... but no fear. The stoi at thu fiont ms that the Fmich are -ivond. rfuIU l,rae. It was a rial tst. and the elements which cause the nss?. ncss and the . ffei Vtstence in the Fieuoh chaiactei weto pieUultated. The Kltuu titn tailed for. aid the police oidered. caimn To th, sunn Is, of ev,-n thoe who tuve -h. o,dri it was obeved. thir is wiitten th, lutfi-t dlwpati h a from the Horn giving new of nntinuou F, 'ikii sui.e., ai- bins piint.d. The n- "as iuiil at It o'clock lj.t night. At th-it houi ull Pdiis vh." sound useei. It hud hen c rtuln th'o news would nine and "t the t jrfew law was, not binken to finrl out w hat had h ipp ned. BRUMBAUGH STIRS VOTERS OF THREE COUNTIES Enthusiastically Received by Farm ers of Union, Mifflin and Snyder. li:u i.-p.rrtn i'a , SL.pt .i n,.f,,i hundi'd- ot Immi-n gathod at tl., I'n lon i uunri Fuir hn this rimming. I Xlaitn U ButmbauKh. RepuM' nn noni Ir.n for tioe!nor, pledged, it 1 1, ) t di all In his power to Insun- tuimtiULtion of '..od h'jiusit hlshwas, thuiouglih hu It .,nd tonstantly kept in rtiMlr thiouchout th entfie State Thec ronds. h d.,lii,fl will br such that the nmxi tpum ii m (un be b'ought to population tr,' .s with a minimum effort. ro(tn nrumbauBh with his lampaign r,.irti iirivfd heie thin morning from - -it ur Mopplipj en rout at SfUiuigrov, . whire tit ncepMon latHl an hour. Tl puri, htt h-re at noon on tour ,f Union, Mirrlln and Snjder counties, und will Mvuk tonight at lenlton Reft ling to th child Iji0r las. Doctor Brunn augh dfilarfd ht- li,wl an mt mi rnlnd wr.Kh if pasert would heroine n nwdrl i ir ever State tn the I'nlnn Thii miasnr hr nld, woulfj enable a orSt inc nllel to (ontinu tils tdU'fttton in tit piihlh fci ho a Th fUrt'on of Doctor Brurobamh x a tnrflnritv of 'Wurt) Wj pr4letwl bj Hi-rr lan of lntinal Affttlre Kowk Ii.ctoi Ur nnb'tuh i hMrinK on evr fc de thai the mdors ment of VaBee " M,(Vrrahk b the Washington party has euu.rd t,o.h a herlous. pllt In that Pflit that ts death knell is sounded BRUMBAUGH'S GBBAY CANVASS Treasurer of Citizens" Committee geesj Wonderful Results, Louis J. Kolb. treaiurer of th Di Martin J Uiumtuh t'itUen' I'oTimit-. tee and an independent in polities, mid today thit I" Ilr.imoaugh was inaldng one of thr mutt wonderful cmpigri ev iincM--ii ui this matt. To his hn of fiiiiid- his wnle circle of ac"jUMlrt.tncs nd his ..baolute sincerity Sir. KJlb a tnhuttd I" Hrnmbaugii s sue. m His minute ork." Mr Kolb ij.id. "I ab jfaint-d him thousand f fiiendu who iniit mlier htm for the giet uiurk he liai uccomplUliud in advancing the edit- atkin.'l tai lllties in this Hate ' Mr Kolb critliised the action af the AVashington Party estate Comm.tteo dt HarrUburg last week In indorsing Vane C McCormick as the gubernatorial candi date In place of William Draper IawIs. "This was a violation. ' Sir Kolb de clared. 1'ot onl uf th sidrit but of the letter of the Mate wide pilman Ui t T'ie a ti"1" of the Wahington Paity nmo-ltfe "as cauk'-d th o-ands to de clare t"ic-nelves f"r Dr Brumbaugh The AV ihlngfn part s-t Itself up tT fcttnd (rim b-st in the neputdlran i't- I wonler 'f ' is what they the hesf Ev what right fan !5 mi wi'hdran a vamitaair wnoni rfv,w JPJJSSmFtL CoprlRht lij cn,lorood & L'n'lerwood, N. V. MILITANT LEADER AIDS RECRUITINQ Miss Christobel Pankhurst, the head of the Furies, has laid aside her militant tactics and is shown busily at work on raw material, which soon will become trained British soldiers. PALMER IN THE FIGHT ROCKEFELLER GIVES $300,000 AGAINST PENROSE TO END , TO Y. M. C. A. OF BROOKLYN Challenges Opponent to Name Any Authoritative Call for Him to Quit. TOVAI. Pa, M-pt Jl t'oti-iies--mun A Mitchell Pnlmoi. candidate for the Fnit'd State Sf-nute, to sunetd llul"s Pinriie, airivid heie shorth bcfoie noon toda fr,'m f'nrbon t'ountj, thtough which he campaigned relet da Last night he addresd two enthusiastic mass-nuetlngs at Miuch Chunk and Lelilghton, Those who have hei n predicting a 3.000,000 Required to Complete Magnificent Building. XEW YORK. Sent. 24 The Young Men's Christian Association of Urook ln, it was announced, has been en riched by a gift of $3iv,000 from John U. Rocketellei. One-half of this sum has already been paid over to the asso ciation, and the conditions on which the balance Is to be paid were explained by John B. Cook, tno general t-ectc-tary as follows: "The remainder of Mr. Rockefeller's pledge, Sl.'in,''. is conditioned upon se curing In cash or lesponslblo pledges, on m before Iiinuury 1, 1016, of the entire fund of $2.t5,GMi. Payments will be made by Mr Rockefeller on account ot 'this pledge In three Instalments of hniniunlom fu.tloi) compact between Hep-n-i i Mt.ve Palmer and Ulffoid Pinchot, whetehv Mi Palmer would wiihelia.v in fnvo.- of thf tnrmer Chli-f Folestei. lt iwlvfd n d'-iided shock when th. 'm gieman challenged Mr. Pincheit to pit rime the name of a single Hemoeiutlt .oontv elm I rmii n who ha- suvrtsted that he withdraw In favor of Mr. piiuhot. "I do not bating to th withdiaw I i. ,1. i..,..l Me Pil".n . ":i',I if any one thinks that Mr, Pinchot standi. ." each, the tlrst to bo payable when lei bett i , ,V"uni.nt than I do let him nut-thud of the total amount to be vote for M . Pint hot. I would be iirittu. I migi,(l from aII oUlor BOUrccs nas bep no'conO: irrWn'nn.l"! IW in: the second Instalment when U.ve I will canv It on to vletorv." two-thlrds of the amount has been paid V,, his indictment of Senatoi Pe.uo.e. in. and the third Instalment whn the m;.d. on the Gutter' own record In Wash- rntlre fund has been paid in. Z" m rvf. ""1'iin Palmer pr.sent.d a It has been estimated that nearly V7,. '., ir tlmt Penros. in th. S-nat. I ISuOQ.roo will be required to complete nil (fllllll IO --noM tor.. .H,..LUa K,.Orlln,P rn-ittnnu ..r.n- Hi,- ran li,, uuiiuiim uiiniyn. .,,- t. mplutcel by the dliectors of the asso i iation Approximately J75.'rt of the Ho, keMler monev will be applied to the .ost of the site for the new building of th. Central Hunch on Hnnson place had iif'-ii a ilumpion straddW n m'; m. that eoiitein.il ruilioad, Mandu-I O'l nnd ithe 1ftleIf. woo Hint thu tlU IHVoied tu. ioiporationS as aHins-t h. p 'I le PENROSE SHOVS IRRITATION Calls Palmer's Indictment Garbled, Insincere and Misleading." The bill of imii.tm.nt 8tfalm.t Pnire. Iim upon whl.h ftwigie.-i.man A Mit. h.ll falmer ha.- be. n baslnij hi arguim ins to (U-nwnstraie that Senator 1'intOMi TWO BOYS FACE MURDER CHARGES IN NEW YORK Gangsters Kill Innocent Man Step son Accused of Crime. SEW YOIJK. Sept. 2l.-Two boys, one 'J and the other 16. are under arrest atiouM not repiewmt the people of Ptnn. fop ho milrder of two men g svhania at Waahlnston nas "nraum forth an answer from the senior Benator In wit int rvlew Ut nlfiht e senator eharaeterUe4 CorierMmaii Palmer's ehaig's a- "garl'led, Insincere Bnd linen. ttonalU inisi.ailiruj. and scarcely worthy of tin disiutiea y ny ,u,Utg Uom me Then refining to Mr Palinei k own iiimrs wero committed in different sec tion of the city. line of the dead was the Innocent ctlm of a sanrf foud, and the man was kills d b hu s-tep-bon. Uitlci... OoUlleb, SI j ears old, was shot and killed in the BronN hist night when he ws W4lkine with two of Ills broth ers The assailant ran, but he was cnasea i 1 Sh'itiw ifcorl Mr iVfiro-w drHtnatjd jtVfcnl blocks and captured by David ,uii . 'th. P. n. If I Arnold of l-nribjl- UoUf,h- vania' 'in .if ouit en in in iu.t..... j,rfl.,,i, Vnlcntl, 10 years old, was ar- tiid pain. iiluH 1' work for tl.e passago ,.gt(d B(tor a rhaso and charged with ot the in. t.il t-'rdule i.., murder of his step-father, John . ( ajiliMi in ,,e jatter s barber shop in BRITISH CENSOR OPENED I H,wUin ,lasX nisM AUSTRIAN CONSULATE IV1AIL ; pnqcrats to open campaign ' 'p ' The reorganization element of the ritrmmiatit iiarty in the 11th Ward will open the fall campaign tonight at u mass rnctling at SJel mid Master btreets. John M Hill a foimcr leader, itagistrute Iloli and II l. Wescott will be the fepcaktis. Letters geieed From Steamship for Official in This City, A breath of luutnilin b the British is alleged at thu Aiihiriai I'twirtilil" in Philadelphia tMti,tI regintt-i . tl letteia addressed to the t'oin.iate in Philailel. phla hae leeii open, d b th c. u-tu in London Thee Wlteis. ier rwtivni here late Um niRht It is saiej at tl. Coii.uUite tb it Ih.re wus .t brt n of neutrality m tint thie lettms, muot bte been taken from a neutial ship. eiih. r of the Italian oi uf tl . tlollanel line ui these are the onl a bv who h w--trlun mail toubl ieoh th.s t-ounti Th" letter will be sent to I'r 'on-l inline tiuinba, the iitio-HuiiKari.iii Ambas saelor at Washington i The ait of tile nn ..i at I oiieioa is con- I eidered at it- ioi.-ul.iii .i iicng a per fidious cuii.igt. and fuiw n wis ex pressed that a i. .lion to- b ,is I-.gKnd, would be guilts of fw h nrtion ' A r"lvtta reg'-tered lette r freiri Au-tria I wa also ppened by the FpbIi h i-ensor This waa received In t ie sam mail aa the official commuokaUon, SECOND VON MOLTKE HAS YET TO FULFIL TRADITION'S DEMAND Name of German Army's Head the Synonym for In vincibility in War Quali ties Not Dazzling. For nine years another Moltkc Teutonic Bynonym for Invincibility In war has been chief of the great Oetiernl Staff of the Herman army. The decisive arbitra ment of the present campaign will bo netessary to detetmlnc whether Lieuten ant General Itclmtlth von Moltke, nephew' of the 'Organizer of Victory," Is entitled to his celebrated uncle's other sobriquet of "The Battle Winner." His supremo wnr lord, the Kiilcr, and the treniendou organlzatlon of 5,000,000 officers and men which Lieutenant General von Moltke heads nt any rate have unalloyed confi dence In his ability to Indicate the tra ditions entrusted to his keeping. Mean time, emulating the habits which gave the conqueror of Trance still another pop ular title, "The Gic.at Silence Keeper," Von Moltkc's energies, writes Frederic W. Wile, In the Chicago Tribune, nre devoted to hammering Into still more deadly per fection the mightiest wnr machine the world lias yet known. The victories which the German army has won In the first six weeks of the war nro a striking trib ute to his genius. Von Moltke succeeded a brilliant sol dier, Count von Pchlletfrn. nt the General Staff on January 1, lDOti. He had had a somewhat more than ordinary enreor In the nrmv up to thnt time, won his lieuten ancy and Iron Cross In the field as n stripling In the Franoo-Prusslan cam paign nnd acrpiltted himself creditably In various grades of the service until he reached his lieutenant genernlcy In 1D02. I3ut men lndde nnd outside the army looked askance on his elevation to the post so long adorned by Schlleften. They declared he owed It primarily to Em peror William's passion for the plctur cfine nnd a gnawing desire once again to have the magic name of Moltke at the head of the "brains department" of the German army. scoffkus nun Tinom byes Detractors were destined to have their skepticism dramatically undermined. Hav ing scoffed at Von Moltke as a decorative figure, they rubbed their eyes over the first "Knlser maneuvers" held under hh auspices before he hnd been at the Gen eral Staff ten months. The great nutumn mimic campaign for years past hod been distinguished hy operations which thnt oft-quoted marshal of France would hne called "magnificent but not war." The Kaiser had an unconquerable passion for thrilling cavalry charges over bare fields, which would make splendid cinema films, but cost the lives of n division In war. With the taunts of his rivals ringing in his ears that he was a "Knlser staff chief" pure and simple. Von Moltke's first Innovation was ruthlessly to obliterate the picturesque from the autumn maneu vers and substitute grueling, practical op erations night fighting, forced marches nnd nil the other t applngs of "real" war Count Schlieffen, who hnd opposed Wil liam lis predilection for pi rotorhn'es. had finally to leave the General Staff In disfavor Von Moltke revnling o will of steel, succeeded speedily where his emi nent predecessor had failed. His growth In the esteem of the nrmv was consistent and rapid thenceforth. Thnt the Germ-in army today is essentially "workmanlike" Is to n large degree the achievement of Its present chief of staff General von Moltkc, born In Mecklen-burg-Pchwerln In 19P!, was CC, c.ns oh1 In Mav. 1911 He Is often mltokentv cnlled "Count" von Moltke. for the title of count, conferred on his great ancestor In 1870 on the dnv J z fell, was Inherited hy the elder brother of the present Molt ke, General Count Wllhelm von Moltke, and ceased with the latter's death a few years ago. The "orgnnler of Ictorv," whose wife was an Hngllshwomin. Miss Tlurt. had no children General Helmtith von Moltke sorved ns adjutant to his dis tinguished uncle nt the General Staff from 1SS1 until the Field Marshal's death In 1811 While escorting the latter to the grave Emperor Willram Informed the then Major von Moltke thnt he hnd decided to elevate him to the rank of a personal nltle tie camp. Five ears of service. In tin Knlser's entourage were succeeded hy regimental nnd divisional commands In the guards until n r04 Emperor William created a quartermaster generalship nt the General Staff, hitherto filled onlv In wnr time, and designated Lieutenant Gen eral von Moltke to occupy It The post Is thnt of n lre chief and von Moltke was thenceforth looked upon as Count Schlief fen's eventual successor. Von Moltke's qualities nre not of the dazzling order Flulkv and stockv of ex terior, with the ungainly outlines of a nismnrek, blue eyed nnd blondish grnv haired, taciturn to n. degree, a famed characteristic of the Meeklenhurgers and Schleswlg-Holstelners, from which the Moltkes. have sprung, the chief of the General Staff Is a man of Indomitable force, unfailing candor and mental cn pacltv more distinguished for sanltv than scintillating brilliancy He cares far less for show than a guard lieutenant T OUR CHILDREN'S CORNER i 0 L-.V-cr -, ' PURE FRESH PAINT Believe Me : Does your home help you to enter tain? Playing the host is much easier when you are proud of your home. Every year Kuehnle changes hundreds of homely houses into homelike dwellings. He will tell you what painting and decorating YOUR home needs to make it in best taste. Now, get suggestions from Kuehnle Painting and Decorating Gel Our h'sUmutt First Both Phones 28 South 16th St. Inter-State Fair TRENTONScpt. 28 to Oct, 2 $ -g Round Trip Tickets From Philadelphia. iiTv'3j!5v'$v- 1 PrAnnrllnn,,- Ttota Vrnm Cither PolntS VAST AM) FIIKQLE.N'T E.M'ItESS TItAINS KtKKl DAJ Special Trains Wednesday and Thursday, 9.30 A. M. For Full Particulars Bee Flyn or Coniult AacnH EXCURSIONS SUNDAYS ONLY TO ATLANTIC CITY. OCEAN CITY. SEA ISLE CITY, STONE HARBOR, WILDWOOD, CAPE MAY. Jaie Chctnut&Ut( and South SUeft Ferries 7:30 A. M. "Well had the boding tremblers learned to trace The day's disaster in his morning face, Full well they laughed with counterfeited glee At all his jokes, for many a. joke had he; Full well the busy whisper circling round Conveyed the dismal tidings when he frowned." (Goldsmith's "Deserted Village." ) BEFORE THE SANDMAN COMES WOULDN'T you like to be the stm?" "Dear mc, no! 1 would much rather be the sunset. I like the whole sunset better than just the sun alouc!" Now who do you suppose was talk ing? Hinls? Fairies? Children? Xo, none of those; Two flowers were talking together and their talk was in the long ago fairyland time of the world. In tlintc days all flowers were white white as the clouds and as snow, and every flower could talk so plainly that the fairies and birds and creatures could understand and talk back equally well. Tbcbc two particular flowers who talked about the sun were cannas. Lovely white cannas that thrust their glistening petals above the green leaves like icebergs pushed out ot the sea. "Rut the sun is so lovely and gold en.' said one canna, continuing their talk, "I'd rather be yellow like that than an other color in the whole rainbow." The fairy queen was puzzled. "How stupid you are1" cried the other. "Don't you see that yellow is a flat pale color"' Now, I like the flaming red of sunset, that is a gorge ous live color worth talking about oti ought to wish to be red, as I do'" Just at that very minute, before there was time for the first canna to answer the fairy queen walked by "Good afternoon,' she said to the cannas, in her cordial, polite little way, "is there anything I can do for you today?" "Do for usl" exclaimed the cannas together, "what do you mean?" "I mean this," answered the fairy queen, "this is wishing day. I am around collecting wishes, cery plant may make one, and who knows? maybe they'll all come true!" "Then I wis,h to be yellow!" "I wish to be red!" Bpth the cannas spoke at once, and so suddenly the fairy queen was sur prised. "Dear me, how quick you made up your minds," she said, "you must have been thinking about it before." ""Vc were." the two cannas assured her. "And I want to be yellow," the first canna repeated. "And I want to be red," added the second. The fairy queen was pu.zlcd. You sec she had expected to make each kind of flower a color, and now two flowers of the same kind wished to be different colors. "I don't know what to think about that,' she said; "won't cither of you give up?" "I don't like red." said the first canna, "I'd rather be white!" "I'm sure I don't like yellow," the second canna assured her positively. "Very well, then." .said the fairy queen, making up her mind quickly, "you may both have your wishes," and she waved her magic wand. Quick as a flash, the white of the blossoms melted to yellow and to red, and the gorgeous cannas faced each other. But alas! the canna that liked yel low had to look at a red canna, and the canna that liked red faced a yel low blossom all the day. At first that seemed very dreadful to them, but as the days of sunshine and shadow passed, each flower saw ungucsscd beauties in the other's color. And, would you believe it? When the fairy queen came by next time bhe saw streaks of yellow on the red canna and blotches of crimson on the yellow bloom. Tomorrow A Delate I Sunflower. Copyright, 1014, hy Clara lncram Judson ANOTHER SLANDER "Vou snould have heard Smith cineklnB up his wife's biscuits this moraine'." "I believe I did henr him,. I thought ut the time he wnr chopping wood." Fun. HEALTHY ONES "IIow'll yeh hac yer eggs?" demanded the busy waitress. "As well as could bo expected undei the clicumstances," icplled the aluent-mindfd ph.sklnn. I'uck. $)oSl f Round Trip NEW YORK SUNDAYS, Sept. 27, Oct. 25 SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES Thlladtlplila (llru.ul t.)... 7 II A. 51 ibt riilli'leliihU 7 17 . M Nrtti l'hllallilila ... . 7 5TA.J1 uutl'RMNu i,i:avi:s Vew Y"rk (I'eiuia Stall m s an p j jew York (Huiiton Term.j. S j 1' ji Pennsylvania R. R. THE MOON IN THE CLOUDS HY MALCOLM a JOHKSTON. 1 linvo watched when "tlio moon goes bo fast, Far nbovo nil the trees so high; And breathless ho rushes along and ntralght past All tlio clouds, when they fill the sky. And I've wondered Just why, when so swift In his flight, , lie never Is able, to gej out of sight. And I've wondered nnd wondered just why, (And I never can gjuebs alone), When all of the clouds hao llown over the sky. Then the moon stands as still as stone. But perhaps lie tnkes rest when they'e ull kouo away; Or, lonely, he's sad und just don't wnnt to play. And one day I watched while the rain fell down fast, For Lcerlo to nod up to mc as ho passed; But I didn't see him nor hear his quick feet, Beforo the llqht shlned high up oer the street. Why didn't I sec him, when I was close hy? And how did he ever reach up there so high? (CopjrlBht. Jlalcolm J. Johnson, 1114) We Beg to Announce that we arc now enabled to reduce our to the original price of 65c for Full Quart Cans $1.25 for Vz -Gallon Cans $2.50 for Full Gallon Cans We guarantee the quality, purity and measure of this oil, and will take it back at our expense if not absolutely satisfactory. Prompt attention to 'phone and mail ordeis. FKEE DELIVERY Felix Spatola & Fruits SOIIS Vet,,abIes Reading Terminal Market Hell l'lionci I'llliert .71-r.O rilliert ni-fl KfjMloiii' Unci- j;i-IKS liiii-i? -U-D3 A tl tn JlrlUiT- In hulnirlis Jo'e Importers o "Sjmlo'a llrand Ol i Oil" F ' AN IMPORTANT CONSIDERATION TO BUYERS OF RUGS AND CARPETS The purchase of your Floor Covering' requires great care and judg ment and should not be left to a hurried selection from an incom plete assortment. Your Rugs and Carpets are your daily companions for many years. It is therefore important that they should be just right in style, quality and size. As manufacturers of the leading lines of Standard Floor Coverings we offer you an almost Unlimited Range of Styles and Colorings in all the choicest and most artistic effects IN OVER 100 DIFFERENT SIZES We have just opened our new Fall offerings with an addition of over sixty new patterns. OUR LATEST IMPORTATION OF ORIENTAL RUGS IS NOW READY FOR INSPECTION HARDWICK & MAGEE CO. Successors to Ivins, Dietz & Mugee 1220-1222 Market St. Floor Coverings Exclusively h ; I A J . . n in TM I LfttW&SfSfSrS?t& " JJi!ll!iJjiiL'f"Tw ' TM jjmmczmmm