J it THE CONCORD TIMES. : Ipl is Only . . . ; . ' " --;. . . . . . .: " . . - U - , and i :?f59 ' John B. Shbrrim, Editor and Publtaher. - ' . - RUPLIOMCP twice a week, I j " ' " ss CUmsS a 'ear' " - . , . ' TwiOfc a . ngQAYi i , Dei t aitahi, Ukt the I Volume XXXIII. - CONCORD, N. O.TUESDAY, JUNE 18, 1907. Lli iziK n -u' .. . - to jiiiMj wmsmmmaQmmate Sj I CITIZENS BANK & TRUST COMPANY f -V 7 " l'lnmiMlJllteiJ - MJi'MU Binder Twine Will in a few days be the cry of the farmer who has hiswheat to get in. We have the best thatcan be bought in the city and the price is just a little lower than it should be for the quality. When you come to pur chase this very necessary article do not do so until you have priced our stock. - We are headquarters for groceries, dry goods, etc., and can furnish you from shoes to hat. We are making a specialty of low prices just at this season. e D. J. The Concord National Bank Capital $100,000 Surplus and Undivided Profits $29,000 YiMir' Business Solicited. Every Accommodation Exten dot! Consistent with Sound banking. I . B. CtilTRANE, -President.- l . L I). COLTRANE, Cashier J NO. Do You Know What It Does? The Keeley It relieves a peison of all desire for strong drink or drugs, restores his' nervous sys tem to its noimal condition, and rein states a man to his home and business. Cure For full particulars, address, .THE KEELEY INSTITUTE, GREENSBORO, N. C, WH4V WEI . LAUGH ' "A Little Nonsense Now and Then, ; Is Relished by the Wisest Men." Judge's Quarterly, $i.oo a year. Judge's Library, $i.oo a year. Sis Hopkins' Mon., $i.6o a year. Vn'itveipt'of' Twenty Cents, we will enter your name for a thvpe fliontlis' trial subscription for either of these bright, witty,. and humorous jouinals, or for One Dollar will add Leslie's Wetkly or Judge for the same period of time. A 1. 1 ic . . JUDGE COMPANY - iir, l'mirilr.A venue. New York DAVIS WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, EIDDENITE, NORTH CAROLINA. - , HA VIS BROS., Owners and Proprietors, HIDDENITE, N. C. AWRINCIPIES . Bost Co. P. ALLISON, Vice Pres. A w 11 known prin? of fine curtiv pnipt-rile.", for iutli Ktstion. dyspei'si- !rtney trouble, etc New H te! oin y te. WHi-r Mi'f 'ewerafffi xssiem. tut ..ml c U baths, c nu' 1. 1 iwn tftmit. howilnu iIUm, filmotiiitf tri.ll ry. phiHH-s coiniwliiijc e-ti fl-r wiinn;ce. t 1 graph ml B H teeiilnun CMiniC!iins with nttintrv. Heul'b-l.C;itlon ad tlrtti tn i Mi'i n cu ixTHle. Two thrr.uith Trains ila'ly, from rtiarlotte, arrive - u:- m. an t 10:80 p,ia. Besideut Fhystcin in hotel for sasi n. On Southern Railway from Charlotte to Tavlorsville -. Our 'Bus meets all the trpectal price for May. June anrf September, $5 to fS per - July and August $6 to 8 wu.ir KTir further infiir. j m&tioa write tor booklet to Baltimore San. xur. James liryce, the British Am bassador, made an. address at the annual commencement of Brm uiowr in me coarse or which ne iook occasion to give some excel lent aavice to tne younz women o: tnac insutution. The mental facul nes or. men and women being: abou aiiKe. intellectual traimnfr m Bryce believes, which is suitable for waz dca is a iso suimoie xor the other He did not believe' that American women, at least in the Eastern and Miacue states and he mi:ht have added the Southern desire to enter poiujcai me. lhere are certain tivities of life which men fan should resign to women, and certain affairs that women can and should leave for men. Mr. Bryce suggested two fields of work as peculiarly ap propriate to women, une is the cul tivation of the love of good books or a thorough knowledge of and a fine taste in literature and the habit of reading good books. Reading ana epnemerai novels soon be comes wearisome, and then the wo man who Knows nothing of good books nor cares for them must find some other amusement. The faculty oi eiiierxaining nerseii has not been acquired, ana she becomes depend ent upon others for that diversion which she should be able to afford herself. This is where cossiD and tittle-tattle and character-shredding nave meir orunn. f ew miners con duce more to happiness and content than the habit of reading good dooks. Mr. Kryce also suggested tnat women should address them selves to -the study ofhowtomiti gate the contrasts between wealth and poverty, how in various ways to I 1 .1 t , . , , Y . neip mose wno neea neip. The i - A 1 1 4 41 . meaning oi me word iaiy ' is breadgiver, and chanty "and good works is her traditional field. The needless and ostentatious display of weaitn is not only vulgar, but harm ful, and perhaps has contributed its part to the growth of anarchy and socialism. When a man who has a wife and a family of children who may be crying for. bread reads of a dinner given by one of the new rich which cost enoucrh to feed several families for a whole year, it sets him to speculating upon the inequalities of fortune and opportunity and fos ters unrest and discontent." Of course, it is to the public advantage that people who have large incomes should spend freely. But there are various methods of spending there is a decent method and an indecent one ; there is a respectable way and a vulgar way. And among the most vulgar of all the practices of the American smart set is the habit of assessing everything in dollars and cents. If a house is decorated with flowers it is announced that so many dollars' worth of flowers are used ; if a dinner party is given, the cost is announced at so much a plate ; if one of the set is married it is necessary to announce the cost of the bride's dress and often of the wedding pres-" ents. Mr. Bryce might have ad monished his hearers that good taste in literature is not the only kind of good taste that should be cultivated. What the rich circles in American society need to study is refinement. "Sir: 'Your wife is held by us for ransom. She will be detained until you deposit $10,000 under the oak tree at the top of the hill.' ' Signed The Black Hand." "Dear Sirs : 'Your favor of recent date .received. I have deposited under the oak tree a trunk contain ing the rest of my wife's wardrobe.' Yours truly v J. B. Henpecke." Life is full of perversities. A man never realizes until he joins the church that fish always bite best on Sunday. - A Lazy-ti ver May be only a tired liver, or a starved liver. It would, be a stupid as well as savage thing to beat a weary or starved man because be lagged In his work. So in treating the lagging, torpid liver it Is a great mistake to lash it with strong drastic drugs. A torpid liver Is but an Indication of an ill-nourished enfeebled body' whose organs are weary with over! work. Start with the stomach and allied organs of digestion and nutrition. . Put them in working order and see how Quickly your liver will become active. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery has made many marvelous cures of "liver trouble " by its wonderful control of the organs of digestion and nutrition. It re stores the normal activity of the stomach, increases the secretions of the blood-making glands, cleanses the system from poi sonous accumulations, and so relieves the liver of the burdens imposed upon it by the defection of other organs. If you have fitter or bad taste In the morn ing; poor or Variable appetite, coated tonjrue, foul breath, constipatedor Irregular bowels, feel weak, e&slljt tired, Respondent, frequent headaches, pain or dlstressn "small of back." gnawing or distressed tteiyg- In stomach, perhaps nausea.WtaereoVr "rlsinrs" to throat after eatlntr. and klnHi symptoms of weak stomach and torpid 11 vx no medi cine will relieve you more promptly or cure yon'mm permanently than boctor Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. Perhaps only a part of the above symptoms wUl be present at one time and yet point to torpid liver or biliousness and weak stomach. Avoid all hot bread and biscuits, griddle cakes and otber indigestible food and take the "Golden Medical Discovery" regularly and stick to its ase until you are vigorous and strong. The "Discovery" Is non-secret, non-alcoholic. Is a glyceric extract of native medici nal roots with a full list of its ingredients printed on each bottle-wrapper and attested under oath. Its Ingredients are endorsed and extolled by the most eminent medical writers of the' age and are recommended to cure the diseases for which it is advised. Don't accept a substitute of unknown composition for this non-secret uzDicin 0 Kjrowx ooitfgarrjoy, - Honor, Glory and Jokes for the Eearers of the Him, Especially at Jamestown.' Xew York Sun. I read a paragraph a few days ago to we etiect that this would be great year of John Smith," said the traveling man who was fixing up me cares in a game in the smoker, "It didn't appeal to me' . "As most of you know that's my name. I am not ashamed of it, but l don t mind saying that i would like to trade it off until that James town affair is over. n we could have a set of expert numonsts to get up the jokes condi tions might be more tolerable, but ior everybody you meet to take i shy at the family, patronymic is tire some. "My house thought it would be a good card to have me on the ground the day the show ooened at Norfolk I arrived the night before and put up at a convenient hotel. When I wrote my name on the register the torture Degan. " 'You're the first on the ground. e&cuumea uie cieric, wno was evi dently a raw one. I confess, how ever, I didn t take his meaninc. off tne Dat. . . i - . Of course you want the best in the house, continued the mushroom with a smirk on his face. Then he hammered lUn. 'The Smith familv has the right of way here,' he con tinued, and 'specially John.' f 1? M H .. . urumamy i m pretty quick on the trigger, but the wretch kent ahead of me. Before I could unlim- ber he handed out another : We'll give you the Pocahontas chamber. John Dardn Mr.Smith. front! ''Before the bellbov made the nlate i was at tne bat.. I won't delay the game, gentlemen, by Quoting mv own words, but when I was through tne excrescence behind the counter was sneaking away as if he had squatted on the hot end of an evict ed hornet. In spite of apologies bv the landlord I walked out of that tav ern and put up at a boarding house wnere they don t keep books. Ihe next day I droDDed m at the telegraph office and asked if there was anything for John Smith. The man looked at me as a fellow looks at a hat on the sidewalk on April Quicker than you could get your cards l showed him my watch Dock et book containing a bundle of old etters to clinch the identfhcation. " 'I am John Smith.' I said, with the words underscored, 'and I don't want any funny business.' Ihe man at the window handed out four wires to my address and said in a quiet way that was rather soothing : 1 reckon you are John Smith all right, but don't go 'round here with the idea that you're the only one. The twelfth went out just ahead of you.' - I thought it was time for me to do the funny stunt. Seeing that I had anticipated trouble, I said : "Then I'm No. 13 As I was going out I heard the man at the window say, 'You're lia ble to be 23. before you're much older.' "I'll owe that fellow one until I meet him again. I am not the only one of the name that is doderinz it. either. "The last night I Was in the town went to the- office of a hotel. It wa3 crowded. While I was sitting and smoking, an office boy with a telegram pushed his way through the jam, calling out 'Smith. John Smith ! Smith. John Smith !' Nobody responded. The bov took the telegram back to the clerk, who looked over at the line of occu pied chairs along the wall, and called out: What's the matter with you Smiths over there ? I knov? at least a half dozen of you are of that name, What are you afraid of V "Not a man m the line moved, ater in the evenThg after the mob had scattered I sneaked up to the clerk and asked him if anybody had claimed the message. Yes, he snorted. The message has been read by six different Smiths. Maybe you're the right one. I hope so. I-took-it... . It was for me. I apologized for my part of the trou ble. I said in a meek sort of way that I wasn't to blame for my name. '''Course not,' snapped the tired clerk, 'but if you Smiths would only get together and mark yourselves in some way it would save a whole lot of trouble in this hotel.' "I left that town the next morning. and I shall be traveling away from it as long as the exposition la ta. And I've burnt up all my cards." Want a Pint of New Ones. A traveler, putting up at a fifth- class hotel, brought the "Boots" up with his angry storming. Want your room changed, sir : What's the matter, sir?" "The room's all right." fumed the guest, scorchingly. "It s the fleas object to, that's all." "Mrs.- Blobbs." bawled the .'Boots," in an uninterested sort of voice, the gent in No. 8 is satisned with his room, but he wants the fleas changed." - Tonight. If yon would enjoy tomorrow take Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tab lets tonight., Tney prod nee an agreea ble laxative effect, clear the head and cleanse the stomach. Price, 25 cents. Samples free. All lrnggutB, Concord, and A. W. Moose, Mt. Pleasant, L Upright walking Is sure walking. News and observer. MUs Julia Magruder. who died Richmond on Sunday, was one al . . a. . I k a in o uie most, accomplished women writers, in the South. She was novelist whose stories charmed many thousands and fave her a high place among American women of letters. She had relatives in North Carolina and often visited them at Concord Among her best works were "Child Sketches from Georgia Eliott." "The Uhild Army," "The Labor of love,' "Miss Ayr." "A Realized Ideal.' "Princess Sonia" and "A Manifest Destiny." The London Saturday Review says ' her right to be in eluded in the scanty handful of American novelists is undisputed." Miss Magruder was a devoted Southerner, and was an ardvnt lover of alt the traditions of that section But she as ardently wished for a com plete obliteration of sectional lines. She made her home for the most rart in Washington, and numbered as many friends and associates among Northerners as among the folk from the Southland. In speaking of Across the Chasm" she once said ITll . a a ine people tnemseives are so essentially different. They look at things in such different lights and from so widely divergent points of view. The color question is. of course, the main point today. I am one of the few Southerners who ap prove of President Roosevelt's attitude in the matter." When asked if she meant the social equality of the negro, she protested, Oh, my, no; that is just the sort of mispresentation of each other's ideas that has kept the North and South at loggerheads for generations approve oi the recognition of Booker Washington or of any other black man who may develop as much ability and character; but that does not imply that 1 for one ; moment think it advisable for the white man to open his drawing room doors to the negro race or to meet them socially in other person's homes. Taking the standard of the 'crreat- est good to the greatest number,' what more useful citizen have we han Booker Washington?" Dropping from social problems to iterature Miss Magruder, during one of her chats m her beautiful Washington home, picked ud a volume of James Martineau a treatise on politics and theology and- said: "lie is one of my favorites, but he is not my nineteenth century man. Emerson is my nineteenth century man. The Emerson philosophy has done more for me than anything else. I feel that Lmerson has taught me to lve my life more sanely and more wisely than if I had not come under his influence." All Fourth Class Post Offices in the State to Reoort to Ralefch. ! . . News and Observer. i Beginning July 1st. under a new order of the Third Assistant Postmaster-General, all the fourth class post offices in North Carolina will make their quarterly postal deposits to the Raleigh office. This discon tinues Asheville and Winston-Salem as depositories, also Richmond, Va., so far as it is a depository for this State. There are 2,126 fourth class offices in North Carolina, only six States having a larger number, these being New York, Pennsylvania. Vir ginia, Kentucky, Missouri and Texas. This order means that the rural earner paying olhce m each State will be the exclusive depository for postal funds for fourth class offices in that State. Offices in about half the counties in this State now desposit at Raleigh, so that this work will be about doubled here. Have You a $10,090 Bill? Washington Herald. 1 If you have any $10,000 bills lying oose in your pocKets or bureau drawers, you'd better cash them, as the issue of that denomination of the present day is to be called in. This action has been decided upon owing to the fact that fourteen of the said $10,000 bills were among those which vanished in Chicago last winter when the sum of $173,000 disappeared a3 if by magic from the sub-treasury. Charles II. Treat, treasurer of the U. S. made known hese facts in an address last evening at the University Club. Mr. Treat talked on Glimpses into the United States Treasury. He said that no trace of the fortune stolen Chicago had ever been found. He intimated, however, without saying, they were still in the employ of the government, and that some of the officials might know omethine of the whereabouts of the money. the disappearance of which has been baffling Uncle Sam's Secret Service men for months. A Dangerous Deadlock, that sometimes terminates fatally, is th-. toppage of liver ad bowtl functions Fo quickly end this condition wlrhoo? disagreeable eens&tioDH, Dr Kwg'u New Life Pill- should always be yenr rem edy. Guaranteed abfo'otelv cat u fac tory iu every case, or mney back, at all drug stores. 25c. One eastern railroad has a regular brm for reporting accidents to ani mals on its right of way.- Recently a track foreman had the killing of a cow to report. In answer to the question, "Disposition of carcass?" he wrote, "Kind and gentle. Proud looks make foirl work in fair faces. rait" . lmadent Roceve!t rovcmJ a kW range f subjects in his two addre- es at the Jamestown Exposition, or at the dedication of Uws Borgia isuiamg. arm one i lore the .Nation- al rh t or uu Association. Among other things he came out unequivo cally tor an Income tax law, tar m graduated inheritance tax. for national legulatitm to prevent child labor in factories, for legislation to provide compensation for accidents to employes, whether caused by negligence or not, and in thU connec tion gave a rather broad suggestion it -i . . w uie ran roans mat mcv were tin. wi in fighting the constitutionality of the National Employer's Liability law. He also told of the land fraud which had been unearthed and of the necessity of enacting laws which would permit the Government to control the fuel, oil and timber re sources now in the public domain Some of his more striking sentences are as follows: Most great civilized countries have an income tax ami an inherit ance tax. In my judgment, both should be part of our system of Fed eral taxation. I speak diffidently 1 1 iL . ! . . . 'a aoout me income tax, iiecause one scheme for an income tax was de clared unconstitutional by the Su preme uwrt hy a hve-to-four vote. neveruieiess. a graduated in It V A. K . 1 . . 1 . come tax of the proiier type would be a desirable permanent feature of Federal taxation. in my iuukrmeni, nowever. llie I J A 1 . . inheritance tax is both a far belter method of taxation and far more important for the purpose I have in ic - ine purpose 01 navin mc swollen fortunes of the countr? bear in nmrtinn tn tho.v view - the purpose of havinvr the in proportion to tneir size a eon stantly increasing burden of taxa tion. It is of course elementarv that the natipnhas the absolute right to decide as to terms upon which anv man shall receive a bequest or devise in ). ti i'. ji . i uo not ueneve mat any advan tage comes either to the country as a whole or to the individuals inherit ing the money by permitting the transmission in their entirety of such enormous fortunes as have been accumulated in America. . Tl.e South will be all the better for new immigrantsof the richttvne. and I hope to see steamship lines carrying such immigrants establish ed at ports like -Savannah and Charleston, just as I hope to see ports lik-j New Orleans connected by ines or steamers with the South American continent the continent with which our relations should grow ever closer and mutually more advantageous." Sam Jones' Body Removed. . The bodies of tho late Rev.. Sam P. Jones, of Cartersville and his youn gest son, Robert, who both died some months ago, have been removed from the, vault at the Westview cemetery, Atlanta, to Cartersville. It will be remembered that when the Rev. Sam P. Jones died his body lay in state at tne capitoi and was placed irt a vault at' Westview tem porarily pending the erection of a vault at Cartersville. Several weeks afterwards Robert, the youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. Jones, died and his body was brought to Atlanta and place d beside that of his father. Last Thursday the train stopped near Westview and both bodies were placed vpon the train and carried to Cartersville. When the train arrived at Cartersville it was stopped near the cemetery and tne oouics- were re moved and deposited in the vault prepared for them. No one except a tew mends of the family knew that the bodies were to be removed. EWE HE 3J1EHIE 3IIE211E Call at "nhe Store That Satisfies" and see an 'Oasis' rSee how they, are made, read the guarantee, and, last but not least, buy one and be happy ; Free! Free! Standard Talking Machines. Now is your time to hear our proposition. 1 1 Da HAUY Jt0W. As ArpaxfiC lUt Crime Cataet Cmri by fWxmcct fmabrs Urn Very Istrmtiat Kraf. Attacking our prim ayntent and the theory that crime can U currd ny pufUahnwnt, Brand WhiUock wniea tn the May hVerybody't : "Many ram In prion are sufTerfag i or xae tin oi the judge that Coo demnrd them quit a much u for their own. The magitrat has no means or knowing the rrally aijpufi. cant mmgs a unit uxy man before him ; what strange, occult, mnteri. tu currcpts of human will or fat. moving m the man's mind, or in th minds of hi ancestors, impelled him to hi deed ; be has no means of Knowing how ur the man has been the prey of economic forces that tK judge does not understand, or what hidden physical defect mav hv created moral defect or obUauity in mm. ah tne judre knows is that in a certain book it is printed that be tween rninmura and maximum imita tions there is a mvsteriotu numhor of jyars that must be prescribed for uurgiary, another number for lar- ceny or a sum of over $35, another tor stealing a horse, another for lorging a noie, anotner ior nrlng a iweiling : or that there are no minv so many days for getting drunk, for creating a disturbance, ami so on. . . . It would be just as: sensib e for doe tors t say that a man with typhoid rever must go to a hospital for two years, a man with smallpox seven years, a man with appendicitis throe wars u mnn with u Iwitl thlrw ' . V . j a rnan WH? a cafbuncIcJ ninci a man with a cold ten days, and so on. When a man is cured of a Dhrsi - cardiseas? he is a dischanred from a hospital ; when a man is cured of I mora! disease he should be discharged irom a prison : uxat is. assumimr mat a man could ever be cured of a moral disease in a prison, which, of course, he cannot, as society itself admits by continuing the same treat ment when he doea get out. But then the law. on the criminal aide. has made no progress in two hun dred years, and cannot be compared with medicine. One "AM Too Many. Marjier'n Weekly. A number of years ago when the present-Second Assistant Secretary oi ntaterAiveyA. Adee, was Third Assistant, an employe of the State Department was called to the phone. w Hi you kindly give me the name of the Third Assistant Secretary of btate? asked the voice at the other end of the wire. "Adoe." "A. D. what?" "A. A. Adee." "Spell it, please." "A." "Yes." "A." "Yes." "A" "You go to h !" and the receiver was indignantly hung up. India, the land of mystery, is rapidly coming to the front in various fields of Industry. The Indian Empire posfiesses no fewer than lifteen coal fields, while iron is worked on an extensive scale in three districts, two of which are situated in the immediate vicinity of Cal cutta. Nor are oil fields wanting : seventeen more or less Important centres are engaged in this industry in tne provinces oi rienga ana Assam, while tabacco cultivation is another valuable asset to Assam, as well as to Madras. 3IIBIIE DIIE3IIC tt HARRIS Et !etdir)f Urrmta for not rkni- - 4 bcm iher U of bnm Wiry ihero wtM In a now rJ. whra a iKin MnK,t t. rt4 countryman str4 ti tjr uKlwirai; hcrw?1 laU uf goods ta dot tin, eni Wi competition. If a!l aftirt you don't UWit. you nti your moo ey back or oWirtf th ta cxahar, yw know. Vai rou a farmer ?" . . I hvo up on 11 lUrtt. YelLctcn. rem mmhI kUirnfkMt oot aakyJuj pair from cl ClOLh In Oil th Mtmtr "lu. degrnenrlnt doeskin, and vlll hut da year oud. you know.1 . ftrywn took 0 pasta to the light, examined tho tcxtart of the cloth, and then thaVfo M ki knowingly, .ik lW'T tuch cotton la thera; they wta shrink." "Of MIIM M J . rtt shrink, rut rait und 1 tlla ding. If man rat owns a tmnk or JfP top Com hero I don't sell him dem kind of rmnt VT lun..M dey vas made xbrfcaty for d farm rig puOncaa, Dey vud4 dcrmomo ter panta. und a pleln to trery farmer rat rears a balr of dm. Iv you know, my f rent, doM panU rill dell you exactl rat do wedder riil ; , ) .II VM roing to bo ret und cvld dee banu till begin U shrink up. und ren it was goin to be rry and varm dey come right down, you know. Dree years airo I aalla a balr i , . " . i.T7. fLJf J? Bmc4 V N kifti ud efcr since den he made 1 SS crP yen de Oder beople don't knows py his dermometrr nanta vat de redder vill be. After arhllede booplo in de neighborhood ftnJj oud ue egret ur VUlun iucceat, und at Wnnlnf of the blantlng leasott. you know, der come dirty railee round, und if dry aee VUkins? bants erawUnjr up hla icg dey hold off and valu for a change, but if hU bents vas down dey goet right back home, und puts in de crop. Dink uf it, f rent. Mit de dermometer bants. you can dell exactly ven to tmt in cabbage seed, und plant corn dwlce as better at mit any almanac, beside ven de redder feta ao cold und ret dot de banta goea up under your arms, you can aew buttons on de front and rer dem as a rest.' Side Uf kU oa fteppiaess. Tho habit of happiness can be acquired. Begin each morning by reaoJrmg to enjoy something during the day, It may be In the sunrise, a child's play and laughter, or a pretty touch of the landscape. Learn to look In each experience which comes for a tittle pleasure. You will be surprised to find how many things that you thought com mon place and rather disjurrreable possess either an amusing orlnitruc tiveaide. No" matter how disagreeable a duty U. some happiness may be got ten out of it, even if.it ia only the thought that by your efforta too are getting it out of the way. if the duty must be repeated con tinually you can get some comfort as well as happlneM out of the fact that you are cultivating your pa tience and strength of will power, both of which are essential to happi nesi or success. The boughs that bear roost hang lowest. 3I1E2111 11 OM T7 S i 1 1 FURNITURE CO. il i i ! I