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Show STORY OF SHADEOCH. close of a cold mird the It waa cheerless day in January, the 4:02 train from New York had Just paused with a snort of contempt at the little 2s ew Jersey town of Ilondeauville,.and the commuters who alighted from It turned their trousers up above their ankles and buttoned up their overcoats snugly across the dreary expanse of streets beyond fields and which shone the cheerful lights of their homes. Among these passengers was a tall, spare man, with a serious face and a long goatee, who wore a . -- ill-pav- ed rather seedy ulster and carried a large market basket on his arm j He sighed wearily as he bent his steps towards the interesting example of architecture in which he lived, and as he ascended the steps the wind moaned sadly through the wooden filigree work that adorned the porch, while the hall windows, bright with colored papers pasted over the panes in imitation; of stained suburban glee. glass, rattled with Onre inside his snug, warm study, where a fire was blazing on the liearth and the light was shining cheerfully from a lamp with red hoopsklrts over it, the commutor deposited his basket on the table and sank, with a sigh of relief, into the "big leather easy chair. The room was filled with implements of his craft and so great was the variety of articles displayed that but few laymen would have been able to guess what trade it was that claimed man's "labor. this stood in a cor A disjointed stove-pip- e bits of fresh oraer by the ange and banana peel rested on the had for its table, the mantel-piecprincipal oraament a stuffed yellow dog that had evidently seen much hard service, and a dozen wooden mannikens, bearing such labels as "Plumber," "Vassar Girl," "Young Husband," and "Office Boy" sat in a serious row on an old own-your-own-ho- sad-face- d fire-plac- e, e "Mother-in-Law.- " sofa. The sad faced man was William n Walnut, the professional humorist and as he opened his basket and took from it a number of packages containing jokes, poems, ballads, short stories and other literary wares, he uttered a sephulchral groan of despair, for these were the unsalable goods which had been returned to him that day from the various newspapers and publishing offices which he had visited in the course of his regular weekly trip to the city. The door opened and a graceful woman with a sad, care-wor- n face ;ame toward him with outstretched arms: "My dear one," she cried, tenderly, "you look disheartened; was your trip to the city a failure?" "Alas, Jane," responded her husband with something like a sob in his voice, "although I tramped the street of the great town all day with my basket on my arm, I met nothing but disappointment oh every hand, and I have come back as heavily laded as I went and infinitely more depressed in spirits. It seems to me that the demand for jokes, poems, mother-in-lan I i j i iujis, siu y pastorals auu uaua.ua-pee- l fantasies has ceased forever and I really do not see how we are going horse-hai- r well-know- w 1 ve-pip- "to THE Bless my soul, what's the beast abort RICHEST OF ALL; . now?" Shadrach, who had bounded into tha house with the children at his heels, ROCKEFELLER SISTERS OWN now reappeared with half a dozen ' $50,000,000 EACH. sheets of white paper in his mouth and brought them to his new owner. "Shadrach"' cried William sternly, And They Don't Intend to Purchase "how often have I forbidden you to Titles with It The Beautiful Home touch any of my papers on my desk? Idle of the Wealthiest Family in the Give me those Jokes this minuter World. "Jokes!" cried the stranger, as he took the papers from the goat's mouth and examined them eagerly. "You f (New York Correspondence.) deal. in jokes, sir?" HE two richest un"I make them, sir, as a means of married gtfrls In the livelihood," replied William Walnut, towhole universe "and Shadrach; has often evinced a day are Alta and hunger for them that was nothing Edith Rockefeller, short of cannibalistic, as many of of John daughters them were of his own species.' D. Rockefeller, head ' in"These are very excellent Jokes, of the Standard Oil deed," continued the stranger, critconcern. The ically examining the piece of paper, for"While the Intelligent goat regarded Gould of tunes the him with a keen delight portrayed on and Vanderbilt his mobile features. ' girls pale into insig-- : "I hold a diploma as a master-jok-nificance when the Rockefeller wealth er," replied William, modestly. is mentioned. It is an "Excuse me," continued the stranger, when it is said that Helen and Anna "may I ask if you are Of sober,4 indus- Gould have fifteen millions each. Eleven trious habits?" millions would be much nearer the "I am, sir," replied William proudly. mark. Since the death of Jay Gould "Then," said the other, "how would there has been a considerable shrinkage you like to take a position as foreman in the valuation of the securities in in my factory?" In which the family wealth is largely At these words Shadrach began to Invested. His wealth when he died was bound in the air with delight, greatly seventy-tw- o millions, and a larger share to the surprise of William, who made went to the elder son George than to answer. "But I am not a mechanic, any of the other five children. The latter inherited about eleven millions each, sir; I am only a humorist." tall dear that sir, building and their unspent accumulated incomes "My which you see over yonder is a lit- barely compensate for the depreciation erary factory in which both prose and of the principal during the last two verse are constructed and "we have years of financial depression. The heads of the various branches of lately added a large and well ap- Vanderbilts will undoubtedly adhere pointed humorist department for the to traditions and bequeath the family purpose of supplying all the honor for of their bulk the respective fortunes to : foreof the the place sons and a comparatively man In that department Is yours if the eldest to the daughters. This modest fortune you will take it." wealth intact and main the William Walnut accepted the offer plan keeps The railroads. the ;in secured family of the kind manufacturer In the broadthe for methods similar Astors adopt cloth suit, and was placed at once In estate real reservation of their city charge of the humorist department in oldings. which nearly two score of horny-hande- d So, when it comes down to the bare verse and joke makers are kept of millions, the Rockefeller constantly at work. His wages are question as they are invariably called, are large, and his home contains many girls, comforts and luxuries which were unknown when he did nothing but piece work and took his wares to the city every week in a market basket. As for Shadrach, the devoted quadruped, to whom the humorist owed get through the winter." ' ; , 1 , much-talked-ab- I over-estima- te ' sion, These young ladies are up every morning at 7 o'clock not a very fashionable hour, but an extremely healthy one. Everything in the Rockefeller household moves like a piece of taachln-- .. ery, and for years the family; has sat dowri .to breakfast at 7:30 o'clock. The r two daughters have only one maid be- tweeri them. What is more, they, occupy the same large' bedroom on the east,side of the second floor. There are two sxnall beds .in the apartment, which opens into two large, sunny rooms One furnished in oak and the other; in ma hogany. These are thes dressing-room- s, comall boudoirs and working-roombined. Miss Alta uses the .mahogany room and Miss Edith the oaken apartment. Each room has a substantial business-lik- e desk, fitted with a large s, filled pigeon-holet the latter rack of bills. and letters folded with neatly Both of these girls are thorough .business women. They are allowed large sums yearly and they control the exinpenditure absolutely. Almost if rom necesthe been have .they taught fancy sity of system and method aIn all their miniature doings. They each keep set iof books, have individual bank accounts, and can tell to a cent just wheretheir money lias gone for thetpast several years. It is almost needless, to Say that very little of their money has gone j into the coffers of the Fifth avenue ' I modiste or milliner. The breakfast in the Rockefeller house is a plain meal. The family assemble at 7:30 o'clock, and in the dining-rooMr. Rockefeller asks a blessing upon the meal and then reads a chapter of the Bible. Breakfast is over at a few min-utes after 8 o'clock. The father and son go downtown to manage the millions, and the mother and her sister, Miss Snellman. who is a member of the. household, attend to the affairs of the house. The hour immediately alter immeasurably above all contemporary, heiresses. Some time ago in court the father of the girls swore that he could not tell within $112,000,000 what his wealth was. This certainly leaves a wide margin for conjecture on the subject. Men who claim to know say that his present wealth is in the neighborhood of $145,000,000, and that its net increase is at the rate of eight millions a year, as his investments earn annually . large dividents. He is only fifty-fiv- e years of age now, and were he to live six years more he would then be worth more than $20,000,000. There are four children in the Rockefeller family and they will inherit all of the wealth. It has been Mr. Rockefeller's policy to make all the charitable bequests in his lifetime that he intends to make, and the supposition is general among his friends that, with a few small exceptions, the bulk of his money will go to his family. Of the four children the eldest is Bessie, who married Professor Charles Strong of the Chicago University, to which Mr. Rockefeller has given $2,500,000. Mrs. Strong is 28 years old. Miss Alta Is 24 years old, Miss Edith is 22, and John T., Jr., the only son, is 21. Each of these children will inherit anywhere from forty to fifty millions, and it Is doubtful if the whole wide world contains two girls of such vast wealth as the Misses Rockefeller. How these girls spend their days will be told here. In the first place it must be understood that they are not women of fashion. They never made a formal debut in the social world simply because they are unknown in the regular walks of swaggerdom, and their circle of friends is an extremely narrow one. They take no interest in the changes Lj-a-v,x- ; ' i The entire Walnut family rushed Into the front yard to give the wanderer a hearty welcome. ' The stranger who was moppipg his brow with a I large silk handkerchief, exclaimed, "I don't ; know what to make of this animal. I happened to remark in his hearing that I was out In search of a new foremangoing and he Insisted upon accompanying me. I had no objection to that as long as he walked quietly along, but when we reached the corner of your street he literally forced me to your door-stepartly e by dragging me by the and Partly from butting me from behind. -- p, coat-sleev- j , . . : Hi yjfifiif (i JT iyil) (g j m i : s Tuu Fll v at of ludia. One of the most curious and interesting of the animals at the Zoological gardens died the other day. It was the fish cat from India. The animal looks very much like a common house cat, although a trifle larger. The antipathy 6f cats for water is well known. Therein lay the difference between the late lamented eat and others of its species. It simply yearned for water. In its native land ft not only took hourly swims for its health, but it earned its living in the streams which it frequented. When the pangs of hunger approached It was wont to go out in the river, dive under the water and catch fish as they passed. It was a clever fisherman. Nothing with fins was too it was alquick for it, and consequently When well fed. and sleek ways brought to the "zoo" this longing to go out and catch fish was pretty well developed, but became its fish already gradually lulled by receiving fish every day caught. The keeper fed it and little else. It thrived for a long time, "zoo" for having been an inmate of the was taken years, but a short time ago it sick and gradually grew worse, until it Globe-Democra- t. breakfast the girls devote to music. Miss Alta is a finished pianist, while Miss Edith is quite expert.on the violin and 'cello. They practice regularly every week day. Their taste for, music is an inherited one. Their father is one of the finest amateur performers on the violin in the country, and has been so "llie , , il 1 i i j ; Their Interest Vends In a more serious direction. Educational affairs, the sciences, Church and mission work and kindred subject are their enjoyment. or They are not women by any means; they are and healthy-bodie- d healthy-minde- d whose vigorous mentality forces girls them to probe deeper into the problems of life than do their butterfly sisters. : DOPK-wor- ms over-cui-tur- ed j i ! A Story of Two Humorists. , Will H. Vischer, the humorist, en- the reputation for homeliness. Speak-nof his yearnings for comeliness, the hu"When I married and had a morist said: little daughter, I had some one who really admired me. To her I was an Apollo. One in my office with me, and day Bill Iye was in and making my little girlas came was her way, began love to me, calling me all sorts of sweet names, 'Nice papa,' said she, 'pretty papa.' Nye turned around and said in his peculiar drawl: 'Vischer, are you try-" out of that child?' ing to make a humorist Philadelphia Record. A Poisonous Alist. P. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O., Proprs. of Hall's Catarrh Cure, offer SIOQ reward for any case of catarrh that can not ei cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send! tpr' testimonials, free. Sold' by Druggists. 75c. j The ice cream sign and tlie bock beer ad. are the harbingers of spring. Piso's Cure for Consumption relieves the most obstinate coughs. Rer. iD. Buchmuel-ler- , Lexington, Mo., Feb. 24, !'94. The book agent has more brasa than the man whofrequently travels for a hardware This fitly describes miasma, u. vaporous poison whicn breeds cuius aua lever, uuioas remanent, duino ague, ague caii.e, aua in tne t ynoid lorms oi lever. tropics deaaiy toiomucn Uxiioiti preeuts and cures these coiupiauiti. iiiii.ouiuess, constipation, ua ixiuue trouuie, dyspepsia, nervous uuu nupuireu vitality ure neuralgiatno rcaL rcstwauva also remedied by Warranted to cure or money, refunded. Ask your druggist for it. Price 15 cents, i A man leaves inb stone unturned when he generally goes out in the, fields looking for il ios-teuer- firm. "Hanson's Magio Corn Salve." j 's pronounced by famous musicians, who have been entertained at the Rockefeller house. The father and daughters often play together In the evening to the great pleasure of the chosen few When a man's mind is unsettled, it freof the friends who are permitted to quently happens that his bills are in the hear them. The fact that there are four same condition. pianos, a magnificent pipe organ and nothing is lost It is a mistake to say that who has given up innumerable other instruments in the by politeness. Anybody house attests the musical character of his seat in a street car knows that. the inmates. work Mothers ;ppre:atn tli- - g After the music of the morning has of Parker's Ginger Tonic, with its reviving' qualities and nervous. a boon to the been disposed of the girls take up their favbrite studies. Prior to her marriage When a man attempts to warm his hands Mrs. Rockefeller was a school teacher at a hotel register it is high tiiie to inin Cleveland, Ohio, or more properly quire into his mental condition, speaking, a professor of botany. The you com to realiza studious habits contracted then still that your When corns are gone, and no more pain, how cling to her and have been transmitted grateful you feeL All the work of Hiudercorna. 15c to the daughters. Both are clever linboth arms?" "Will the coming man use can guists and deep readers. Miss Alta asks trust the a scientist. Yes, if he favors French and Miss Edith prefers girl to handle the reins. German, although she has gained a knowledge of Japanese, and at one time seriously thought of journeying, to that country as a missionary.; The spectacle heiress going of a as a missionary would, indeed, have been an odd one. After the reading is over the girls go for a ride in the park. The whole fam fond of the equine ily is passionately and son owning fast world, the father; trotters and the girls favoring the saddle horse. They are usually attended by a groom and both are swift riders,' frequently covering fifteen miles in an hour and a half. They are usually back before 12,1 and spend the remaining hour until lunch time; in going over their mail. Both of them have! Sunday school classes in Dr. Armitage's Baptist church, and are members of many KNOWLEDGE church societies.; Their wide charities have made them knowh to toilers in Brings comfort and improvement and the field of philanthropy all over town,' and whenever a really deserving case tends to personal enjoyment when who live betis encountered the Rockefeller girls are rightly used.' The many,life and to more, with supply ter than others enjoy usually communicated with served more at )less expenditure, by the needed aid. Luncheon is promptly to 1 o'clock, and the afternoon passes away best .world's the products adapting ' much of season attest the will At needs this year of physical being, the quickly. of the time is spent In the garden survalue to health of the pure liquid the laxative principles embraced in the rounding the house. In It Is an artificial lake about four Inches deep. It remedy. Syrup of Figs. ; freezes readily and affords a fine skatis due to its presenting excellence Its used daily whening ground, which isice.i in the form most acceptable and pleasTheir friends ever there is any and truly ant to the taste, the also use it, and there are often many beneficial propertiesrefreshing laxa of merry skating parties hidden behind the ative ; TectuaUy cleansing perfect the system, high green fence running" along the dispelling colds, headaches' and fevers Six o'clock Fifty-fourt- h street front. curing constipation. is the dinner hour, and the meal is a andhaspermanently satisfaction to millions and It no given wines with one; substantial plain, of the medical met with the approval sfiarfifilv de- .n KnimK! . v jtjj. hj on ji acts Decause ine rr j on it the protession, scribes the Rockefeller attlude and Bowels without weak-tune- s question. ,They spend many for- - ;,' neys, Liver and it i3 perfectly free from the liquor ening them annually' in fighting 1st favorable there evil. If the weather every objectionable substance, e is oftentimes' a skating party by elec- Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug-tris man-iis it light in the evening. a If not, there, gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but Or friends. California few ufactured by the entertaining music, Fig Syrup By ir o'clock the whole family is asleep. Co. only, whose name is printed on every wise, .simple, and package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, It Is 'a healthful, ' satisfactory day that these extraordl- -n(j being well informed, you will not women nary rich young live., Fortuneept any substitute if oflered. hunters never approach them.; If they did, the memory of their reception would ' make them shiver for: a lifetime. bait. rnea-niatis- - '! j fifty-million-dol- lar ; - MRS. BESSIE STRONG. of styles, dances, the theater, fashlon- able clubs or thethousand and one light amusements of he society women j while we tenaciously cling to our opinions own. r 7 LtifferenCcj Customer Fifty cents for. filling this prestore down Why, at the scription? only! a quarter. the street they charge me drugj Druggist That's all it's worth at that store, ma'am. They put about four cents worth of drugs in the bottle and then fill it up with water. I put in ijtmej same drugs and fill the bottle with the finest aqua pura. Thanks. Anything else? Chicago Tribune. ONLY ON1S ANI THAT? IN JULY. Excursion to Colorado, The Great Rock Island Etoute will sell tickets cheap for this excursion to Denver at in and you should onceJuly, as to rates and routesipdst yourself SeSend by postal card or letter to .Tno. bastian, G. P. A., Chicagoj for n beautiful souvenir issued Dy tne umqagoi kock lsiann "Tourist Racine railway, cauaa in tells all about the trip. It Teacher." that win oe sent free, It is Hi gem, and you should not delay in asking! fjorj it. JNO. SEBASTJAN, G. 1. A., Chicago. Wfi expect other people! tfc change their Be If the Baby is Cutting Teeth. that old and sure and use -- ; . Jvia-liqu- or weli-rie- d remedy, Maa. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Chidren Teething- It is the experience of al conductors that strange things come to piss on railroads. Harvard Shoe Co.'s ad. for bargains. Lawyers are men who wfork with a will. Doctors often put them iji :he way of it. Ralmf Fly'sV firpam WIWMIII MMIIIIf, klj E1 y 1 .v T Pa ssases, Allays Pain and Inflammation, Restores the Senses of Taste and Smell. Heals the Sores. Apply Balm56into each nostril. Elt Beos.. Warren St.. N. Y. "-a- SJ I cjfAHl.CHDrpCOLDl StoSGtA BA-W- !&EAbl fw THE SAFETY HAND SEPARATOR is the est running; isthoHily light hand separator wiih 'all Is ha covered. MERS! I It gearintr and easiest J simplest keni. clean. Stephen tiifiifT" Joyce of Dakota Neb., writes: "Aye City, would not part with our and SeparatoiMf Safety wo could not get another. It iseverv perfectly satisfactory wav: from the in same milk from which we? used to get 8 or 9 pounds of i J butter we now get 13.'' Write for Circulars, Tho Qharn'ooo I uoc On liu j , .P"1'.1"!. Co. Bluffs, la uui jsuppu LYfe EW1S' 98 uuuip Dairy ?0W2I& 31 AITS FEsmxs (PATENTED) The strongest and vzxreet Lye made. Unlike: other Lye, It being a fine powder add packed in a can ,wlth removable lid, the contents are always rt ad 7 for use. Will mate toe oesi perrumea usra rsuap In 20 minutes without boiling. It 2a the best for cleansing waste pipes, disinfectiosr sinks, closets, washing Dottles, paints, trees, etc ; ' xrum screamed front window,1 "herexommy, comes Shadrach home again." Xnd there, sure enough, was the worthy goat, accompanied by his new owner. ' : ; ! g! "is fer breach of th'e premises.' It appears to the court that he promised the widder to marry her, ah then run off with the postmistress?" Yes, (Sir," said the weeping widow, "that he did." "JJaillff, collect $10 out o the widder fori interruptin' the court. Is the postmistress present?" "No, sir," she's on her honeymoon." "Git $20 wuth o' stamps out o' her All the lawyers presfer contempt. rent?" ' "No, sir two absent." "All right; $10 a piece fer both. ?" Ain't you been drlnkin' bailiff , "Jest a dram, sir." costs for you. "Five dollars and Is got court here The dignity of this I" Free Detroit to be maintained Press. 'As" i I g . J ,1 Gol. . - j A large number of fairly well pre- ; VMflfMVltl..... died. St. Louis Joke-make- tlon." j Rocks That May Ante- served fossil shells have recently been found in rocks so ancient that they were supposed until recently to be de void of all remains of organisms, and perhaps to antedate all life on this earth. This discovery will assist in the classification of rocks and the mapping of the earth's surface, but it has still a greater interest in connection wffh the theory of the development and evolution of life, for, strangely enough, the shells in question are allied in the closest manner to species now living in countless myriads, although the rocks in which they are entombed are probably not less than a score of millions of years old. Even at that remote period, long before the coal measures, and relatively, near the epoch at which the earth be- came habitable, there were many species, many allied genera, descended from still more remote common ancestors. Their descendants, on the other hand, have adhered closely to the types established so long ago no doubt because they were well adapted to an environment which has underj gone little change. These fossils are not large, or they might have been found before; In fact, they can only be seen clearly with the higher powers of the microscope. They are globular, silicious and covered withf the radiating spines which have given them their name of radio-lari- a. Their modern representatives f W. .' Well Preserved Fossil Shells Fairly Found In . fun-makin- I , j VERY ANCIENT FOSSILS. date Life. ? 4 his good fortune and the manufacturer his faithful and exemplary foreman, he sleeps in a carved oak box stall, and has his whiskers trimmed once a month by a French barber and frequently lunches off Cheret posters. Best of all, he is still tenderly loved by Mrs. Walnut and her children, whom he visits at their pretty little home nearly every fair Sunday. The Topeka Daily Capital. "William." said his wife, bravely, ""'there was a gentleman here y who wishes to buy I scarcely dare tell you of it, but I feel that there is nothing else to be done. It will break the children's hearts" ' "Surely, Jane," cried the husband, 4tyou do not mean that you think of parting with our faithful Shadrach?" "I do," rejoined his wife, firmly but sadly. "This gentleman was passing the house and saw Shadrach sitting in customary place in the fence corner, eating his noonday shavings. To my surprise he came in and offered to buy him for $100 explaining that he was in need of a good family goat with long gray whiskers and that he hacT not seen any one among the many which he had looked at which could compare in point of quaint beauty, keen sense of humor and docility with our own dearly beloved beast." "What does he want him for?" demanded William, suspiciously. "I suppose he is a rival humorist " "No, William I am sure you are mistaken, for he wore a beautiful suit of black broadcloth and a cluster. diamond pin. In fact, he told me himself that he was the proprietor of that big factory whose tall chimneys can are somewhat larger, for they can be seen from our room." sometimes be seen with a good lens, The following morning the stranger and they live on the surface of the appeared and, the bargain having been ocean, far from land. Where the animade, the faithful Shadrach was drag- mals die their flinty shells fall slowly ged, in spite of his resistance, through to the bottom, and, accumulating the front gate while . the children there, form a chief constituent of the clung to him with sobs and cries and material brought to the surface by the the mother watched them tearfully deepest soundings. from the porch. i The beds in which the shells have "Poor Shadraeh," exclaimed William now been found by Mr. Barrols and that afternoon,' "I really don't see how his pupil, Mr.; Cayeux, are among the I shall be able to get along' without earliest rocks certainly deposited from him.i What the compass is to the water, and the group is called the mariner, the cold deck !to the poker Algonkian. The discovery will give a hark, the dyed mustache to the bunco new to the use. of' the microsteerer, the goat is to the American scope,impulse most and of the work on the orr. He is the corner stone of ganic remains of , the very old rocks our national humor. You may trace will probably be done with that inhis influence in the pages of every strument. . r Cosmopolitan. comic newspaper in the land, and if - his whiskered tribe were to become EVERYBODY PAY J UP. extinct is that the whole profession of would disappear from the face of the! earth, like the reputa- The Dlgmlty of the Com t In lie tion of a police captain in the fierce white light of the Lexow investiga- - L "This suit,' said the rural Justice, to-da- out who love ftd flutter about in the sun .! shine of Queen Pleasure. Much of their time is spent at the city home of the family at No. 4 West Fifty-four- th street, a. big, roomy, brownstone mansion facingthe park surrounding St. Luke's hospital. The two girls never go to Newport, Lenox or other summer resorts of fashion, but often spend much of the hot season in town looking after their little charges in the church mis- PENNA.SALTM'FG CO. Gen. Agents.. Phila- -. Pa. DR. GUNN'S IMPROVED LIVER PLLS '.Minn n Duvum :tMfC fill VIV, ONEPILLFOKADOSE. A movement of the howols each dy is Decessary tot health. These pills Bupplyhat the system Jacks to VgV make XJr it regular. They cure Headache, brighten th than ootmetica i Eyea, and clear the Compleiioa better nor sictteni To convince you. we They neither a or will mail sample tree, fnlipoK fif 6e. Sold every. where.1 ROSA: vko MJSU. rnuwipm if . H . - ! : , . i Prosecutes Claims. Successfully U.S. Pension Bureaut U 3IjtePrincipal n last war, 15 abjudicating clakua, since. yrs atty 1 Washington. Tl 1 IPTTIS'0 7hm 1 Ik A XJ11 Mtained. Write for Inventor'sGuideT ?TZYlln H. a Wanted Agents 4300. over 1000, In many f PJ Box 1371. New Torsi |