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Show ARMOUR'3 POOR RELATIONS. Hie Big Facker Tells a Funny Story AboWt One He Hasn't Made Rich. It has been a matter of current report for years among board of trade men that Phil Armour has no poor relations, says a Chicago newspaper man. "He will not allow any of them to remain poor, " a veteran of the board remarked by way of explanation of this unusual good fortune for-tune of a rich man. "He makes them all rich. " "I have heard that story before, " Mi. Armour remarked, with a smile, when one of his friends asked him about it the other day. "But it's a mistake. I have suough of them. ' ' Then the big packer burst out in a !augh, and his friends knew a good story was coming. "One of the poor kind he lives down In Illinois is one of the most persistent persist-ent men I ever knew. He keeps writing and writing for money all the time. He Is not a bad fellow, only improvident, and if ho displayed tho same energy in attending to business that he doea in writing to mo he would have been rich a long time ago. Well, he kept sending one letter after another, saying that if he only had $500 he would be all right He repeated this so often that one day I told my secretary to send a letter saying say-ing that if he would' t bother me for a year I would send him $500." "Well, sir," and Mr. Armour's sides 6hook with laughter, "as soon as the mails could bring a reply I got it. He Baid, 'Make it $1,000 and two years,' and I thought it was suoh a clever turn that I sent the money." "What happened next?" "In about three months he wrote again, saying the agreement was off because be-cause his wife hadn't been included." Mr. Armour seemed to think the whole thing was a great joke and especially espe-cially enjoyed the shrewdness of his poor relation. |