•4 * 5 * * '• WOMAN'S WORLD. WOMAN'S PART IN THE CALIFORNIA MIDWINTER FAIR. IVallMltoy Girls Play Football--A Stair of vdOTgyatan's Daoghtw*--Th* Woman Who Works--Women as Sanitary In spectors--Tb« Girl of the Period. California is to have a Midwinter World's fair, which will begin Jan. 1 and last six months. Already great preparations are being mnAe for the event which is to make the resources of. the Pacific coast evident to the whole world. There is to be a woman's con gress auxiliary of conrse, and the Pacific Coast Woman's Press association has taken the initiative in calling a meeting of all California women's societies to ar range plans for the congress. Such a gathering of women will be of incalcula ble benefit to the scattered women of the state, who, because of their great distance from the centers where the gatherings of women have been held, have not had the advantage of concerted action in the Advance movements in which women are engaged. By meeting each other an esprit de corps will be established which will be of incalculable benefit in forwarding their professional and industrial inter ests. Women also from all parts of the country will fiftd an added inducement to visit California at this genial season in the fact that they may then personally meet the noted women of the Pacific coast, echoes of whose Wondrous ability have floated over the country in flower and fruit, in poem and painting, in legal argument and bewitching romance, in aeience and song. The lovers of humanity will rejoice when there no longer exists the necessity for a congress of women or a separate representation for their interests in any way, but this can never be until men erase the line they have themselves drawn. As long as men ignore the com mon human interest by organizing for 'the conduct of great enterprises like this without recognizing women in a co-or dinate capacity, so long must women or ganize separately to gain such strength and recognition as will impress the world with their importance and potential use fulness as a factor in the concerns of the race.--Woman's Illustrated World. 0 Wellesley Girls Play Football* - TRiere has been a new departure inau gurated at W ellesley college in the mat- tea1 of athletics. Earty this fall Miss L. E. Hill, who has charge of physical cul ture at the college, conceived the idea of introducing a number of outdoor games hitherto the almost exclusive property of young men, and at the foot of the hill, which is surmounted by the main hall of the college, Miss Hill has laid ont a small football field. An association football is used, and passing is the sole method of advancing the ball from one goal to the other. All violence is elimi nated from the game, and it is very amusing to hear the "I beg your pardon" when two of the contestants jostle each other in their endeavors to catch the ball. i The Wellesley girls are enthusiastic devotees to golf and football as well as tennis and archery, and some of the girls show a spead in getting to first base that would make their brothers envious. In all their games there are earnestness and enthusiasm, b»t, strange to say, no sug gestion of rudtness and nothing unwom anly. No one laughs at any discomfiture of a player, due perhaps to the encum brances of dress, and accidents are ac cepted as natural consequences not to be jaoticed. Miss Hill is now endeavoring to have a level tract of land within the grounds set apart and fitted up for a per manent athletic field, which is indeed much needed, as the .gymnasium at Wellesley is altogt. titer inadequate for the 700 students in the institution. Miss Hill restricts this outdoor exercise to those who have first had physical examinations, and no girl will be allowed to participate in any game for which hm not atrength.--New York Sun, ' ; ^ A -Stalf sf Clergymen's Daughters. ; ' One of the largest Humming houses in »"• Jjtmdon has & staff peculiar to its own organization. This i§ made «p of the daughters of elergyiqaM. These live in the building, which hi most extensive. They have the!* wall appointed rooms and their comfortable table. They have their times and seasons of relief, oppor tunities for recreation, but their hours are appointed. They are well dressed and always in black silk. Whan the notice of a death is received, one of these young women is sent in a cab, if It is in driving distance, an4 pwniiillj superintends every detail of the mourn ing. She goes, comes, takes meaaimp, buys gloves, scarfs, veils, eeod !._> tfieir transmission, and at the last gopi per sonally to adjust bonnets, veils and Ak&p- * ery. If the errand is out of town in a tant place, she takes the train and gctoe up and down until everything is in readi ness. If the order comes from a distance so far that her presence is impracticable, she assumes its entire charge in town. The ceremonial of English mourning is so well prescribed and so thoroughly un derstood that any order can be easily filled.--Exchange. f J' The Woman Who Works. Writers in the English press and peri odicals are very much exercised lately over the rushing of women into all de partments of labor. The Spectator re cently devoted two columns to prove that the woman "who works is injuring herself and may even be injuring civili sation." Discussing this and other sim ilar opinions on the subject, Miss Emily Faithful, whose long service in behalf of her sex gives her voice authority, aays: "It appears to mo that the present movement has not been the result of a revolt against the so called 'divine the ory of woman's life,' but has been due to changes which have taken place in our social system, which have made men Spinners, bakers, and so on, and talrofi various employments out of the domestic ^ "T',T ;' '? . I ^ J t •£ ^ I , sphere into the.manufactory, and conse quently made the work of women out side the home an absolute neoessity, and I am glad to have outlived the age which bound them to works of philanthropy, in the narrow meaning of the word, and now welcomes them into the commer cial circles, as well as the regions Qf science, art and literature." guarded by three ladies, residents of an English province, but such a boon to the race cannot long be withheld when its existence becomes widely known. --Hera Point or View in New York Times. Women as Sanitary Inspector*. The extremely unsanitary condition of a very large number of the workshops ancP workplaces in which women and girls are employed has long been a mat ter of regret. It is one which is with some difficulty reached by the male in spector, who cannot investigate the cir cumstances as readily as could be done by a woman, and the length of time dur ing which girls are employed by many dressmakers exceeds - in many cases the limit fixed by the factory act, and the same is true of other occupations. These abuses as regards girls are more readily cognizable by women than men, and it is satisfactory to note that during the past week the sanitary committee of the Kensington vestry appointed two ladies as inspectors. Although the salary is only £60 per an num, a considerable number Of candi dates competed for the office, all of whom are stated to be more or less quali fied for the work--a convincing proof, if any were required, of the large number of well educated women seeking profita ble and useful employment.--London Queen. , The Girl of the PeriodU Sneak thieves and burglar#^ lieve that the old fashioned girl of the three volume number, who faints in the face of danger, is a creature of flesh and blood, should be undeceived at once. If she ever existed, the species is fortunate ly extinct, for the girls of today are made of entirely different stuff. This was proven conclusively in west Phila delphia recently, when Miss Alice Sypher, a daughter of Lawyer Josiah 11. Sypher, put a burglar to flight and nearly ended his earthly career. . The thief entered Miss Sypher's room, and, instead of scaring lier half to death, found himself looking down the muzzle of a revolver. The fellow had nerve, however, and carelessly remarking, "That isn't loaded," started to walk to ward her. But it was loaded, as the thief discovered' when a bullet whizzed within an inch of his head and imbedded itself in the door panel. With an oath the baffled burglar flew down the stairs and escaped through the front door.-- Exchange. A Chinese Giftroom. ^ ^wo sisters living alone in an uptown flat have been enabled to furnish one room almost entirely with the presents given them by their Chinese laundry Sunday school pupils. For 11 years the women have taught in this school, and no Christmas, Easter or Thanksgiving day passes without some token of gratitude from the Mongolians privileged to learn English under such pleasant auspices. These gifts come in variably in the shape of something in the Japanese or Chinese line. Last year the ladies transformed their sitting room in to a Japanese apartment. At the door which leads into the parlor hangs a bam boo portiere interlaced with colored bt&ds, and everything but the matting and a few chairs came from the pupils or "boys," as they are called. There are several pretty little cabinets, some pictures in unique frames, scrolls, fans, umbrellas and sweet incense. The sisters are very proud of this "gift- room."--New York Herald. Sequin* fashionable detail of ttw wotaeat is sequins. What poetical visions the word conjures--the tinkle of the tem ple bell on the road to Mandelay, and oriental beauties out in the spiced air, fringes of sequins veiling their eyes' soft light. Alas for poetry! the sequins of fashion are only blanc mange and wine jelly in another form. Sequins of milli-, nery are made of gelatine; they do not' tinkle; they are brittle, but brilliantly decorative. Bonnets are made of sequins, rosettes are made of sequins, passemen terie is made of sequins. An evening; dress of brocade has the entire pattern! outlined in sequins; a white brocadef* sparkles with white sequins; a black* moire has its water lines traced with" gold sequins.--New York Sun* , v FOE LITTLE FOLKS. , . The Lost Baby. A baby about 2 years old wftatafedttta the fair one day by its parents. They had been seeing the sights all day and were very tired, when about 8 o'clock in the afternoon the three sat down on a bench in a shady bypath to rest. They were all tired and soon were asleep. The baby was the first to awake. It saw a bit of colored paper borne by the wind lodge in a little bush about 10 feet from, the seat. ' With baby clumsiness it rolled oil th|; seat a«d-ora *1 A' towaril the bit of pa* : Fashion and Fancy* , , A pretty penwiper is inado of leaves of gray chamois, held together with a beech leaf of oxidized silver. It is said that crape, except for wid ows, is to go quite out of fashion. Veil ing, grenadine and the like are to super sede it. There is a new storm serge in green, an olive shade which will be welcome to those ladies who are fond of this mate rial. It is as durable as the blue. While black is unquestionably the firsts choice for useful dresses and ordinary business wear, the fancy in colors runs to blue, olive, shades of gray and pur- plish tones for more dressy occasion Tllll The Socks Terror* • Somebody ha's introduced socks with five toes. They came out a Couple of months ago. The women promptly and wisely waved them aside, refusing even to examine them; Now that dry goods houses have returned them to the man ufacturers as unsalable goods, dealers in men's furnishing goods are giving them awav to customers, and the miserv of ^Sfetv til i^&cli^d the dovet^t prize, and being fatigued lay down behind the bush and fell asleep. The mother awoke, noted the absenc# of the baby and made the island echft with a shriek. The father sprang to his feet rnbbing his eyes, and upon learning of the baby's disappearance became great ly excited. ' ' j A poor Bedouin with his ample robes was .pounced upon and sel rched to seeif the little one was concealed about • his person. A Columbian guferd made his appearanee and was about vto arrest the father, but when things w,ere explained the overtaxed wives and mothers may be to him joined in the searchjor the mis» imagined. It was hard enough to darn ' infant. It took but a frw moments socks,-but the sex is threatened wit h a j for the guard, urged on by the sobs of new terror--five toed the distracted mother, to find the infant * Evening World. | asleeD behind the bush with the She Made liooth Laugh. Speaking of Edwin Booth,, a girl says: "I did something once that I don't believe anybody else ever did. I made Booth laugh while he was play ing Hamlet. You know the way he had of fixing his eye upon some one person- in the audience and apparently acting to that person? One night I was the one. It made me nervous. I could not stand it." So, in the soliloquy, what do you suppose I did? I made a monkey face at him. And he laughed. He certainly laughed," she ended triumphantly.--Ex change. An Old Wedding Custom. Jk% a recent fashionable wedding in one of the suburbs of Boston the ceremony of cutting the bride's loaf was performed the night before and was made the occa sion of a festivity, participated in by the immediate wedding party only--brides^ maids, ushers and the like. This is a; revival of an oldtime custom which mayl be destined to run its course again in these days of a craze for resurrections. • v? I asleep behind the bush with the bit of Colored paper clutched in its chubby fist. | Its mother grabbed it to her bosom and pretty ; COvered its pudgy face with kisses. The father apologised as best he could to the astonished Arab, and everybody Vas Those Threatened Ringlets. Are we going back to Ndah's ark? Be cause it seems to me that nothing is so popular in the way of fashion as the old and--may I be permitted to express an opinion rather strongly--hideous ones. By dint of leagues and efforts we fought off crinoline when it threatened to in vade us again, and now we really shall have to make a stand against the ap proaching coiffure. Hair parted in the middle and drawn over the ears is loom ing in the horizon. The next thing will be the bunches of curls--ringlets is the proper word--which are to be seen all through the pages of Dickens, and which necessitate a patting across the head as well as toward the forehead. Even now there are whispers of these curls having appeared in Paris, to the. satisfaction of hairdressers, I dare say, because hair is not plentiful nowadays, and so those who wish to be in the mode will have to buy false bunches and stick them on.-- London Gentlewoman. - * Mrs. Stanford's Work. Mrs. Leland Stanford has, since the death of her husband; brought into ac- \ :.ve play the executive ability of which Ebe is possessed. Partly to fill her lonely life and partly from a desire to put the business affairs of the Stanford univer sity on the best possible footing, she has taken the personal control of the vast and complex business interests of which, as her husband's heir, she is mistress. At the age of 68, and wealthy beyond all ambition for more riches, she is tire lessly at her desk and indefatigable in her care of the estate. So successful has she been, and so sagacious in the man ipulation of her affairs, that the big properties have been perceptibly better ed since she has had charge of them, while her management of university matters is said to be such as will leave the trustees little opportunity to improve upon her work when the property final ly reaches them. A Homesick Girl. A homesick freshwoman at a girls' col lege has made a string of paper dolls, ac cording to the childish manner, with hands joining in a long chain. There is one for each day from now till the Christ mas holidays. Every day she will cut one off and thus mark ber gradual approach to freedom and home. -- Philadelphia Press. • ' •; Mrs. Carlisle Joins the Authors. Mrs. John G. Carlisle has joined the circle of women who have stopped in the middle of busy and famous lives to set the seal of authority on kitchen chemis try. Mrs. Carlisle will soon publish a cookbook, as Mrs. ex-Senator Hender-. son, Marion Harland, and Mra. Taylor have done before her. ^ s Progressive Western Australia.' Western Australia is likely soon to fol low New Zealand in granting full suf frage to women. A recent letter in forms us that an effort to secure it failed in the legislature by only one vote. The strength of the movement surprised even its friends. Next year it will probably secure a majority. Brief. severely . ---- • 'U > + , . "Lady Mary." .-si*.. }; Amongthe many games playefMjy the New England factory children upon the village green is on* which is called "Lady Mary." Tht Iftdy hes down on the grass, while the lingers, hands, step forward and sing: »f'ii Lady M>rfc,fHl you get up? <1 ; tfp Will** wii» you 8T«* Lady Mary, will yea get up? • Will yoa get up today? The lady from her verdant quires in song: Wlwptfll you have for my brcakfto%«-- For iny breakfast, tor my breakfast? % What'll you have for mjr breakffcit, ^ . * If I get up today? ' • 41 . M. A slice of bread and a evp of tea* jL • ' A cup of tea, a cup of tea; ' , ", A slice of bread »sd a cup of tea • i$f ' ^ |f you'll get up today, chorus musically the attending mothers. This doesn't suit her tadyahip, however, and she, answers: No, dear mother, I w< 1 won't, I won't. _ No, dear mother," I won't 1 won't get up today. • Slit with sudden afterthought of to Come she proceeds: • What'flBj ou have for my dinner V If 1 get up today? A lump of fat and a roasted jpat» If you get up today, respond the indulgent mothers coaxing- ly. Lady Mary repudiates this, howev er, and then goes on to supper. When this meal is reached, the mothers have & happy inspiration and mention some thing that sounds as much like "a nice young man in a caravan" as any tiring else. And then Lady Mary enthusias tically answers, "Yes, dear mother, I will get up," which she proceeds to do, causing the mothers to scatter helter skelter. The first one touched by Lady Mary is then "it." f McHENRY -52 .. To say that his wife can't make at good bread as his Mother did, CILLETTS , Will give you Uie great ad\ C which his mother had, and besides, bread made with this yeast will help bring back his boyhood's P;V?:. digestion, ensuring his enjoyment of the rest of your cooking also. Oct Magic Yeast at your Grocer's. It is always GOOD «nd always READY. DR. FRUTH! --WILL BE AT lpfOODST O CK, Friday, Nov. 24, 1893. Office Hours from 9 a; v. to $' m**-, •: 'A'\ T HOTFl. WOODSTOCK % H. Miller & Son, JLHSALKKS IN-- MARBLE I GRANITE, MomiitientH, BendstoncNi Tablets, Kto. 0 Cemetery Work of every de scription neatly executed at the L o w e s t P r i c e s . : r ' u . ^ S&tis&ctloa Burutndt * Shops at Me Henry and Johns- bur^h, III, where at all timet can be tound a good assortment of fi&ishdd work M»diiry Millar & Hon*' W. L. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE noTWP. Do you wear them? When next In need try a P*WJ v*'w;r Beat in the world. vtWWi I 4 #5.00. 44.00 #3.50 #2.50 #2.25 £3.00 $2.50 I $2.00 FOR LADIES 2.00 #I.7S FOR BOYt * 1 . 7 8 * 1 If you want a fine DRESS SHOE, made In the latest •tyles, don't pay $6 to $8, try my $3, $3,50, $4.00or $5 Shoe. They fit equal to custom made and look and wear as well. If you wish to economize in your footwear, do so by purchasing W. L. Douglas STioes, Nam® and price stamped on the bottom, look for it when you buy. W.I* DOUGLAS, Brockton, Macs.1 Sold by MMON STGFFEL., West. McHenry D. O. FRUTH, i Surgeon tn the Provident Medical Diipen- --7 of Aew York now President of the Yuih Mtdical Institute, chartered For wall decoration flat baskets and china jars in all suitable shapes, placed rather high, are filled with careless loose ness. the pretty eiiect completed with trails of ivy falling to a considerable length. To be _unconventional is the present floral aim. While a farm barn was burning at Perkiomenville, Pa., ayoungservantgirl dashed in to save two valuable liorses which the men present had not thought it possible to save. She escaped badly burned. So did the horses. An Encllib Woman's A tea toning tablet is the latest inven tion or discovery of amateur chemistry. In shape they are like lozenges, are of light purple color and are called "tanoc- cas." One of these clapped into a pot of tea--two if the pot is a large one--effec tually, it is alleged, destroys the tannic acid and other harmful properties and removes the grim specter of unwhole- aomeness which has latterly begun to haunt seriously this most comforting bev erage. For the present "tanoccas" are ont of the reach of the New York public, as their concoction is A secret closely This is certainly the reign of crystal, and it is easier to mention the things not made of it than those that are. For your toilet table you must have two glass can dlesticks--cut glass, if your purse con sents to the extra outlay. A pretty "slumber roll" is made out of cardinal and orange ribbons sewed in cluster stripes on a black silk founda tion. It is simply a round roll gathered at each end and finished with pompons of the same ribbons. A Parsee woman named Miss Sobragi has studied law at Oxford, England, and intends to practice in India. This is the first oriental woman who has dared to venture into the domain of jurispru dence. Fronde, the historian, refuses to ad mit any women to his lectures at Ox ford--an instance of illiberality excep tional among the ^.tiprera gE tlpt vener able university. " > , ' ^ . • * f ' 4 » - t > t SO»p BubblM. All children delight in soap bubbles. They are an'unfailing resource in rainy weather, when paint boxes pall and pic ture books lose their charm. Of course, the bigger and more brilliant the bub bles are the more fascinating they are to the little people as are their prototypes to childx-en of a larger growth. And bub bles can be blown as big as the biggest football that ever won college honors ivith properly prepared soapsuds. Cut up a bit of white castile soap the size of a walnut into a cup of warm water and add a teaspoonful of glycerin. The ad dition of a few drops of strawberry juice will give the bubbles a lovely rose tint, and a squeeze of orange juice will pro duce a prevailing yellow tone.--New York Telegram. His long experience in the largest hoapttala in the world enables him to ir<'at all CHKONIO NERVOUS, SKIN AND BLO>D diseases upon the latest ftCHMitUif 5>rincp(e«. Oil FHl) Til lina no superior in diagnosing and treating dlpoftses and deformities. Ho will give 150 for any case he cannot tell the disease and where located In live minute , Medical and surgical diseases, acu e and ehroni<' Catarnih, disease* of the Eye, Ear, Nose, Th-^atand Lungs, Dysp^pda/llriirlit's Disease, Diabetes, Kidney, Liver. Bladder, Chronic Female and Sexual Diseases tpeediSv c red by treatment that h*s never 'ailed in thousandsofoa»es that tad been protiounoed beyond hope. BInnv people moet death every ye*r who might have heen restored to perfect health had thuy placed their cases in tho hande of e.\|»«rtf DR, Fill)Til haa attained the most wonder ful success in the treatment of cases to which he «iovot#8 special ationti. n, and after years of experience, bag perfected tho most infalli l»le ln'otbcd of curing Organic Weakness, Ner vous Deuillty, Premature Dec line of the Man- >7 Power, Involuntary Vital Losses, Impair- •d Memory. Mental Anxiety. Absence< f Will Fovror, Melancholy, Weak Back and kidney •ffeettohs if consulted before Idiocy, Insanity Falling Fits or Total Ijnpitenc.y result from YOUTHFU L ERROR'S the awful effect, whieh blight the most radiant hopes, un(l< itig pati ent !">' business study, society or marriage, anuu allv a>w@eplt>g to an aiatimuly grave thous aiuls of young men rf exslf'd talent and t>r-lllant lulellect. PILES OU KKD with- out »ain, knifecutery, EPILEPSY positive- ly cored by our aow aad neve>' failing Iiospl tal treatment, FRISK EXAMINATIONS of the anaa, client ieal and microscopical, in all eaaei of Kidney DiieaMs, Rrigbt's Disease, Diabetas and gpermatorrhte. Bring tptci- irens, WuK'BIElTUL OUGLM perfected in all cases thai have been Mflected or nnsklll- fully treated. Mo experiments or failures. We undertake no imoaamble cases, but cure thousandsglvaa ay to die Keaiember the date and eoui«lnrl7 as Ms rooms are al ways orowded " Gates and oo^retpondeaee oenfldeatial, end treatment sent by express with full direct ions for Dae* bit! personal consultation pre ferred. ; DR. O. O. FRUTH. 3B32 Lake Avenue.'Ohloaoo* Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and >11 Pat»J! ent business conducted for MOOCRATC Fees. OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT Orrtec^ and \vc can secure patent iu less time than those' [ remote from Washington. Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents," with i cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries' [ > sent free. Address, , r C.A.SNOW&COJ OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, D. C. > PATENTS • \ Caveats, Trade-marks, Design Patents, CopjrigMfc r ^Ad all Patent business conducted tMF MODERATE FEES. -b ' v .A. tK y" f . . , •*" 3e * «, Information endatoeegive*to tirrnntnnnltliwl , , (tfUHiga, Address 1 CLAIMS CO., JOHN WEDDERBURN, P.o.Box4es. WASHINGTON, D.A>. HA K7*Thls Company Is managed by a combination of the largest and most influential newspapers in the United States, for the express purpose of protect* ing (heir aubacribcra against unscrupulous and incompetent Patent Aleuts, and each paper printing this advertisement vouches for tho responsU bUlty tun! iiigH The Brave 8ts|e Driver. % Redhanded Dick, the Lone Bandit-- Halt, Dfrigo Sam, or Til fill you full of lead! Dirigo Sam--What! Place the peer less senoritas at the mercy of such a vil lain! No, no! Death were better.--Dei*> ver News. ' ~ A Slight Error. In the familiar isong, "Pull For the Shore," there is a line, "Cling to self no more." In a colored school it was dis covered that the children had been sing ing, "Clean yourself noi^fe" with great spirit.--Barn's Horn. ^ , j FREE.- Land In California Free, 13|PThat can arrow, if irrigate^ Or*nwesgrapes rr any fi nit iil California thai, will srrow by ir rigation This land is no nia^w feet value witnout irnii^tiou. Wo will Plant the Troes Free, Take caie and cultivate them for 5 yeasip for half tfic i "Ht, pay the taxen, labor and other c'•» .UCM, will pav you hack the first year alter irrigation one-third of your investment if you will help get irri gation. Priee $25 for 5 years, payable $5 par n j J u 1 month till f _'*» is paid. FREE DEED t© rronounccd 3 pure and Whole- t Ii- laud, no charts to you for taxes or some tonic-Stimulant by Sis© labor or trees. Address medical fraternity everywhere. t California Laud and Watot^ -I -i Jt •V - 4"|- ~' Shipped pure and unadtrfter* ated direct from the distillery. Gives life, strength and happi ness to the weak, sick, aged and infirm. If yoa cannot pro«ttre it of your druggist or liquor dealers, vpob r eeipt of $1.50 we will express prepaid to • ntldiens a full «tuart sample bottle o i Oii 1.1 k live or Bourbon. I CO. DISIILLtfiS, Exchange. 38ft Main fit.. Dayton, O. IF YOU WANT INFORMATION ABOUT ^l| * PATtNTS. t JK PFOTCCTfON.lKOT FOR ORNAMENT, trite DUBOIS & DUBOIS, Patent Attorneys. Inventive Age Building, WA&ttIN4TON, D- C. Itook Fm. I Mention tbis Addwss » letter or postal card to THE CLAISS COHPA1VT. Hj*Nv WEDDERBURN, - Managing Attorn) . O. Box 463. WASH 1N> aing At GTON, D.< ^ ̂ PENSIONS PROCURED FOR SOLDIERS, WIDOWS. CHILDREN, PARENTS. Also, for Soldiers and Sailors disabled in tho Ua«of duty m the reralar Army or Karr*tae«the war. Survivors of the Indian wars of 1883 to 1843, a*4 their widows, mow entitled. Old and rejected claiim a»neciHlty. Thousands entitled to higher rtlM, ffidfornew|aw,. Xo far ««VtQ^ SoQ