** ***~ *** ?T * *~ * "* *»-T- ^ _ ^ i _ t '-ST *' . • V,«f tl " (fjiy «* 1 4j! "J V { % .VW » -ni ' Y^TmPw 12?v*&. V•<- r < ,:-»y i *':•*&? •v # ', ^-.7 A - ,-* vHi f:« ,i:'»1;:-' ?S»v. ' -.-r-i -^*t*" \ r THE MeHEimY yLAiyPEALER. STcttErttY, ill. fS?WWi • / / / y i s a s k e t c h Newton D. Baiter, ^resident fWilson's new Secretary of War, fo merly Mayor Cleveland* *' . $ • *, T?r- ..ts v .-v./ .. : •>,,',7", -"-..V ̂ '>. ! HOUSEMAIDS TO Organize Union for Avowed Pur pose of Bringing Mistre&eB, to Terms. TO TRAIN EMPLOYERS , ' • - - . - " ' Plan to Enfdrce Their Demands by Wearing on Nerve* of Individual Mistresses--Lazy Girl* Ar* "Especially Desired. EWTON D. BAKERS 1 had b«en toM by a man well acquainted with him, "is the kind of thoroughly good citi zen we all approve of highly--and fail to imitate! He has lofty ideals. He has high principles. He is utterly sincere. He is simple and unaffected both ^in thought and life. He has a clear, %^1-diBciplined mind. He has &n extraordinary command of concise fctid effective speech. Without being 4 in the least effusive, he is a good ®*f*cr. You will find him full of charm. Out in Cleveland he lived in a modest frame house with his wife and three children, smoked flake tobacco in a 25-cent pipe, drove his own Pord, and for amusement read Greek and Latin books on the street cars." Thus runs an article by Rowland Thomas in the New York World. is interesting to notice," my informant added, that he is the second of Tom Johnson's disciples to be lifted into prominence by President Wilson Brand Whitlock is the other. It is hardly exagger ation to say that Brand Whitlock, in Belgium, has -proved himself a great man. Will Baker be as successful In the war department? Frankly, ™"cfh, a® 1 u£e Mm personally, I am wondering wnether he Will measure up to the Job. What he nas done he has done well. But--hfe has never oeen tested out in really big affairs. Has he the capacity for them? You know a .38-caliber re- IHlTif1?7 be " perfect "sapoa--as a revolver-- trat fail lamentably if pressed into Bervlce as a ««acoast gun! Is Newton D. Baker big enough fo be secretary of war at a time like this? That's ^hat I'm asking myself. That's what the country Is asking itself, I think." Naturally those remarks ran through my head as I talked with the new secretary of war last week. I saw him twice, once in his modest bed room at the University club, where he is living for the present as a bachelor "because the children •re in school in Cleveland and we don't want to break into their year." The second time he was In his office in the war department, the office to which one penetrates through tiiat dread ante chamber where hang the portraits of all the previ ous incumbents of the office. .On both occasions I got the same impression of the physical man. Nature, In molding his body, did a neat job. He is a markedly small man, but in proportion all the way through. His littleness carries no suggestion of the dwarfish. HIB head Is large, but not enough so to make him look top- heavy. His hands and feet are of moderate size, well formed and muscular. He has a chest big enough to breathe in, a waist which carries no adipose luggage. His skin is swarthy, his hair black and straight. A pair of hazel eyes full of life, but comprehensive rather than keen; the wide mouth of an orator or actor, mobile yet Arm of Hp; the brow of a scholar; a face in general in which the perpendicular lines of strength are ac centuated, a manner at once dignified and friendly, • bearing which I should call attentive rather than alert--these are the characteristics of the outward* ma#. • His mentality is not so easily characterized. I shall have to try to bring it out for you in a series of rather detached glimpses, as he himself re vealed it to me in the course of our conversation. Our talk ranged over many topics. We had, for Instance, been speaking of the extraordinary amount of reading of standard English authors he had done before he was twenty years old, and I asked him whether the familiarity of his mother tongue thus acquired had not been an important element in his various successes. He said: "1 think that is true. Ability to express myself ef fectively in speech has been of great value to me." This led to a brief sketch of his personal hls- toi'y. Mr. Baker was born in 1871 in Martinsburg, W. Va., a community of P,000 persons, wherein his father was the leading physician. He was the second of four sons. At the age of twenty, in 1891, he received his degree of Bachelor of Arts from Johns Hopkins university, having completed the four years course in three years. Followed a year of graduate work in Roman law, comparative jurisprudence and economics, and then his law course, which he took at Washington and Lee uni versity, completing the two years' work in one year. "That compression," he told me, "was done for family reasons. Money was not plentiful in a country doctor's family, and there were other sons to educate." After his graduation in 1893 Mr. Baker hung out his shingle in Martinsburg to indicate that he was "willing to practice law," as he puts it, and remained in that receptive condi tion until 1896, the last year of the Cleveland ad ministratis when Postmaster General Wilson called him to Washington to be his private sec retary. "I divided my two cases between the other members of the local bar," he told me, "and went." In 1899 Mr. Baker was invited to come to Cleve land, O., as a partner with Foran & McTigue, one of the city's leading firms of trial lawyers. He . went there, met Tom Johnson and was magne tized; by that association was drawn into local politics and had fourteen years of active cam paigning there, serving four terms ,J£S city solicitor under Mayor Johnson and two terjiis as mayor after his chief was deposed. He declined to run for a third term, and had just resumed his law practice at the beginning of this year when he was called to Washington. Returning to our topic, I asked him to what other qualities besides his ability as a speaker he felt indebted for what he had accomplished. He pondered that and said: MAKE8 WORK FOR LAUNDRIES. It would naturally be expected that the owners <of laundries would oppose any device that would tend to make washing of clothes at home easier, jg .. On the other hand, it has developed that the pf / .laundry owners. are in favor of the electric iron FF^Nsnd credit a good deal of increased business toj fh , ^tbls appliance. In numbers of cases the faouse- V *? keepers are ridding themselves of a weekly bug- -bear by sending their work to the laundries to be returned "rough dry," finishing it at their leisure. In this way the laundries get consider* *ble work which otherwise would never oome to "*hena. . "Looking at myself Impersonally, I am inclined to think I have a very patient mind. 1 mean by that a mind which moves slowly, which plods for ward Instead of dashing or leaping. There is noth ing brilliant about it. A brilliant mind, it strikes me, 1b like a thoroughbred horse, good for a race but afterward needing to be stabled for a day or two. My mind Is like a plow horse. It cannot spurt, but it can go on turning furrow after fur row. That lets me get through a lot of work. "By a patfent mind," he went on, "I also mean a mind which does not leap to attitudes and deci sions, but feels its way. And a mind which does not get its back up easily. Opposition does not make my mind bristle. A difference of opinion is not a personal thing with me. "And I think," be said, his dark eyes twinkling and his wide lips quirking- with fun, "it has been a very decided advantage to me to be so little and to look so young. I really mean that," he hastened to add and cited two instances in illustration. One was his argument before the Supreme court of the United States in the Cleveland traction cases, an argument which attracted the flattering favorable comment of the learned justices. The other was a speech which was one of the outstanding features of the Baltimore convention which nominated President Wilson. "Neither of those," he commented, "could by any stretching of words be called a great speech. The natural fairmindedness of men was what pulled me through In both cases. I looked so handicapped that my hearers said instinctively, 'Gjive the boy a chance!'" Such cool, almost academic self-analysis led me to ask him how life struck him, so to' speak-- what ambitions it Btlrred in him. "I'd like to prac tice law," he said. "That is my one ambition. There is no office or position that I care for. But I'd like to practice and practice and practice law." Further talk along that line developed the rather interesting fact that the new secretary of war is one of those men who seem to have been moved forward by the urgings and propulsion of their frleads Instead of fighting forward of their own accord in response to an inner impulse. Post- paster General Wilson all but dragged him from his briefiessness in Martinsburg to get his first taBte of cabinet ways and duties and responsibili ties. Martin Fnran dragged him to Cleveland to become a trial lawyer. Tom Johnson dragged him into politics. And Woodrow Wilson has just dragged him to the war department. The circumstances of the Foran case are un usual enough to partake of the romantic. In 1897, when the young and still younger looking attorney was returning from his first visit to Europe, he was table mate of the late W. T. 8tead and a mild- mannered, retiring English barrister. One day Baker came on deck to find the barrister in a peck of trouble. A stalwart, lawyerieh, six-foot Irish man, full of Gaelic fire, had waylaid him and was charging him, in his own person, with all the wrongs England had ever perpetrated on the dis tressful country. "I happened to be rather fa miliar with the Irish land laws," so Mr. Baker tells It, "and contrived to substitute myself for the barrister in the argument. The upshot of it was that my opponent and I became good friends and spent the rest of the voyage playing chess together. We parted in New York. 1 went back to Martinsburg, and no word passed between us for two years. Then the man--Martin Foran-- wrote me the firm's business had so increased that another partner was required and that he wanted me. I had long felt I should be in a larger com munity than Martinsburg, and 1 liked Cleveland." but I knew they wanted a trial lawyer, whi^h I was not. So I went on full of excuses, prepared to thank him and be dismissed in friendliness. Before I could get my first excuse out Mr. Foran had ushered me into an office and said, 'Here's yours,' and before I caught my breath he had sent some clients in for me to talk with. I stayed in Cleveland and learned to be a trial lawyer." His enlistment as an active fighter in the John- son camp was equally casual. "Tom" was sick one night, and the young lawyer was pressed into Bervlce to fill his place at a rally. "Tom's sick," said the man who Introduced him. "This is New ton D. Baker, who's going to speak in his place. COATING STRUCTURAL STEEL. A new process of coating structural steel br any other exposed metal with zinc is being introduced He's a lawyer. That's all I know about him. Go ahead, boy, and tell them what you know." Baker told them, and so'began the activities which led to four terms as solicitor and legal leader of the antitraction combine forces and two ,termB as mayor. ... I asked Mr. Baker how the mayor of Cleveland's Job compared with that of the secretary of war. "I love personal relationships. One of the pleasantest things about being mayor of a city the size of Clevelanlf is the great number of people with whom It piWI We into touch. At the war department JU-fina a large part of my duties is taken u jj'WTth seeing people. 1 am very glad that is so. I like to see people constantly. Of course." he explained, "I don't mean that flocks of casual visitors drop in to see me here. But the business of the department brings many people to me daily." I had meant to ask him how the two positions compared In size and difficulty. He was non committal on that point, and I suggested that at least he did not seem appalled by the size of his new task, even though the Mexican situation had given him a baptism of fire for a greeting. He said: "I am not appalled. No man can hope to escape mistakes. Mistakes are inevitable. I know I shall make some. But the only things one need be really afraid of are insincerities and indirectness. Also, it is well to remember that unfamiliar tasks ha"ve a way of looking mountainous. Familiarity reduces their proportions. At present I am work ing here from half past eight in the morning till midnight to become familiar with mine. That slow mind of mine," he said smilingly, "compels me to put in those long hours." "What is your idea of the functions of the secre- Urryof war?" "We duties." he said, "are largely legal. Almost all the secretaries have been lawyers. (He cited the names of many, from Stanton dtfwn to his predecessor. Garrison.) Strictly military affairs are not my province. Experts must care for those things. Legal questions--touching the conflict ing rights of state and federal governments, the navigability of streams, the proceedings of courts martial--such things comprise the problems I have to settle I am an executive. Congress has made laws governing my department It is my duty Jto see that they are carried out conscientiously.^ About "preparedness" he felt obliged to decline to say a word, and I reminded him of an interview in which he was recently quoted as saying that he was "for peace at almost any price." "So I am." he answered stoutly, "because peace seems to me the reasonable thing. I do not say that war Is always avoidable. It seems to come sometimes as earthquakes come--a natural cata clysm- The French revolution. I think, was such a war. But war is always regrettable Peace Is what spells progress. We have to advance step by step. 1 do not think we can hope to force ad vancement by violence. And I believe that some times we shall have a court of nations, and no. more wars. Was It Lowell said: 'The telegraph gave the world a nervous system?' As our world gets better co-ordinated by intercommunication, we shall have fewer ,of the misunderstandings which cause wars." * ' ' Constantly, as we talked, alike In his domicile and in his office, the new secretaryls unpretentious pipe was in his mouth. Constantly bis knees crooked and his feet curled up to comfortable posi tions on radiator top and desk top. Though there was always dignity about him. we might have been tw<> undergraduates chatting together. His atti tude was not suggestive of lounging or of affected carelessness. It was, I thought, the bodily ease which is apt to reflect outwardly the mental states of self-unconsciousness and serene self-confidencg. As city solicitor of Cleveland, in the traction mat ters, he fought the mobilized legal big guns of Ohio to a standstill. As mayor he forced the peo ple to retain him until he had done what he set out to do. To be secretary of war JiJst now, to be lifted at one step from local into national prominence at a critical moment Jlke the present, is a far more searching test of his capacities than any he has yet undergone. Denver, Colo.--Twelve dollars a week and no work on Sundays, short er hours and better treatment are some of the things the Housemaids' union of Denver demands for its mem bers. .... ' "We have the bulge on the rich women of Denver because they won't wash their own, clothes. We can rule the women of Capitol Hill through this failing of theirs," the girls decided. Plans to whip their mistresses into line through their dislike of greasy dish water were made during the meet- ' ing. • The new union will call no general strike. Its members will wear on the nerves of the individual employer until she comes to terms. Will Travel Light, 'The women of Capitol Hill are to be trained in the way they should go. Maids who leave their jobs once a week, serve meals late, take no hack talk and demand the privileges for which they have been asking in vain, are going to do the training. In order to carry out this plan of campaign many maids for mistresses who ^re being "trained" will rent a house1 where they can live between jobs. The new cook or second L^girl will never arrive at her employer's home with her trunk after this. She will travel light, so she won't have to be constantly paying to have h^r bag gage hauled around the city. And while she flits merrily from Capitol Hill to Aurora her trunk will remain safe and secure, locked in the baggage room of the union home. If she has a child it will be cared for at the home while she works'. Cross and undesirable mistresses are going to be blacklisted by the union. At the office to be opened downtown as soon as the place can be found, there wili be a long list in cluding the names of every employer of house servants in Denver. And op posite each name its owner's charac teristics will be put down without wincing * words. How many rooms Heard }n the Hotel Barber Shop. Porter--Boss, yoj1 sho' am dusty. Patron of, the Hotel4-All right, • George rybii'jtoay" brudit, off about ten" cents' ^oi-th. / .. S"oes Medicine insora* tt8UnBrM£lt|i 1.AROR TRIAL BOTTI.E KRKB. Ua KU3K CtmrANV, bad Bank, N. Jr-AO*. , , Happy Thought. "Money talks, old man." "Happy thought! I'll get mine to talk into a phonograph and save the ret&rd.? Kill the FHes Now and Prevent diseasl. A DAISY FLY KILLER will do it. Kills thousands. Lasts all season. All dealers or air. MI t, express paid for $1. H. 80MERS, 160 Ut> Kalb Ave., Brooklyn, N. X. Adv. Another Explanation. s being candid,' father?" 'Speaking unto otl^ra as you would not like them to speak* unto you/'" BAD COMPLEXION MADE GOOD AFTER OF SBFFERINSbl Woman Made Wei! E. Pinkham's Veg< Compound. .. :•* Cohnnbus,Ohio.--"I had almost giveuf Y* BIX I had been sick for six years witiu ^ female troubles and i. &' >v$s nervousness, T had;; H a pain in my right* * f j side and could not. - eat anything with-j^ °f hu"in«s stomach. I could «> not drink cold water , J at all nor eat any . kind of raw fruit,' nor fresh meat ncr*- chicken. From ITS ' pounds I went to 118 and would get so weak at times that* I fell over. I began to take Lydia E.'- kll _ r, . ^ _ 1 Pinkham's Vegetable Coirponnd, and Whan All Else Falls, by Cuticura Soap ; ^ days later j ̂ eat ̂ it md and Ointment. Trial Free. If you are troubled with pimples, blackheads, redness, roughness, itching and burning, which disfigure yoUr com plexion and skin. Cuticura Soap and Ointment will do much to help you. The Soap to cleanse and purify, the Ointment to soothe and heal. Free sample each by mall with Book. Addresg postcard, Cuticura, Dept. L, Boston. 8old everywhere.--Adv. Someone Always Celebrating. | 'When is Independence day?" 1 divorces are being granted all ! e tifne.""Boston Evening Tran-1 script. 4 hurt my stomach. I have taken th® meuieine ever since ana I feel like new woman. I now weigh' 127 |»and»§4! so yon can see what it has done for met x already. My husband says he know* H your medicine has saved my life/'-- Mrs. 3. S. BARLOW, 2624 South 4th : Columbus, Ohio. s Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com» -VA pound contains just the virtues of roots and herbs needed to restore health and f V*" •trength to the weakened organs of the.,, j body. That is why Mrs. Barlow, .aTJ' j ^ V chronic invalid, recovered socomple It pays for women suffering from any: , A& * ^ female ailments to insist upon having1 ' i Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Gaa* ' pound ALCOHOl,- 5 PER CENT, A Vegetable PreparalioitforAs iiia-sinulatin^tlie Food <1 nd tint) the Rm«>] INFANTS 'CHILDREN CASTORU For Infants and Children, Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria \ Always Bears/the ness mid Rest.Ooutains neither Opium,Morphine nor Mineral. NOT NARCOTIC. JbmeetQMDsSAffl'L ««oO 5$ POH<V Take No Back Talk. arifud 6 A perfect Remedy fbrCotisffpa- tion. Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea, Worms. Few richness ami, LOSSQFSLEER fec&mile Signature? THE C EJfTAUR COMIV^n NEW YORK. AI 6 months old j j D n s i > Ba«ct Covr of Wrapper Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORU m«mwiMNMUf,Mni«WOTK 'M?- * i - -- -t * * Catarrhal Pevtr, Pink Eye, Shipping - l'i. • s 1 * Fever, Epizootic '̂ ".4 there are in your house will be set down, how many children and how well or ill-trained they are. Lazy Girls Are Wanted. ' Employers will not be able to get maids who are out of work to come to them by putting an advertisement in the paper promising "excellent Cages" when she expects to pay three dollars a week. Maids won't have to run up telephone bills and pay fare finding Out how undesirable one may as a mistress. All this information 11 be neatly filed away on a card. girl will be kept out of j$ie union' because she is lazy or incompe tent. In fact, large numbers of lafcy girls are especially desired as mem bers, the better to train the mistresses of Denver into an understanding of their proper place. HE MAKES GOOD HIS VOW Escaped Prisoner Slashes Eyes That He May Never Again Look Upon Prison. to -those who are in It is attracting cons! the ease and tboroui tion Is performed, e put in place. Powd heat are the three el process, and the 2 burner by the air, to a liquid state, and able ®C auBtatalng t at once. such matters, and attention because of th which the opera- the metal has been compressed air and hleh are used in the ven through a gas 1 instantly reduced? es any surface cap- aaueres ami cool^ HIGH FLYERS. Lots or men go up In the air with the aid of airships. Death has evidently traded his pale horse for an aeroplane. The man vHh a boil on the back o( his neck derives no pleasure from sea ning the heavens tor aircraft.1 » IN THE SAME BOAT* The Overbearing Lawyer--Ignorance of the" law excuses no one! The Culprit--I'll be sorry for you. then, Iff ««r ever get in trouble.--Browning's Magas&ar Minneapolis, Minn.--Oscar Btfrg- lund, escaped prisoner, taken by the St PauKpjdlice for the Wisconsin peni tentiary at Waupun, is In the St. Pau! city hospital in a- critical condition, after slashing his eyeballs .with a razor lEven if he lives he will never see again, the ph>0:cians say. Burg- lund's act was "making good" on a vow. "I will never lobk 'on those prison walls again," he said to R. M. Coles, deputy warden from Waupun, who had come to St: Paul for his man. Coles smiled and went to speak with the Jailer. - In a few" minutes they returned to find Burglund, his sightless eyes filled with blood. f Burglund went to prison from Bay field in 1912- for writing bad checks He '^scaped lastiQctober by making a ladder from pieces of pipe and scaling the prison ^ all. He was arrested at his mother's Home in St. Paul. . Re-wed With Old Ring. New York.--Using their old wed ding ring. Louis N. Raphael and Viola Peliz Raphael, who were divorced last year, have been married again. • "J just couldn't get along without him," declared Mrs. RaptyteL^ INFLUENZA And all diseases of the horse affecting his throat speedily • ; cured; colts and horBes in same stable kept from having V thein by using' Spohn's Distemper Compound, 3 to 6 doses ' often cure; one bottle guaranteed to cure one case. Safe • ... for brood mares, baby colts, stallions, all ages and eon- • dltfono/t Most skillful scientific compound. 60c and II, r per bottle; 15 and 110 a dosen. Any druggist or deliv- jvfcf •red by manufacturer*. gpoHN MEDICAL CO., GtMhca, lad. yf;»| • WE PAY CASH FOR | MEDICINAL ROOTS, HERBS, LEAVES, BARKS, ETC. We buy over two hundred different kinds of Medicinal Roots, Herba, Leaves, Barks, Seeds, Flowers, Etc., for which we pay net cash on arrival. We make a specialty of Giatcuf, Galdea Seal Root, Scaeka Saak* Beet, Star KMI,] Star GRASS Root, BOM wax. Etc. Wi pay toy cadi prices. if you want to line up with a progressive, growing, honest, op-to-date coaeera wbu will handle your goods right, who will keep yon well posted oo mariei conditions; write us for our price list, shipping tags, and full ioionnstioa. H. R. LATHROF & CO, Inc. New York City, N. f. 11<M 12-114-116 Batkntn Staroot 194 Wotor Street Established 1910 rTiBPf.M--ia--ssssfct 4 € 1 ' " Busy. "Jlmson^has, ,become very devoted to his family ail of a sudden." "What makes you thtnk so?" "Well, I haven't seen him at his us ual haunts for nearly a month." "That doesn't prove anything. The fac:t of the matter is, somebody pre sented him with* a meerschaum pipe and he spends bis evening at honn coloring it." BLACK LEG I LOSSES SURELY PKffiMllff br Cuttsr't Blaeki** Pill*. Lo priced, fresh, reUsble; preferred i>f Wtsioni stockmen. bacaOM tlMf tact wh*re «tk«r *aa«iaM faU. for booklet and dote iiktt*. SlMkltf PNIO SI.M -iow pkf*. Blasklst Mlla 4.SS ' I'sp my tnjdetor. but Cutter's bMfc The superiority of Cutter products Is due to o»er U rmrs of spednlldrig in vaMlnea antf MTumt Mty, Insist Cutter's. If unobtainable, order direct. Cuttsr Latoratery, Berkeley, Cat.. «f CfeiMtih Ufa Worry wears worse than work. Answer the Alarm! A bad back make3 a day's work twice as hard. Backache usually comes from weak kidneys, and if headaches, dizzi ness or urinary disorders are added, don't wait--get help before dropsy, gravel or Hright's disease set in. Doan's Kidney Pills have brought new life and neiv strength to thousands of working men and women. Usea and recommend ed the world over. An Illinois Cue S. Eiseman, ISO N. California Ave., Chi cago, III., says: "I was In misery with a deep-seated pain in my back. The'kld- nt y secretions were painful in passage mid highly colled. Doctora' medk'ine helped me only slightly and finally I used Doan's KlJney Pills. They fixed me u p a l l r i g h t a n d w h e n e v e r I h a v e taken them since, the results have been of the best." Cot Doma'a *t Aar Stor̂ 80c a Bos H A A I Y > & K K D N K Y V V r t n U t p i L L S FOSTER-MUJBuRN CO, BUFFALO, N. ¥. HAIR BALSAM A t.ii.rj piopontion of nertfc HP 1 J>81A eradicate dudruO, For Rettaim Color mmd utr toCiro* or Fad od Hair 60c. an J tt.ro at Dru£vUtA. Every Woman Wiiutfl PietTtr* ffcli* a Story • A N T I S E P T I C ' P O W D E R FOR PERSONAL HYGIENE Dissolved! la water far douches it*. pelvic catarrh, ulceration and inflam mation. Recommended by Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co, for ten ywuna. A healing wonder for nasal catarrh, sore throat and sore eyes. Economical. Hal cmu»cTck*iy c!«*!uus* ccRskiial Doww. " Frwh SOc. aH MiTotl^i Curanaoy. I ^sss^ The Puttem" . Boston. ,rsa.v , '^1 1^1 CALIFORNIA LAND U>get 1Ut h»!f if tt<\b*a«u. ibotee lvvnl San U isb stwk, *bundtti:.-e ,.f w»t«T. on if 5 lu.iM liiH r*!'- ruad otatioo. WtUoella t««r lidacrotutuohwr of jiJJr„'OuUmiuTs (h idirnt uliWttaavv^ri. tmu ca.i-1' bal*uo<r» 8&UU j.. r jn r Toil wut«*Gi« lai»t a»4y*>u *v< vt .t. IMA priw* i ti b«H.m w ht-n war <mkU. w r'i<> to Uvnnl BrufiUeuburn, Owm-r. Los CaUt W w tocM* K. (\>lcu«a,Wua-inytotk. i> i'. frw« jlkk. 1 0^1 wfotVOCM. B<»t roooaa.1 PATENTS L L S T O N E S Arotd ope-ACon*. foalttro r«o»' ly-- r*nV*f<i (\c ut:v--srrv Writ« >i«r < ur r« K I* r 61« BiK.h of Tre?>l «»Mt r*ir«; * IVlOM GALRTOMK«ATF4YCO..&^C-IE.XUSI)L>«A*TI>RA&J3IAGB ... W. N. U„ CHICAGO^ NOK