The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, November 20, 1903, Image 3

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TH
T THE
HALFWAY HOUSE
A STORY OF THE PLAINS
BY B. IIOUD1I, APTIIOR OF TIIK STORY OP THW CQWnOY
C Dtrfichttd, 1903. ty D. Attltttn 6 Coiianr. frw 1'erA
.j- r i '.r. i. :
Mrs. Rosa Adams, niece of
the late General Roger Hanson,
C.S.A., wanls every woman to
know of the wonders accom
plished by Lydia E. Pinkham's
Vegetable Compound.
"DEAn Mns. I'bckuam: I cannot
nil -rnn with ncn and inl: what trood
Ijydia B. Pinlclmm's Vegetable
Compound did for mc, suffering from
the ills peculiar to tho bcx, cxtrcmo
lassitude and that all r;ono feeling-. I
vrould rise from my bed in tho morning1
fcclinjr more tired than when I went to
l)cd, hut beforo I used two bottles of
Iiydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Cpinpound, I began to feel the buoy
ancy of my younger days returning,
became regular, could do raoro work
and not feel tired than 1 had ever been
able to do before, go I continued to use
it until I was restored to perfect health.
It is indeed a boon to sick women and
I Heartily recommend it. Yours very
truly, Mns. Rosa Adams, 819 12th St,
Louisville, Ky." $5000 forfeit If original of
abort letter proving genuineness cannot be produced,
FItEE MEDICAL ADVICE TO
WOMEN.
Don't hesitate to write to Mrs.
Pinkham. She will understand
your case perfectly, and will treat
you with kindness. Her ndvico
is froc, nnd the address is Lynn,
Mass. No woman ever regretted
having written her, and she liaa
helped thousands.
CHAPTER I.
'asa'
4W
WW
u
ffifltfestthev
Is no Mnilroncn to the
naerwoo wears
5
The Brazen Tonrjuec.
Tho band major wns n poet. His
tamo Is lost to history, but It deserves
t plnco among tho titles of tho groat.
Duly In tho soul of a poot, a groat
man, could thero have been conceived
hat thought by which the muBlc of
triumph should pass the llttlo pinnnclo
of human exultation, and reach tho
higher piano of human sympathy.
Forty black horses, keeping stop;
forty trumpeters, keeping unison;
this procosslon, headed by a mere mu
sician, who none tho less was a poet,
a great man, crossed the field of Louis
burg as it lay dotted with tho heaps of
slain, and dotted also with tho groups
of those who sought their slain;
crossed that field of woo, meeting only
hatred and despair, yet leaving be
hind only tears and griof. Tears nnd
grief, It Is true, yet grief that know
of sympathy, and tears that recked of
othor tears. ,
For a long time tho linoof Invasion
had tightened about the old city of
Louisburg, and Louisburg grow weak
er In tho coll. Tho wheat lay green
upon tho fields nnd tho odor of tho
blossoms of tho peach trees hung
heavy on tho air; but thero was none
who thought of frnUagc or of harvest.
Out thero in front, whoro the guns
wore pulsing, thero wejit on that grim
mer harvest with which tho souls of
all wore Intimately concerned. Tho
boys who threw up their hats to greet
tho infantry wero fewer thanthey had
been before tho blossoming of the
peach. Tho war had grown loss par
ticular of Its food. A bay could speed
a bullet, or could stop one. Thero
were yet the boys.
, Of all tho old-timo families of this
ancient little city none hold position
more secure or moro willingly accord
ed than the Fairfaxes and tho Beau
champs. Thero had always been a
W-tt-KTU
suckle. Had Mary Ellen's eyes not
boon hid beneath tho lids they might
havo Been a faco palo and sad as her
own. They sat Bllent, for it was no
tlmo for human speech. Tho hour
camo for" parting, and ho rose. His
lips Just lightly touched her check.
It seemed to him ho heard a faint
"good-bye." Ho stepped slowly down
tho long walk In thp moonlight, and
his hand was at his face. Turning at
tho gate for tho last wrench of separa
tion, ho gazed bach at n drooping form
upon tho gallery. Then Mrs. Beau
champ camo and took Ellen's head
upon her bosom, seeing that now Bho
was a woman, and that her sufferings
had begun.
CHAPTER II.
EXCELSIOR BRAND
POMMEL SLICKERS
Man or cailtlle can not cet w et.
EXCELSIOR BRUNO
OILED CLOTHING
For rJl fclndu of wort
Warranted Waterproof.
look for '.rtulc-raare.
If not at dealers, write
It. B. S.wjf P Ron, 6.1. Hf r.
But cummig. saw.
inr.
The Players of the Game.
When tho band major was tweuty
miles away in front of Louisburg his
trumpets sounded always tho advance.
Tho main lntrenchments erected In
tho defences of Louisburg lay at right
angles to the road along which camo
tho Northern advance, and upon tho
side of tho wood nearest to tho town.
In tho Holds both tho wheat and tho
flowers wore now tratapled, and a
thousand industrious and complaining
bocs buzzed protest nt tho losing of
their commerce, Tho defenses them
selves wcro but earthworks, though
skilfully laid out. Along their frout,
well hidden by the forest growth, ran
a lino of entangling abattls of stakes
and sharpened Interwoven boughs.
In tho center of tho Una cf defense
lay tho reserves, tho boys of Louis
burg, flanked on either sldo by regi
ments of veterans, tho lean and black-
haired Georgians nnd Carolinians,
whoso steadiness and unconcern gavo
comfort to moro than one bursting
boyish heart. Tho veterans had long
played tho gamo of war. They had
long since said good-bye to their worn-
hocro, dcp, encoring, a roaring wriT?
of mecacp mado up of llttlo sonndn
An officer sprang up to tie top of tho
brtastworka and wnvad his ovrord,
shouting out something which no on
heard or carod to hoar. Tho lino in
tho trenches, boys and veterans, ro
nerves and remnants of tho columns of
dofonse, rono and pourod volloy after
volley, as they could, into tho thick
and concoallng woods that lay boforp
thom. Nono tho less, thero appeared
Boon a long, dusty, faded lino, trot
ting, running, walking, falling, stumb
ling, but coming on. It swept llko a
long serpent pnrallol to tho works,
writhing, smitten but surviving. It
camo on through tho wood, writhing.1,
tearing at tho cruel abattls laid to on
trap It. It writhed, roared, but It
broko through, it swept over tho rail
tencos that lay between tho lines and
tho abattls, nnd still camo on! This
was not war, but Fnto!
Thero camo a cloud of smoko, hiding
tho, faco of tho lntrenchmont. Thon
tho boys of Louisburg saw bursting
through this suffocating curtain a fow
faces, many faces, long towb of faces,
somo palo, somo red, eomo laughing,
somo horrified, somo shouting, somo
swearing a long row of faces that
swept through tho smoke, following a
line of Bteel a lino of steel that flick
cred, waved and dipped.
CHAPTER III.
HAPPY WOMEN
Mrs. Pare,
wlfo of C.
B. Paro, u
promlne n t
rosidont
fl Olnsgow,
Ky., Bnys:
"1 war. fiuf
fcrlng from
n compli
cation of
kldnoy trou
bles. Bo
Hides a Imd
back I had a great deal of troublo
with tho secretions, which woro ex
ceedingly varlnble, sometimes exces
sive anil at other times scanty. Tho
color was high, and pnssagos wcro ac
companied Willi n scalding sonsntlon.
Doan's Kidney Pills soon regulated
tho kidney secretions, making tholr
color normal and banished tho Inflam
mation which caused tho scalding sen
sation. I can rest well, my back Is
Btrong and sound nnd I feel much bet
tor In every way."
For snlo by nil dealers, prlco CO
cents per box. Fostor-MIlburu Co.,
l'uffrflo, N. Y.
i tv 'l. " n.
VST ic- "fch.
e?
Much Consumption Among Negroes.
Consumption occurred rarely, If at
all, among negroes In slavery, but
now, after a little more than a quarter
of a century of freedom, It causes moro
deaths among them than nil the other
contagious diseases combined. Tho
negro rate from consumption .3 moro
than three times that of tho whites.
Mn. Wlns1ow- woormnsr Hj-rup.
For children tecttitoir, toftens the cum", redact! rti
Cauuuatloa.allayp pain. rurea wind colic. 25o a bottU,
Don't treat your family like a lot
of paupers, oven If charity docs begin
at homo.
Tho commuter who runs may rcad
If ho succeeds in catching his train.
Confidence is seldom lost, but often
sadily misplaced.
VASELINE.
Everybody knows tho groat value of this
remedy in tho household, but everybody
does not know that tho imitations of it,
which somo second class druggists dishon
orably palm oil on their customors, havo
littlo or no value. What should bo under
stood by tho public is, that It is not a mcro
ciuestion of comparative value between
"Vaseline" and the imitations, but that tbo
imitations do not effect tho wonderful heal
ing results of tho world renowned "Vase
lino," nnd that they arc not tho samo thing
nor mado in tho sumo way. Besides this,
many of tho imitations aro harmful, irri
tant and not safo to use, while truo Vase
line is perfectly harmless.
Perfect safoiy therefore lies in buvlng
only original bottles and other packages put
up by tho Chesebrough Manufat-turlnir Co.
Attention is cnlled to their Capsicum Vasb
llno advertised in another column.
A braye man's honor and a truo,
woman's love havo no decline on the
stock exchange of life.
Took Ellen's head upon her bosom.
It isn't always tho most paltable
medicino that cures tho quickest.
Lewis' "Single Binder" straight So
eicar. The highest nrico So ciuar to tho
dealer and the highest quality for the
Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111.
smoker.
Nervous prostration has a pretty
hard Job when it tackles a man whose
wife supports tho family.
A paper dollar 1b said to last about
Ave years unless It visits a church
fair.
Distance prolongs tho life of many
friendships.
mother nraT'a Sweet rowaen for Children,
Successfully used by Mother Gray, nurse Fairfax homo in Loulsberg only
In the Children's Home la NewYprk, cure I ,.to nf r,nr,i Kirfav an,i the
Constipation, Feverisuness, Had btomacn,
Teething Disorders, move and regulatethe
Bowels nud DestroyW-jrms. Over 80,000 tes
timonials. At all Druggists. 25c. Sample
FKKE. Address A. S. Olmsted, Leltoy.N.Y.
A baby isn't necessarily afflicted
with Jaundice because It's a littlo
yeller.
Don't mako tho mistake of giving a
man advice which doesn't confirm his
own opinion.
ABE YOOK CLOTHES FADED
T7ee Red Cross Ball Blue and make them
irblte again. Large 3 or. package, 5 cents.
When tho proverbial rainy day
comes lots of men use borrowed um
brellas. H
-
Babies cry most when they realize
that they look like some of their relations.
Colonel Fairfax, the leader at the local
Dar, perhaps the representative la tho
legislature, or in some- position of yet
higher trust. Tho Beauchamps had
always had men In tho ranks of the
professions or In stations of respon
sibility. They held large lands, and
in the almost feudal creed of tho
times they gave large services in re
turn. It was considered a matter of course
that young Henry Fairfax, son of
Colonel Fairfax, should, after com
pleting his studies at the ancient Insti
tution of William and Mary College,
step into his father's law offlce, even
tually to be admitted to tho bar 'and
to become his father's partner; after
which ho should marry Miss Ellen
Beauchamp, loveliest daughter of a
family noted for Us beautiful women.
So much was this taken for granted,
and so fully did it meet the approval
of both families, that tho tide of the
young people's plans ran on with little
to disturb Its current. Young Fairfax
seemed, so perfectly to represent the
traditions of his family, and his future
seemed to secure; and Mary Ellen her
self, tall and slender, bound to be
Btately and r.t noble grace, seemed so
eminently fit to be a Beauchamp
beauty and a Fairfax bride.
For the young people themselves It
may be doubted If there had yet awak
ened the passion of genuine, personal
love. They 'mot, but. under the strict
code of that land and tlmo, they never
met alone.
For two years Colonel Fairfax had
been with his regiment, fighting for
what he considered tho welfaro of his
country and for tho Institutions in
whose Justice ho had been taught to
believe. There remained at tho old
the
wife of Colonel Fairfax and the son
Henry, the latter chafing at a part
which seemed to him so obviously Ig
noble. Spirited and proud, restive un
der comparisons which ho had never
heard but always' dreaded to hear,
Henry Fairfax begged his mother to
let him go, though still she said, "Not
yet."
But tho Hues of the enemy tightened
ever about Louisburg, Then came a
day a fatal day fraught with the tid
ings of what seemed a double death.
The wife of Colonel Henry Fairfax
was grande dame that day, when she
burled her husband and sent away her
son. There were yet traditions to sup
port. '
Henry Fairfax said good-bye to Mary
Ellen upon tho gallery of the old home,
beneath a solemn, white-faced moon,
amid the odors of the drooping honey-
en. They had seen how small a thing
Is life, how easily and swiftly to be
ended.
In front of the trenches wero other
regiments, out ahead in the woods, un
seen, somewhere toward that placo
whence carno the steadiest Jarring of
artillery and tho loudest rattling of the
lesser arms. It was very hard to He
and listen, to imagine, to suspect, to
dread. For hours tho game went on,
the reserves at tho trenches hearing
now distinctly and now -faintly thq
tumult of tho lines, now receding, now
coming on.
Those young men, who but lately
had said good-bye to tho women of
their kin, began to learn what war
might mean. It had been heretofore
a distant, unmeasured, uudreaded
thing, conquerable, not to be feared. It
seemed so sweet and fit to go forth,
even though It had been hard, to say
good-bye.
Now there began to appear In the
woods before the trenches the figures
of men, at first scattered, then becom
ing steadily more numerous. There
came men bearing other men whoso
arms lopped loosely. Some men walked
with a hand gripped tightly to an arm;
others hobbled painfully. Two men
sometimes supported a third, whose
head, heavy and a-droop, would now
and then be kept erect with difficulty,
the eyes Btarlug with a ghastly, sheep
ish gaze, the faco in a look of horri
fied surprise. This awful rabble, tho
parings of the defeated line In front,
dropped back through the woods, drop
ped back upon the young reserves, who
lay there In the line. Some of them
could go no farther, but fell there and
lay silent. Others passed back Into
the fields whero droned the protesting
bees, or whero bore and there n wldo
tree offered shelter. Suddenly nil the
summer air was filled with anguish
and horror. Was. this, then, the War?
And now there appeared yet other
figures among tho tices, a straggling.
lirnlron linn wlifli fall lianlr tialtn.l
stood and fired always calmly, coolly, j
at some unseen thing in front or them.
But this line resolved itself Into In
dividuals, who camo back to the edge
of tho wood,' methodically picking their
way through tho abattls, climbing tho
Intervening fences, and finally clamb
ering into the earthworks to take their
places for the final stand. They spoke
with grinning respect of that which
was out there ahead, coming on. They
I throw off their coats and tlghtoned
their belts, making themselves com
fortable for what time there yet re
mained. At last there came a continued,
Tho Victory.
The bandmastor marshaled his m
sic nt tho hoad of Uio column of oc
cupation which was to march into
Louisburg.- Tho gamo had been ad
mirably played. Tho victory was com
plete. Thoro was no need to occupy
tho trenches, for thoso who lay In
them or near thorn would never rally
for another battle. There was no
longer need for hurry. Before tho
middle of tho morning tho lines would
start on tho march of tho fow short
mllc3.
During tho delay n young officer of
engineers, Captain Edward Franklin
by name, asked permission of his
colonel to advanco along tho lino of
march until ho camo to tho earth
works, to which ho wished to glvo
somo examination, Joining his regi
ment as It passed beyond tho fortifica
tions on Its march. Tho colonel gavo
his consent, not altogether willingly.
"You may sco moro ovor thero than
you want to sue, young man," said
ho.
Franklin Went on, following a near
ly as ho could tho line of tho assault
of tho previous day, n track all to bold
ly marked by tho horrid debris of tho
fight. Ab ho reached tho first edgo
of tho wood, whore tho victorious col
umn had mado its entrance, It seemed
to Jilm that thero could havo been no
such thing as war. Tho air was soft
and sweet, Just cold enough to stir
tho leaves upon tho trees and set
them whispering intimately. All about
was the suggestion of calm and rest
and .happiness. Surely it had been a
dream! Thero could havo been no
battle here.
This that had been a dream ,wa
changed Into a horrid nightmaro at
the young officer advanced into the
wood. About him lay the awful evi
dences. Coats, caps, weapons, bit ol
gear, all marked and emphasized with
many, many shapeless, ghastly things
Hero they lay, these integers of the
line, huddled, Jumblod. They had ah
the contortions, all tho frozen ultimate
agonies left for survivors to see and
romember, so that they should nc
moro go to war. Again, they lay sc
peacefully calm that "all the lesson
was acclaim for happy, painless war
Somo lay upon their backs where tho
had turned, thrusting up a kneo In tin
last struggle. Some lay faco down
ward as tho slaughtered fall. It was
all a hideous and cruel dream. Surelj
It could be nothing more. It could not
be reality. The pirds gurgled and
twittered. Tho squirrels barked and
played. Tho sky was Innocent. I'
must be a dream.
(To be continued.)
URSS&RAW FURS wauled
Vat London ,lanurjiBt. Omwrara, Mimkrut, MlnV,
Hknnk, Hxoconn nnd oilier. llllit mlt rlan rlit.
Writs A. K. JIurLliardl, Mala As 3nd, Cincinnati, O,
THRIFTY FAR
ERS
Hroluvdert t'iKi'ttIo In Ilia tUtrof Mnr nml. hro
tlicy will Unci Rdt-lUlnf ol unit lu-a'.ihy tHmMr,nrt
ttM iiiarkcln for their tirodiicis nnd plenty or Und
nt ixionnbln prion. lp nnd dpc rlplho JiUl'l
let wilt liottmtrreo on Application in
H. OADENHOOP.
Sco'n State Board ol Immigration, BALTIMORE. MD.
"'VettiS Thompson's Eyo Vatcr
Put your fin
ger on our
trade mark. Tell your
dealer yoii want the best
starch your money can buy.
Insist on having the best,'
DEFIANCE.
It Is 16 ounces for io cents?,
No premiums, but one
pound of the very best
starch matte. We put all
our money in the starch.
It needs no cooking.
It Is absolutely pure.;
It gives satisfaction or
money back..
xx
TUB DEFIANCE STARCH CO.
Omaha, Neb.
Hl f jp Jt l., , ,-..., ... ,- .1,... "
K Hil i!1! V mI
133
Wmi
I
Factory Loaded Smokeless Powder Shells.
It'o not ttcntiment It'a not tho prico that makc3 tho
moct intelligent and oucccBsful shots ohoot Winchester
Factory Loaded Bhotgun Shcllo. u'b tho results they
give. It's their cntiro reliability, evenne33 of pattern and
uniform shooting. Winchester "Lender" ohslln.load
cd with smokeless powder, aro the best loaded sheila on
the market. Winchester ''Repeater" ehells loaded with
nmokclesa powdir are cheap In prlco but not in quality.
Try either of these brando nnd you will be well pleased.
Bo Sure to ct Wlnchcotcr Factory Loaded shells
TME SEIELL&Ttie CEBAHPBON& 5I.00T.
WITH NERVES UNSTRUNG AMD HEADS1"
THAT ACHE
WISR WOMEN .
BROMO - SEL.TZER
TARE
TRIAL BOTTLE IO CENTS.
Negro Inventor's Good Fortune.
Andrew Beard, a negro who has
worked in tho machine shops of tho
Ixnilsvlllo Si Nashville Railroad com
pany, In Birmingham, Ala., for twenty
yours, has just sold a patent for a car
coupler of his own invention for $100,
000. In addition ho is to get a royalty
on every coupler mado on his model
for soventcen years.
The man whoso wlfo makes It hot
for him novor speaks of ber a3 tho
sunshine of his existence.
No Time for Kindness.
Don't you think tho modern woman
.is In danger of getting so busy she
has no tlmo to bo kind?" asked a
sweet old lady tho other day. "We
hear so much about making every
minute count and always having some
work or course of study for spare
hours and systematizing our activities
that thero is no room left for wny
side kindnesses. We get so tremen
dously absorbed In our own affairs, so
self-centered, so Intent on not missing
anything that is going on, that we
pass by a thousand little gracious act's
that, If we had been living fifty years
back, Instead of now, wo should have,
thought of. It Isn't only the lanio
tho halt and the blind that need our
lovo. There are hundreds who ncvei
fall by tho way or ask publicly for the
cup of cold water, who yot are perish
lng for lack of it. I think tho old
fashioned woman had the advantagi
over tho so-called new woman Ir
quickness of sympathy nnd respond
lveness." New York Tribune.
A Technical Point.
"You say your road carried a mlllior
passeugers last year?"
"Yes, Blr; and 1 can prove 1k"
"You can?"
"Yoh. sir.-'
"Well, now, let's get right down to
facts. Can you make two passungeri
out of ono man?"
"Of course not."
"Xo doubt In some capes youVe car
ried the same man flftoon or twouty
times."
"Unquestionably."
"Well, dooa that mako fifteen oi
twenty passengers of him?"
"No-o."
"In vlow of that, can you say that
you've carried a million "
But the railroad man retired an
grily. He never did have any use foi
a technically exact man anyway.
To Cure a Coicl In Ono flay.
Take- Lnxotivo Brotno Quinine Tablou. All
drujrgUbi refund money if it f nils to euro. 20c
Lamb with green peas suits somo
men, but the wall street broker pre
fers Iamb with greenbacks.
The Use of Tobacco.
Ono of tho most difficult things In
tho world is to get any authoritative
conclusion about the effects of using
tobacco. Literature is filled with
pcans in its praise and maledictions
in equal measure. Some things, how-evc-r,
wo do not know about tobacco:
It costs a vast sum of money, is ono
of tho most important industries in
tho world, and nn important source
of revenue to all nations. Americans
consume 7,000,000,000 cigars annually,
nnd the yearly Increase In tho con
sumption is nearly COC",000,000. Smok
ers uso 3,000,000,000 cigarettes annu
ally, and consume In other forms, as
in snuff, plug and smoking tobacco,
315,000,000 pounds, exclusive of tho
tobacco exported and that used in
manufacturo of cigars and cigarettes.
The federal treasury lecelvos $65,000,
000 annual revenue from the tobacco
tax, the manufacturers alone pay in
dividends $10,000,000, and In wagos
$50,000,000 a year, and the annual val
ue of tho manufactured product In
this country is upward of $200,000,000.
The Doctor's Statement.
St. John. Kan., Nov. 1C This town
has a genuino sensation .in the case ot
u little boy, tho son of Mr. and Mrs.
William 3fcBrlde. Dr. Limes, the at
tending physician, says:
"Scarlet Fever of a very malignant
type brought this child very near to
death and when the fever left him he
was serai-paralyzed In tho right leg
and right- arm. He also lost hearing
in his right ear, and his mind was
much affected.
"His parents tried another treat
ment for a time nnd when I was re
called I found that ho was having
spells very like Epilepsy and was very
bad and gradually growlns worse. I
advised tho uso of Dodd's Kidney Pills
and in a short tlmo the clhl began to
improve. Inside of a week the nerv
oub spasms or epileptic seizures
ceased altogether."
1 Mr. and Mrs. McBride have mado a
sworn statement of tho facts and Dr.
Jesso L. Limes has ndded his sworn
statement saying that Dodd's Kidney
Pills and nothing else cured tho fits.
The nun who marries for inonoy has
no kick coming if thero isn't any love
In the home.
Try One Package.
If "Deflanco Starch" does not
please you, return it to your dealer.
If it does you get one-third moro for
tlfo samo monoy, .It will give you
satisfaction, and will not stick to tho
Iron.
The soul can bo horribly cold-blooded.
EElillllllllllll
1 EVERY SHOOTER 1
1 WHO SHOOTS
I
1
1
1
!
!
I
1
i
ai
t&lfwmir
AMMUNITION
has a feeling of confidence In
his cartridges. They don't
misfire and always shoot where
you aim.
Tell your dealer U. M. C.
when he asks "What kind?"
Scad tor catahs.
The Union Metallic Cartridge Co.
Bridgeport, Conn.
i
!
i
fit
llilllllllllll!
OUR HOLIDA Y PRICES
on Jcirelrrand Wtbei save ynu iiOjt. Benjfor
KKhK ( tuliHtue nnd rrar luuvaln for Jrourclf
andlrteade. CARBON DIAMOND CO.,Bjrrcuia,M.Y.
PATENT
Send tor int. 42nd Annlrcnary I look on Pat
ent, containing nearly lix) llluttratlona of mechan
ical niutennnu. and tamable law point for luYeii
toraand manufacturer! i also an InteresUnK lint of
laemlona FREE. Dmi't wait, write TO-DAY.
MASON, FENWICK & LAWRENCE,
Patent Lawyers, Washington, D. C.
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No. 471903.