in the emsp ANOTHER of-ill it' BED CURED WTi a. . WOMAN EDWARD B. CLARKE da 1'IE RED TAPE trust ought to be rich. Its mills are kept run ning overtime to supply tho Washington demand. Tho com mittees on claims are tied up In red tapo and any claimant gets his legs tangled up In it before be has progressed a foot. The tape Is of the right color; it turns to anarchy the thoughts of the claimant who tries through the disappointing yenra to thread tho devious courso of its windings. The house of representatives once had submitted to it by the members of the committee on claims a report recommending that Major LawBon M. Fuller of the army be paid for some articles many articles In fact which tho government lost for blm nine years ago. An army officer's pay is small nt the best, and ten years ago, when Major Fuller's bo longings wero lost, his pay wa8 somewhat mailer than It is to day. Nevertheless, he had to expend $1,323. 3.r, as he could save It from time to time, to replace tho absolutely neces sary articles which were lost "without fault or neglect on his part and with equitable re sponsibility by the United States," as the find ing of one of tho investigating officials had It. Major Fuller's belongings comprised pretty nearly everything that lie had in tho world, from "one pair of Romeo slippers" to a civilian dress suit, "evening, satin lined," "one sack suit from New York" and "one sack suit from Baltimore." The major made affidavit that ev ery article enumerated in tho list of his losses "was necessary and would have been used hnd the consignment ever reached its destination." Tho consignment went to the bottom of tho sea with the wreckage of tho transport Mor gan. The major added to his affidavit the statement that every article would be replaced as soon as he was financially able to replace it. The goods were lost 10 years ago. A glance at the army pay tablo makes it appear that by the practice of rigid economy Major Fuller by this time may have succeeded In duplicating bis wardrobe of the Into nineties. The end Is not yet. The committee on claims, after many years, reported Major Ful ler's cose favorably to the house. The house was busy with other things. It is not hard for the representatives to ovei ook claims. They are used to it and hardened to it. Then the senate must act and finally tho president. Ma jor Fuller may get his money at a tltno coinci dent with his retirement at the age limit, and he Is yet a young man. There Is no means at this present moment of finding out whether Casper H. Conrad, of the Third United States cavalry, has succeed In finally wresting from Uncle Sam's grasp $32.85, which the usually amiable uncle took from the officer's pay practically by force of arms some 10 years ago. At last accounts the cavalryman was still pegging away trying to get his money back, for it belonged to hltn and no one has ever Intimated that it did not be long to him, but claims proceedings are greater laggards in their pare than were the Jarndyco proceedings In chancery. If Cnpt. Conrad has not recovered his $32.83 he is still hopeful, for the most hopeful peoplo on earth are those who have claims, and the deferring of hope seemingly never makes their hearts sick. This is one of tlui compensations which nature grants to offset the Iniquities of claims proceedings in congress. Capt. Conrad, as an acting quartermaster, paid $32.83 extra duty money to curtain en listed men. A government regulation which has existed for years authorized, In fact or dered, the captain to pay tho money. After he had paid It he found that the government had revoked the extra-pay regulation, but no one had seen fit to notify the quartermasters of the change. Uncle Sam Immediately stopped $32.85 out of Capt. Conrad's pay and practically told him that he should have known lu Bomo mysterious way that the government had an order stowed away in a vault somewhere to the effect that extra-duty pay had been cut out. Conrad comes of an army family and ho stuck to his trt of getting his money back from the goveiii.fcmt like a good fighter, and ho is sticking at it to day, unless within a very short time the almost Impossible has hap pened and his money has been returned to him. It took him five years to get permission from the secretary of 'Jrar, the licutenaut-cen- rr V oral of tho army and the quartermaster-general to make tho attempt to get a bill passed by congress to reimburse him for the pocket-picking outrage per petrated by Uncle Sam. Ho had to do a lot of work be fore ho succeeded In reach ing the action permission stage of the proceedings. To be sure there was only $32.83 in money Involved, but the principle was worth something, and the soldier who won't fight for a prin ciple won't fight well for anything else. Of course only a part, very likely a small part, of the claims entered against the government have Justice as a basis. In order to find out the truth of things tho government occasionally is obliged to spend many times the amount of money in volved. One of tho most curious claim cases ever known to congress wus that of Senora Feliciana Mendlola, who lived at Angeles, Fampanga, Philippine islands. The Se nora rented a house to Un cle Sam for the use of some of his tenmsters. When the mule-driving contingent moved out of the house after a short occupancy tho se nora declared under onth that some of the siding boards wero missing from the kitchen wall, and she asked for $200 In gold to re pay her for the damage to her property. This case of Senora Fellel ' ana Mendlola fills 14 pages of a house of representatives document. It contains a long letter from the secre tary of war on the question of the value of kitchen sid ings, another letter from the quartermaster-general of the United States and D3 com munications from army offi cers and civilians of various ranks and conditions. A bonrd of officers was convened to pass on the va lidity of tho scnora's claim. The board was In session tnr days, many of Its members coming from a ong distance to attend. One teamster. Wil liam langworthy by name, swore that the se nora a kitchen sidings were chewed up and eaten by red ants. Teamster Summervillo swore that in his opinion the boards dropped out of place by their own weight. Teamster PIcklo said: "Them boards was punk" The army board which sat on the enso thought It was very doubtful In strict Justice If Senora Feliciana should be allowed nny money, but finally (he members granted her the sum of $30 In gold. This action, of course, was not final, but the committees on war claims In house and senate approved the find Ings. The senora received $30 and doubtless It gave her some satisfaction to know that Uncle Sam had spent about $1,000 to get authority to pay for a kitchen siding which went to de struction either by way of a teamster's foot or a red ant's stomach. The Inventor' Rocky Road. There comes to Washington occasionally a man who perfected an Invention, an engine of war. which is now in use by nearly every civi lized government on tho face of the earth, In cluding tho government of tho United States. This man recently talked reminlscently. Ho said some things In the course of bis conver sation which may be Interesting to Inventors present and prospective, and which may also dishearten those of them who have not wills, physiques and courage of iron. It must bo remembered, of course, that this Inventor is a man who finally made good and who to-day talks from the hilltop of success. Ho said: "Let every man know If be has an Inven tion In which he beliovs and Id which ha I i i i 'I. ik ' ; l m ill iff inn i'i'i trusts thnt the government will find merit that he must prepare himself at tho outset to be treated In turn like an Imbecile, a lunatic and n criminal by tho department officials to whom he tries to present his ideas. "Every inventor who enters n department of the United S.utes government with a view to interesting the officials in something which may bo and often proves to be of servlco to the government is set down ns a matter of course as an idiot. This is at tho outset. There Is in most of the departments, nnd cer tainly In the one with which 1 had to do busi ness, a set of officials whose business It Is to get rid of inventors and to get rid of them without loss of politeness and without loss of time. "The regular plan Is to pass the Inventor from one to another, each one having an in creased chilliness of manner, but yet wearing the semi-indulgent smile with which one listens to the prattle of a child known to be mentally deficient. May Never Return. "The last official gets rid of the inventor, who. if ho, has not an Indomitable persever unce and a mental poise which enables him be cause of nn Inner consciousness of right to overlook insult, goes away probably never to return, and the chances are that becauso of tho sensitiveness of somo men this govern ment has lost to its uso many Inventions which would have added to Its power. "Tho second stage of tho inventor's pro gress, for I am speaking only of thoso who make progress, Is thnt of the lunatic, for so he comes to bo viewed. The Idiot Is practi cally harmless and may bo treated as a child: tho lunatic is apt to bo dangerous, and so when the liwator, conscious of the worth of bis in- Jti, 'K vention, perseveres In attempting to see the officials, he is looked upon as tho man with 'a glitter In his eye,' and the blue-coated officials with police au thority are given warning that he Is not to bo admitted to the presence of official greatness. "Occasionally Influence, which the real Inventor hates to bring to bear, en ables him to get an audience with the highest official in the department. He has reached the criminal stage by this timn, for he has taken to the chief that which courtesy and custom require should have been taken to the under ling. "The three stages of suspicion are gone through again by the persistent Inventor imbecile, lunatic and crimi nal aud occasionally his persistence wins out, for in passing through the degrees he may happen to hit upon some official, also regarded as a lunatic by his colleagues, who takes In that which other lunatics produce. "Such was my case, and I won out. The officials today who treated me with something worse than scorn are taking credit to themselves for discov ering the merit in that which I had to offer. Different in Europe. "On the continent of Europe things nro different. There the inventor la not treated as if he were fresh from an asylum for the feeble-minded, but Is turned over at once to the official whose duty it Is to examine such things as he has to offer, and the exam ination proceeds forthwith. Tho conti nental governments take interest in ev erything that is new, especially If It pertains to warfare, nnd the Inventor is treated like what he is In most cases a gentleman. The United States gov ernment when It gets a thing gets it by nccldent after having exhausted ev ery means likely to discourage a man whoso brain has produced that which finally is found worthy by those who had met it at the outset with a sneer." It may be after all that truth Is stranger than fiction, though people are given to a doubt of the old saying. After hearing of what this inventor had said, a character In one of Charles Dickens' novels came to mind and I looked him up to refresh the memory. Tho American said that the continental European governments were Interested in all the schemes of Inventors. He said nothing about Great Britain. It may be that Edward's government has reformed, but in "Llttlo Dorrlt." as anyone may And who chooses to look, Daniel Doyce, Mr. Meaglc's friend, had an experience with officialdom much like that of the yankee. Of Doycc Mr. Meagle said: "This Doyce is a smith nnd engineer. . . . A dozen years ago ho perfected an invention (involving a very curious secret process) of great importance to his country and his fellow creatures. I won't say. how much It cost him, or how many years of his life he had been about It, but he brought it to perfection a dozen years ago. . . . Becomes a Culprit. "He addresses himself to the government. The moment he addresses himself to the gov ernment, he becomes a public offender! . . . He ceases to be an Innocent citizen and be comes a culprit. Ho is treated from that instant ns a man who has done some Infernal action. Ho Is a man to be shirked, put off, brow-beaten, sneered at, handed over by this highly connected young or old gentleman to that highly connected young or old gentleman, and dodged back again; he 1b a man with no lights in his own time, or his own property; a mere outlaw, whom it is Justifiable to get rid of anyhow; a man to be worn out by any possible means." Tho Inventor who had some things to say about the manner In which he was treated by tho American department officials when he asked them humbly to look at his Invention 6tated also that once upon a time he had an appointment with a cabinet officer and that ho waited beyond tho time set for two hours before he had his interview, which lasted less than ono minute. It must be borne in mind thnt this was some years ago nnd no present cabinet official is Implicated. It might also be borne In mind by present officials that nt least six governments of the world are each spending millions of dollars annually In adding to their store of weapons of offense and defense the Invention which this man had perfected years before he could get the officials of the government of his own country to look upon it with anything that even smacked of interest. By Lydia E.Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Gardiner, Maine. "I have been a peat sufferer from organic troubles and a severe female weakness. The -pn. - X I doctor said I would It f have to go to the operation, but I could not bear to think of it 1 de cided to try Lydia E. llnkham's Vcr etable Compound and Sanative Wash and was entirely cured after three months' use of them." Mrs. S. A. Williams. R. F. D. Ko. 11, Box 39, Gardiner, Mo. No woman should submit to a surgi cal operation, which may mean death, until she has given Lydia E.Pinkhani's Vegetable Compound, made exclusive ly from root3 and herbs, a fair trial. This famous medicine for women has for thirty years proved to be tho most valuable tonic and renewer of the femalo organism. Women resid ing In almost every city and town in the United States bear willing testi mony to the wonderful virtuo ot Lydia E. llnkham's Vegetable, Compound. It cures female ills, and creates radi ant, buoyant femalo health. If you are ill, for your own sake as well as those you love, give it a trial. Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., Invites all sick women to writo her for advice. Her advice Is free and always helpful New Ceyser in Yellowstone Park. For a few days past there have been Indications of an eruption of some kind near the Fountain hotel lu Yel lowstone park, says a dispatch from Mammoth Hot Springs, Wyo. Now a new and magnificent geyser has bro ken out in full force about 1 00 feet north of the regular Fountain geyser near Fountain hotel. This new geyser, which does not appear to affect any of the others In that vicinity, played to a height of 150 to 200 feet, throwing off Immense quantities of hot water, mud and steam. The new geyser does not play regularly as does Old Faithful, but at short intervals, the eruptions occurring five or six hours apart, and lasting about one hour. Many Were fn the Same Boat. According to the Saturday Evening Post, this Is a story heard with much glee by congress during the last days of the Roosevelt administration: During tho recent cold spell In Washington, a man, shivering and tagged, knocked at the door of a F street bouse and said to the lady "Please, madam, give me sometblnt to eat. I am suffering severely from exposure." "You must be more specific." the lady replied. "Are you a member of the senate or of the house?" Joke Medicine. He Is a very practical, serious minded man of business. The other day he met a friend, and related to him an alleged joke, and at its con clusion laughed long and heartily. The friend looked awkward for a moment, and then said: "You'll have to excuse me, old man, but I don't see the point." "Why, to tell you the truth, I don't Juts see the point myself. Rut I've mfc.de It a rule to laugh at all jokes; I think it's good for the health." Editorial Amenities. Editor Junkin of the Sterling Bulle tin has red hair. Editor Cretcher of the Sedgwick Pantngraph has no hair at all. "Mac," asked Junkin, "how did you lose your hair?" "It was red and 1 pulled it out," growled Cretcher. Everybody's. Hlxon "Did the operation on your wife's throat do her good?" Dixon "It did us both good. She hasn't been able to talk for six weeks." Boston Herald. fmsm ft !Z5 'Guam When You're Hoarse Use CURE wt ust mmi tor (gutus.; Gives Immediate relief. The firrl dose relieves your aching throat and allays the irritation. Guaranteed lo contain t opiates. Very palatable. AD DruiiUto, 1 5c - hit