c THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG. PA. IN BAD FORM. CTaated to reel Comfortable and Dreil tot the Occasion, -Good day, lndy," lie snld, tvlrTi the "ft. Insinuating tone of the profession al mendicant; "I hopes as ycr well thi Tly day." "Take your muddy foot oft that door- ZtHD." XJnrtainly. Alius wlllin' ter 'bligo s .'.ady." "I haven't auy cold meat." .. - "No?" Nor any loft over coffee." "It's kind of an off dny in the com TUnaary department, ain't it?" "I s'posb you'd ha will Inpr to eat sonn -JU I had It on hand and didn't know !ow to get rid of It. Uut I haven't .-toy.- tvPio has got to be an old story witl a. I don't want nny." 1 suppose, then, that you'd like tc svo mo give you my husbnnd's Prince Albert coat and his broadcloth panta ."oooe." "No'm. Thnt afn't exactly what ! -ant, but you're warm. I'm so loaded town with things ter eat what tlu ftdy furder bak Klmmo that tho ideo jj eattn' is positively unpleasant tci u. An' ie lady I seen Jce' before thai rjfnme seen a supply of clothes that 1 iad tor frivo some of 'cm away cos 1 J-da'L h;no enough Saratoga trunks ji' dress-suit cases ter carry 'cm jround in. There's only three articles L need now, an' I don't puess I've itnwk the right house fur nnything sc '.in-ter-date. I may be down In tin world, but I likes ter preserve tho pro rtities of pouts' attire. I've been in taodln' ter take a wheelln' trip through Ae country " Do you mean to say that you rido bteycle?" "Not exactly on a bicycle. I see de bicycle's two wheels an' go 'em twe Setter. This trip is on tho truck undei X (freight car, hut it's wheelln Jus' tlu same. An' I've put off startiu' fui uore'n three days now In hopes some body In this community 'A bo lip-tor-:Ute enough ter have a pair o" knick erbockers an' some Golf stockings thoi ihey could gimme so's I'd feel com "ortablo an' dressed lur the occasion. iDetroit Tree Press. Making It Tliiln. The young woman from Boston was t the table In a railroad restaurant It the far West, and, when she essayed to cut the Bteak with which she had been served, she discovered that what she needed was a higher education in athletics. After four or five ineffectual attempts to dissect It, she called to the natter. "Cahn't you," she asked, "give me a bit of steak which is characterized by ier tenncity of tissue?" The waiter looked staggered and a eowboy across the table looked up. "I didn't quite ketch, mum," said th waiter, bending forward with his hanc io his car. "I said" and fhere was a shade oi xnnoyr.nce In her tone "that I desired x portion of steak in which the coher ence of the molecules was not so ap parent." "Oh," fitammercd the waiter, and h stood fixed with hia mouth open ir amazernVnt. The young woman became embar rassed. "Here." snorted the gallant cowboy, coming to the rescue, with a Bounding whack on the table, "g!t "a move or pou; what the lady wants is a piece ol .neat that ain't so toupa she can't sticli ier purty tooth into it. See?" and the joung woman actually smiled as the aiter hurried away. Detroit Free .Trass. He Wn Cotiaf-tcntlnui. There was an anxious, doubtful look an. the young fellow's face, ea he paced op and down the aisle !n a liroadwaj eablo car the other evening. There were half a dozen seats, yet the young aian took no notice of them, and con rtnued his restless pacing to and fro. "Seats in front, plenty of 'eai," 6aid tie conductor, brusqitf ly. The young man continued his patrol A benevolent old gentleman pulled Van by the coat and said: "Here's a teat, sir." Tho young man 6hook his A newcomer entered the car, and, be ing an altogether officious person, pointed to the vacant seats. The young nam still walked. "Hello, Henry!" exclaimed a dappei young fellow, an acquaintance of the peripatetic, who Just then bounced lntc the car. "Why don't you sit down? What In the world makes you walk uj and down ILke that?" "Conscientious scruples," Bald the young pedestrian. "You eee, I prom iaed her that I would walk down to the florist and get some roses for her. I wouM much have preferred to ride, you know. It's hot and dusty, and so I'm wmpromising with myself by walking and riding at the same time." He turned on his heel and passed up die car. New York Herald. A (lifted lirnlm. The new reporter had admitted that Ala knowledge of newspaper work was. Jlieht, but as the s tnff was short he wm taken on. That he was a good man he showed that evening In a style peeu liarly his own. i He had -been taken a late supper at in all night restaurant, and some little sontroversy arose while ho waa there. Grauplnig at once the fact that this wan a news Item, he stopped not to witness the trouble, but rushed to the ofllce. I "Say," grasped he, out of breath, ' "there'll a man trying to kill tho waiter ver at the Australian restaurant. YWd better send a reporter over there ight away." Louisville Courier-Jour-aaU The Cop'a rrenome of Miuct. We have great cause to bo thankful .br the efflolency of tho police. The Allowing Incident well illustrates their invariable presence of mind: A small Joy happened to be crossing a bridge lust as another email boy foil Into the rater. A policeman asked tho 1oy on Una bridge whether ho could swln. The Hoy eald he could, and with great pres jnce of niind the olllcor thereupon tfrop jed him over Uio balustrade into-th river. After a hard struggle the boy who was dropped in succeeded In rescuing the one who fell In. . The po liceman has not yet Keen promoted for Ala bravery.- Saa Francisco Wave. , It let not essontlal to keep growing chickens fat. Clean the neata regularly to keep them free of vermin. If the hens lay soft-shelled eggs g!0 them plenty of gravel. To make most profitable fowls, they should be fattened rapidly. The food must always be varied enough to keep the chickens with a good appetite. Too much soft or cooked food Is not pood for fowls. They need some em ployment for the gizzard. Overfeeding Is expensive. It not only costs more for the feed, but the hens get too fat and lay no eggs. Civkorcls too young and small to soil for broilers now may be made profit able by canonizing n little later on. It does not pay to raise scrub stock. Sell the scrubs and get well-bred ani mals. This In a good year to make the change, while prices are low. We do not advise any one to capon izo voting turkeys. They are too ten der and the operation is attended witn (treat risk and little benefit results from It. The early-hatched pullets are now large enough to permit of Intelligent election. The culls should 'be dispos al of, and the best reserved for laying and ibreedtng. There Is one crop which le nearly al ways below the demand in supply, and thnt is popcorn. This country uses it largely, but does not grow enough, al though It tiolU at a good price. Spread the onions on shelves In thin layers and do not disturb them until they are wanted for use. Onions may ,'reezo and thaw several times during the winter without injury If they are not handled. A superb hog feed, for any ago and almost any condition, says an ex change, Is corn, wheat and oats of equal p;irts, coarsely chopped nnd fed any way the hogs like it cooked or raw, ioakod or dry. In Russia sunflowers are made spe cial crops, the seed being ground and ,isod for cattle, the same ae cotton seed meal, and such food Is not only wholesome, but gives excellent result n milk and butter. As soon as the rot Is Observed In the g plant, writes an authority, "dust the spot with alr-slacked lime, and In i day or two the rot will hnve dried ip; the spot disappears, and the fruit ,vlll mature in good condition. A fruit grower thinks one of the best frays of manuring strawberries or other ?m.ill fruits Li to scatter broadcast be tween the rows, nnd then work into :he i oil with a cultivator, taking care ilwVs to have It reasonably well fined. Beets, turnips and carrots keep in rood condition In winter if stored in aounds. and apple.? should remain In !ood condition all through the winter .n a dry cellar. The chief obstacle is lot the cold, but usually too much warmth. A grape vine or any other kind of a fine, trained on an arbor over the cis ;ern or well does not keep the water roller during warm weather, but fur lishes a very inviting shade to the 'armer who comes in hot from the field md thirsting for a cool drink. The gain from fall plowing is that .he naked surface is easily made into i mellow 'bed by cultivation, if the ainter is Just right; but this gain is jften offset by too great a loss of fer tility to make It generally protitable ,'t is far better if the field Is covered y a protecting 6od. An old broncho buster gives the fol owlng as a sure way to cure a horse ol ticking: "The way we lix a kicking aorse is to tie one of his forelegs with i rope to the hind leg on the other side. Then, as 60on as he starts tc tick, he Jerks his front leg off the sround and goes down in a heap. Two r three doses of that kind will cure die worst case you can find." The outcry In Europe against dis posed beef is not sustained by statis tics. It has been found that one out ol fvery seven cattle shipped from Aus tralia to England died while In transit: that of those shipped from South America one out of every twenty-live iied, while of those that were shipped trom the United States and Canada, but one in every 200 died In transit, rhis would Indicate that our cattle sur pass the rest of the world in excellence it condition, and that any discrimina tion against us is practically without eaaonable foundation. Cranuerrlea Tho Kplry Full Kerry, In cooking cranberries, never adA lugar till they have cooked long nough for the skins to crack open. Then put It in liberally and let the lame cook for fifteen minutes longer. Allow them to oo'jk down, after the Bugar Is put In, until they are nearly ready to Jelly; the ideal cranberry sauce does not consist of one cranberry floating In a table-spoonful of hot pink ish water. Many appetizing desserts can be made from cranberries. Dinap lings made as Apple dumplings, with a handful of sweetened cranberries in plnce of apples, are very nice. A de licious pudding may be made with a layer of bread crumbs, then one ol cranberries, then sugar, bits of butter ind the favorite splcf; then another layer of bread and cranberries until the pudding dish is full. Have the top lay sr of the 'bread crumbs. Pour over the vholo a cupful or more of fruit Juice Into which a beaten egg has been stir red, and let the puddiag bake until the cranberries are done. Serve with swee oudding sauce. The House Queen. Ineuniatio Tires Pneumatic tires and motor carriage Aiay together solve the good road piolilem in a very unexpected way by rendering stone or other hard roads annctceRsary. Tho horseleps carriage Is surely coming, and as it Is estimated that two-thirds of the wear of roads it saused by horses' feet, the motor will make a great saving. Then again some French engineers from careful tests huve learned that the pneumatic tire 3Rves from 30 to CO per cent, of the power necessary to haul a lo:id. This nn roads covered with snow, mud and slush. A properly grained gravel road or even dirt may answer the purposes &f the future vehlole. x . , A LARGEST BRANDT STILL. Cnllfornlrt llonptu an t:tbl1bmnit Tnrn Ins; Out 1A.OOO linllonn Dully. The largest brand) still In the world Is nt the Kl Pinal vineyard In San Joaquin County, not far from Stock ton. Part of It has been built about four years and the otl-er part was fin ished only a short time ago. Aa In well known, tho El Pinal vineyard has always made a ppeclalty of brandy nnd sweet wines. It was the Intention of the proprietors to do this when they went Into business, and for that reason they had the largest still built that was ever put up. That was, as has been stated, about four years ago. nnd even then It wa nhend of any thing In existence. It could produce more brandy In twentyrfour hours than any other still In the world, and It has not betn surpassed since. Hut even thnt was not enough to mipply all the alcohol needed in their busl ness, so another still was built nnd made to work in connection with the original one. The two aro really one still, as they are used, nnd havo about three times the capacity of any other still in the world. This enormous machine is located in a building by Itself, and part of tho year Is kept running day nnd night. It Is very complicated in Its workings so that a description of that part of It cannot be nttempted here. It will be sufficient to stat. that the grape Juleo or wine Is pumped from vats to a tank on top of the hill. From there it sim ply passes through a series of heated chambers In fho form of a vapor and comes out in tho shape of brandy. It ran be tested In the different chambers nnd the change noted. In tho first chamber it Is little more than warm wine, and it gradually gets stronger and stronger until it Is sharp to taste. From the time the wine leaves tho tank until it comes out as grape brandy only ten minutes Is oc cupied. In tho old method of distill ing it used to take about three hours. In appearance the largest brandy still in the world Is simply a conglom eration of tanks, pipes and boilers. The capacity of this still Is enough to make a person wonder what becomes of nil Its products. When running full time it can convert 15.000 gallons of wine Into brandy In a day. This will make about 4,01)0 gallons every twenty four hours, or enough to keep about 40,000 men in a state of Intoxication during that time. In a month there would bo enough of brandy on hand to intoxicate 1,700,000 men, or about the entire population of New York. But, aa It happens, very little of this brandy Is sold as brandy. It is used to fortify sweet wines, so that they will be In condition to keep until ready to send to market. Tho alcohol acts as a pre servative of the grape Juleo the same as It would of anything else. It keeps It from turning sour. San Francisco Call. Wngner a a Ilero. Never waa there a sorrier hero than Wagner, this selfish voluptuary who was content to gratify his luxurious tastes at the expense of his friends, but was too Independent to feel grate ful for their sacrifices; whose self-indulgence was so much of a disease that he smoked In order not to miss a sen sation which others enjoyed, and waa capable of driving his host Into the streets In the small hours of the morn ing to replenish his snuff-box; and of whom his ardent champion, the late Ferdinand Praeger, has to confess that while ho was ready enough to enter into a quarrel he "always moved away when it looked like coming to blows." Wagner's callous neglect of his first wife, who had been his slave through years of penury qualified by prodigal ity, provoked the remonstrances of hla friends, and forced Mr. Praeger to say; "I can testify that Wagner suffered se verely from thoughtlessness.'" No shabbier letter was ever penned than the one he wrote to Mr. Praeger when he found that the long-suffering wo man had confided her troubles to their common friend. "How could she have expected," he plaintively asks, "that I was to be schackled and fettered as any ordinary, common, cold mortal? My inspirations carried me into a sphere where she could not follow, and then the exuberance of my heated en thusiasm was met by my cold douche." The familiar plea that there should be one law for genius and another for tho "common mortal" is not intoler able when urged by the apologetic hero-worshipper; from the hero him self It comes with but 111 grace. "I liked every luxury she fettered me there," he bleats of the woman who had striven so hard to save him from the ruin threatened by his colossal ex travagance. Blackwood's Magazine. Averace. A very common word, to be sure, and well understood as to its applica tion. But after fair translation of its old French body "aver" Into Eng lish, and only "horse" Is found, and the word becomes "horsage," the change tends to confusion. Nono the less, "horsnge" and "average" are identical, Bince In the old-tlmo French an "aver" was a horse. It was also a horso In the Scotch dictionaries, and In one of Burns' poems, "A Dream," he alludes to a horse as a "noble alver." In olden times in Europe a tenant was bound to do certain work for the lord of the manor largely in canting grain and turf horse-work; p.nd in the yearly settlement of ac counts the Just proportion of the large and small work performed was esti mated according to the word done by "avers" (horses); hence our common word "average." Tho I-'Irnt l'lintngruph. A French dealer, In "Notes and Quer. io?," has discovered that Feuelon. in lii'jO. foreshadowed the photograph, nnd that a less known author. Tl phnigne, In 1700. In his odd book called "Oiphautie," described the photograph process very closely. He said: "The rays of light reflected from objects make a picture on all polished surfaces the retina of the eye, glass, etc. Now we havo sought to fix this fugi tive Image; we have Invented a sub stnnce. very delicate, viscous and quick to dry niid harden; by means of this a picture Is made In an Instant. We then back this up with a piece of cloth, and present It to the objects) we Wish to point."- j j i i ..... 1 j HEASONS Walter Baker & Co.'s a. Breakfast Cocoa. mm a cup. Be sure that you gtt the frenulne article mde by WALTER Ilikl-U Arn I A linhflr Mm. I'atahllithrd I7HO. "Thrift is a good revenue" Great saving results from cleanli ness and Tours to Florida. No district in America presents, during the Winter season, so many varied attractions as the state of Flor ida. Besides its delightful climate, which to one escaping from the cold and unhealthful changes of the North seems almost ethereal, it is pre - emi - nently a land of sport and pleasure, Along its eleven hundred miles of salt water coast and in its twelve hundred . ments ol cotton, breailstufts and var-fresh-water lakes are fish of almost ious merchandise by renewed sliip every conceivable variety, from the j ments of gold. Remarking on this migratory tribes common to Northern : probability the Financial Chronicle. waters to the tatpon, pompano, and others of a more tropical character. Nowhere in all our broad land can the angler find a greater variety of game or better sport. Here also the most enthusiastic hunter finds satiety. Deer, turkeys, bears, panthers and wild cats roam at large through the more sparsely set tled regions, while birds of all kinds may be found in abundance through out the state. The more novel sport of alligator and manatee hunting may also be indulged in by the more ad venturous tourist. With its matchless climate, its or ange groves, its rivers and lakes, its fishing and hunting, and its extensive forest, Florida presents unrivalled at tractions for the valetudinarian, the lover of nature, the sportsman, and the explorer. To this attractive State the Penn sylvania Railroad Company has ar ranged four personally-conducted tours during the season of 1S97, leaving by special train January 26, February 9 and 23, and March 9. The first three tours will admit of a sojourn ot two weeks in this delightful land ; tickets for the fourth tour will be valid to re turn until May 31 by regular trains. Rates for the round trip, $so.oo from New York, $48.00 from Phila delphia, and proportionate rates from other points. For tickets, itineraries, and other information, apply to ticket agents, special booking offices, or address Geo. W. Boyd, Assistant General Pas senger Agent, Broad Street Station, Philadelphia. 12-24-4L No Patents in Japan. No patent is granted to a foreigner Japan. No foreign inventor, by in applying through a Japanese citizen, can obtain a patent except by fraud. it a patent were obtained by a false representation that the Japanese citi zen was the inventor, and it was dis covered that he was not, the patent would be at once cancelled. It is pre cisely the same with trade marks and designs there is no registration and no protection. The result is that all goods of foreign produce and manu facture, of which the label is worth copying, can be bought all over Japan of Japanese manufacture, and at a cpjarter of a fractional part of the cost of the original and genuine, foreign made article. An Unfortunate Bondsman, Some months ago B. F. Cutler of Pittston, who deserted his wife, was sentenced to pay her $20 a month. W. L. McDougall, also of Pittston, became Cutler s bondsman, furnishing - 1-1 r .1 ...... - 0 i,ooo uan ior me laitntul perform-1 ance of the sentence. After paying ! for three months Cutler refused to give his wife any more money, and ' McDougall has been compelled to pay her $20 a month for three months. iie nau sutler brought into court Saturday, but Judge Bennett said the court was powerless to relieve him of the responsibility and he would have to continue the payments. If you wish to make a good start in the new year, it wouldn't be a bad idea to settle up your subscription. It takes money to pay salaries and we cannot furnish you with the news for nothing. A few subscribers pay in advance, but we will be very glad if those who are back will only pay for what they have got, and then your mind will be easier knowing that you have paid the printer. FOR USING Because it Is absolutely pure. Because It Is nr i "iaoe by the so-called Dutch Troccss In which chemicals are uted. Because beans of the finest quality &re used. Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. Because it is the most economical, costing less than one cent Coming Gold Shipments. Never in the past history of the United States has there been such an excess of exports over imports, in the five months ending November 30 of any year, as in the year 1896. The excess amounts to $191,130,269. Yet, in spite of this favorable balance 1 et, in spite ol ll of trade, it is quit e probable that we shall 'follow up our immense ship- December 19, says : Wherein then does the reason lie for our being just on the edge of gold shipments a trade-contracting influence under present circumstances when we ought to be receiving gold and thereby recuperating and reviv ing our half-dead industries ? The answer bankers give to this question is everywhere the same. Their opin ion is that the anomaly is accounted for by the unnatural congestion of money in New York City, keeping the rates all the time lower here than in Europe. Now it is Berlin that is about to take advantage of this situa tion. Money is active at 5 per cent, there : here it is say 2J per cent, and going a-begging at that. Why should not Berlin bankers call on their near neighbor London for their gold ? Why should they come all the way to America and go nowhere else ? Because New York is not only the cheapest money market there is in the world, but it Is the only market that cannot be influenced by a rise in foreign exchange or even by a withdrawal of gold. In London money hardens as soon as the ex changes turn against that centre be cause its currency is the world's cur rency. America, on the other hand, suffers because its currency is wholly out of touch with the world's currency except through the United States Treasury, and when redeemed in gold there it has to be paid out again as sjon as redeemed. This explanation hits the target in the very bull's eye. We have cheap and abundant money, but no use for it as long as there is no assurance of a remedy for a financial situation which keeps us at the call and beck of gold hoarders and borrowers the world over. Meantime the leaders of the Republican party seemed dispos ed to kick the ladder on which they climbed to power from under their own feet. They propose to ignore the issue on which McKinley carried New York, Kentucky, Indiana, New Jersey, Connecticut, Illinois, Michi gan and Wisconsin and start out on new tariff-tinkering enterprises. The business of the country has been tariff-tinkered to death. Business needs rest. It needs to be let alone. It needs such assuiance as an im mediate, courageous reform of the currency would instantaneously bring. The people are entitled to expect such reform. They are entitled to the opportunity which the immense extension of our export trade has achieved for us, without the para lyzing uncertainties that inhere in our patchwork, crazy-quilt currency sys tem. Record. More Curative Power contained in a bottle of Hood's Sarsapanlla than in any other similar preparation. It costs the proprietor and manufacturer more. It costs the jobber more and it is worth more to the consumer. It has a record of cures unknown to any other prepara tion. It is the best to buy because it is the One True Blood Purifier. Hood's Pills are the best family cathartic and liver medicine. Gentle, reliable, sure. Harrisburg will do away with the volunteer fire department and create a paid one. It is estimated that the cost to the city will aggregate $35,000 per year, for which it will be necessary to levy an additional pne mill tax. SUBSCRIBK FOR THE COLUMBIAN Fine PHOTO GRAPHS and CRAYONS at McKillip Bros., Bloomsburg. The best are the cheapest. THE MARKETS. M.OOMSUURG MARKETS. CORRRCTBD W8KKLY. HIT1IL FHIrgg, Butter per lb $ . Fggs per dozen .22 .22 .08 13 ,06 .07 95 30 Lard per lb , I lam per pound , Pork, whole, per pound Beef, quarter, per pound, , , , Wheat per bushel Oat3 ' " Rye " " Wheat flour per bbl r 50 20 Hay per ton i2 to $14 roiaioes per pusnci, . . . Turnips " " Onions " " , Sweet potatoes per peck 3 5 20 Tallow per lb 4i Shoulder " " ,i 10 Side meat " " Vinegar, per qt Dried apples per lb Dried cherries, pitted Raspberries Cow Hides per lb Steer " Calf Skin Sheep pelts , Shelled corn per bus .to .07 S .to .12 31 OS .80 75 5 .90 1 .00 .90 .08 .oS .12 .IO .08 Corn meal, cwt. . Bran, Chop Middlings 11 Chickens per lb new ...... " " "old Turkeys Geese Ducks it COAL. No. 6, delivered a.6o " 4 and s " 3.S5 " 6 at yard a.35 " 4 and s at yard 3.60 The Leading Consertalorjr of America lARLJAULTIIN, Ullector. Founded In 1833 bv K.Tourj8.rro: lor ProtptcWJ giving full information. Frank W, Halb, General Manager. tfvwvvvyvfTVvyvyvYyvvvv'f eirce cltool 34ml Year. A representative Amerlonn HuM net.8 School for both (sexes, founded by Thomas May Pf.iucr, A. M.. I'll. 1. Couples y-iiintlc luinl nrm training wltu a practical, sound and useful EdkIUIi educa tion. It oirers three full course: ltr.slness, Khorthand and Type vriUnir, KiigllKh ; the whole cou stltutlnii an Ideal combination. Graduates are cheerfully assisted to positions. liolU Uuy and Xleht Sessions are now running. Students received at any time. FKIIK t SCHOOL, KI7-0I0 ( knlnal St., PhlUiU. Ilmird HulliUny. NEW DINING ROOnS. A LARGE and well furnished dining room has been opened by IMDDV XIlDINn onlha second floor of his nAKKl AUKAMJ, r e , . laurant. Meals will be served at the regular dining hours for 25c. and they can also he obtained at any time. The table will be sup plied with the delicacies of the season onJ the service will be first-class. Entrance by door between Itastaurant ta Ualfaiera'i grocery store. CHARLES NASH PURVIS, WILLIAMSPORT, PA., Collections, Loans, Invest ments, Sales Agent and Real Estate Private Banker. Deposits received subject to Drafts or Checks, from any part of the World, money forwarded to any place ; Interest at 3 per cent, allowed on deposits with us for one year or more ninety days notice of with drawal must be given on all interest-beartug deposits. 96-9-IO-iy PATENTS ravoats and Trado Marks obtained, snd aJ' Patent business conducted (or MoDKllATl FiiKs. Ol'lt OFFICE IS OI'POHITB TUB U. a PAT ENT OKb'K'K. We have no sub-ngnm-lfs, all business direct, tmnoe can tranmtet patent busl ncRs In less time and at Less font than tuoao ro tuoUi from Washington. nena moaci, (trawl lit; or pnoto, Wlin awnnnp tlon. We advise If patentable or not, free of nlin.mi nii.l..Annt .1 Ill n.. ...... la dltll.ft vuhi hui .'.ii n:v ll"' IIUU LIU t'llll'llu I u.-- - A book, "llnw to Obtain Patents," with rucer aniini tr a.itmil .Hunt.. In wm.H Li.iln fYiiinrv- A town sent free. Address ' C. A. KNOW & CO,, Washington, D. tt (Opposite U. S Patent Otlice.) Wanted-An Idea I Who can thhili a,.iii Nl.niiJ tldUK to imUMU? Protwt your Moan; thuy mny tirlug you wnltb WniB JOHN WLUDKUllL KN A CO., Patent Attor neys, Waalilugtou, L). c, fur their l,SuU iriMMIa ud list ot two buadrad Uirwllous wauled. . P 5