The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, January 07, 1897, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG. PA.
jAHTD TO LYNCH TBI MURDERER.
a Wu a, Newspaper Man, lint the Crowd
Were Aminos to Hung HI in.
tpfaln Leos was n walking aloni
Xtrkt street the other day holding t
ark complcvioned young man of sin
ister countenance by the arm. I'copl
tnraeri and glanced back, wondering I: I
4tie captain had captured anot her clan
aerous criminal. The captain was talk
nil In a loud and angry tone and ges
tJcluating violently. He was heard tf
r:
"Ton cold-blooded murderer, you'
TO put you where you won't make any
more trouble. I've got a rope around
four neck already."
8everal people heard It and turned tc
ftallow the couple, staring curiously at
the prisoner.
"If you make a move," roared thf
csptAln, "1 11 blow the top of your heafl
off."
The prisoner looked decidedly un
ootBfortable. "We were a long time getting you
Dot now that we have landed you yot
can commence getting yourself read
tor a necktie party."
"Lynch him!" yelled gome one In tin
great crowd that had surrounded thi
couple.
"Hang the murderer!" yelled half e
doeen voices: and several of the fore
most impelled by those behind, rushei
jpon them.
"Stand back there! What's the mat
ter with you?" demanded the capLaln.
"Hang him!" they shouted, as thej
sHsed the dark young man.
"What do you want to hang hln
torr
"He's a murderer."
"Oh, o and attend to your own busl
sens! He's a newspaper man, and 1
was Just telling him what I said to De
vine, "the Chicken,' when I capture
him twenty-flve or thirty years ago."
Saa Francisco Tost.
Successful.
Mr. Goodman My little man. when :
wu your age I didn't smoke the wcj
you do.
Slobsy I'll bet yer didn't. Why, derf
ain't a kid In de ward dat kin inhale
Dke rue.
Rlillenloasly Effeminate.
"I understand that there le a revolt
among the young woman," said a col
lege president.
"There Is," replied the professor lr
mathematics.
"What seems to be the trouble?'
asked the president
"They refuse absolutely to wear th
university cap and gown."
"Refuse to wear the cap and gown!'
exclaimed the president In astonish
ment. "Well. I don't understand that thej
kawe any particular objection to the
can, but they positively refuse to pul
on the gown."
"Do they give any reason?"
"Oh, yes; they say It hi too effemi
nate and entirely out of date. Beaidea
It -hides their bloomers, and is really
atily fit for men to wear." Chicago
rribune.
Taken From I If.
ffcere was a man who bought a wheel,
Be bought it for his wife,
And through the streets this man
would reel,
m-risk'.ng of his life; ;
last so his wife could learn to ride,
'With swift and agile bounds,
B galloped onward by her side
She weighed two hundred pounds.
9t course he couldn't keep the pace, t
And soon he traveled hence;
tBa love a tandem now doth grace
Her second hub hae sense.
Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Why Ha Protested.
"It' very wrong of you people to
atac those gongs after 10 o'clock at
algbt," said the man who lives on a
aastd transit car line.
"Why you don't mean to say thai
rm go to bed at 10 o'clock," said the
MBductor.
"K no. I can't say that I da Birt
wkan I don't, I'm particularly anxloui
Oat my wife shouldn't be awakened."
Washington Star..
u. ' n, i.
Fuhllc-atton.
"Know all women by these pre
exits." began a sagacious attorney ox
a public proclamation.
"Know all men. &c," corrected I
(fellow lawyer.
"That's all right," explained the
3rst. "If the women know it, the men
will soon hear of it." Washington
Evening Times.
.. ..
Tha tlrart First.
"I notice that you eat the heart ot
year watermelon first." said the theor
ist. "That is all wrong. You ought
to save it up till the last." "H'm,"
said the other man; "according to youi
theory, a man oughtn't to begin thi
honeymoon until he had been married
ten. or twelve years."
,J;
Nanette's DIHIcultT. I
First Coat Why, Nanette! whafi
the matter? ;
6econd Goat Appendicitis, William
-First Goat Stovepipe?
Second Goat No; art posters. New '
Tork Press.
Importance.
Ferry How did you get that blacl
y?
Hargreavea Got knocked down by s
confounded scorcher.
"Was he on his wheel?" Claclnnat1
thiauir&r. . . , f , - . ,'
A QUEER DISCOVERT.
Live Oats Found On Hundred Feet Dae)
In the Earth.
A neet of live bats was found 10
feet underground In Snowshoe Uulch
near Cottage Grove. In Oregon, the oth
er day. This is considered a most re
markable discovery, and those whi
have visited the place and seen the anl
mals are at loss to account for it.
John Dlnman and Andrew WIlsoi
have been developing a claim in thi
gulch by running a tunnel to reach ta
vern. The tunnel runs obliquely, am
a few days ago, when a depth of 15i
feet had been reached, the rock begai
to assume a different condition. I
sounded loose, or hollow, in that par
tioular spot, and the partners knev
that they were nearing what in miner"
parlance is called "a change."
Their "holes" were nearly loadci
when this discovery was made, bu
they continued loading, and then wen
to the surface and touched off th
charge. Upon their retuTn they ex
pected to find a vein uncovered, or, a
least a rock of different charade
from that through which they wer
running.
But quite a different mntter attract
ed their attention when they went bac!
to the end of the tunnel, and the clr
cumstance has been the wonder of th
entire country ever since. It has ere
ated an immense amount of discussion
scientific and otherwise, but no cer
tain explanation has yet been adduced
Instead of finding ore for any par
ticular change in the rock, they fount
the tunnel full of bats. The cause o
the peculiar sound that indicated i
change of ground was a small cave, am
into this their last shots broke and ou
of which came the bats. How the bat
got into the cave Is the problem, am
what sustained them there? The poln
Is about 100 feet below the surface, ant
there Is apparently no opening o
means of Ingress or exit. The bats
when caught and taken out to the day
light, appeared to be without eyes ant
able to By but little way. In fact, thel
wings were but t eagerly developed
The first thing that attracted the men'i
attention upon thr return to the tun
nel was the peculiar odor, which, not
wlthstanuTng the amount of gas fron
the exploded powder, was quite percep
tible and disagreeable.
The only solution of the strange oc
currence that has yet been offered Hoj
In the fact that the rock is of metamor
phlc and aqueous origin, and, being ir
the Cascade range, is of recent occur
rence. The rock is a closely bedde
shale, and at the time of the geologica
distrubance that put it Into its preset
position the bats had their nests then
nc! became Incased as they were found
It would eem. too. that the bats mus
be of that nature that becomes dorman
and able to retain life without food
An effort was made to save some O'
them alive but they rapidly succumhet
to the sunlight and fresh air. Sai
Francisco Call.
A Ranchman's Luck.
A story is told about a panther tha
was trapped by Luke Anderson, wh
has a small ranch In the Smut Creek
Valley of the Big Horn Mountain
Smut Creek is a small stream aboui
five miles long, flowing through th
ranch from a series of springs uj
among the mountains. Near one o:
these springs Luke set his trap, a big
iteel affair weighing seventeen pounds
and usually used for big bears.
Luke thought that panthers wen
stealing his sheep and that they livec
somewhere among the thickets abou'
the headwater of the creek. He wen1
to the trap on four successive days
but found that nothing had disturbec
it. He skipped the fifth day.
On the sixth day, when he approach
ed the trap from down stream be hearc
a groaning sound and the rustling o:
leaves. He peered over a rock at th
place he had set this trap.
The place had been disturbed some
what. Every small bush within five
yards was torn up by the roots. A dead
rotten log that had served as a sid
of the trap pen was torn and scatter
ed about in fragments. The ground
itself had been ripped up and plowec
clear to the bed rock two feet beneath
No trap nor beast was in sight. Luke
looked about quickly. He could heai
the groans, and they sounded uncom
fortably close.
On the far side of the rock behind
which he was Luke saw the tips of th
ears of an animal. Luke slid out ol
that quickly. He backed away with
rifle cocked and made a detour of sev
eral rods. Then, to his surprise, he
saw not one, but two panthers. One ol
ot the two bad its leg in the trap. The
other was beside It, licking down the
trapped one's neck tenderly, as an old
cat licks a kitten. The wounded on
was groaning.
Luke shot the untrapped one anl
then killed the other. He found thai
the trapped animal was a male, witt
an ugly face. The other was a sleek
coated female.
The Plucky Hluejay.
My raspberry patch la flftj
feet square, surrounded by a win
fence. So many birds make their homt
in the wooded rooms within ten feel
that it Is necesary to protect this patci
by netting, which is supported by wirei
6trung overhead. The net hangs ovei
the sides of the fence three or four feet
Occasionally a bird gets inside, espec
ially the blue Jay. We catch them and
let them eo unharmed. Yesterday mj
man and myself were near and saw i
blue Jay In there with a ripe raspberrj
in his bill, fluttering against the net
Mv man went inside and chased hln:
from one side to another three times
end finnally got his bands on him al
where the fence rail and the net met
but the bird managed the slip through
his hands down between the net anc
then outside of the fence and galnec
his liberty. All this time he hung ont(
the berry and flew away with' it. Thai
certainly Is a good illustration of bird
cluck. Median's Monthly.
Pennsylvania Mouutaln Tea',
Under this name the leaves of one
ot the golden rods, solidago odoro, art
in vwy common use as tea by famillei
of the (lerman race in the Interior oi
I'ennsylvania. Men gather the leavei
In the summer time, and many are
eaid to make a good living at the work
They peddle the plant in the wintei
tinKJ. ... ... . .
HEW PRECIOUS STOIfB DISCOVERED.
Jewel Comes From Meilcand Was Fount
by Edward J. Smith.
A new and remarkable seml-preclou
stone has been discovered by Edwart
J. Smith, a Chicago diamond expert
It is not yet known whether or not th
stones will be found In sufficient quan
tlty to place them on the market. ADou
a year ago an opal miner In Mexlo
sent a handful of peculiar, rough lit
tie stones to Mr. Smith for examlna
tlon. In the rough Borne of them look
ed like little snail shells and some Ilk.
tiny rosettes, varying In size from I
very small pea to a small hickory nut
Most of them approached more or lesi
a half sphere in shape. The roundel
part was generally of the nippearance o
clear quartz, while In the centre of thi
flat side there was a prettiily colore
little nodule. The substance of tht
stone seemed to 'be laid In strata ovei
this little colored kernel.
A number of the stones were pollshet
at once, and it was found they madi
most beautiful settings for rings, scar
pins, and other Jewelry. The uppe:
side was given a smooth polished sur
face, through which the imbedded fo
dule distinctly showed. In most casei
the nodule was of dusky red color. Ii
some of the stones the eye-like renin
was not well defined, but the colorlni
matter was clouded across the ertlr-
stone. The vast majority of the stonei
however, bore such a remarkable re
semblance to an eye that It gave riS"
to the name "Cyslips," with whicl
name the stone has been christened
George F. Kunze. the New York miner
nloglst who made the collection whlc)
H. N. Higinbotham presented to th
Field Museum, said that since Mi
Smith had discovered the stone It w
right that he should name It, so Ml
Smith gave it the appropriate name o
Cyclops.
Last summer Mr. Smith iook in
stone to Europe, and the experts then
said that no stone like it had ever be
fore been known. It was highly prals
ed and at once classed as a gem flttei
to set in any kind of Jewelry. Thi
stone approaches the opal in value, ant
will no doubt prove a popular stone l
enough of them should ever be foun
to make them find a place In the mar
ket. This point is as yet entirely prob
lematical. Because of the rarity or in
Cyclops Mr. Smith does not yet can
to make known the name of the mlnei
who found the first ones or the loca
tion of the mine where they were firs
cracked out of the rocks by the search
er after opals.
The substance composing the Cyclopi
is chalcedony in an entirely new ar
rangement, dissimilar to any form li
which it has ever before been found.
An extraordinary Tippler.
"I have seen the statement that m
man could drink half a gallon o
brandy a day for more than a verj
short time." said John L. Smith, o
Linden, Va., at Wlllard's, "but there li
a man living in the town I reside it
who has never missed drinking tha'
much brandy In a day for twenty years
His name Is John Hudnall, and he owm
brandy distillery near Linden. H
has used liquor as a beverage sine
early youth, and for the past twentj
years has consumed half a gallon o:
brandy a day. He is not an Inebriatt
by any means, not becoming Intoxicat
ed by the brandy. He is hale and
hearty and stands well in the com
munity where he lives as a buslnesi
man. No explanation can be given o'
his remarkable power of withstanding
the effects of liquor, but no one whf
knows him doubts the statement as t
his having drank the amount I havt
said. It has not impaired his digestloi
In the slightest degree, as it is usual!)
claimed it will do. The statements go
ing the rounds as to the amount ot
brandy that can be used as a beveragi
by a man require revision." Washlnjr
'on Star.
Fond ot Their Priest.
According to the remarkable story
which comes from the village of Santa
Marina, In Abruzzl, It Is not alont
the Anglican curate who boasts of be
ing loved "beyond all other men" by
the ladies of the parish to which he le
sttached. The priest of the village
named appears to have been able, with
out the adventitious aid of any quail
Icatlon for matrimony, to similarly en
dear himself to his fair parishioners.
whose attachment was so strong that,
rhen their spiritual director was
transferred to another sphere of duty,
they went even to the length of resist
ing his departure from among them by
physical force. Subordinating all pos
sible mutual Jealousies in the face ol
i common danger, they "held firmly tc
ach other, and the soldiers had to
tharge them in order to get him away.'
So resolute was their resistance that
aot until one of them was killed and
several others injured was it possible
for the too well-beloved priest to be
dragged from their midst and escorted
from the village. On the whole, per
haps, the slipper-working and church
decorating system of expressing femi
nine devotion to the clergy, in vogue
in this country, is preferable to the
more demonstrative methods of Santa
Marina. London World.
Fnllnp; I'nsstnn.
"Yes." said" the charitable lady vls
ftor, fussily, as she was being shown
over the orphan asylum. "I should like
to adopt a little boy, if you have one
to spare. I suppose you have, you have
so many of them. Now, there is a very
pretty one over there in the corner.
How about him?"
"O, he is not a good little boy at all,"
replied the Superlntendent.discourag
lngly. "He Is always getting into trou
ble. Why, he's been marked down
twice to-day!"
"Marked down, did you say?" said
the charitable lady visitor, quickly.
"I'll take him." New York Journal.
Ureat lMvliiff Feat.
, The greatest diving teat ever achiev
ed was in moving the cargo of the ship
Cape Horn, wrecked oil the coast of
South America, when an English diver
I named Hooper made seven descents to
1 a depth ot over 200 feet, remaining at
, one tlaie 42 minutes under water. An
i authority states that the greatest depth
to which man has been known to de
scend docs not exceed 220 feet, which
Is equivalent to a pressure of tfiift
$K)und to the square inca. 4
Important Notice !
The only genuine "Baker's Chocolate,
celebrated for more than a century as a de
licious, nutritious, and ncsh-forming bever
age, is put up in Blue Wrappers and Yel
low Labels. Be sure that the Yellow
Label and our Trade-Mark arc on every
package.
WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass.
TRAM-MAS.
IIIIIIIHHIIimillllllllllllHIIHIMIIMMIIM
Thrift is a good revenue" Great
saving results from cleanli
ness and
APOLIO
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 unhcalthful changes of the North
seems almost ethereal, it is pre-eminently
a land of sport and pleasure.
Along its eleven hundred miles of salt
water coast and in its twelve hundred
fresh-water lakes are fish of almost
every conceivable variety, lrom the
migratory tribes common to Northern
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 spart
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 1897, leaving by
special train January 26, February 9
and 23, and March 9. The first three
tours will admit of a sojourn ol 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, $50.00
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. 12-2441.
Choosing a Minister.
The parish kirk of Driechton had
been rather unfortunate in its minis
ters, two of them having gone off in
decline within a twelvemonth of their
appointment, and now, after hearing a
number ot candidates for the vacancy,
the members were looking forward
with keen interest to the meeting at
which the election of the new minister
was to take place. "Weel, Marget,"
asked one female parishioner of an
other, as they foregathered on the road
one day, "wha are you gaun to vote
for ?" "I'm just thinkin I'll vote for
none o1 them. I'm no' muckle o' a
judge, an it'll be the safest plan," was
Marget's sagacious reply. "Toots,
woman, if that's the way o't, vote wi'
me." "An hoo are you gaun to vote?"
"I'm gaun to vote for the man that I
think'has the soundest lungs, an '11
no' bother us wi' deein again in a
hurry." Scottish American.
Did you ever stop to think what
indigestion really means ? It means
simply that your stomach is tired. If
our legs are tired, we ride. The
horse and the steam engine do the
work. Why not give your stomach a
ride ; that is, let something else do its
work. Foods can be digested outside
of the body. All plants contain di
gestive principles which will do this.
j The Shaker Digestive Cordial con
tains digestive principles and is a
preparation designed to rest the sto
mach. The Shakers themselves have
such unbounded confidence in it that
they have placed 10 cent sample
bottles on the market, and it is said
that even so small a quantity proves
beneficial in a vast majority of cases.
All druggists keep it.
Laxol is the best medicine for child-
of Castor Oil.
Got His Honey Back-
Thirty-three years ago, in the good
old State of Pennsylvania, two young
people decided to get married by the
elopement route, says the Ashland
(Ky.) Republican. Living at different
po nts, and on account of parental
objection, it become necessary that
they meet upon neutral ground. So
the lovesick swain forwarded to his
turtle dove fifty good, sound dollars
to enable her to fly to him, but alas
for human hopes the young lady's
father intercepted the letter and
pocketed the money. He likewise
intercepted the letters that followed,
until the young man, disgusted at the
silence of the one he loved, tore her
image from his heart and set his cap
for another. Years passed both
parties to the little romance married
and moved frdm the Keystone Stale,
the young lady to a far Western
State, the young man to Ashland,
Ky., where he now draws a salary as
an efficient city official. This morn
ing the worthy Judge was dumbfound
ed to receive a letter from his sweet
heart of boyhood days, inclosing a
portrait of herself and just think a
check for $50. She had at last
learned of the part played by her
father in separating them and hasten
ed to return the money he hypothe
cated, and the official well, he got
the check cashed.
As the name indicates, Hall's Vege
table Sicilian Hair Renewer is a
renewer of the hair, including its
growth, health, youthful color, and
beauty. It will please you.
How Serpents Sleep,
One of the most curious facts with
regard to snakes is that their eyes are
never closed. Sleeping or waking,
alive or dead, they are always wide
eyed. If we take a dead snake and
examine it closely we shall soon find
the reason there are no eyelids. The
eye is protected only by a strong scale
which forms a part of the epiderman
envelope, and is cast off in a piece
with that every time the reptile molts.
The eye-plate is as clear and trans
parent as glass, and allows the most
perfect vision, while at the same time
(as any close observer of the habits of
the snake can easily discover) it is so
hard and tough as perfectly to pro
tect the delicate organ within from
the thorns and twigs among which, in
flight from enemies or in pursuit of
prey, the reptile so often hurriedly
glides. Nature.
Two Badly Puzzled Ladies-
Vernet, the French painter, was
once traveling from Versailles to
Paris m the same compartment with
two ladies whom he had never seen
before, but who were evidently ac
quainted with him. They examined
him very minutely and commented
upon him quite freely. The painter
was annoyed and determined to put
an end to the persecution. As the
train passed through the tunnel of St.
Cloud the three travelers were wrap
ped in complete darkness.
Vernet raised the back of his hand
to his mouth and kissed it twice vio
lently. On emerging from the ob
scurity he found that the ladies had
withdrawn their attention from him,
and were glaring contemptuously at
each other. Presently they arrived
at Paris, and Vernet on leaving them
said, "sanies, 1 snail De puzzled all
my life by the inquiry, which of these
two ladies was it that kissed me?"
San Francisco Argonaut.
Why Attempt to Cure
catarrh by the use of so called blood
remeJies ? That catarrh is not caused
by blood troubles is self evident when
you reflect that attacks are always
due to sudden climatic changes or
exposure, and occur most frequently
during the winter and spring, though
the blood is as pure then as in sum
mer or fall. A remedy which quickly
relieves and cures the catarrhal at
tacks has been found in Ely's Cream
Balm.
Fine PHOTO
GRAPHS and
CRAYONS at
McKillip Bros.,
Bloomsburg.
The best are
the cheapest.
THE MARKETS.
lll.OOMSBURG MARKETS.
CORRICTID WIIILT. BITlIb mtCRI.
Butter per lb $ ,22
F.ggs per dozen k . .3 a
Lard per lb , 08
Ham per pound .13
Pork, whole, per pound ,06
Beef, quarter, per pound, . , , ,07
Wheat per bushel .95
Oats " " 30
Rye " " 50
Wheat flour per bbl 5.20
Hay per ton 12 to $14
Potatoes per bushel, .30
Turnips " 25
Onions " 50
Sweet potatoes per peck .20
Tallow per lb 4$-
Shoulder " " 10
Side meat " " 10
Vinegar, per qt ,07
Dried apples per lb .05
Dried cherries, pitted .10
Raspberries ,i
Cow Hides per lb
Steer " " 05
CalfSkin 80
Sheep pelts .75
Shelled corn per bus .50
Corn meal, cwt 1.50
Bran, " ,90
Chop " " 1.00
Middlings " .90
Chickens per lb new .oS
" " "old oS
Turkeys " " 12
Geese " " .10
Ducks " " c8
COAL.
No. 6, delivered a.6o
' 4 and 5 " 3.85
1 6 at yard 2.35
1 4 and 5 at yard 3.60
Th Leading Consamtory of Amsrica
Caul Fakltin, Director.
roandalia ISM b --t,iCt)
KFW" Otiii endforPrcpeetai
fp-- FiahkW.Halb, General Minaret.
Peirce
3'lnd Year.
A representative American liusl
ncFK Kt-hool for both sexes, founded
by Thomas May Peiiick, A. M.,
Ph. D. Couples systematic busi
ness training with a practical,
Kound iiud useful English educa
tion. It oilers three full courses :
Purines, Shorthand and Type
writing, Kngllsh; the whole cou
fctttutliiK an Ideal combination.
Grailuutes ore cheerfully assisted
to positions.
I'.iuli lay nnd Nlfiht Sessions are
vJ now ruimlng. bludeuu received
f'4 at any time.
'J J-LMU l St IlllOU SU-KI9 IliMtsilt St., rUbuU.
i UalhUni.
NEW
DINING ROOKS
A LARGE and well furnished dining room
has been opened bv n I DDV ITTDIItn onthe
second floor of hit HAKKl AUKMU, r e , .
taurant. Meals will be served at the regular
dining hours for 25c. and they can also be
obtained at any time. The table will be sup
plied with the delicacies of the season and
the service will be first-class.
Entrance by door between SesUurant a
U&Ifalera'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-luring
deposits. o6-g-io-iy
PATENTS
Caveats and Trade Marks obtained, and all
Patent, business conducted lor MODKUATjf
if KKS.
OI K OFFICE IS OPPOSITE TnK V. 8. PAT.
KNT OFFICE. We have no sub-agencies, all
business direct, hence can transact patent busl
ness m less time and at Less tost lUuu those m
tuute from Washington.
Send model, drawing or photo, with doscirtp
tlon. We advise It patentable or not, free of
charge. Our fee not due till patent Is secured
A book, "How to Obtain l'atenls," with refer
ences to actual clients in your biate.Countr, o
town Boutfree. Address
C. A. SNOW CO,, Washington,!!). 0
(Opposite V. 8 Patont omce.)
Wanted-An Idea
Who ean think
of sonitf simple
Pritct Tour Ideal! they may l.rln you wealth.
W riu, John wtLiinuwitTTuw ... , ......
neys, Washington, D. O., for their pre offer
ud lut uf. two hundred tufeuUwus wanted. .