AUDITORS' REPORT Of the Overseers of the Poor of the Township of Shippen for Year Ending March 6, 1908. W. F. LEWIS, Overseer of the Poor, in account with the Poor District of Shippen Township. I>R. To balance due from last audit $1,078 67 To received from County Treasurer.... 200 00 To received from J.VV. Lewis, Ex-Poor master 224 65 $1,503 32 CR. By paid Ellis Burr for wood for E. Bar ton and Sarah Lanning 14 00 By paid Geo. J. Laßar on account 20 00 By paid F. J. Lewis, groceries ac t poor 18 19 By paid Lucreto Locbwood, account of Dan Mundy, board from May 27th to June 24th at $3.00 per week 12 00 By paid C. B. Howard Co., account Nellie Spencer 53 By paid Mrs. Jennie Housler account Dan Muudy, board from Aug. 25th to Sept 12th 7 50 By paid Will Carter, account Mike Me ban, board from May 18th to Oct. 5 50 00 By paid T. F. Britton, account of Eliza beth Barr 15 00 By paid T. F. Britton, per J. W. Lewis account Mrs. Barr 16 00 By paid T. F. Britton per J. W. Lewis accouut Sarah Lanning 8 00 By paid Henry Edgcomb, account of Elias Barton, groceries for 20 weeks at f 2.50 per week 50 00 By paid John W. Lewis, Lizzie Barr. grave 4 00 BypaidW.F. Lewis, account William Smith, Bfii lbs of butter 123 By paid G. H. Adams, account Fred Pepper 14 weeks and five days 52 90 By paid W. F. Lewis, account Nellie Spencer from Sept. 13th to Oct. 18th 12 50 By paid W.R. Johnson three days audit 6 00 By paid F. X. Blumle days audit ... 100 By paid 64 days service 96 00 Balance due Poor District 1,118 47 $1,503 32 Balance due Poor District H, £2B 47 JAMES HOBSON, Poor Master, in account,with the Poor District of Shippen Township. DR. To balance on hand last audit $467 26 To received from County Treasurer.... 1,000 00 To received from County Treasurer.... 41 00 To received Feeling Est., rent and hay 67 00 To received from T. Waddington, ac count J. Hallowel! 7 50 Balance due Jas. Hobson 52 61 $1,582 76 Balance due Jas. Hobson 52 61 CR. By paid Leet &. Co., lor Mrs. Cheesbro from April 29,1907 to March 3,1908 $132 00 By paid Leet & Co., Mrs. Dell Hacket from July 6th, 1907 to March 15t,1908 89 00 By paid Leet & Co., tor Jasper Havens from Nov. Ist, 1907 to Feb. 11,1908.. 14 13 By paid Bert Housler, board for W. Moore, for Feb. and March, 1907.... 16 90 By paid S. B. Hopkins for moving Mrs. Feeling 75 By paid Frank Mundy, three messages on account baby thrown off Flyer 1 80 By paid F. J. Lewis, account Ellis Barr 5 00 By paid W. L, Dizon, account Mrs. Cheesbro 8 88 By paid car far and freight for Ella Spencer to Erie on her agreement to stay a way 10 00 By paid 1.. G. Cook for moving Mrs. Spencer 5 00 By paid N. A. Ostrum, taxes Feeling estate 7 63 By paid Mrs. L. Lockwood, account Fred Pepper, board from Sept. 30, 1907 to Oct. 19th, 1907 9 50 By paid A. F. Vogt, rubbers for Fred Pepper 2 00 By paid D. O. Gardner, stove, Lanning 10 00 By paid C. R. Kline, account of Geo. Curtis and Alfred Lewis from April Ist 1907 to March 2d,1908 165 64 By paid Elk County Home, account Lucy Feeling, board Jan. 17, 1907 to Jan. 17,1908 168 50 By paid A. J. Turley & Bro., account S. Lanning, June Ist, 1907 to March March 20, 1908 56 91 By paid A. J. Turley &. Bro., account Mrs. Granger, Oct. Ist, 1907 to Mar. 20, 1908 33 82 By paid A. J. Turley, account Mrs. Haskins 5 00 By paid G. J. Laßar, account Poor Masters' account with C. Diehl 41 00 By Paid C. Campbell account Mrs. Cheesbro 13 97 By paid Henry Edgcomb, on poor acct 49 00 By paid J. D. Swope to arrest B.E.Lord 5 00 By paid account J. Hal lowell....™. 68 50 By paid State Hospital, accout C. Hous ler 46 00 By paid A. C. Dow, account S. Lanning 11 00 By paid State Asylum, chronic insane 65 14 By paid F.Swesey.accountMrs. Grang er and S. Lanning 16 00 By paid V. Swesey, account coal, dray 4 25 By paid M. M. Larrabee, account prof. service 6 50 By paid L. Taggart, drugs lor poor from March 11th, 1907 to Nov. 16. 1907.... 59 65 By paid six months house rent 33 00 By paid Balcom & Lloyd, Mds lor poor 55 10 By paid Mrs. H. Lyons, 19 weeks board , for Fred Pepper, Oct. 19, 1907 to Feb. 29, 1908 .50 85 By paid Dr. Bush, account Mr. Wood.. 30 00 By paid Dr. H. S. Falk account poor, medical service 20 50 By paid T. W. Welsh, Mdse., poor 19 50 My paid Verney Lewis, 8 cords of wood 16 00 By paid Verney Lewis, 5 acct. Elias Barton 112|50 By paid R. P. Heilman, Med. {service for poor 66 00 By paid J. Newton, Mdse. for poor 47 71 By paid .Mrs. Nolan. Michael Mehan board from Jan. 11, 1908 to March 7, 20 00 By paid postage 2 00 By paid Balcom ,V Lloyd, Mdse. poor.. 1111 By paid S. S. Smith,account C. Housler 5 00 By paid S. 8. Smith acct Mrs. Feeling.. 6 50 By 75 days service 112 50 $1,635 37 ASSETS. Due from P. S. Culver, Coll., tax 1900, 1901-02-03-04 KOO 68 Due from W. F. Lewis, ex-Poor Master 1,118 47 Dne from unseated tax 1906 271 70 LIABILITIES. Outstanding bill, Johnson & McNarney 50 00 Outstanding bill of R. P. Heilman 63 01 Outstandidg bill of Geo. J. Laßar 52 oo Outstanding bill of Furnace Co., 40 00 Outstanding bill ol'Wiil Carter 17 72 Outstanding bill of Geo. J. Laßar for C. Delhi 115 68 Balance due Jas. Hobson 52 61 . , ... sl2l 02 Assets over liabilities.. 1 775 83 $2,196 85 Assets over liabilities $1,775 83 This is to certify that we have audited, adjust ed and settled the accounts of the Poor Masters of Shippen Township for the year 1907, anil that the forgoing is a true and correct statement of the same. Witness our hands this Ist dav of May, 1908. F. X. liUMIJE, WM. R. JOHNSON, Auditors TREASURER'S SALE OF UNSEATED LANDS In Cameron County, for Taxes lor Years 1906 and 1907. V GRF.LCABU: t.> an Act A entitled 1 V "An Act to amend an Act directing the mode of selling Unseated Lands for taxes and other purpose " passed the Kith day of March, A. I).. lHl r i end further supplemenls thereto, J, ('UAH. .1. HOW AH l>, Treasurer of the County of Cameron, hereby give notice to all persons con cerned therein, that unless all arrearages of tax es due on the following tracts of unseated lands, situate in Cameron county, Pa., are paid before the day of sale, the whole or such part of each tract as will pay the costs and taxes chargeable thereon, will be sold at public vendue or outcry, at the Court House, in Emporium Borough, County of Cameron and State of Pennsylvania, on Monday, June 8tl», IQOK, and con tinued by adjournment from day today, as will be deemed necessary, for arrearages of taxes And and the cost accrued on each tract repet ti/cly. Persons wishing to pay before sale, will /emit the amount of these taxes, together witli/inter est and fifty cents for each tract for advertising and twenty-five cents for receipt. Notice is also given that in compliance with the Act of Assembly, passed the 6th flay of June, A. D. 1887, entitled "An Act to regulate the col- I lection of taxes on Undated Lands" there will I be accrued interest at the rate of six per cent. I per annum on taxes of 1906 from January Ist, I 1907, and on taxes of 1907 from January Ist 1908 until date of payment of same. See P. L. 1887 ; page 373. j SHIPPEN TOWNSHIP. War. Acres, To Whom Assessed Tax. 1967 375 H.H. Mullin |37 15 61 "8 60 do 5 94 5038 390 do 38 61 1143 50 do 4 95 5037 300 do 29 70 M&U 170 do 16 83 : 4969 120... do 11 88 1359 32 do 3 16 1 4986 50 . . Mrs. J. C. Skillman 4 95' 4986 100 do 9 90 4986 100 do 9 90 i 5164 600 C. R. Noyes, Est 222 00 4983 40 J. R. Hunsberger 3 96 [ 5038 495 O. W. Warner Est 49 03 i 1194 368 A. H. Shafer, 36 44! MM) 30 E.J. Rogers, 2 97; 4950 31 Claud Lyons, 3 07 1 1112 335 L. K. Huntington 33 19 ! 1143 289 do '2B 62 | 5036 42 do 4 15 j 4964 150 A. Kresge, 14 85 1142 100 L. E. Gibbs 9 90 2973 390 A. H. Shafer 38 61 4997 552 Levi Heidrick, 54 64 1141 663 R.K.Cross 65 66 5037 100 Mrs. Warren Moore 9 90 4982 228 Josiah Howard 22 58 1142 157 Oscar Heath 15 54 1195 137 J.H.Evans 13 56 1199 76 H. C. Crawford 7 52 1360 130 do 12 87 1129 1013 A. Gouviner Est 103 27 4954 282 Win. Howard Est 27 91 4949 283 do 28 03 5042 279 Cen. P. Lumber Co 27 63 5042 400 do 499 60 2597 990 Josiah Howard, 98 01 4968 522 do 51 67 2537 217 Emporium, Pa., April 1, 1908. j W KNOWN TO r/Ul! I ! l Lave lUeiuVi !i 74, Lancaster, PA. m Sold in Emporium by L. Taggart and i R. C. Dodson PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Bulletin. THE SUMMER VACATION GUIDE The summer vacation is the bright spot in the dull routine of the year's work. It breaks the monotony of the daily round, and cheers and invigorates for the strenuous life ahead. America abounds with delightful summer resorts in valley, 011 mountain and beside the sea. The Atlantic coast line from Labra dor to Cape Hatteras contains the greatest number ot resorts de voted entirely to the pursuit of pleasure and health in the world. One may purchase from Pennsylvania Railroad Ticket Agents excursion tickets to over eight hundred of these resorts, covering all the desirable places from the rock-bound bays of Newfoundland to the gentle sandy slopes of the Virginia beaches; from the White Mountains of New Hampshire to the Cumberland Mountains of Tennessee; in the wilds of Canada, along the shores of the St. Lawrence and the Great Lakes. The famous seacoast resorts of New Jersey—Atlantic City, Cape May, Wildwood, Ocean City, Sea Isle City, Asbury Park, Long Branch, Spring Lake, Seaside Park, Beach Haven and others so well known that description is superfluous—are among the most popular and most easily accessible resorts in the country. The Pennsylvania Railroad Summer Excursion Hook, to be obtained of Ticket Agents at ten cents a copy, or of the General Passenger Agents Philadelphia, by mail postpaid for 25 cents, de scribes them all and gives the rates and stop-over privileges allowed 011 tickets. 110326-21 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 21, 1908. The World's Best Climate. Is not entirely free from disease, on the liitrh elevation fevers, prevail, while on the lower levels malaria is encountered to j a greater or less extent, according to al- I titude. To overcome climate aflections lassitude, malaria, jaudice, biliousness, fever and ague, and general debility, the most effective remedy is Electric Bitters, the great alterative and blood purifier; the antidote for every form of bodily I weakness, nervousness, and insomnia. I Sold under guarantee at all drug stores. 1 Price 50c. ■ _ The Host Common Cause of Suffering, ; Rheumatism causes more pain and suf • iering than any other disease, for the rea j son that it is the most common of all ills, and it iscertainly gratifying to sufferers to know that Chamberlain's Pain Tialm will afford relief, arnd make rest and sleep pos sible. In many cases the relief from pain, which is at first temporary, has become permanent, while in old people subject to chronic rheumatism, often brought on by dampness or changes in the weather, a permanent cure cannot be expected; the relief from pain which this liniment af fords is alone worth many times its cost. 25 aud 50 cent sizes for sale by L. Ta«»- AUDITORS' REPORT. Of the Receipts, Expenditures, Lia bilities and Assets of the Poor Fund of Emporium Borough, Pa., for the Year End ing March 2, 1908. F. P. STRAYER, Poor Master, in account with the Poor Fund. RECEIPTS. Balance on hand last audit $327 05 Received from Jobn Glenn, Col). 1907.. 861 67 9!,188 72 EXPENDITURES. Paid relief of 1.. W.Spence *lO7 00 Paid relief of J. Bell 66 00 Paid relief of Mary E. Mundy 10 00 Paid relief of Mrs. Dietrick 132 00 Paid relief of Joe Enfelt, nurse, burial, 416 80 Paid relief ofL.Gifl'ord and J.Hitchcock 33 30 Paid relief of Mrs. C. Clohessy 13 35 Paid to R. C. Dodson, drugs 20 00 Paid to L. Taggart, drugs 67 50 Paid to Dr. Bardwel), bill 1905 IS 00 Paid to Independent, auditors report.. 22 00 Paid for postage and phone 3 75 #905 12 Balance in hands of F. P. Strayer 283 60 #l,lBB 72 F. G.JUDD, Poor Master, in account with the Poor Fund: RECEIPTS. Received from J. W. Kriuer, Poor Master $2lB 25 Received from John Glenn, Coll. 1907.. 850 00 Received from T. F. Moore 53 75 Received from John Blinzler 91 25 $1,213 25 EXPENDITURES. For relief of Mary E. Mundy S9O 00 For relief of Mrs. Bellows 26 84 For relief of Mrs Mary Mix 78 43 Paid State Hospital 236 25 Paid W, L. Thomas, making duplicate 5 00 Paid G. J. Laßar, burial Jas. Connors.. 40 00 Paid Press, printing auditors report 20 00 Paid Green & Felt, Retainer 15 00 Paid tramp account 2 50 #514 02 Balance in hands of F. G. Judd 699 23 $1,213 25 RECAPITULATION OF POOR FUND. ASSETS. | Balance in hands of F. P. Strayer $283 30 : Balance in hands of F. G. Judd 699 23 I Due from C. W. Shaffet, Coll. 1903 23 47 | Due from John Glenn, Coll. 1907 36 59 $1,042 59 LIABILITIES—NONE. I JOHN GLENN, Collector iu acount with the Emporium Poor Fund: DR. i To amount of duplicate $1,783 61 CR. IBy amount paid F. P. Strayer $B6l 67 I By amount paid F. G. Judd .. 850 00 : By amount of exonerations... 35 35 $1,747 02 Balance due from John Glenn 36 50 —— $1,783 61 We, the undersigned, auditors of the Borough | of Emporium, Pa., do certify that wo have ex j amined, audited and settled the accounts of the I Poor Masters of said Borough and find the fore ; going a true and correct statement ot the same. GEO. A. WALKER, JR. GRANTS. ALLEN, I. K. HOCKLEY, Auditors. | Emporium.'.Pa., April 28,1908. 14-3t ! "HZ ORIGINAL LAXATIVE COUGH SYRUP : KENNEDY'S LAXATIVE HONEY»»TAR tfed Clover Blossom and Honey Bee on Every Bottle, The Commencement. The word 'Vommeneement" enables orators in frock coats to tell beautiful young ladies in white organdie that the extinction of the academic era marks the "commencement of their real lives." Maybe you have heard them and witnessed the thrill with which the notion was received by blushing maidenhood. It is a stupen dous thought, bulging with originality, and I suppose it is mean to meddle \Vith it, even though one knows how that use of the word commenced—or "began," if you prefer. In the old days degrees or diplomas were not granted iu June. They were granted in September, and the seniors of yes teryear were forced to reinvade the academic shades to acquire them at the commencement of the new term. After awhile it dawned upon our insti tutions of learning that the arrange ment necessitated undue bother, so they moved the "commencement" ex ercises back across the vacation and put them at the end of the year. How ever, they neglected to rechristen them, and oratory has gained much by that Inspired oversight.—Boston Transcript. A Fountain of Ants. The house I was occupying in India was a bungalow, and, as is the case with many bungalows, the inner walls were constructed of merely sun dried bricks, and in the recesses of one wall a colony of white ants had established a nest. It was evening. I heard l»e --hind me a buzzing sound. I turned, and from a hole near the bottom of the wall I beheld a fountain of young white ants ascending. They reached the ceiling, and then the descent com menced. They alighted by thousands on the table and there shook off theic wings. In a few minutes the cloth, the plates, the glasses, even the lamp shades, were covered with the little white, feeble, crawling creatures. The fountain of ants continued to play for at least ten minutes. When, next morning, the floor was swept the wings that the ants had shaken oft' filled a large basket. What became of the ants themselves I cannot say.—"Haunts and Hobbies of an Indian Official." Sly Old Commodore. "When Commodore Vanderbilt was alive," says a New York Central offi cial, "the board of directors of the New York Central used to find their work all cut out for them when they met. All they had to do was to ratify his plans and adjourn. Yet they had their uses. Occasionally a man would come to him with some scheme which he did not care to refuse outright. " 'My directors are a difficult body of men to handle,' he would say. 'l'll submit it to 'em, but I warn you that they are hard to manage.' "The matter would be submitted to the board when it assembled and promptly rejected. " 'There,' the commodore would say when his visitor came to learn the re sult. 'I did the best I could, but I told you in advance that my directors were an obstinate lot.' " His Card. Mr. Newricli, the- dust contractor, having made a fortune, part of which lie had invested in house property in the east of London, wished to rise, like a phenix, l'rom his ashes into some sort of society. His golden key, ap plied to the coffers of an impecunious aristocrat, opened the way. Ilis new friend, among other things, advised him that visiting cards were a necessity, and, as a guide to drawing one up ready for the printer, handed him one of his own, which read, "Harold De Vere, lona House, Ports mouth Square, W." Two days later, as De Vere was sit ting in his dressing room at breakfast* a servant brought in 011 a salver a visiting card bearing the following: "Ephraim Newricli, I Own 23 Houses, London, K."—Philadelphia Ledger. Pepys' Kiss. For more than two centuries the body of Katherine of France, Henry V.'s queen, uncovered in the building of Henry Vll.'s chapel, was one of the sideshows seen by every visitor to the abbey. Pepys. indeed, records that on Shrove Tuesday,' 1001), he "had the upper part of her body in my hands and did kiss her mouth, reflecting upon it that 1 did kiss a queen."—l*. IVs London Weekly. A Little Matter Among Friends. Two boys were in fighting atti tude, like bantams. Another and a smaller one stood watching them, wip ing his eyes, sobbing the while. "What did yer bit him for?" said one. "'Tain't none of your business." "Yes, it is. lie's my friend." "Well, lie's my friend too." New York Globe. Apples For Health. A correspondent writes to ask it what ho should do when his doctor pays liim more visits than are lietvs sary. We would remind our corre spondent of the old saying: An apple a day Kecps the doctor away. But the apple must, of course. :><> well aimed.- Punch. His Merit Card. Mother < u'prised) - Why. .Tohnn;.. how did you happen to get the nieri; card for good behavior at school ti• i-? week? Small .folium It was like this, mamma. Harry .lone* won it.and I told him if he didn't {jivo it to me I'd punch him. Hebrew Standard. The Change. Roddy (putting down a gold piecei Ticket for I>el Monte. Ticket Clerk Change at Castroville if you take this train. P.eddy- I'll wait, then, for i want my change right here, uncle.— Monterey Gossip. In the Jaws of a Lion. A lion comes at its enemy at full speed, galloping low, and dashes a man standing upright to the ground by the full impact of its body. Major In verarity states that "the claws and teeth entering the flesh do not hurt as much as you would think," but that the squeeze given by the jaws on the bone is really painful. When knocked over lie was still keenly conscious and felt none of the dreamy sensations ex perienced by Livingstone. Major Swaine, struck down by a lioness going full gallop, was uncon scious for some minutes and did not know what had happened till he found himself standing up after the accident. "I felt no pain," he writes, "not, I be lieve, owing to any special interposi tion of Providence, but simply that the shock and loss of blood made me in capable of feeling it. There was no pain for a few days till it was brought on by the swelling of my arm on the twelve days' ride to the coast."—Lon don Spectator. A Woman Governor. Queens have ruled many nations, but Pennsylvania is the only one of the United States that ever had a woman for governor. A passage unearthed from Armor's "Governors of Pennsyl vania," page 120, says: "On the 30th of July, 1718, William Penn died, at the age of seventy-four. By his will his wife, Hannah, was made his sole executrix and assumed the management of colonial affairs, ex ecuting this difficult task with rare tact and business capacity. 'She be came,' says Watsou, 'in effect our gov ernor, ruling us by her deputies or lieutenant governors during all the term of her children's minority.' " Lion and Unicorn. The animosity which was supposed to exist between the lion and the uni corn, as referred to by Spenser in his "Faerie Queene," is allegorical of the deep rooted ill will which anciently ex isted between England and Scotland. Ever since 1003 the royal arms have been supported, as now, by the Eng lish lion and the Scottish unicorn in token of the fact that St. George and St. Andrew had at last shaken hands and forgotten their old difference. An Explanation. The passionate rhythms of"The Merry Widow" waltz floated through the office, and the boss looked up from his desk impatiently. "Frederic," he said, "I wish you wouldn't whistle at your work." "I ain't workin', sir," the office boy replied calmly. "I'm only just wliis tlin'."—New York Press. A Japanese Joke. Guest—Do you know that fellow of Sayama is telling all kinds of lies to defame your character? Host—lf he is telling lies I don't care, but if he'd begin to tell the truth I'll throttle him. Guest—Oli, you will, eh?— Japan Cur rent. Her Raven Hair. "Some novelists don't know what they're talking about. Here's one who speaks of a girl's 'raven hair.'" "What's wrong with it?" "All wrong. Havens don't wear hair. They wear feathers!"— Liverpool Mer cury. The greatest quarrels in the world's history have been between people who were onee friends.—Atchison Globe. wzrsr-: Bulletin. REDUCED RATES TO WESTERN CITIES For the benefit of delegates attending the sessions of the bodies enumerated below and others desiring to visit the cities of the West, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company has arranged to place 011 sale to all persons ex cursion tickets to the various meeting places at a consider able reduction from the usual fares: CHICAGO, 111. American Medical Association, June 2to 5. Tickets sold May 28 to 30, good returning until June 12, inclusive. LOUISVILLE, KV. International Sunday School Association, June 15 to 23. Tickets sold June 13 to 17, returning, until June 26, inclusive. CHICAGO, 111. Republican National Convention June 17. Tickets sold June 12 to 16, good returning until June 27, inclusive. DENVER, COI.. Democratic National Convention July 7. Tickets sold July Ito 4, good to return until July 17, inclusive. CLEVELAND, OHIO. International Convention, Baptists Young People's Union of America, July 8 to 12. Tickets sold July 6 to 8, good to return until July 15, in clusive. ST. PALL, MINN. Imperial Council, Mystic Shrine, July 13 to 18. Tickets sold July 9to 11, good to return until July 23, inclusive. CoLUMiirs, OHIO. Prohibition National Conven tion, July 14 to 16. Tickets sold July 10 to 13, good to re turn until July 24, inclusive. INDIANAPOLIS, IND. National Convention, A. O. 11., July 20 to 25. Tickets sold July 17 to 19, good to re turn until July 31, inclusive. TOLEDO, OHIO. National Encampment, G. A. R., August 31 to September 5. Tickets sold August 27 to 30, good return until September 15, inclusive. DENVER, COL. Sovereign Grand Lodge, I. O. O. I\, September 19 to 26. Tickets sold September 15 to 17, good to return until September 30, inclusive. The Pennsylvania Railroad maintains a comprehen sive schedule of fast express trains to Chicago, St. Louis, Indianspolis, Louisville, Columbus, Cleveland, and Toledo from the principal cities of the East. Full details of the reduced fare arrangements for these conventions and the through western train service may be obtained of any Pennsylvania Railroad Ticket Agent. 382-i4-2t. Spring Announcement Happy Thoughts in Stylish Spring Suits, Fancy Vests, Hats, Etc. All the popular styles in Neckwear, Col lars, Pens, G-loves and Underwear. NEW—Our stock is all new, up-to-date and marked to the lowest notch. R.SEGER&CO. NEXTITO BANK. \vTpromptly^btSa^^ V^urFon)ign V^J <{ Send model, sketch or photo of invention for 112 < freereport on patentability. For free book, \ TRADE-MARKS «;■ flr Ill■ 1 T iKJI ■ | in iii ii