||3WHJ^RBSE. . MICOU stood with : fl. his back to tho fireplace j in the living-room, first on one loot then on tho other, toasting tho soles of his heavy boots. lie had just come in from his work of repairing tho broken places in the worm fences on tho little blue grass farm which he had in herited, and on which stood the log house in which ho had made his first appearanco on earth fifty-odd years fore. Near by, that is to say, within a mile or so from Chinquapin hill, stood tho, ancient village of Perley, whose spires and other highest objects could be seen, in almost any kind of weather, from the altitude of tho farmhouse. Jacques and Louise Mieou, tho foun ders of the American Mieou family, had long ago gone to the last rest and their, children were out in the world, pros perous people, heads of families who still spoke of Chinquapin hill as "home," and who with their children frequently came to the old place for suminerings, a few at a time, or many of them, as circumstances were, and it was always a haven when a haven was needed. Of tho sons and daughters of Jacques and Louise there were two, however, who had never left Chinquapin hill ex cept on social or business visits. They were John and Julie. John you have already met. He was the j'oungest son of the family and the master of Chin quapin hill, and he had a glorious fam ily of boys and girls, about a dozen in all, and Mrs. John was yet a handsome, white-haired, quiet and happy matron of fifty. Julie was tho "old maid" of the fam ily. She was trim and neat, demure and forty-odd, sweet-faced and sweet-man nered, beloved by tho entire tribe and tho especial love and butt of her al most brawny yet tender brother John, lie rallied her about her old maid ways, but frequently hugged her like a bear, when she came in his way, and always released her with a gentle kiss. Late in the afternoon of a soft day— soft as to the condition of the soil — early in tho year of grace, 1893, while John Mieou was toasting the soles of his boots boforo tho fire, as ho stood first on one foot and then on tho other, ho was joking Julie as usual, and upon his favorite theme. 4 4 Joe Thompson will be in at Easter, won't he, Julie? Joe's hair must be a sight by this time if ho hasn't had it cut any more than he did in those days. Maybe he's bald. That would bo a JOHN RALLIED JULIE. natural judgment against him. You must have hit him pretty hard to make him stay away so long, and him so de voted, too." Julie gave a sly littlo glance at her big old brother and something in her eyes that had the hint of a hunted fawn passed over them. John, seeing It, caught her in his arms, held her up as if she were a child and kissed her, then sat down with her on his lap and said: 44 1 think I would go and hunt him up Lnd slap him over if he were worth tho trouble. But he isn't, and never was, and I wish you would quit thinking about him, honey, for I know you al ways are. I'm worth a ten-acre field of such as him and you've got me." For answer to this Julie turned her face to her big brother's shoulder and he said nothing more till she lifted her tear-tinted cheeks and looked away, trying to hide the weakness. 44 Never mind, honey," John con tinued, 44 I'm going to give you carto blanche to decorate tho church, for Easter, and—how's your bonnet? Well, you shall have the best one in the shop and the prettiest. Now run away, I know you want to." She arose and giving John the tiniest kiss on the ear—or somewhere in that neighborhood—vanished in her gentle way. "I wish that milksop had been born in Beloochistan and never left home," John Mieou remarked to himself, as ho contemplated the bald head of one of the brass andirons. The Micous had descended from Ilugncnot stock that had originally settled in North Carolina, and Episco palianism had been their inherited re ligion. Julie's religion was second nature to her. Indeed it was almost "tirst-nuturc," if I may bo allowed tho term. Joseph Thompson and Julio Mieou had been sweethearts from their childhood and this association of the two had grown to bo a settled and accepted fact in the two families who were as close as adjoining farms and two gen erations of intimacy could make them, and yet the Thompsons were Metho dists. There came an Easter season just about the timo when Joe and Julie were at tho portals of manhood and womanhood in which Julie, with other maidens of tho church, for two or three days before Easter Sunday, was busily and devoutly dressing, adorning and decorating the walls, chancel and pul pit of the old chapel in tho village for the approaching festival. There were some young men in the little church with the girls helping them about the heavier part of their pleasant and congenial tasks, and in the chatter among the young folks there arose some good-natured banter ing concerning denominational faiths. One of tho other girls remarked that there was really only one Christian church, "the Holy Catholic," meaning, of course, its Protestant side, and that such denominations as Methodists, Re formers, Baptists and the like were only ''societies." The "insane impulse" is something to which nearly all intelligent persons are more or less exposed, at some timo in some way. The inclination to spring from a high place to the depths below; to throw one's self under a rapidly pass ing railway train; to say a harsh thing at tho wrong time, are, perhaps, some of the more violent phases of this "im pulse," and it was that kind of an in sane impulse that led Joe Thompson on that Saturday afternoon to say: "More religion and less ceremony is good to have in a church. But that can't be expected in the Episcopal church, of which tho best thing ever said Is that it doesn't bother with re ligion or politics." Young Mr. Thompson may have been urged to this under the delusion that ho was saying something very humor ous, second-hand though he knew it to be. lie -hud barely uitered the words when ko caught a look from Julie that made him feel just as if he had struck her a violent blow in the face with his clenched fist. It was the same look of the hunted fawn that has been men tioned before in this true tale. lie was heartily ashamed of it, but did not go to Julie with humble apologies and con tritely beg her pardon as he should have done. When the work in the church was completed Julie accompanied a school time friend and chum to her home in the village and remained until time for services the following day, Easter Sun day. Then she went home with the others, in the family carriage, to Chinquapin llill. Sometimes when things start the wrong way it seems that tho track is lubricated to facilitate swiftness. It had been arranged that Joe Thomp son was to go to a distant city, in duo time, to take a place in business with a maternal uncle who was the head of a great manufacturing establishment. A contingency had arisen in the estab lishment that made it necessary for him to start on the Monday morning, suc ceeding Easter Sunday, in obcdienco to a sudden message. On his way, in the early morning, to tho village where he was to take pas sage, Jop called at Chinquapin Hill to say "good-by," and also, let us hope, to apologize to Julie for his almost brutal words of the Saturday before. Julio was ill and not knowing that ho was going so far away so suddenly did not see him. Love is exceedingly sensitive and is eminently powerful in constructing mountains from mole hills. Joseph Thompson, as ho pursued his way, ruminating upon the subject, concluded, of course, that Julie was angry with him, when, indeed, she had never been angry in her life, though, truth to tell, she was still suffering from the blow he had given. lie made some poor excuses for himself to him self, but the foundation that upheld him in it all was that ho would smooth matters over, if necessarj', in his let ters, and he would see her in the sum mer. Besides, Mr. Joseph Thompson felt very much elated, somewhat con ceited and altogether self-satisfied, as rural young men nearly always do under anything like similar circum stances. lie felt proud, indeed, to think that the city could not, very well, get< along without him. It transpired that tho inexperienced Joseph fitted the city too well, but his uncle's business not closely enough. The story is so old that to repeat it would seem to be a waste of time, not to speak of its commonplaceness. Joe's letters were just like all such letters for a time, and then they fell off just as letters do when young men from the country start in the city on the pace that kills. Joe's dismissal from his uncle's service brought him a con sciousness of disgrace. He went else where— indeed far off into tho west— to accept a situation obtained under the influence of a boon companion. Ugly habits brought more bad results and thus the years went on. Home and Julie had become a befogged But Julie herself kept on in her devo tion to the little chapol, and with Joe beside it in her heart, wliilo tho hunted? READINO JOE'S LETTER. look in her eyes became more and more frequent, and she grew to be tho little old maid that she was, always expect ing that Joe would come some day, and then dear, old, big brother John would quit joking her about tho lost sweet heart of "way back yonder." Strangely things sometimes happen to change tho whole courso of a life. For instance: A plain, common, every day printer, who had just returned to his side of the country after the great war of 1801-05, seeking employment in tho "black art" that he had abandoned four years before, to bocome a soldier, was in a steamboat explosion and came down on his head from his blowing up, striking in such away that his bumps of humor and pathos, that lie so close together, were so developed when he picked himself out of a swath of dead people lying on the river bank, that he got ten thousand dollars' damages, be came a newspaper proprietor and grew rich and famous from his writings and it all. Joseph Thompson was one day borne from the scene of a western saloon brawl, wounded and unconscious, to a hospital. It happened to be an Epis copal institution to which he was car ried, and it was moro like a home than a hospital. He had a long and hard tussle and wrestle for life, but he came out of it at last, subdued, refined as by fire, changed altogether for tho better. Ilis native intelligence assumed a stronger sway than it had ever gained before and his heart turned to better things; to home, and Julie, and religion. Dur ing his long convalescence he had the almost continual companionship of tho young rector who had charge of tho hospital chapel. Joe fitted himself, easily, for confirmation in the church, lie had learned its catechism, creed, litany and general services when a boy for Julie's sake; he studiod for orders, was ordained as a minister and was given charge of a western parish. The time came when he longed to preach in the chapel at Perley, and it was on the Easter Sunday morning of 189S that he did so. He arrived unan nounced at Perley the evening before. John Mieou had kept his promise with Julie, as he always did with all persons. She had carefully used his carte blanche to prepare for the Easter service the chapel that had grown to be a church, and she wore to church that morning the pretty and modest bonnet that John had set his heart upon her having, though it was not probably, "the best otic In the shop," as lie had suggested, because Julio didn't care for tliat. ll was known by the vestry that there would be a minister in the na ture of a temporary "supply" for the old rector, who was growing feeble. It had been the request of Itev. Joseph Thompson that his name should not be announced until after the morning services. The vestry appreciated his wishes. This was his native town. To Julie there was ho need that the name should bo given, even though the mil Ister's hair was as white as his sur plii e, and twenty-live years had passed sin JO she had seen that face. She knew that her big brother John would never again rally her about her long lost sweetheart. lie had arisen. The light of the world comes from a jomb. It is not Golgotha that inspires the Christian, for tens of thousands havo died upon a cross; but it is the sepulcher of tho Ariraathean about which center the faith and the hope of all believers. The ages had groped in darkness until the coming of the Christ. True, Job had declared with sublime positiveness: "I know that my Redeem er liveth," yet he also put forth the anguished inquiry: "If a man die shall, lie live again?" There is nothing in all the Hebrew theology that gives assur ance of a future life. Here there is a hint qnd there a faint suggestion in the Old Testament, but there is not one absolute promise in all its pjfges. The Sadducees of Christ's day were philoso phers and scholars, yet they utterly de nied the doctrine of resurrection. Men found the terror of death a burden they could not east off. Christ came and in Ilis death and resurrection from the dead brought life and immortality to light. The Chinese have a Confucius, the Hindoos a Buddha and the Moliain medans a prophet, each of them a great teacher and a good man; but they left tho dogma of immortality where they found it—a gloomy, uncer tain, unsatisfactory and ill-defined something that might or might not be. They were men who lived, suffered, died and disappeared without a trace, as countless millions of other mortals have done. The Nazarene so lived, so suffered and so died. Divinity stamped Ilis words and Ilis works, but human ity was in Ilis agony and bloody sweat, and in Ilis giving up of tho ghost. As a man that had been, Ilis body was laid away in the tomb and His disciples mourned as for a man that was not. The announcement: "He is not here; lie is risen," was the Divine thrill that was destined to quicken all the dead into life and put a new song into tho mouth of humanity. Bless God for the glad tidings, the confirmation of Christ's words to Martha: "I am tho resurrection and the life. Whosoever liveth and believeth in Me shall never die." Light comes out of the shadows of death, and tho face that is wet with tears at a new-made grave may look upward to the Christ-star of promise and say with Paul: "O grave, where is thy victory?" 0, springtime of resurrection of nature, when the trees put on energy and the ground is instinct with new life; when flowers spring up as by magic and send fragranco out every where, how fitting that Easter day, Christ-resurrection day, should bo com memorated in the midst of vernal beauty. How meet that the bells shall ring glad notes and that the service of the churches shall partake of the uni versal gladness of nature. Christ is risen from tho dead and become the first fruits of them that sleep. Hail, Easter day! harbinger of man's final triumph over death, when they that sleep in Him shall be raised and join '•■ heir deathless Lord. The Son (j of EaHtor. The song of jubilee has gone forth and the old men are saying: "The Lord is risen from the dead." The young men and maidens catch the glowing theme, and the little children, scarcely comprehending the source of their joy, with glad hearts rejoice because Jesus is risen from the dead. All over the earth tidings have gone forth, and as the valleys and the plains have been ringing out their praises on this bright Sabbath morning, how many hearts have been singing: "Our Jesus is gone up on high." EASTER-EGO HUNTING IN AFRICA. I ~ i 4S4> 0 —Judge. Tho Joy of tho Morning. Lot us rejoice at this season, with joy unspeakable, that Jesus, the risen Saviour, continues to be Lord over death and the grave. May every soul that is ncarbig the bound of life; every soul that is troubled and distressed be cause of bereavements; every doubting heart, every weary pilgrim, longing for the rest and peace of the Father's house, be filled with the joy of Easter. Weeping may endure for a night, but |o3 r comoth in the morning. Why 110 Fasted. Smith—Have you been fasting dur ing Lent? Flyboy—Don't see how I can help it, old boy; my landlady holds my trunk for board and I've got to stick by her.— Texas Sifting*. SSgI4JI _7' \4 y. , WI HE south wind caught sv ♦ ... . VL tho sunbeams 'Mong orange blooms at play, And far o'er mountains bore them • To where tho snowdrifts lay. In soft, warm arms It boro them To far off Northern land Where brooks were bound in fetters Wrought by tho'lee king's hand, Till by an ancient maplo Tho south wind set them froo And tho sunbeams smiled Whore the snow was piled And danced in tho leafless tree. Tho snowdrift moved and molted, Tho brook its shackles cast. And through tho ancient maplo The sap ran freo and fast; Tho cold earth stirred and murmured, A violet brave looked up, And the sunbeams came from tho branchos And hid In its purple cup. The church bells rang the message That cheered the hoarts of men When first the grave was conquered And Jesus lived again; {•ho air was rich with odors Of lily and of rose, And organs made sweet thunder Whilo men forgave their foes. , 4 Hut no heart sang so truly j {■ The joyous Easter song, , \ As one who, quite desertod, 1 Slow strolled tho wood along, t ♦ To havo his darkened lifeway, 1 By every care besot, ill suddenly illumined By that lone violet. CHARLES EUGENE BANKS A Mystery Explained. Although her Easter bonnot cost A fortune in its way, Her husband seemed not to bo crossed, Nor had a word to say. I know you'll think this is a Ho, It's hard to overcome, Until you know tho reason why; Iler husband—he was dumb. —N. Y. World Regular as Clockwork. Dinah (scrubbing the floor) —You mus gib me a present to-morrow, missus. It's my birthday. Mistress—And so your birthday comes on Easter this year, Dinah. Dinah—Yesim, I has a birthday cbery Easter.—Life. Disputed. Clara—Mr. Fiddleback has just boei trying- to persuade mo that I am a per fect Easter belle. Maude—Don't you believe it? Clara—No. I told him I had no ring —Truth. AN EASTER EPISODE. Duckling—Did your ma do that? Chick—No, I guess not. Sho does do a little scratching now and then, but sho never did anything in black-and white.—Judge. A Helpless Victim. .n a now spring suit of clothing I had hoped I might appear, For I needed und had sot my hoart upon It; But I'll havo to woar tho same duds I've been wearing all tho year, For my dear wlfo's going to buy an Easter bonnet. —Truth An Improvement. Itev. Mr. Drowsie—Did you enjoy my Easter sermon? Mrs. Rapraclc—Very much. I thought you read it so much better than you did last year.—Truth. IIAD NOT A DAY TO SPARE. Mrs. Biddy Barnj'ard—Ah, children, what a narrow escape you have had! To-morrow is Easter, and if you had been much later you might have been boiled for Easter eggs!— Golden Days. Two Visions. •I've a dream of an Eastor hat," sho said, While her husband sat pale and still; "Oh, then," ho said, and hung his head, "I've a nightmare of a bill." —Chicago Record. No Wedding. This Easter brings mo no content, The reason's plain to soo; fihe gnvo up many things In, Lont, Among them being mo. —Judge Ills Annual Sacrifice. Wyld—Are you going to give up any thing during Lent? Iligbee—About thirty dollars for my wife's bonnet.—Brooklyn Life. The Height of Humiliation. Thongh Easter is the time, they say, When woman is In clover. It Is to her a sorry day Whose bonnet is mado over. An Easter Bonnet. Mrs. Editur—This hat is a perfect poem. Editur—All the more reason I should decline to pay tor it.—Brooklyn Life What is Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverislincss. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates tbo food, regulates the stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas toria is the Children's Panacea—the Mother's Friend. Castoria. Castoria. 41 Castoria is an excellent medicine for chil- < Castoria Is so well adapted to children that dron. Mothers have repeatedly told mo of its T recommend it as superior to any prescription good effect upon their children." known to me." DR. Q. C. OSGOOD, 11. A. ARCHER, M. D., Lowell, Mass. 11l So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. • 4 Castoria Is the best remedy for children of 44 Our physicians In tlio children's dopart which lam acquainted. I hope the day is not inent have spoken highly of their experi far distant when mothers will consider the real ence in their outside practice with Castoria, . interest of their children, and uso Castoria in- and although wo only have among our stead of the variousquack nostrums which are medical supplies what is known us regular destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, products, yet we are free to confess that the morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful merits of Castoria has won us to look with agents down their throats, thereby sending favor upon it." them to premature graves." UNITED HOSPITAL AND DISPENSARY, DR. J. F. KINCUELOE, Boston, Mass. Conway, Ark. ALLEN C. SMITH, IVES., Tho Contour Company, 77 Murray Street, Now York City. We Impart a thorough knowledge of the COM AT F.RCI AI. STUDIES at the cost of less time ami moncv than other schools. TliOis.A NI s owe their success in life (so they say) to t.lie training they received here. We made BItKA 1 >-\V IN X Kits of them. We want you to know us; write and we will tell you all about this LI VF, sri l< •)!.. N. 15. We assist erud ites to positions. JPALIUS !J US Ift ESS COLI/I''ti JO, 170N-1? 10 Chestnut St., I'ill LA. Fortunes Made and Saved by following the ndvicc of the Wall Street Daily News, (established 1879) in speculating or investing in Railway Stocks and Bonds. Subscription, $5 per year. Sample copies free. Address E. Martin lilack, editor, No. If Exchange Place, N. V. \ N ORDINANCE to authorize the Ilnzle- | *.V ton and North Side Electric Railway i ompiiuy, of II; ■/,]< ton, I uz rneeouuty, Poiin- | sylvaula, to lay tracks and operate its road . upon certain sticcts within tin l borough of Freehold, Luzon e county, Pennsylvania. He it ordained and enacted by I lie burgess ! and town council of the borough' of Frccluiid, in council met, ai d it is hereby enacted by au thority of t lie same. Section I. Thai the Ifazleton and North Side Electric Railway Company be and is hereby authorized to lay and construct its tracks with the necessary switches, turnouts and crossovers, and operate t he same o\ or and upon the following streets of said borough: On Centre street from the south end ol the borough line to Walnut street, along Walnut street eastwardly to the borough line, and on Front street, South street. Pine street. Main street ami Johnson street. The tracks shall : be laid in the centre of the street, excepting | so much of the streets named as shall by the borough authorities be deemed necessary for turnouts. The kind of rail to be a stand ard rail, not less than sixty aid) pounds to the yard, the top of said rail to be laid even with the grade ol said streets, as given by the bor ough authorities. Sec. 52. The said Huzleton and North Side Electric Railway Company shall keep their tracks in good condition so that the same can be crossed with safety to persons and vehicles, and shall macadamize the inside of tracks, and also twelve (.152) inches in width on the outside ou each track until such t imous t la.* said borough council may by ordinance direct any of the said streets to be puved, when the said company shall lorthwith conform to the kind of paving so authorized. bee. 3. The suid llazloton and North Side Electric Railway Company may erect poles and wires to operate the said railway with electricity, but the borough council shall be entitled, free of charge, to use such poles for tire and police alarm wires, provided that such use in no wise interferes with the opera tion of said railway. bee. 4. Any material excavated by said railway company in the construction of its railway, and not needed by said company, shall be delivered by said railway company at such points as may lie din cted b.\ t lie borough aul horltics; provided that if no place be desig nated, it slmll lie removed by the said railway company and deposited at some place selected and provided by said company outside the borough limits. bee. •'>. Tlie said railway company shall run its cars at a rateol speed not exceeding eig ht (S) miles an hour within the borough limits. bee. d. All poles erected for the purpose of convoying power shall placed at proper and suitable points along the line under the super vision of the borough authorities. bee. 7. 'flie borough ol Freeland, by its properly constituted officers, shall at all Limes nave the right to make repairs and improve ments to culverts and sewers under the sur face occupied by said railway, ami to open ami remove the said tracks and turnouts whenever it shall become necessary for such purposes, but if possible without obstructing the running of cars of the said railway com | pun j', and the said rail way company shall at all times keep clear of all obstructions all water courses crossed by said railway at tin point of such crossing. bcc. s. In the event of fire, or the alarm of tire, that right of way must he yielded readily and at once to the lire apparatus of said bor ough, and the said railway company slmll not, by the running of its cars, interfere with the proper use of said appuratus during the time of any lire. See. 9. Suid railway company shall be liable for all accidents that may happen through the negligence of suid railway eoinpuny in the construction or operating of the same, and save hurmless the borough of Freeland from all suits at law that may arise therefrom. bee. 10. That the said railway company shall, within thirty d<o) days after the passage of this ordinance, tile wit h the borough clerk acceptance of the provisions of this ordinance, under its corporate seal, otherwise this ordi nance slmll be void and of no ell'ect. bee. 11. Whenever the suid railway com pany shall cms-; anv ,-d net s across which wat.-r struct culverts beneath tlu-ir trucks and one (1) foot on each side of such trucks, so as to preserve a regular grade, and shall at all times see t hat such culverts are kept clear and open and are oi sullicient dimensions to allow ail surface water to pass through under such tracks. Sec. 152. Said railway company shall run its j apart at all times between six ah o'clock a. in. and ten (Ith o'clock p. m. Passed finally in council, February 152, A. I). 1895. Attest, I-rank DePicrro. president. Thomas A. Ihicklcy, secretary. Approved February 525, 1K95. Patrick McLaughlin, burgess. ! *=2s*^ ft®- 'k|£ ; AND ABSOLUTELY SAVeLj MI The Best SEWING MONEY tVd 4 MACH,HE 1,1 ONE , -i MAD E WE Oil OlJli DEALERS crdi f ell you mncliliicn cheaper than you can get elKcwliert). The NEW lE<j:?!liS 1m oiirbcHh but we niiiko cheaper hinds, mlicit as the CLIMAX, laM-2.1L and other llig.li Ann Full Nickel Elated Sewing Machines for $15.00 a-id up. Call on our agent or write us. Wo want your trade, and If prices* terms aud hquaro dealing xvll] win, wo u llt have It. We challenge the world to produce si BETTER $50.00 Solving Machine for $50.00, or a better S2O. Sewing Machine for $20.00 thnn you can buy from us, or our Agents. TII2 NEW HOME SEWING SACEIHF.CO. FOR SALE L / D. S. Ewinp, general agent, 1127 Chestnut street, Pliila., Pa. CAN I OBTAIN A PATENT? For a prompt, answer and an honest opinion, write to AII NN V CO., who have had nearly fifty years' experience in the patent business. Communica tions strictly conlidentinl. A Handbook of In formation concerning Patents and bow to ob tain them sent free. Also a catalogue of mechan ical and scientific books sent free. Patents taken through Muim & Co. rceeivo special notice in the Scientific American, and thus arc brought widely before the public with out cost to the inventor. Tills splendid paper, issued weekly, elegantly illustrated, has by far the largest eirculutiou of anv scientific work in tho world. ss| a year. Sample copies sent free. Iluildiiijgr Edition, monthly, fi liOa year. Singlo copies, 2.> cents. Every number contains beau tiful plates, in colors, and photographs of new houses, with plans, enabling builders to show tho latest designs and secure contracts. Address MUNN & CO., NEW I'ouii, 301 BROADWAY. Singe Tax Courier, NATIONAL SINGLE TAX NEWSPAPER. It gives tho single tax news of the world weekly, single tax discussions ami tho very pond outs in Japan. _ Australasia, Franco, Eng- Thc I'lii/;-/.. is a Id-page, til-column paper, in valuable champion < I the cause which is at tracting so much attention throughout tho world. W. K. BROKAW, Editor. Published by TIIE COURIER PUBLISHING COMPANY, Room 507. Fagin Building, St. I.ouis. SI.OO PER ANNUM, j I £ Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- i d cnt business conducted for MODERATE FEES. * sOur OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE* y and we can secure patent in less time than those Z * remote from Washington. # t Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-* Stion. Wc advise, if patentable or not, free of 2 #charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. > t A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents,'' with * Jcost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J i sent free. Address, £ :C. A.SNOW&CO.: OPP. PATENT OFFICE, Was^m N g TON, J3.
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