Royal makes the fuod pure, wholesome and delicious. p| I POWDER Absolutely Pure i i FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established IS3B. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY TIIE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STUEBT ABOVE CENTRE. ; Make all money orders, chuck*, etc., payable to > the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months To ! Four Months 50 Two Months 25 The date which the subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change of which lo a subsequent date becomes n receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to this ofiiee whenever paper is not received. Arrearages must bo paid when subscription is discontinued. FREEHAND, DA.. OCTOBER 25, 1897. No Encouragement in Freeland. No secret Is made of the keen disap pointment felt by the Republican county candidates at the news they received \ from the local leaders during their visit here last week. The staunch liepubli c ins of the town, those who are really ; responsible for the good showings tin party lias made here in late years, were conspicuous by their absence from the caucus hold Wednesday night. Heelers were there in plenty, but the unostenta tious workers did not show tip, and there is no indication that they will con cern themselves about the fate of the 1 ticket. Mr. Koons. of course, has a few per- I sonal friends who may go out of their : way to get him a vote, hut even this is j not enough to overcome the falling ofi which will result from the reported ap pointments In: is to make. Four Free land Republicans are each hugging the | delusion that clerkships under Mr. Koons await them, and each, in his anxiety to elect the candidate, is doing | Koons considerable harm by parading i his own prospects before voters who I have local scores to settle with the ex- 1 poct-to-be clerks. The expression, "If i Koons Is going to appoint he can't I have my vote." is quite common in Re publican circles. As for the others, Messrs. Fell and i Llewellyn, nobody seems to care a picayune for their chances. In Free land there are Republicans, some of them active workers at that, openly advocating the election of Messrs. Mar tin and Daseh. Jt i> no wonder the candidates left town with gloomy faces, j with grave doubts that even the "boo dle" plan will have any effect here. Whut lllive 4Ye Done to the Sheriff? Sheriff Martin doesn't seem to like the voters of the South ward uf Freeland j borough, and if his election proclama- j tion counts for any thing the 150 citizens in the two districts of this Democratic stronghold will have no say in the com ing election, in the list of polling places which he publishes in his proc lamation. there is no provision made ! for the voters of the South ward dis- | tricts. The other four wards, north from j Main street, have their polls designated ! according to the decree recently issued I by the court, and the lower ward is ignored entirely. Notwithstanding the sheriff's carelsss- ; ness, or his antipathy to Democrats.! whichever it is. *ve presume the South i ward election officers will be found do- j ing business at the same old stands on ! November 2. Rune Hall Writer Dead. Lovers of base ball throughout the country will miss the weekly letters of ! O. I'. Cay lor. His death last week re moved from the newspaper world one of the best authorities on the national game. His comments, as given through 1 the mctropoliton journals, have been | eagerly read for years by those who fol- j low the sport. Despite his falling health, in- stuck to his duties to the j last, and of the thousands who, up to u few weeks ago, perused his interesting I talks, few knew of the pain and agony he I underwent rather than disappoint his readers. A Sure Thing for You. A transaction in which you cannot lose Is a ! sure thing, biliousness, sick headache, fur red tongue, fever, piles and n thousand other ills are caused by eonstipution and sluggish 1 liver. Cuscurcts t'andy Cathartic, the won- I dcrful new liver stimulant and' intestinal I tonic, are by all druggists guaranteed to cure : or money refunded. C. C. C. are a sure thing. Try a box today; 10c, 260, 50c. Samplo and booklet free. All druggists. CAHTOniA. "Watch the date on your paper. I Elections in the "Sixties." A copy of the Scran ton Republican o the date of October 25, 1809, drifted inti the TRHIUNB office a few days ago ! Apart from its marks of age, it contain; t he vote by counties of the elections hole in Pennsylvania from 1860 to 1809, in elusive. In the former year Luzortu • county, which then included Lack J awanna, gave a Democratic majority foi | Clyraer of 3,054 against Geary, but the 1 state elected the Republican to tin governorship by 17. ITS. Next year. ISO7, Luzerne gave Sharswood, I)emo cratic candidate for associate justice. I 2,419 more votes than it cast for liis Re | publican opponent, Williams, and this elected him, his majority being only 92v : when all the returns came in. Ex-Governor Hartranft was Hie lb publican candidate, in October I>o>. for j state treasurer, and beat Iloylc, Demo crat, in the state by 9,077 votes. Lu zerne stood by its colors, g v :>g Do. I a majority 0f 3,428. The following month, i in the vote for president. Seymour ills tancod Grant in this county by .'i.sso votes, but Pennsylvania went for the ; soldier candidate by 28. Mis. In 1809, in the tug of war between AM* Packer, on tho Democratic side, and Governer Geary, who was seeking re | election, Luzerne's Democratic majority dropped to 1,000, and the Republicans : won out in the state by the small margin of 4,590. Besides these election figures, the Re publican contains a column editorial on the "Demise of the Democratic Party," a subject which, apparently, was written up by Republican editors to (ill in space as freely a quarter of a century ago as it is in these days. Like many others, Editor Scranton's obituary on the death of the old party was penned too soon. That same { "dead" party, over whose supposed corpse he reveled twenty-eight years ago today, is still in existence, and in the j years which have passed since 1869 there are few men whom it has given more i evidence of its life than the man who wasted a valuable column commenting on its "demise." A resident of Gibson, N. 7., A. 11. i ney by name, allowed a patent medicine eomjpany to use his portrait with a testimonial he had had written of the worth of the company's remedy, and the advertisement was printed all over the country. Some time afterward Mr. Olney received a letter from a Den ver woman, who said that, judging from his picture, she would like to marry 1 him. He did not answer the letter j promptly and she wrote again. This ! time he answered, and after several let ! , tors on each side she sent a, check for him to go to Denver and marry her. and as she had $40,000 in the bank and was good looking, and he had nothing ; in the bank and no ties to bind him in the east, he accepted her offer and went. ' When three women out in Fort Scott. , Kan., were summoned' to serve as jurors : in the United States district court, the I news was disseminated far and wide as j evidence of the emancipation of th - ! sex. It is somewhat doubtful if one o! j these women, Miss Cora Wheeler, fully | appreciates the responsibilities of juror | duty, if one can acceipt as true the re : mark attributed to her. The Kansas City Journal quotes her assaying when the summons was served upon her to appear in court next day: "Oh, thank you so much. Please tell the dear, kind judge that I will surely accept his in- I citation or send a substitute. Isn't it ; funny?" Mayor McKtesons of Cleveland, while presiding at a board meeting recently, was surprised by an old gentleman., who walked into the room and laying a ! large bunch of tiger lilies, on the may j or's desk, said: "These flowers are i from Mrs. Crawford, who lives on I Darkness avenue. She is 7G years old j ami has. lived in Cleveland for half ? century. In the opinion, of this lady ! your honor is the best mayor this city j ever had. Sho takes this means too: J press her appreciation on a &DHI!I i scale." There is more catarrh in this section of the country than all other d; -ases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be incurable. Fur a great many years doctors pro nounced it a local disease, and prescrib ed local remedies, and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pro j nounced it incurable. .Science lias proven catarrh to be a constitutional disease and therefore requires constitu tional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure on the market. It is taken in ternally in doses from ten drops to i teaspoonful. It nets directly on t!,e blood and mucous surfaces of tho ,- tern. They offer ono hundred <!oi\,rs for any case it fails to cure. .Sen 1 lor circulars and testimonials. Ad ire.ss. F. J. CHENEY A CO., Toledo, O. my Sold by druggists, 7oe. j Hall's Family l'ills are the best. Everybody Sy So. Cascareta Candy Cathartic, the most won derful medical discovery of the ugc, pleas ant and refreshing to the taste, net g'-Mly and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel <" ds, cure headache, fever, habitual const ipa lion and biliousness. Please buy and try a box of C. ('. C. today; 10, 25, 50 cents. Sold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. 1 ' ac * _ _/7 TO MY WATCH. Little watch, fast licking out All the hours of pain and doubt, All tho tumult, toil and strife Making up our span of life; All the heart-wrung sighs, and tears Falling faster with'the years, As the petals drop and fade From the bloom life's summer made. Ah! what thoughts each other chase As 1 look upon your face! Every tick your motions give One tick less have 1 to live. Did 1 realize this thought, With such solemn meaning fraught. When some new-born Joy drew nigh In the happy days gone by? And your slight bands all too slow Round about your face did go? Ah! those tardy hours have passed. Would they were not now so fast! Never stopping in your flight, Never pausing day or night; Not a moment's rest you crave From the cradle to the grave. With a never-ceasing motion, , Steadfast as the tides of ocean; Peeming evermore to hurry, Yet wi houta moment's flurry: ! Till our worn hearts almost pray That you would a moment stay. All things rest—the clouds at noon, And the leaves in nights of June; And the grief-! • wildered brain When sleep falls like softest rain; And tlie stars when day awakes, Ami the day when Hesper shakos Gleams of M Id from out the skies Into wandering lovers' eyes. Ycu alone speed on your way, Never resting night or day. ' Yet what Joys those hands have brought! Golden days with rapture fraught; Golden days by sunlit fountain; Golden days c.i breezy mountain; j Days made mot e divine by lovo i Than by radiance from above. Ah! those hands that to the sense Bring such Joys and boar them hence; Could we know what Time conceals 'Neath those little ticking wheels! Yet when those slight hands shall mark That last hour when all grows dark; ! And shall still keep ticking on When earth's light from me is gone, Little watch, your face shall be Still a memory sweet to me. Though diviner light may shine On these opened eyes of mine. For your hands that never cease Bring at last the perfect peace. —Sydney Hodges, In Leslie's Popular Monthly. /sji:V..kwV.u4<Vu.Vi l iVßA : A'4VAfmA7Vr7(/iVaVii>.>t | AN INTELLIGENT DOG. f; i [Copyright, ißq7.) 2: ! ' " "* | MtEODOIIE" is his name and he is one of the most highly-hon ored inmates of a certain farmhouse in one of the central counties of New York state. Though he is only 10 he is accounted very old; he is almost blind, more than half deaf, his teeth are falling out, and his once glossy black hair is now plentifully sprinkled with gray. ; "Theodore" is a dog, the companion of his master's boyhood days and his ' most cherished pet in the present peri od of canine senility. All through his relatively long life "Theodore" has shown intelligence and fidelity far f ** ,/. y s ./• •" tb 3 . '<" ..i-t 1 ,<" fcy- 1 CI.UTCIIED BETWEEN HIS TEETH WAS THE MISSING POCKETBOOK. exceeding: the average among dogs, j and once he did his master n service of ' exceptional importance—ti service that j will insure the poor old brute the ten- j dcrest care to the day of his death, if ! he should live, to be 100. Here is the : story: "Jt was when 1 was a very little boy j and Theodore was little more than a pup. lie was given to me as soon al most as he got his eyes open; we were friends from the very first, and as soon as the dog was old enough to keep up with me we were together constantly from sunrise till sunset. "Before Theodore was six months old he showed unusual intelligence. 1 thought then, and 1 think now, that Theodore understood the English lan guage much better than some of the two-legged creatures who speak it. So firmly was this borne in on iny childish mind that I used to devote a good deal of time trying to teach the poor creature to speak. You may laugh if you want to. but I believe that dog knew 1 was trying to teach him to speak. lie used to look up into my eyes with the most wistful expression imaginable on his poor old black face, and his futile winnings and barkings sometimes went to my very heart. But after awhile 1 became satisfied that my efforts were vain and for this reason, quite as much as because of the jeers and gibes to which they sub jected me, I left off trying. "It was when Theodore was six or seven years old—quite an old dog in fact —and I was about ten, that, being very busy with Ids farm work, my fa ther sent me to the village one day with SIOO in a. pocket-book with which to pay off a note that was in the bands of the local banker. My father made the mistake of not telling me what was in the pocket book, saying oTily that when 1 got. to the village I was to go straight tb the bank and give, up the pocket-book, taking great care to bring back the paper which the banket would give to ine in return. Of course 1 should have understood, young as J was, that the pocket book was valuable, and 1 should also have obeyed my fa ther's instructions to go as directly as possible and to hurry back. ' "1 did neither of these things. O! course 1 took Theodore along with me. and being a very small boy, of course 1 loitered along at my leisure, and when Theodore and I got about hall way to the village we turned aside from the road into the thick growth of the swampy woods. For hours we played in the shade of the water ashes and the willows, jumping from bog to bog in the more swampy parts and chasingbutterflies in occasional glades. Finally, when the sun was half way down the western sky, I remembered my errand and we continued on our way to the village. "I reached the little bank just before the hour for closing, and marching up to the little window put my hand into my pocket to take out the wallet. Bu; it wasn't there, and I had to explain to the banker that 1 had lost it in the swamp. I have passed through many greater crises since then, but I am sure I never felt more completely cast down than 1 did when I heard from the lips of the banker that the lost book had contained the ineomprehensible sum of SIOO. 1 was literally overwhelmed with grief, and I readily agreed to the bank er's impassioned declarations regard ing my utter personal worthlessness. "Of course I retraced my steps through the swampy woods as carefully as 1 could in search of the missing book. Of course I couldn't find it. 1 was so excited and sorrowful, in fact, that T could hardly see, and when night came on T had to give it up. I will pass oyer the details of the interview that took place between- m\l father and me. A stout leathern strap and its applica tion were among the chief features thereof, and I was so absorbed in my own grief and pain that I failed to no tice that Theodore had not returned with me. "It was some time after I awoke the next morning, that I remenmbered the frightful thing that had befallen me. Indeed, it did not present itself to my mind until T had dressed and started to go downstairs. Then T found the door of my room locked, and it came back to me. I remembered then that my father had declared I must remain a prisoner for a week to pay for my care lessness. When my mother came to bring her boy a breakfast I asked for Theodore. I told her T knew I wasn't fit to go out among folks who went about what they had'to do with care and promptness, and so had no fault- to find with -my punishment, though it | was hard to bear. Tf T could only have my (log with me I thought T could get along. j "But Theodore was nowhere to bo found, and he did not appear till near j sundown. When he did come to light | he looked as if be had been through i.U the swamps in the world. He was di sheveled and covered with, mud, his eyes were bloodshot, and he looked gaunt and worn and hungry. He re | fused all efforts to stop him on the ground iloor, insisting on rushing up stairs to my room at once; and, tightly clutched between his teeth, was the missing pocketbook with the SIOO in tact within its cover." Tlic Advocate of tlie Itatn. According to the historian I)e Thou. ; Chasseneuz himself first became L.- I liious through the skill with whieluhe advocated the cause of the rats of Au tun. They had been summoned to ap pear before the bishop's proctor and show cause why they should not be ex communicated. Chasseneuz was ap pointed to delend them, and began by demanding that the summons should be read in every parish, since the rats were widely scattered and might not otherwise hear of it. lie next excused their nonappearance by saying that the roads were dangerous for his clients, seeing that cats were everywhere lying in wait for them, and finally, having ex | hausted all modes of delay, he made an eloquent speech on the injustice of proceeding against the whole number at once, and demanded that each rat Fbould- be tricrl separately. This speech, says the historian, was recalled t-o his memory by the Waldensians when, as president of the parliament of Province, lie was obliged to take part in- the persecution of those unfortunate secretaries.—Cornhill Magazine. Salaries nt Glasgow Cnlverslty. The salaries of the professors of Glas gow university last year amounted to £2d.7.T1. the best paid of them being Prof. Clelantl, who received £4.645 while the smallest emoluments were those of Profs. Simpson. Mairnnd Bed. i er, each of whom received £6OO. MEN AND WOMEN OF TITLE. The oldest temporal sovereign in Eu rope is Grand Duke Adolph of Luxem burg. who is 80 years of age. Though a simple and unaffected monarch. King Oscar of Sweden, is the sovereign who makes use of ni-s crown most frequently. The youngest member of the house of lords, the duke of Roxburghe, has just attained his majority, and is now quali fied to take his seat. The czar has been a German admiral for about a year. As for Emperor Wil liam, he now holds the rank of admiral in the English, Swedish, Norwegian and Russian navies. Princess Louise is engaged in sculp turing the figure of an angel with outstretched wings, which is to be placed over the altar in the Prince Henry of Battenberg Memorial chapel. While the king of Siam was in Eng land the London Times published n let ter from n member of the Athenaeum declaring that his name was not Chula longkom. but Kululangaram. The king of Greece, when conversing with the members of his famkly, never employs any but the English language. He seldom speaks French, and only uses Greek when compelled to do so. The young earl of Shaftesbury, aid to Lord Brassey, governor of Victoria. Australia, has appeared in comic opera at Melbourne, making a hit. He bad already won distinction on the concert stage. Kaiser Wilhelm is a great collector of autographs, and specially prizes the signatures of military commanders of the end. of the last and the beginning of the present century, of which he has a large collection. The son of the late Sir John Millais. former president of the Royal academy, will treat English art circles to a novel ty in a biography of his father, to which i all of Millais' models are to contribute reminiscences. Sir Joseph Lister, the retiring presi dent of the British Association for the -Advancement of Science, has been a i leading advocate of the use of antisep | ties in medicine. The familiar nntisep ! tic, listerine, was -named after him. PEOPLE YOU HEAR ABOUT. I Miss Marie du Maurier, daughter of ' ! the late George du Maurier, was mar riedi recently to Edward norsman Coles. Carolus Duran has returned to Paris from London, where be had been pain-t --; ing the portrait of Lady Warwick, formerly Lady Brooke. M. Durnn, it is said, was highly complimented on his work by the prince of Wales. The new Chinese minister at Wash ington is a Christian and n member of j the Episcopal church. Wu Ling Fang ' was educated in London and called to the English bar in 1877. He has been made director of Chinese railroads, con nected with the negotiations for peace with Japan, legal adviser to the Viceroy Li Hung Chang and other things to his cred'lt. Baron Tliielmann, who has just left the German embassy at Washington to become secretary of the German im jß'rial treasury, was an unusual man in many respects. As an example of his learning it is related that during the Franco-Prussiau war, in which he serveds he sent reports of various events to his old teacher, all written in San skirt. Thus he described Sedan and the capture of Napoleon. SAID ABOUT WOMEN. lie that hath a fair wife-never wants | trouble.—Proverb. Woman is seldom merciful to the man who is timid.—Edward Bulwer Lytton. Women have more of who# is termed good sense'than men.—William Ilazlitt. Women can rarely be deceived, for they are accustomed to deceive. —Aris- t ophancs. In love a young sheperdess is a be tor partner than an old queen.—J. de Fined. She who spit in my fuee whilst I was, shall come to kiss my feet when I am no more.—Michael de Montaigne. The man flaps about with a bunch of feathers; the woman goes to work soft ly v.i-i ha cloth.—Oliver Wendell Holmes. There will always remain something to be said of woman, as long as there is one on earth.—Stanislas de Bouflers. A woman should never accept n lover without the consent of her heart, nor a husband without the consent of her judgment.—Ninon de Lenclcs. There is nothing sadder than to look at dressy old things, who have reached the frozen latitudes beyond 50, and who persist in appearing in the airy cos tumes of the tropics.—Frederick Shel don. PLAYS AND PLAYERS. It is possible that Victor Maurel will give a. concert tour in this country dur ing the winter. In addition to "An American Citizen," Nat Goodwin expects to present this winter a play by Augustus Thomas. "Treadway, of Yule," andi another called "Richard Savage." William Favershum is reported to have fully regained, his health during his stay in England this summer. The strain of his work in "Under the Red Robe" left him very much worn out at the end of last season. Marie Wninwrighf denies any inten tion of going into vaudeville and to prove it begins in "An Unequal Match" in Philadelphia soon; she will go to New York later to arrange for the rest of the season. The stage seems to have got tangled up with the law in London lately. Beer bohrn Tree was compelled to go to court to recover a brooch, which he claimed had been appropriated by an attend ant; Florence St. John took similar ac tioi. against a servant, whom she churged: with taking a trinket; and a periodical of the great capital of Eng land was fined $125 for accusing a sing er of singing a sor.g which was "vul gar." SEE mcrnDii that the llA* ' "FAC-SIMILE Vegetable Preparationfor As- SIGNATURE slmilating ihcroodatidßcgula tinglheStomachsandßowelsof OF Promotes Digestion, Cheerfu lness andßest.Contains neither IS OTT THE Jdtape of Old UrSjU'tIULP-J uZEfI 1 WRAPPER Pump/cui Sce J." / dlx.Sennn * ] I OF EVERY Ppptrmint - > j 1 /ft Curb ofiaU Sola, * I figSftfcr. BOTTLE OF Mjnfcy/w; I'laivr. J lac Simile Signature of H NEW YORK. fl Caatorlo. is put up in ono-size bottles only. It fflla not sold In bulk. Don't allow anyono to sell I B you anything eho on tho ploa or promise that it fl * a ' j nat na good" and "will answer cvory pur- B posci" fice that you get C-A-S-T-O-E-I-A. Bjj Tho fee- ./> EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. fij cimilo V!b cn L_ w . f **• °™7 GREAT BARGAINS IN Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. Notions, Carpet, Boots and Bhoes, Flour and Feed, Tobacco, Cigars, TYn ami Queensware, Wood at id Wiltowware, Table and Floor Oil Cloth, Etc. A celebrated brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. My motto is small protlts and quick sales. I always have fresh poods and am turning my stock every month. Every article is guaranteed. AMANDUS OSWALD, J IV. IV. Cor. Centre and Front Sts., Freeland. P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director a^Eiiti^r.l Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. VIENNA 7 BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. CHOICE BREAD OF ALL KINDS CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. ' FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES BAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery $ Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply wagons to all parts oj town and surroundings every day. Are You a Roman Catholic Then you should enjoy reading the literary productions of the best talent In the Catho lic priesthood and laity (and you know what they CAN do), aa they appear weekly in The Catholic Standard and Times OF PHILADELPHIA, The ablest and most vigorous defender of Catholicism. All tho news—strong edito rials—a children's department, which 1H elo vatlng and educational. Prizes offered monthly to the little ones. Only 82.00 per year. The Grandest Premium ever Issued by 1 any paper given to subscribers for IW7. Kend for sample copies and premium circular. The Catholic Standard and Times Pub'g Co />O3-505 Chestnut St. I'll I la. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Centre street, l'reeland. J FINEST LIQ UOR, DEER, PORTER, j ALE. CIGARS AND TEM- \ PERANCE DRINKS. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uso ■1 In time. Sold by drumrtstfL H dBKEM §B I heels, | j Quality TOO! | j | STYLES: if | Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. | J Tho Lightest Running Whocls on Earth. { THE ELDREDGE V ....AND.... ij I THE BELVIDERE. j I S 2 Wo al-.vays Made Cood Sewing Machines! * Why Shouldn't wo Make Good Wheels! i __ i % i g National Sewing Machine Co., i ,4 339 Broadway, Factory: ? New York. Gelvlderc, Ills. POWER! /D Fifty per I." • " j it io::;; I ©J - s}•>, pense eat. Io '*? had by using Z'J^-' The Victor Vapor Engine man u fact u ret! by Thos. Kane & Co., Chicago. Steady speed, easy to start, always re liable, absolutely sufe. all parts Intel ehangoable, adapted for any cluss of work requiring power. J. D. MYERS, Agt, FREELAND, PA. Call nr send for catalogues and prices. Anyone sending n sketch and description may quickly ascertain, free, whether an invention is probably patontaldo. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency forsecuring patents in America. Wo have u Washington oltlco. Patents taken through Muiui & Co. receive special notice in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated, Inrgest circulation of any scientific journal, weekly,terms*3.oo a year; fl. idsix moot lis. Specimen copies and HAND BOOK ON PATENTS rent free. Address MUNN &. CO., 301 Broadway, Kexv York. 4 ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. 4 ?OUN OFFICE IS OPPOSITE.U. S. PATENT OFFICE* 5 and we can secure patent in less time than those t 4 remote from Washington. * Send model, drawing or photo., wjth descrip- 4 Stion. Wo advise, if patentable or not, free ofi 5 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. $ J A PAMPHLET, "HOW to Obtain Patents,' 1 with * of same in the u. S. and foreign countries , J sent free. Address, j C.A.SNOW&COJ PATENT Qrnc J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers