FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 1888. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY AND THURSDAY lIY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE. Make all moneu orders, checks, etc., payable V the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year sl. ' Six Months 7." Four Months W I Two Months The date which the subscription Is paid to is- | ou the address label of each paper, the change j of which to a subsequent date becomes a • receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt- j ]y to this office whenever paper is not received, j Arrearages must be paid when subscription j is discontinued. FREELAND, PA., NOVEMBER 15,1897. Republican Majorities—How Obtained. From the Philadelphia Record. Mercy to the scoundrels chosen as election officers, and sworn to a faithful performance of the duties opposed upon j them, who deliberately make false re turns of the ballots given into their hands is murder to the republic. For many years the falsification of election returns in Philadelphia has been culti- j vated as an art. It is an impossibility to carry the city for or against any ; candidate or any proposition unless the managers of the Republican party who make puppets of the election boards are for or against such candidates or propo sitions. The transparent frauds perpe trated at the late election were so gross and so bold as to compel examination upon the part of the judges of the courts clothed with the responsibility of verify ing and announcing the official result. As a consequence, three or four of the elections officers of the Fifth, Seventh and Second wards are either fugitives or prisoners. There should be no delay in trying them, and no hesitation in giving them the full punishment pro vidid for their hideous crime. But investigation should not stop with sending two or three men to the peni tentiary. It is probably impossible to i bring home to the actual instigators and promoters of crimes against the ballot the proof of their complicity, and to j punish them as they deserve. But they can be branded with the contempt of j honest men, and by the prosecution and jailing of their poor tools their malign power for evil circumscribed and made difficult. All honor to Judges Arnold. Gordon and Sulzberger and their aides and as- j sistants! By their action they have opened the way to the cleansing of the city from a political plague worse than I a pestilence. Let not the hand of jus- ! tice be stayed. Wanmnaker on Advertising. Interviewed by Frank G. Carpenter. "Mr. Wanauiaker, you are one of the largest advertisers of the country. J have noticed that you keep your adver ments running during the hard times. ; Many of the merchants have let tliem drop. Does it pay to advertise when | times are hard?" "I certainly think so," replied Mr. Wanamaker. "When the times an- \ hard and people are not buying is the j very time that advertising should be the heaviest. You want to get the people ' In to see what you have to sell, and you must advertise to do that. When the times are good they will come of their ! own accord. But I believe in advortis- j ing all the time. We never stop adver- Using." "You use the newspapers almost alto- 1 gether for advertising, do you not?" •Yes, I have tried all kinds, but I think newspaper advertising is by far | the best. 1 used to spend a great deal ; of money in posters and bills, but I have given up that long ago." "Can you see any immediate results from such advertising?" I asked. "1 should think so," replied Mr. Wan amaker, "If you will come over here or to our New York store some morning when we have advertised a job lot of bicycles or some other things and look at the long line of people who are stand ing outside waiting for the doors to opon you will see how the advertisements in the newspapers are read." SIOO Reward, SIOO. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to care in all its stages and that is catarrh. Hall's catarrh cure is the onlv positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation o. the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers, that they offer one hundred dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, _ F. J . CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. 'Sold by druggists, 7oc. Hall's Family l'ills are the best. THE DANGERS OF MINING | Curious Mishaps That Have Hap pened to Delvers. One Alan Plunged Down 800 Peel \V i t lion I llrt-u U i nu 11 Hone—lnjured Miner Wanted to See 111 M Dead Partner'* Face. "In this line of work we come aerosr- j some curious accidents and narrow es capes," said Deputy Mine Inspector 1 Frank Hunter to a Butte (Mont.) Miner reporter, the other night. "One thing struck me long ago. and that is how much it takes to kill a man sometimes, and how easily the thread of life is often snapped. "Down in Colorado 1 knew a fellow who hud plunged down 800 feet in u single compartment shaft. He went to the bottom, but did not break a bone. Of course he was preety badly jarred up and a good deal frightened, but he was all right again in a day or two. When he fell he went down feet first, and a big oilskin that he wore opened at the bottom and acted as a parachute. No said the last part of his descent was so much slower than the first that he hardly thought he was dropping at all, and half expected to remain suspended in the shaft, like Mohammed's coliiu, ; "Nearly always when a man falls any distance he turns over if he starts feet j downward, and finishes his plunge head first. 1 have seen a number of cases where the man fell with his boots on and was found barefooted when he was picked up. 1 suppose this is because the blood goes to the head, making the feet smaller, and, besides, the pressuro of the air upon the heel counteracts as a bootjack. "That was rather a singular accident up at the Diamond the other day," Mr. Hunter went on, reflectively. "1 mean the death of Matt o'llara in the waste j hole of the 400. It is my belief that if O'Hara had been two feet farther in he would liuve escaped serious injury, as j the rock only fell a few inches. It just ! happened to catch him in such away as to break his neck. I know of n paral lel instance where a rock weighingGOO or 700 pounds fell from a height of J PLUNGED DO I eight feet upon a man and he is alive to- I day, though badly crippled. "I had to go over to Sand Coulee last ! week to investigate an accident in j which one man was killed and another ; had three ribs broken. At the funeral of the dead man a request was received his injured partner, who was con lined to his bed. that the remains might be brought to his bedside so he could take one last look at them. Well, after j the services the procession stopped at j the house of the injured man and 1 waited while the coffin was taken in- i side, where the lid was unscrewed in order to give the invalid l a view of the dead man's face. Then the march to the cemetery was resumed. "Speaking of Sand Coulee, it struck me while 1 was there that if 1 wanted | to commit suicide 1 would go there to j do it. 1 don't mean that life becomes such a burden in the coal country that | i the ties that bind are more easily ! ; severed than elsewhere, but that it nf- j | fords unsurpassing facilities for cheap ' | and happy dispatch, it's a ,%vondter U> ; ;me that some of the many people who ; | annually launch themselves into eterni ty from Butte do not take the Sand ; i Coulee route. "Down iu the coal mines there is one ' passage that is three miles long, and in j • -oine of the chambers air does not. ; -eetn to circulate. Upon the walls there j is a gathering of moisture, and if you | puff a cigar in one of these chambers I ! he smoke will seek the walls, where it I ; jlings with an undulating movement ; I like a spray of weeds under running j | water. The dew on the walls is white. ! j damp and the dead air of the chamber j I where it is found is poisonous. In a ! few minutes a feeling of drowsiness j steals over a man who breaths it. and j before* long he is asleep and dreaming ; ilelieiously—so those say who have been | resuscitated. But the sleep is akin to ; 'hat of the lost traveler over where I aumbed limbs the arctic snow eddies j i.nd drifts, for. unless help comes soon. 1 there is no awakening. If, however, the venturesome explorer of these under ground death traps realizes his danger | ; in time and manages to stagger out into i the fresh air, he has an experience '.Y undergo which may cause him to regret that he did not remain inside, Euwy none and muscle aches with the i; tol \ poignancy that is known to con valescents from yellow fever. The reament is simple, but effective. Be j ng nearly dead, the sufferer is nearly mried. A hole is dug in the soft earth •ad flic victim is made to stand up in f, while the dirt is thrown around him intil only his head is seen above ground. I'his seems to drnw out the soreness, ncf in a short 'iine the patient has ful y recovered." Another Definition. Tommy—Pa. what D an epicure? Pa— A fellow who can eat things that would turn other people's stomachs Cleveland Deader. HELP YOURSELF. ' Help yourself, but not by grasptnf All that's good for selllßh gain. Gather what the passing moment* Bring in reach of hand and brain; So that, with a purpose noble, You may hold for other's good That which helps a poorer brother Who may stand where you have stood. Help yourself, but not to honors That another fairly won; Neither Join the victors only When the hard-fought battle's done; For the bravest do not carry Standards from the field of fight. But Into the trying conflict. Bearing this: "For God and Right." Help yourself, but not by casting Down some noble, struggling soul. Who has not your strength or prestige. Battling for a longed-for goal. God. and Godlike men, will honor Ev'ry aid to virtue given; Help yourself by helping others, Earning the "Well done" from Heaven. -C. Harry Anders, In Baltimore American. | "Summed in a Single Kiss." | O ;s,:: :CiK€C£K:eeete'2€^' HE WAS first of all heir husband's friend, and then her own; and this )s the story of how she saved him in a time of great clanger and stood herself on the brink of another and greater peril. Evey Lnncaster was one of those women who marry men they averagely love and are faithful wives and devoted mothers so long as passion, going down the country lanes of their peaceful lives, passes them by on the other side. She perhaps loved her husband more than these women usually do, but then she was made of sterner stuff, and where there is more to conquer there is more to suffer. Small blame to her, since Heaven had made her charming; small blame to Edward Vereker, her hus band's friend, since he found her so, and he himself as goodly a man as you would meet on any summer's day. Her J husband. David Lancaster, was a good ly man, too, and worthy of her, and of I Edward Vereker, his friend. ! But there were three of them, and three is an evil number concerning men and women. It was during the summer of 1893 that Edward Vereker and Evey, his friend's wife, began to be more than friends. Tie was staying with the Lancasters down in Surrey, in their pretty little red house on the edge of the pretty little blue river, and David was going up and down to London every day, be cause it was yet early and the various vacations and holidays had not begun. So he and she were left a good denl on one another's hands. Satan found mis chief. not for those idle hands, but idle eyes, for that summer one's hands re mained in one's lap, and it was too hot even to talk; but it is as easy to look at one's neighbor os to star* blankly Into space, and eyes can do a great deal by themselves, take it altogether. So these two sat in the shady garden under the big cedars and looked at one another for want of something better to do. and found the occupation suffice for all their needs. Evey Lancaster was a good woman— by nature, not by art. I mean she was naturally good, and had not become so by trying very hard. She hud been well brought up; she read decent books, and, therefore, only a few, and she meant every word of her share in the marriage service. But alas! and alas! she was a woman, nnd a pretty one, and Edward Vereker was good-looking, and a man, though somewhat unusually moral and pos sessed of a sense of honor. Moreover, tliey both loved David. But David was nway all day, and—l mistrust June and the devil in a green garden! I don't know that anything would have come of it if tragedy had not. stepped in.; Adelphi tragedy, battle, murder and sudden death in one of its ! most appalling forms In the shape of | hydrophobia. | Evey and Edward had been unneces ! sarily energetic that day; perhaps they both uncomfortably realized that sit ; ting under the trees saying nothing was i becoming a little exciting. At any rate, Evey went to the gunroom and brought out a Smith & Wesson, .380. of j her husband's, and they set up a mark | in the meadow outside the garden, and, I having prudently removed the cows. practiced shooting in the cool of the • day. They shot very badly, but they i had to look at the target, and that was comparative safety. They got tired of it at last, nnd she sat down under one 1 of the great oak trees flanking the j garden with the revolver in her lap. while he sauntered ucross the grnss to rearrange the somewhat shaky target. She was near the gate leading to the road, and it was open, for the cows had gone that way to the farmyard, and in June, '93, gates that it was not an im perative necessity to shut remained open for coolness' sake. And here the Adelphi melodrama came in, and through the open gate, too. heralded by "shouts outside"—u strange, heart-sickening clamor coming ! up from the hush of evening distance— hoarse, scared yells and the tramp of j running feet, and confused directions apparently lamed in many voices. And through the open gate a horror rushed, 6 creature with dripping jaws and star ng eyes, a big, black retriever, bear ng in its strange, altered state but lit \le resemblance to the friendly, kindly dog of a few days back; and at its heels a concourse of men armed with sticks ind farm implements, and nny weapon that could be hastily snatched up, but none, alas! with a gun. Evey Lancaster, revolver in hand, with shells still retraining in n couple of chambers, saw the mad dog enter the meadow and rank? straight across it. nit over the sunburnt grass to where Edward Vereker was walking towards the target. She was under the shadows of the hedge, broadside on. as It were, 1 nd the dog never noticed her. i.dovard Vereker turned on h!s heei at the sound of the noise at the gate, and, like Evey, took in the situation at a glance. But he was absolutely un armed —he had not even a stick, and he was alone in the midst of a wide field with death in its foulest form not 30 yards from him. Than Evey Lancaster, from where she knelt on the grass under the hedge, took aim and fired. She was his friend, end knew that his life was at stake, and that quickened the presence of mind and the courage within her. She was made of British stuff, and that steadied the shaking hand and kept the revolver straight; and though the first bulle* went wide, the second car ried true, and the mad dog with a Hid eous yell dropped disabled with a shat tered shoulder not 15 paces from him. Then the crowd dosed in and put an end to everything. Five minutes later Edward Vereker and the woman who had saved him, leaving the excited villagers still clus tered around the horror on the grass, went back into the garden. It was as much as she could do to walk now, for the strain was past, be ing only a woman after all; and the green garden was going round and round in the dim mist that smelt of gun powder and grew blacker at every step. He saw her falter and stop, and was only in time to catch her in his arms to prevent her collapsing on the lawn at bis feet. The earth and sky might wheel and melt into a blackening mist at will, but a pair of strong arms were round her and hex cheek on a protect ing shoulder. Strong emotions make us view the world in a distorted light with our mental as well as our bodily eyes, and there was no David in the green gardeu behind the high hedge; only a brave woman, weak and trembling, with her head on the breast of the man she bad rescued from worse than death—the man who called her "Evey,any darling!" and passionately kissed her. David Lancaster came home in the gloaming half an hour later, with a piece of salmon in a bass bag and the fifth Globe with all the latest cricket in it. Evey, up at her window, white and trembling still, watched with half averted eyes a figure pacing up and down under the cedars —fiaw her hus band' come in at the gate, saw him join the restless figure and tramp up and down in company, and knew the story was being told him. For with the kiss MISS BVBY NOABTBH FIISBD. had come awakening and shame, as it came with the knowledge of good and evil into the First Garden. Some time later the two men came back to the house, and Evey'a preter naturally-sharpened eara heard Edward ascend to his own rooan and David turn down the passage to come to hers. She stood in the middle of the floor in her white gown, her hair slightly ruffled, her face drawn with the stress of emo tion which she had undergone, her hands —those little hands that had done so much —hanging limply by her side. And David opened the door and came in. She could not look at his face, but she understood as he walked across the room to where she stood, and took her straight and unhesitatingly into his arms, that somehow, in spite of all, he knew about the kiss and had for given her. And' the kiss was all she could rememfuer of her past life. When David Lancaster went upstairs to his wife, and took her to his heart without asking for a word of explana tion on her part, he did the one thing that saved hira and her and Edward Vereker from shipwreck. 1 rend a story once, in which the con cluding sentence ran thus: "And so, by a litole thing, was a woman saved from Ihe misfortune of u great pas sion." Edward Vereker, havingdone oil that lay in his power to atone for what had happened, left the house early next morning without seeing Evey again. And her husband shook hands with him si parting. They hat.* not met since, except cas ually in society, and then they meet unci greet as friends. They had fallen a little way together and repented of it; und with repentance comes revulsion of feeling, and with the end of all things that might have been, withered untime 1y in the budding of passion's poppy* flowers. So she was heroic, in that she saved him; and he was noble, in that he con fessed his kiss to her husband. But somehow it seems to tne that the great est of these three was David Lancaster, who heard and understood, and yet, hearing and understanding, forgave.— Black and White. lilir Potato In the Went. Loveland, Col., claims to have raised a potato weighing 82 pounds, whieb is 18 inches long and ten inches across. May Pa retinae 200 Cars. The Santa Fe company has under con sideration the purchase of 100 refrigera tor and 100 furniture cars. FASHIONS SEEN IN THE STORES. Felt hats having a large velvet crown ruche of gauffred silk and ostrich tips. Galloons of metal and silk braid; also of the same with spangles or beads over them. Tiny velvet toques edged with fur and having a buckle and two tall tips in front. Ermine collarettes combined with lace epaulettes and jabot and a bow of velvet. Corset* and petticoats to match of glace taffeta trimmed with black or white lace. Russian blouses of net covered with rows of braid or an embroidery of col ored beads. Cloth oapes braided in white silk cord and with the collar appliqued with heavy lace. Exquisite shades of gray and castor drap d'ete in qualities at $1.25, $1.50 and $2 per yard. Bough knotted cheviots and dark boucle plaids in goods and suits for general wear. Colored silks with a cord strip in black, forming tiny Vandykes in ba yadere effects. Misses' suits of a skirt and jacket of plain cloth, with blouse of bright plaid woolen goods. Black and white checked braid, one half-inch wide, forming a latticework five inches in width. Plaid frocks trimmed with a broad sailor collar of solid serge and a belt and collar of plaid ribbon. Immense hats of three shades of cas tor or gray in felt, velvet and long plumes, with steel ornaments. —Dry Goods Economist. INTERESTING PERSONALITIES. The princesses of the royal family of Itussia are devoted bicyclists, although the czar gave rather a grudging consent to their riding. Mr. D'Ennery, the quiet and kind hearted French writer of fiction, has just been astonished to find that his works contain more than 50 murders, 24 cases of child-stealing, 60 poisoning coses, 32 incendiary fires and many forgeries. Mrs. Craigie's (John Oliver Hobbs) new novel, "The School for Saints," treats of political life in the early years of Victoria's reign. The character of a celebrated political leader of the 'sos is depicted in this volume. Mine. Carlotta YVolter, the celebrated Austrian singer who died recently at Vienna, has left personalty amounting to over 1,000,000 florins, about $500,000. As the deceased was never married and had no children her fortune goes to her brother, llerr Gerhardt Wolter, wlio has hitherto had to keep body und soul to gether on his miserable wages as a journeyman tailor at Crefeld, in Ger many. The greatest heriess in the world is the baby grand duchess Olga. daughter of the czar of Russia. At present she is the richest person in the world and what she will inherit is beyond compu tation. Grand Duchess Olga was born in 1895 and is the elder of two daughters. Her bassinet is studded with precious stones and she has a doll whose dress is ornamented with price less emeralds. Every pin used to fasten her imperial garments is made of pure gold. LATE FANCIES FROM ABROAD. A diamond button fastening a lace bolero is a late fancy. Ileart-shaped ornaments are partic ularly fashionable just now. Silver photograph frames represent lacework mounted upon leather. Elegant gold buckles are now seen on evening wraps and furs, replacing the usual hook at the throat. One of the lo*t things brought out in Puris is a tiny chain and pin for the smallest of empire fans which hungs from the waistline as/the watch used to. Some of the London shops are dis playing toilet and desk articles of Meis sen china—flowers on a white ground— much cheaper than Dresden. Muff chains will prove a popular holi day article, having already appeared among the holiday goods in Paris. Ow ing to the Russian craze furs have been displayed there early, and consequently their accessories are in vogue. Long, narrow bags of light and dark green, brown, tan and cVeam leather are used to hang with handles from the left wrist; in them is placed any neces sary change, memos, railroad tickets und such articles as a shopper or trav eler needs. In precious stones the present fad is for pear-shaped ones. Rings have a pear-shaped pearl, opal, etc., with one or two diamonds on either side. Pearls have risen in price owing to their pop ularity. —Dry Goods Economist. HELPS FOR THE HOUSEWIFE. A teaspoonful of salt mixed with paraffin oil will cause a lamp to burn brightly. Warts will disappear entirely if they are rubbed two or three times a day with oil of cinnamon. This gives no pain whatever, and is simple enough for anyone to try it. Medicine stains may be removed from silver spoons by rubbing them with a rag dipped in sulphuric acid and afterward washing them with soap and boiling water. To clean a black felt hat, first brush the hat free of dust, then add a table spoonful of strong ammonia to five ta blespoonfuls of cold tea, and with this clean the surface by rubbing it thor oughly with a flannel. Lace curtains should never be ironed after washing; tliey only require stretching. Spread an old clean sheet over the carpet and pin it down; over this place the wet curtain, gently pull it straight each way. and stretch it bj pinning it on to the sheet. It should then be left in this position until quite dry, when it will appear equal to new. AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD "CASTORIA," AND " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," AS OUR TRADE MARK. I, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Eyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now —r""" 1 on every bear the facsimile signature of wrapper. This is the original " PITCHER'S CASTORIA," which has been used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is the kind you have always bought s/U —T"" 0,1 ie and has the signature of wrap per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is March 8,1897. ,p. Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in gredients of which even he does not know. "The Kind You Have Always Bought" BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed You. GREAT BARGAINS IN Dry Goods, Groceries and Provisions. Notions, Carpet, Boots and Slu>es, Flour and Feed, Tobacco, Cigars, Tin and Queensware, Wood and Willototoare, Table and Floor Oil (Jloth, Etc. A celebrated brand of XX flour always in stock. Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty. My dlotto is small profits and quick sales. I always have fresh (roods aiul am turning my stock every month. Evory article is guaranteed. AMANDUS OSWALD, N. W. Cor. Centre and Front St*., Freeland. P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director and Embalmer. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. VIENNA : BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. CHOICE BREAD OF ALL KINDS CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKE.- BAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery # Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, witli all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Delivery and supply tea yon* to all parts oj town and surroundings every day. Are You a Roman Catholic Then you should enjoy reading the literary productions of the beFt talent in the Catho lic priesthood and laity (and you know what they CAN do), AS they appear weekly in The Catholic Standard and Times OF PHILADELPHIA, The ablest and most vigorous defender of Catholic-ism. All the news strong cdito- ! rials—a children's department, which IN ele vating and educational. Prizes o tie red | monthly to the little ones. Only S'-LOO per year. The Grandest Premium ever Issued by any paper given to subscribers for 1K!7. Rend for saucple copies and premium circular. J The Catholic Standard and Times Pub'g Co 503-505 Chestnut St. Plilla. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Centre street, Freeland. FINEST LIQUOR, BEER, POUTER, ALE, CIGARS AND TEM PERANCE DRINKS. Beat Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use ■ In time. Sold by druKSlnts. ® ■332BQ2EOBZHI I IWheels, j | (Nityrsr 1 Too! | I STYLES: j£ i 2 Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem. X' f I The Lightest Running Wheels on Earth. ! THE ELDREDGE I I | ....AND.... I THE BELVIDERE. f j 5 Wo always Made Good Sewing Machines! J *5 Why Shouldn't wo Make Good Wheels! 0 % i t i g National Sewing Machine Co., | j 339 Broadway, Factory: k New York. Belvldere, Ills, f POWER! SptA Fifty per j additional < x- The Victor Vapor Engine ma nu fact it red by Thos. Kane A Co., Chicago. Steady speed, easy to start, always re liable, absolutely safe, all parts Inter changeable, adapted for any class of work requiring power. J. D. MYERS, Agt, FREELAND, PA. Call or send for catalogues and prices. Anyone sending n sketch and description may quickly ascertain, free, whether an Invention is probably patentable, ('oiiiinnnieutions strictly conft'lentlal. Oldest agency forsecurtng patents in America. We have a Washington office. Patents taken through Munn A Co. receive | speciul notice in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, ! beautifully Illustrated, largest circulation of I any scientific Journal, weekly, terms $3.00 a year; I TL.OO six months. Specimen copies and LLLND BOOK ON PATENTS sout free. Address MUNN & CO., 301 Broadway, New York. sent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. $ JOUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE' 5 and we can secure patent in less time than those i 5 remote from Washington. j Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip- * Jtion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of 5 5 charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 2 $ A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents,'' with # J cost of same in the U. b. and foreign countries' g sent free. Address, j PATENT OFFICE, WA3HINGTOM.^P^C.^
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers