FREELAND TRIBUNE.' ZiUtl ihel 1888. PUBLISHED EVERV MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIB STREET ABOVE CK.NTHE. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable b> the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION IIATKS: One Tear $1..7 Six Months Four Months > | Two Months *-'• I The date which the subscription is paid to is I on the address label of each paper, the chunyc { of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in ! advance of the present date. Report prompt- ; 1 y to this office whenever paper is not received, j Arrearafes must be paid when subscription is discontinued. FREELAND, PA., MARCH 24, 1808. j A Sort of Hip Lock. Indianapolis railroad officials are ! blue, it is reported, over news received ' from Virginia. Two months ago a mar. fell on the platform of a train about live miles out of that city. His heel caught in a crack, and his bip was dis located by the fall. Three surgeons ex amined bim, including the surgeon, and all declared that the man would be a cripple for life. The man | was paid $2,200 and his lawyer's fees In addition to this he was furnished with a baggage car and transportation | for his lawyer and a nurse to go with i him to Chicago. The railroad officials j felt that they had made a cheap settle- | ment. The other day a man fell on n platform on the Norfolk & Western in Virginia and worked the some old istory of the dislocated hip. 13ut he had lieen seen on the previous day buntiug for a place to catch his heel. A travel ing man was present and recognized hira as the man who had been paid by •the Indianapolis road. An investiga tion revealed that the man was a pro fessional contortionist, and could dislo cate any part of his body without pain, lie has swindled several roads. "New names for old things," re marked a gentlcmam the other day. j "are the order of the day. There arc j from time t-o time heavy rainfalls in this country which in the old time were .characterized as 'downpours,* or some thing of that kind. Now, however, we | hearof'cloudbursts'everywhere. Every time a mill creek overflows or a hay crop gets suddenly spoiled, it is at tributed to a 'cloudburst.' People have j been dying from stoppage of the heart's action since the beginuingof mortality, j •yet it is but recently that we begau to i hear of 'heart failure.' A heated term ! is now produced by a 'hot wave;* all , sickness that the doctors cannot un derstand is attributed to 'Bright's dis- 1 ease,* and living cheaply in summer if called 'going into the coutnry.* The • nomenclature is different, but the old . ;things are the same." A Kentucky exchange says that Miss j Ona Ireland, a young lady living near .Skillman, has a bird the history of j which would grace the columns of our j natural history. Miss Ona lias a very I large arad beautiful flock of turkeys, a j part of which were hatched in the early summer months and strayed away from the house for quite a distance. In their | rambles a young partridge, presumably ' an orphan, fell into the ranks of tkelit 'tle turkeys, and, finding the company ' congenial, forsook the field, stayed in the barnyard and orchard, a*ud never tfor a moment left the turkeys, eating j nod roosting on the limb of a tree with , them. Now the turkeys are grown, as i also is the partridge, ami it is no tin- < usual sight to see the pnrtridge creep- I • ing beneath the flock of turkeys. A California paper states thai Miss Elaine Telfor, a young lady of IS sum- | mers, has become such au adept at bag pipe playing that she is "sought all ' along the coast to give color to the gath erings of the men from Burns' land." j It is explained that Miss'l elfor, though an American by birth as well as resi dence, comes of Scottish stock, her fa ther being an Ayrshire man "who traces his ancestry to Robert Bruce." Miss Telfor is a slightly built maiden, but "she carries herself with the pro verbial statelincss of the piper, and marches to the tunes she plays," She is fairly ablaze with medals bestowed upon her by the admiring Scottish so cieties of California. At Cripple Creek, Colorado's richest mining camp and also the largest gold producing district in the United States, there is rejoicing and wondering over a new discovery. The vein traverses all ' geological and mineralogical theories, for it is a "blanket" or horizontal layer ! which has only earth—no rook—above 1 it, it is richest at the top instead of at 'the bottom, as is the rule with blanket i veins, the covering of earth is so tliiu that it is being removed with plows and ( scrapers, and the ore is being shoveled from the level; no mining is necessary. An inventor has hit upon a method o f putting stone soles on boots and shoes. He mixes a waterproof glue with a suitable quantity of clean quartz saiul, and spreads it over the leather sole used as a foundation. These quartz soles are said to be very flexible and practically indestructible, and to give the foot, u jlrm hold even on the most slippery sur face. WEARY OF HIS CROWN. I King -George Is Tired of Wield ing the Scepter. Were a Grecian Republic at All Pos sible He Wonld Abdicate Only Too Wllllngly In Its Favor. [Copyright. IS9S.] Poor old King lieorge of Greece! Weary and disheurtened, so runs the report, he professes himself willing, I and more than willing, to yield to the i restless discontent of his people, lay | down his thankless office, and give way j to the republic for which so many are clamoring. ' It is not likely that anything of the i sort will be permitted; but that the | luckless though well-intentioned sover eign is thoroughly tired of his job is ! little to be wondered ut. From the days | of Agamemnon until now, the rulers j of Bellas have found their task a trying one. Yet abdication is never easy, and j rarely expedient or safe, j But quite apart from the attitude of ; the powers—who certainly would not j sanction any such radical change in the form of government at present—it is sufficiently obvious to the unprejudiced observer that stable and successful self-government in Greece is still a Jong way off. It is something that the world has never jet seen—popular impres sions to the contrary notwithstanding . —and the world is not likely to see it for many years to come. The Jaws of nature are mightier even than the | "powers," and their manifesto is dis ! tinctly against n republic in Greece, i It is not that the modern Greek is de generate—though corruption of blood I and ages of stultifying oppression have assuredly not increased his capacity in this direction. The Greek of to-day. nevertheless, is quite as truly Greek its the Englishman of to-day is Anglo- Saxon —if anything, rather more so-' and in temperament he is as like his ancestor of the time of Pericles as one magpie is like another. Right there is the rub. He is too much like his re nowned progenitors; for the inability of the ancient Greeks to maintain a republic—or democracy, which here | amounts to the same tiling-—was as ' marked as was their zeal for the ex periment. ' That Greece was never united under 1 any form of government except vir tual despotism, usually foreign, may be passed by—though the fact is -ignili ; -ant. On a more limited seal.*, how •vcr, the pet experiment was tried again and again wit.h unabated en thusiusni. but with invariable collapse. E\en Athens, the case usually eited. only succeeded in convincing nearly all political philosophers for a period of about 2.0W) tears that democracy v as j not a feasible form of government: that it was false in theory and self-de structive in practice. It was left to j Vniorica. indeed, to nro\e the contrary. It has hcen customary to attribute | the failure of free institutions in Greece—for failure it was, despite j leiningly favorable conditions and j brilliant beginnings to rampant dema- I gogues and unscrupulous usurpers; | but this is fallacious. Where tlx- -oil | is fit \\ceils arc sure to spring up: tin* ' >ecd is everywhere. It is also pointed j out hv eager apologists that Greece finally succumbed to a foreign power J and superior force; but a united Greek I ; republic, organized as the English, for instance, might have organized it, would easily have anticipated tbeeon , quests of Alexander and dominat-d the j known world. IV rieles really planned no less, but even lie was unable to | carry out this great project. The fault was in the people themselves; ami the , same fault lies in the way of their sue , ress to-day. What, then, is tills persistant and ap parently incurable national liefeel? I What was it that pre* ruled the ino-t ntclHgent and spirited people .if an tiquity. with n line of buttle at ight ••f which most of their enemies simpiv turned and ran. from reaping the nnt J urnl fruits of thc>r unquestioned , prowess—and that has made their de- J sc end ants slaves of the Turk and a play thing of the powers? Without doubt it i was the result of a temperament pecul- j inrlv unstable, factious and emotional; I but this only leads to another ques- i tioa. How did it come about that they i were cursed with such a temperament? For, remember, they were of the same essential stock as the Romans of old j and the English of to-day—\bot.h i*e- j mnrkahlc for dogged perseverance and ! organizing power. The problem is nn interesting one, and the writer lias a theory. It will be observed that nearly nil the inhabitants of the peninsulas and islands of southern Europe exhibit QUEEN OLGA. rmich the same temperament—vivn cious, volatile, with a marked inapti tude for stable government. The Ro mans may at first seem to be an ex ception, but they—like the Macedo nians in their relation to Greece—be longed to the upper rather I ban the lower part of the peninsula. The traits in question are very apparent in the modern Italians ami Sicilians, in the Spanish and oven in the French. The Irish, too —though, like the Greeks, they rank among the bravest, bright est and most patriotic peoples the world has known—have experienced a similar difficulty in maintaining their ! independence. As in the case of old j v Melius, a wcli-organized'and united Ire land would have been impregnable, but these were conditions that could not be secured. Hchind all this lie some curious facts. A little preliminary explanation, however, is necessary. Like most other European peoples, the Greeks were fundamentally of the so-called Aryan stock; but the Greek traits above described are very un- Arynn. These Aryans—who are sup posed to have originated in central Asia—were n race of blue-eyed blonds, of unusual strength and stature, rather stolid in temperament, but endowed i with a fierce energy and grim tenacity i of purpose that made them irresistible. They conceived that their special mis sion was to conquer the world; and they set about it promptly, with ex traordinary success. When, in pursu ance of this iden, they began to over run Europe—chiefly in prehistoric times—they found there, so ethnolo gists tell us, a comparatively short, bru nette race, called, rather arbitrarily, Iberians. These the invaders part Iv ex terminated and partly drove before them, forcing them to the coast, and probably to some extent across to (lie nearer islands. Naturally lite fugitives were massed in largest numbers at the extremities of the great peninsulas, where the remnant, as the rage for slaughter relaxed, wax gradually ab sorbed. This merging of races, it is believed, accounts for the otherwise unaccountable variations in stature and complexion so noticeable in Eu rope to-day. and for the relative pre dominance of the brunette type in the south' ru port ion. Mut it accounts for something more. There is much reason to suspr*t that the Iberians are chief! v responsible for the excessively emotional and unstable temperament "hnracterislie of the ro f ions where physical indicat if us, and j in sonic degree historical evidence, I j show that the intermixture of blond J j was greatest. Further to the norlh, ! where the original population seems to j have been more scanty and was swept ! i out more completely, tHe Aryan trails, i i both for better and for worse, persist j in comparative purity. ! For, after all, this intermarriage of j races, provided the differences are not ; too fundamental, is no unqualified evil. | ! Indeed, in the long run, through na ture's happy faculty of selecting and perpetuating what is most tit, the re sult is often the development of n type much superior to any of its elements a fact full of promise to America, where all the nations of Europe are so rapidly blending. Even the English man would not have gained the marked superiority he shows as compared with his overpraised and really rather dolt ish Saxon forbears, had it not been for a repeated infusion of foreign blood— which was most extensive in those up per ranks where the improvement is most manifest. The boasted English yeoman, it must be confessed. Is a too unmitigated Saxon; he is rather dolt ish still. The peoples of southern Eu rope, doubtless, got an overdose of Iberian blood; but what tliey lost in stability the}* gained in vivacity and cleverness. But here is the root of the weakness of the Greeks. They were excessively Iberianized; and while this gave them a great liveliness and quickness of per ception and a marvelous aptitude for things artistic, it has made them mere impetuous and impatient children in all matters political. Sucli they were in classic times, and such they are to j day. As Athens plunged headlong into tlie Pelopennesian war and the Sicilian expedition centuries ago, so last year she fatuously defied the powers, in vaded Crete and bearded the Turk in both cases with extravagant expecta j lions and a most disastrous conclu . sion. The proceedings of lier delibera tive assemblies, ancient or modern, no I matter what eloquence was displayed, j have always liad a curious trngi-comie quality; you feel that you are dealing with a nation of schoolboys. Even in their physical characteristics the Iberian strain is easily traced. The j average stature in Greece was below j the pure Aryan standard. Golden locks are found chiefly on the pages of the poets, adorning the heads of sun gods and mythical heroes of similar solar origin. In short, the defect that makes a j Greek republic an opera bouffe proposl- j tion is racial. What the Greek was he , still is—with omissions: time has not mended matters thus far. And as the ! weakness is constitutional, dating back j several millenniums of years, it will probably require many generations to i eradicate it. Till then King George j and bis heirs had better stick to their j uneasy throne, lest some worse thing befall. DAVIS TURNER. | SONG OF CAGED BIRDS. j It l.onen It* SwrpOien Apnri from It* i Association*. I have never yet seen a ('aged bird that I wanted at least, not on account i of its song nor a. wild flower that I j desired to transfer to my garden. A caged skylark will sing its song sitting j on a bit of turf in the bottom of the I cage; but you want to stop your ears, it ; is so harsh and sibilant and penetrat ! ing. But up there against tlie morning skv, and above the wide expanse of fields, wliat delight we have in it! It is not the concord of sweet sounds; it is the soaring spirit of gladness and ecstasy raining down upon us from J "heaven's gate." Then, to the time and the place, if one could only acid the as j soeiution. or bear the bird through the ; vista of the years, the song touched with the magic of youthful memories! A number of years ago n friend in England sent me a score of skylarks in a cage. I gave tliem their liberty in a I field near my place. They drifted awav. and I never heard from them or saw llicm again. But one Sunday a Scotch man from a neighboring city called upon me. and declared with visible ex citement that on his way along the road lie bad heard a skylark, lie was not dreaming; lie knew it was a skylark, though he had not heard one since he had left the banks of the Boon, a quar ter of a century or more before. What pleasure it gave him! How much more the song meant to him that it would have meant to me! For the moment he was on his native heath again. Then 1 tohl hi in about the larks I had lib erated, and be seemed to enjoy it all over again with renewed appreciation. Many years ago some skylarks were ! liberated on l.ong Island, and they be | came established there, and inny now | occasionally be heard in certain local ities. One summer day a friend of mine was out there observing them; n lark I was soaring and singing in the sky j above him. An old Irishman come along, and suddenly stopped as if trnns fixed to the spot; a look of mingled de : light and incredulity came into his face, i Was lie indeed hearing the bird of his i youth? lie took off his hat. turned his I face skyward, and with moving lips and j streaming eyes stood a long time rc- ; ! carding the bird. "Ah." my friend i i thought, "if I eouhl only hear that song with his cars!" How it brought back his youth and all those long-gone days on his native hills! The power of bird- j songs over us is so much a matter of as sociation. Hence it is that every trav eler to other countries finds the feath ered songsters of less merit than those j he left behind. The traveler does not j bear the birds in t lie same receptive, un- 1 critical frame of mind as does the native; j they are not in the same way the voices I , of the place and the season.—John ! Burroughs, in Century. I item ln rrasneri. "I thought." said the man uho had i been burned out, "that you told me. < this wiir n tire proof safe.** "Sj it is," replied the traveling sales man. "If anybody doubts that you | have had a fire, you can point to that | j lafe and prove it immediately."- Wash : fngtou .Sar. A SEEKER OF CHARITY. [Written for This Taper.] ; COUNTY AGFNT. ; The sign stood out prominently on the door of a ramshackle old building before which was a long line of poverty-stricken people each with a basket on their arm. To me, untutored in the ways of a great city as 1 was, the sign was meaningless at tlie time, but the long line of people was one ot the sights of the city, and 1 was in the city to see all that I could iu the short space of a few days. The savings of an entire summer's work was being devoted to this trip to the city ihut I might see something of the wonders of which I had heard and read so much. 1 had looked at the tall buildings, at the ceaseless stream of humanity on the busi ness streets, had visited the public parks covered with a white mantle of snow; had even squandered tin- half of a good dollar in attending the theater, securing for that sum a gallery seat, but of all the wonderful sights I bad seen that long line of suffering humanity appealed to mc most. I was born and raised on u farm where old clothes were valued as one of the neces sities of our working days, but in all my farm experience 1 had never seen such an ar ray of rags as this. Every garment seemed lo be in the same state of collapse, all were worn, faded and dirty. All, 1 say, but this I must retract and make it all but one. There near the center of the line was a young girl whose clothing was at least clean. The difference between her apparel and that of the others in the line was so marked that anyone would have noticed it. While her dress was far from new it was HO neatly patched and so clean that it caught the eye at once. It would be hard to imagine how that one clean dress appealed to me. It seemed an oasis in a desert of tilth, one bright ray of light in a dark sky. The girl herself pre sented the same hungry, frozen appearance shown by her companions. But aside from this she appeared cliiforeut. She was out ot place, and her condition appealed lo me strongly. As I stepped nearer 1 found .she was cry ing, and her tears touched my boyish coun try heart. I fell into a vacancy in the long line beside her and asked her the meaning of so many poor people, and who and what was the "county agent.'' At first she did not answer me, but I repeated my ques tions. "It means that these people arc hungry and cold, and the 'county agent' is their only hope of assistance," she said. "We are the county poor, or at least so much of it as lives in this neighborhood." At my exclamation of surprise she even ventured a faint smile. "Arc you a stranger here? From the country, I suspect," she added. "Why do you think from the country?" I "Because in the country we were never familiar with such sights as these." "And are you also from the country?" "Yes; six months ago." My heart had gone out to that giil as to a sister in distress, and before she had reached the entrance to the building where she was to solicit charity from the county I had induced her to accept an offering from inc. To it would lessen the time I could stay in the city, but it would increase the pleasure of my visit. As we left the line of people arid walked away towards the store she told me her story. Iler father had been a farmer in a small way, and on a rented farm, near -t village 1IH) miles from the city. But he hail not prospered as lie thought he should, ami so came to the city with his wife and daugh tcr to find work that would be mo.i remunerative than that of the farm. lie was untrained iu the ways of the city, lie had nothing iu the way of a trade. There was nothing for him to do, nothing that h could do, unless it was of the cheapest kind of manual labor, and even this he could find but little of. Their little store of liionej ran swiftly away. They moved from the pleasant little cottage to a tenement hoinc and then from three rooms into two. The mother sickened and died, lier trouble was a broken heart and starvation. The fa titer finally began drinking and what little be did earn went for liquor. And now there was nothing left but public charity. The girl was too frail ns a result of the life she had for the past six months to earn her own way where hard work was required, and not tilted for a place iu the stores. It took many questions before 1 had the full slot'}, but my country manners were too much in evidence for her to mistrust nie for other than 1 represented myself to be, ai d she hud been so long without fiicruk ihut I really think it did her good to find, some one who would sympathize with lieu Ever since her mother's death she had Ik-en practically alone in a great city, and in a section of it where friendships are almost unknown and confidences seldom exchanged. Iler neighbors were too busy lighting the hard buttle of life to give any time to her. Before she had finished making her few simple purchases I had made up my mind as lo what I would do. My mother hud never been blessed with a daughter, lier four children were all sons, of whom 1 was the oldest. I would sacrifice the balauce of my hard earned vacation and she should go home with me. I hud no doubt of the wel come she would receive; when my mother heard hei pitiful story, she would give her the place cf a daughter in our home. Just how I told her oil this 1 hardly know, but she refused. She must remem ber her lather, she said, even though she was to starve for her devotion. And then I hunted up her father and for tunately found liiin sober, a condition he ad mitted he had not been iu for two weeks be lore. I tohl him who 1 was uud what 1 wanted to do for his daughter. At first he would not consent to her leaving him, but my arguments finally prevailed. He tohl lier to go and find a pleasant home if possible, "and," he added, "I shall leave iiiis cursed city also and seek for work in the country again where the demon of drink will not assail me. Go, daughter, and 1 promise you that wo shall meet again." t It was more than half in fear that she at .oiupitiiiod me home, but lier fears proved gioiitidless, for no wander Jig duuglilei could hue received a wanner welcome than -he received from my mother when 1 had told her story. My tiip to the city occurred several years ago. 1 have never had any desire to make another. The friendship with the half starved, ha If-frozen girl which began in flout of the "county agent's" office in a great; city cudcd in our marriage. We still live on the farm, and \ r expect to leave it. i lie sight o! tli.il long line of people, MI tid ing for the necessities of lite, is a lesson 1 shall iiovu loigct. My win h father found work in th'ecnun tr\ a,lei a short lime, and wood have glad l\ bad his dnughtci come to liiin. but lie did not insist, and she did not go To-day lie is with c* in our country home, a noble man God bless 11 e f.ti ms. WUIQifT A. PATTERSON. 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. 1, DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "PITCHER'S CASTORIA," the same that has borne and does now y/fTFTZT" on emri J 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 y/tfTTTTZf" on e 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 President. j March 8,1897. Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you I (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in gredients of which even he does not know. "The Kind Yon Have Always Bought" BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed You. DePIEKRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Street*, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. Oibi on, Dougherty, Kaufor Club, Roaenbluth's Velvet, of which we h ve EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumm's Extra Dry Chanipagnc, Hcinosey llrandy, Blackberry, Giua, Wines, Clurets, Cordiaia, Etc. Imported and Domestic, Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE. Ham. and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines. Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS, j Ballentine and Hazleton beer on tap. j Baths, Hot or Cold. 25 Cents. P. F. McNULTY, FUNERAL DIRECTOR AND L^^^NIER. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre afreet. Freehold. {WANTED! 11l 5000 CORDS I POPLAR ! WOOD I > W. C. HAMILTON 4fc SONS, I I ] ( Wm. Pen a P. 0., Montgomery Co., Pa. J [ i of every description executed at short notice by the Tribune Company. ) Estimates furnished promptly on \ ail classn. of work. Samples'froa. ! FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Centre street, Frcclnnd. FIN KM' LIQUOR, BEER, POUTER, ALE, CIGARS AND TEM- DERANGE BRINKS. G. HORACK, Baker & Confectioner. ~Wholnmtle and lietail. CENTUM STREET, FEEKLAND. ' FCIPSRT K GOU:A Syrup. Taste* Good. Use Pfl ,x hi tine. Sold by druggist*. In i \ mis*mn2imEEs& | j Quality Too! STYLES: L | Ladies', Genllemeus & Tar.dein. | < J The Lightest Jiuuniug Wheels ou liarth. j.' || THE ELDREDGE | j 1 ....AND.... B 1 THE BELVSOERE. I h d B We always Made Good Sowing Machines! Jf % Why Shouldn't we Mske Good Wheels I W © fe : J National Sewing Machine Co., fe j 3'9 Broadway, factory: f> ; New York. fclvidcrc, Els. W VIENNA: BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH. Prop. Centro Btreet. Freeland. ! CHOICE BREAD OK ALL KINDS, | CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. \ FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES RAKED TO ORDER Confectionery it Ice Cream I supplied to halls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. I Deliver!/ and mipply wagon* to all part* o] j town and tuirrminding every day. experience. TRADE MARKS* DESICNB, COPYRIGHTS AC, Anyone sending n sketch and description mar quickly ascertain, free, whether an Invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly I conlideutlal. Oldest agency for securing patents I in America. We have a Washington office. Patents taken through Miimi & Go. receive special notice In the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of any sclenUfloJournnl, weekly,termsf3.no a your; f1.50 six mouths. Specimen copie.s and 11A.NU BOOK ON PATENTS sent free. Address MUNN 8L CO., 3L llruudtvuv. New York. ivc it ,and rrade-Marki obtained andallPat-? #cnt business conducted for MODERATE FEES. # ? OUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U.S. PATENT OFFICE? 2and we cau secure patent in less time than those? Ficmotefrom Washington. * Send tnodcl, drawing or photo., with deserip- # Jtion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of? icharge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. 2 * A PAMPHLET, 'How to Obtain Patents," with J icoat of same in the U. S. and foreign countries? 5 sent free. Address, :C. A.SftIOW&CoJ OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON. D C. J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers