FREELAND TRIBUNE. 1 Zita'olUhtl ISBB. PUBLISHBI) EVERY , MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY THK TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited. OFFICE: MAIX STREET ABOVE CENTRE. Make all money order*, check*, etc., payable to the Tribune Printing Company, Limited. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year Six Months V;" Four Months. 30 Two Mont lis The date which tho subscription is paid to is on the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes a receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in ; advance of the present dute. Report prompt- I ly to this office whenever paper is not received. ' Arrearages must be paid when subscription i is discontinued. FREELAND. PA., APRIL 4, 1808. Money Wasted. There are a great many persons in this ! country who squander money on j postage stamps and postal cards who | might a great deal better save it. If it j were not for such parsons, however, | Uncle Sam's postal revenues would lie greatly reduced, so it is just as well, perhaps, that things arc us they are. One form of letter writing is especially j prevalent in rural communities. It is practiced by people who have no large j business interests, but who love to re- ; ceive mail. These people make a prac tice of sending for samples, catalogues | and prospectuses. Whenever they we t an advertisement "Samples free by j mail," they write for a sample. They j send their names to directories and are j classed as "agents," and almost any j day the "agent" can go to the post of- j lice and get a bulky catalogue from j some concern which manufactures two- I dollar revolvers and three-dollar gold j watches. The young man who has a ! passion for answering advertisements ! loves to be seen coming from the post office with an armload of mail. The fact j that he is in correspondence with so many important business houses seems to give liiin a sort of standing, or at least he fancies so. At any rate he helps to increase the revenues of the postal de- j pertinent* During the early part of a dinner re cently given in Washington, reports an exchange of that city, the guest of honor, a young married woman who is 1 the proud mother of two very small j boys, suddenly paused, with a startled j look, in the midst of an animated con versation with her host, and cried: ! "There, if I didn't forget those bo\ s j again! Have you a telephone in the ; house and may 1 use it?'' Iler host j conducted her to the telephone, and ' presently she returned "I do hope you will pardon me," she said, "but you sec, I always have Georgie and Eddie say their prayers to me before they go to j sleep, in the hurry of get ting off I for- j got it to-night, so 1 have just called up ■ their nurse. She brought the children ! to the 'phone, and they have just said ! their prayers over the wire, so my mind j is relieved." The very unusual seme of a man j walking through the street with a two- : bushel meal sack full of silver dollars was witnessed at Lexington, Ivy., a few i days ago. Just before the close of ; banking hours two men, apparently ; good old farmers, walked into the Phoenix national bank, oneof them car- i rylng the sack. They told Cashier Wal ler Rhodes that they wanted to make a deposit, which he, knowing the men to be citizens of the country, from near .lack's Creek, accepted. They untied the bag and counted out a sum which looked to be about $3,000, every piece of which was a shining silver "plunk." A part of the money was carefully wrapped in paper packages, S2O in each, i The scent of these packages clearly indicated that the money had been bur- j led beneath the earth. The supreme court of Illinois has handed down an opinion deciding that the act of breaking into a henhouse and stealing chickens is burglary. The de cision was in the case of Hillock vs. The People. Gil lock was tried in the circuit court of Sungamon county for burglary and larceny, the offense con sisting of breaking into n henhouse and stealing chickens therefrom. The case w as taken to the supreme court, which decided that breaking into a henhouse did not constitute burglary. A rehear- I ing, however, was afterward granted, ! and the court now reverses itself. Un- ; der this decision Glllock will have to serve time in the penitentiary, accord ing to the sentence of the lower court. An Emporia (Kan.) man heard a dis turbance in the night and on got!ingup to see what was the matter found his bulldog engaged in a desperate strug gle with a jack rabbit. Concluding that it was dangerous to interfere, he went back into the house and shut the door, in a short tirue the outside struggle ceased, and looking up he was sur prised to see a jack rabbit looking in over the transom of the frontdoor. In the morning he went out and found the. bulldog dead in the front yard, with marks of rabbit tccHi all over his per son, bearing mute testimony to his brave and drspcrutr struggle. CASTOHIA. STONE MOUNTAIN LION. Striking Monument F.reeled l>y A.v j tore In Jicw Mexico. In the mountainous valley of the San ta Fc river in New Mexico there stands a huge rock known in the country i around as "The Monument." It towers , hundreds of feet above the bottom of the valley and even lifts its head far up ward from the top of the ridge upon which it rests. A person going up the j valley is struck with its striking resem blance to some huge animal not unlike an Egyptian sphinx, standing upright , and gazing out across the valley to the ' mountains opposite. But it is not a sphinx; the Indians \ who once owned the country have their j WHERE THE STONE LION STANDS. own explanation us to how it came there. Far back in the time of their j grandfathers the mountain lion, who j was one of their gods, came out of the west, running toward the rising sun. I For days and days he ran. and every I time liis feet struck the earth they left a valley, and every time he. brent lied ! forests were uprooted before him. I And at last when he had run for many ! days he slopped to rest, curling liis hind legs under him and nodding just us at;,) ! giant cat would do. lie was so tired that he slept a longtime, and while he was sleeping along came the greatest ; of all Indian hunters and -hot him wit h j liis bow and flint-tipped arrow. His | blood flowed in such quantities that it wore the deep valley in the plain where j the Santa Fc river now runs. Doing a ! god, the great mountain lion did not ! fall down, and by and by he turned to [ stone, and now he stands guard over 1 he ! j valley. And tlie fur on his legs and sides I : is now the shaggy chaparral. A man standing on the neck of the ' I stone lion is hardly more than a speck, j and the head of Hie great creature tow | ers, bold and forbidding, scores of feet j above him. Only one person ever : climbed to the summit. That was a lit - ; tie Mexican shepherd named Juan Gon ' /.ales, who was watching his flocks near ' the base of the stone lion. One day be ' clambered up the steep sides to the i very top, but when he started down ' he found himself slipping and slipping. , j and it was only by an effort that he could dig his toes into a crevice and hold ] i fast. For a time he shouted for help. ' j and he was fast growing weak when ! j some neighboring ranchers saw him j | and came with ropes and poles and got ! j him safely down. Since that time no j one has tried the dangerous ascent.— i C hicago Record. I'M I 11 ca 1 a Snn|lcioii. Pat wanted to go from Washington ! to Norfolk, and excited the sympathy j j of a ship master, who agreed to let him \ | work his passage. Pat was densely ig- j norant of maritime affairs, but. while , going down Chesapeake bay, with a I fair wind and plenty of sea-room, lie ! was put on the lookout. He had r.ot been there tun minutes, when he s;..ig out: "Ah, captain, there's something out here foreninst the boat.!" "What is it?" asked the captain, as the light* of an approaching steamer became vis ible. "I really can't say, sir," replied Pat; "but I suahpcct it's a drugstore. There's a red and n green light!" Ife was immediately removed and ordered j to go down and help the cook. Kntrrrd School nl Fifty. j In Nebraska there is a man aged 52 who is going to school with his yi unger children. He is not by any means il literate. having a fair education aincd in his youth, but lie says that he he sires to be up with the times, so has en tered school "ignin. It is a humorous sight, to a stranger, but the tcnehcrand I the other small pupils lake it with per < feet gravity. ; The princess of Wales i* never con tent unless her rooms are one mass of flowers, so much does she love them. Every table in her rooms bears- it.-, mass of bloom, and the palms and greenery at Sandringham are a wonder tn be hold. She invariably wears a knot of violets or some other small flower tucked Into her belt. .;-j ~U',: 1 i fV v' X A R AY.' LITTLL-CIBL-S^rK-y-" is/ t i i 17 lightning awful bad last night " fr-v ! The flash was oil about. I jjl / ' But offer while There come the ram ■ u 1 And put the liflhtninp oul } 0 A'XlYtr/d ■ ► ANIMALS AS MODELS. Experience* of nn Artiwt In Sketching front l.lfe. I "Leaves from the Sketch-Cook of un 'Animal-Artist,* " is an article by Mere- ! dith Nugent in St. Nicholas, ilr. N'u- j gent says: There was an elephant in the Jardin- I lies-Plantes that would not pose unless j I he were paid for it, and paid in ad- I ! vanee. Then he took payment in buns j and pic, but if these were not forth- j I coming he would deliberately walk to I tlie farther end of the inclosure and j turn his buck. The only way to get i I a drawing of this big fellow was to j engage some one to feed hi in mean- ' while. I In the same gardens I saw an un usually interesting sight one morning A little sun-bear with a large marrow bone in his shaggy paws was resorting to nil sorts of bear devices to get the sweet marrow. Suddenly ho lay down on his hack, placed one end of the bone in his jaws, and with his hind paws tipped the other end of the bone so high up that Hie choice morsel slipped into his mouth. If the animal could I I only have understood the shouts of ap- I proval that greeted this performance. I think it would have turned his head. In ' one of the sketches you will see how j ! this feat was accomplished, i As a rule I tind the models very good j natured. True, they keep a sharp eye ! on me for the first few days but after ' that are generally quite friendly. Of \ j course, there are some parts of the business they do not like. The oriole ! never was happy when I held him in i my hand for close inspection, but a i beautiful cat which rebelled when I j ' first placed her in a bird-cage—to keep j her in front of me—grew so fond of be ing there, that after I finished my draw ings she cried and cried to be put back into the cage. Intense curiosity is the great char- j ncteristic of animals when in the studio. , I hey are as much interested in you and 1 the surroundings as you are in lliem. . This is especially the case with birds. ; Leave the studio but a few minutes, ! and these two-legged fellows are hop- j ping into everything. Of course they j inspect the paper on which you have ' been drawing, and the paints, and the brushes, and occasionally vary these : proceedings by taking a batli in the ! water-bowl. SOAP BUBBLE SHOW. \ >*♦ Tr!'k I'll n f 1* \l v* n > * I'n r./.l In u In Ohncrvern. i The most interesting trick is thesonp ! bubble one. To perform this two cork ' figures must be made. They can "oe ! colored with bright paint. Fasten them with wire to a small cork stand. The soap bubble mixture is important j to prepare. For it you must shave a j quantity of castilc soap, perhaps half | ! ' S< >AP BI BBLE Ql ADRILLE. a teacup, and add to it a fourth of the I | quantity of glycerin. Melt the soap in t j warm water before adding tlie glycerin. j ; This should make perhaps a pint of I heavy, soapy water. Test the bubbles, j and if you cannot blow them as large ! as the moon the mixture is not properly i i mixed. Soap bubble exhibitors ofton ; blow bubbles as large as three and ! ! four feet in diameter by the use of this mixture. lake a short strip of wood (a foot ! rule will do) and drive a small nail into j each end. Then stretch a thin string, j or, better still, a piece of wire, from one nail to the other, and place a bridge i under it so as to form a primitive mil- j sieal instrument. Next nail to one end of the strip of wood the lid of a tin in ' such a mariner (hat it touches the string I or wire, and place the tig lire inside the ' Hd after moistening it well with soap ' and water. Now take a straw and blow : a bubble in Hie lid and then touch the I string gently. The vibration of the In I - ' ter will then be communicated to the • lid, and ilie figures will dance inside j the bubble. A beautiful optical effect is thus ob tained. and the delight of Ihe audience 1 is such that the bubble performer is kept busy all the evening with fresh j creations. There are many variations ] of the soap bubble trick possible, and j which will readily suggest themselves —t ineinnati Enquirer. Itirtli Custom in ,1 ii |xi ii. At the birth of a Japanese baby a tree is planted which must remain untouched till the marriage of the child. When that hour arrives the tree is cut down ' and a skilled cabinetmaker transforms i the wood into furniture, which is nl ways cherished by Ibe young couple as tho most beautiful of ornaments ir j the house. | A PENNSYLVANIA ISEAK. i Tom Wilnirtli, 18 years old and in the TO class at Colunlbin, had been studying pi c tv hard —carrying too big a load, his lather said -and was having trouble with his eyes. So he was told that he must give them per fect rest for a week, not even to look in a book all that time, and Tom's father tol l him that to be far away from temptation he had better run over to Monroe county, T\i., and pay a visit to his uncle Tom, who still lived on the old place, about three miles I north of the village of fresco, j "You had lietter take your gun along, | tflo, Tom. You may get a day or two of good shooting at this Reason." j "Oh, pshaw! Pop," he Raid, after reflect- I ing a moment. "There's no shooting over ' there. I'll wait till next summer and go up into Canada, where I can get big game." "You may be right, Tom," was the re ply. 4 T haven't been over there for a good many years, but the game there was big enough sometimes when I was a boy. I shot a hear once not a mile from our house, and there were deer in plenty then, too." "Bear! Why, it isn't more than three or j four hours from here!" | "Well, I don't suppose there really are any so close to New York city now, but I there were then." | Tom finally decided to take his gun, after all, and was very glad when he saw how in terested his cousin Laura was in it. "Oli! Cousin Tom, you'll let mc go with j you, won't you? I've l>ceti with papa some I limes, and once over by Canadensis we shot | a big buck with antlers." i "We'll g< to-morrow!" he said, gayly. j "Maybe we'll bring home a bear." | They started early next morning. It was i late in February and there was a good deal | of snow on the hills, but both were well ! clad and booted for the occasion and full of ' the'joy of youth. By and by they came to a , 50-foot precipice that overhung a larger i brook than any they had crossed. Thev j looked over, but there was so much brush, ' young evergreens and the like growing out from the side of the cliff that they could barely get a glimpse of the frozen surface j below. i "Oh, Tom, look there!" j Ho turned in the direction she pointed. Then ho started violently, for only a few ! feet away, sitting upright on its haunches and regarding them with wonder, was a huge black bear, i For u moment he even forgot that he held 1 a gun iu his hand. Then he noticed a little 1 white spot on the bear's breast that seemed made purposely for a mark. "Hun, Laura! I may not kill him first lire!" He spoke softly, as he dropped on his ; knee and took careful aim. Perhaps Tom's hand trembled a little, or ; perhaps his overworked eyes were, not quite dear. Whatever it was, the two barrels that he let go at the white mark on the 1 bear's breast did not lind at once the vilal { spot. As the gun cracked Tom saw the big fellow stagger u step backward, then with . a snarl drop on all fours and come straight toward him. He must run for it, too, he thought, and try to load as lie ran. Then, as he turned, he saw that Laura had waited to see the shot. ' "Hun! Hun!" lie cried. | The girl wheeled to obey. As sin- did so j she tripped iu u mass of wuesTind fell hend i long. There was no time for reflection. ' '! om saw t hat he must face the bear ami give Laura a chance to recover and get away. He whirled and, seizing the gun by the bar iel, dealt the brute a heavy blow just as it was rising to its haunches. The blow stuuued his opponent an 1 brought him down, but only for a moment. J!e rose with a fierce growl and was upon Tom before he could swing his gun again. ' If Tom had felt some twinges of fear al first ' they were gone now. In the excitement til' the struggle everything else was forgotten, j He seized the big black wrestler by the throat and with a skillful movement tripped him. j Down they went, clinching as they fell, 1 and rolling over and over in the snow. It j was Tom's idea to free himself from the ! bear, seize bis gun and fly. But Bruin j knew his own game. He was a hugger, and : he hugged Toil) to his breast like a long lost son. Presently Torn heard Laura's voice calling: "Tom! Tom! You'll go over the cliff! I Oh, Tom!" And then Tom seemed to feel the earth sink from under them and felt himself shooting downward, still erusheu tightly in the bear's arms, lb? was under neath at first, but a second later thr\ | crashed through a mass of evorgrern i houghs and turned. Then it seemed to Tom I that they kept falling and crashing forever. | almost, and suddenly there was a great j shock and splitting noise and he felt cold ] water rise about his arms and legs and run j liov. ii his hack. Tom realized that they hail fallen into the 1 brook and would probably drown together, j Then all at once the hear relaxed his hold. | freeing himself, the hoy staggered to his I feet and found himself in three feet of \va i lev with broken ice all around and a big mo j t 'unless black hear lying beside him. He waded to the bit of bank at the foot I of the cliff and sat down. He was a good : deal shaken up, but did not feel otherwi-c j hint. The hour falling underneath had i saved him. He coughed a little and blew Bomo water out of his nose. "Tom! Tom! are you there?" It was | Laura calling from above. Tom laughed weakly. I "Oli, yrs, 'he answered. "We gut here all | right. The heal* seems a little contused, hut , I'm pretty well, thank you." 1 Then suddenly reaction set in and he be gan to laugh immoderately. Laura above • caught the spirit of it and joined in. "Oh, Tom," she shouted, "you don't know how funny you and the bear looked hugging j each other." "Conic down here and I'll hug you, too, j I for that!" he shouted back. "All right! Here 1 eoine!'* ! Tom looked up quickly. Laura had seized | a slender sapling that grew over the edge of 1 1 the cliff and, swinging herself to a mass of cedars below, she dropped from one to the other, and catching in the thick yielding 1 brandies she half fell and half swung hersci. to the nc \i, and so on until, pant ing, breath- 1 less and flushed, she dropped on her feet at ' lotus side. Me stared at her a moment in "Well, you are a brick!" lie said at I'.st and gave her a rousing kiss. Ihe bear was quite dead. Whether from the tail or the bullets Tom coii!d not toll. I hey leii him iu the water and hurried up the'el iff by a roundabout way tog.'t Tom's ' gun. I lien they hastened home, and Tom , got dry ( lollies and a man and team and .went back. The bear lay where they had left liiin. It was one of the largest, that had been killed in t hat soclion for years mnj Tom piesented the skin to Ins crouain Laura. But she. insisted oil his tuk:ug it home to show, snyiug that maybe she would claim it again, some day. When t"tii s father >;pv it and heard Ibe rtorv lie looked at 'lorn proudly. Then lie "W HI, there dors to be nmi pretty tug game up ( resco wa.\. after all." " I hat's light," said loin, "and the I rar est nnd prettiest girl in the wcr'd."- Albert Bigclow Puiuc, in N. \. Herald. can nee for rurniir. Oh, birds! yours Is a sorry lot— For If you 'scape the cats The women-folks will have you shot To trim their Sunday hats. —L. A. W. Bulletin. GETTING EVEN. "Mrs. Cat ford wants me to play your accompaniment, dear." "Does rbe? I didn't know she hated me so much as that."—Ally Sloper. A Slippcr from S!io]>p*rKv!lle. Aggie—Why, Ft hid! You are going ;1 readfuMy out of your way. You eiiu mutch that ribbon rig-lit across the street. Ktlu'l—Yes. I know: but let us try in nil the other stores first, Judge. 111 m sinhm. Teller—Wlmt an egotistical fellow Puffing-ton is! lie is always bragging ii bout being one in a thousand. (Iriinshaw -He is right about it ! lie's one of Ihe ciphers. N. Y. Journal. \ Metamorphosis, Sambo Johnson (sternly) Hon' \' ' know I lol' yo* not t' gq srviinniin* wid no white-trash, cliillun, eh? Sanilio Johnson, Jr. - Hut he wan' white befo' he went in.—Judge. 1,,,. Safer. Mrs. Johnson—Ain't it terrible, de j sickness tint's goin'around nowadays? I Mrs. Jackson Yais indeed! 1 wuz jess 1 idling my husband dat n pitsson wuz safer off' dead dan alive.—Puck. Two of II Iviiol. He— Why does a woman wear nn- I other woiniiu's hair on her head? i She— Why does a man wear another calf's skin on his feet?— Chicago Daily News. x \o .More Itrthen. The Boy—l guess sister's beau must be engaged to her at last. I The Dirl—Why? | The Bov—He has quit giving me money.— L'p-to-Date. II is Excuse. Hera Mine—This is so sudden! Herald—l know it, but 1 never heard <i word before to-day about your father having inOney.—N. Y. Journal. The Philadelphia Eecord after a career of nearly twenty years of uninterrupted growth is justified in claiming that the standard first established by its founders is the one true test of A Perfect Newspaper. To publish ALL THE NEWS promptly and succinctly and in the most readable form, without elision or partisan bias; to dis cuss its significance with frank ness, to keep AN OI'EN EVE FOR PUBLIC ABUSES, to give ' besides a complete record of cur rent thought; fancies and db coveries in all departn e its > human activity in its DAIL EDITIONS of from to to 14 PAGES, and to provide the whole for iffcl latrons at the nom inal price of ONE CENT—that was from the outset, and will continue to be the aim of ':THE RECORD." The Pioneer one-cent morning newspaper in i the United States, "The Re-| cord" still LEADS WHERE OTHERS FOLLOW. Witness its unrivaled average daily < irculation exceeding 160,000 1 copies, and an average exceeding 120,000 copies for its Sunday editions, while imitations of its plan of publication in every itn portant city of the county testify j to the truth of the assertion that 1 in the quantity of its contents, j and in the price at which it is j | sold "The Record" has establish- ! j ed the standard by which excel- < ! lence in journalism must be ! measured. The Daily Edition j of "The Record" will be sent by mail to any address for 53.00 per year or 25 cents per month. The Daily and Sunday editions together, which will give its readers the best and freshest information of all that is going on in the world every day in the j year, including holidays, will be J sent for 54.00 a year, or 35 cents j p> r month. | Address Tin Ricoiin ITblisiiing Co., Record Building, Philadelphia, Pa. Health for Everybody! -J, When the Kidneys, Bladder and Urinary Organs are in a liea'thy states a person is practically disease-proof. Sick ness can hardly find a foothold when those organs are well and strong. The Kidneys sift and strain from the fl\ ~ ,r I fIHSVi blood poisonous and waste matter. When they JEkV J. /■are weak and diseased, the poisonous particles -TMm not P ass °H. but remain in the system. They y cause pain in the small of the back, Stone JEtK / \ * n Bladder, and Bright's Disease. '/ \a/ \\ * s eas -' to your Kidneys are I fflwEl "Cl disordered. Put some urine in a bottle or y \ glass for 24 hours. If there is a sediment, Br II ij Yv* you have Kidney.disease. Other signs are f ' C a desire to urinate often, particularly at night, and a smarting, scalding sensation in passing water. Nothing is so good for curing diseases of the Kidneys, Bladder and Urinary Organs as Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, that grand medicine which has been before the public for over 30 years. It should be taken without delay by men and women who have any of the above symptoms, as the disease is apt to prove fatal if not attended to. From the Convent of the Good Shepherd, Troy, N. Y., comes this short but . pointed endorsement, signed by the sisters of that famed and pious institution; 44 We have used Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy for Kidney trouble, and have Sample Bottße Fu'-ec 7 If you wish to test Favorite Remedy before \ J buying it, send your full postofFice address to the I DR. DAVID KENNEDY CORPORATION, Rondout, N.Y., giving full directions for its use. You can depend upon the genuineness'of this offer, and all sufferers should take advantage of it wjr ajjflWWW at once. The regular size is sold by all druggies nil AHP T1 n n HIT P Large and small blocks SPACB FGR SALE. Advertisers in the Tribune get full value for their money. DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.-: Corner of Centre and Front Streets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock. \ Gil won, Dougherty, Kaufcr Club, Kobeutiluth's Velvet, of which we h EXCLUSIVE SALE IJ! TOWN. MumuTß Extra Dry Chanipafrno, Hennensy brandy, Ulaekberry, Gins, Wines, Clarets. Cordiau, Kt Imported and Domestic Cigar#. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE, Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, j Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOUR!*. Bdllentine and Hu/leton beer on tap. Baths, Hot or Cold. 25 Cents. P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director | and Ersibalmsr Ira 3388E® Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. |W ANTED ! 5000 CORDS 1 POPLAR WOOD W. C. HAMILTON dt SONS, I TTm. Penn P. 0., Montgomery Co., Pa. | | ; of every description executed at, short notice by the Tribune Company. Kstimutes furnished promptly on I all classes of work, baniples free. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Centre street, Freeland. FINEST LIQUOR, BEER, POUTEIi. ALE, 010 AUS AND TEM \ PEUANCE DRINKS. G. HORACK, Baker & Confectioner. Whole#*tic and llctail. CENTUM STEKET, FREELAND. wheeij' [ j QuctjSrsr" Tool j jij STYLEG: S 1 Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tandem, i vj S a The Lightest Running Wheels on Eartli. J ii THE ELDREDOE [ t ? | THE IELVIDERE, \ I I We always Made Good Sewing Machines! J vj Why Shouldn't we Make Good Whcols I $ I I National Sewing Machine Co., \ 339 Broadway, Factory: Vj New York. Cclvlderc, tils. $ VI NNA: BAKERY! J B. LUBACH. Prop (Teutre street. Preetend. CHOICE BREAD OF Al.l. KINDS IKES. AND PASTRY. DAILY FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKE { ' I KKD TO ORDER Confectionery t Ice Cream ipplted to balls, parties or picnios. with all neeessary adjuncts, nt shortest notice and fairest prices. | Delivery and unpply wagons in all pin. ot | 'own aiul enrrmintlinge every day Anyone .ending n sketch and dewirlptlon may quickly ascertain, free, whether an Invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly coniidentlal. Oldest agency for securing patcuts in America. We havo a Washington office. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive special notice in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully Illustrated, largest circulation of anyncientine journal, weekly, terms $3.0(1 a year; fl. iil six months. Specimen copies and HARD HOOK ON PATENTS seut free. Address MUNN & CO., 301 Uroadwny. New York. * ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. ! > JOUB OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE 1 ! * an 'l we can secure patent in less time than those; * remote from w ashmgton. * Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of ! f charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. > j A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents," with > of same in the U. S. and foreign countries ! #Bcnt free. Address, , JC.A.SNOW&CO. p * virNT WASHINGTON. D. C.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers