FREELAND TRIBUNE IltibMti 1863. PUHLIBHED EVERV MONDAY ANI) THURSDAY BY THE TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited OFFICE: MAIN STIIKET ABOVE CENTHE. Make, all money order#, c/it'c/t#, etc., payable t> the Tribune Printing Com pail u. Limited. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year Sl.."# Six Months 7 Four Months Two Mouths SJTi The date which the subscription is paid to b on the address label of each paper, the cliangt of which to a subsequent date becomes at receipt for remittance. Keep the figures in advance of the present date. Report prompt ly to this office whenever paper is not received Arrearages must be paid when subscription is discontinued. FREELAND, PA., APRIL 18, 1898. Information on Advertising. Robert C. Ogden, of the linn of John Wanamaker. made an address the other day in New York city, at tlie Merchants' Association headquarters, to a larg number of business men ou "Advertising as a Business Force," and as Mr. Ogden speaks from experience, and presents the matter so aptly and tersely, we give a brief synopsis. In opening his address Mr. Ogden said that he intended to talk on advertising from the retailer's point of view. "We all know," he said, "that advertising is a business force, and it is concerning the methods of advertising that I shall speak mainly. Business can be divided into three parts, merchandise, service and advertising. Advertising is the dyna mic power of the business, and cannot be followed with any degree of success. After the merchandise has been gather ed and the store service made as perfect as possible the steam that must move the engine is advertising. "The columns of the newspaper is the merchant's rostrum. It is his stump From it he speaks to his audience, h is the channel through which the incr chant reaches the people. And news paper advertising is a test of a mer chant's character. It must be thorough advertising, for the people will sureh judge the advertiser througli it. Also, if advertising is to pay it must not he stupid. It must be good literature. It is a fact that advertising occupies an important place in the literature of the land. Intelligent readers look at it as characteristic literature of the time. "Gladstone says that the American newspapers interest him because the ad vertising in them is good reading, be cause of the splendid accompanying illustrations and because the advertising is his means of gauging the material prosperity of the country. "There is great waste of money in advertising. A great deal of advertis ing fails because the advertiser gets dis couraged. Advertising to be successful should be continuous. 'J'he advertiser must have courage. Most men are afraid to go beyond a certain poiir. Having placed 930,000, they should not fail to put on the extra J?.".OOO, or they may lose the beneiit of s'-0,000. if a man has not the money to advertise he might as well go out of business." In closing Mr. Ogden said that adver tising should bo characteristic, so that the public would know it the minute they saw it, without having to look for the name attached. lie said it was a mistake to think that any one could write such advertisements, as it is f, r beyond the capabilities of an ordinary man. He closed by saying that the motto of the successful business man is. "Early to bed, early to ri>o. don't g< t tight, and advertise.' Silence* lb a Coafesdoo. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. The cable dispatch from Loudon which say that Joseph Punell Gibbons ridicules the Spanish denials of the sale by him of the submarine mines to Spain and positively asserts his belief that the explosion can he traced to the act of a few individuals sustains General Kitz hugh Lee's testimony to the ell'cct that the mine was blown up by some of Weyler's oflicers. At the same time, it opens up a view of tin; question that lias not been touched upon. Any government that was a govern ment could unearth the perpetrators of that barbarous act in a few days. Spain could do it if she desired. She has not done so because she knows that the arrests of the guilty persons would bring the crime home to Spanish officials of one kind or another and show the unworthiness of Spanish government. Spain's silence is a confession, and it looks a if she would have to take her her punishment. While the Philadelphia city cotiuc.il is under investigation on charges of whole sale bribery of members. Mayor Harri son. of Chicago, declare* that the t'hirn go council Is "steeped in crime and cor ruption," and that "not a week passes but there are crimes committed by alder men of the city of Chicago which are calculated to make hardened men shud der." It is worth noting that in both these cases the corruption arises mainly in connection with the disposition of pul lie franchises among private corporation.* by the rule of personal favor or preju dice. — <S pringjie.ld Hep nllira n. PR.DAVID favorite K^sßemedy The one sure cure for J The Sidney's,liver and 51ood A MASCOT IN REALITY. Prlec* of l.und Boma Whmreyrr Kx-Frmi (lt*nt Cleveland Reside*. Glover Cleveland is a mascot for real estate boomers. He has made money in large sums for landholders in three widely separated parts of the country. When he was married, ten years ago. during his first term, Mr. Cleveland bought for $21,500 a place of twenty eight acres in the suburbs of Washing ton. Until that purchase the sight liness of the locality had not been recognized. The land was In small small farms and there were few Wash ington people who had homes along the unfashionable pike. The President made some alterations in the com fortable old stone house and lived there In the summer time. When he went out of office, after two or three seasons' occupancy of "Red Top." as the place was called, from the brightly painted roof, he sold his twenty-eight acres for $135,000. But previously thousands of acres surrounding had changed hands. Cleveland Heights had been laid oat. an electric road had been built and all of the accessories of teal estate speculation on a grand scale had been applied. Mr. Cleveland's next venture was in a desolate tract of land on Buzzard's Bay. He went there oil the recom mendation of Joseph Jefferson, found good fishing and bought liberally of the rocky and sandy acres. The his tory of Red Top repeated Itself, save that Mr. Cleveland did not sell when the boom came. Buzzard's Bay has come into prominence as one of the choicest localities on the Atlantic coast for summer homes. The land has gone Up and up until the advances parallel those of the first neighborhood to which Mr. Cleveland lent his name. And now the news is that Princeton acres, and especially that part in which the ex-President has invested, are soaring in values. • They Hot JLNEU. "The most amusing nuptial event I ever officiated at," said good old 'Squire Hiram Cate. of Kentucky, the marrying magistrate of the Penny rile.' who died not long since, "was in the winter of '7l. I was awakened one cold night about midnight by vig orous knocking on my front door. I went to the window, and by the light of the moon could see two forms on my front porch. I raised the window and asked what was wanted. A wom an of the backwoods type, answered in about this language: 'Why, hits us, Jim an' me, as wants to git hitch ed.' 1 hurried down, and on opening the door found a poorly clad, flnnlcky looking man of about forty, led by a determined looking woman of perhaps thirty. I could see that the female was the business part of the proces sion, and addressed myself to her, asking why they had chosen such a late hour for their hitching affair.' This was the reply in quick, snappy sentences: 'Why, hits this way. Jim Owens is bin a-sparkin' uv me, I low, for fo' yeres, an' 1 got fetched tired uv his mincin* wurds. so tuk sin' ast him to-nite, I did. ef he wuz ever gwine ter pop. I tol' him. 1 did, I spected him 'votedly, and ef he wanted me, to cum on an' less git jined tonite, er I wuz gwine to take Fletch Bog gesses' boy, Hez, an' settle down. Jim lowed—he did —he reekined he'd cum, tho' it wuz a long trip. So I took an' fetched him in pap's mill waggin'. Didn't I, Jim? Jim nodded a doleful assent. In answering the questions I put to the groom in the ceremony the brawny better nine-tenths gave the bashful spouse about to he the cue, and she paid me a half dollar, taking the money from Jim's pocket book. it beat any wedding I ever witnessed, I think." Unbinding: Uiina Women** Feet. Are any Chinese women's feet un bound in consequence of the exertions of foreigners? Yes; but no more than European ladies are they going to walk barefoot through the streets to con vince doubters. And what is far more important, numbers upon numbers of little girls are remaining unbound in missionary schools at Araoy. Hang chow and all up and down the river. And at parties ladies who so far as we know are untouched by Christian influences yet show with pride their soft-footed little girls, saying, "My old people bound my feet, but I will never bind hers." It is the upper circles of China who are giving up binding. The man on the streets yet binds and loves bound feet, just as in Singapore all the Straits-born Chinese have cast off binding, if it be not the very poorest of the poor. Pay for Every lmml y. An aged Georgia negro. Nathan by name, is employed by a gentleman prominent In State politics. That Nathan also has an eye to political favors is shown by the following con versation which recently took place between him and his employer: Marse Jim." said Nathan, "is you gwine in dis yere race for Governor?" "Haven't thought about it." "Well, ef yer does run, an' gits elect* ed, will you give me a job?" "Certainly I would remember you, Nathan. What would you like?" "Well, suh,' I'd des like ter black boots roun' de Capitol." "And what would you expect for that service?" "Well, suh," he replied. "I should say $4 a day would be reasonable. Daa what de yuther legislators get." So in o liny. The Fair One I suppose you will marry, though, when the golden oppor tunity offers, won't, you? The Cautious One—lt will depend upon how rmvh gold thort is In the opportunity. j I DYNAMITE JOHNNY. REMARKABLE CAREER OF CAPTAIN O'BRIEN, THE FILIBUSTER. He Ha* Attained More Notoriety in the 1 I.at Decudn llian Any Other American ! ■ Pilot —He HUM Conveyed Lot* of Supplies io the Cuban Insurgent*. ; That truth is stranger than fiction I j has another illustration in the re- ! markable career of Captain John I O'Brien, known among his old friends as "Dynamite Johnny." He was the skipper of the filibustering steamer ' Tillie, which was lost recently off Bar negat. In all his forty years of adven ture it was his first serious setback. There are few who have not rend of the fate of the thirty-six-year-old piece of patchwork styled the steamer I Tillie. whose filibustering career ended at the bottom of the ocoan off Barne gat. Probably no one. htfwever intl -1 mate, knows thoroughly the career of i "Dynamite Johnny" O'Brien, whom I report says perfected all details and never faltered when others hesitated i and talked of the perils it was im possible to avoid. No man born ever had a more ardent love of adventure. Adventure is his god. No tale of sen sational romance can excel his life story. It will never reach the world in completeness, O'Brien does not talk. He has attained more notoriety in the last decade than any other Ameri can pilot. He is a professional maker of international trouble. There has CAPTAIN JOHN O*BRIF.If. not been strife of any magnitude since | he grew a beard in which ho has not ! had a hand. He appears, reappears ! and pops up in unexpected places. He has been shot at with arms of every ; size, has been condemned to death, has had a price set upon his head on nu merous occasions, and to-day, at sixty i years, is without a shattered bone or j nerve, and more eager than ever to | ' undergo any risk which promises good i flnuncial remuneration. "Captain John ! ny's" friends say he fears neither man ; nor the devil. ' In appearance he is short and mus- 1 cular with bronzed and somewhat ! j wrinkled fare and sharp blue eyes. His ! hair is thick and healthy, but the col- i or of chalk. It was black a few years j ago when he vanished from Staten Is- i land, 'where he had rented a cottage. He returned in a few months with | skin a trifle paler and hair as white I as snow. No one knows the horror of • suffering which caused the transfor mation. He gained the sobripuet of "Dyna , mite Johnny" when he navigated the • old schooner yacht Rambler, laden to \ i her deck beams with the explosive, to I Laguayra, oft' the Venezulan coast. i This is the only voyage he was ever ' known to talk about. It was hardly a month after the present Cuban revolution began before Captain O'Brien was heard from. No I one expected him to restrain himself. I j How many expeditions the strange, j j white haired man has guided to a ; snug haven on the island's coast is a matter of conjecture. He is seldom at 'home nowadays. He is loved by all rebel sympathizers. Those foremost in the councils of the revolutionists deny all knowledge of the adventurer. The most exciting episode in which he has figured during the insurrection, i so far as known, was during the win i ter of 18911, when he attempted to pilot the Three Friends to the Cuban shore, j He did not take command of the boat i until the coast of Florida had become j a blur. Then the silent man whom ! the mixed crew had regarded as an i unwelcome intruder doffed his sty- i lish derby hat, slipped on a dark blue i seaman's cap and assumed entire j charge of the pilot house. His know'l- I edge of southern waters is thorough, ! but he was unable to quickly avoid a i Spanish cruiser which bore down upon the little filibuster. Then began a ; | chase which finally ended in Spanish I humiliation, but not before it had j I seemed certain that the Three Friends i 1 would be blown out of existence by j : shot and shell. The untrained crew of the steamer ; were panic stricken. There was hard ly an American among them. Prayer and exhortation rose to heaven. O'Brien was the only thoroughly un alarmed man in I lie little band. Hour after hour he held the vessel to the course, calmly estimating the corapar- j atlve speed of pursued and pursuer, ! and never uttering a word that was not a wisely planned command. The j weather was boisterous, and O'Brien was wet to the skin, but never for a j moment did his tired muscles relax ' their grip on the great spoked wheel. Governments have tried in vain to i catch or kill the stout hearted raarin- i er. Probably no man is mom cor dially hated or more closely watched than he. How mu n h money his life of adventure has brought to him is a secret that has never been divulged. He has a competency, without a doubt, but neither that nor the entreaties of , his family will deler him from con tinuing in his caretr of mystery and 1 peril, SHE MADE IT DEFINITE. Wutnnn'M Note V'nn llu*lncnN-l.llte, nut it n;<tu*t suit, Watson was sitting at his desk one evening when his wife said: "My dear, will you send a note to Syik & Sattin and tell them that I musl have the five yards of lining that J bought there yesterday. They said they'd send it right away, and I must have it to-morrow, for the dressmakei will be here the next day." So Watson wrote as follows: "Messrs. Syik & Sattin: Will you please send at once the five yards ol lining my wife purchased at your store yesterday?" "Let me see what you have written?' said Mrs. Watson. "Oh, dear!" she said, after reading it, "that isn't half posiive and definite enough. They'll pay no attention tc that. I'll sit down and write to their myself." And this was what she wrote: "Messrs. Syik & Sattin: You wiil re member that I was in your store at about 10 o'clock yesterday morning (ot it may have been as late as 10:30), and I purchased five yards of perealine fot dress-lining. One of the salesladies at the lining counter will remember about it. The one I bought, it of was tal' and slender, with dark eyes, and I remember that she had on a red silk waist trimmed with black velvet and a red and green plaid skirt. She will remember that i purchased the lining of her and she promised me that it would be sent sure to-day. It has not come and it would not make any par ticular difference, only that my dress maker is coming day after to-morrow and she will need the lining the first thing, and cannot go to work without it, and her engagements are such that she cannot come to me any day but day after to-morrow and the next day so if the lining should not come it would put her ha- k so that she could not finish the dress, and I cannot get her again for nearly a month, and 1 simply must have the dress by the last of next week, and I am too busy to come downtown to-morrow and get the lining. The saleslady I spoke ol with the red silk waist waist will be sure to remember about it, and I told her just why and when I wanted it and she promised me that it would be sure to come. Of course it may come be fore you get this, and if so it will be all right, but I simply must have it be fore the dressmaker gets here, for she will want to go to work on the skirt the first thir.g and she cannot if she does not have the lining. Please send it right away. "P. S.—Five yards of perealine skirt lining at 38 cents a yard, bought of saleslady In red silk waist and plaid skirt, to be sent sure yesterday, and lias not come. Must have it to-mor row." "There," said Mrs. Watson, as she folded the letter. "That will make it all clear to them." < rl.l. I„ HI. l arrrr. "Cyrus," asked his wife, "what are you moping about?" "it is thirty-seven years ago to-day, Keturah," replied the gloomy man, who had thrown himself on the lounge, "since 1 became cashier of yie bank." "Well, what of that? Are you worn out? Is the salary too small? Have you ever had the slightest trouble with the bank? Is there anything wrong with your accounts? Are they think ing of replacing you with a younger man?" "No, there's nothing wrong in any way," replied the bank cashier, "but the very fact that I have been the bank's most trusted official for thirty seven years, that I have never done a dishonest thing in my life: never mude an Injudicious loan: that my ac counts are perfectly straight, and that no man on earth can say a word against me is making people suspi cious, and they are beginning to talk about me." Sample. Testimonial.. We append a few testimonials which may be of benefit to proprietors of pat ent medicines: "I have been unable to walk without crutches for many years, but after us ing your liniment I ran for office." "I lost my eyesight four years ago. I used a bottle of your eye wash and I saw wood." "I have been dumb ever since 1 was married, but the day after using your remedy I had a speaking likeness ta ken at the photographer's." "Some time ago I lost the use of both arms. Shortly after buying a box of your pills I struck a man for ten dollars." "I have been deaf for many years, but after using your ointment I beard that my aunt had died and left me $ It),11(10." norm lirvrngr. Has another American paper pub lished a caricature of our royal per son?" inquired the Kaiser. "Yes. Your Majesty." replied the dig nified lackev. " 'Tig well." replied Ills Majesty. "We will exclude the American baked bean." Inviting;. "This." said the Kansas editor, look ing over the top of his spectacles. "Is the most inviting manuscript I have received for a long time." "What is it?" asked the foreman. "A poem, beginning, 'Come, drink with me!'" 1.0.l Oiiporl.Nllte.. Hungry Higgins- Well, well! Hero is a story 'bout a feller gittin' 3500 fer a dog bite Weary Watkins—You don't say? Jut think of the forchins w. otto have at that rate! I MINE MAKER'S STORY THE BATTLESHIP MAINE WAS DE LIBERATELY DESTROYED. , J* P. (tihhiiiK Declares That the Kxploslov WBH Intentional—Narrow* the (nveetiga* tlon tn Two Men—Flvo Cumlualve l'rooti That the Ship Wan Itlown 1 p. Following is the .startling story of th€ man who made the mine which blew tip the battleship Maine: The only submarine mines which ; have been supplied to the Spanish Gov- 1 ernment since 1886-87 were manufac tured under my own patents. I then supplied them with fifty-six ground mines, twenty-five buoyant mines, each with a charge of 50C pounds of guncotton, and fifteen elec tro-contact mines, exploded either on contact or by observation from shore, each containing a charge of 100 pounds of guncotton. The mines sent to Havana would still retain full effectiveness. They will last under water for an indefinite period. i In 1806-97 the Spanish Government ordered a fresh supply of my patent mines. Whether they went to Ha vana or not is immaterial. One of the mines supplied in 1886 is still fully capable of causing the de struction of the Maine. JOSKl'll PAXKt.I. GIBIIIVS. In fact, I am convinced, from all the surrounding circumstances, that no other agency could have caused it. In direct contradiction of the asser tions of the Secretary of the Spanish Legation at Washington and of Gen. Weyler that there are no submarine in i nes in Ha vara Harbor, absolutely affirm that 1 shipped the above mines for Havana ami Ferrol on a Spanish ship, the property of the Spanish Gov ernment, and officered by Spanish nav al officers, with two captains, at the West India dock, London. My mines are in electrical connec tion with the shore, and it is quite im possible that they could be exploded except by design. 1 am convinced also that the explo ; slon of the mine which destroyed the | Maine was the work of one or two men, for these reasons: First A vessel swinging, either an chored or moored, upon striking the circuit closer case would merely drop I a shutter on the keyboard on shore, warning the officer in charge that she | was in contact with the mine. Second —Before tlie officer is in a p; Mi'ion to fire the mine he must oh | tain one of two keys. One generally , is kept by the commandant, the other by the officer in charge of the firing , station. He then must unlock the j glass door over which the shutteY has fallen and insert a red danger plug in I the insulated switch. Third —He must insert a plug in the switch of the firing battery earth plate. Fourth—The firing key is arranged with n locking armature of ebonite, which must be unlocked before the danger point is arrived at. Fifth—The firing key hammer must be pressed on to the contact anvil to complete the circuit that explodes the detonator, by which the mine in turn is exploded. 1 have not the slightest hesitation in j saying that the Maine was deliberately destroyed with a 500-pound ground mine as invented and supplied by me. , There is a consensus of opinion that the first explosion was external. This is established on the following grounds. The forward magazine contained 2.- 500 pounds of gunpowder, which might blow up the decks, but it is problemat ical whether it would le capable of igniting the 5,500 pounds of powder in the middle magazine. Even if it did the explosion of both would be quite incapable of detonating the 8,200 pounds of wet guncotton in the after magazine. Had that quantity of gun cotton hern detonated not a vestige of ' the Maine would remain. The only practical way of diseover : ing the mine that sunk the Maine is by underrunnii'g the cable from the shore to the junction box and from thence undenmining each individual cable to the mine, until one was found without a mine attached. I am satisfied that the explosion ' was caused by a ground mine not by \ a buoyant mine for Havana harbor is to shallow to admit of the use of the I latter. I am prepared to satisfy by demon • i'n any jury of reasonable men I that this is the true explanation of the I Maine. JOSEPH PANELL GIBBINS. Oiieeu Itegont to Flee to Auwirla. London, Eng. The 'Vienna eorrespnn dent of t ho Daily 'lVlryru|iti says: ••Una' MTioUKly Illi> eilllntilill is lllldrr.-liliid In la' ln-rc ia alnnni In ilie fuel 1 lint ( 'mui iiiv|e. already believe that linn may return id Iter unlive land. Suitable ifreparaliiilis are already making at tlie inlave id' Iter bn.llur, Artliduke lill^Utl." Welcome Hems Any information that tells how sickness and disease can be overcome is the most welcome JjT news a paper can print. Although this is an advertisement, it contains facts of more vital Jv* yMvy importance than anything else in this newspaper. It tells of a medicine known for over thirty years as Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite gd&&) Remedy. It is a medicine that purities j the Blood, and restores the Kidneys, ShST Bladder and Urinary Organs to vigor and strength. Its principal ingredient is not alcohol. It does not ruin men's and women's lives by causing intoxication and V >\i fostering the appetite for strong drink. 11 Favorite Remedy cools and purifies the / 1 blood. It is not like the many "bitters," "com- J' \ \\\ pounds" and "tonics," now so widely sold, which \ \ \ \ heat and inflame the blood, doing more injury \ 1 Favorite Remedy cures troubles of women 1 I \ \ Y\ just as certainly as it cures troubles of men. It I I \ \\ restores the Liver to a healthy condition, and /Hi .1 i\ cures the worst cases of Constipation. It cures m J Y\ Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, F j i\ all Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases, ' I J \ Gravel, Diabetes and Bright's Disease. 11l A " My complaint was Stone in the Bladder. I / I \\ ' Physicians said my case was hopeless, but l)r. I / I n \l Kennedy's Favorite Remedy cured me."— // / I If \\ D. 11. Ho AC, Lebanon Springs, N. Y. f J / / / \l Sold in all drug stores for si.<x> a bottle. 1 m J I \\ One teaspoonf ul is a dose, and you will ex peri- M Ml f j U\\ : ence relief long before first bottle is taken, i M tJ / Sample Mle free! (f' , 2 n with any of the ailments mentioned above S jT J is offered a chance to try Favorite Remedy ly without any cost whatever. Send your full post- f office address to the DR. DAVID KENNF.DV CORI'OR- / <0 ATION, Rondout, N. Y., and a free sample will be VA * sent you. Please say you saw the advertisement in this paper, so we may know your request is genuine. ■■■ SPACE M SALE. 'IsSS Advertisers in the Tril une get full value for their money. DePIERRO - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre and Front Streeta, Freeland, Pa. Finest 11 'hiskies in Stock. Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufer Club, Rosenbluth's Velvet, of which we h ve EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mumm'g Extra Dry Champagne, lieunt'xsy lirandy, Hluckberry, Gins, Wines, Glarets, Cordials, F.tc Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE, 11am and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches, Sardines, Etc. MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS. liul leu tine and Ha/leton beer on tup. Baths, Hot or Cold. 25 Cents. P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Director and Embalmer. Prepared to Attend Calls* Day or Night. South Centre at reet, Freeland. jW ANTED) { 5000 CORDS I POPLAR WOOD A W. C. HAMILTON &- SONS, A 9 Win. Penu P. 0., Montgomery Co., Pa. S w AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA PRIMTIInTG of every deserlption executed at short notice by the Tribune Company. Estimates furnished promptly on all classes of work. Samples tree. FRANCIS BRENNAN, RESTAURANT 151 Outre street, Frrehiinl. FINEST I.lljUOfl, UK Eli, DOIiTEII, ALE, CIOMiS AND TKM- I'MIIA NCE /Hi INKS j "OHMWheels, | I Quality ~ cd TOO! | 7 J | £ STYLES: | | Ladies', Gentlemen's & Tamta. i j The Lightest ltuiiuiug Wboela on Kurth. ® I THE ELDRED6EI % s X > ITHEEELVIDERE.H I I <j Wo always Made Good Sewing Machines! J Why Shouldn't v.o F;lt!;o Ccod Wheels! § |j National Sewing Machine Co., 339 Prondway, Factory: yj New York. P. Ivlderc, Ills. VIENNA 7 BAKERY I J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street. Freelutitl. CHOICE DUE AI) OF ALL KINDS, ■ CAKES, AND PASTItY, DAILY. | FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES 1 BAKED TV OliDEli. Confectionery <i Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with till necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. Deliver)/ and supply wagons to all parts oj town and surroundings every day. Anyone sending n sketch and description may quickly uncurtain, free, whether an Inventidn Is probably patentable, Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents in America. We have a Washington office. Patents taken through Munn A Co receive special notice in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of d any scientific Journal, weekly, term* HUN a year: i SI..>UHIX months, specimen copies and lIAM> ' Ruoii ox PATENTS sout, froe. Address MUNN A CO., IW 1 Hroudwity, Rew York. $ < avcats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and all Pat- * * cut business conducted for MODERATE FEES. # 'Oun OFFICE 13 OPPOSITE U 3. PATENT OFFICE' J ami we can secure patent in less time than those i #icmotc from Washington. £ ' Send model, diuwing or photo., with descrip-# Jtion. Wc adv i .e. if patentable or not. free of J * charge. Our fee unt duo till |*lent it secured. * A POMPMP ~ "Mow to Obtain Patents," with ' Jccat of saui* in the. U.S. aud foreign countrii * sent free. Address, J iC.A.SNOW&COJ t OPP. PATENT OFFICE. WASHINGTON. D. C. { ,>
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