FREELAND TRIBUNE. Estatlishod 1888. PL*JiUSHKI) EVERY" MONDAY AND THURSDAY BY TUB TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited, OFFICE: MAIN STKKKT ABOVE CENTKE. SUBSCRIPTION KATES: One Year $1.50 Six Months Four Months 50 Two Months 85 i The date which the subscription is paid to is ; on the address label of each paper, the change of which to a subsequent date becomes n 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. Make all tunney orders* check*, etc., payable to the Tribune, Printing Comimny, Limited. FREELAND, PA., MAY 16, 1808. Nothing About Wanamaker's Demerits. From Philadelphia City and State. It seems to be extremely difficult, if not impossible, to obtain from even our best journals such an impartial judg ment of Mr. Wanamaker's claims to the governorship on a reform ticket as they readily give that gentleman's just and severe arraignment of Quay. Even such excellent papers as the New York Even ing Post , the Outlook , and the Independent. quite fail for some cause to touch the heart of the truth. They call sharp at tention to Mr. Wanamaker's arraign ment of Mr. Quay, but they offer no adequate comment, so far us we have seen, of our arraignment of Mr. Wana maker. The Post gives great editorial prominence to Mr. Wanamaker's expo- j surcs of Mr. Quay's control of many newspapers in Pennsylvania, but fails to point out Mr. Wanamaker's equally dangerous control of others. The con trast between the Post's past and pri sent Wanamaker policy is striking in this regard. In .January, 1890, commenting on the Wanamaker senatorial canvass, i the Post said: Wanamaker's hold on the newspapers of Philadelphia is almost complete, and all on account of the page "ads" he fre- j qiieiitly places, and the regular two and ( three columns of advertisements which j appear as regularly in each morning and j afternoon newspaper as the weather for casts, with the exception hereafter noted. He is never criticised in these papers. Neither his connection with the Keystone bank failure nor the movement to have Pity Treasurer Bardsley pardon ed has been exploited, nor his short comings as postmaster general. Now is the time when the Post can. with great effect, take up the episodes in Mr. Wanamaker's career, which, as i hat journal truly says, the Philadelphia dailies will not touch, and so clearly show Mr. Wanamaker's unfitness for the i governorship. It is evident that until there can be bad a fair and free discus sion of a candidate's record and merit before the public that wholesome condi tion- will not exist, and that a genuine reform is not possible. No daily paper in this city will dare to give its real opinion of Dr. Swallow's merits or Mr. Wanamaker's demerits because it can not afford to offend the great fountain of newspaper wealth. Nor is it only in the city but in many of the counties that Mr. Wanamaker exercises the same in fluence over the newspapers. We have a number of amusing illustrations of the j extent to which this journalistic control has been carried by the great merchant prince. The Independent , commenting lust \v ok with astonishment on the failure of Mr. Wanamaker to secure the votes of enough county delegates to triumph in the con vention. adds: This is not a little strange, for the revelations he has made of party intrigue and party managements, the politiclal crimes he has brought home to the •'boss" ought, it would seem, to create a moral re- ; vulsion in any average American state. | His accusations are not refuted or e\- | plained away. They are made in the most impressive and convincing wa', ; but apparently without adequate result. But why should Quay feel it necessary to explain when Mr. Wanamaker placed in relatively the same position, does not explain? We have shown the Indepen dent how to solve its riddle, butwedoubt if it will either accept the solution or I give it to it* readers. Not until we are willing to measure the rich religious strongman by the same non-elastic yard stick of truth that we apply to others will true reform be possible. CASTOR IA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Signature of DR. DAVID favorite Rf^sßemedy The one sure cure for J The Sidney's,liver and Blood BASHFUL. Rural I.ruinlntnr Orl. in Rrmnrk. Even If t'nculleil Eor. "I can't help saying to you," remark | ed one of the old members of a more | or less august legislative body to a rural recruit, "that some of the re- I marks you made yesterday were un i called for, entirely uncalled for." j The other looked intently at his col | league and. removing his hat, mopped ! his brow with a red handkerchief. "Looky here, friend," he proceeded after thinking for a quarter of a min ute, "do you realize that I am on the minority side of this here house?" "Yes." "And that the place is chock full of people who are full up to the necks j with speeches they want to git de livered?" j "There are many such." ; "It's occurred to you. mebbc, that | theru is a dimit to the time that a man 1 j has in this life fur doin' things." | j "That hasn't anything to do with your remarks yesterday." "Yes, it has. You find fault with 'em because they was uncalled fur. But 1 want to tell you somethin,' Ef I had started out in politics as a shrinkin', modest violet I wouldn't even have got a nomination. An' with all them peo ple, with both hands in the air, try ill' to git a word In edgewise. 1 can't afford to take no chances. I know them remarks was uncalled fur, but I leave it to you as a fair minded man. if I held onto remarks till some of you fellers got up and clamored for 'em, what would my constituents think had become of me?" An Eye to "Yes, sir. Yer right; there ain't 110 money in farmin' now days, en til' only tiling fcryou en me to do is to go to New York and marry one of them there rich heiresses." Devilled 10 Wed Mr. Dukknts. "Why, Ethel, what are you doing with that big medical work in your lap?" I "Well, Arabella, you'd never guess, | I am quite sure." [ "You are not going to make a physi cian of yourself, are you?" "Not at all. 1 am trying to find out which of my two suitors I love enough to marry. What do you think of that?" "How can a cyclopaedia of medicine help you?" "Well, it's this way. Mr. Spondu licks is fifty-seven years of age. He is worth SIOO,OOO, and has consumption. Mr. Dukkats is sixty-five years old. He is worth $500,000 and has incipient gout I thought, perhaps, this medical book would help me to make up my mind. I have about decided that I love Mr. Dukkats the better. Which would you love?" A Disseminator or I'OIHOII. Henry Hoglot.—So ye think ole Al vin ought ter be expelled from our so ciety? What's he been doin'? Samuel Stubble.—Why, he'B a infi del! Henry Hoglot.—lnfidel! What's that? What does an infidel do? Samuel Stubble.—He don't believe in anything. Now, ole Alvin said l ' las' Fall that the cornhusk an' hog-melt theories fer prognosticate' hard Win ters was ail bosh; then he said that a man might as well grub up briers in the light of the moon as in the dark. But the last time I saw him he fairly put the cap-sheaf on the shock. Henry Hoglot.—Do tell! What did the blamed fool say? Samuel Stubble—Why, he said that a woodchuck would no more think of wakin' up for groundhog day than he would fer Sunday school! Hl* Retort. j "Here's a queer case," she said, look j ing up from the newspaper, j "Is it?" he returned, for he was not feeling in particularly good humor and i didn't care who knew it. "Yes, it is," she replied. "It's a case where a bride was given as a german favor." "Rather a stretch of the imagination to call it a favor, I should think," he said. Of course she got even with him later—they always do; but this is not a continued story. One Way. Rev, Longnecker—l wish I could think of some way to make thie congie | gation keep their eyes on n*e during j the sermon. , Little Tommy—Pa. you want to put ! the clock right behind the pulpit. 1 Mclem* Worry. "I'm afraid Wizey thinks a little hard of me." | "You're foolish. There's a man that :an't think hard on any subject." A Dream of Home. Oh. it's nice to write of farming, Of the hoeing of the corn; Of the driving cows to pasture, On an early summer morn. I Of the cutting down of timber, When the snow is all about; Oh, it's nice to dream about it, But to do it—leave me out! \ BRITISH WHITE CAPS. Imlluna Moral Reform Method.* Adopted by tlie I'eople of Wales. They have very fit ran go and vigorous methods of enforcing the laws of mor ality in the parish of Llanbister, which is situated in the hills of the purely agricultural county of Radnorshire, South Wales. Scandalized at a breach of the laws of morality, which they believed to have been committed, the parishioners a few nights ago formed what is known in Wales as a "Rebecca" gang, and, attired in a variety of costumes. , and, with faces sooty black, serenad- ; ed the alleged delinquent's house. The i woman who was suspected was also ; fetched. Both, in a nearly nude con dition, were marched to the River Cwmdwr, which flows close by. In its waters they were submerged, and then made to walk backward and forward through the stream for the space of nearly twenty minutes. While in the stream the man made a desperate at tempt to escape, but in crossing a weir he came a cropper, and was re captured. The two were then made to run up and down the fields, and ! were well belabored with straps and sticks. Then they were escorted back in procession to the man's house, where the "Rebecca" sat in judgment. The couple were condemned to undergo further flogging and to march up and down the fields hand in hand. Their hair was cut off, and, besides, they had to undergo many other indigni ties. Tar and feathers were procured, but the more cautious prevailed on their companions not to administer such a dreadful punishment. This extraordinary affair appears to have given the greatest satisfaction to the inhabitants, who feel that a great blot on the rustic innocence of their parish has been avenged. •I iin it 21 tl Hob. 44 They were too much alike to get I along well together," and the man who was talking shook his head as though to affirm his statement. "I knew the father. Jim Strike. He was hard-headed, stern and self-opin ionated. There was a man that would rather argue than eat. There's noth- i ing surprising in the fact that the boy, Bob, inherited these characteristics. They asserted themselves as soon as he was able to get the first ideas of ! babyhood, and they cost him many a , spanking. "But it was after Bob came back from school that the campaign really opened. He and the old gentleman couldn't agree on anything less cer tain than the time of day or the date of the month. Jim was a conserva tive and strongly disposed to be an aristocrat. Bob was radical, demo cratic and mighty near revolution ary. When Jim's men struck at the factory Bob took their part and Jim fairly raved. He couldn't keep up his end of the argument and one day at the dinner table, after a humiliating defeat in discussion, the old man, his face purple with anger and with a voice that could be heard all over the house, told Bob either to drop his fool notions or pack and get out. "Bob got out. He went right to work and made his living, and it takes a pretty stubborn young man to do that when there is a magnificent home and plenty of money waiting for him if he will sing in harmony with the old gentleman. That fall Jim ran for congress and Bob took the stump against him. Jim vowed he'd horse whip the young man on sight, but I guess he made it a point not to see Bob. "The opposing candidate withdrew because of sickness and the commit tee put Bob on the ticket. I suppose that was the hottest campaign that ev er came off in the state. It was simp ly a screamer, and Bob won out. When Jim got the returns I expected to see him explode. But he was tickled to death and so proud of 'My Bob' that he went to Washington with him and stayed right through every term." Cklnumiiii PuKKled at Gridiron Fun. Mr. Wu, the Chinese Minister, was a guest at the last Gridiron Club din ner in Washington, and was at first somewhat puzzled regarding the fun that always goes with a Gridiron din ner. When one of the members stop ped the winner to complain of the soup and the President demanded that the soup pot be brought in, to see what gave the peculiar taste complained of, Mr. Wu looked serious and inquired of his neighbor if the trouble could not be adjusted without breaking up the din ner. He saw the hotel proprietor brought in, and then the soup pot, and he expected to see trouble over the dinner before it was served. But when the President of the club fished out a civil service reform bill from the pot as the source of the complaint against the soup, the Chinese Minister saw the humor of the affair and from that, moment there was no guest who caught on quicker or enjoyed more the jokes of the Gridiron than did he. In Silence. "Tell me." pleaded the artless maid, "wherein lies the secret of the art of conversation!" The sage assumed the attitude he was wont to assume when in the act of imparting wisdom, and said: "My child, listen!" "I am listening!" breathlessly she answered. "Well, my child/' he rejoined, "that is all there is of the art of conversing agreeably." Some Itntn It rains on an average 208 days in the year in Ireland, about 150 in Eng land. at Kezan about ninety days and in Siberia only sixty days. FOILED. The Gcntlci'innly Highwayman Wan | a llicye'j Fiend. "I'll trouble you .or your little wad, if you please!" The footpad was but insistent. I The luckless pe strlan looked up and down the dimlv lighted street, but nobody else was in sight. "It will not do you any good, my dear friend," said the gentlemanly highwayman, still holding a revolver pointed in a most threatening manner at the other's head. "The nearest sa loon is half a mile away, and the dis j tance to the nearest policeman is ex -1 actly the same. You and I have the | locality entirely to ourselves. Where fore"—and he gave the trigger an om inous little click—"there is no occasion for prolonging this interview. Pro | duee!" | "I see you've got the drop on me all right enough," said the victim, grumb lingly, "and all I'm kicking myself about is that I didn't need to lose my roll. I could just as well have left it at home this evening. If you'll put your fingers in my right vest pocket 1 you'll find $9, more or less. It's all I've got about me, and I was going to spend it to-morrow for a new set of tires for my bicycle." "What kind of tires?" sternly de manded the footpad. "The Fladger & Skimmerhorn Punc tureless Anti-Sideslip." ! "Can you get that for $9?" | "I know where I can get it for a I shade less than $9." "Great Scott, old man! You keep your little wad and go and buy that j tire. Say, do you know that's the best tire on earth? Why, darn it, I ride the Fladger & Skimmerhorn myself. | Shake!" | If this should meet the eye of the | gentlemanly highwayman he will learn I that an outrageous confidence game ! was played upon h ?n. The belated pedestrian whom he met on that occasion uses the Jingo & Slubb Extra Resilient bicycle tire, and has no use for any other kind. But he happened to see by the light of a street lamp that the gentlemanly highwayman wore a Fladger & Skim j merhorn button in the lapel of his | coat. Furthermore, he had $67.50 in auoth j er pocket. A Height Idea. j "The new missionary," said the King, i as he plucked a bit of wool from be neath a splinter on his club, "is a strange sort of person. I hardly know what to make of him." "Soup," suggested a voice, at which the King brightened visibly.—Cincin nati Enquirer. No Chungc For It. The best description of a counterfeit dollar we have ever heard was that given by a saloon-keeper in a trial at Wichita, Kan., the other day. He said: "Well, Dawson threw a piece of money on the counter to pay for the drinks and I could tell by the sound of t that 1 did not have the change." llow They Got Rich. She —I could have married either Whipper or Snapper if I'd wanted to, ind both of those whom I refused have since got rich, while you are still as poor as a church mouse. He—Of course. I've been supporting you all these years. They haven't. Not lo the Swift. "You told me this horse had won lalf a dozen matches against some of the best horses in the country. He ■an't trot a mile in six minutes to save i lim." ! "It was in ploughing matches that |je took i he prizes, sir." Taken at IIIN Word. "Gentlemen," shrieked a medicine 'akir on the streets of Abilene, "I pledge you my honor that there is no whiskey in this medicine." With which the crowd gazed on him re- I proachfully and melted away. ( IIOONIIIK Ihe Leaner. ! "Did you really lie still and see a : ourglar walk off with your watch?" I "Yes; my wife had just quit talking ind gone to sleep, and I wouldn't have aad her wake again for all the gold j watches in creation!" Not II UueHtlon of Veracity. "What was the row between you and rhomperson? A question of veracity, was it not?" 1 "No. It was a question of unverac -1 ; :ty. I said lie was a liar and he said ( was another." Paradox. The man who treasures up his speech— To cite a general rule — s either a philosopher, 1 Or else he is a fool. I'he man who talks and talks and talks ! Belongs to the same class; , J He's wiser, even, than a sage, , j Or e!#e he is an ass. Everybody Says So. Cnseurots Candy Cathartic, the most won derful medical discovery of the ago, pleas . ant and refreshing to the taste, act gently ' and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, mire headache, fever, habitual constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a box of C. C. C. today; 10, 25, 50 cents. Sold and guaranteed to cure by all druggists. CASTOHIA. Boars the __/7^ he Kind You Have Always Bought Dr. David Kennedy's favorite Remedy CURES ALL KIDNEY. STOMACH j - -AND LIVER TROUBLES. EASTERN GIRLS GOING WEST AgeutH in New York Engaging Wait reason lor the I'uclUc Slope. A number of agents in New York are engaging girls to work as wait resses in California and in Denver and other cities in the far West. It ap pears that Eastern girls are more pop ular than Western girls in restaurants out there, and that the places that em ploy girls from New York, and other Eastern cities are rushed with busi ness. The employment of these girls began last summer, when an agent hired fif ty young women to go from New York to Denver. He succeeded in getting them all employment within twenty four hours. This induced him to try other cities, and he found there was a demand for Eastern girls in the res taurants of Western cities. He re turned to New York, and now it is said that an exodus of waitresses to the West has set in. One New York res taurant keeper who employs women said: "It seems odd that in California they should want Eastern girls rather than Western girls for waitresses: but all the same if the present exodus goes 011 it will soon be hard to get a good looking waitress to stay in New York. A number of them have left two of our establishments to take employment in a hotel at Coronado Beach, San Diego, Cal., and to-day I learned that four more had secured employment in a hotel at Los Angeles. When one goes others follow her example." Knell of London LaiidmiirkN. London is losing its old landmarks at an alarming rate. In the neighbor hood of Hoi born the course of destruc tion has been paraicularly noticeable during the year gone past. The de molition now in progress of a number of ancient houses on the north side of that thoroughfare will cover with oblivion many a spot of historic in terest. The clearance begins at Fur nival's Inn, and one may take a last glimpse of the top set of chambers, ia which Charles Dickens wrote part of the "Pickwick Papers." Thence the labors of the "housebreaker" extend to the famous "Old Bell," which has already been razed to the ground. Between these two points two other licensed houses, pleasant with the fla vor of by gone days, and more than one building with an interesting his tory, are doomed. Bidler's Hotel, which is to be rebuilt and enlarged, is a relic of the early days of the Queen's reign, and the removal of the present structure means the destruc tion of the Horse and Groom at the corner of Leather lane. This house claims to have been licensed for close upon a couple of hundred years, but the buildings are probably at least a century older, and it is one of the quaintest hos telries in London. Former asso ciations of the house connect it with the highwaymen who plied their call ing on the Great North road, and Jon athan Wild, the notorious thief-taker, whose skeleton rests in the College of Surgeons in Lincoln's Inn Fields, hard by, was once a regular customer at the tavern whoso days are number ed. People Are Qnprr. "Well, people are queer." It was Mr. Dodge Fenders, of No. 2010 Perambulator Avenue, Flatbush, Borough of Brooklyn, Greater New York, U. S. A., who was speaking. "As is well known, the Borough of Brooklyn, which contributes about 1,000,000 of Greater New York's 3,500,- 000 inhabitants, is criss-crossed with trolley lines. The first thing I get in to in the morning is a trolley car, and 1 ride forty minutes with a fat man standing on one of ray feet and a slim man stepping on the other at two min ute intervals. The last thing : get out of at night is also a trolley car, and I have had therein another forty min utes of trolley torture. "When I was at my old home in Blugtown last summer, father said he was going to give me a grand treat. I asked him what the treat was. "'Never mind; it's something great, Dodge,' he cried, enthusiastically. Come on, my boy, come on; it'll be great!' " 'But what is it, paw?' I insisted. "'lt's great, my boy; out of sight,' he cried, grasping me by the arm. 'Come on, an' I'll give ye a jiminy crackin' long ride, 'way up to Bees winger's Corners, on the new trolley ! car line!' " A Novel IMI with 4.000,000 Readers, The most popular novelists are those who are least known to literary peo ple. Who has heard of Emma Jane Worboise, or of the late Mr. Smith, of "Family Herald" fame? And among French novelists Zola and Daudet and Ohnet we know, but very I few have heard of Reichebourg, whose death was announced yesterday. Yet Reichebourg—"the king of feuilleton ists," as he was called—had probably more readers than any novelist alive or dead, and made as much money by one novel as any other novelist by two. He wrote, exclusively for the Pe tit Journal. He had, it was calculat ed. 4,000,000 readers for every story he wrote, and he used to receive £4,000 for the serial rights alone. 124-AIIIc Cycle Path. Cyclists are apparently regarded with especial favor in Austria. A path for their use has been laid down by the side of the high road all the way from Gratz to Trieste, a distance of 124 miles. The path is said to be only 1 about a yard in width. A queer lilt of Financiering. I A girl doesn't love every man she is i willing to go to a dollar and a half show with.—Atchison Globe. Saved from the Surgeon's Knife No organs are of greater importance to the human body than the Kidneys. Their duty is to sift and strain the poisonous and waste matter from the blood, and if they fail to do this, the trouble shows in the nervous system, and even in the brain. Your life is at stake when there are pains in the small of your back— When you are compelled to get up at night to urinate—when the passing of water causes scalding pain—when there is a sediment in the urine in the vessel, or when it appears white or milky. When so alllieted, you can conquer the trouble ' with Dr. Dnvlil Kennedy's Favorite Remedy, the greatest medicine that civilization has ever known for curing Kidney, Bladder, Blood and Liver Diseases. James Lettice, of Canajoharic, N. Y., tells of iO his wonderful cure: "Some years ago I was attacked Arh jJ jjl with pains in my back \" - —i M and sides that were UJ/jl trol my kidneys, and \ '• - V V\ \ \A^\|/ what came from me was \ \ \ A — V filled with mucus and blood. . \ An Albany doctor was to \ - \ perform an operation upon \ * \ i /jjk me, and said my home doctor \ nt^A could take care of me after. I \ * a saw an advertisement of Dr. 111 David Kennedy's Favorite ra&yai; f Remedy, which seemed to fit my •. j so 1 decided to try that OHKwHHHj ' submitted to tlie operation. 1 began V| | its use. When I bad takyn about two bottles the flow from the bladder grew cleaner, and the pain stopped, and in a short time I was saved from the surgeon's knife, and am now well." Favorite Remedy also cures Eczema, Scrofula, Rheumatism, Dyspepsia and Constipation. For Female Troubles it is unequaled. It is sold for SI.OO a bottle at all drug stores. sample mwt free i a free sample bottle will be sent, prepaid, to those who send their full postofiice address to the DR. DAVID KKN'M.DY CORPORATION, Rondout, N. Y. It is necessary to say that you saw the advertisement in this paper if you wish to take advantage of this genuine and liberal offer. Send today. ' ME FOB SALE, llSsg Advertisers 111 the Tribune get full value for their money. DePIERK.O - BROS. -CAFE.- Corner of Centre ami Front Htreets, Freeland, Pa. Finest Whiskies in Stock, j Gilwon, Dougherty, Kuufer Club, ltoscnbluth's Velvet, of which wc h v? EXCLUSIVE SALE IN TOWN. Mutnm's Extra Dry Champagne, Hennossy linmdy, blackberry. Gins, Wined, Clarets, Cordiaij, htc ! Imported and Domestic Cigars. OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE, Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches , j Sardines, Etc, MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS, j nullentino und Jiazleton beer on tup. R.itlis, Hot or Cold. 25 Cents, P. F. McNULTY, Funeral Oireclor and Embalmer. Prepared to Attend Calls Day or Night. South Centre street, Freeland. l Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained, and nil I'at-J * cut business conducted for MODERATE FEES. # JOUR OFFICE IS OPPOSITE U. S. PATENT OFFICE J Z and we can secure patent in less time than those J 5 remote from Washington. J Send model, drawing or photo., with descrip-* itlon. We advise, if patentable or not, free of J ? charge. Our fee not due till patent ia secured. $ J A PAMPHLET, "How to Obtain Patents," with * Jcost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries J g sent free. Address, ? ;C.A.SNOW&CO.j 5 OPP. PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON, D. C. E WANTED! 5000 CORDS POPLAR! i WOOD j! I i W. C. HAMILTON & SONS, I I | [ Win. Peon P. 0., Montgomery Co., Pa. J ! IP XX x i of every description executed at short notice ly the Tribune Cnninnny. Estimates furnished promptly dn all classes of work, bum pies free. j j || i | Quality ijl= Best. fi 00! | \ j J STYLCGI j'l Ladies', Genilemcu's & Tanden. j The Lightest Iluniiing Wheels on Lartl,. ■ ...AND.... ; Wo always Made Cood Sawing Machines! P | Why Shouldn't v; 0 Make Gocd WhcolC I w 4 b d National Sewing Machine Co., fc 3J9 Broadway, Factory: K : ® New York. Celvlderc, Ills. j *•' iVT£J^TTJiV VIENNA: BAKERY. J. B. LAUBACH, Prop. Centre Street, Freeland. CHOICE BREAD OF ALL KINDS, CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY. \ FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES j BAKED TO ORDER. Confectionery $ Ice Cream supplied to balls, parties or picnics, with all necessary adjuncts, at shortest notice and fairest prices. j Delivery and supply wagons to all parts of town and surroundings every day. Anyone sending n sketch ami description nmv quickly uncertain, free, whether un Invention I'H probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents in America. We have u Washington oflloo. Patents taken through Munu dt Co. roeeive special notice in the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, beautifully illustrated, largest circulation of w