Freeland tribune. (Freeland, Pa.) 1888-1921, December 05, 1898, Image 4

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    FREELAND TRIBUNE.
Establishol 1838.
PUBLISHED EVERY
MONDAY AND THURSDAY
TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPANY, Limited.
OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTRE.
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Ono Your $1.50
Six Months 75
Four Mouths 50
Two Months 25
The duto which the subscription is paid to is
on the address label of each paper, the change
of which to a subsequent date becomes a
receipt l'or remittance. Keep the figures in
advance of the present date. Report prompt
ly to this ofllee whenever paper is not received.
Arrearages must be paid when subscription
is discontinued.
Miihr, ail money orders, checks, etc., payable /<•
tin Tribune I'rintlny Company, Limited. i
FKMIDLAND, PA., DECEMBER 5, 1808.
THE FEMININE OBSERVER.
The man who always pays cash often
sleeps ontick.
No season is so brief as woman's
love, unless it is man's.
The best way to destroy an enemy is
to make a friend of him.
After a shirt has been to the laundry
about three times it is pretty well done j
up.
A man never knows how little ac
count he is in this world until ho at
tends his own wedding.
When a girl makes an assignment of [
her love her sweetheart is immediately !
appointed as receiver.
LACONIC PHILOSOPHY.
As an ear-trumpet the average worn- '
an is not a success.
Happy are they who look before they
marry, and overlook afterward.
There is nothing a manly man ad
mires more than a girlish girl or a wo
manly woman.
An actress is often Indebted to the
florist for the flowers she gets over the
footlights.
It doesn't always make a man happy
when a girl returns his iove—especially
when it's returned because she has no !
Before marriage every man has a
theory about managing a wife, but af
ter marriage he finds that it's a condi
tion and not a theory that confronts
him.
CULLED FROM ALL SIDES,
England makes $20,000,000 a year |
profit out of its Post Office.
Stammering is practically unknown
among uncivilized people.
The Victoria Cross carries with it a
life pension of $250 a year.
Copra is a preparation of the cocoa- i
nut made in great quantities in tropical
islands all over the world.
Bombay is said to be the most dense
ly populated city in the world. In cer
tain areas the numoer of inhabitants is
760 to the acre.
Copying ink may be made by dis
solving lump sugar in the common ink,
used in the proportion of one drachm
of the former to one ounce of the lat
ter.
Spurious coins are legally made in
China. They are used to put in the
coffins of the dead, and the supersti
tion prevails that they make the dead
happy.
SOME THINGS TO KNOW.
In some parts of Italy the govern
ment has to spend $3,000 to collect $2,-
000 worth of taxes.
It sometimes happens that it takes a
speaker longer to clear his throat than
it does to clear the hall.
The Bank of England contains silver
ingots which have laid in its vaults
since 1696.
Whistling is practically unknown
among the Icelanders, who regard It as
irreligious and a violation of the divine
law.
When a man Is sure that his friends
never say unkind things about him,
he may be sure that all his friends are
dead.
Russia, with a population of 127,000,-
000, has only 18,334 physicians. The
United States, with about 70,000,000,
has 120,000.
It is said that men who never drink,
smoke or stay out late at night live to
a ripe old age. Perhaps that's their
punishment.
San Francisco has a law by which a
peddler who rings a doorbell of a house
where the sign "no peddlers" is dis
played is liable to a fine of SIOO or six
months' imprisonment or both.
One Man's I.ncx.
Fortunes come to some men almost
against their will. Mr. Herbert Moly
neux tried hard, but could not dispose
of his share in the Rivas diamond mine
for £IOO. He now asks £225,000.
The De Beers Company is negotiating
for the mine's purchase, and the price
they are prepared to pay, should the
test prove satisfactory, is variously es
timated at from £1,000,000 to £2,000,-
000.
The Lnnnhina I'lnnt.
A flower known as the laughing
plant, which grows in Arabia, is so
failed because its seeds produce effects
like those produced by laughing gas.
The flowers are of a bright yellow,
while the seeds resemble small black
beans.
OASTOriIA.
Bears the Kind Y° u HaVO AIWBJtS Bought
i LOOK UP I 4W
Look up! the world is wide. On latd
and sea,
On ship or shore, there is no rust, no
rest;
l A heart throbs outward from each
human breast,
And moves it onward to its destiny.
| Why, meet It bravely, with the hon
est thought
Of no good deed undone, no ruin
wrought,
What if its hidden doom must end in
death?
To kill that hope that soothes a dying
breath.
lie who would soar from darkness into
light,
And, like Icarus, mount on waxen
wings,
Will never reach and touch the
golden springs
That ope the gates that close upon the
night.
j Who rises, lifting others up with him,
Is strong indeed. Within his call or
reach
Are hands that aid him —hearts that
help him teach
What he has learned himself, and
taught to them.
We build our thoughts like mountains
to the clouds,
The mystery of our being still un
solved,
Save that we know our lives are not
evolved
For the sole end of filling empty
shrouds.
ONE OE THE THREE.
j Dollie knocked at my door,
j Dollie is my niece and my goddaugh
; ter, and it is always a pleasure to me
j to see her, but when she wakes me up
j at 3 in the morning to give me that
| pleasure I cannot say that it is wholly
! an unmixed one.
j "Auntie, may I come in?"
j "You are in," I answered tartly, for
she had opened the door.
Evidently she considered this an in
vitation, for she closed the door be
hind her, put her candle down on the
table, and sat down at the foot of my
bed.
j "Auntie," she said penitently, "I
wouldn't disturb you unless it was for
something really important. But I
can't sleep."
| "What has been taking place?" I ask
ed.
i "It isn't what has taken place, but
! what will take place. Auntie, I must
j marry me."
I "Extremely sudden. I see no im
mediate necessity."
| "It will sound cruel. lam In love
| with three men."
| "Not bad for your years. Do you
! propose to marry all three?"
"No—but I propose to marry one of
them. The question is which."
I "And where does my part come in?"
"You must decide for me," pleading
i ly.
| "Bless me, you are to marry them—
- him I mean—the one"—l said con-
I fusedly, "not me, therefore surely you
ought to be the one to choose."
[ "How can Ibe both judge and coun
| sel? And I want to plead the cause
| of all three."
j "Plead away, then." X was getting
! curious now.
"First, there is Mr. Action."
"A clever barrister, from all ac
counts. What do you find to love in
him?"
"He is so clever, so ambitious, so
strong, and keen, and cold. Auntie,
brain is a grand thing. And it is so
delicious to lose all one's own small
identity and individuality in such a
large one —to merge one's paltry am
bitions in another's great one. Think
of the pride of hearing a man like that
say, 'That is my wife.' Think of the
pleasure of assisting his work, of
standing between him and the every
day disturbing annoyance of life, above
all, the pleasure of having him to look
up to and admire. Admiration for a
man is a luxury so rarely possible to
women nowadays. And I admire ev
erything about him, from his clear cut
features and keen eyes to his enormous
j brain and wonderful eloquence."
I was so much astonished at Dollie's
| own unwonted eloquence that I could
only blink stupidly for a minute or
two. Then I said, "Does he want to
marry you?"
"They all want to marry me"—trag
ically.
"You have pleaded one cause so well
that I fail to see where the other two
can have an advantage. Who are
they?"
"Well, there is Claude Brown."
"Then explain the quality of the es
sence poured forth for him."
"He makes me feel jiite a saint. He
I believes I am the most perfect woman
I living. When he sits and talks to me
I I am a throned queen and he a hum
ble worshiper. lam a single, tall,
white lily in a field of grass. lam a
white robed nun, a spotless, pure white
maiden. I feel as if my hands held
the charity and the kindliness and the
peace of the v. nrld, and no vileness
could live near me. lam something
j set apart. I sit in a charmed circle
j with his love and his reverence mak
j ing a white wall between me and the
! small sins and temptations of the
world. lam raised above the com
monplace. Storms can rage all round
me and not touch me. The world
struggles and fights while I sit on a
white throne holding its ideals and
; high hopes pure and undeflled."
Dollie's candle and my night light
I sh ion the pink ball dress and made
her jewels sparkle. But the jewels
' were nowhere compared to her glisten
' ing eyej. X ljjd forgotten now that I
•rer bad a down pillow and a hot wa
j tor bottle.
I Twenty-year-old Dollie had reached
j the two extremes of woman's bliss—
oh, wasteful fates—while some women
never knew either. But where In the
name of the holy St. Valentine was she
j going to get in a tl ird?
"And Claude Brcwn also wishes to
| marry you?"
j "They all want to marry me," she
| repeated, more tragically still.
| "And lam judge," I ejaculated, look
ing at the rosebud face and sweet per
j turbed blue eyes. "Well, I should be
I sorry to have the rosponsibility of glv
; ing the casting vote now, and I have
I another cause to lis en to. Who is the
j third?"
"The third is Jack."
"Ah, then, what fas Jack to offer be
sides a fair income and his handsome
face? A luxury of admiration? /Or a
white throne? Or something original
on his own account?"
"No. After all I think Jack might
be struck out first," she said, medi
tatively. "Only he says, 'Doll, old
girl,' and pushes my bicycle up all the
hills."
"Marry Mr. Action," I suggested.
"Yes, perhaps I will," said Dollie
slowly. "But I cannot help thinking
it is a pity to be a pillow all one's life,
knowing that one could have reigned a
sainted queen."
"So it is," I responded cheerfully.
"Marry Claude Brown."
"Well, I may," said Dollie, without
enthusiasm. "But isn't a sainted
queen a lonely person?"
"A very lonely person," I decided.
"Marry Jack."
"That," answered Dollie promptly,
"would be reverting to the common
place."
j "Dollie," I said, "go to sleep and
j dream. And marry the one you dream
of."
j Fortunately Dollie was pleased to see
i the wisdom of this remark.
| "Well," she answered. "That is a
good idea, for it does away with the
: responsibility. Good night, auntie."
I "Good night, Dollie," 1 replied, fall
ing back on my pillow gratefully. The
next morning Dollie popped her head
in at my door when I was dressing and
said in a voice that carried the de
spair of nations in its tones:
"Auntie, I dreamt of all three. I
went to church to be married, and
there they all were-—frock coats with
white buttonholes and all."
Dollie was out skating all day. I
hate cold, so I spent the afternoon by
the library fire reading, and was deep
ly engrossed when Dollie woke me—l
mean disturbed me—again.
; There was a clash of skates in the
| hall and the sound of a girl's rippling
laugh and a man's deep voice,
j Then Dollie came into the library.
Her eyes sparkled and danced—her
cheeks were daintily rose tinted—her
wide hat brim sheltered a different
face from the one that had despaired
by the light of a night light.
"Auntie," she said, "I have brought
home Jack."
"Ah," I remarked, "then you have
reverted to the commonplace after
all."
j Dollie didn't even mind.
"Yes," she said happily.
No Evidence Forthcoming.
A man was on trial in Western
America on a charge of catching a cer
tain fish that weighed less than two
pounds. The constable who had made
the arrest testified to catching the pris
j oner with the fish in his possession.
"Where are the fish?" asked the law
yer for the defendant.
"Why, they wouldn't keep," answer
ed the officer.
| "What did you do with them?"
"Oh. I disposed of them."
"What did you do with them?"
"Well, I knew they wouldn't keep, so
I—l—disposed of them."
"But what did you do with them?"
"My wife cooked them."
"And you ate them?"
"Yes."
I "Your Honor, I ask that this case be
j dismissed."
j "Charge dismissed and defendant
discharged," ruled the Justice of the
Peace, "on the ground that the arrest
ing officer ate the evidence."
Some I net* of Charcoal.
! Foul water is purified by it.
No better known disinfectant can be
used.
Tainted meat can be sweetened and
purified by its use.
Charcoal is so porous that it absorbs
and condenses gases rapidly.
Strewn over the skins of birds and
I animals it will prevent all unpleasant
odors.
A teaspoonful added to half a glass
of water is a remedy for acidity of tlio
stomach and often relieves sick head-
I ache.
j It absorbs the gases and relieves the
distended stomach pressing against the
nerves which extend from the stomach
to the head,
j Charcoal laid on a burn causes the
! pain to abate immediately, and by re
newing the application will heal and
cure—if it is not deep—in a few days.
China'. Walls.
There are two great walls in China.
One is 40 feet thick and 50 feet high
and surrounds Peking. It is 10 miles In
circumference. The other—the great
wall of China—is nearly 1,300 miles
long and was built 2,115 years ago—
-217 years B. C.
Wintniroßrn'a f lanr. ii.-.
Cigarette smoking is a common prac
tice among the colored washerwomen
of New Orleans. They loan over the tub
and make a quaint picture as the
smoke rolls from their lips.
Fliirlitn'a lloncy.
One county in Florida alone has an
average annual output of 360,000
pounds of honey.
THE LADY AND THE MOUSE.
This Little Itoilnnt Caused n (Jroat Deal
of Trouble.
It is an old, old story to accuse wo
mankind of cowardice where the mouse
jis concerned. But the oft-repeated
charge that any woman will immedi
| ately go into hysterics or spasms at
the mere sight of a small-sized rodent
Is an insult to the sex. Some may
evince their dislike of mice in this way,
but there are notable and conspicuous
exceptions. For example, one woman,
while engaged in her domstic duties,
encountered a mouse in the flour bar
rel. Now, most women under similar
circumstances would have uttered a
few genuine shrieks and then sought
safety in the garret, but this one pos
sessed more than the ordinary degree
of genuine courage. She summoned the
man-servant and told him to get the
gun, call the dog and station himself
at a convenient distance. Then she
clambered half way upstairs and com
menced to punch the flour barrel with a
pole. Presently the mouse made its
appearance and started across the
floor. The dog at once went in pur
suit. The man fired and the dog drop
ped dead, the lady fainted and fell
down stairs, and the man, thinking
that she was killed and fearing that
he would be arrested for the murder,
disappeared and has not been seen
since. The mouse escaped.
W
" 1
—-
Reilly—Wot's Callahan lookin' so
mournful for to-day?
Dooley—Sure, he wanthed his little
kid named Dewey and ther owld wo
man had the by christened Alger be
misthake.
KceiiiiiK I1!h I'romlMP.
"Can you build a bridge over this
washout strong enough to take a train
over," asked the conductor, looking at
his watch, "in two hours?"
"I can, sir," replied the section boss.
"Then go ahead."
It was then 2 o'clock. At 4 the con
ductor went down to Inspect the work
"How's this?" he demanded. "Didn't
you say you could build a bridge in
two hours that I could run this train
over?"
"No. sir," responded the section boss,
"I said I could build a bridge you could
run the train over in two hours. It
ain't none of my business what you
want to run so thunderin' slow for, but
I'm makin' the bridge all right. It'll he
done to-morrow mornin'."
A I Ncfdl Mule.
"Tom, that old sway backed mewl
o' yourn ain't no good under a saddle,
is he?"
"Nope; too slow an clumsy."
"Ner in th' buggy er waggin?"
"Nope; too awkward fer that."
"Ner at pullin ov the plow?"
"Nope; wants tar graze too much.'
"Whut you keepin him fer, then?'
"Waal, you see, we ain't got no clock
at our house, an that ole mewl brays
at dinner time jest cz shore ez ths
yearth tourns over. Yassar, I've been
called to dinner by that mewl's bray
fer the last five years an I'm alius right
plum ou time."
Wny Out of It.
He —Who is that ugly looking girl
standing at the side of the post?
She —Sir, I want you to understand
that she is my sister.
He—You misunderstood me; I meaD
the girl to the left of the post.
She —That is also one of my sisters
He —Allow me to congratulate you
on having the meanest looking lot ol
relatives I have ever seen in all my
life.
Flattened.
Young Mrs. Torldns was almost in
tears when her husband came home.
"What's the matter?" Inquired hei
husband.
"It wasn't my fault, Charley, dear
and I do hope it can be mended. That
pouter pigeon you brought home—"
"Well?"
"I'm afraid it has swallowed a tack
and got a puncture."
Two Flntu.
Mabel—l suppose you have heard ol
sister Lou's marriage. She's taken a
flat in Brooklyn.
Miss Jellus—Yes, I heard she had a
flat; hut I didn't Lear where she had
taken him.
The Correct Etxitrennion.
"Have I got the 'pleasing expression
you want?" asked Mr. Gubbins.
"Yes, sir." replied the photographer.
"I think that will do very well."
"Then hurry up, please. It hurts my
face."
Quite a LUfilit,
"Does your husband speak more than
one language, Mrs. Parvenu?"
"Oh, yes, he tall.s war, horse, base
ball and bicycle—one just as well as
I the other."
Than Ht Shoulil Kxprcl.
"See here, policeman, that woman
1 wlio gave me her baby to hold haru't
come hack."
"Well, th' kid' 3 asleep, ain't it?"
POINTS AND MOOT POINTi .
Man is naturally cruel —he steps on
the worm unless he stops to reason.
Cruelty is the revenge we take for
our own just sufferings.
We love the kind—not because they
are kind, but because we are selfish.
Man is more tyrannical to the mind
than to the body of man.
A very little actual power exercises
all the tyranny of the universe.
Timidity, vacillation, irresolution
are fatal qualities.
The black frost of fear nips indis
criminately a host of the blossoms of
good and evil.
Weak wills have terrible tasks im
posed upon them-—those the strong
cannot endure for themselves.
If the brute creation could bring
mankind into court, who can doubt
which side the Divine Justice would
take?
EDITORIAL DONT'S.
Don't annoy a silent editor; he may
be a reformed prize fighter.
Don't forget that it's economical to
write on both sides of the paper, and
editors admire economy.
Don't fail to submit a list of fifty
alternative titles fer your manuscript.
They will please tpe editor and keep
him out of mischief.
Don't send an article without having
it cross-written, as it makes it bright
and attractive. It may try the editor's
eyes, hut what of that? Spectacles are
cheap.
FACTS IN A FEW LINES.
Germany prints twice as many books
as France.
Rarely indeed is a blue eyed person
found to he color blind.
In China horses are mounted on the
right side and ships are launched side
ways.
It is said that women criminals have
larger hands and feet than average
women.
Between the ticks of a watch a ray
of light could move eight times around
the globe.
The wall around the city of Babylon
at the height of its prosperity was 56
miles in length.
The Chinese fiddle, in the shape of
an ordinary hammer, has two strings
and is played with a bow.
MAXIMS IN THE SOUDAN,
Fight earnestly, leave off evil; the
avoidance of it is a true education.
He who overcomes his own heart
bends it as a sickle is bent.
This life Is a sowing time for the
future life; all who sow good deeds
shall enter the great city.
Whoever chooses this world rejects
the choice of the next; he seizes one
cowry hut loses two thousand cowries.
About this saying there is no uncer
tainty: whoever rejects it, leave him
alone, that he may become a heathen.
This world is like a room where we
see ropes set up for weaving and thread
is placed ready.
If there is no purity there is no
prayer, as you know; if there is no
prayer there is no drinking of the wa
ter of heaven.
Y r ou will obtain a reward according
to the character of your actions on
earth; you will come to meet with
these actions in the next world.
He who possesses knowledge but
does not act accordingly, what will he
have to say on the day of the resur
rection?
OUT OF THE ODD.
Eight feet is the usual width of a
street in China.
No particular form of religion re
ceives official recognition in Japan.
The left side of the face is consider
ed by artists and photographers more
beautiful than the right.
Pious Russians do not eat pigeons
because of the sanctity conferred on
the dove in the Scriptures.
The United States and Germany are
the only two great Powers in the world
that have no postal savings banks.
The willow is one of the most adapt
able of plants. A willow switch stuck
in the wet will alnost invariably take
root.
A German officer estimates that In
the course of the present century wars
have killed 30,000,000 men in civilized
countries.
When English soldiers are on the
march and billeted upon publicans only
three halfpence per man is allowed for
their breakfast.
SNAP SHOTS.
The toper enjoys life fully.
A love feast —kis ;cs and pop.
It's quite a feat for a poet to get a
foot-hold.
Even an even nt mhor of teeth may
he uneven.
A doze is akin to a nap, but it isn't a
napkin.
Circus people w ruid starve if the
tent were their onlj spread.
The liveryman ought to be thankful
for his stable income.
Even a blindman may say he has had
a pleasant sea voyage.
Some halls are a regular circus, even
to the bareback performers.
"Now I shall lit all roused up,"
thought the placid water. "There
come the white cafs."
Strange to say, applicants for posi
tions are generally out of place in an
smsloyment bureau.
letter from a woman
Dr. David Kennedy*a Favorite Remedy frequently cures several
members of a family. While it is considered by many to be a Kidney and
Bladder Medicine, it is just as certain to cure Dyspepsia, Constipation, Rheu
matism, Scrofula and Eczema. This is because it first puts the Kidneys in a
healthy condition, so they can sift all impurities from the blood.
Healthy blood practically means a completely healthy body.
Here is a letter from Mrs. Capt. PETER RACE, of OJFTJR Hudson,
N. .: "My husband was troubled with his kidneys, andsuffered
fearfully with shooting pains through his back. He *1 F took Dr.
David Kennedy* 3 Favorite Remedy, and N—T
is now well and. strong. Although " J
seventy years of age, he is as hearty as
a man many years younger. I was so
troubled with Dyspepsia that it was
recommended Favorite 17] f]
J? C J 'ic F o ll |; in D aftcj r \JJ
our good health to Favorite Remedy."
It is prescribed with unfailing success for Nerve
Troubles, and for the Liver and Blood it is a specific. /Xfef
It has cured many that were beyond the aid of other
medicine. Ask your druggist for it, and insist upon getting it. Don't take a
substitute. It will cost you si.oo for a regular full-sized bottle.
Sampße SBoftSe rre©
If you want to try Favorite Remedy before buying, send your full post
office address to the DR. DAVID KENNEDY CORPORATION, Rondout, N. Y., and
mention this paper. They will send you a free trial bottle, all charges prepaid.
This genuine o.fer is made to prove to everybody what a wonderful medicine it is.
CDApn EflD oA \ o
or/iuß run 011111]=
Advertisers in the Tribune get full value for their money.
T. CAMPBELL,
dealer in
M&y
Boots ami
S&.O6S*/
Also
PURE WINES J) LIQUORS
FOR FAMILY
AND MEDICINAL PURPOSES.
Contro and Main streets, Froeland.
DePIERRO - BROS.
-CAFE.-
Corner of Centre and Front Streets,
Freeland, Pa.
Finest Whiskies in Stock.
Gibson, Dougherty, Kaufcr Club,
Kosenblutb's Velvet, of which we h ve
EXCLUSIVE SALE 111 TOWN.
Mumm's Extra Dry Chnrapajrnc,
Henuessy Brandy, Blackberry,
Gins, Wines, Clarets, CordiaU, Etc.
Imported and Domestic Cigars.
OYSTERS IN EVERY STYLE.
Ham and Schweitzer Cheese Sandwiches,
Sardines, Etc.
MEALS AT - ALL - HOURS.
Rallentiuc and Hazleton beer on tap.
Baths, Hot or Cold, 25 Cents.
FRANCIS BRENNAN,
RESTAURANT
151 Centre street, Freeland.
FINEST LIQUOR, DEER, PORTER.
CIGARS AND SOFT DRINKS.
U Beat Cough Syrup. Taatea Good. UwPl
j: in time. Sold by druggist*. If
About the Toad.
If a toad's mouth be forced open and
held so the toad will suffocate. This
is because lie has no ribs and cannot
dilate his chest; therefore he swallows
the air as though it were food, taking
it into the stomach instead of the
lungs.
The Oldeni Love-Letter.
The oldest love-letter in the world is
in the British Museum. It i u a pro
posal of marriage for the hand of ah
Egyptian princess, and it was made
3,500 years ago. It is in the form of
an inscribed brick.
Do You K.avy Him (
The Emperor of China Has to fast
sixty-four days in each yoar for the
sake of religion.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Dr. David Kennedy's
Favorite Remedy
CURES ALL KIDNEY. STOMACH
- AND LIVER TROUBLES.
Watch the date on your paper.
Dry Goods, Groceries
and Provisions.
S BROTHERHOOD HATS 0
IJ
A celebrated brand of XX flour
alwu3'g in stock.
Roll Butter and Eggs a Specialty.
AMANDUS OSWALD,
N. W. Cor. Centre and Front Sts., Freeland.
P. F. McNULTY,
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND EM BALM ER.
Kinbalminy of frmnlc corpses performed
exclusively by Mrs. P. F. McNulty.
Prepared to Attend Calls
Day cr Night.
_ South Centre street. Freehold.
VIENNA : BAKERY
J. B. LAUBACH, Prop.
Centre Street, Freeland.
CHOICE DREAD OF ALL KINDS,
CAKES, AND PASTRY, DAILY.
FANCY AND NOVELTY CAKES
BAKED TO ORDER.
Confectionery n Ice Cream
supplied to balls, parties or plcnies, with
all necessary adjuncts, at shortest
notice and fairest prices.
Delivery and supply vayons to all parts oj
town and si/rronndinys every day.
< aveats,and Trado-Marks obtained, and alt Pat-?
i ent business conducted for MODERATE FEES. $
\ OUR OFFICE 13 OPPOSITE U. 3. PATENT OFFICE#
and we can secure patent in less time than those ?
remote from Washington. ,
Send model, diawing or photo., with descrip- #
| tion. We advise, if patentable or not, free of?
i charge. Our fee not due till patent ia secured. $
A PAMPHLET, '"HOW to Obtain Patents," with#
, cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries?
i sent free. Address, ?
C.A.SftGW&COJ
P . PATENT OFFICE, WASHINGTON.
1? IR lIsT Tinsr <3-
or every description execute'! Nt sheet
notice by the Tribune Couipuny.