FREELAND TRIBUNE. Established 18S3. PUBLISHED EVERY MONDAY, WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY. BY 'l'HB TRIBUNE PRINTING COMPAN?, Limited. OFFICE: MAIN STREET ABOVE CENTKE. LONG DISTANCE TELEPUONE. SUBSCRIPTION RATES. FREELAND.— The TRIBUNE is delivered by curriers to subscribers in Freeland ut the rate of 1 cents u month, payable every two months, or $1.50 a year, payable in advance. The TRIBUNE may be ordered direct from the carriers or from the otliee. Complaints of irregular or tardy delivery service will receive prompt attention. BY MAIL.—The THIBUNE is scut to out-of towu subscribers for $1.50 a year, payable in advance; pro rata terms for shorter periods. The date when the subscription expires is on the address label of each paper. Prompt re newals must be made at the expiration, other wise the subscription will be discontinued. Entered ut the Postoiliee at Freeluud, Pa., as Second-Class Mutter. Make all money orders, checks, etc., payable to the Tribune Printiny Company, Limited. FIIEELAND, PA., NOVEMBER2I,I9O2. FACTS IN FEW LINES Purls lias 1,310 factories. A diet of garlic Is it wonderful aid to tliu complexion. The czar of Itussin has established u ten hour working day. A man should weigh twenty-six jwimds for every foot of his height. The most valuublo byproduct pro duced on the farm is the sklinmllk. Whitewash made of quicklime and wood ashes will destroy moss on tiles. The number of laborers required to cultivate the tea crop of India is UIJO,- 000. Two roots and the trunk of a fossil tree have just been unearthed ut Brad l'ord, England. The standard of height in the British army is greater tbun iu any other army in the world. There are sixty-flve steamers on the Swiss lakes. The largest can trans port 1,200 passengers. The median age of the white popula tion In the last census year was 23.4 and of the colored 10.7 years. During the last ten years 275 acci dents, involving 301 deaths, have oc curred to people climbing the Alps. The income of the Suez canal last year was $10,450,000, being dues froui 3,000 vessels which passed through it. Fifty thousand Christmas postcards designed and printed in London have been ordered for sale on the continent. Twenty-live survivors of the eruption at St. Pierre, Martinique, are adver tised us an attraction at a circus in Berlin. The motto "Dieu et Moil Droit" was first assumed by Edward 111. of Eng land when he took the title of king of France. Dr. Ileinz, professor of therapeutics of the University of Erslangen, advises long, deep and quick breathing for cur ing seasickness. Cleburne, a town in Texas, possesses a gray brindle tomcat that Is thirty years old. The animal has no teeth and is unable to mew. Twenty-five thousand black silk handkerchiefs have been ordered by the British admiralty for the navy from a Macclesfield firm. The whole number of Seminole Indi ans, as shown by a census Just taken, is but 330. Nearly all of them are In the Florida everglades. The greatest number of complete Bi bles ever issued iu one year—viz, 939,- 700—was sent out in 1901 by the Brit ish Foreign Bible society. There are 3,900 window glass pots in the country, but owing to the limited number of skilled workmen it Is only possible to operate 2,300 pots. A Spanish ducat belonging to the pe riod of Philip IV. of Spain, IG2I to 1 (.125, has been found by a Mashona land volunteer near Mafeking. A portable seat for messenger boys has been invented. A tired lad carries it concealed beneath ids coat when not in use, but it will usually be in use. Germany sold Russia nearly $700,000 worth of plows last year. The plow in use in that country lias wheels at the beam tip, so it does not have to be held. Since June 7 more than 95.000 British oilicers and men have left South Afri ca. Tliis is believed to constitute a world's record in the transport of troops. The agricultural returns of Great Britain for 1902 show that the total under crops and grass was 32,387,705 acres, a decrease of 29,480 compared with 1901. As a thanks offering for his good health Pope Leo XIII, proposes to erect a home for the aged poor in ids native town of Carpineto, Perugia, at a cost of $200,000. Judge M. M. Sheldon of Macon, Mo., married a young couple recently and left out the word "obey" iu the cere mony. In order to make sure that both parties should lie aware of the omission lie called attention to it. CASTOHIA. Boar, the KM V Oll N al6 Always Bought CASTOniA. Boars the KM Von Have Always Bought T" LABOR'S LEADERS. OFFICIAL HEADS OF UNIONS AND WALKING DELEGATES. Honest Men and Good Cltlsens Who Have Been Misunderstood—There In a Better Feeling N'oiv Than There Was Twenty Years ARO. The gentleman v.*ho has occasioned the enemies of trades unions incalcu lable annoyance and anguish Is the walking delegate. ' All the world has heard of him, aud a small part of it has met him. The funny papers and some papers that are not so funny pic ture the walking delegate as a coarse featured, overdressed fellow who wears a big diamond in a pink shirt, smokes big black cigars and rides in a baughtymobile. According to these chroniclers, the sole business of the walking delegate is to stir up trouble* between employer and employee and to live on the fat of the land at the expense of his dupes. With a swagger he approaches a gang of workmen, pushes his hat back on his head, ex pectorates half a pint of tobacco Juice, makes a half circle sweep with u big red hand and shouts: "(Jit out o' this, youse fellows! This Job is struck!" The picture is overdrawn, say you? Well, the one I present Isn't original. It's a copy after the Sir Joshuas of capitalist pressdom. Now let me tell you the sober truth about the walking delegate, or the business agent, as his proper title is. (He was nicknumed the walking dele gate because he has slight allowances for car fare and has to walk many miles in the performance of his dutieSj notwithstanding the "haughtymobile' story.) The business agent is an official of building trades organizations, 1 may say, almost exclusively. These trades, especially in the large cities, found him a necessity* Their men are scat tered over a large territory, and there are so many of them that It is impos sible to get them all out to all of the meetings of the union. So the'busi ness agent goes around from job to job, collects dues and assessments, serves notices and perforins other du ties assigned to him under the consti tution of his union. Ills hours of work are generally from two to six more each day than those of the men working at the trade. Me must be in telligent. thoroughly informed on craft matters and courteous. Me must be honest and temperate, for he handles a great deal of money, and his respon sible duties call for a clear head all the time. And this man receives from ids union generally only the rate of wages paid In the trade. And the union is not an easy boss (I should say bosses). One serious misstep and the unlucky walking delegate Is called up before a court that deals out even and exact justice, which is full of mercy and compassion for an erring or unfortu nate brother, but weighs the official's acts without sugaring the scales. But how about the strikes ordered by the walking delegate? Me orders them just about as the clerk of the house of representatives passes a bill—he an nounces the result of a ballot. The offi cial boards of trades unions rarely or der strikes, walking delegates never. It Is generally the rule for the mem bers of the union (and sometimes those members only who are directly con cerned) to vote upon a motion to call a strike, and in most unions a two-thirds vote is necessary to carry. A course once decided upon, the officials of the organization lieeome its executive rep resentatives, and in this connection the walking delegate has certain duties to perform. No man makes greater sacrifices for the cause to which he is pledged than the walking delegate. Mis labors are not only arduous and unceasing, but in many cases he Is blacklisted by em ployers, and when he is supplanted for any reason by another member of his union he must go among strangers to secure employment and often Is com pelled to abandon his trade and go into anytliiug that offers him work. Me is one of the most thoroughly misrepre sented and unjustly treated men, and recognition of his worth and services to humanity will come, as it generally lias come to those who have occupied the dangerous positions in every war for the elevation of mankind, long aft er the mortal casket of his brave and loyal soul has returned to dust. To some extent what I have written of the walking delegate may also be said of those in higher official positions | in the labor unions. But It is only fair to the mere liberal spirit of recent years to say that the labor leader is not now universally condemned and slandered as he was a few years ago. There was a time not long ago when to be the spokesman or leader of a trade union was to be ostracized so cially by all but the unionists. The officials of labor organizations were misrepresented and persecuted. The father of lies never found so much work for his offspring as in that period covered by the fifteen years immedi ately subsequent to 1880, when the la bor movement in America was strug gling against as great odds as ever confronted any crusade in the cause of justice and truth, and it is that period which I now have in mind. Not con tented with deceiving the public as to the character and conduct of the labor officials, the eloquent tools of Mam mon who served with pen and on ros trum endeavored by the basest means to destroy the confidence of the labor ing men themselves in their chosen leaders. Sfelflsh and dishonest motives were charged, so called evidence was manufactured and put forth and con spiracies were hatched, all that in the greatest contest for human rights the world lias ever known the seeds of discord and destruction might be sown. Thugs were In some instances hired to couimlt acts of physical vio lence upon the men holding responsible places In the unions, and there huve been times when the position of the labor lender was as full of danger as the tiring line at Gettysburg. You may say this is an exaggeration, due to the enthusiasm of an advocate. But I tell you It is a part of the history of the labor movement and that I have not read and been told these things, but that I have seen tliem and lived them. Happily those strenuous times have passed; gone, I hope, never to return. The labor lender of today has many friends, some of them powerful in other than labor circles, and he is able to stand before the world and de fend the faith that is in him. But it seems to me not amiss at this time to say a word for the leaders who were in the forefront of labor's battles in the times when the "labor problem" was frequently called the "labor war." Many of those warriors who strug gled, sacrificed and suffered in the struggle for human rights have crossed the dark river which marks the un known shore. Others, still in the har ness, have lived to see the labor move ment become "respectable" and to find the duties of leadership not quite so difficult as in the days of yore. I do not claim absolute perfection for all the champions of labor. Some, It is true, have fallen by the wayside, Jilst as some of the world's greatest states men, merchants and divines have been too weak to stand the supreme test when it cume to them. But I do assert that in no other walk of life has there been so near an approach to universal fidelity to principles and trusts as Is shown by the record of the labor move ment in America. There are several labor union treas urers for each bank cashier in the United States, and yet the records show that for each dishonest custodian of union funds there have been a dozen embezzling bank cashiers. llow many names of labor leaders have you ever seen published in connection with di vorce court proceedings? They leave that field to the class which considers them inferiors. Without a doubt the labor leader is fully entitled to the respect and con sideration he is winning today because of his principles and his personality. He is honest and intelligent; he is loyal and courageous; in? is a patriot in the highest meaning of that term. The ma jority of labor leaders are as nearly unselfish as it is possible for humans to be. They believe in the brotherhood of man and want to serve humanity. They would guard the homo, believing that "home is the best interpreter of heaven," by making it unnecessary for women and children to toil in mine, mill and factor}*. The labor leader has his faults—so have we ull of us—but in the work he has been selected by his associates to perform he is entitled to the support and sympathy of every lover of justice. Personally as a general thing lie can stand alone, but In his efforts to im prove the condition of the toller he wel comes aid no matter from whence it conies. JOS. It. BUCHANAN. POOP Old "Divine Right.** It Is particularly the opportunity of the operators to st-t tholr house In order, to correct obvious abuses and to so manage their business that If they should have to face a similar crisis they may have full claim to public support. The most loyal and ardent supporters of the operators for the past months could hardly assert that their ease has been well conducted. From the beginning they were most unfortunate In their spokesman. President Paer's pi ous cant about the divine right of himself and his fellow presidents disgusted thou sands of men who see In labor dema gogues one of the greatest dangers this eountry has to confront. But, more than this, It has seemed almost as If they had deliberately undertaken to make them selves ridiculous before the people by their public utterances.—New York Even ing Post. This is severe, especially from so conservative a source as the Evening Post, which has no sympathy with or ganized lubor. Yet it is probably mild as compared to some things Mr. Baer will have to hear behind the scenes. Of course It Is not to be assumed that the practical men of large affairs were not correctly represented by the per formances of Mr. Baer. For the time being he was their mouthpiece, and they hud to "grin and bear it," but it is safe to predict that he will never again occupy such a position.—Gunton's Mag azine. The Employer** Mnatory In I*n**lng. The Industrial mastery of the em ployer Is passiiig rapidly. Labor organ izations and the laborers' improved con dition are in fact destroying It. As a substitute for the old system It is in evitable that the employer must ac cept the fact and act toward the deul er in labor as he acts toward the dealer in raw material, making the best bar gain with no favor but civility. A whole century of change has led from a system In which responsibility might be shirked (by the master in oppression of a servant, by the servant in the iiope of charitable aid from his master) to this better system of co-ordinate re sponsibilities definitely placed and not to he shirked without loss to the delin quent. The rise of the factory system with its much lamented severance of personal bonds between master and worker and the organization of labor which the factory system facilitated have contributed most to this fortunate revolution.—Ambrose P. Winston in At lant lc. The I'neqnnl Content. In England the fact that the house of lords had decided that a trades un ion man could he sued for damages for the nets of another may he used as an implement of employers In the greatest conflict against lubor ever known—not to collect daningos, hut tc submit the worklngman to long nnd expensive litigation—the long purse against the short one—Washington Post. WOMAN AND FASHION A Henutlful Goirn, Vivid and almost startling combina tions are decidedly the vogue today in dressy wear, and be they not too bizarre they lire the very height of style. This effect Is of a beautiful soft material In a delicate pastel shade. The waist is heavily adorned with broad bands of lieavy lace and self tucks and is trimmed with a narrow black and white torpedo braid. The FOR AFTERNOON OR EVENING. yoke is a square Elizabethan effect, and below it the self mntcrinl is very finely tucked. The front of the waist Is a Gibson idea, and the sleeve Is a full affair rather on the bishop order. The skirt shows the same wide tucks of self material as the waist, nnd be tween these are Inserted bands of lace, which same lace also trims the skirt Dn the lower portion In the back. Evening; Wrap*. The cloth evening wrap has every appearance of carrying all before it in the matter of dressy cloaks. In pale pastel tinted, fine face cloth it offers most unlimited scope for artistic inge nuity. One it has been my happy fate to meet of late was in a lovely shade of pale blue, fashioned very much on the lines of a full Inverness ami most attractively adorned with wide entrc deux of guipure insertion down either front, a collar with long stole ends of black panne adding the always lovely touch of sable, while yet another equally recherche In kind was of white cloth, carrying a six inch border every where of Irish crochet laee, a pelerine of the same exquisite dentelle falling over a doublure of rose panne.—New York Mail and Express. Keck WrnpN. Neck wraps have taken on new glory and are In stole shape with long ends that hang nearly to the feet. In many instances the neck portion becomes a small cape and fits the shoulders snug ly aiul perfectly. The ends are from five to six Inches wide and quite flat. Some are finished with tails, but others again are simply broadened slightly at the ends and left plain. Those of squirrel are charming. The gray Is soft and becoming, the skin is pliable, and the hairs rest caressingly against the skin. The Ready Made fiown. Once upon a time a ready made gown was the recognized symbol of poverty and unsophistieation. Today it is oth erwise and to declare yourself a devo tee of private makers is to admit being behind the times. Few women of even large fortune can withstand the elianus of the models shown by the big stores, each of which strives to outdo the other in point of style and lowness of price. For Schoolgirl. This charming model would make a smart and serviceable school frock. The blouse has a double collar, which is decorated with stitching, and the upper one has the anchors in the eor- SCHOOL FIIOCK. nor. It is made with a fitted lining, and there are two rows of large pearl buttons to decorate the front. The skirt is cut in seven gores and is finished at the bottom with a fitted circular band or flounce. Dark blue flannel with chemisette nnd upper col lar of white would make a pretty little frock.—New York Journal. CHOICE MISCELLANY Hard I.IJIVM For the Ml*op;y nlnt. A stringent law against bachelors has recently been promulgated in one of the stutes forming the Argentine Republic. A man is marriageable in Argentina when he Is twenty. If from that date and till he pusses ills thirtieth birthday he wishes to remain single, he must pay $5 a month to the state. For the next five years the tax Increases lUO per cent. Between thirty-five and fifty the bachelor is mulcted to the tune of S2O a month. From his fiftieth year-to sev enty-live s.'lo a month is the tax; but, having reached the seventy-fifth year, relief finally comes, and the tax be comes nominal, being reduced to S2O a year. After eighty a man can remain single without paying anything. There is a paragraph relating to wid owers, who are given three years in which to mourn and pick a successor. A man who can prove that he has proposed and been refused three times In one year is also considered to have ourncd immunity from taxation. It is said that the law works like a charm. The EmbnMKlci* at Washington. Sir Michael Herbert, the new British ambassador, will tuke rank next after Signor Mayor des Planches, the Italian embassador, in the diplomatic corps. The foreign embassies at Washington now rank in this order: Germany, Rus sia, Mexico, Italy and Great Britain, with Austria-Hungary next, as Mr. llengelmuller probably will present his credentials as ambassador before Mr. Jusserand, the new representative from France, arrives and is presented. There have been persistent rumors that Dr. von Ilolleben, the German am bassador, who is now dean of the corps, will soon relinquish his post here for another one on the continent, and there have also been intimations that Count Uassini, the Russian am bassador, who has been at Washing ton since June, 1808, will be trans ferred to another post. If these two prospective changes occur, Senor Azpi roz, the Mexican ambassador, will be come dean of the corps, with Signor Mayor des Planches of Italy ranking next and Sir Michael Herbert third In the order of precedence. Prefer \VK'S to Tip*. The waiters of Paris are up in arms against tips. They held the other night a meeting whose battle cry was "Abas le pourboire!" and are shortly to issue handbills setting forth the evils of the tipping system—familiar topic, though never before presented from the wait ers' viewpoint. Tipping is a complicat ed system in Paris. Each "pourboire" as it Is collected is put into a general box, and at the end of the day the total is divided equally among the waiters. They receive no wages, but, on the contrary, have to advance to the cafe keeper at the beginning of each day a sum estimated at one-half of the day's pourboire. Whether or not the gratui ties reach the estimated total the fixed sum is paid to the owner for "ex penses." One garcon recently brought suit against his employer for these ex penses and recovered. The 2,000 wait ers at the meeting determined on simi lar action. Freak* of the Hunt Pelee Eruption. Professor Angela Heilprin in an ad dress on the Mont Pelee eruption said the first phase was the emission from the crater of a brown colored cloud which was impelled to a vast height. Almost simultaneously a black cloud Intensely luminous shot downward to ward the city and when over St. Pierre was shattered by a tremendous light ning stroke, which sent the death deal ing blast in all directions. Some of the freaks of the destruc tion, he said, were inexplicable. In one case a body was found scorched to a crisp, and beside it lay a box of match es untouched by fire. Jewel boxes were picked up with the exterior unscathed and the trinkets inside fused in a solid mass.—-Philadelphia Record. Doctor** Income* In England. The British Medical Journal ven tured an estimate of the average in come that might be expected by the general practitioner in England and put it at £4OO to £SOO. The estimate was copied into several daily papers and has produced a large crop of cor respondence teeming with ridicule and indignation. The general practitioners, who ought to know, declare that only a small proportion of their number earn so much even after years of ardu ous work. The competition brought about by the overcrowded state of the profession is, they declare, so great that it is n cruelty to induce men by Inflated estimates to enter it. Sea Elephant Leather. A New England sea captain named Cleveland has created a sensation by bringing home a few hides of the sea elephant, a giant seal thus far hunted for oil alone. The hides are said to he more flexible and tougher than those of cattle, and a process has been in vented which produces from them a grade of leather superior to anything hitherto known. The elephants have Increased rapidly in numbeni during the last score of years on aeronnt of their comparative immunity from slaughter. Captain Cleveland's ship is the first vessel to sail after sea ele phant hides. Fixing; It. "My price," said the merchant who had been asked to fix one for his busi ness and who was quite willing to sell out, "is $150,000; not a cent less." "Make it just that much ICSR." sug gested the promoter, "and I think we can close the deal." "llow do you mean?" "Make it $149,099.00. The head of this syndicate is a woman."—Philadel phia Fress. SKIN \ OK LIVER (•/ KIDNEYS £ BLOOD I • ARE TKEY DISEASED? ' Favorite Remedy will absolutely cure any *4 Case of kidney, liver or bladder trouble. It ' will purify your blood and build up your sys tem. It is the only Kid.ney Medicine ever discovered that regulates the bowels. All others cause constipation, which is dangerous. Trial Bottle Free Every reader of this paper can have a trial bottle of this wonderful medicine and a papiphlet of valuable medical advico abso lutely free, postpaid, by simply sending their full post olneo address to the DR. DAVID KENNEDY CORPORATION, Rondout, N. Y., and mentioning this paper. The pub lishers of this paper guarantee the genuine ness of this LIBERAL OFFER. All druggists sell Dr. David Kennedy's Favorite Remedy in the NEW 50 CENT SIZE and the regular SI.OO size bottles. I)r. David Kennedy's Golden Plasters strength en Muscles, remove pain anywhere. 15c each. RAILROAD TIMETABLES LEHIGH VALLEY RAILKOAD. November 10, 1902. w ARRANGEMENT or PASSENGER TRAINS. LEAVE FREELANI). J 0 12 a m for Weutlierly, Mauch Chunk Allentown, Bethlehem, Euutoti, Phila delphia and New York. 7 29 u in for Sandy Hun, White Haven, Wilkes-Hurre, Pittston and Scrunton. 8 15 a ni lor Hazleton, Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Allentown, llethlohem, Easton. Philadelphia, New York, Delano und Pottsvillo. 9 58 a ui for Hazleton, Delano, Bluhanoy City. Shenandoah and Alt* < armel. 1 1 32 a in lor Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al lentown, Bethlehem. Easton, Phila delphia, New York, liazleton, Delano, iMahunoy City, .Shenandoah and Mt. t armel. 1141a in for White Haven, Wilkes-Barre, Seranton and the West. 4 44 p ni for Weatherly, Mauch Chunk, Al lentown, Bethlehem, Easton, Philadel phia, New York, liazleton, Delano Mahanoy City, Shenundoah, Alt. Curme. and Pottaville. 0 33 } m for Sandy Hun, White Haven, Wilkes-Hurre, Seranton und all points West. 7 29 P m for Hazleton. AH HIVE AT FKEKLAND. 7 29 a m from Pottsvillo, Delano and Muz- . ' leton. 9 12 aiu from New York, Philadelphia, Has- L ton, Bethlehem. Allentown, Mauch ('hunk, Weatherly, Hazleton, Mahanoy City, Shenandoah and Alt. Carmei 9 58 a tu from Seranton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. 1 1 32 a ni from Pottsvillo, Mt. Carmei, Shen andoah, Mahanoy City, Delano and Hazleton. 12 35P ni Irom New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem, Allentown, Mauch Chunk und Weatherly. 4 44 p m from Seranton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. 0 33 P m from New York, Philadelphia, Easton, Bethlehem Allentown, Mauch Chunk, Weatherly, Mt. Carmei, Shermn douh, Mahanoy City, Delano and Huzle ton. 7 29 P m from Seranton, Wilkes-Barre and White Haven. For further information inquire of Ticket \ gents. ttOLLIN IT. WILBUR, General Superintendent, Ski Cortlandt street. New Yoi k City. ..HAS. S. LEE, Goueral Passenger Agent, 2B Cortlandt Street, New York City. G. .J. GILDHOY. Division Superintendent, Hazleton, Pa. THE DELAWARE, KUBHEEHANNA AND SCHUYLKILL RAILROAD. Time tabic in effect May 19, 1901. Trains leave Drifton for Jeddo, Eckley, Hazle Brook, Stockton, Beaver Meudow Hoad, Hoan and ItHzii ton Junction at GO a iu, dally except Sunday; and 7 07 a m, 2 38 p in, Sunday. Trains leave Dritton for Oneida Junction, fnrwood Hoad, Humboldt Hoad, Oneida and Sheppton at 8 H) a m, dally except Sun lay; and 7 07 a ni, 2 38 p ni, Sunday. Trsins leave Hazleton .'unction for Oneida Junction, Hurwood Hoad, Humboldt Hoad, Oneida and Sheppton at H 32,11 10 a ni, 441 p ru, dally except Sunday; and 7 37 u m, 3 11 p ru, Sunday. Trains leave Deringer for Tmnhickon, Cran berry, Hut wood, Hazleton Junction and Hoan at 500 p m, daily except Sunday; and 337 1 m, 5 07 D in. Sundiiy. Trains leave Sheppton for Heaver MoHdow toad, Stockton. Bazle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo ind Drifton at 5 28 p tu. daily, except Sunday; and 8 11 a in, 3 44 p ni, Sunday. Trains leave Hiizleton Junction for Beaver Meadow Hoad, Stockton. Hnzle Brook, Eckley, Jeddo and Drifton at 549 p m, dally, •xcept Sunday; and 10 10 a m, f 40 p m, Sunday. All trains connect a Hazleton Junction with •dectrlc curs for Hazleton, Jeanesville, Audcn rir-d and other points on the Traction Com *'anj's lin Anyone sending n sketch and donerlntinn may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether ui Invention Is probably patentable. Communion tiniisat rictly confidential. Handbook on Patents sent free, oldest airency for securing patents. Patents taken through Murm & Co. receive vpeclal notice, without charge, lu the Scientific American. A handsomely Illustrated weekly. Largest cir culation of any scientific Journal. Terms, (J a year: four months, sl. Sold by all newsdealers. MUNN & C 0 .36,8 roadway'y ' New York Branch Office, 825 t 8t„ Washington, D. C. PLEASURE. November 22—Hop of the Bashful Five, of Freelaud. at Dinkelacher's hall, Butler valley. Tickets, 15 cents. November 20.—Thanksgiving Eve ball iiiuler the auspices of the Crescent A Athletic Association •at Kroll's hall. "4 Ticket, 50 cents. December o—Masqueradeo—Masquerade ball of tbo Happy Farmer Club at Dinkclacker's hall. Butler valley. Tickets, 25 cents. from now until Christmas v/iil | be found a free game, amusing J and instructive— 50 different 1 kinds. Get Lion Coffee end a Free Game | at Your Grocers.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers