Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Annoying and untidy, isn’t it? And wdtse still, it invariably leads to bald- ness! Ask your doctor what to do. See if he doesn’t tell you to use Ayer’s Hair Vigor, new improved formula. Cures dan- druff. Stops falling hair. Weo publish the formulas J.0. Ayer Co., Lowel of all our preparations. THE BEMIDJI DAILY PIONEER PUBLISHED BVERY AFTERNOON, OFFICIAL PAPER--CITY OF BEMIDII! A A A A A A A AAAAAAANANANAAAAAS BEMIDJI PIONEER PUBLISHING CO. CLYDE J. PRYOR | A. O. RUTLEDGE Business Manager Managing Editor AR Entered in the postoffice at Bemldjl. Minn., as second class matter. AN AN NSNS SUBSCRIPTION---$5.00 PER ANNUM SIGNED BY THE EMPEROR Bill Appropriating $3,000,000 for Rus- sian Famine Sufferers. St. Petersburg, May 1lL—The em- peror has signed the famine appro- priation of $3,000,000, a large amount of which is needed for medical a stricken provinces. M. Yermeloif, ex-minister of agricul- ture, who is now head of the central organization for famine relief, has left St. Petersburg for the famine prov- inces to distribute a large personal contribution of the emperor. More tavorable reports of the crop prospects have been received from a correspondent of the Associated Press, who has returned here from a trip to Saratov and South Samara, The pre ent showing of the spring and winter grain is good. A few rainfalls during the coming month would guarantee good crops. Tha trade in farm implements, which Is largely in the hands of American firms, is flourishing in the non-famine sectious. are sold out and have placed second orders with the American factories. NO DECISION REACHED. Officials Again Discuss Milwaukee's Coast Extension. New York, May 1 .—At a meeting of the executive cormmittee of the Chi- cago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railway the question of discontinuing work on the road's Pacific coast extension was discussed, but after the meeting one of the officers of the road said that no decision had been reached. President Earling’s attitude in re- gard to postponing the work on this new line, for which $100,000,000 of new stock was Issued in December, is understood to be that it would be well to postpone the work if it can be done without embarrassment and without incurring tco much loss due to interrupting work of so great mag- nitude. It will be left to the directors, however, to decide whether the work should be suspended. The next regular meeting will be held on the last Thursday of this month and it is probable that the ques- tlon will be decided then. PRINCETON GETS MONEY. Friends Bestow $1,200,000 Upon Uni- versity for New Buildings. Princeton, N. J., May . L—Princeton university has received $1,200,000 in gifts from persons who would not al- low their names to be used. All this money is for immediate use. Of this sum $600,000 is to be spent Most of the branch houses | Yin a new physical science laboratory, $200,000 belng for maintenance. The ! other $600,600 will go for the construc- ! tion and equipment of a geological and | blological museum and laboratory. | This elft will place Princeton on a { high footing as a technical school. The I new laborntories will be part of the i John Green school of science, which will be developed as was planned. Captain of Ocean Liner Dead. New York, May 1 .—Captain A. | Krech of the Hamburg-American line jis! mer Graf Waldersee, one of the { oldest commaunders in the transatlan- | tic service, died on board his ship on | May G while the steamer was in mid- | ocean. His body was brought here when the Graf Waldersee came into { port. Captain Kreeh's death was due | to pneumonia. He was taken ill just { before the steamer sailed from Bou- | logne. 'SENATOR PLATT TO RETIRE | | Declares He Will Not Be a Candidate | to Succeed Himself. I New York, May la—According to ithe World Senator Thomas C. Platt | will not be a candidate to succeed himself. The World quotes Senator | Platt as follows: “I have no idea whatever of being a candidate to snccead myself. I shall gerve out my term. Then I shall wait for the call to the other side. I have lived my life, and I have done what | seems to me to be the right thing to do. But I realize there is much left for me to do. I would like to settle down and see the world go round.” Senator Platt talked freely to a World reporter of the political his. tory which he had helped to make. Asked how he felt toward President | Roosevelt the senator said: “Just as I arways did. I was in a position to make him governor in 1898. Black had alienated a large and important section of the Republican voters and it was necessary to pick a man who could win. Mr. Roosevelt, coming back from the war in Cuba, was the man. I selected him and he was nominated. Tt was purely poli- tics. 1 never was a ‘Roosevelt man,’ as the saving goes.” {ALLEGED SHORTAGE FOUND Deficit of $100,000 in Funds of Syra- cuse, N. Y. Syracuse, N. Y., May 1 .—The city treasurer, it is alleged, has discovered a shortage in the accounts of the office i during the term of E. F. Allen as ; treasurer. It is impossible to tell un- { til experts report how large the short- {age s, but it is possible that it will | exceed $100,000. Specific cases where shortage is said to have been proved jalready amount to about $2,500. Mr. Allen s he has no knowledge of any irregularity in his office. An in- vestigation is being made of all the local improvement accounts. Armed Brigands Rob Cubans. Havana, May 1 .—Armed bands are reported to be committing depreda- tions in the Songo district of Santiago and in the vicinity of Manacas, Santa jClara. The brigands are exacting money from farmers and stealing horse The members of the bands, it is Delieved, are negroes who have been thrown out of work by the end- ing of the sugar seaso; BuULL Great North HELP BUILD U issues from time to time ing of the advantages of Local Ghe Great Northern Railway If you have relatives or friends you think might be in.duced. to move west send us their names and we will mail them some interesting literature. E. E._Chamberlain ETIN: ern Railway P YOUR STATE bulletins and bcoklets tell- Minnesota as a home state. Agent R Bemidji, Minnesota easy terms. s For further parti H. A. SIMONS, Agent. Choice Building Lot We have many choice building lots which we are placing on the market at reasonable prices and Bemidji Townsite and Im- provement Company. culars write or call Swedback Block, Bemid}i. i "The Odor She Wanted, ~ " ¢ Bhe paused on the pavement and clutched the arm.of the woman who was with her. “I have found it at last!” she ex- claimed. “Did you notlee 1t? It was that indescribable violet perfume which.I have been looking for all these years. The woman who just passed us had it. Do you suppose she would think I was crazy: if I went after her and asked her what the name of it 137" “She would probably think you wera insane,” rejoined her companion, “but if you wish to know so much it would not do any harm to inquire.” She with the perfume had stopped for a moment preparatory to crossing the street. “You will pardon me, won't you,”’ asked the seeker after rare scents, “but fvould you mind telling me the name of that wonderful extract you have and where you got 1t?” “Certalnly not,” was the response as the woman threw back her cape and showed baeath a great corsage bou- quet of fresh double violets.— New York Herald, but agreeable coming therefrom, Outslde the bedsteads and springs will be used as chicken roosts. But the Bquaw doesn't let her housekeeping shortcomings worry her. When she puts on an elk tooth robe, valued at anywhere from $1,500 to $3,000, and rides to the fair or to the agency on a Sunday astride a beaded saddle she i3 a picture of contentment.—Denver Re- publican. Old Grog. The inventor of grog, the, long time beverage of the sea and of salt water literature, was Admiral Vernon, of whose courageous deeds at Porto Bello a lvely poet has sung: Which when they came to understand he Wwas 8o brave a fellow, They did surrender, out of hand, the,town of Porto Bello, #0ld Grog” was Vernon's pet name In the navy of his day, and 1t was thus bestowed: “Out on the Spanish main Vernon found that the result of glving each man-in the ship’s company half a pint of rum a day to drink neat was disastrous. His captalns and surgeons suggested to him the revolutlonary ex- Brains and Housekeeping. “I wonder why a brain no bigger than a salted almond is supposed to be good enough to keep house with,” re- marked a matron the other day, “while a nimble and comprehensive intellect i3 supposed to be necessary in a wom- an who goes in for a ‘career.’ I find my housekeeping gives employment to every faculty I have. If I don't put out all the brain power I own, things don’t go well. Memory, executive abil- Ity, observation, foresight—all are de- manded in organizing and running a home. “Wherever you find the domes- tic machine moving without a creak or a jar look for the clever brain of some woman behind it all. I’ve known girls to take the tone that they were thrown away in being obliged to look after the details of a house. Stuff and nonsense. It wasn’t too much mind they had for it, but not enough.”—New York Trib- une. Analogous. A teacher had a very dull pupil whom he found extremely difficult to instruct in the letters of the alphabet. “This is letter A,” explalned the teacher for the tenth time as he wrote it down on the blackboard. “And this letter B,” he went on, putting down the second letter of the alphabet. “Now, my boy,” he began, kindly and encouragingly, as he turned to the stu- pid boy, “let me see if you can remem- ber them. What is this?” pointing to the initial letter of the alphabet. “Letter A,” came the slow response from the dense scholar. “And this?” questioned the teacher, Indicating letter B. “Let 'er alone,” returned the pupll instantly, his stupid face lighting up with pleasure at his own quick reply.— Bohemian Magazine. The Turkish Mangal. In most of the houses in Constanti- nople as well as in other cities of Tur- key heating in winter is done by means of the so called “mangal.” This con- sists principally of a receptacle for burning charcoal. A mangal may be nothing else than such a simple brass or {ron receptacle or may be quite an artistic and expensive article of most rare and valuable workmanship. The charcoal is first thoroughly burned through, and when it no longer emits any flame or odor the mangal is brought into the room for purposes of heating. . Sometimes it happens that proper attention 1s not pald to the burning charcoal, with not infrequent fatal results. Force Exerted by the Heart. The force exerted by the heart equals 120 tons lifted one foot. In other words, the work of the heart is equiv- alent to ralsing its own welight 20,000 feet in one hour. A strong man can raise himself but 1,000 feet in an hour. This enormous force, if exerted by the heart through a fixed rigid pipe, would shoot the blood along with each jerk at a rate of 200 feet a second. How- ever, the arteries, belng elastic, are distended by the jerk or beat of the heart, and when the heart pauses after the beat the contraction of the arterles sends the blood along in a steady non- intermittent flow, which averages about one foot a second. Patmore’s Wit. In the early days of the Franco- 'Prussian war the Emperor Willlam was in the habit of sending telegrams of a somewhat religious character to the queen., The late Coventry Pat- more, the English poet, hit this off in °| the following skit: By will divine, my dear Augusta, We've gained a battle—such a buster! Ten thousand Frenchmen sent below. Pralse God from whom all blessings flow. No Time For Detalls. An American speeding over the con- Hnent of Europe in his automobile ask- ed of his chauffeur, “Where are we?”’ “In Parls,” shouted the man at the wheel, and the dust flew. “Oh, never mind the details,” irrita- bly screamed the American million- aire. “I mean what continent?” To Know Oneself. How can a man learn to know him- self? By reflection never, only by ac- tion. In the measure In which thou Beekest to do thy duty shalt thou-know what s in thee. But what is thy duty? The demand of the hour.—Goethe. The Condition. “Do you think you could be comfort- able on $10,000 a year?”’ . “Yes, I belleve I could If the people next door hadn’t more than $9,000 a year and my wife knew it.”—Chicagd Record-Herald. The greatest pleasure Is the power to glve it i Squaw as Housekeeper, Put a squaw in a tepee and she Is the neatest of housekeepers. The blan- kets are neatly rolled and stowed away- under the edge of the tepee, leaving the center clear. Bright colored blankets and fine fur robes are spread about, and a wonderfully beaded dance drum hangs from one of the poles. But put & squaw in a house and she is any- thing but a success. Go into one of these frame houses and you will find the mattresses laid along the floor, with the whole family sprawling there- on. The cracked cook stove will-be fn the middle of the floor, with anything periment of mixing the spirit with wa- ter. In a station order Vernon re- quired this to be done. The new liquor ‘was not favorably received, and the seamen cast about for an opprobrious name for it and its author. Now, Ver- non used to wear a grogram boat cloak; hence ‘Old Grog.’ ™ The Crooked House. On the estate of Earl Dudley, at Himley Staffs, there is a curious habi- tation known as “the crooked house.” It is altogether out of the perpendicu- lar and slants toward the south end, ‘which is heavily shored up with thick red brick buttresses, These peculiari- tles are the result of mining opera- tions, the under stratum of the earth in these parts being completely honey- combed, The clocks on the walls, al- though absolutely perpendicular, as their pendulums testify, appear to be hanging sideways at a pronounced.an- gle. A short glass shelf, one end of which appears to be a foot higher than - the other, proves to be absolutely level, while in the taproom is a table which 1s apparently slanting, but on which if round marbles are placed at the seem- ingly lower end they roll to all appear- ance uphill to the top of the table and fall over with a bump.—London Stand- ard. Why He Brought His Along. ‘Whenever the penurious manager of the large store wanted to sharpen his pencil he would enter the shipping de- partment and borrow a knife from one of the boys. Sometimes the boys did not have their knives with them, but there was one lad, Tommy Breen, who always could be depended upon. “How is it, Tommy,” asked the man- ager one day as he whittled his pencil, “that you always have your knife with you and the other boys haven’t?”’ Tommy hesitated for a moment, then, gathering courage, said: “The wages I get aren’t enough for me to afford more than one pair of pants.'—Harper’s Weekly. Part of the Horse, A rich rancher told a story about a little slum urchin whom he had sent on a4 month’s vacation Into the country. “The lad,” he said, “thought we got mush from the mushroom and milk from the milkweed. One morning a lady pointed to a horse in a fleld and sald, ‘Look at the horse, Johnny. ‘That's a cow,’ the boy contradicted. ‘No, said the lady, ‘it's a horse.’ ‘'Taln’t. It's a cow,’ saild the boy. ‘Horses has wagons to ’em.’ "—Kansas Clty Times. A Conundrum. “Why Is a clock like a valn, pretty young lady ?” “I fall to see any resemblance. Why?” . “Because it is all face and figure, has no head to speak of, is hard to stop ‘when once it {s wound up and has a striking way of calling attentlon to it- self every hour in the day.”—Baltimore Amerlcan, Pairiless Cancer, There is a prevalling opinlon that cancer Is always painful from the be- ginning, whereas It is really painless In the majority of cases. It is desirable to ascertain how far the public ought to be instructed in the early signs of cancer, with a view to the adoption of ‘earlier diagnosis and consequently ear- lier operation.—London Hospital. Had an Alternative. Plirey — And because you couldn’t find a nickel to pay the fare did the conductor make you get off and walk? Jayson—No; he only made me get off. I could have sat on the street if I'd ‘wanted to. Pretty “Close. “Is he parsimonious?”’ “Well,” was the guarded reply, “you might say that he carrles his money in a purse that shuts a good deal easier than it opens.” s A Story of Whewell. Sydney Smith said of the great Dr. Whewell, master of Trinity college, that “science was his forte and om- niscienice his foible.” On one occa- sion two fellows of the college, think- ing to get beyond his range, read up the subject of Chinese metaphysics and then disputed about it in the doctor’s presence. He listened in silence for a time and then observed, “Ah, I see you have been reading a paper which I wroté™ for an encyclopedia_of secl- ence.” A Mean Advantage. “You say he accused you of being ontruthful 7 = & = “That's what happened,” answered Plute Pete, with much embarrassment. “And lives to tell the tale?” “Well, you see he used long words In such a roundabout way that he was out o’ town' before I had figgered out exactly what he meant.”—Washington Btar. -~ Siamese Object to Walking. The Siamesz, above all nations in the world, hate to walk. No such mode of progression is tolerated by a Siamese If he or sh¢ can by any means ride, A Venetlan gondolier will walk some- times, even a Hollander will ride on his ‘rough cart, but a Bangkok man— fot if he can help It. His family boat for him.—Windsor Magazine. Knew Donmark, but Not Haralet. The Literary Lady—Do you think Hamlet was insane or. merely assum- Ing to be? The Vietim—I beg your pardon. I 4ldn’t cateh the name. o Striking a Fish. The secret of striking a fish, espe- clally a trout, which bites quickly, ‘whether in brook, river or lake, is to glve a sharp upturn of the wrist. This family doctor. The Lady=Hamlet. The Victim— Oh, yess is;’; it? Friend of yours? e Lady—I'm talkin | Prince of Denmark, | O SiTeh The Vietim—To, be sure. Hamlet, Prince of Denmark. - I know a lot of those Denmark prinees, but I don’t! seem to place Ham. By the way, Den-: mark's getting to -be quite a town. They teil me they have two regnlar trains running there now, one of them ¢ a freight. And I heard just the other’ day that eastern capital had secured an option -on the building lot across the street from the livery stable for a clothespin factory. Denmark is cer- tainly looking up. The literary lady glares at the vic- tim coldly and removes herself-to an- other part of the room. Whereat* the vietim smiles.—Kansas City Independent. 0dd name, Too Flippant. The specialist surgeon, hot with in- dignation, exclaimed, “No, I wilk not| take her case. There must be a limit to even a woman’s flippancy.” Sis “Why, Dr. —, what do you mean?’ asked the family doctor mildly. “I| have always found Mrs. Jones a lady | in every way.” “Perhaps,” answered the specialist; surgeon, more calmly,. but with dvy: severity. ‘“She asked me why-a su geon was like a hen. And when I gave ! it up, what do you think she said?” “I give it up, too,” said the family | doctor. “Because his motto is always ‘Cut- cut-cut, ah, cut’ Wasn't that the limit?” “And that woman has been under the knife three times,” reflected the | family doctor. “I’ll take her to Dr.| Smith. He has a sense of humor.” | And now there is a marked coolness between the specialist surgeon and the Brooklyn Eagle. A Bit Too Realistic. Some amateurs in a provincial town gave a theatrical performance. Just before the curtain went up the star actor took the manager aside and said to him: “Now, look here! 1 don’t propose to drink water instead of wine in the drinking scene in the second act. 1 want wine—genuine wine. The uni- ties must be preserved. We want to make this play as realistic as possi- ble.” “Oh, you want champagne at 15 shil- lings a bottle, do you?” “Yes, sir. “Everything must be re- alistie.” “All right. In the second act you| shall have real wine, and when you take poison in the last act you shall have some real poison. I'll see that you don’t complain of the play not be- Ing realistic enough. How does prus- sic acid strike you?”’—London Tit-Bits. Writing as a Fine Art. In a letter written by the late Lafeca- dio Hearn to his friend, the musical critic, H. E. Krehbiel, the author says: “Let me dwell upon an art principle. Both you and I.ha7e a trade—journal- ism. We have also an art—authorship. The same system of labor cannot be applied to the one as to the other with- out unfortunate results. Let the trade be performed as mechanically as is consistent with preservation of one’s reputation as a good workman. But when it comes to writing a durable thing—a book or a brochure—every line ought to be written at least twice, if possible, three times. In the very act of copying new ideas of grace, force and harmony will make themselves manifest. Without this, I will venture to say, fine literary execution is im- possible.” % The “Book of Sports.” The “Book of Sports” was a procla- mation by James I, who in this publi- cation in 1618 signified to his people the royal pleasure with regard to what sports, games and amusements might be practiced on Sunday. The king inti- mated that “no lawful recreation should be barred on that day to his good peo- ple.” The sports forbidden on Sundays were bear and bull fighting, bowling and dnterludes. Those who did not at- tend church were not allowed to join in the sports, and no one could go out of his parish. The amusements allowed were dancing, archery, leaping, vault- ing, May games, Whitsun ales and the _will move the rod or bait only two or three inches and will not jerk it from the water. If you miss the fish will follow the few inches, not being fright- ened, and in the majority of cases will be hooked at once. The quick jerking of the bait from the water almost in- variably scares a trout—result, a dark streak disappearing down the stream, Sale of School and Other State Lands tsltcate of Minnesota, State Auditor's Of- 6. £ St. Paul, May 4, 1907. Notice is hereby given that on the d: and date and at the time and place he in stated below in this notice, in the off of the county auditor of this county, Wwill offer for sale the following described 1 | unsold state lands, and the following de- scribed state lands, which have reverted to the state by reason of the non-pay- ment of interest will also be then and there cffered for resale. Fifteen per cent of the purchase price and interest on the unpaid balance from the date of sale to June Ist, 1908, must be paid at the time 22 the salé. The balance of the purchase money can be paid at any time, in whole or in part, within forty years of the time of the sale; the rate of interest on the unpaid balance of the purchase money will be four per cent per annum, pay- able in advance on June Ist of each year. provided the principal remains unpaid for ten years; but if the principal”is paid be- fore the "expiration of ten years from the date of the sale the rate of interest on the unpaid balance of the pArchase money will be five per cent per annum; interest is payable in advance on Juné 1st of each year. : Holders of certificates on which the in- terest payments are in default can haye their certificates reinstated “on payment before the sale of the interest in full -0 date and the penalties thereon, when the lands covered thereby will be ‘withdrawn from sale. All mineral rights are re- served by the state. All sales made will | be subject to the provisions of Chapter No. 299 of the General Laws of 1905. SAMUEL G. IVERSON, State Auditor. _ BELTRAMI COUNTY. Sale at Court House, Bemidji, June 18, 1907, at 1:30 o’Clock P. M. UNSOLD LANDS. g =3 PARTS OF SECTIONS. 5 e+ djysumog, ! §E% NBY . 0 40 NWY% and’ NEY 88, 14 200 E% NW¥, lots 1, 2, NEY% SWY and SEY SBY....18 18 209.60 0 143 29.16 1148 29.03 4 149 60.33 5 19 40 22 149 N NW: Lo‘bts 1 ar?:‘i 2, NW1, NE% and_SW¥% NWI, less - 23 149 120.78 29 149 80 31 149 40.15 El% SEY 32 149 80 %‘7\!/:% and SWY § 0 146 19.75 1 NBY, St NE, 15, NV;‘% S]é% a!‘f‘dm lots 1 and 2 146 560.65 N NEY . 147 80 2 147 32 17 4 147 32 40 6 147 32 400 20 147 32 40 ..... « 4 148 32 166.65 SEY ... NEY, N, W SEY NWi, V\%stmsg%afi R 1%, B SWiL, and W% 26 148 32 360 8% NWY%, SW1 SWYy, and NEY SEY, less R. 28 148 32 145.97 4 148 32" 80 4 149 33 60.75 8 149 3 9 149 32 31.25 .22 149 32 40 .23 149732 40 W -24 149 32 40 Lot 1 and NWY SE%...2%5 149 32 7251 8% NW¥, SW% and Wi SEY, less R. R. .. .36 146 33 307.76 Lots' 3, 3, 4, NWY, NEY%, S% NWY% ang S: ls?s .‘AR. g l)536 BY, B NWl/i' ots 1, D] SEY%_NEY, and SEY SEY The -Best : “North Coa in its unique Observatio Send for North Coa of Everything NORTHERN PACIFIC Through Vestibuled Trains, each way between St. Paul; Minneapolis, Duluth, and Superior and Northern Pacific coast points, carry the latest styles of through Pullman Sta: dard and Tourist Sleeping Cars, Din- ing Cars, and handsome Day Coaches. through and meals are served at regular hours each day. daily in each direction—Steam Heated; Electric Lighted; Library, Buffet, Baths and Barber Shop Northern Pacific Railway A. M. CLELAND, General Passengér Agent, St, Paul, ., Dining Cars run st Limited” n Car. st Limited Booklet FRIEND TO FRIEND The personal 7ccommendations of peo ple who have been cured of conghs and colds by Chamberlain's Cough Remedy have done more than all else to make it & staple article of trade and commerce over & large part of the civilized world. Barker’s Drug Store R P T O TSV Just Received A large sbipmeni of Singer and Wheelér & Wilson Sewing Ma- chines. The best beautiful line of cabinets ever carried in the city. Also a complete line of Pianos, Organs and Sheet Music ~at popular pricés. Repairs for machines of all kinds. and most sewing BISIAR, VANDER LIP & COMPANY 311 Minn. Ave, Phone 319 Bemidji Want Ads . FOR RENTING A PROPERTY, SELL- ING A BUSINESS OR OBTAINING HELP ARE BEST. Pioneer 60 YEARS® EXPERIENCE ‘TRADE MARKS DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS &C. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain our opinion free whether an invention is probably patentable. Com: tions umutg sent free. Oldest agency for securing uts. Patents taken through Munn & Co. receive apecial notice, without charge, in the cientific American, A handsomely llustrated weekly. Largestolr. calation of any scientific journal. Terms, $¥a finfi 3 fifi“&:“ém' L. 8ol dbyufinwld?nlui 361Broadway, 0, it Wunmxg;y D.ncr ‘Branch Office, 625 F BI Thersare iers MoQall tates than of any sther iccount of thelr styley MeCall’'s MIMI.(TW ‘Fashlon) ‘mere subscribers than any etl E i kb s jubscribe teday, e Carsioguaof e o dy £ 1lgns) snd Premium Catalogue (sl 400 premiumc; Y A TR :h"co. NowYork' nd TRADE=M iptly_obtained in ARKS prompil B uil countries, orno'fee. Wo obtain PATENTS o THAT PAY, advertise them thoroughly, at ous expense, and help you to sucoess. ‘Send modsl. photo o sketch for FREE report on patentability, 20 practics. SUR~ PASSING REFERENCES. Forfres Guido, Book on Profitable Patents write to fl 503-508 Seventh Str. WASHINGTON, D.