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(Published trade-mark)

Ser. No. 297,676. MICHAEL KNEILING, doing business as Kneiling Co., Tacoma, Wash. Filed Mar. 21, 1930. Under section 5b of the act of 1905 as amended in 1920.

All wording apart from the mark as shown on the drawing is disclaimed. The portrait forming a feature of the mark is the portrait of the applicant.

For Welding, Brazing, and Soldering Fluxes.

Claims use since Nov. 1, 1929.

(Registered trade-marks)

276,977. BRASS SWIVELS AND BRASS RINGS. H. A. B. SNEVE, doing business as H. A. B. Sneve ☐☐Company, San Francisco, Calif.

Filed November 1, 1939, Serial No. 291,893. PUBLISHED AUGUST 19, 1930. Class 13.

Note style below for assignment of registered trade-marks:

239,476. SLOW-OPERATING VALVE. FLOYD L. SCOTT, Houston, Tex., assignor to Hughes Tool ☐☐Company, Houston, Tex.. a corporation of Texas.

Filed July 16, 1928, Serial No. 734,692. PUBLISHED JULY 7, 1930. Class 31.

Trade-mark registered under act of March 19, 1920:

278,120. (CLASS 39. CLOTHING.) THE DALLAS CO., Des Moines, Iowa. Filed Sept. 16, 1929, Serial No. 289,821.

For Women's and Misses' Ready-Made Dresses.

Claims use since Aug. 29, 1929.

If registered trade-mark jacket does not carry a date published in the Gazette, note whether file is marked "Publication waived", in which case "Published" and date are omitted.

SAMPLES OF HEADINGS

(Straight reissue)

Original No. 1,087,735, dated February 17, 1914, Serial No. 762,048, April 18, 1913. Application for reissue May 15, 1916, Serial No. 913,970

(Reissued design)

Original No. 37,504, dated August 8, 1905, Serial No. 262,949, March 10, 1902, for 14 years. Application for reissue January 14, 1913, Serial No. 742,086. Term of patent 14 years

(Divisional application)

Original application May 21, 1900, Serial No. 17,360. Divided and this application July 20, 1903, Serial No. 163,658

(Continuation of application)

Continuation of application Serial No. 341,560, May 3, 1904. This application June 2, 1905, Serial No. 450,632

(Renewed before reissue)

Original application May 20, 1898, Serial No. 480,550. Renewed August 10, 1901, Serial No. 12,640. Original No. 720,230, dated March 3, 1903. Application for reissue February 6, 1908, Serial No. 414,653

(Renewed and divided before reissue)

Original application May 20, 1898, Serial No. 681,202. Renewed August 10, 1901, Serial No. 710,635 Divided and application February 7, 1902, Serial No. 930,110. Original No. 720,777, dated March 3, 1904. Application for reissue February 9, 1910, Serial No. 414,652

DIVISION A

(Set "Division A" in 71⁄2-point Ionic capitals and lower-case)

Original No. 975,935, dated November 15, 1910, Serial No. 480,510, March 15, 1905. Application for reissue May 15, 1913, Serial No. 767,921

DIVISION B

(Set "Division B" in 71⁄2-point Ionic capitals and lower-case)

(Reissue of a reissue)

Original No. 1,056,794, dated March 25, 1913, Serial No. 481,582, May 30, 1910. Reissue No. 14,023, dated November 30, 1915, Serial No. 14,559, March 15, 1915. This application for reissue September 25, 1919, Serial No. 326,421

(Renewal of a renewed and divided specification)

Original application January 2, 1909, Serial No. 326,784. Renewed July 7, 1911, Serial No. 367,428. Divided and this application August 10, 1912, Serial No. 726,184. Renewed March 9, 1913, Serial No. 786,477

(Division of two applications)

Original applications May 10, 1907, Serial No. 372,980, and December 11, 1908, Serial No. 467,087. Divided and this application March 28, 1910, Serial No. 552,082

(Continuation of renewal)

Original application February 4, 1903, Serial No. 141,817. Continuation of renewed application February 23, 1905, Serial No. 246,916. This application June 29, 1905, Serial No. 267,527

The following sample heads are intended to serve as a general guide to the reader. Should any unusual construction occur which is not covered herein, the referee should be consulted before changing the form in which it is set.

"Territory of" should be inserted and queried before "Hawaii" and "Alaska" if omitted from jacket. In Canadian patents supply name of Province and query. [In trade-marks where applicant has a number of places for doing business use commas and semicolons] Kingan & Company, Limited, Indianapolis, Ind.; Richmond, Va.; Philadelphia, Pa.; and New York, N. Y.

[Note comma after name of administratrix when followed by an assignment, and its omission in the second sample]

Leslie G. S. Slocum, San Francisco, Calif.; Frances J. Knauss, administratrix of said Leslie G. S. Slocum, deceased, assignor to the Brewer Tichener Corporation

William J. Gaven, Wilkes-Barre, Pa., and Michael Fried, Mount Vernon, N. Y.; Mary E. Gaven administratrix of said William J. Gaven, deceased

[Copy should be followed in the use or omission of the word "by" shown in the two samples following, the second form being used when executrix files application. Notice that the semicolon is supplanted by comma when "By" is inserted and that the words "deceased, late of" follow name of patentee]

Edmund C. Morgan, New York, N. Y.; Olive Eugenie Morgan executrix of said Edmund C. Morgan, deceased

Edmund C. Morgan, New York, N. Y., by Olive Eugenie Morgan, executrix of said Edmund C. Morgan, deceased, assignor to John Smith

[When executrix has made application]

Edward L. Watrous, deceased, late of El Paso, Tex., by Agnes B. Watrous, executrix, Evanston, Ill. [Notice that "and" is supplied when inventors are from different cities]

Ralph Edward Ogden, Cornwall, N. Y., and Charles C. Thompkinson, Plainfield, and Arthur R. Van Tassell, Bayonne, N. J., assignors, by mesne assignments, to J. Edward Ogden, Mountainville, N. Y. [Address of a patentee in the armed forces of the United States is not usually given, but should be printed when written on file]

John V. Rowan, United States Army, Aurora Heights, Va.

[Form when assignment was made before the death of one patentee]

Henry Phillips, Ottumwa, and William E. Hunt, deceased, late of Ottumwa, Iowa, by Josephine Hunt, administratrix, Ottumwa, Iowa; said Henry Phillips and William E. Hunt assignors to Ottumwa Box Carloader Company, Ottumwa, Iowa, a corporation of Iowa

[When assignment is made by executrices]

Alonzo E. Rhodes, deceased, late of Dover-Foxcroft, Maine, by Annie Maria Boswell and May Margaret Boswell, executrices, Dover-Foxcroft, Maine, assignors to Draper Corporation, Hopedale, Mass., a corporation of Maine

[When township is given, county should also follow]

Charlie Jasjerson, Baldwin Township, Sherburne County, Minn.

[Showing position of copartnership in an assignment]

Harry Glaberman, Brooklyn, N. Y., assignor to National Form & Fixture Co., a copartnership composed of Harry Glaberman and Samuel Silverman, Brooklyn, N. Y.

["Doing business as" or "Trading as" follows name of inventor]

Henry T. Roberts, doing business as H. T. Roberts Co., Chicago, Ill.

["Now by change of name" follows residence]

Henry T. Roberts, Chicago, Ill., now by change of name H. T. Roberts Co.

SAMPLE APPLICATION LINES

Application April 22, 1926, Serial No. 103,823. In Great Britain February 11, 1926
Application September 23, 1920, Serial No. 412,224. Renewed April 2, 1927

Application April 27, 1920, Serial No. 37,075. Renewed July 7, 1922, Serial No. 573,454 Application May 2, 1927, Serial No. 188,349. Renewed October 11, 1927. In Great Britain April 12, 1926 Application May 12, 1924, Serial No. 712,721. In the Netherlands May 28, 1923

Application November 11, 1926, Serial No. 147,785. In the Union of South Africa January 5, 1926 No Drawing. Application January 15, 1924, Serial No. 686,427. In Italy January 26, 1923 No Drawing. Application December 20, 1924, Serial No. 757,297. Renewed October 1, 1927 Original application July 24, 1922, Serial No. 577,035, now Patent No. 1,543,416, dated June 23, 1925. Divided and this application August 6, 1924, Serial No. 730,429. In Canada May 30, 1924

CONGRESSIONAL RECORD

RULES OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON PRINTING

Attention is called to the following extracts from the rules of the Joint Committee on Printing for the publication of the Record:

3. The Public Printer shall print the verbatim report of the proceedings and debates of the Senate and House of Representatives, as furnished by the official reporters of the Congressional Record, in 721⁄2-point type; and all matter included in the remarks or speeches of Members of Congress, other than their own words, and all reports, documents, and other matter authorized to be inserted in the Record shall be printed in 61⁄2-point type; and all roll calls and lists of pairs shall be printed in 6-point type.

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7. If copy or proofs have not been returned in time for publication in the proceedings, the Public Printer will insert the words "Mr. addressed the Senate (House or Committee). His remarks will appear hereafter in the Appendix", and proceed with the printing of the Record.

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9. When leave has been obtained to print (1) a speech not delivered in either House, (2) a newspaper or magazine article, or (3) any other matter not germane to the proceedings, the same shall be published in the Appendix, but this rule shall not apply to quotations which form part of a speech of a Member, or to an authorized extension of his own remarks. The official reporters of each House shall indicate on copy and prepare headings for all matter to be printed in the Appendix, and shall make suitable reference thereto at the proper place in the proceedings. Any Member may, upon request noted on the manuscript, have an authorized extension of his own remarks printed in the Appendix.

GENERAL RULES

The rules governing document work apply to the Congressional Record, except as may be noted herein. All should familiarize themselves with the exceptions and the forms peculiar to the Record.

All extracts are set in 62-point type unless otherwise ordered by the Joint Committee on Printing.

Instructions covering the measure and the size and kind of type for parallel columns in the Record will be given to operators when necessary, as the general style will depend upon the character of the matter.

In general, operators should avoid wide spacing, especially in break lines and lines containing many points.

In resetting lines when correcting proof, operators must exercise great care to have such lines free from error.

Extreme caution must be used in making corrections in copy, and no important change should be made without authority.

Observe the lists of names of Senators and Members, committees of both Houses, and duplicate names. Changes caused by death, resignation, or otherwise must be noted. There is no excuse for error in the spelling of names of Senators, Members, or department officials. In case of doubt, the Congressional Directory will be taken as authority.

Small-cap center heads in speeches, also headings over tables, leader work, and subheads following main subject heading in the proceedings will be set in 62-point. Queries must not be made unless it is known that the author is to see a proof.

CAPITALIZATION

(See also Guide to Capitalization, p. 25)

It must be borne in mind that one general style of capitalization is to prevail on Record and document work.

In Senate and House proceedings and Senate and House Journals use rule VI, rule XVI, etc.

If the name of the Congressional Record is mentioned, it must be set in caps and small caps and never abbreviated, though appearing in citations.

If the name of a Senator or a Member is used in connection with a bill or other paper, as the Glass bill, the Smith amendment, etc., lower-case; but SMITH'S amendment, etc.

21048°-35-13

187

The names of Members and Members-elect of both branches of the Congress will be printed in caps and small caps if mention is made of them. This applies also to eulogies, and notices of or references to eulogies, of deceased Senators or Members.

Certificates of Senators-elect of a succeeding Congress are usually presented to the current Congress, and in such cases the names of the Senators-elect must be in caps and small caps.

Names of Members of Congress must be set in lower-case in votes, in lists set in columns, in the list of standing and select committees, in groups (three or more) of names of Members and non-Members, in contested-election cases, and in lists of pairs. (See under Pairs, p. 193.)

Observe that the names of all persons not certified Members of Congress are to be set in lower-case: that is, names of secretaries, clerks, messengers, and others. Follow capitalization of proposed boards, commissions, services, etc., in reprints of bills and titles thereof, but not in extracts.

CONTRACTIONS

If in a Senator's or a Member's language the copy shows such contractions as don't, can't, won't, didn't, couldn't, and wouldn't, spell in full, as do not, cannot, will not, did not, could not, and would not. This is not intended to apply to extracts and anecdotes. The abbreviation etc. must be made to read and so forth, except in extracts.

FIGURES

(See also Numerals, p. 95)

If an expression contains two or more enumerations, some definite and others indefinite (or not accompanied by subject), spell the indefinite and put the definite in figures (unless under 10), as four or five thousand spent out of $6,000 appropriated; $300 saved and a thousand dollars spent; a hundred dollars is more to me than $500 to you or one thousand to him; if copy reads "six millions of dollars", it must be changed to read "$6,000,000."

Use figures for all enumerations of weights and measures and duration of time. All grouped enumerations, any of which is 10 or more, are to appear in figures in examples such as the following: There were 20 males and 8 females, 28 in all; six horses; 10 horses; six horses, nine sheep, and five cows; 25 bulletins, containing 352 pages; the population of Chicago is more than 2,000,000; a hamlet of 18 persons. If complicated, and if enumeration is 100 or less, spell, as twenty-five 6-inch guns, two 3/4-inch boards, ten 5-cent pieces, 125 6-inch guns, etc.

Isolated numbers of 10 or more, as 50 guns, 10 trucks, 11 soldiers, etc.

If sums of money are used as adjectives, express in figures, as a 5-cent piece, a $10 note, a $1,000 house, a $1,000,000 expenditure, a $1,200 clerk (even if copy reads a twelve-hundred-dollar clerk).

If an expression of weight or measure is used as an adjective, use figures, as, a 1-foot rule, a 2-bushel basket, a 5-acre lot, a 4-ton stone, a 3-pint pail, a 1-grain pill, a 12-inch pipe.

Follow copy in such expressions as twelve hundred gallons were used, fourteen hundred dollars was expended, or 1,200 gallons were used, $1,400 was expended; a thousand dollars, a hundred pounds, two thousand million dollars.

ITALIC

In titles of cases use italic, with lower-case roman v., including contestedelection cases, as Smith v. Brown. In roman small-cap lines use a lower-case italic v. for versus.

Names of vessels must be set in italic in all cases.

If it is desired that italic should be used other than as provided for herein, the word or words must be underscored and "Fol. ital." written on each folio. Do not construe this to mean "Ordered", "Resolved", "Be it enacted, etc.", titles following signatures or addresses, or the part of date lines which should be set in italic.

The prayer delivered in either House must be set in 72-point roman. If prefaced or followed by a quotation from the Bible such quotation must be set in 72-point italic.

MISCELLANEOUS

Do not quote any communication carrying date and signature.

Do not put quotation marks on center heads in 61⁄2-point extracts unless center heads belong to original matter.

In newspaper extracts put place and date at beginning of paragraph. Use caps and small caps for name of place and roman lower-case for date. Connect date and extract by an em dash. If date and place are credited in a bracket line above extract, they need not be used again at the beginning of paragraph. (See p. 124 under Date Lines, and p. 195 under Credits.)

Except in bill work proper, each Whereas in a preamble must begin a new paragraph. The Therefore be it must be preceded by a colon and be run in with the last Whereas. Be it will run in with the word Therefore, but must not be supplied when not in copy. Note the following:

Whereas it has been deemed advisable to, etc.: Therefore be it
Resolved, That the committee, etc.

Use single punctuation in citations of cases and statutes, as Brown v. Robinson (122 U. S. 329; R. S. p. 310, sec. 1748).

In the case of Smith against Brown.

(A general or casual reference to a case.) In the case of Smith v. Brown (122 U. S. 329). (A citation of a specific case.) In One Hundred and Twenty-fourth United States Reports, page 329. Indent star lines 2 ems on each side. Use seven stars.

If a title is used as part of the name of an organization, vessel, etc., spell, as General U. S. Grant Post, No. 76, Grand Army of the Republic.

The order of subdivision of the Constitution of the United States is as follows: article I, section 2, clause 3.

If an exhibit appears at the end of a speech, the head Exhibit should be set in 62-point caps, preceded by a 3-em dash.

In extracts containing votes the names must be run in, as Lewis of Maryland, Maverick, and Ramspeck, etc.

In Senators' or Members' language, if the copy indicates number, use the abbreviation no.; when the word is numbered, use that form.

In text, reference to Senate and House reports and Senate and House executive and miscellaneous_documents the No. must always be used, whether in copy or not, as House Report No. 75, Executive Document No. 20, Miscellaneous Document No. 37.

In the Senate, under House Bills Referred, Message from the House, Enrolled Bills Signed, Concurrent Resolutions Referred, Presidential Approvals, and in lists of bills and resolutions, the numbers must come first and read "An act" (or resolution), whether in copy or not, as "H. R. 722. An act", etc. In the House the same rule applies under Message from the President, Enrolled Bills Signed, Message from the Senate, Concurrent Resolutions Referred, and Senate Bills Referred. This means that bills and resolutions received in the House from the Senate or in the Senate from the House, when in lists, shall have the number begin the paragraph.

Seven-and-a-half-point breaks in 61⁄2-point matter should be paragraphed, as

follows:

The report goes on to say that

Observe this closely

during the fiscal year 1934 there were, etc.

USE OF CAPS AND SMALL CAPS

[Names of Senators and Members are set in small caps when in parentheses or brackets, or when sentence is in the passive voice. See also note on roll calls, p. 190.]

On motion by (or of) Mr. LEWIS of Maryland, it was, etc.

The VICE PRESIDENT resumed the chair.

The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. BULKLEY in the chair). Shall the bill pass?

The SPEAKER called the House to order.

Mr. DARROW's amendment was adopted.

Mr. BROWN of Georgia took the floor and yielded to Mr. GRAY of Indiana. During the roll call,

Mr. EAGLE said: If not paired, I would vote "no" on this bill.

A MEMBER. And debate it afterwards.

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