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28, Copiers,


rhr

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No, I'm not talking about pantographs such as the one used by Thomas Jefferson at Monticello and invented by John Isaac Hawkins, also the inventor of osmiridium-tipped gold nibs, or the pantograph in US patent no. X657. And I don't mean the Elisha Gray "Telautograph" in US patent no. 386,815, "a writing telegraph", or writing facsimile machine. I mean printing machines and duplicating apparatuses such as these. Trademark no. 41,661, Albert B. Dick Co., "Stencil-Paper", Dec 15, 1903, used since the spring of 1887, is for the word "Mimeograph". Trademark no. 41,662, Albert B. Dick Co., "Duplicating-Ink", Dec 15, 1903, used since the spring of 1887, is for the word "Mimeograph". Trademark no. 41,663, Neostyle Co., "Duplicating-Ink", Dec 15, 1903, used since Sept 1, 1893, is for the word "Neostyle". Trademark no. 15,011, Frederick W. Zimmer, "Ink, Gelatinized Paper, And The Accessories For Hectograph Copying", Dec 6, 1887, used by the Hectograph Co. since June 1, 1887 for the words "American And European Trading Company" and an image of a globe. There were also such perforated-stencil printing machines as Edison's "Electric Pen and Press" and Gestetner's "Cyclostyle".

 

George Kovalenko.

 

:ninja:

 

If you want to perform the trademark searches, simply cut and paste, or type the trademark numbers into the search window in the Trademark Document Retrieval Portlet.

rhrpen(at)gmail.com

 

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