! THE SCRANTON TBIBUNE-TIIURSDAY MORNING. POTU3M3 DAILY IN 80KANT0H PA , BT THI TRIBUH PUDUSHUiO COMPANY. t. P. KINQSIUNV, Pn. OiN'l M C. H. RIPPLC, Scc h Tmm. LIVV . RICHARD, Editor. W. W. DAVI. Rusini NUiuocft. W. W. YOUNGS, o. Mani'r. kiwTo&KOraioi: tribomi BtniDmo. Kbam 8 GRAY. MANAGER. fcNTlRIO AT Till POSTOFFIC1 AT SCRANTON, FA, BIOOND-OLASa HAIL UATTSR. AS "Printers' Ink," the recognized Journol for advertisers, rotes TUE SCRANTOI TRIBUNE as the best advertising medium 1 .1. . ..-. I .. "DrlnlAra' Ink" knows. SCRANTON, JANUARY 81, 18D5. THE SCRANTON OF TODAY. i Come and Inspect our city. Elevation above the tide, 740 feet. . Extremely healthy. . Estimated population, 1S94, 103,000. Keglstered voters, 20.599. Value of school property, J75O.00O. Number of school children, 12,000. Average amount of bank deposits, $10, BOO.OOO. It's the metropolis of northeastern Penn sylvania, Can produce electrlo power cheaper than, N lagara. No better point In the United States at Which to establish new Industries. See how we Brow: Population In 18C0 '.223 Population In 1870 &-m Population in 18S0 45j Population In 1890 Population In 1S94 (estimated) 103.OJ0 And the end Is not yet. The "Wilkes-liarre Lcador finally al though reluctantly admits that the peo ple of Pennsylvania want compulsory education; but it parries the question by pleading for more legislative delay. AV'e ask the Leader thl3 question, which ought to be decisive: If thirty other American states have found compul sory education, laws to operate advan tageously to the public welfare, why ehould Pennsylvania put off a similar experiment? If such u law is worth passing at all, it is worth passing at once. An Important Decision. Now that the subsidence of the crisis of affairs lm Brooklyn renders ex pedient a review of the Judicial inci dents of the greait trolley .strike, it Is in order, to consider, with some care, the remarkable opinion rendered dur ing that strike by Justice Uaynor of the supreme court. In passing upon the application of one James Loader for i mandamus to compel one of the ticd Up street railway companies to operate cars in sufficient number to accommo date ithe travelhig public, the court 'bald: "This corporation has a public relation to the people und u private relation to Its stockholders, it must not be forgotten here, though it may seem to be growing Wholly forgotten elsewhere, that In Its chief aspect It Is a public corporation, having duties to perform to the public which transcend any obligation which, In its private aspect, It owes to Its stockhold ers. Though the principles ure old and in herent in the Idea of sovereignty of the people, It would seem that the recent rapid growth of corporate power, and the ten dency to use public franc hises for the ag grandizement of Individuals llrst and for the service and benellt of the public sec ond, they have become somewhat over looked and need to be restated." Then the court went on to say that while the directors of a private corporation may, an tuated by greed or motives of private gain, stop business and refuse to employ labor at all unless labor conies down to their conditions, however distressing, for euch are the industrial anil social condi tions, the directors of a railroad corpora tion may not do. the like for they are not merely accountable to themselves, but are accountable to the public first and to the stockholders second. They must not stop their cars for an hour, much less a week or a month, thereby to coerce the price or conditions of labor down to the price or conditions they offer, in respect to the question of hours and wages between the company and Its employes, the court aald that It was the duty of the corpora tion to go on and operate Its lines with . Its full complement of men, having the right to gradually and from day to day to supercede its employes. If It can, by new employes who will work on Its terms, or to supercede them all at once when It has obtained a sufficient number of new employes for that purpose; but In such a controversy it has not the right to stoo (Its cars while it Is gradually getting other men. Each party, the court has held, has the right to obtain the best terms it can, but If the company cannot got men at a price it thinks fair, it Is bound to get them at a price it may deem ex orbitant because Its first duty is to operate its road. One of the arguments at once raised against this ruling was that It did not give the company a reasonable time In which, to restore its suspended sched ule; and by an alternative writ subse quently issued, and made returnable in Wrty days, the court deferred to this argument. In his first ruling, however, Judge Oaynor held that the claim of the company that it was prevented by vio lence from running its cars was not made out; that there was ample protec tion; and that the real difficulty was its refusal to hire men, except on its own conditions a policy -which can not be pleaded against the general public Naturally, a decision of this gweepln? character although true In the main to the law and to the equity of ithe case, lias excited very general discussion, In which censure is freely intermingled with praise. For example, we have be fore us two morning newspapers of Minneapolis of the same date, each con taining a leader upon this subject. The Journal praises the decision as "un doubtedly good law," and declares It to !be ''high time" that "the rights of the public, ithe party most interested and the party which always suffers the most In conflicts between corporations and their employes, were thus, plainly and emphatically asserted.". The Tribune, upon the other hand, after a facetious fling or two, proceeds to observe that a Btreet railway company Is under obi lira ttons to run Its cars as per schedule; but equity win always take Into conBldera nun circumstances unu conditions. Ira sudden tidal wave should Cover the streets wn.n,?.t,?tfhie!td.Tl!'. 1 ,co;" i felled its franchise for falling to operato its line while the flood lasted. If Brook lyn Is Inundated with the turbulence of tho mob, and the authorities are powerless to - ...... ..(,.. vim v u 1 1 1 u it uan ml' preserve order and afford protection to , men who want to work, no fair-minded oourt would declare Its franchise void bo. cause of failure to run cars under such circumstances. The municipality confer a valuable grant In the franchise; but one of the things which makes It valuuble Is the protection to property wlilcn every well ordered community guarantees, if this protection Is withdrawn, the fran chise becomes valueless for the time be ing. The obligation Is a. mutual one be tween tho company and the city. The company obligates Itself to run cars, and the city to protect it In such -operation, if the city is guilty of a laches in tho obligation It has assumed, It cannot take advuntage of Its own negligence becauso of Its own failure to enforce tho laws. If such a, thing could bo done, any set of schemers could procure the forfeiture of any franchise by simply fomenting a strike or riot and rendering the operation of the franchise physically Impossible. Judge Gaynor's interpretation of the law, while correct In tho abstract, may nave no application whatever 'In the concrete. This variation of opinion Is proba bly general throughout the country; and it illustrates the extent to which the public has drifted uway from the true principles underlying corporation grants conditioned upon the extraor dinary law of eminent domain. Judge flaynor'fl interpretation of the law impresses our Minneapolis name sake as being "correct in ithe abstract ' but Irrelevant in the concrete. In other words, it is Just In principle, but impossible in every day practice. Now why thould f definition of law which, in principle, all persons must commend be regarded as useless in dally ap plication? When such is the case, something is manifestly wrong; fci leal Justice is nothing If not uniform and iinpai tial. Does it not appear that the pjbllc Itself" Is in. a wrong position ? lias it not, invthe rapid recent multi plication of franchise grants, some how ivrown confused as to its own lights d:i these premises, und fallen partly into the superstition that it has no rights except such as are secondary to and In harmony with ttvsseltlsh pur poses of the holders of those grants? The spectacle of a public dumbfounded by so fair and palpable a 'truth as this one of Judge Gaynor's that the holder of a public franchise owes his first al ljglance to the public which gave him that franchise would be anomalous enoup.ti to be diverting were It not that it is too serious a thing for -levity. The road was built upon a dl3tlnot promise that it would perform certain public services. It ehould perform them or go out of business. The notion that so suon as It gets its franchise it may sing and ithe public whistle Is out of harmony with both law and equity. The Oaynor decision fharks an Im portant step In 'the development of cor porate power, it Is the beginning- of, not a socialistic, but a scientific recoil from corporate aggressiveness and greed. Representative Council, In a recent letter to -the Central Labor union, wrote as follows: "I desire my every action watched and If I make any mistakes I want to be told about it. I consider my duty here is not so much to Intro duce new bills as it is to keep a watch ful eye on bad bills and to help to kill them." This frank declaration lias the right sound. There are exceptions, of course, but as a rule .the member who serves his llrst term tit Harrisburg would act wisely to keep his eyes open and his mouth and Ink-bottle shut. The more experienced members can generally Introduce sulliclent bills at each session to save the commonwealth and have several left over. Pass the Farr Bill. In support of a movement before the Minnesota, legislature to secure the enactment of it law prohibiting child labor in factories, the Minneapolis Tlnifc3 properly observes that "all chil dren that come into the world ure our oredltors, and remain our creditors as long as they are children. They have a right to food, clothing, shelter, education, kind words, careful protec tion. We are poor paymasters if we do not give them these things." This is precisely 'the point at issue In Pennsylvania, In the movement in be half of compulsory education. The commonwealth, by legal enactment, has decreed that children between 8 and 13 years of age shall not be forced, to wear their young lives out In mines, breakers, shops or factories; but it yet permits 175,000 of itht-se children, to roam the streets in idleness or .to neg lect the opportunities open to them for the acquirement of a good, common school education. These children-are absolved from blame bi-cause pf their Ig norance; but what about 'their parents? Shall parental indifference to the rights of children be permitted Indefinitely to throw upon society's care a large and growing burden of illiterate citizen ship? It Is well enough to guard the proper rights of parentage; but has society no rights in the premises that need pro tection, too? Is the state unfit to be considered in this connection? Has childhood no claim to the care which is denied It by callous parents? Pass the Farr compulsory education bllK" Representative O'Malley's Invitation to his constituents to confer with him, from time to time, and to keep him posted as to their wants, is a generous Immolation of self upon the altar of public duty. We trust ithat Mr. O'Mnl- ley will have no reason to regret It. They Do Not Clash Inquiries have come to us from rp. dents of the WoBt Side asking If the proposed state appropriation to the Lackawanna hospital will Interfere with the movement to establish a miners' hospital in Hydu Park. Our understanding Is that it will not. Both enterprises have received the Indorse ment of the State Board of Charities, the recommendatloTm of which are rarely Ignored by the legislature; and since there is today nearly $4,000,000 of surplus money lying idle In the state treasury it is reasonable to suppose that the Hyde Park hospital bill will receive as favorable consideration as Is vouch safed to any similar measure having behind it a genuine public need. It would be exceedingly unfortunate to all portions xif our city if a spirit of Jealousy should arise between these valuable hospitals, the one performing ft mnirnlflnent nervine In Die eentrnl Potion of the city, and the other con- templatlng a similar service to the In dustrial population on the West Hide and in the North End. Roth are needed, and yneeded- badly. Each will supple ment the other.- 'The- work of one will In no wise interfere with the usefulness if the other. If there Is any apprehen sion In any quarter that the success of the Lackawanna hospital appropria tion would necessarily Jeopard the chances of the West Bide project, It should be dismissed as without founda tion in fact. The Lackawanna hospital, as the pio neer institution of its kind, deserves the unstinted support of every citizen of this entire community. The Kirmess of next week, for its benefit, should re oelve the cordial patronage of every resident of Scranton. The hospital, within the limits of its now meager ac commodations, closes its doors to none; end in return should encounter the apathy ;of none. But the liberal and earnest support of this hospital Is by no means inconsistent with confidence In the success of the proposed miners' hos pital for Hyde Park; and it would be a serious error on the part of our West Side friends to feel that their Interests are a matter of Indifference or of oppo sition to the active supporters of next week's Kirmess. The reported displeasure of the Mex ican people at the offer of this govern ment to assist, If possible. In the bring ing about of a peaceful settlement by arbitration of the boundary dispute be tween Mexico and Guatemala Is founded on temper rather than common sense. The method taken by our Btate department In expressing its peaceful overtures may not have been fortu nate; but the national feeling back of It Is one not of petty Interference but of a sincere friendliness supple mented by a laudable wish to honor ably avert the sacrifices of war. The Mexican who would take offence at that would be himself blameworthy. Senator Uobln, the exuberant econo mist of yesterday, does not act like the Senator Gubiu of last week, who was so anxious to Increase the salary of the proposed commissioner of bunking; but candor compels us to say he is the same person. . . It Is easy to criticize a poor president. Suppose we now take a different tack, and. first pity, .then ussist him. One Democratic legislative district In Lackawanna county Is ample; but the question is, "Which one?" LEGISLATIVE ToVlCS. The Proposed Anti-Company Storo l.uu. Representative Wyatt's anti-company store bill, now pending la the house at Harrisburg, Is as follows: An act entitled an act to prohibit min ing and mui.. jut luring corporations or limited parliteisliips Hum engaging m thj l."Vilii)S-j o' uijii'S on stores knowi h company tsttics ur general supply no-ii by liii.-ct-oi Inched means, or requiring their employe!- to trade ill any particular store. Section 1. IJe it enacted by the senate and house of representatives of the com monwealth of Pennsylvania In general assembly mel, uii.l it Is hereby enacted by tho authority of the same, that from anil alter a period of two (-) months sub sequent to the dutu of the passage of this act, it sliull not be lawful lor any mining or mumilacturliij; corporation or limited partnership to carry on by direct or indi rect means any store or stores known as a coinpiuy store or general supply store other than such as have been mumd or manufactured by the mining or manufac turing corpuralious or limited partner ships. See. 2. That no mining or manufacturing corporation or limited partnership shall compel their employes by direct or Indi rect means to lulco store orders or go to a.tty particular store to buy their mer chandise, nur shall any mining or man ufacturing or limited partnership through its olliceis or stockholders, by any rule or regulation of its business, make any con tract wlh tho owners or keepers of uny store, whereby the employes of such min ing or nianul'actut ing corporations or lim ited partnerships shall be obliged to trade, anil any such contract mad shall be a violation of this act, and till moneys or values expended by such contract or agreement shall be recoverable by law with six u) per centum added to go to the employe, and one hundred ($ltJ dollars line to go to the school district in which stilt Is brought. Sec. 3. No assignment of wages under the provisions of this act shall be valid, nor shall any agreement be valid that re lieves the said mining or manufacturing corporations or limited partnerships from paying their employes In lawful money of the I'nlted States. Sec. 4. It shall be the duty of the fac tory Inspector and his deputies to bring action In the niiino of the commonwealth against any mining or manufacturing cor poration or llnilti-d partnership violating th'i provisions of this act upon complaint of any citizen of this commonwealth. Sec. 5. All laws or parts of laws Incon sistent with the provisions of this act bo and the same are hereby repealed. Attending Strictly to Uuslnoss. Carhondalu Anthracite: Hon. Charles P. oWlulley Is attending strictly to busi ness at the state legislature. He Is much Interested In securing legislation that will benefit his constituents, and in a let ter to us he mukes the following state ment: "There Is a formidable 'Lubor Combine' In the present house represent ing all the Industrial districts of the stute. There are over sixty members In It. lis object Is to select the best bills aiming at certain results and push them. I think it Is going to bo the means of securing some beneficent legislation for the work ing people at this session. In the matter of committees 1 am fortunate In being en Judiciary general, which, as you know, handles the majority of the bills presented to tho house. It Is a great school for a young man. I am also on mines und min ing, so that 1 have the greatest opportun ity of being of service to my people on all mutters concerning them und whero It Is most needed, In the committee. 1 shall be happy to receive suggestions from my constituents. 1 consider myself their ser vant and In duly bound to carry out tho will of a majority of them on any matter pertaining to their 'needs. I am striving hard to look agter the Interests of my people, and trust thut when the session closes I will be able to go back to them with the knowledge that I have dis charged the trust they reposed In me to their satisfaction." . Amen. Say Wo All. Philadelphia Record: "The bill Intro duced by State Representative Nlles, of Tioga county, to provide that where the various phases of a criminal act can be Included In a single Indictment of one or mure counts no more fees shall be allowed to a district attorney han for a single indictment, proposes u ehungo of prac tice mcasuro that ought to puss upon Its merits. There la neither Hense nor Justice In the circumlocutory practice to largely prevalent In this stnte of drawing up a whole batch of formal charges to cover a single criminal act, and the legislature should take this occasion to reform It al together." THE PROPER METHOD. Prom the Krle Dispatch. The Nicaragua canal bill has passed the United States senato after a career of several years and debate which would muke volumes. It provides, In a word, fo; the guaranteeing of the bonds of a pri vate corporation organized to construct tho ranul. The government will be re sponsible for the payment of $0,000,b00 Just as it Is now responsible for the f:i3,0O0,0UO Union Pacific bonds, with no security whatever, the victim of shrewd btincolsts In the guino of capitalists and fraud In the name of enterprise. There In no one with a spark of patriotism who does not believe that the Nicaragua ranul ought to be built,, and when constructed be con trolled by the United SJates. Unless It is, It will naturally be a formidable menace to our commerce and to the Monroe doc trine, for the European powers will not long allow the rotten boroughs of Central America to control so valuable a water way. All are agreed to the proposition that the United Btates should control the canal. Then why not have the govern ment build It? If J70.iMI.0e0 guaranteed bonds will fall, short of constructing the canal, will not the government be called upon to jduee Its Indorsement on still more bonds? and whut compensation do we get? Possibly the same as In the Union Paclilc deal, where worthless, prior claims will have to be met, the road closed out and the people who are the govern mentwill have only the debt to show. If the Nicaragua canal Is to be bullt'by un Indorsement of the United States, let tho government build It, own It, and con trol it IN FLORIDA. Somewhat nearer the equator, wliore the the smiling alligator and the coon and sweet pertater lend the scene a tropic air. ' There Is woe and lamentation for defeated expectation of Joyous speculation, and no oranges to spare. Rut there's bnlm for every trouble, and the breaking of thebubble gives ex cuse for charging double for the winter tourist's keep. Higher, higher, rise the prices, till we see by lute advices seven dullars scarce suffices for a supper and a sleep. New York Recorder. Useful and Orna mental Goods LADIES' DESKS. CABINETS. BOOKCASES. LADIES' DRESSING TABLES. TEA TABLES AND LIBRARY TABLES, BRASS AND ONYX TABLES AND CABINETS (OF A GUARANTEED QUALITY.) AN ELEGANT STOCK OP PIC. TURE3 AT MODERATE COST. FANCY BASKETS AND LAMPS. CALL EARLY AND MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS WHILE OUR AS. SORTMENT IS COMPLETE. ill& Connell, 13! AND 133 WASHINGTON AVE. Hand Sleighs, Baby Sleighs, Clippers, Alligators, Self-Steering Sleighs, Steel Sleighs, Iron Sleighs AND THE FAMOUS Paris Hill Oak Sleighs In Clippers and Rent Wood Knees und the Montrose Gas Tubing Sleighs. Wc have over ioo dozen in stock and will sell very cheap at wholesale and retail. I D. WILLIAMS & BR0. 314 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. A Decided Move In the Skate trade bm sot fn and It u 111 pny vim to eiiiniine the iitock of JL'UISCR'S. at V't Spruce etroot. Fine line of Kuporior pockut cutlery, rutors, etc.. for Hull duy trnde. Guns und ammunition at bottom flirurea. Aim wins second hand v lieels at pr IceB thnt will aetonlab you. Boeing la bullorlug Wni. Linn lie 3c Co. STOCK BROKERS, Buy and sell Stocks. BondR and drain on 'Now York Exclmnse and ChicaKO hoard of Trudo, cither (or cash or os margin. 412 Spruce Street. ' LOCAL STOCKS A BPECIALTT. G. doB. DIMMICK, Manager. TELEPHONE 6.Uta Tic secret Is out. Not only do they say wc do washing for a living, but that we do it well. So keep it going. Tell everybody you sec, but teJU Ihem not to tell. EUREKA LAUNDRY, 322 Washington Ave. THAT WONDERFUL WEBER .1. GUERNSEY GOLDSMITH'S FROM THE ALPS TO AMERICA We are just patriotic enough to use, and want to use, everything we possibly can of the produc tions of our own country. The Yankees, may their tribe increase, have succeeded in making nearly everything that can be made ot cotton, wool, flax and silk, but there's a few Old World industries that ' don't flourish here yet One of these is the art of Embroidery. To do that successfully, one must be a Swiss and live in Switzerland. We can't bring over the Alps, but here's the All of the Newest and Choicest designs, but recently ncn iui-k i,u3iom nouse. upen Hork and Loop Edges will take the lead. We have them of every price in Cambric, Swiss, Kainsook. This bids fair to be the greatest Lace season ever known. Our first impor tation for 1895 new open and ready for inspection. England, Germany and France are represented. Our line of Point de Venise with Net Tods and Fine Black Laces is Un surpassed. ISHTH QJJ IS THE EGHTH WE GREAT HEDUCTIONStSEP' IN ODD AND ENDS OF DINNER. TEA and TOILETSETS, LAMP GOODS and BRIC-A-BRAC 422 LACKA. AVE. Blank Books Raymond Trial Balance Books Graves' Indexes Document Boxes , Inks of All Rinds AGENTS FOHrST Ediscr's Mimeographs and Supplies Crawford Pens Leon Isaac Pens REYNOLD Stationers and Engtavers, 317 LACKAWiMS) AVE. DR. HILL & SON ALBANY , DENTIST5. Sot toeth. J5.50; best sot, (8; for roM cap and tet'th without plntea.callcdcrowii and bridge, work, cnll for prlwn an1 refer enroa. TON ALU I A, for extrnvtlnK tuotli without pain. No other. No gas. OVER FIRST NATIONAL BANK. 4 ML AH ifElTIW S BEGS,, BROTHERS, WYOMING V A Kcduction Sale with Heductiona. Jail. SI, 19M. AN OAK CHIFFONIER FOR $5. So, $7, from $io. $8, from io. $17, from $20. $25, from $30. $28, from $32. $55, from $70. $48, from $58, etc. Chiffoniers in Walnut, Birch, Habofun7 and Cherry with aimllar reduction in price. Hull & Co. 205 Wyoming Ave. We Move March 1. START TIE NEW YEAR U And keep going right by buying and carry ing one of LLOYD'S WATCHES. LLOYD, JEWELER, 423 LACKA. AVE.' YENISON, PRAIRIE CHICKEN, Partridges, Quail," Rabbits, All Kinds of Poultry, Ripe Tomatoes, Mushrooms, Green Beans, ' Cucumbers, Head Lettuce, Salsify Radishes, Etc. Pierce's Market BMTHE TONE IS FOUND ONLY IN THE WEBER PIANO AVE. EMBROIDERIES landed and fresh from the MY KimloBs Bifocal OIhsroi oombtne iliv tun t and mailing lu unit pair and gir til. vrrcntest Hiitisfiictiuu. Headache and nor vernations romidlwlby using Klties accurately Otted. HtiRtuctlon guaranteed in erery cm DK. S1I1MBERG, 305 Spruce St, Eye Specialist EYES EXAMINED FREE. DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia SpecinliKt, and his asscx dated Fluff, of Kniillsh and German physicians, are now permanently located at Old Postoffice Building, Corner Penn Avenue and Spruce Street. The donor l a uruduue of the L"nlver Bity of Pennsylvania, formerly demon ntiator of physiology and surgery at tha Medico-L'hliuiKieal collide of Philadel phia. His t)eiialties are Chronic, Ner vous, Skin, Heart, Womb and Blood did ease. DISEASES OF THE KERY0US SYSTEM The symptoms of which are dlzziness.laolt of confidence, sexual weakness in men and women, ball rising In throat, spots flouting before the eyes, loss of memory, unable to concentrate the mind on ona Bubject, easily startled when suddenly spoken to, and dull distressed mlml, which unfits them for performing tho actual du ties of life, mtikinp happiness Impossible, distressing the action of tho heart, caus ing flush of heat, depression of spirits.evll forebodings, cowardice, fear, dreams, niel ancholy, tire easy of company, feeling as tired in the morning as when retiring, lack of enerp,y, nervousness, trembling, confusion of thought, depression, constipa tion, weakness of the limbs, etc. Those so affected should consult us immediately, ard bo restored to perfect health. Lost Manhood Restored. Weakness of Young Jlen Cured. If you have been given up by your phy sician cull upon the doctor and bu exum Iwd, He cures the worst cases of Mcr ous Lability, Scrofula, Old Hores, Ca tarrh, Piles, Female Weakness, Affec tions of the Kye, Ear. Nose nnd Throat, Asthma, Heafness. Tumors, Cancers and Cripples of every description. Consultations free and strlctlv sacred and coulidenlf.. ufll-e hours daily from 9 a.m. to 0 p.m. Sunday, 9 to 2. Knrloso five 2-cent stumps for symtpom blanks und my bonk called "New Life." I will pay one thousand dollars In gold to anyone whom I cannot cure of EPI LEPTIC CONVULSIONS or FITS lilt. K. GRKWRR. Old Tost OfTlcc Building, corner PuuB avenue and Spruce street. SCRANTON. PA. EVERY 1 BUYS HARDWARE. The question Is, where can the best b obtained? Whero tho lowest prices for tho good kind? Listen! Let us speak to you confidentially. Most people suy ours. We know and you know that they know, what Is what It ought to be In Hurdware. We have Bhaved our prices .with Knives, Chisels and Shaves, and planed them with our planes. They are now below tha lovel of others as our Levels show. We remove to our large now store, 119 Washington avenue, April L FOOTS 1 SB CO, t IP YOUR OLD noons NEED FIXi Snranlnn Trlhnna I W I iw a) IVUIIU . IWl Bookbindlnir Denfc. 88&MPA1Y ' '"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers