4 THE SCEANTON TRIBIWJE-MOXDAY MORNING. FEBRUABY 4, 1895. i bblcjhsd dailt m bcrahtoi pa., bt tui Tiubqhv fOBUattlNO OOHPiHT. t. P. KINGSBURY, Phis, mi OWi Mas, C. H. RIPPlc, Sio'v mi Tmm. UVY . RICHARD, Cditk. W. W. DAVIS). ButiHH MNatn. W. W. VOUNOS, Aow. Mane'a. Itiw Tows omos: Tribuni Boaciita. Frank 9 OKAY, UAMAOia. kliTlRXO AT TBI TOSTOrriOl AT SCRANTOR. FA.. B1O0ND-0LASS UAIL IIATT1R. "Printer' Ink," the recounted journal tor advertisers, rates THE SCRAM TON TKIBUNE as the best advertising medium In Northeastern Pennsylvania. Printent Ink." knows. BCRANTON, FEBRUARY 4, 1895. THE SCRAN TON OF TODAY. Como and Inspect our city. Elevation above the tide, 710 feet. Extremely healthy. Estimated population, 1S9-I. 103,000. Registered voiers, 20,599. Value of school property, 1750,000. Number of school children, 12,000. Average amount of bank deposits. 1V. eoo.ooo. It's the metropolis of northeastern Pent cjylvanla. Can produce electric power cheaper than Niagara. ... No better point In the United States at Which to establish new Industries. Bee how we grow: Population In lfifiO Population In 1670 83.000 Population In 1880 45'Vj Population In 1S90 H.'lli Population In 1S94 (estimated) 108,(M And the end Is not yet. The retrospect in another column covering the lively times of 1871, when the Youns Men's Christian association crusade against Illegal liquor selling forced the Liquor Dealers' league to agree, In open court, to observe the law, and, In the words of Judge Hund ley, reduced the court costs while rais ing the license revenues $30,000 a year will be read with interest, after the Interval of a quarter of a century. The methods by which that campaign was vron were heroic ones. They did nut Btop at soda fountains nor deal in in ferential evidence. They cut clear through to the marrow of the central iniquity; and forced a favorable result ty not giving up short of one. It Is Instructive to renew acquaintanca with those times, even though the com parisons suggested be not wholly com plimentary to the present. The Work of the Baldwins. It is Immaterial, so far as scientific Investigation Is concerned, whether the so-called mind-reading entertainments of the past week were bogus or genuine. The principle upon which they are said to rest Is today well established, and would survive any exposure of the Im mediate modus operandi employed by the Baldwins, This principle which may be roughly stated as the possibil ity, under favorable conditions, of transferring mental .Influences .from mind to mind without materialistic In tercommunication does not, to be sure, Admit of demonstration In a geometric sense. It cannot be established by the same absolute rules which convince the mathematician that two added to two makes four. Yet It is admitted by most candid students of psychology and may be demonstrated experiment ally by any one who yet doubts It. For example, if a person will, upon entering a railway car, attentively con centrate his gaze upon another person seated several feet in front of him, only a few minutes will usually Inter vene before the object of this scrutiny, If semi-somnolent by reason of the drowsy Influences of traveling, will be come restless and uneasy, will writhe in his seat and will Anally turn square ly around and return the gaze. The same experiment will succeed, nine times out of ten, when the person ex perimented upon Is asleep. The parlor game called "memerism," In which one person is blindfolded, led by two asso ciates Jnto a room where one of these associates or a confederate has con cealed some object upon which the com panions of the blindfolded one concen trate their thoughts, and unconsciously walks directly to that object, afterward picking It up, Involves the same' gen eral principle In modified form. ' These experiments do not always succeed, and therefore the principle cannot he said to have reached the standing of a fixed science; yet the preponderance of evi dence Is heavily in Its favor, and the intelligent. Inquirer who enters upon an Investigation of this ohadowy realm of advanced knowledge without prejudice or bias must soon decide to give cred ence to at least the possibility of such phenomena, entirely apart from any commercial hocus pocus or humbug, ii, 'inen, it ue possible to convey thought, silently, without materialistic Intercommunication, from one mind to another, why should it be deemed lnr probable that In some human organ isms this mental or psychical sensitive ness is more pronounced than in oth ers? It Is tolerably well authenticated, although by no means generally con ceded, that the late Washington Irving Bishop performed many remarkable feats of mind reading and telepathy while in hypnotic state such as driv ing blindfolded for several blocks through the busiest of Chicago's busy utreets, to a place where a small object find been hidden without the possibll- dty of his knowing anything about It. Another performance is recorded in Bt, (Petersburg in which a Blight young lady, whose name Just now escapes our memory, with fher finger tip pressed to his chair, lifted the strapping Czar Alexander II, and carried him about the room; and afterward, with equal ease, hurled him agalnstthe wall qf the palace although he said to have been the strongest man In his empire with Iboth his giant , arms outstretched, braced himself against her, The achievements of the Baldwins In our city may have ben wholly decep tive, wholly genuine Yr a mixture of both. We do not pretend to know which supposition is the true one. But In any event they have been, upon the whole, beneficial lnaemucnaa they have directed public- attention to a vltta of exploration In which, notwithstanding much prevalent quackery- and charlat anry, there Is very evidently some de gree of truth not yet revealed in Its full measure. Many of the ablest men of our day are at work upon this ex ploration. Their theories are numer ous and fantastic. But however much they may differ in conclusions, there can be no denying the desirability of a thorough sifting of ascertainable facts. For It Is clear to us that in this direc tion of Inquiry the future holds much knowledge in its keeping subject to re lease only after patient and toilsome pursuit. Recently this journal took occasion to pay What et the time it believed to be a just compliment to the Harrfsburs correspondence of the Scrantoti Truth. We now find it'he writer of that corres pondence charged by Representative Furr with making "uncalled for 'mis representations." Mr. Farr specifies the assertions In that correspondence touching an alleged clash between him self and Representative Cunnell on the reapportionment question. These Mr. Farr declares to be untrue and mis leading, since he ha3 proposed no plan of reapportionment Whatever, and hence had nothing about which to clash. We should regret to believe thut the Truth's opposition to compulsory education had Influenced its ll-tnls- burg representative to "write down" the member from the First district. The New Woman At Large. A good many eccentricities have to be excused in the New Woman; but it is doubted If the ordinarily complacent and Indulgent New Woman's Brother will sit quiet under the latest one of these, which consists of going about, man fashion, from saloon to saloon, in search of the novelty or the fascination which the New Woman assumes must be possessed by such rendezvous of the convivial male homo. If we mistake not the temper of the said woman's fraternal relative and guardian, he will stand a good deal of foolishness, but he will not stand that. But," you ask us, "is It true? Does the New Woman frequent saloons?" Aye, that she does, alas; and we have her own word for it. The esteemed Syracuse Post of last Saturday com prised thirty-six readable pages, the whole of them written, edited and proof-read by the New Woman and her friends. And on the second of these pages we see, In black head let ter, these tell-tale words; "In the Sa loon Dives." "What a Post Woman Saw on a Tour Among Them." Our horrified attention thus abruptly transfixed, we proceed to digest the unblushing details. It is admitted, as a first concession, that "the better class of saloons are inviting. They have a wealth of decorations, the service is quiet and skillful generally, courtesy to one another is observed and the lunch counters are resplendent with fragile ware and attractive with savory viands." But from this kind of place the New Woman speedily descended un til she found saloons where cleanliness spemed un known, where the crews before the liaiM were restless, moving crushes of beast lality, where the conversation was less re strained, the lloors were filthy, the clothes of the men less cleanly, the hats of the worn ami battered description, and the smells diabolical, arising from old clothe?, frankfurts, sauerkraut, stale beer, whisky, gin, tobacco and vile breaths coming from foul mouths rendered more foul by their unclean words. Yet even this was not the ne plus ultra of the New AVoman's hardihood. For, going still lower, she came to the Baloons where the most dissolute wo men hover about. These saloons are where the windows are covered by shadt-s or curtains drawn so closely over the wal lows that only for the streaks of light from the sides or through I he crevices In the dilapidated screen It would be sup posed that they were unoccupied. It Is In these saloons of narrow width and re stricted room the most violent of the smells and the greatest license Is found. The language grows coarser, the crowils are more like wiggling, twisting, squirm ing masses of earth worms than anything, moving to and fro, gesticulating. sIiikIiiv, or rather bellowing, and past much sen sible movement of any sort, for they were unqualifiedly drunken. From an artistic standpoint the ven turesome daughter of Eve who Is our pilot In this novel Journey through the slums concludes that saloons, upon the whole, are unqualified failures. In her pilgrimage she tells us there were three places where nutfe figures were dis played. They were all life size and while In the gallery of the millionaire, the .Met ropolitan JIusem or In the art publication, they (or rather the originals) would he looked upon as conducive to cultivation of the nrtlstlc sense, In the reproduction they have lost their Ideality and while Godlva In the former place Is of marvelous beauty, she takes on' the air of the lo cality where found, and In a saloon ono only thinks of her as stealing away for any other purpose than to alleviate the wrongs of an oppressed people. Ko too. the nymphs of the woodrt move In harm i nlous grace In the original, but mu'lly caper with unseemly motion when dis played on the walls of a saloon. What muy be the reason for placing these fig ures on the walls or In the corners of the saloons It Is hard to comprehend. The hnbltues of these places nre not generally of artistic proclivities, so they do not need them for studies. They do not seem nec essary In any other respect and the only reason Imagined Is that they lead men to drink In order to forget them. The New Woman tell3 us much more. She tells us, for example, that In one place she saw "a forlorn, watery eyed, purple faced, trembling wreck of a man once doing a prosperous business. In another a strong, fine looking man was displaying a roll of bills and spend ing money freely, whose wife Is a deli cate, educated woman with two babes and takes In washing in order to live." But despite these spectacles, so cleverly described, not a word does she Bay about prohibition or moral suasion or white ribbon crusades. In' this detail she establishes her claim to be called the New AVoman. But What will her brother Bay? Or, indeed, what can he say? AA'iitlng In the current number of the North American Review upon "The Financial Muddle," Secretary of Agri culture J. Sterling Morton takes occa sion to remark that "the harmonies of civilization, the multifold tones of trade, all the great choruses and melo dies of commerce tho murmuring stream that runs tho mill wheel, the hissing engine on the rail, the plash of the puddle wheel, on Inland lakes, the monotonous pulsations of great hearts of steamships on all tho oceans of the globe, the singing wires of telegraph lines hanging In- the air, the whir of the electric cars every movement of p sentient commerce, transporting from north to south, from south to north, from east to west and from west , to east, with nil its . myriad sounds of contented Industry, are merely the economic orchestra of civilization obey ing tho motions of the magic baton of Demand wielded by the will power of tho civilized world. These are the mar velous melodies of modern commerce. But tho inspiration which gives voice to value, and energizes the many tongued industries of modern life, ad vancements and improvements, is ex changeability based upon demand, which la founded upon desire." We have no doubt that the public will once more breathe easily now that this fact Is ofllclally decided. Boston has just dedicated a new $5,000,000 public library; and by a sug gestive coincidence the first person to enter the new structure was one whom the press dispatches describe as a "broad-shouldered worklngman." Yet tills was as It should be,. since It is the workinginan who Is most benefited by public libraries. Persons of wealth can purchase libraries of their own, but not even the wildest dream of socialism contemplate. an estate for the Indus trial toller sufficiently fortunate to ena able him to have access, In his own home, to a collection of 2,000,000 books like that soon to be accessible to him in the Hub. The public library is one of the chief est ameliorating forces of our present civilization, and that city Is fortunate indeed which has such a force in active and successful opera tion In its midst. To the extent of a column In the Har rlsburg Patriot a Scranton "Democrat" who doss not chose to come out from cover larrups AVilllnm F. llarrlty and ex-Overnor Paulson for their alleged joint betrayal of the Democracy of Pennsylvania. This anonymous writer's principal grievance against Mr. Harrlty Is that the latter rose from the estate of a Philadelphia ward politician to the na tional chairmanship of his party. At least, this seems to be the main thing charged against him. A'e do not ad mire Harrlty and have no conceivable Interest in him, one way or another. But it occurs to us that this Scranton assailant of Harrlty ought in common justice to come 6ut of ambush amd do his fighting In the open, like a man. "It Is encouraging to know that the feeling is growing that Christian fidel ity means patriotism Just as much as It doL'.s piety; means being a good citizen juut as much as it does being a good church member; and that X.arer, My God, to Thee," and 'Star Spangled Banner,' are both Christian hymns In the mouth of an all-round Christian." Dr. Parkhurst. Rev. Dr. Carlos Martvn. a Chicago clergyman, is In illsfavor because he said that there were 40,00 disreputable women In that city or one In five of the female population between 18 and years of age. Dr. Murtyn should remember that figures can readily be made to prevaricate, If one be not very careful in their use. r Upon the whole, the bunks of Penn sylvania, both state and national, have emerged from the trying times of the past two years with Hying colors. In what other state has the banking busi ness made a superior record for honesty and prudence? LEGISLATIVE TOPICS. The Harvey School Hill. Wllkes-llarre Record: "jno of the most Important measure. now before the slate legislature Is that relating to the prompt payment of the school appropriation, it was prepared by S. J. Strauss, of this city, and has been Introduced wlniultun- oously In the senate and house by Senator Kline and Representative Harvey. The bill provides that whenever any school district shall have held Its schools open for the in minium school term In uny year, the president und secretary of the board Khali file a statement with tho superintendent of public Instruction In such form us he may prescribe, showing tho time during which tho schools have been actually kept open that year; and thereupon the supei Intcndi-nt of public Instruction shall certify the statement to tho state trt-UMircr, and he shall causa to be transmitted to the said district with in sixty days, three-fourths of the state appropriation to which that district is entitled for the year, and the rcniulnini; fourth shall In- transmitted after the end of the school year und ufter the animal report has been nunle to tho department as heretofore. The necessity of such n bill Is plain to all who have had experi ence In the man:iKnent of our public schools. I'nder the present system, the state appropriation Is not uvullame until three or four months iift-'r the school year has ended. The money lies Idle In tho treasury or Is distributed nmnnir the various banks iwed as slate depositories, hut the districts rnnnot secure II no mut ter how much It may be needed to pay necessary expenses. This has proven a hardship to the poorer districts In the state, while even those that Include tho larger cities llnd It necessary In many In stances to borrow money and puy Inter est for Its use, while waiting for the ap propriation. This Is clearly unjust to the districts. There Is ho good reason why at least three-fourths of this money should not be paid at the close of the mini mum school term. It would not only be doing nn act of justice to tho districts, hut would relieve many of them from the necessity of borrowing money to tide tlum over the school year." Tho Proposed Charities HIM. Pittsburg Commercliil-tiazette: "A bill bus been Introduced In tho house at Ilar risburg abolishing tho state bourd of public charities and establishing In Its stead a department of charities. The pro loscd bill will make radical changes In the management of these several Institutions, it places at the head of the department a superintendent, who Is to be appointed by the governor and serve for three years, with uuthorlly to appoint throe linipee tors, live clerks and three deputies. Tho superintendent will have conferred upon him nil the powers now vested In tho board of public charities, with full power to visit and inspect the books of all insti tutions receiving state nld.- The purpose of the bill In to secure better service through concentration of power, throwing upon ono person the responsibility now resting upon ten, and giving him a suf ficient number of assistants to have the work of the department more thoroughly performed. Tho success of he change will largely depend upon the character and Illness of tho superintendent and the manner In which the various duties shall lie defined. Home change In the law seems desirable, but it Is possible to create an expensive department without any cor responding benefit to the public at largo." To Pravcnt Overcrowding of Cars. Below Is tho text of the Kearns bill to regulate the rale of fare to be charged on Mti-eet pusHcnger railways for passen gers who are not tendered or provided with sealB: "Whereas, lly reason of In adequate and Insufllelent car service on a great number of street passenger rail ways within this commonwealth largo numbers of pusscngers are unprovided with and unuble to secure seats, and are necessarily obliged lo remain standing, re sulting In discrimination between the pas sennets and causing great Incunvenlenco and discomfort. "Section 1 Bo it enacted that from and after the first day of October, A. D. 1895, It shall be unlawful for any street railway company in this commonwealth. Its agents or employes, to charge, collect or receive from any passenger in any street railway car, who Is not tendered or provided with a seat In its cars, the regular fare charged on any such car; and any passenger so obliged to stand as aforesaid shall be en titled to a reduction from the. regular fare of at least 1 cent. "8ec. 2 The violation of any of the pro visions of this act shall be deemed a mis demeanor, and any person, corporation or employe convicted thereof shall be pun ishable by a line of not less than $5 and not exceeding (50. Ono Valuable New Hill. Carbondule Herald: "Senator Woods has Introduced a bill to prevent electric, cable or horse car lines from crossing steam roads at grade, or where the street railways exist, to prevent a steam road crossing from being constructed ut grade. It Is probably too early to congratulate the people of the state upon this measure, as It may die a lingering death of strangu lation In the committee. If It Is passed In such a way us not only to prevent the building of grade crossings In the future, but also to provide for the elimination of those that already exist, the peop)e will have ut least ono cause to remember the present legislature kindly. The bill will be a still greater blessing if It will in clude In Its provisions public highways as well as cur lines. Then indeed will It bo a useful measure." Too Much l.nu -.Making. Curbondule Herald:. "The American people are too much "governed. Our law makers get together for only one session In two years, but when they do meet, they mako up for lost time. From the llrst to tho lust It Is a wild rush of bills. One thousand bills were read In pluce during the llrst six weeks of the present session. The gentlemen at lliirrlshurg seem to Im agine that the people of this common wealth are crying for legislation; thut we are suffering for tho passage of more bill;'. The state would be better off If the gen eral assembly met only once In ten years; or better oft still If they would go into con tinuous session for the repealing of luws." Mr. Fritz's l ittle Dill. Mr. Fritz, of Columbia county, has pre sented a bill to authorize the assessment und collection of tuxes for local purposes on real estate, of railroads, canal, tele graph, telephone and pipe line companies. This bill provides thnt statements shall be made and returned by the companies lo the state board of assessors, composed of the auilltor general, stute treasurer and secretary of Internul affairs, who shall meet at the ntllce of the auditor gen eral on the first .Monday of November of each year for the purpose of assessing this property. THERE is but one way in the world to be sure of having the best paint, and that is to use only a well-established brand of strictly pure white lead, pure linseed oil, and pure colors. The following brands are stand ard, "Old Dutch" process, and are always absolutely Strictly Pure White Lead "Atlantic," "Beymer-Eauman," " Jcwett," " Davis-Chambers,' "Fahnestock," "Armstrong & McKelvy." If you want colored paint, tint any of the above strictly pure leads with National Lead Co.'s Pure White Lead Tinting Colors. These colors are told in one-pound cans, each can being sufficient to tint 25 pounds of Strictly Pure White Lead the dcsircil shade ; they are In no sense ready-mixed paints, but a combination of perfectly pure colors in the handiest furm fa tint Strictly Pure AVhite Lead. Send us a postal card and gut our book on paiuts and color-card. free. NATIONAL LEAD CO., New York. Useful and Orna mental Goods r,ADIE3 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 TURES AT MODERATE COST. FANCY BASKETS AND LAMPS. CALL EARLY AND MAKE YOUR SELECTIONS WHILE OUR AS, BORTMENT IS COMPLETE. HH1& Connell, (31 IND 133 WASHINGTON AVE. Tl'c secret Is out. Not ouly do they say wc do washing for a living, but that wc do it well. So keep It going. Tell everybody you sec, but tell them not to tell. EUREKA LAUNDRY, 323 Washington Ave. THAT WONDERFUL WEBER GUERNSEY FOR SPRING. 7rB are now displaying all of the Latest Novelties, and at prices established under the New Tariff, which are much lower than ever known before in the history of the Dry Goods trade Our show windows during the next week will be a per fect revelation. D8M kMkm IS THE KOHTH WE GREAT REDUCTIONSfSEar IN ODD AND ENDS OF DINNER. TEA and TOILET SETS, LAMP GOODS and BRIC-A-BRAC t lUUUliiiUl 422 LACKA. AVE. Blank Books Raymond Trial Balance Books Graves' Indexes Document Boxes Inks of All Kinds AGENTS FOR.- V Edisor's Mimeographs and Supplies Crawford Pens Leon Isaac Pens REYNOLD Stationers and Engravers, 317 UCKftWIRM AVE. DR. HILL a SON ALBANY DENTISTS. Bet teeth. I.1.B0; best net, 8: for gold cspi and tooth without plates, called crown and brlrigo work, call for prices ami refer ences. TON AI.illA, for extracting toot without pain. No other. No gun. OVEB FIRST NATIONAL BANK. 1UE1TIH BROTHERS, WYOMING AVE!, AND SCHAXTOX OPTICAL INSTITUTE. DR. SHIMBERG, 305 Spruce Street Bodroom Suits very cheap. Feb. 4, 1893. I Our Cheap as Dirt. Next to First Pres. Church New Store Will Be Hull & Co. 205 Wyoming Ave. We Move Next Month. START TIE El YEAR RIGHT And keep going right by buying and carry ing one of LLOYD'S WATCHES. LLOYD, JEWELER, 423 LACKA. AVE. VENISON, PRAIRIE CHICKEN, Partridges, Quail, Rabbits, All Rinds of Poultry, Ripe Tomatoes, Musbrooms, Green Beans, Cucumbers, Head Lettuce, Salsify Radishes, Etc. Pierce's Market . IBS 1 TONE IS FOUND ONLY IN THE WEBER PIANO 1895 EYES EXAMINED FREE. Glasses flttcil to remedy all defect of vision. Ilcudachc and Nervousness relieved. Ar-tifU-iul eyes litted. If you hure fuilod to gut Miituble kIhhwih, consult ua about your eyo Hight. We will grmd Bieril sinuses to lit your eye, making your oyesicht as perfect s la youth. The value of spectacles doprad upon thobkillof the optician. Superior facilities, combined with years of experieuce. erahles ms to Kiiaruntee to tit your eyes oerfictlv. I Correct Work: Honi-Kt Prices; Elegant Btvle; the Most Complete Optical Eatatlnlimcnt lu the stute. DR. E. GREWER, The Philadelphia Specialist, and his asso ciatt-d stuff of l:ntrllh and German physicians, are now permanently locutcd at Old Postoffice Building, Qorner Penn Avenue and Spruce Street. The tiortor is u niadnue of the I'nlver Blty of Pennsylvania, formerly demon strator of physiology and surgery at the Mcdico-ChlrurRical college of Philadel phia. His Pin'Ciultie are Chronic, Ner vouh, Skin, Heart, Womb and lllood dig eapcH. DISEASES OF THE HERYOUS SYSTEM The symptoms of which are dizziness, luck of confidence, sexunl weakness in men and women, ball ilslim in throat, spots Moating before the eyes, loss of memory, unable to concentrate the mind on one subject, easily startled when suddenly spoken to, und dull distressed mind. which, unfits them for performing tha actual du ties of life, mnklnfr happiness Impossible, distressing the action of the heart, caus ing flush of heat, depression of splrlts.ovll forebodings, cowardice, iear, dreams, mcl oncholy, tiro easy of company, feeling a tired in the morning as when reining, lack of energy, nervousness, trembling, confusion of thought, depression, constipa tion, weakness of the limbs, etc. Those so effected should consult us immediately; ard be restored to perfect health. Lost Manhood Restored. M't-akuess of Young Men Cured. If you havo been given up by your phy sician call upon tho doctor and be exam 'd. He cures tho worst cases of Ner vous l.-eblllty. Scrofula, Old Sores, t'a tarrh, Piles, Female Weakness, Affec tions of the Kyo, Ear, Nose ami Throat, Asthma,- lcnfness, Tumors, Cancer and Cripples of every description. Consultations free, and strictly sacred and eonfidenlr... OltW hours dally freta t a.m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, 9 to 2. Knoloso five 2-cent stumps' for symtpom blanks and my book called "New Life." 1 will pay ono thousand dollars in pold to anyone whom 1 ennnot cure of EPI. LEPTIC CONVULSIONS or FITS. , , 1H. E. OREWDR, Old Post Office Building, corner Peon avenue and Spruce street. SCRANTON, PA. EVERY 1 BUYS HARDWARE. Tha question Is, whore can tho best bd obtained? Whero tho lowest prices for5 tho good kind? Listen 1 Let us speak to you confidentially. Most peoplo say ours. We know and you know that they know, what in what It oiucht to bo In Hardware, Wo havo shaved our prices with Knives, Chisels and Shaves, and pinned them with our planes. They ure now below tha lovei of others as our Levels show. We removo to our larice now store, 11) Washington avenue, April L , FOOTE i SHEAR CO. 11 m IF TOTJB OLD BOORS NEED FIX INO, BEND TU KM TO T.. Snrsntna Trlluina 101 Bookbinding Dept '