The Scranton tribune. (Scranton, Pa.) 1891-1910, December 07, 1895, Page 10, Image 10
.; .' - - ... ' .": .''-' v -:' '..' ." .' J u. THE SCBA2JTON TBIBUNESATTjllDAY MOBNING, DEOEMBEB V, 1895. 10 Facts, of .. IhtetV "u" To WoinoRder - : - v Symposium of Information, Partly Grave, . Partly Gossipy and . Partly Gay. THE "WOMAN'S PAGE:" A "fad that spreads with growing ratre, A Just the proper caper, Ja that they call the "Woman's Pag." la every "hustling" paper. Just why tbe woman mind is made 80 curious, seems funny; All sorts of mental marmalade Mixed up with men and money. Exchange. :o: "I wonderi muses Amber, "what to the matter with the men nowadays, and not only the men, but the women and girls! They are all petting to be such tenderfeet! They can't endure aa much as a kitten did a few generations ago. I have heard my grandmother tell how the boys used to chop wood and hoe corn; drive the oxen and thrash oats; walk fifteen, miles a day not on wagers, but doing chores and hustling work and yet the average man of to day kicks If the elevator breaks down and he has to walk up throe flights of stairs! He is no account when It comes to an emergency. He puts on his over coat In October, and wants the street car heated if he rides a dozen blocks. And the .young women a.id the girls! It used to be that a seventeen-year-old girl could run a home, do a washing, and sit up until midnight entertaining her beau in the front parlor. I can re member the time when a poor man's duughur did the work and thought It the natural thing to do. nut nowadays, If a man hu to work hard for the main tenance of wife and daughters, they sit In the parlor and whine becuuBe ser vants are ee incompetent In the kitchen. If by any fanner of means they have to do this work it Is a positively dread ful state cf. affairs, and they gain the commiseration of all their friends. The trouble lr that we overdo the luxuries of life. We have too much to eat; we have too many clothes; we live in too fine houses. If we would simplify about one-third of life as we live it we would develop new sinew and new strength, both of soul and body. Kick the stoves out of the street cars, tear the listing out of. the windows, and take life a little more natural, and there would be more men and women, and fewer editions du luxe in the human family." ATIE WE COMING TO THIS? "Who Is It. Marie?" "It's lord Chumplelfch's valet, ma'am." "Ah ! He has a massage from his lord ship, I suppose?" "Yes, ma'am." "What Is it?" . "His lordship sent him to ask for the hand of one of your daughters, ma'am." "Which one Marie?" "His lordship Isn't particular, ma'am, so long as the dowry exceeds a million dol lars." "Is his lordship Indisposed?" "No, ma'am, but the valet says that his lordship never gives his personal attention to purely business mutters." Chicago Pest, :o: Considerable discussion has been pro voked In the columns of the New York Sun by a communication to that paper from a married woman who wanted to know if she had not earned the Income of the family as much as the husband who received it. The ground of her claim is that they rented a three-story house, had three children, and that she had done all the work. Her husband denied, however, that she was entitled THE BUSIEST AND MOST POPULAR STORE ON THIS BUSY STREET TVTOT WONDERFUL, ONLY NATURAL, how this store has grown. Not quite two years ago we had one window and 20 feet of space inside. Next we got double the space. Customers kept crowd ing; had to build back; now 5,400 square feet of floor space including basement, piled up with all that is new and most salable. STORE ALWAYS BUSY and bright, so we believe our methods are right To buy in quantities to secure special prices, marking all goods low to make the quantities go, and running a complete Jewelry Store, an Art Store, a Picture Frame Factory all with one rent and one force of employees, that makes expenses low. We shall keep right on seeing how much we can ' give for a dollar and the store will grow more. r THE' Never bought so low, JEWELRY and the assortment ev STORE erything beautiful that you want before Christmas. BOY'P Stem wind, stem set, WATCH American works, and a, timepiece, $2.50. GIRL'S Sterling silver, hand en WATCH grayed case; you couldn't imagine a prettier gift,, $2.90. . LADIES' Two or three hundred, WATCHES from cute, wee silver at 3-75 t at $35 one set' with dia. mondsj but one we say most 'about here is that 14-karat,: solid .gold, - a beauty, $15. : GENTLEMEN'S Solid goldsolid WATCHES silver, but 15 arid 20 year gold filled . sell : the fastest. A to any share of his earnings, and would not give her enough to buy even a pair of4 gloves. 'This communication has called out many comments. Most of them condemn the husband for his meanness and his niggardliness, while others stand up for the husband's Bide of the case, and say that perhaps she wants to live in a three-story house when, a 'much smaller one would da "This," ,says the Cleveland World, "Is a never-ending and never-settled ques tion. It never will be settled, because it is almost entirely a practical ques tion that varies with every family. Un doubtedly the wife Is fully entitled to her share of the earnings. But for her services In the household the husband would have to hire them done. So, whatever they Would cost Is at least fairly her share. :o: THERE WERE OTHERS: "liook!" she almost shrieked In Her rago as she shook the paper under his face. "Oh, villain, villain, 1 have found you out In all your base perfidy." "I I beg your pardon." said the young man, "but I am afraid 1 don't quite follow you." "This Is your letter to me?" "Yes." "It breathes the tenderest affection, doesn't it?" "1 flatter myself," he answered, with a complacent bow, "that it does." "It Is ardent In its protestations of un dying devotion, Isn't It?" "If It'was as I intended it there's no doubt about It belli so." "f.ook look here," she hissed, "and then turn your face In shame. Here are the unmistakable traces of carbon paper. This letter was manifolded. "Washington Star, "But suppose after paying rent, the household expenses and for the cloth ing ubsolutely necessary, there Is little or nothing left, how can there be any surplus for luxuries? Or, suppose there Is a surplus and the husband's Judg ment is that it had better be 'luld up for a rainy day." One of the couple must decide. The husband decides It because the money' comes into his hands, and, under present conditions, there seems to be no way of preventing his doing so. There are far too many husbands who take advantage of this control of the funds to spend the surplus and sometimes a good deal more in their personal gratification. They will not, in other words, divide fair. This injus tice to wife and children extends from the drunkard who spends in drink al most every cent he can lay hands on, to the more refined yet Hellish husband who treats himself to fine clothes, cost ly dinners, the thenter. cards, billiards or any other form of entertainment at the expense of the rest of the family. Yet, unless the law shall step In and exact of the employer or of the husband himself a certain percentage for the benefit of wife and family, there seems to be no way of forcing a fair division between such husband and his wife. In the case of alimony for divorced per sons the law does Intervene In this way and for this purpose. But when the re lations of the two have arrrived at the stuge in the matrimonial career requir ing the Intervention of the courts, the couple might as well be divorced. The affection and the consideration or even the sense of decency and justice neces sary to the tolerableness, to say noth ing of the happiness, of the married state, are cone. Perhaps in some cases this would be the best solution of the problem. At any rate. Just now. It seems to be the only one, . rf: SURE OF HIS EMPLOYER: - - : I met a man yesterday who had just come back from one of those unpro nounceable towns up la the Pennsylvania oil regions. He had been spending I don't know how many months among the Swedes up there, and he has a great many things to tell of them. He says that just before he left I can't remember the town's name there was a Methodist re vival. A great many of the Olaens and Petersens and Knudsens were converted. To one of them. Nels Petersen, the leader of the meeting said: "Ntls, will you work for Qodr ' Nels shifted uneasily. A Swede, you know, can't express anything at ail with his face, except the national stolidity. "Ae don't know," he said hesitatingly. "Ae got a gude yob at. the factory.. Ae tank ae keep dat!" Washington Post. -::- "Of course there Is the husband's side of the question. That Is to say, many wives could not be trusted with so much as their share of the surplus, even if they could be made to comprehend what the surplus should be. They would waste the money either from an extravagant disposition or an ignorance and Incapacity to spend It prudently. If the husband were In such cases to comply with every demand of the wife or to bribe her complaints Into silence they would Boon be on the road to bankruptcy. And. it Is not every hus band that can help himself even when he controls the revenue. He can be wheedle or bullied out of his money either through the uxorious fondness of his wife, through dread of a scolding or of a 'scene,' or through the fear of being thought stingy and mean. Home husbands, too, spend too much money on their wives to gratify their own vanity by proclaiming to the world their pride in adorning and equipping their wives and households luxurious ly and ostentatiously. In brief, the marriage state is literally a co-partnership, the limitations and conditions of which ore so personal, so flexible, so In definable, that It is Impossible to as sign to each partner the exact and proper Bhare of the dividends. Each is presumably entitled to go to the drawer and to take whatever there Is In It. Ac tually, the husband is tbe senior part ner, as one might say, and has the first chance ut it; the Junior partner taking what Is left. But owing to the (liferent temptation, training and disposition, sometimes It is the Junior partner who gets the bigger share. The perfect part nership Is where both are as well bal anced, and have such entire confi dence In each other's judgment and af fection, that almost instinctively and unconsciously they dispose of their In comes to their mutual satisfaction. Perhaps, In siilte of the common com plaint of the wife that It humiliates her to ask the husband for the money actually needed for the household, and to pay for his needs as well as theirs, the successful matrimonial firm Is more common than It seems. Other wise, tnere would not In this country be so many thrifty households with ac cumulations of capital." :o: TWO OPINIONS: Hostess After I had finished singing, last evening, Mr. Gusher told me I ap preciated music thoroughly Caller Yes; he told me he thought that was the reason you didn't sing oftener. Truth. SELECTED RECIPES: , Orange and Cocoanut Candy. To two cupful of granulated sugar add the grat ed rind and half the Juice of a small orange, together with enough cold water to thoroughly moisten the sugar. When It comes to a boil, add half a cupful of desiccated, or, better, freshly grated co Keystone case with Elgin movement looks as beautiful as solid gold, and what a saving. $12. LAMPS What brightens up the room like a beautiful1 lamp with del icate silk shade? Sold a lot last year, but through . fortunate . shade buying last summer we are enabled to make prices that are doubling last year's sales. HERE'S Onyx base, ' Roc hester ONE burner, gold plated, with handsome silk shade, any color, $3.59. . . Lamps at $5, $7, $10, complete with shades. -If any one . is selling cheaper-tell us and - we mark ;lower. THE Has doubled and more PICTURE its size. Hundreds , of STORE popular subjects, framed coanut. Let It boil without stirring, until It stiffens In cold water, so that you can take it up In a very sort ball. Take from the fire and set saucepan and all In a cold place, until the syrup Is nearly cool; then stir vigorously until It becomes thick and white, and pour quickly on a buttered plate. Cut In squares. Sliced Beer, with Spanish Sauce. Slice a sufficient quantity of cold boiled beef left from dinner and heat It In the fol lowing sauce: Take the seeds from, and mince half a green pepper; slice one Span h.h or two Bermuda onions and fry to gether with two ounces of butter; add a cupful of minced tomatoes and cook for half an hour; season to taste, lay In the meat until hot and serve. ' Etewed Carrots. Wash and scrape the carrots, then let them boil until perfectly tender, with one or two whole onions. When quite soft, remove the onions and cut the carrots into small pieces, like dice. Put the carrots into a saucepan with a little meat gravy or soup stock, season with pepper and salt, add a teaspoonful of vinegar and hair-as much sugar, and let them cook slowly tor an hour. Escalloped Oysters. One pint or grated bread, one can or oysters, two tablespoon ruls or butter, one scant cupful or cream or rich milk, pepper and salt. In a but tered dish place a layer of bread crumbs, upon this a layer or oysters. Sprinkle with pepper and salt and dot with smull bits or butter. Alternate the layers till the dish Is nearly full, having crumbs for the top layer; then turn the cream over all and sprinkle more bread crumbs on top. The bottom and top layers should be quite thick, but very few crumbs are needed be tween the layers ot oysters. Bake, cov ered, for half an hour, then uncover and brown. Jerusalem Pudding. Cover two table spoonfuls of gelatine with hair a cup or cold water. Whip one pint or cream, and boll two tablespoonfuls of rice for twenty minutes; drain, and throw out on a nap kin to dry. After the cream is whipped, turn It Iroto a pan, and stand this in an other of cracked lee. Sprinkle over two thirds or a cup or powdered sugar, hair a cup or chopped dutes and three figs chopped line. Add four tablespoonfuls of cream or milk to 'the gelatine, and stand It over a tea kettle until thoroughly dis solved. Add the pudding and teaspoon ful of vanilla, or If wine is preferred, four tutilespoonfuls of. sherry. Strain In the gelutine, add the rice and stir continu ously until the puddinz begins to thicken. Turn into a mould and stand away to cool. Chicken and Corn Tie. Cook and sea son the chicken for the table. Take tan ears of sweet corn, cut off. Put a layer of it In a pan. then a layer ot chicken, then again or corn, until it Is all In, hav Ing 'the top layer or corn. Lustly, turn on the soup. Hake half an hour. Salad Dressing. Hreak Into a bowl two fresh eggs, add one teaspoonful salt, one heaping ttaspoonful dry mustard, pinch of red pepper and-' two tablespoonfuls or granulated sugar. Whisk quickly with an egg-beutei for three or four minutes. Squeese the Juice of one lemon, strutn and add slowly to the mixture, stirring all the time. Next add In the same manner two large tablespoonfuls of good vinegar, then very slowly a full teacup of best olive oil; stir constantly until the mixture begins to thicken like soft custard; then tukc your egg-beater and beat hard until it becomes light and thick. If It does not thicken, add more oil. 1 put mine in a glass can, screwed it up tight and set It In the Icebox to use as required. It will keep for several weeks. Stir it up before pouring out. Chocolate Pudding. Quarter, or a pound or chocolate, one pint or milk, hair a box of, gelatine, half a cupful of sugar, six egxs (whites only). Soak chocolate In milk, add the sugar; souk gelatine in cold water; beat whites of eggs to a stiff con dition; then beat all things together. Strain and put in moulds; put on Ice. Serve cold with whipped cream. This 2s a German dish and delicious, :o: Sl'SPICIOl'S: "Miss Rllcksmlth," said old BttRrox, the mlllionarle xeptuagennrlun, to his beau tiful young fiancee, "I have called to tell you t tin t 1 have reconsidered the proposal of marriage which I made you some time ago,' and to ask you to release me from the engagement." "What is your reason for making this extraordinary announcement, Mr. Bag roxf haughtily demanded the young wo man, drawing herself up to her full height - .. "You will pardon me, I trust," returned the gentleman, with a deprecatory ges ture, "when I say you are a trifle too fin de slecle for a conservative man-ot my age." ... "Do you mean to Insult me, slr-r-r-i" cried the, haughty young beauty. Indig nantly. ' "Nothing could be further from my In tention." was the reply. "And I hope you will not consider me hypercritical when I say that the fact that you are having the most of your trousseau made in black convinces me that you are too swift for my somewhat settled tastes. I will, there fore, with your permission, be In the fu ture only an elder brother to you. ' Puck. :o: HEALTH HINTS: There Is a great doctor In Paris who bas cured many ot his women patients on the verge ot nervous prostration by the sim ple instruction to always keep their eyes on some object ten feet or more above the level range of vision when they walk or drive, and tor others, working women most particularly, who sit at the easels and desks, or the shop girls, he orders that they, on finishing their work, undo their stays and lie fiat on their backs, the head a little lower than the feet;' ror an hour. The ugliest nightmares of the-mmd can he banished by either or these simple means. An English periodical calls attention to the tact that a great number of children are seriously Injured or suffocated alto, pettier, while in bed. with their parents. These latter, weary, perhaps,, and proba bly very heavy sleepers, are restless,' and In rolling and tossing about' either' strike the infant with thelrarms and elbows t r roll over upori It and suffocate Ifwtthout being aware of the fact. -. n.;.. . .j n ' Regarding the proper time for a bath, a simple general rule may be given: ( Take cold baths on rising In the morning, and warm ones just before retiring. In taking Turkish or Russian baths' the hour-need not be considered, except as In all baths, none 'of which should be taken under an hour or so before or after meals.' If clean' lincss is the main object or a bath, soap must not.be sparingly used. In bathing establishments patronized by refined peo ple one rarely sees other than the old fashioned, pure Castile, which Is extreme-' ly softening and cleansing In effect. Where it Is possible, use fresh, clean rain water for the bath: This Is the nearest approach to distilled water, 'which is too expensive for general use. Soft water Is next, to rain water, and a little borax or ammonia m hard water will soften it. Brisk rub bing should always follow a bath; then the bath will do all that Is claimed for It In the way of renovating the person, -Invigorating tht system, Increasing the line, ness and softness of the skin, and making the person look and feel younger. The Housekeeper. Take a teaspoonful of the phosphate of sodium In a teacupful of boiling water (sip while hot) three times dully between meals. This will, "cure" the bad taste in the mouth and the belching of gas, also any other dyspeptic symptoms. " Take it for several months. The nux vomica may be taken for three months at a time if needed. The cheapest and most efficient remedy ror biliousness is the phosphate or sodium; buy it by. the pound; take a teaspoonful In a teacupful of hot water (sip while hot) halt an hour before every meal every day ror four weeks. For a bilious or sick headache take the same dose every hour until relieved. The simplest remedy for the drinking habit, says the Philadelphia Record,'- Is cayenne pepper. Mix up the pepper with molasses and roll into pills as large as a small pea; carry these In a box in n the pocket, and whenever there is a, longing "for a drink" 'take a pill. .. To be In health one must have, first of all, enough sleep; sfeep never less than eight hours out of the twenty,' and longer if one has the time: Out-of-door exercise is Imperative for every one; dress so as every day, regardless of the weather to be protected from the rain, cold' and storm, and walk thirty or forty squares walk briskly and energetically. To be well and keep well one must also have a dally bath a scrubbing with a wash rag and eoap from head to foot. Eat three ED as they should be and sold same way. AT, 38c 12 subjects of medallions, had to buy 500 to get the price, 11 by 14, easel . back. 75c are gotten for them. AT $1 Monogravures, new process and beautiful; ten subjects, framed -in white and gold, 20x24. " ..A'V'"'-- ' . . . : Pictures at $l Pictures at $2. . Pictures at $3. ; v. Pictures at $5. Pictures at $10. Big money's worth every one, or you ; can , pick .from thousands un framed and order your frame to suit. SILVERWARE More silve r w are comes in our back door and is; car ried out the iront door than any two meals every day; at the asms hour each day. Irregularity- of .a ting oauses dys pepsia. Medicines will do very little good unless one follows out to the letter the di rections for rest, exercise and cleanliness. :o; THEN THERE ARE OTHERS: He I confess I do not quite Understand what a woman means by a confidant.. She A confidante Is the first one to whom a woman tells a secret. Puck. . . HOUSEHOLD SUGGESTIONS: Remove whitewash spots on garments by instantly washing In strong vinegar. Cook rice In a farina boiler, add a few drops of lemon Juice, do not stir until done, and It will be white and the kernels separate. The proper amount or mustard for an emetio is one tablespoonful in a tumbler full of warm water. Salt used In the same way Is nearly as efficacious. Leather chair seats may be brightened and revived by rubbing them with the white of egg. - Leather book bindings can also be Improved by the same treatment. A very good stuffing for a duck Is made from mashed potato and English walnuts. Use one cupful of the potato and one-half cup of chopped walnuts and season with one teaspoonful or salt and one or onion juice. . To make beer salad, cut some very i.itn bits ot cold roast beet into inch squares, press from the vinegar four tablespoonfuls of horse-radish, add a little salt and a few drops of onion Juice; whip six table spoonfuls of cream to a froth and add it to the radish; arrange the beef on lettuce leaves, put the sauce over it, and serve a once. ... The Philadelphia Record gives the fol lowing remedy ror chapped hands: Wipe the hands until they are quite dry partly drying the hands causes the chapping. After .washing the hands or removing them from the water rub them while wet with a mixture composed of the compound tincture of benxoln one ounce, glycerine four ounces and water one ounce. Rub this Into the hands and wipe them dry. White chamois gloves, used by bicycling women, can be washed as follows: Make a lather with castile soap and warnt water, in which you have put a spoonful of am monia to each quart. When the water is tepid put the gloves in it, let them' soak for a quarter of an hour, then press them In your hands, but do not wring them. Rinse In fresh, cold water with a little am monia added. Press the gloves In a towel. Dry , In the open air, after pre viously blowing to puff them out. :o: A STUDY IN REPARTEE: He Doubtless you have often been pro posed to. She Why what makes you think that? He Moths will singe themselves In the flnme. She Do you flatter yourself that that Is original? He Oh, no; It's merely a quotation. She Somewhat trite. He Admitted, ' But o start again at the beginning. She Where else would you start? He I have known girls to start at the end of a book. But, for a fresh start, did It ever occur to you what an excellent place a dinner-table Is tor a proposal? She-No. Why? He Because It is impossible for the fair one to fly. She must sit still and listen. She But the doctors prescribe light and amusing conversations at meals. He Isn't It possible for a declaration of InVA in fulfill ih, luiH.mu.') . i- . . ........ ..... vviuiiiuu i . III nurc IIIW I bonds of modern matrimony are often airy . enouKh. She After all, It dopends upon the peo ple, I suppose. Still, It must be difficult to play at making love with the soup, and Love himself must freeze if swallowed with the ice.1 He Suppose we try? She Oh, no. Indeed, or I really must ex cuse myself. .JHerAnd leav? me "'randed, like the last bit of cake on the dish.. She-Don't you flatter yourself In the sweet simile? ,.nH?'. v?Ke ca1 ,m8'n' that It Is an uninviting bit-perhaps a trifle bitter. She And stale and hard. He-No. Still bo enough to be molded Into any form by beautiful Angers. She Mine would rorm it Into a pellet. He, eagerly So you could swallow It more easily? She-No, Indeed: so it could roll away and be lost more easily. Life. jewelry stores in the city. Often we run into a good thing and this is one. ' ROGER'S Tea spoons, the make 1847 you know, a price you don't know, only 50 sets, sorry they won't go around, 95c. for 6. KNIVES Forty sets of triple-plated Knives, just the same as you often see or use, but instead of $2 we can, say 75c. the set. 'Nough said, . v CHRISTMAS S9 many are coming Gl FTS in and selecting now. Why don't you? You don't need to pay for or take the goods till later. On sale now are special lots of love ly '. gifts that surely are not here later, say nothing of the pushing and crowding that is coming after a bit , THE BUSINESS MAN'S (.(JfJCH. Hard Work am. ImHcmUmi n .' Hand ia Hand. :, J. ' T Concentrated thought, rantinutd lt, robs the stomach of necessary blood, tad this ii also true of bard physical labor. When a 6ve horse-power engine is mad to do ten horse-power work sowetUinf ia . going to break. Very often the hard worked man coming from the ield or the office will "holt" his food in a few min utes which will take hours to digest. The too, many foods are about as useful n th stomach as a keg of nails would bt in a fire under a boiler. The ill-nstd sttmach refuses to do its work without the proper stimulus which it gets from the blojd and nerves. The nerves are weak and "resdy to break," because they do not get tht nourishment they require from the blood, finally the ill-used brain is morbidly wide awake when the overworked tuau at. " tempts to find rest in bed. . The application of common sense in Ilia ' treatment of the stomach and the wnolo system brings to the busy mnn the full en. ioyment of life and healthy digestion when he takes Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets to relieve a bilious stomach or after a too hearty meal, and Dr. Pierce's Golden juciui-ui iukdvci; io purity, eiirtcn snq vitalize the blood. The " Pellets " are tiny siiRar-coatcd pills made of highly concen. traled vegetable ingredients which relieve the stomach of all oiTeudiiig matters easily and thoroughly. They need only be 4aken for a short lime to cure the biliousness. cuiinupauuu umi Ttioiiminicss, or torpor, Ot , , ,,, aicrun-ui wiHcovery ' should be taken in teaspoonful doses to in crease the blood and enrich it. It has a peculiar effect upon the lining membranes . of the stomach and bowels, toning uu and strengthening them for all time. The whole system feels the effect of the pure Dioou cuuritmiF inmiiffii cue nonv ntin in nerves are vitnlized and strengthened, not deadened, or put to sleep, as the so-called celery compounds and nerve mixtures do but refreshed and fed on the food they need for health. If you suffer from ituli. geHtion. dyspepsia, nervousness, and any of the ills which come from impure blood and disordered stomach, yon 'can tare yourself with Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical 'Discovery which can be obtained at any drug store in the country. EVA M. HETZEL'S Superior Face Bleach, FotliiTilj Rsmties ill Ftclal Bltmltlui No more Freckles, Tan, Sunhum, B!ek heads, Liver Spots, Pimples and Sallow Complexions If ladies will use my Su perior Face Bleach. Not a cosmetic, but medicine which acts directly on the skin, removing all dlscoloratlons, an one of the greatest purifying agents for the complex, ion in existence. A perfectly dear and spotless complexion can be obtained In every Instance by Its use. Price, U.00 per bottle. For sale at E. M. Hetssl's Hair. dressing and Manicure Parlors, 830 Lack, awanna ave. Mall orders filled promptly. ' "I ' K- ' . i" v I- I -V"