Tim SCRANTOX TBTBUNE-MOXDAY MORNINO, JANUARY 14, 1895. The Reauxlieux Diamonds By Mrs. HARRIET PRESCOTT SPOFFORD. (These short aerial stories are copyrighted by Bacheller, Johnson Bach eller.and are printed InThe Tribune by special arrangement, simultaneous wltn their appearance in the leading dally Journals of the large cities). QHAPTEU III CONTINUED. The days were Ions to the duchess while her sou and the monsieur were away. She busied herself and Victor lne at their embroidery, at their books. She walked beside the sea in the latter part of the day, a Alight, swift figure wrapped in a long cloak, looking over the gray and melancholy waste, rest less herself as those dreamy waters WMie longing for "her boy, distrusting and fearing the future, yet soothed when she thought of the strong arm of M. Kth'iine, on which, whether near or far, she leaned, in the evening Pierre tinkered at the barrel of the music box, having a knack of tinkering, or perhaps Jean read to them by the flre llyht which Illuminated the dark salon, he lying on the skin hi'si'de the health, Whose logs he and Pierre had helped to She Walked Beside the Sea in the Later Part of the Day. bring In from the forest, or raiding, not by any means line news of the day madame would have none of that now more frequently old romances of der-rlng-doe. When Beauxlleux Came homo vlth tiie story of his adventure It was Pierre's eyes fUat opened at the men tion of palaces and great houses, and he demanded even more particulars than had struck Beauxlleux's sight. It was Jean who asked about the peoplo upholding the structure of the great households on their shoulders. Jean himself had been away un foot, more than once now no one knew where. But even the duchess had seen the light on his face sometimes when com ing back. "I shall have a dwelling such as one of those," said Pierre. "I shall house my wife in a paAiae. I go to Paris to makeimy foiHuna." "You like then this rotten splendor," orled fhe deep voice of Beauxlleux, from the shadow where he sat by the duchess on the nther side of the wilde hearth. "Alas! It 'is only the scum on a sea of filth and Iniquity. That liaughiter of the people who float over It I hear through It only the groan of the people who produce It!" "I Bhall ndt search too deeply," said Pierre. "One mum cannot reform the world. Ltit me take the best of it while It Is going money, Jewels, houses, horses " "And you call that the best? Money wrung out of my sweat? Idle glitter of Jewels while others have scarcely rags? Houses that are gilded seraglios, while there are men and women sleeping on wattles of straw" "It will not be my fault," said Pierre, "that they sleep on straw. Pshaw! When I am rich I shall not keep It all to myself. I shall take pleasure in giving" "He has read of Alnaschar," said Jean. "In giving!" cried Beaulieux. "There Is no giving! It Is theirs! It Is their labor, their lives, their deprivation, their want, their suffering, that made all this money; no matter how you come by It. It Is theirs! You can give them nothing. You can only restore In p.'irt." "What puzzles me," said Jean, "Is how these others can think that they love the good Uod, and, knowing that He loves all men, be willing to wrong any man. No, no, when I recollect the story of Jesus, that He died for mn. I have felt myself unwilling to ac cept the sacrillce., I have felt that I, too, must surrender myself, if not to die, then to .live for. men. Never for myself, only for them." "Oh, Jean!" cried Ileaulleux, clasp ing his hand. "And I shall live with you!" "I suppose Jean Is going to be a priest?" said the pretty Victorlne, with a little Insolent shrug. "Not or any church, Victorlne," said .Jean. "I shall not need to be blessed of the apostollq succession in order to carry hope into dungeons." "Oh, you make me cold at the heart of me!" cried Victorlne. Beaulieux had now set himself seri ously at work to learn the profession In which M. Etlenne was so accom plished. He was not one under any circumstances to be Idle. His mother had not wished this study, however, she would have him wait, even If It were in poverty, preserving his nobil ity, till the government should give him his own again. But the hated em pire had fallen, and It had been re placed by the even more hated repub lic. THat had not signified grently to her;' it, was never "France" to her. It was always "My son." But now even Henry V. was dead. "There Is no more hope," M. Etlenne had declared. "Let his grace do as he will." And it was M. Etlenne who found the means for Beaulieux to go to Paris and finish his undertaking. His mother had some dim idea that all things were open to him as his father's son, as the last of his exalted name; she had no Idea whatever that the name now was re membered only as a matter of history, nor that In Paris the young duke was known simply as Beaulieux, a student of promise from a southwestern depart ment. . It was. on his twenty-first birthday that his mother formally made over to him his possessions. He was a little sad about it no that the chateau was a ruin, the forest so thin, ithe fields bo few .and bare, but that his mother 'should break her heart over these affairs. For .himself, he was full of strength and (hope, and nothing mat tered since he was well and was alive, since he had M. Etlenne and Jean; since, aibove all he had his mother. His mother, not yet In her fortieth year, was still beautiful, her hair black aa the raven's wing, her dark clear skin as smooth as a girl's, her eyes glowing as the midnight stare, her smile heartwarming. As she stood In the warm light, for Olympe had candles in every sconce, wearing that pale primrose satin of more than twenty years ago, covered now with black lace of a far greater age, almost wrapped in the glow of the Beaux lleux diamonds, as In a cloud of bright ness, preserving all the sweet and stately grace of her first youth, she was still a sight to make a man's heart tremble. She seemed to beam and sparkle as she walked, her every move ment shedding a stream of light; and Jean himself did not llnd it possible to envy her In his heart that night the possession of the diamonds, that they might be sold and their price given to the poor. As for her, it would as soon have occurred to her to sell herself as those stones, which were a part ofMhe Insignia of the family magnificence. She put off the air of gentle melan choly which fhe usually wore, but which was a remnant of old manner rather than an indication of present feeling, and made them gay with her gayety. She talked with Jean of Beauxlleux, her son, and his future, with M. Etlenne of his great cases, with Pierre of his hopes Pierre had had a year In Purls now. She danced with Beauxlleux to tunes of the music box. She even danced down the long room with M. Etlenne, once, but no more, a sort of shiver making her fall on the cushsions of the bench in the big window there, and she closed the even ing by singing at the piano, which Jean kept In tune, a little chanson, that was as proper to her voice as fra grance is to the rose. When she em braced her son, and bade them all good-night, and swept through the door that M. Etlenne held open for her, they felt as if after all in her grace and majesty there were the traits of a divine right to power, that something like a superior being had been with them. And later, aa she sat under Olympe's hands, the pretty Victorlne taking the jewels as they were unclasped, the duchess thought, with a sort of sacred Joy. of the time when she should give these Jewels to Beauxlleux' wife an Orleans princ?ss, It 'might be; who knew? That family had the wealth re quired, but the Sarazlnea Beauxlleux name and blood was the older and the nobler. And he smiled unconsciously and sweetly on the girl whose forward ness had of late needed repression, and had made the duchess doubt her wis dom In taking the three low-born child ren Into her life, through pity for Beauxlleux' solitude at a time when tha safety of what was left to them lay in being forgotten. And taking from her Jewel box a thread of gold holding n fa rW' And Swept Through the lloor. a heart of pearls, she hung It on the glrl'a neck, so that no one might fall of happiness on the day that Beaux lleux, even though It were but fanciful vision, with no tangible reality, came to his rights. as the first peer of France. CHAPTER TV. Beauxlleux was walking late that night on the stone terrace Hooded with moonlight. On one side the sea, not far away, swelled like the curve f some silver shield and cast Its own luster back upon the sky and filled the night with the soft music of Its mur mur. On the other side he saw the old chateau, covered with vines, full of deep-set shndows. "Voyes vous pendre au (lane de la colllne Ces tnurs, ces tours, cette vusto ruine?" he repeated as he walked. "Aux temps passes line bruyante cour Retentlssnlt douce ce muet hpJouY, II fut pouplc le heroes et da belles, II ontendt aux nobles demoiselles, Les chevaliers chanter des lols d'amour." . And Just then he saw two shadows hurrying down the arcade of the long disused chapel cloister, disused, since, when she had reorganized her house hold on the basis of comparative pov erty, the duchess had suffered the abbe to go, accepting In his stead the office of thf village priest. "Ah, well," Beauxlleux said, a gentle smile following the shadows, "the love of the noble demoiselle and the chevalier., la no better worth than the love of Pierre and Victorlne. And this may help to strike the balance with all that other, the loves, the luxury of that bruyante cour. Can It take less than the life time of centuries of Beaux lleux to restore to the people all of which that bruyante cour, and such aa that, has robbed ithm?" Par he had already another point of vJow fhlan 'that of Ihls mother, who, be llevlelng lit the duty of nobles to hold 'thttlr prtojrte n charge and provide for thwlr happiness, waa confident that the Beauxlleux could never have done oth erwise. And he went back to hi thoughts, which were now fUll"Sf somber feeling end now of Joyous hope. While tat his studies In Parks Busjux lleux had penetrated the hidden aide of life; he Mad Keen flights that mania him ehuddwr again aa he spoke of iflhm to Jean. And tn recalling these Jour neys with M. Etlenne aa far as the Caucasus, he forgot the palaces, the I'-N mm g&larles, the lovely women, the stu pendous fortfllk'altilons. the arlm sol diery, all he had, seen, except the squalor, the orime, the poventy. He waa going tack to Paris now to finish his medianl studies: 4m wotilA wrH. every lay to Jean, he would see Pierre livquetMiy- enough but Plarre'S' out look n lite was already totally at vairtamce with his and Jean's. More ovcrj Pierre metanlt to be a money mak er; and their contention was to de stroy moniey.' "It 1s the first evil," he said, aa he walked, looking across fflie lawn, that Jong ago Mad been filled In Where onoe the moait gathered Its wa ters, and. Into the ede of the over grown piairk, where a hare bounded aorous the onen soaoe. And RmMuniv sonvdthlng.smate his vlalion like a. blazo vi giory iana was gone .again, shining, shapeless, a moonbeam cleaving the foam wrealth of ia cascade, an appari tion of guttering mist, a white ghost of the old magnllrlcences come back to look upon ithe scene with him. For a "And It Was Wo Who Mado Thorn So." moment ,the thought flashed on him that lit 'was some masquerading play of VJctorlnu's, and then It had vanished so Instantly, that he knew it for am il lusion of his eyes, of Wis brain, tired with thinking and caring and sorrow ing for sorrows he oould not iheal. And so he left the ntghlt 'aired moonlight, and the cold unquiet sea, and went to his slumbers. There lhJad been a brief season of gayety in the first year after Bttaux lleux's majority, when Pierre, who re ported himself aa doing finely, cfume homo to marry 'Victorlne, whose lhand he Wad asked of the duchess, a wed ding which took a great load off the mind of Olympe, slnoe he knew the wiles of Victorlne, and the charm of being Duchess des Sarazlnes Beaux lleux, even in a republic, where It mlsfht be little more than bfilng ia duchess of rag fair. She had not chlauieed to hoar Pierre eay to Victorlne that might in the wood: "I will make you Duchess des Beauxlleux yot!" More than once in the two years time, Beaulieux had run down to the chateau for a sight of his mother, for a fresh trip with Jean, no one knew where, but from which he came back with an air, one could not declare were It more of sadness or of proud determination. "I have been eating black bread," he would say in answer to his mother's inquiry. "1 have been among my brothers. There is so much to do. They have not only to be helped, they have first to be taught that they need the help. They are in the dark; they do not even grope; they do not know that there 1$ any light. They suffer so. They ure so patient. Some of them, my mother, seem like beasts of the field. And it is we who have made them so!" he cried, springing to his feet. "It is the weight of our splendor that has crushed them into earth." "Our splendor!" said his mother, bitterly. "The splendor," with a wild ges ture, "thut, thank Uod, is ours no more!" "My child! Beaulieux!" "Sometimes," he said, "when I am with them, my heart swells as If it would burst. I feel the very singing of the poor blood In their veins. It would not be so poor had mine not been too rich! We have trodden them down so long, they have been so herded, so outraged, so cowed, so starved, their souls Impoverished as thrir bodies my God! We have lived on their labor, our wealth Is their sweat, our thrones arc plunted on their slaughter! Often when 1 have seen the great carriages driven along the Bols, the high step ping horses In their golden harnesses, the women, rosy, round, their silks overflowing like petals of great flowers, the sight of them has mude me tremble, I have felt the wheels of those carriages roll.ng through blood!" (To Be Continued.) How .Mrs. Reese Became a Convert Her Arm M as Useless, and CoulJ Not He Moved Without Puin How She AYus Cured. Mrs. John Reese, South Pott3town, Pa., says: "It is now about a year since I was cured of one of the worst attacks of rheumatism I ever had. I had tried all kinds of remedies and had several doctors, but nothing did me any good; so I concluded to try Munyon's Heme dles. I never hnd any faith In homeo pathy; I confess now I am a firm be liever In it. After tuking the Rheuma tism remedy a few days I was able to raise my arm, which 1 had not moved for two weeks without the most In tense torture. Within a Bhort time I was completely cured, and It was per manent, for during the post year I have not hud the slightest return of the dis ease." Munyon's Rheumatism Cure Is guar anteed to cure rheumatism In any part of the body. Acute or muscular rheu matism cured In from one to five days. It never falls to cure sharp, shooting pains In the arms, legs, sides, back or breast, or soreness In any part of the body In from one to three hours. It Is guaranteed to promptly cure lameness, stiff and swolen. Joints, stiff back, and all pains In the hips and loins. Chronic rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago or pain In the back are speedily cured. Munyon's Homeopathic Home Rem edy company, of Philadelphia, put up specifics for nearly svery disease, which are sold by all druggists, mostly for 25 cents a bottle. HOTEL WAVERLY , European Plan. FIrst-olasa Bar at tached. Depot for Uergner at Engle't Tannhaeuaer Beer, 9. E. Cor. 15th aid Filbert Sts., Pblla. 1 Most desirable for residents of N. H. Pennsylvania, All convenience for travelers to and from Broad Street ' station and tha Twelfth and Market Street station. Dealrsbls for visiting Bcrantonlana and psopls In the Am thraclte Region, T. J. VlCTOiRY, PBOPRIBTOB. Mil BiimiuaitiiiiuiiMi!Uii!:tt!Miii:a ':'': lilt UUIUI 1IU&1CMPU SltWUk. W ABSOLUTELY PURE THE OLD RELIABLE SWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTE Hat stood tha Teit ol Tlmo MORE SOLD THAN ALL OTHER BRANDS COMBINED RADWAT'8 R13ADY RELIEF is safe, reliable and effectual because of the stim ulating action which it exerts over the nerves and vital powers of the body, add ing tone to the one and Inciting to re newed and increased vigor the slumbering vitality of the physical structure, und through this healthful stimulation and Increased action the cause of PAIN Is driven away and a natural condition re stored. It Is thus thut the READY RE LIEF Is so admirably adapted for the CUKE OF PAIN and without the risk of injury which is sure to result from the use of many of the so-called pain reme dies of the day. It Ia Highly Important That Every Family Keep a Supply of gADWAY'S ll READY RELIEF. Always In the house. Its use will prove bunetlcinl on all occasions of pain or sick ness. There lunothing in the world that will stop pain or arrest tho progress of disease us quick us the READY RE LIEF. CURES AND PREVENTS . Colds, Coughs, Sore Throat, Influenza Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Head ache, Toothache, Asthma, Dif ficult Breathing. CURES THE WORST PA1N3 In from one to twenty minutes. NOT ONE HOUR ufter rending this advertisement need any one SUKFEK WITH PAIN. ACHES AM) PAIXS. For headache (whether sick or nervous), toothache, neurulKla, rheumatism, liun baKO, pulns and weakness in the back, spine or kidneys, pains around the liver, pleurisy, Knelling of the Joints and pulns of nil kinds, the application of Kadway's Ready Relief will afford Immediate ease, and Its continued use for a few days ef fect a permanent cure. Internally A hulf to a teaspoonful In half a tumbler ot water will, In a few minutes, cure Uramps, Spasms, Sour Stomuch, Nausea, Vomiting, Heartburn, Nervousness, Sleeplessness, Sick Head ache, Flatulency und nil internal pulns. There Is not a remedial uent in the world thut will cure Fever and ARue and all other Malurloiic, Klllous and other fevers, aided by KADWAY'S PILLS, so quickly us RADWAY'S READY RE LIEF. Piire M cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists. AD 17 AY'S ILLS, Always Reliable. Parol; Vegetable. Perfectly tasteloss, elegantly coated, purge, regulate, purify, cloansB and strengthen. RADWAY'S PILLS for tho cure of all disorders of the Stomach, Rowels, Kldnoys, Bladder,. Nervous Dis eases, Dlzzlutis, Vertigo, CosUvenasa. Piles, SICK HEADACHE, FEMALE COMPLAINTS, INDIGESTION, IL.OUSNksS DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION AND ALL DISORDERS OF THE UVER. Observe the following symptoms result ing from dlacaaes of the dlgostiv orsaju: Constipation, inward pilfcfi, fullness of blood in the head, acidity of the stouacn, nausea, heartburn, disgust of food, full neaa of weight of tha atomaob, sour aruo tatlona, sinking or fluttering of tho heart, choking or suffocating sensations wba In a lying posture, dlmneaa of vision, dots or waba Dofore the sight, fever and dull pain In the head, deflolenoy of perjpf ra tion, yellownees of the akin and ey, pain In the aide, oheat, limbs, and eudAen flushes of heat, burning In the fleeti, A fow doeea of RADWAY'S PILLS will free the ayatem of all tha above-named diaordors, Prloa 25o. per box. Sold by Drueglsta or sent by mall. Send to DR. RADWAY oV CO., Look Box W6. New York, tor l30ok of Advice. REVIVG RESTORES VITALITY Made a utDa,. W4?jRi&weil Man MMDtMfM ofMet THE QREAT 80th bay. PXU3P0-OZX REMEDY produce the above ret ulta In 30 daya. It arfc powerfully and quickly. Cum when all other, tall Young idbu will iwiiu their loit manhood, aad olo neu will recover their youthful vifor by ueins KB VI V O. It quickly aud eurely reeturea Nervouf Dene, Lout Vitality, lru potency. Ntgutly Kruiaelonn Loat Power, Falling Memory, Wutlns Dleeaiea. and all effecta of aelf-auuee or axoena and indiscretion which unfits one tor study, buiiaess or marriage, ll not only cures by starting at the seat ot disease, bill Is a (rest nerve tunlo anil blood builder, bring Ing back tba pluk glow to pale cheeks and re storing the Are of youth. It wards off Inaanlt) and Consumption. Insist on bsvtng RKVIVU, n. other. It can be carried In vest pocket. By mtll 1.00 per pscksge.vr all forsS.OO, wltbaposl tlve written guarantee to ears or reitmi the money. Circular free. Address OYAl MEDICINE CO., 13 Rim St., CHICAGO. ILI Few sale fcy Matthews Bros DlBggls' ScrantoB . Pa. 0RITIR IBOB CO., Incp. Casltal, l .MM. BKsT I.OO HUOK IN THE WORLD, "A dollar tared Is a dollar earned.' This radios' Mellil French ltoagoln Kid Bat ton JSoot delivered tree anywhere In the U.S.. on 9m reoelntotOaah, alone Order, or I'osiai new ror ni.au. Equals every wsv the boots aold In all retail stores for 2.M. We make Ikla boot oursalvea, therefore we guar a(ee the Jit, ttyU end wwer. end If any one Is sot satisfied: we win raiuna ina moeej ereenaanouierpair. unera 'roe or josnmon penes, ww ma u, p. m, a bis. telle 1 to t and halt tea. smawen-eiM,' . we mm jw new. luusiTmsra logue i nil n- . u BOMTOH, petaf terms f heater. 4a9JK Iraa Ufh OUR NATIVE HERBS The Great Blood Purifier and Liver Regulator. 200 DAYS' TREATMENT, $1.00 COM ROSED OF Aad will Positively our all disease' arising from IMPURE BLOOD. MUCH AS Rheumatism, Kidney Disorder, Liver Complaint, Sick and Nerv. otis Headache, Neuralgia, Dys ficpsla, Fever and Ague, Scrota a, Female Complaints, Erysipe las, Nervous Affections, Catarrh, and all Syphilitic Diseases. E. M. HETZEL, AGENT, 330 LACKKWANN1 AVENUE. Call and Get Circulars. STILL IN EXISTENCE. The World Renowned and Old Reliable Dr. Campbell's Great Magic Worm Sugar and Tea. Every bog gurrantead to give satisfaction or money rufunilod. Full pilntud direction from a child to a grown person. It In pur -ly vegKtebleand cannot positively harm the most tender infant. Insist 0.1 huving U r, Camp bell's; accept no other. At all Druggists, 26u, WONDERFUL. South 8"RAnton, Pa, Nov. 10, 18W. Mr. O. W., Cainpbell-Ueur Sir: I have Biven my boy, Freddie, 7 years old, soma of T. Campbell's Magic Worm Sugar aud Tea, aud to my surprise this afternoon about 2 o'clock he passed a tapeworm mossurlng about 85 foot in length, bead and all 1 huvo it in a bottle and any person wishing to seo it can do so by calling at my storo. I hud tried numerous other remedies recommended for taking tapeworms, but all failed. In my estimation Dr. Campbell's ia the greatest worm remedy in existence. Yours vrv resnei-tfully, FRED HEFKNER, 732 Bomb St. note The above Is what everybody says after once uting. Munnfaetured by C. W. Campbell, Lancaster, I'a. Successor to Dr. John Campbell & Son, E. Ill's BREWERY. Manufacturers of the Celebrated, PILSENER LAGER SEER CAPACITY: 100,000 Barrels per Annum THE HUNT I HILL CO, lUKtrPACTOIlBRg' AOISTg FOB TRENTON IRON CO.'S WIRE ROPE. VANALEN&COS STEEL NAILS. OXFORD IRON C0.S MERCHANT BAR IRON. REVERE RUBBER CO.'S BELTING, PACKING AND HOSE. FAYERWEATHER & LADEW'S "HOtTS" LEATHER BELTING. A. B. BONNEVILLE'S "STAR" PORTLAND CEMENT. AMERICAN BOILER C0.S "ECONOIRr" HOT AIR FURNACES. GRIFFING IRON CO.'S BUNDY RADIATOR! 434 LACKAWANNA AVE. Comparative-Doses and Results, Patent Medicines, Electric Appliances, Specifics, Druggists' Prescriptions. Quack's Nostrums. You Will See the Dose Given by "The English Specialist," DR. W. H. HACKER ' Is Small, but Look at tho Result. TREAT CURE AND THE ONLY RDBE1ENU01KEW YORK. id lid l OF SCRANTON. (Mil - WILLIAM CONNELL, President. I GLO. II. CATLIN, Vice-President. W ILI.IAM 11. 1'LCK, Cashier. DIUKCTOKS: William Connoll. James Archbsli), At frcd llnnd. George H. Cgtllu, Henry Bella, Jr., Willium T. Smith, Luther Keller. The management of this bank points with pride to its record during tho panie of 1803, and previous panics, when spec ial facilities wera extended to its business accounts. THE TRADERS National Bank of Scranton. ORGANIZED 1890. CAPITAL 250,000 SURPLUS, $35,000 SAMUEL HINE3, President. W. W. WATSON. Vice-President. A. B. WILLIAMS, Cashier. DIRECTORS. Samuel Hlnes, James M. Everhart, Irv Ins A. Finch. Fierce B. Flnley, Joseph J. Jermyn, M. 8. Kemc-rer, Charles P. Mat thews, John T. Porter, W. W. Watson. and LIBERAL. This bank Invites the patronage of bus loess men and firms generaly. WHEN THE The goods are yours at your own price, if you happen to be the lucky bidder. UNRESERVED AUCTION SALES of C. V. Freeman's valuable and high class stock of Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Silverware, liiic-a-Iiiac, etc. THIS SALE IS POSITIVE, as the store is rented, the fixtures for sale, etc., and Mr. Freeman positively retires from business. AUCTION SALES J.30 AND 7.30 P. M. Private sales at less than cost price during the intervals between auctions. ' COL S. M, MEE, AUCTIONEER. DUPONTS MINING, BLASTING AND SPORTING POWDER Manufactured at the Wspwallopen Mills, Lb sei ne county, Pa,, and at Wil mington, Delaaare, HENRY BELIN, Jr. Geueral Agent for the Wyoming Distriot. 113 WYOMING AVE, Scranton, Pav Third National Dank Building. agencies: TH08. FORD. I ittston. P. JoHN B. SMITH & SON, Plymontb. Pa E. W. MULLIUAN, Wilkes Barre, Pa. A Rents fur the Kepauno Chemical Com pany a lllgh Kxplosivus. HADB FALLS ll in i ERRORS OFYOUTH. ACADEMY OF MUSIC'' . MUIMUAT, JAN. 14, THE IRISH-AMERICAN ACTOK, flR. DANIEL SULLY. And Company In His Great Success, D. C. By DANIEL L. HART. Salo of setts opens Friday, Jan. 11. DAVIS THEATER Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, January 14, 15 and 16. ARTHUR DEINC'S MINSTRELS In tho Great Laughing Festival, A Stranger Brand New and Up la Date. Elcjant Contumcs, Original Music. Superior Marching, Unparalleled Dancing, Elaborate Specialties Delightful Singing, ADMISSION, 10, 20 OR 30 CENTS. Twuporformanc.es dailyat 2.30 and S.16 p. m. Next Attraction Ke-cngaitement of the Great Succoss. "BLACKLIUlKU." ACADEMY OF MUSIC. THURSDAY, JAN. 17. THE COMEDIANS, CONROY AND FOX, Tho Musical Furco-Comody Success, HOT .'. TAMALES RECIPE-WIT, HUMOR, MIRTH AND MUSIC The Season's Great Succes?. A Company of Singing and Dunclnz Comedians, Including HiguClass Specialties aud European Novelties Sale of seats opens Tuesday, Jan. l SECOND AND LAST WEEK, I 1 " K THE ARMORY. OPEN 2 TO 10.30 P. M. COOKING LECTURE, 3 P. M, Free Boxes of Candies Afternoons to Ladies. SPECIAL FEATURES: MONDAY Lodge Day. TUESDAY Caramel Day.' Admission, 25 cts. Children, 15 cts. m. PLEASANT COAL AT RETAIL Coal of the best quality for domeatl. use, and of all sizes, delivered In an part of the city at lowest price. Orders left at my Office NO. 118 WYOMING AVENUE. Rear room, first floor, Third National (tank, or sent by mall or telephone to the nine, will receive prompt attention. Special contracts will be made for the lale and delivery of Buckwheat Coal. WM. T. SMITH. i i i aff 327Spruce St., Oppoaiu tha Naw Hotal Jermyn, Soranton, Pa. A-