TIIE SCItANTOy TIUBTJNE -TUESDAY WOTlNTJtfGr, APJIIL 27. 1897. 0)e Rome Reading girck TtffE;,BLOE-, - ww" Copyright, 1S97, by I. T. StXOl'SIS. This ptory Is told by Madelines Itonnlcl:, an KriKltali KoverncpH In tho family of Dr. C'hanco at St. 1'otcrnburjj, Hueln. f'hnnco Is nil I'tiBHshman by birth, l.tit for many your a naturalized Ituisiiiii. Ho has a Kus.so-Oermnu wlfo und two daughters, Olija and Maroussa nRul sIn tcen and flfterti years. Dr. Chanci- hr.s long Mnco Riven up tho pructleo of meill clno to bury himself In scientific resi'nrr.i In his laboratories, leading tho life or n lecluso Mlts Hcnntck li a Glrton sr;ulu iito and much Interested In selentlllc su.i Jetts. one day. while she Is with tho jjlrls, lir. Chance hears her tell th, m of her fondness f r uhemlstry. Hi- ii de limited to hear this, nnd nsks her at once to help hint on a paper ho Is wrltlriK lor An Kurdish scientlllc Journal. It Is on the HUbjeet of photoKrnphlnt; thoueht. Dr. Clianro dictates the paper to Mlsx lien r.lck, nnd she copies It out. Alter this a work of tome hours she returns to her charges. FAIIT II, When I entered the Btilon Olffn, nnd MarotiBKT rushfil to meet mo. With the avidity of healthy, affectionate young unlnials they begun to l;lss nnd hug inc. "We missed you dreadfully," said 'Olga. "You know, darling', you nro quite the life of the house," said Maroussa. "Sit between us now, and tell us what lms happened." "Hut I have nothing to tell, Marous ea." "Xonsonse; you have been away for five hours." "Yes, and during that time your fa ther dictated a leetuie to me which I took (inwn In shorthand. 1 have Just transcribed it for blin nnd left It on his de.sk. It Is 11 scientlllc paper and I be lieve ho villi iiosi It to England, to night." "And ie, diiiinz those hours," paid Olga, "yawned n. good deal, and read novels, and ate sweetmeats. How dif ferent you are from us! Please, Made line, tell us what was the subject of father's paper." "I am not at liberty to do that, Olga." Olya and Matoitssx glanced at each btber. "They say that Englishwomen al ways respects secrets," miM Maroussa, at last, "that they never breathe them again." "No honorable woman would ever breathe a secret which was committed to her," I replied. The gills again gazed anxiously at each other. "Then 1 am not honoi-ibl"." said Ol ga, "for 1 intend to eonfld" In you." "Hut suppose 1 don't llstsn?" "You had better listen. Ycu know from this out you will be often in the laboratories." "Is there more than one?" "Yes. Now pray give me your atten tion, Madeline. Hlen;e understand that father will ask you to help him again and again. He may even get you to assist lilm with his chemistry. A couple of years ago we had another governess. He got her to write for him and to help him. Well, she did not etny long; she became frightened, ter ribly frightened." "I'll. Olga, ought we to tell her about liosa'" interrupted Maroussa, "Never mind." I said, "now that you have begun, speak out." I cannot imagine why I urged these girls to open up their hearts to me. but a sensation which I hud never expen enced befor? came suddenly over me. It was a feeling of nausea for this stately house, that cold-lookin:: man, down-stulrs, the mysterious laboratory which I had not yet enteiod. "Speak out." I said. "Whatever you say I promise not to betray you, and if your father really wishes to secure my services. I may as well be armed at all points." "That Is Just it," said Maroussa, "but after all it is not about our poor gov erness, poor Rosa we always called her Rosa she was not so pretty as you, Madeline, nor so strong-minded, but it Is not about her we want to speak. It Is about father's other labor atory, the one you have not y-t seen, the Hlue Laboratory. Tho fact Is. Olga and I have a secret on our minds In connection with it. It weighs on us, bometlmes It weighs heavily." As Maroussa spoke, she shuddered, and Olga's ollvc-tlnted face giew dis tinctly paler. "We long to confide in some one" said Olga. "Prom the moment we saw you we felt that we would be 'en rap port' with you. Now will you listen?" "Certainly, and I also promise to re spect your secret." "Well, then, 1 Phall tell you in as few words as possible. A couple of months ugo some gentlemen came to dinner they were Germans and were very learned. One of them was called Dr. "YOU HAD NO RIGHT TO FOLLOW ME INTO THIS ROOM." Schopenhauer, who Is a great savant. When the wine was on the table they began to talk about something which made father angry. Soon they were all quarreling. It was fun to listen to them. They got red and fa ther pale, and father said; 'I can prove my words.' I am sure they forgot all about our existence. Suddenly father sprang up and said: 'Come this way, gentlemen. I am in a position to make my point abundantly plain.' They all swept out of the dining room and went Into tho cabinet. Mother Bald she had a headache, and she went upBtalrs to ha salon, but Maroussa nnd I were gr PW- Meade nml Robert Eustace. quite excited and we slipped Into the cabinet after them. I don't" thln'.t nny of them noticed us. They went from tho cabinet Into the laboratory, n glimpse of which you saw today. Wc thought of course that father would stay there and make some hide ous fizz or smell with his lion Id chemistry, but he did noth ing of the kind -he ripened n door at the f tit titer end nnd walked on In front down a long passape. The scientists nnd father, abmiied in their own In terests, wnt .in In front, and Maroussa nnd 1 followed. Kuther took a key out of his pocket and opened a door 111 the wall, and us he did uo he touchrd a fifing, anil behold: Madeline, we found ouivelvcit on the threshold of nn- THE FACE WAS other lahoiatoty, twice, thrice as large as the one we had lelt a splendid place, lr'fty, and furnished with oviry sort of thing that the heart of a chein Ist could di sire. Theie was mi px traordii.ary fcott of dome In one of the' orners. Fi.tnduig up out of th? llonr. Marous.-sa and I noticed It the moment we putr-rrd the mom. We vre dread fully aft aid of lxlng banished, t.nd we slipped at enre behind a. big screen and waited there while father ami tjio sav ants talked their secrets tog'lher. Sud denly MarotTs-a who Is always up to a bit of fun, suggested to me Unit wo should stay behind and ojtaniip" tho pl ice for ottiM Ives after father and the Germans hud gone. I do not know how we could really think of such a daring sehetoe for, of course, father would lot k us In, but I think wo forgot that part. After a time ho seemed to witlsfy the gentlemen, and they left the loom as quickly as they had come In. Then fa ther turned off the electric light and we were In darkness. "We heard hla footstepi and the foot step of the men dying away down tho long conldors. We telt full of fun and mischief, nnd I said to Maroussa: 'Now let us turn on the light.' "We hud not gone half way across the room, when oh! Madeline, what do you think happened'.' There came a knock which sounded ns If It proceeded from the Hour under our feet, and was in the dltectlon of the queer dome which I have already mentioned to you. A voice cried plteously three times: 'Help, help, help!' We were terrified; all our little spirit of bravado ran out of us. I think Maroussa. fell flat on the floor, and I know I gave the loudest scream that could come fiom a human throat. It was no loud that It reached father's ears, The kmcklng underneath ceased nnd we heard father's footsteps hurry ing bach. Theie whs Maroussa moan ing on the Moor and pointing at th& dome. She wus too frightened to speak, but I said: 'There Is some one under neath away by that dome In the corner. I heaid some one knocking distinctly, nnd n voice erltd 'Help' three times.' " 'Folly.' snld father, 'there Is noth ing underneath. Come away this mo-im-ni. You hud no right to follow me Into this room. C.ome, not another word of this nonsense.' "Father hurried us out of tho room, and locked tho door, and told us to go up to mother. We told mother nil about It, but she said wo were talking nun senfe, nnd seemed quite angry, and Matoussa could not help crying and I had to comfort her. "Hut, Madeline, that night we heard that cry again In our dreams, and it has haunted us ever since. Madeline, if you go on helping father he will cer tainly take you into the Hlue Labora tory. If over he does, pi ay listen and watch and tell us, oh, tell us, If you hear that terrible, awful volco again." Olga stopped speaking: her face was white, and there were drops of moist ure on her forehead. "Why, child," I said, "the telling of that story seems quite to have alarmed you." "Yes," she answered, "I cannot bear to speak of It. I shall never forget the awful terror of that cry." "Nor I either," said Moroussa. "Hut hush, Olga, not another word Just now, 1 hear momma coming," From that hour I felt that I had a mission in life. I determined to be wary and watchful, to act cautiously, and, if possible, to discover tho secret of tho I31uo Laboratory. For this pur pose I made myself agreeable and use ful to Dr. Chance. At meals I talked to him on scientlllc subjects, and al though my knowledge was undoubt edly that of tho smatterer nnd his of the profound and deep sclontlst, yet compared to tho conversation of hu wife and daughters, ho doubtless found it pleasant to listen to me. Many, many times when he complained of his eyes he asked me to be his secretary, and on each of . these occasions h paid mo ten rubles for my trouble. b-tg"a , V j.y A Durlng our Intercourse and I now spent a good deal of my time with the doctor ho never really took mo the smallest way Into his confidence. Ho never for a moment lifted the veil which hid his real nature from my gaze. Never except once, and to tell of that awful time Is tho main object of this fitory. To an ordinary obsetver, Dr. Chanoe was a gentle-mannered, refined but cold man. Now and then.lt Is true, I did see his ryes sparkle ns If they were flints which had been suddenly struck to emit fire. Now and then, too, I noticed an anxious look about his tense mouth, and I have seen the dew coming out on his forehead when an experiment which I was helping him to conduct promised to prove excep tionally Interesting. At last, on a cer tain afternoon, it was necessary for him to do some very Important work In the niuo Laboratory. He required my aid and asked mo to follow hlin there. It was indeed a splendidly equipped room a teak bench tan round tin eo sides of the wall.flttcd with every conceivable apparatus and appliance, glazed fume chamber.', stoneware sinks, Hansen burnets, porcelain dishes, bal ance!', mlcioscopcs, polarlscopes, ther mopiles burettes, mortars, retorts, and in fact every instrument devoted to the rites of the mephltlc divinity. In one corner, ns the girls liud described to me, was a mysterious-looking, dome-shaped projection, about three or four feet high and covered with a black cloth that looked like u pall. In this room, side by side, we spent two or three bonis. The doctor 113 working hard and 1 helped him. As a rule he work ed In his shirt sleeves, treating me ab solutely ns If I were either an auto maton or a boy. On this occasion he looked like the fcctenllst who had not a scrap of soul about him. His research- HORRIIILE ONE. es were deep and fascinating, he was penetrating into some of Nature's fic ercts some of her ghastly secicts but he never allowed me really to question him. This was the first occa sion on which I worked with him In the Hlue Laboratory, but after that af ternoon I went with him there on many occasions and learned to know the loom well. One day my master was obliged to leave me for a couple of minutes alone In this laboratory. I havo by na ture plenty of courage, nnd I did not take an Instant In availing myself of this unlooked for opportunity. The moment he left tho room I hurried actosa to the mysterious dome and raised the black cloth, saw that it cov ered a frame of glass doubtless com municating" with some chamber be low. I struck my knuckles loudly on the glass. The clfect was almost in stantaneous; I was immediately con scious of a dim face peering up at mo from beneath, nnd I now saw that there was an Inner and much thicker paitltlon of glass between us. The face was a. horrible one, horrible with suffering. It was haggard and lean, ghastly white, there was a look about the mouth and the eyes which I had never before seen, and I hope I may never witness again upon a human face. This face, so unexpected, so ap palling, glanced -at me for a second, a shadowy hand was raised as If to Im plore; then my master's steps were heard returning, and the ghost-like vision vanished Into the dark recesses beneath. I pulled the covering back over the dome as it had been bo fore and returned quickly to my work. Dr. Chance was near-sighted ho came bustling In with a couple of phials In his hand. "Come here," he said, "I want you to hold these. What Is tho matter?" He glanced at mo suspiciously. "You look pale. Are you 111?" "I have a slight headache," I re plied, "but 1 shall be all right In a moment." "Would you like to leave off work new 7 I have no desire to injure your health." "I can go on," I answered, placing Immense control upon myself. The shock was past; It was an awful one, but It was over; my suspicions were now realities; the girls had really hearvl that cry of pain. There was some one conllned in a dungeon be low tho Hlue Laboratory, God only knows for what awful purpose. My duty was plain as daylight. TO BE CONTINUED. A Promising Settler. "Do you think Skinner can make a liv ing out there?" "Jlako a living! Why, ho'd mako a liv ing on a rock In the middle of tho ocean If thcro was another man on the rock." Tid-CHs. Labor Time Cost TUB SAVED BY WASHIM PoWDEfc What More Only this uk your grocer for it, and lutlst ou 72 THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY, Cblcco, U Louis, NK j AT THE THEATERS. "The Juekllns," n new comedy drama which Stuart Robson has added to his already large repertolie, Is a dramatl zatlon from a Inte popular novel on provincial life In tho Sunny South. There nro snld to be many square Inches of fun, a nntural spring of laughter nnd n streak of reality's "pay dirt" at ho bottom. No one tells tales of a certain class In the South better than Ople Read of that shiftless, Irre sponsible, happy-go-lucky stuff of which the Kentucky colonel was made. Mr. Read's studio appears to contain Infinite numbers of these figures, nnd ho touches them up so ns to bring out tho differences In a mnsterly manner. "The Juekllns" will bo given Its first evening at the Academy of Music with a cast that complines well known names. Novel readers know of Ople Read's quaint and Interesting charac ters, and would be particularly Inter ested In the dramatization of any of the woiks of this talented author. In, Lem Jueklln, it Is said that Mr. Read has created n character even more quaint und Intel estlng thnn any of tho many others that have nddod to his fame. The character Is quaint nnd unique nnd far different from anything which Mr. Rolison has ever played be fore. The dramatizing wns done by Daniel L. Hart, of Wllkes-Harre. The brilliant tragedy event of the season at the Frothlnghnm will bo the engagement of the distinguished artist. Frederick Wnrdc, on Wednesday and Thursday. He will give thtee per formances, presenting "King Lear," "Tho Merchant of Venice" and "Rlch nrd HI." The Dallas, Tex., News, a conservative Southern paper, says: "The acting of Frederick Wnrde, In contrast with the general commonplace of the stage Is like Hamlet's star set In the darkest night. It Is not a wonder, theiefore, that the most Intelligent nnd cultivated portion of the amusement loving public goes to see him. The spn clous opein house contained a larce audience Inst night, who saw with deep Interest and frequent earnest plaudits Mr. Wnrde s splendid presentation of the tragedy of 'King Lear.' " With Mr. Wnide's company, Miss Florence Hnm, of Honesdnle, a most talented young woman, will bo seen. 4 "The Dazzlerk" which will be seen nt the Academy of Music for a period of threo nights commencing Thursday, April 21), with n special Saturday mat inee, Is this season ns full of ginger as one of Sanford's bottles. Every thing is bright and new, the music i be ing the latest popular songs, the danc ers the newest nnd most fetching, and tho Jokes and w Ittlclsms devoid of whiskers. The company Is first-class comprising the cleverest comedians nnd prettiest girls ever seen In the piece. All who enjoy good fun, catchy music, beautiful dancing nnd pretty girls will get their fill nt the "Dazzler." KAIS1NC 1'AMIMI'S I'OIt IMtOPIT. How Connecticut .Mill Operatives I'rovidu lor Their Old Age. The cable dispatches telling of tho proposal of the French government to offer premiums for large families, hop ing by this Inducement to restore th native population to Its size of a quar ter of a century ago, merely broach, as something novel, a system which has for reasons not of statecraft, but mere ly personal, long been in operation In eastern Connecticut. In the mills, which are to be found wherever In this hilly iwrtlon of the btute there Is a water power, the work ers are French Canadians. HIg mills, with their hundreds and even thous ands of operatives, nie numerous, and little mills, each employing from twen ty or thirty to 100 or 200 workers of both sexes, aiu tucked down between the hills In all sorts of possible and seemingly Impossible spots. In the largo mills Is to be found a sprinkling of women of other nation alities, but fully ninety per cent are Fiench. In the smaller mills there are practically none but French workmen. What surprises the visitor who has come out of a New England city like Hartfotd or New Kaven to see how cctton nnd woolen goods are made Is the number of children In the factories. Should this visitor ask the superinten dent of a small mill to point out the children of one family he will name half a dozen in the room In which he happens to be; indicate another on th' stairs and four or five more In the var ious workrooms. The father or mother may or may not bo workers in tho factory. If the fumlly Is large enough the mother Is the housekeeper, and the onerous duty of the father Is to escort his offspring to nnd from work. He goes to the mill with them In the morning and knows that they are all Inside the gate be fore the hour of starting the machin ery. At noon he conveys them home to dinner and back to the factory. At night he may come to take them hont1 but this Is not an Imperative duty, On pay day he comes in the factory and draws the wages of nil of them. A mile from Dayvllle, and about five miles from this city, Is a factory from which a man, who can neither rend nor write, draws over $90 a month for tho labor of his children. The size of his family Is Indicated by an extract from the factory books showing that the children earn from $2 to K60 a week. This Frenchman Is merely one of many who have found profit In a largo family. He Is now making hay while the sun shines, and In a few years he will retire to a farm In Canada with from $1,000 to $2,000 in his canvas bag. There he will live, a nabob among his people, tho remainder of his life. This child farming Is but one act of the drama of French factory life. The years during which all the child- Can be Asked 7 trying It. Largrtt package greatest economy. York, fioalon. rhUAjelpUa, tgWei) dren work nnd the father draws the wages nro necessarily few. The fund for a life of ease must be made quick ly. Tho female child, which at four teen Is thp source of sreatest profit, Is ready to marry one of her own class at sixteen, and she dees so promptly The new husband and wife will work on In the mill for the next five vnrs, with occasional Interruptions when there nro additions to the fnm !', and then they vanish. They have gathered their savings nnd gone to Canada to raise n family. They make no fuss nbotit the matter. It b th. regular thing. Ten years later, or even sooner, they will bo back with a big string of boys and gills to earn money for them; they will gaMier tho profits and retire for life to the Canadian farm, ns their fathers and mothers did. It Is notifiable of late yemt that the operat'v-'s are more In haste to b" rich than formerly. They rush Kick to the fnctorl?si w'th smaller faiulli's thnn weie rjtnnion twenty yeirs ngj. WHO SETTLtTl) AMERICA ? An I'vprdltloit Will Souk to Answer Till Interesting (nestlon. An expedition to circle tho globe In search of Information eon :erttlnc man's first appearance In America Is shortly to he sent out by the Ameiienn Museum of Naluinl History, of New York city. Mori Is K. Jnsup, president of the museum, will pay all expenses out of his own pocket, nnd It Is esti mated that tho cost will amount to $00,000. Professor F. W. Putnnm, who was In charge of the anthropological division of the Worlds fair, nnd for many years a professor at Harvaid, will conduct the expedition, nnd with him will bo the antlnopologlst, Dr. lions. They will take with them a competent corps of assistants, and will, It Is expected, oc cupy six or seven years In their le searches. America. Asia and Africa will bo vis ited, nnd Mr. Jesup Is confident a valu able nnthropoloRlcnl collection will be secured. Particular attention will bo given to collecting data i elating to the entllest visitors from Asia to this coun try. i.rrn.r. iiiti'r.ciii's. (Hy Colonel Thomas I John Ilav, who succeeds Bayard ns ambassador to l'nnland.) I don't go much on religion, 1 never ain't had n) show; Hut I've got a mlddlm' tight grlrl, sir, On the handful of thins I know. I don't :ian out on the prollts And free-will nnd that sort of thing, Hut I believe In Hod and the angels, Hvor since one nlsht last prlii. I came Into town with some turnips, And my little Clabo came along, No four-year-old in the country Could bent 'him for pretty and strong, l'enrt and chipper nnd sassy, Always 'e.idy to swear and fight Ami I limit him to chaw terbaeker .Test to keep his milk-teeth white. The snow came down like a blanket As I 'passed by Tnggart's ttoio; 1 went In for a Jug of molasses And left the teim at the door. They scared at something and started, I heard one little squall, And hell-to-splll over the pr.tlrle, Went team, Little Hrroehes and all. Ilell-to-spllt over the .pralrle, I was nlmost froze with skeer; Dut we rousted up some torches And Fearehed for 'em far nnd near. At last wo struck tho houses and wason, Snowed under a soft whlto mound, I'psot dend beat, but of little Ckibc No hldo nor hair was found. And here nil hop soured on mo Of my fellow -i rltters' nld I Jest flopped down on my marrow-bones, Crotch deep in the snow, nnd prayed. Hy this the torches wa played out. And mo nnd Isrul Parr Went off for some wood to a sheep-fold That ho said was somewhar thar. We found It at last, nnd a little shed Wheio they shut up the lambs at night, We looked In and seen them huddled thar, So warm nnd Ie?py and white; And thar sot Llttlo Hreeches and chirped, As pert nn you ever see, "I want a chaw of terbaeker. And that's what's tho mattor of me." How did he get thnr? Angels? He could never have walked In that storm; They Just scooped down and toted him To whar It was tafe and warm, And I think that saving a little child, And bringing him to his own. Is a denied sight better business Than loafing round tho Throne. Itching, Irritated, icaly, crtutcd Scalps, dry, tbln, and falling Hair, cleanicd, jiurifled, and beauti fied by warm itiampoos with Ci'TIcur. Soir, and occasional dressings of Ccticoea, purest of emollients, the greatest skin cores. Treatment will produce a clean, healthy scalp Kith luxuriant, lnstroua hair, when all cite falls. Sold thrnnthmit the world. roTTiaPEiOAfcDCuiu. Cobi- , I'tle Prop , Uoiton ajr"llow to produce Luxuriant Hair," milled free. skins ON FlRE""DyEci',Tl.v;:,.,tiiirjfii"d The Most Delightful TRIPS nro tboso by tho lmuclsomo largo etcaui ships of tho sailing every week ilav from New York to OLD POINT COMPORT, VIR GINIA BEACH AND RICHMOND, VA. nountl trip tickets, coverlni? a health-giving sea voyage of 700 miles, with meals and stateroom accommo. (lationriouroute, for $13, $13,50 and $14.00. SEND POR PARTICULARS. OLD DOMINION STEAMSHIP CO., Pier 26, North River, New York. W.L. auiLLAUUEU, Vlee-Prcs, & Traffic Mer HELLO AT A. E. Rogers' Jewelry Store, 213 LACKAWAMi A Ell The New York Eya Specialist AntlTcnclier In l'rai'tlcul Applied Optics. Examines Eyes Free For Two Weeks, Be ginning April 22, 1897, HOURS-2 TO 5 P. M. The Doctor has had 1'J yenn' proetlril ex perience In the art of eorreetlni? defective cyciltrht. No fnney prices for xpeehil ground lensert. FOR MEM ONLY. Seasonable Underwear Light Weight Wool Merino, Balbriggan, Etc., AT CONRAD'S. 305 Lackawanna Avenrn, RHEUMATISn Cured F"r DR. J. S. BEHH, Rooms 0 and 7 Williams liuilding, Opp. I'ostofllcc. Scrunton, I'u. Dr. ltelun Mill treat oi cry patient siiirerlim with rheumatism who applies lieloro Jiinu 1 iiliHoliitely HRUB of elmiRe. All other ills cuhch Heated lit n charge barely eoverlns eotl of iieecary rmedlts which Mill r.utly he morn than 50c. Consultation In Ungllsh and Clcrman Pree. NKW YORK HOTELS. 0 . bIT fn " cSS&a & O i-.'S. Y D.L.M.OATL' An established Lotel under new management or.it thorouKhly nhre of tho tlmea. Vlsllors to New YorU will find tho Everett In tho very hemt ( tho shopping district, convenient to n of amusement and readily nrcesslblo Irom &U pnrtA of tho city. EUUOPEAN PLAN. WESTUISTEB. ii Cor. Sixteenth St. and Irving Plac:, NEVA YORK. AMERICAN PLAN, Day and Upu arils. EUROPEAN PLAN, Day and Upwards. $3.51) Per $1.50 Per GEO, MURRAY, Proprietor. The St. Denis Uroadway and Cleienth St., New York. Opp. draco Church. -European Plan. Rooms $i.oo a Day and Upwards. n a modest and unobtrusive way thoro are few bettor conducted notch In the inotropolla than the St. Denla The great popu'aritv it has acquired can readily bo traced to Its unique location, its homelike iitmosphere. the peculiar excellence ot Its cuisine nnd sorvlce, and its very moder ate prlcts. WILLIAM TAYLOR AND SON. WOLF & WENZEL, 531 Linden., Opp. Court llous:, PRACTICAL TINNERS and PLUMBERS Solo Accnts for Richardson Eoyntou'd Furnaces and Hangje. ON THE LINE OF Tilt' CANADIAN PACIFIC H are located the finest flahlng and hunting grounds In the world. Descriptive books on application, Tickets to all points In Maine, Canada and Maritime Provinces, Minneapolis, St. Paul, Canndlan and United States Northwest. Vanvonver, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland, Ore., San Francisco. First-Class Sleeping and Dining Cars attached to all throught trains.' Tourist cars full fitted with bedding;, curtains and specially adapted to wants of families mar be had with second-class tickets. nates always less than via other tines. For further Information, time tables, etc on application to E. V. KINNER, Q. E. A., 353 Broadway, New York, DE. EIEHS S5StiiSOr A v r SSpssj WW. M. BATES. Ut!i 9 THE 124-126 Wyoming Ava. Special For Today, Tuesday, April 27. We shall place on sale our entire stock of Stanley Waists, hitherto marked ioc and 59c, at the remarkable price ot 39c But for One Day Only. These goods are in every way equal to goods selling elsewhere for twice the money. All shades and designs, de tachable collars, some white and some of the same mate rial as the waist and every garment supplied with the Florette adjuster and skirt hanger. Special For One Day Only All of our 39c and 45c fig ured black mohair in all the newest designs, goods that have been received and placed in stock within the last two weeks, will be marked for Tuesday, April 27th, 29c per yard. We also offer one case, yard wide, printed beige dress goods, the regular 15c grade, for Tuesday only at 10c per yard. LEBECK&CORIN 5afes for Securities, at $5.00 Per Annum Upwards, anil Storage for Valuables, in the FIRE AND BURGLAR PROOP VAULTS OF TH12 Lackawanna Trust and Safe Deposit Co., 40.J Lackawanna Avenue, Oppoltse Wyoming House, !' ROBINSON'S Lager Beer Brewery Manufacturers of tho Celebrated Di CAPAGITYl 100,000 Barrels per Attnurrt ASKfcTOEBmETON GIVE5TttL BCTlIXinTaipB AnpI5AB59ITELY5AFE FOR SALE BY THE Bi ! Hi1::! B ATLANTIC niNG S.CRANTON STATION,
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