ENGLAND "3 DABY PRINCE. nia Pretty I.lttlo Ancestral Cradle and Dainty Layette. The royal baby whose recent coming has created such a pleasurable stir In England finds bis small hands filled with the accumulated burdens of his august inheritance. Fortunately tho tiny brain does not have to reason It all out, but his young mother must wisli sometimes that fewer cares of state intruded upon her delighted en joyment of this, her first-born. All his environment i.s ancestral and in close touch with his distinguished i THE LITTLE ENGLISH FIUNC'E IN HIS COT. lineage. Even the swinging cradle in which the wee boy takes his long baby sleeps has held the infant forijs of many of his royal grand uncles and aunts. It i.s the one the queen had in the royal nursery for her own children, and it is deemed proper and suitable that this important successor in the line should have a resting place digni fied with heredity. The cradle swings from a graceful frame of rich old mahogany inlaid with gold. Draperies of handsome brocade of a delicate pearl tint are attached and used to shut off intrusive draughts. The sheets for this downy nest are of fine Irish lawn, lace trimmed; tlve blankets are softest embroidered Pyre nean wool, and the coverlid matches the pearl brocade. The crown and throe feathers which surmount the framework arc further typical of the royalo estate of tho small occupant, whose baby eyes look out on many such suggestive emblems. The layette of the little prince is peculiarly delicate and dainty. Irish linen and Spitalfields silk were used whenever it was possible, and some of the lace comes from Northampton. The work is exquisitely fine, the robes given by the queen being peculiarly lovely. One robe is of rich Irish lawn, hand-embroidered, and as fine in text ure as tho famous "woven wind" of India, and tho other a rich cloak and hood of pure white zibelline, a beauti ful silken material. The tiny hood is adorned with the Prince of Wales feathers in pure white ostrich tips. FOOD FOR INVALIDS. Hour to Cook Things So IIH to Tempt the Delicate Appetite. Eggs for the sick should bo coddled instead of boiled. Dolled renders tho white of the egg tough and indigesti ble, even in those which are termed "soft boiled." To coddle an egg, put It in a quart cup and fill nearly to tho brim with boiling water. Let it stand on the back part of the stove (where it cannot oven simmer) for five minutes. The white will be found a delicate jolly, and the whole perfectly whole some and delicious. Milk is now given in ull forms of ill ness, and especially those in which Solid food is prohibited. The old fal lacy that it raises the temperature, and thus proves injurious in inflammatory disease, has long been dissipated. Hot milk is a valuable stimulant, and proves a most excellent tonic. It should not be permitted to boil, but simply raised to a temperature as hot as proves com fortable in drinking; it should bo drank from a spoon, as this slow method in sures better digestion. When puro milk disagrees with the patient, a ta blcspoonful of lime water added to a glassful, or half a pint, overcomes this objection. A potato baked with the skin un broken is rich in nutrition, and agrco able to the palate. The addition of a little salt and a fablespoonful of rich sweet cream, renders it truly delicious. —lngalls' Home Magazine. French Salad Dressing, One tablespoon ful of vinegar, one half tcaspoonful f salt, one-fourth tcaspoonful of black pepper. A dash of cayenne, three tablespoonfuls of olive oil. Put the salt and pepper in a bowl and add gradually the oil. Mix in slowly tho vinegar, stirring rapidly all the while. As soon as you have a perfect emulsion, that is, the dressing i.s well blended (the oil and vine gar), it is ready to use, nnd should bo used at once. Sfiumtionul Reading and Nerves. The doctor who was conducting a I lass in physiology lately took occasion ;o plead with her girl hearers to leavo the sensations of the press severely alone: "Nothing is so bad for the nerves," she said, "as to read of mur ders and of other cruelties. I beg of you not to do it." NEAT PIAZZA TABLE. Direction* for Nlnklng This IndlnprnHiihla Article ut Home. Where the piazza is used as a sum mer sitting-room, a table is necessary, as in a dining-room. A shelf hinged to tho house and so arranged that it can be raised and lowered is quite service able, but it is not exactly an ornament to the house, ami the difficulty of ex actly matching the paint makes it even less so. Our illustrations show one that can be quite readily made by any ; one who can drive n nail or fasten a The top is of pine wood, thrce-qunr ■ tors of an inch in thickness and twenty four inches across. As it i.s difficult to , find a board of sufficient width, two ; pieces will have to be glued together | nnd secured with dowel pins. There ; inn. t be two of them, driven into the -o each niece two and one-half Inches, after the edges have been care fully squared and straightened by ' planing. The holes must be bored with | a quarter-inch bit, and an equal dis | lance apart Make the pegs of oak to ! lit the holes, and after dipping them j into hot liquid glue, drive them into j one piece; then glue the edges, and bo- I fore it has time to cool, insert the pegs i in the opposite piece and drive them j tight together. i The bower round or shelf of the table will prolnihly have to be made in ±he I same way. It measures twenty inches j uer> s. bet them away to dry till next day: meantime select three hardwood, straight gr. ined broomsticks of equal thickno . and saw them twenty-seven inclic * long. Prepare them by scrap ing of? t'?e p . hit. and varnish and sand -1 paper them d< >wn smooth. The follow ing fie work may be continued. Smo< Lhly plane both sides of the ; 1< or-' ;, jf y >ll have not a large pair of n] vi the circles may be described with v " .til, string and taclc in the way t: t: i;:t every • ooolboy knows. Sow sil . rtlio lino carefully with a com \ .. i v.. holt ling it vertically. Through 43S'' i w HOME-MADE TABLE. the smaller circle bore thrcv hole* through which the legs may pass, each •, one inch from the edge, equi-distant from each other. Lay the shelf on the under side of tho top, and mark tho places for the upper ends of the legs. The broomsticks should fit tightly in the holes, and the shelf secured in place, thirteen inches from the floor, with one and one-half inch finish nails. The upper ends of the legs must be placed on the marks and the top secured with one and one half inch screws, the ends of which are sunken in tho wood and the holes filled with putty. After it has been smooth ly finished with sandpaper it may be stained or painted and finished with lambrequin or fringe put on with brass headed nails. Another way to finish it is to cover it smoothly with donim, or any preferred material, tacked on with an embroid ered valanco. The legs should be stained cherry or oak, and finished with brass claw-foot sockets. llow to Prepuro Frozen Coffee* Measure four heaping tablespoon fills of pulverized coffee. Put into a farina boiler and pour over it one quart of fresh boiled water, cover tho boiler and stand it over the fire for ten minutes. Then strain through two thicknesses of cheese cloth, add half a pound of sugar, stir until tho sugar i.s dissolved, and when cold drop in the white of ono egg unbeaten, half a pint of cream and turn it at once into the freezer. Freeze as you would a sherbet, stirring care fully but continuously. Servo in glasses as quickly as frozen. —Household News. Corumoal HR a Cosmetic. Corn meal, the yellow Indian meal of our pantries, is said to be one < >f tho best of cosmetics. A jar of it should bo kept on the toilet stand, and after the faco lias been washed in really hot water with a pure, unseented soap, tho meal should be rubbed ull over It, well and gently. Then it should bo dusted out of the hair and eyebrows, the fa-'O wiped lightly over with a bit of soft old linen, nnd the result promised by those who have tried it is a delightful ly smooth and satiny skin. A New Dress material. I A new dress fabric made of "peat fiber" is in contemplation, and tho pos sibility of using aluminium for making drapery goods is thought to be very practical, since it can bo drawn into j wires finer than a hair, and yet so lino I and supple that they can be woven j with silk. It has already been used for I silk boiva. PRETTY LINEN DOILIES. The doily i.s in groat demand. Its numbers have increased and added unto themselves until now they are nearly beyond count. The very latest of (.11 is the wine gloss doily, and au thorities declare that a full set must include nil sizes and sorts from it to the big one which forms the center piece. J Jut without going quite so fur as tiiat, one can set a very charming table and present an up-to-date appear ance with only a part of the prescribed number. One of the most important of all to the lucky owner of a polished mahog any board is the plate doily. In its gi*& s&f§ 'W¥W %# A TIUO OF DOILIES. latest, most approved style it is ten inches square, is finished with a fringe and is embroidered in one corner only. When the table is laid these embroi dered bits are all turned toward the center, where they decorate the cloth, and the plain portion is left free for the plate. They are really very deco rative, and if you possess a dozen of them and a few caraffe doilies, besides a centerpiece, you are well supplied. The multitude of smaller ones will hardly be missed, and you can always console yourself with the thought that many object to the too great accumu lation of linen bits. The wreath and the bow-knot designs still hold sway. The former is used almost exclusively for the round doilies, and the latter is seen upon nil sizes and all sorts. A chrrming set recently sent to a bride is all done in wreaths of dif ferent flowers, no two being exactly alike, and the whole effect is dainty in the extreme. For these only solid work is used. The flowers are necessarily small and do not admit of the more sketchy styles. The work involved is, of course, considerable, but linen en dures so well and the colors of to-day are made so lasting that it is thor oughly well worth the doing. Ribbons and flowers combined are always charming nnd suggestive of the best French taste. Just now they arc very popular and are rivaled only by the wreaths. Most needle workers make the ribbon solid as well as the flowers, but one clever woman has de vised a rapid and effective method oi her own. She first outlines the entire design, then fills the space between the lines with single cat stitching. The result, is really striking and well worth the trying. The contrast between th< solid flowers and the lighter ribbon is charming and novel, besides being very little work. A most successful design of the sort is of white violets tied with pale yellow ribbon, and it is seldom one gets a better result with even the most exacting work. Luncheons promise to bo popular the season through, nnd the bare table will be much in use both for Indoor and the piazza functions. These charming bit* of napery will so find a speedy demand and may well employ all one's leisure time. Linen is delightful stuff to handle in the warm summer days, and an array of well selected silks in n natty basket makes a picture not to be despised.—N. Y. Recorder. A Recipe for Tartlets. Mix four ounces of line sugar and four ounces of ground almonds into a stiff paste with the yolks of two eggs; roll it out about a quarter of an inch thick, cut into rounds with a fluted pastry cutler and line some small tartlet tins with them. Fry them in n 000 l oven for some hours, remove and leavo them to get cold and firm. Then detach them carefully from tho molds, dust over with pounded sugar and fill with strawberries and cream prepared as follows: Put a pound of picked ripe strawberries into a basin with four ounces of sugar and a teaspoonful oi inaruschlno, let them stand for an hour, then mix carefully and lightly with a gill and a half of whipped cream. I)ish the tartlets on a napkin or fancy dessert paper. Tho Ilest Furniture I'ollKh. An experienced cabinet-maker says that the best preparation for cleaning picture framcs*and restoring furniture, especially that somewhat marred or scratched, is a mixture of three parts of linseed oil and one part spirits oi turpentine. It not only covers the dis figured surface but restores wood to its original color, leaving a lustre upon the surface. Apply with ft woolen cloth and when dry rub with woolen. Flowers In Finger Itowls. A very pleasing table decoration that is easily carried out throughout the summer months is tho addition of flow ers to the finger-bowls. Use double bowls, one largo enough to hold the other, and fill tho space between the two with very small blossoms. The effect of dipping the fingers into flower encircled water is decidedly unique and agreeable. ttcstaAy. " There's a ring around the moon," Ho whispered In lovor's gloo; Sho sighed and murmured, dreamily: " How happy the moon must bo." —Boston Courlor. Did you see Horner's $25 solid oak bedroom suits, worth S3O? WORK THAT NOURISHES. Under llipe Conditions Toil Develops AS Truly HH Exercise. ! On *of the secrets of a life of grow ing ]lower is to be nourished rather than depleted by one's work. Activity is he althful; strain is harmful. Men do | not die of overwork, but of maladjust ment to the conditions of their work; for under ripe conditions work devel ops just as truly as exercise, but under wrong* conditions it depletes and de stroys. The great W orkers of the world have accumulated force rather than parted with it, and have gath ered richness of material and the power of action by the putting" forth of their energies; to that their lives have moved toward culmination rather than come to an early fruition followed by a long decline. It is easy to detect the differ ence between the man who is fed by j his work and the man who is drained by it. There is an ease, a force and a zest about the work that nourishes, which is never long characteristic of the work that depletes; for the essen sential of the work which nourishes is its free and unimpeded expression of the personality of the worker. It is the overflow of his own personal energy and not the strenuous putting forth of toilsome effort. It is significant that the great artists, as a rule, are im mensely productive. Michael Angelo, Raphael, Rubens, Shakespeare, Rolzac and men of their class attest their genius not only by the quality of their work but by its quantity also. This means that they have secured the right adjustments to their conditions, and that work, instead of being a drain, nourishes and develops the worker. The man who works with delight and ease grows by moans of his activity, and the lirst secret to be learned in order to rid work of worry and wear is to take it in a reposeful spirit, to re fuse to be hurried, to exchange the sense of being mastered by one's occu pation for the consciousness of mastery. To take work easily and quietly, not because one is indifferent to it, but be came one is fully equal to it, is to take the first step towards turning work into play.—Outlook. HOMEMADE AWNINGS. They Are EafUly Put Together If Instruc tions Are Followed. Where the direct rays of the sun strike a window it is always well tr have some kind of a protection, partic ularly for south and west windows. Vines make a good awning, but if trained close to the window, as usually done, they keep out the air as well as j sun. To prevent this a light frame or j hood (see illustration) should be at j tached to tho upper part of the win i dow, reaching at least one third of the | way down, and extending out about 18 I c ic7i FIG.2. HOMEMADE AWNINGS. | or 20 Inches from the window casing. | The vinos should then bo trained over | this frame and will thus allow of a , free circulation of air and exclude the sun at the saino tiino. Cheap awnings may be mode at home that will protect tho windows almost as well as those costing several dollars a window, lluy wide-striped bedticlc- Ing, l, 1 yards for each window. .Scal lop and bind one end. Make a frame by nailing to each side of tho window a strip about two inches wide and 20 inches long. To tho ends of theso nail a strip the same width and of length to reach. Then taclc tho upper end of tho 1 awning cloth to the top of the window. Stretch tightly and tack securely to the projecting frame bolow, which should bo on al>out midway between top and bottom of tho window allow ing about a quarter of a yard of tho scalloped end to hung over the frame. (See illustration). —Clara S. Everts, ii. Orange Judd Farmer. The I)eHt-I>roHMo(l Woman. The best-dressed woman in the world is said to Ihj Queen Marguerite of Italy. Her wardrobe includes a countless va riety of elegant costumes, and she sel dom wears a dress more than once. This is not quite such a recklessly ex travagant proceeding as it first ap ; pears, for the queen sells her gowns to buyers, who ore very glad to get them, | oven at the high prices which are charged for them. In this connection there is a pretty story told. Not long : since Queen Marguerite asked her royal consort for his opinion as to whether she was still young enough to wear her favorite costume of white ! muslin. His majesty replied: "This matter requires reflection." Two weeks later a box was carried to the queen's apartments; when it was opened the box was found to be filled with white gowns which King Humbert had or j dered. Who Might Mumnut lie? Bottesini, the celebrated double-bass soloist, was once engaged to play at a concert at Monto Carlo. At tho end of the performance a young lady walked up to him, and, shaking hands, made some complimentary remarks on the concert- "I remember seeing you at mamma's," she said. "And who might your mamma l>e?" asked the musician, who had been wondering who the young lady was: "Oh, the queen of England!" replied the Italy, who was none other than the present Empress Frederick. Heware of Yellow Green. I Yellow green is a color to be spai- Ingly and cautiously worn. It Is rarely becoming, and has a pitiless tendency to bring out In bold relief every trace ■ of illness or fatigue in those who may ! sometimes don it with impunity. Such j a color should never be selected for a | gown, or its garniture, which TOtwf he iff too UOC& U It* Expi'iimtlon. 4 lot an. little j >b of work, ma'am," ! 1 j lircd the d 1 ly p.! -rim at the back door, "that I can do to earn a bite of grub?" "You've often asked rae for cold ! victuals," replied the woman in sur prise. "11 at this is the first time you j ever asked for work." "Ycs'm," rejoined the tourist, cheer fully, "I'm on my vacation." —Chicago Tribune. Crown Speeches. "The speech from the throne is an absurd thing," said Dawkins, who had been reading the queen's speech. "Yes; but it's like a great many speeches in that respect. Our crown speeches here ain't any better." "Crown speeches?" "Yes; speeches through tho crown oi the statesman's hat."—Harper's Bazar. A Student'* Smart Break. Professor (to a student who had on j In tho lecture hall a loud cravat instead of a white one) —These loud cravats are becoming very fashionable, it seems. . Student—Yes, professor, that's so. Professor (severely)— Hut they are not ! worn in the presence of gentlemen. Student (somewhat confused) —No, professor, they never are.—Sunday j Mercury. Modest Enougn. Husband —I really think you might have had that ball dress made a little bit higher in the neck—to say nothing of the back. Wife—l'll have it changed if you wish, but this stuff costs ten dollars a yard. Husband—Um—-'well, never mind.— N. Y. Weekly. A Disagreeable Habit. Old Grumpps—Sure thut girl loves you instead of your money? Son —Absolutely. Why, she actual ly keeps count of the kisses I give her. j Old Grumpps—Hum! That's bad. She j may keep it up after marriage.—N. Y. Weekly. Bllght Difference. "You look dreadfully battered; how is that?" "My wife has been pelting mo with flowers." "Why, that wouldn't mark you in j that fashion!" "O!—they were in the pots."—lluinor- Istische Blatter. Twentieth Century Politics. Mrs. Brown-Jones—Mrs. Smythe is opposing your nomination bitterly, j Can't you conciliate her in any way? Mrs. Jones-Brown—lt is impossible. Twenty-four years ago I said that her i baby was small for its age. —Puck. Odd Thing*. A tramp who would work would bo culled quite odd, And a man with no vicos strange: Tho boy who doesn't grumble at walking a rod j Is quite out of tho usual range. A whiskered tomutto, an Indolent bee, Soom out of tho common, but still, Tho queerest thing I ever did seo Was a plain, but receipted, bill —Truth. Not Personal. "You really must impress upon John the folly of his line of action." "What's the use? lie won't pay the , least attention to me; he'll only listen s to fools now." (After a short pause)— j "You speak to him."—Tid-Blts. The Other Way Round. Tagleigh—What did that bunk cashier j abscond for? Was he behind in his ac counts? Wagleigh—No; he was ahead. The bank was behind.—N. Y. World. Usually Stupid. Nell —What nre you reading? Belle—"A Model Man." It's dreadful ly stupid. Nell—Yes, they usually are.—Phila delphia Record. MATRIMONIAL ITEM. Mr. Fortune-hunter (to weulthy but I sensible old maid who has rejeoted J him) —Rut don't you miss a husband , very much, Miss Elderly? Miss Elderly—No, I don't miss u hus band very much. I have trained my doff to growl every time I feed him, i nnd I have boupfht u tailor's dummy that I can scold when I feel like It. My parrot can swear, and 1 have a monkey that chews tobacco. No, 1 don't miss him very much.—Texas Sittings. Taking a Terrible Revenge. Witherby—l say, did you recommend that cook of ours to my wife? Plunkington—Yes. I believe HO. Witherby—Well, 1 wish you would \ come round to-night and take dinner , with us.—Answers. i life. " IN life worth tho living?" Ho nsks with a yoll, 1 When they hand him his bin at i The summor hotel. } —Dotrolt Frco Press. ] Lo*t III* Way. ' Ilappy Pilgrim—l'm going to tho l>ct- j ter land — Conductor—You're on the wrong i ' routo, then, mister. This train goes to 1 Chicago.—Puck. I ( No Foreign Tongue Required. Cautious Parent —Let my girls learn foreign languages? Not if I know Iti They talk enough nonsense already!— Truth. Undoubtedly ller Property. Maude—ls that her own complexion? j Mabel—lt ought to be. She paid for | If -Chicago Record, MEWS OF TIIE WEEK. President Cam. of Colombia, is re i or; unizlng his cabinet. I Men nro digging again for a canal across the Isthmus of Panama. The Italian cruiser Ph-monte has been ordered out f Japanese waters. N \v fortifications are to be erected in IVnsacola Harbor, at a cost of $1,000,- Jumes A Bailey bought the interest of the Parnum heirs In th<* Barnum I show. ! The four miners entombed near Cnr bondale, Pa., were rescin d alive Sat urday. ! Plying Jib paced a mile at Chlllcothe, 0., Saturday., in 1 minute and 50Va Ail the tin-plate mills In the country, actii g in com . i t, shut down last Sat urday night. The Japanese have occupied a town in Manchuria, on the way to Moukden, without opposition Cooke's <•.••! printing establishment at Leeds, England, was destroyed by fir Sunday Loss, $750,000. Government surveyors in Alaska found Mount Logan to be 1,000 feet higher than Mount St. Elius. United States marshals in Ken tucky bagged 120 moonshiners as the result of six months' hard work. Bon Price, a clerk in the Cook,county I N. Y., Jn 11. has fallen heir to an estate ! worth from $500,000 to $1,000,000. The czar, whose doctors have told ; him to go to Greece, has had two im perial yachts sent to the Piraeus. The Irish party threatens to desert Lord Rose her y unless lie declares war immediately on the house of Lords. Gov. Flower, of New York has ap pointed Mrs. Sarah J. Fee, of Roches ter, manager of the Western House of The victim <.f the murder mystery at North Sett mate, R. 1., was Identified as Mrs. Emily Chambers, of Providence R. I. A woman in Chicago dropped dead in the chair of a beauty specialist who was treating her faco for disfigure ments. Mrs. Ruth Wakefield, the wife of the oldest Methodist Episcopal minister in the United States, died at Newton, Pa., Sunday. Sporting men all over the country gon rally agree that Corbett should accept a bona-lide challenge from Fitz slmmons. A large number of gnmblors and ■ ownets < ; property where gambling j was t , rrled on in Chicago have been ! Indicted. The University of the City of N w York b gr.n Its collegiate year Monday, in its tiiw buildings on University Heights. Three l ullcts were fired into Judge Br< tano's house in Chicago with evi dent to kill him or some of his family Saturday. Cnpt. Haft, of the Vigilant, Just nr rlved in this country, thinks that the Gould yacht can beat the Britannia eight times out of ten. The excessive rains in Cuba have caused great floods, which are inun dating many towns nnd causing groat loss of life and property. 1 hree men who held up an express train in Arizona secured a small sum of money. They were trailed and cap tured by a sheriff's posse. The authorities are Inquiring into a scandal In a convent in Naples in connection with which a lady superior and other:- have been arrested. One hundred and eighty-three non commissioned officers were arrested in Berlin for seditious outcries. There was great excitement over the affair. Charles Smith, the negro who killed three colored deputies near Muskogee, I- T . has been captured. lie also i wounded one white man and a white | woman. The Penn Iron company, of Lancas- i tor, Fa., has posted a notice of roduc- 1 thm of puddlers' wages from s:i to $2.75 i a ton. Other employes are reduced 8 per cent. Postmaster Hessing, of Chicago, do- 1 nouneed as linrs and scoundrels the ministers who criticised him on ac count of the Hunday inspection parade of letter curriers. A cable from Shanghai says that It is probable that the emperor of China will be dethroned In favor of Prince Kung's son, who will treat with the Japanese for peace. Cardinal Gibbons preached on labor ! Sunday, and said that strikes had : caused a loss of $78,000,000 in eight years to employes, while employers lost | only one-half this amount. The British tank steamer Allegheny and the Belgian steamer Caucnse were ! in collision in Delaware bay, and tie Allegheny was sunk, the crew narrow ly escaping with their lives. The China, Webster Pembroke mills at Suncoke, Pa., linve been run ning full time for the past week. The help Is all In. Tin* strike is nil over and business is picking up fast. Hiram Thomas, colored, a rich Sara- I toga landlord, has been induced by protests of residents of a fashionable | Brooklyn, N. Y., street to sell the house he had bought to live In with his fum- ' " y ,\ V 111iam L. Grout, the millionaire sewing machine man of Orange, Mass., ! nnd N' w York, obtained an Arizona di- : vorer and remarried, despite the fact that wife No. 1 has a suit pending in ; the east. President llavomeyer and Treasurer Senrles, of the sugar trust, wer> in dieted by the grand jury in Washing ton for refusing to answer questions asked by the senate sugar scandal committee. The New York constitutional conven tion adjourned sin. die at Albany Sat urday afternoon. The delegates pre sented President Choate with a mag nificent punch bowl of silver as a tes timonial of their regard for him. Refuge for Women at Albion. The meeting of the committee ap pointed to investigate the management of the New York state reformatory at ; Elmira, is postponed from Oct. 2 to Oct. 11, at the Park Avenue hotel. New York city. The United States court of appeals i Hi Chicago reversed Judge Jenkins' j decision restraining railroad miployes from striking so far as the right of | employes tu strike was.concerned, and I sustuined that part restraining cm* ployes from entering Into a conspiracy to quit with the Intention of crippling property, t FREELAND OPERA HOUSE, JOHN J. WELSH, Manager. ONE NIGr I IT ONTiY. Thursday, October 4. Mr. Gus Thomas' Successful Comedy Drama. I The greatest of American plays, as pro- at tlie Madison Square THE BURGLAR. mid ten's wit,i laughter l ir'lTiycr '' ' KTCUt CUBt of I ,O P U " Direction of A. Q. Ecanwion, Prices: 2b, 35 and 50 Cents. Reserved seats three days in advance at Christy's store. HALL'S SPECIFICI REGAINS AND M ANT A INS THE VITAL POWERS. Cures NERVOUS DKBILITY, LOSS or VIGOR, INSOMNIA and GENERAL DEIHI.ITV. Ctiuwd by IMI'R WENT HABITS, EXCURSUS or O VERWORK. PRICE. ONE DOLLAR PER BOX. Pamphlet and Circular Free. Sold by wholesale and retail druggists in Philadelphia, Pittsburg and Heading, or •wilt by mail, sealed, on receipt of money. Address HALL'S SPECIFIC COMPAHY, IWi Lexington Avenue, New York City. Single Tax Courier, XA TIONAI SIX CLE TAX XUW'SPA PElt. It If I VMS the single tux news of the world weekly, single tux discussions niul the very lies! ol |ini|ulgulldu mutter. Foreign corres pondents in ,tupun, Australasia, Frunce, Kntr land, Canada anil other countries. The Courier is a ill-page, Si-column paper, in very clear print, 011 line tinted paper. It is a valualile elninipinn of tlie cause which is nt wi'rld"* 80 attL ' ntio " throughout the IK, U. JIROKA IK, Editor. Published by THE COI'HI ICR PC HUSHING COMPANY, HlO Olive Street, St. Louis, Mo. *I.OO I'EK ANNUM. Dii. N. MALUYT~ DENTIST, Located permanently in Hii kbcck's building, rooms 4 and second tloor. Special attention paid to all branches of dentistry. -ILL OPERATIONS P EIIFO It MED WITH CA RE. All work guaranteed. Oflicc hours: 8 to 12 A. M.; 1 to 5 P. M.; 7 to J I'. M. GEORGE FISHER, dealer in FRESH BEEF, PORK, VEAL, MUTTON, BOLOGNA, SMOKED MEATS, ETC., ETC. Call at No. fl Walnut street, Freeland, or wait lor the delivery wagons. VERY LOWEST PRICES. Koiper's Stoam Marble Works. con. LAUItF.L and MINE STREETS. Monuments, Headstones. selling at cost for next thirty days. Iron and Galvanized Fences, Sawed Building Stoucs, Window < 'ais. Door Sills, Mantels, Grates, ( oping, Cemetery Supplies. PHILIP KEIPEII, I'll OP., llasUton. This matter is arranged in this style for the sole purpose of attract ing your attention, and, as an illustra tion, to convince you that advertise ments are read. Advertise in the TBIUVNB.
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