mm VOLUME 2. KKYXOLDSVILLE, PENN'A., WEDNESDAY PECEMHER 13, 1893. NUMDEI. 31. -Bell's- REMARKABLE Holiday Offers! Men's and sous' doming. Two Wonderful Special Offers any man to treat himself to a Suit or Overcoat for a Christmas Gift, .S5 rt cs o 3 o c d 03 rH w 0 'O X' 3 M 05 O c 'C oi ,2 to PQ 8 o c of. . , G C J2 tea q is S o u BOYS' CLOTHING. Two surprising bargains which oi a Doy to maxe a $2.00 for Choice. Buy good quality double breasted suits in new, dark designs for $2. Boys' elegant and fashionable feeber suits with broad collar for $2. Long cut double breasted overcoats with deep cape for $2.50. CLOSED ! World's Fair Exhibition at Chicago. OPEN ! Our Great Shirt Exhibi tion. One dollar each. No fare or hotel bills here, at BELL'S. TIES! TIES! TIES! Tied or Untied, 50c. at B,E"L,L'S.2 that will make it easy for C S 2 3 3 2 a 3 eg a f! i (t Q B O" B" 93 2s o o o CIS P! B f -i S 5 b 3 3 8 a 4 Ci 2 2 S ps 5 as i- FN U O T fch" o J eg -8 a! 0 ?3 ? should induce every mother Dee line lor HELL a. $5.00 for Choice. 350RSeeligfeCo. celebrated novelty suits in every new est style and finest materials, now $5. Boy's famous Shet land ulsters, latest long English, cut, now $5. Young men's fine and durable Metlin and Kersey "over coats, all shades, now $5. HATS J If you hatn't any hat, and you hat to buy a hat, hatn't you better buy a hat from us, THE ONLY HATTER. Bell's. A HARVARD-YALE AFFAIR. (h WPitni n Eton Jarkrt and uhlrt Front stiffly turchrd, And rnMet Illuchert nratljr tied bor ller Instep arched; A lallnr hut, with Harrard ribbon tied Anont the crown, Bet Jauntily mion her curia of llnfff Golden brown. And 1 wear neat tan Pinchers, though My Instep's not so swell! I have a blue serge Jacket, and a Stiff starched shirt, as welli Upon my tnnclfd, curly thatch, a hat With Vale's blue band. And our complexions ara alike, seeps That I'm more tanned. itae aays that she's my chum, and looks At ma In feigned surprise When I suggest that she prefers "that Harrard man's brown eyes." He's six feet four, a great athlete Of Harvard's famous crew. I had the Yule flrst honors, but I'm only Ave feet two. Merrltt Keens In Nssr Vork Bun. THS CHEMISTRY OF TODAY. Bow the AH af the Early Age Has Dares. oped Into a Science. CbemUtry as an art dates back from the very dawn of civilization Itself. As a science it is barely a conple of centuries old. To the alchemist its pursuit was in the main but the pursuit of wealth. Now and again we find men riiiodk them like Thomas Aquinas, Basil Valentine, Libavius and Glauber, who were im pelled by a higher motive than the love of gold to seek for the hidden meauiiiR of tilings, but the mystical tendencies of the middle ages were as scales to their eyes, and such devious groping for the light as they were able to make too fre quently ended in utter darkness. Even in the therapeutic crudities of Paracelsus, who was sufficiently sincere in his profession in a thaumnturgit to affirm that inngio was the culminating point of all human knowledge, what there was of science was summed up in the aphorism, which in fuct passed as an axiom among his disciples: Man is a chemical compound. His ailments are due to some alteration in his composition and can only be cured by the influence of other chemical compounds. It may be questioned indeed whether modern therapeutics has advanced much beyond this position. In strict truth, it is only within the present century that men have seriously set themselves to search for the cuiwis and conditions of chemical change. PhlogistoniBin, it is true, had in it the semblance of a philosophical doctrine, but it was founded on an utterly false basis, and ultimately fell and was cruuhed by the weight of its own absurdities. The recognition of the real nature of combustion, itself a manifestation of chemical union, paved the way toward a clearer conception of the essential na ture of chemical combination, and this conception acquired a beauty, order and harmony until then unknown to chem ical teaching by the application of tlio atomic hypothesis as an explanation nf the fundamental facta of chemical af finity. Indeed it has become a truism to say that this conception, the fruit of patient and sustained induction, is to chemistry what the theory of universal gravitation is to astronomy. For the first time in its his tor v cfcetn- istry was illumined and vivified by a ingle consistent theory, founded on quantitative relations ami making use of definite mathematical expression, and it was at length recognized that the acienoe must ultimately be referred to mathematical laws similar to those which had been established in regard to the mechanical properties of matter. jrortnigntly Review. A Brava Idler. A hundred years ago the unfortunate people who came into the hands of the surgeons, generally soldiers or sailors Wbo bad been hurt in action, were forced to undergo the operations necessary to the prolongation of life without taking ewer or cnioroionn, as is now adminis tered to make the patient unconscious. and so free from pain attendant upon tne operation. To aeeure quiet, often the subject had to be bound by ropes, so that much as he might desire to wince) be was utterly unable to do se. Occasionally patients would show re markable fortitude t the crisis of their troubles, but none ever showed more than soldier who, on the morning after the battle of Yorktowa, Oct. 19, 1781, was brought into the hospital, having been shot in the knee. It was found necessary to amputate the limb, and the surgeon ordered the nurses to hind the man fast preparatory to the operation. Neverl" protested theaoldier. "You may tear my heart from xny breast, but you shall not bind me. Can you get me .fiddler His request was complied with', and he proceeded to tune the instrument, after which he said, "So, doctor, now you can begin.'' And he played during the whole of the operation, which lasted 40 min utes, without uttering single false note or disturbing his features in the slight estHarper's Young People. Unanimous. Waiter Excuse me. irenflnman vnt there is a ludv outside whn uva twt. h husband is here, and that he promised to come home early this evening. All of the Quests Humnino-nnl ftentlo. men, you'll have to excuse me a minute. c iiegenae Clatter. "I consider theAmflrfonti vnnnr man a splendid institution. He is easier in his manners than the Enirliahmnii anA more chivalrio," says Miss Annesley Knealv. the English -inr! hygiene at the fair. THE COLORS OF THE EARTH. Bow They Afreet the I.tght That Our Planet Gives to the Moon. The wonderful difference between the name landscape in winter and in summer is a phenomenon familiar to all dwellers in the tempcrnte zones. The two great elements of change are the presence of snow in winter and of leaves and grass in summer. If we could look at our globe from the moon, the variation in its aspect due to seasonal changes would perhaps be even more striking than it appears to those upon its surface. In fact, we sometimes lose sight of the very important part which vegetation plays In giving color to what might be called the countenance of the planet It is not the highest forms of plants that always produce the greatest effect in this way. Borne of the most striking scenes upon the earth owe their charac teristic features to mosses and lichens. The famous "crimson cliffs" of Green land, which extend for miles northward from Cape York, derive their splendid color from the growth of red lichen which covers their faces. The cliffs rise between 1,700 and 2,000 feet straight from the water's edge, and being composed of gray granite their aspect would be entirely different from what it is but for the presence of the lichen. Coming to less magnificent, but not less beautiful scenes, the rocky pass called the Oolden Oate in the Yellow stone National park owes its rich color and its nnme to the yellow lichen cover ing its lofty walls, and the indescribable hues of the great hot spring terraces arise mainly from the presenceof minute plants flourishing in the water that over flows them. Considered as a whole, the vegetation of a planet may give it a characteristic aspect as viewed from space. Many have thought that the red color of Mars may be due to the existence of red instead of green vegetation there. That its broad expanses of forest and prairie land cause the earth to reflect a considerable quantity of green light to its neighbors is indicated by the fnct that at the time of the new moon a greenish tint has been detected over spreading that part of the lunar surface which is then illuminated only by light from the earth. Youth's Companion. Basque Is a Lonely Tongna fitlll. The question, Who are the Basques? that mysterious people who give their name to the bay of Biscay, is always cropping up, and Professor von tier Oa belentz lias recently endeavored to show that the Basque language belongs to the African Berber family of speech for ex ample, the Kabyle and Tanreg. His ev idence, however, only amounts to a few culture words being identical in the Basque and Berber languages and cer tain analogies in the laws of phonetic change Moreover, he assumes that the Basques and Iberians were the same peo ple. Bnt, as Canon Isaao Taylor points out, the Iberian tongue, according to our highest authorities, was different from the Basque, and the French Basques are a different race from the Spanish Basques, wbo are a feebler people of the Iberian type. If we assume that the Basques conquered the Iberians, we can account for the resemblances noticed by Professor von der Gabelentz, because the Iberians of Berber origin in acquir ing the language of their conquerors would retain their own phonetio ten dency and also some culture words in both languages. As Canon Taylor re marks, we may still believe that the Basque language is allied to the Ural Altaic type. London Globe. The Danger of Matches. We wonder how our ancestors man aged to get along at all before the in vention of matches; they are so indis pensably handy that we keep them in every room in the house; the "men folks" carry them in their pockets, leave them hanging in their "other clothes" in a dozen closets in all portions of the house; we have a handful resting within reach while we sleep, they are dropped here and there as we attempt to handle them; if tt is light aU we readily see them, they are picked p, otherwise they are left till a more convenient season which generally does not come, simply because they are forgotten, being "only match ' wean get plenty more for a halfpenny, and time is too valuableto be wasted over so insignificant a trifle. Yet this "insignificant trifle" possesses the latent power to destroy the finest mansion, and with it lives of sweetness and beauty which the word can poorly afford to spare. The cause of the con flagration may not always be revealed, for the fire demon frequently covers or destroys his tracks taost effectually. But bow often is it apparent that only a simple match that insignificant trifle could have wrought the mint Family Doctor. Ho Showed Thau. Professor Macovius was offan at the conduct of a wealthy student Who was extrumelv vain. Dna rlo . uw tUV latter wore a nair of richlv AtnWi.i..ut. stockings, with low shoes to set them off to better advantage. As he wnllrai n the lecture room he protruded his foot so as to attract tne professor s attention, "What a remarkable stocking!" the professor exclaimed. "Let me look at it." The student raised hia font dj professor irrasrjed it as if it hmi somebody's hand. "See here, gentlemen!" he laid alond, and led the student, who was compelled to hon about on one foot, rlirht i,....u 1 - -o WMWUMU the room. Familien-Kalender. BONAPARTE IN EXILE. The Famous General's Trip to St. Ifelena and How He Hehared. At p. m. dinner was announced, when we all sat down in nppnrent good spirits, and our actions declared onr ap petite fully equal to those spirits. Gen eral Bonaparte ate of most dishes on the table, using his fingers instead of a fork, seeming to prefer the rich dishes to tho plainly dressed food and not even tasting vegetables. Claret was hls beverage, which he drank out of a tumbler, keep ing the bottle before him. He conversed the whole of dinner time, confining his conversation principally to the admiral, with whom he talked over the whole of the Russian campaign and attributed the failure of it in the first instance to the burning of Moscow, in the next to the frost setting in much sooner than was expected. He said he meant only to have refreshed his troops for four or five days, and then to have pushed on for St. Petersburg, but find ing all his plans frustrated by the burn ing of Moscow, and his army likely to perish, he hurried back to Paris, setting out with a chosen bodyguard, one-half of which were frozen to death the first night He said nothing could be more horri ble than the retreat from Moscow, and indeed the whole of the Russian cam paign; that for several days together it appeared to him as if he were marching through a sea of fire, owing to the con stant succession of villages in flames, which arose in every direction ns far as the eye could reach. He said the burn ing of these villages as well as of Mos cow was attributed to his troops, but that it waa invnrinblv dona liv tlm nn. I fives. After dinner he did not drink wine, but he took a glass of noyau after his coffee, previous to rising from the tuble. After dinner he walked the deck, con versing principally with the admiral, to whom he said, during this conver sation, that previous to his going to Elba he had made preparations for hav ing a navy of a hundred sail of the line; that he had established a conscription for the navy, and that the Toulon fleet was entirely manned and brought for ward by people of this description; that he had ordered them positively to get nnder way and maneuver every day the weather would permit, and to occasion ally exchange long shots with our ships; that this had been remonstrated aguinst by those about him, and it had cost him much money to repair the accidents which occurred from the want of mari time knowledge, such as ships getting foul of each other, splitting their sails, springing their masts, etc., but lie found this tended to improve the crews, and he determined to persevere in his plun. After walking for some time he pro posed a round game at cards, in compli ance with which the admiral, Sir George Bingham, Captain Ross and myself as sembled with General Bonaparte and his followers in the after cabin, where we played at ving-tun (sic), which was the game chosen by the ex-emperor, till nearly 11 o'clock, when we all retired to our beds. Century. Animal Fertilisers. ; A dead animal of any kind, fish, fowl I or beast, buried near the roots of a fruit or other tree, will cause a wonderful growth. The animal substance does not pass into the vegetable, but being a nat ural and a powerful generator of elec tricity increases the current that passes from the atmosphere to the earth, ' and thereby a larger quantity of sup port is drawn from the atmosphere. , Yon can grow a good crop of potatoes on ' brick pavement if moisture is retained and the potato vines are connected with moist earth by copper wires. Commercial fertilisers do not enrich the soil do not add anything to it that is of value. The object sought in these fertilizers is to put the soil into a condi tion that will enable it to conduct elec tricity. The electrical current passes into the vegetable through its leaves, carrying with it the gross matter that goes to build up the vegetable cells, and after that matter is deposited in the veg etable the electric current must have a conductor through which to pass to tho ; earth. i Wornout soils are poor conductors, ' and the acids nsed in thecommerciul fer tilizers, which are little more than acids and sand, pulverize the dead soil and en liven it for a short time. Foster's Weath er Bureau. Governor Tnrney's Detail. Before Tennessee had seceded Peter Turnev had oraranized a Virion rla nA gone to the front Once, while in win ter quarters with a Georgia brigade, a religious revival broke out among the soldiers. After a few days Turney asked how things were progressing and was informed that 13 Georgians had been converted. "And bow many Tennesseeans?" in quired the governor. "Not one," was the reply, "What, 19 Georgians and not a Ten nesseean? Never shall it be said, if I am able to prevent it, that Georgia has excelled Tennessee. Dotail 18 men im mediately for baptism." St. Louis Post Dispatch. A Compromise. Dr. Smith You take three of these pills every day and give up smoking en tirely for two weeks. Johnny Smoker Well, doctor, would it not amount to the same thing if I were to take six pills a day and give up smok ing for only one week? Texas Sif tings, A 8AILOR BOY'3 FORTUNE. Prom Itrggary In Catlfornlatn n ding Com petence In P.ngUml. Thomas Stone, an 18-year-old English snllor, who hns been living n hand to month existonce in Oakland for several months, has fallen heir to the rtnto of his father, valued nt over 83.000. It was an early hour on a stormy morning last March when a bedraggled and wornout young tiinn appll' d nt tho home of Michael Rigney, 21.1 R:venth street, for a meal. He told a ptr:ilght forward story about deserting his ship In tho bay the day before and enid ho had slept under the Eighth street brldgo all night. Mr. Rigney took compiipnioit on tho desolnto sailor and supplied him with food and warm clothing. As Stone proved willing to work and thero was a good deal of labor to bo perform ed about the place, Mr. Rigney permit ted him to remain, and since then ho has made the Rigney homo bis head quarters. During his leisuro'tWnrs Stono spent his time instructing a young son f the Rigncys in the trade of bout building. In a lot adjoining the house ho estab lished a miniature shipyard, with cra dle, blocks and woys, and there ho built a full sizo steam launch, whlrii lacks nothing but an englnu to mnko it com plete. The tale the stranger told wns about ns follows: Fivo years ago ho wns a schoolboy in England und had u pen chant for reading tulcs of udventnre. His rending mnda him so long for travel that he ran away r.nd went to mi. When he cnino home, his father took him to Liverpool and bound him over to a sen captain for a voyngn to und from Australia. Ho was signed for two yenrs, but long beforo tho voyit;' harl been finished tho boy's drenmn h.td l eon dispelled, and ho had determined to de sert. When the vessel reached Han Francisco on tho homeward voynfjc, ho accordingly got nshoro und ntaid them. Ho was penniless, henco his application for charity at the home of tho fligneys. During tho voyago from England to Australia the sailor's father died, leav ing him a fortune of more than :!J, 000. Bnt the news to this effect ramo only very recently. Young Stone wrote from Oakland to his father several times, but Tocelved no response, so when Walter Seawell, an Oakland contractor, left for a viiit to England a few months ago, he was commissioned by the young man to hnnt up his father and see why ho failed to respond to the communicat ions address ed to him. Mr. Seawoll found that tho elder Stono was dead and notified tho son of this fact and of tho further fact that he was no longer poor. Tho news has since been confirmed by tho British consul of San Francisco, who advanced yonng Stone the necessary coin to en able him to return to his English homo. San Francisco Examiner. They Never Will. A woman stood at the cornpr of Baker and Twelfth streets and waved her par asol for the car to stop. The driver nodded his head. She waved a parasol in one hand and a shopping bag in the other. The driver nodded and pointed und stopped the car on the other eido of tire street She came limping over the pavement with snapping eyes and flushed face, and as she put her foot on the lower step she exclaimed : "Are you all blind and deaf on tills car?" The conductor rang two bells an made no answer.and when she had takev a seat insido a passenger asked : "Why didn't you explain thutsho was-, on the wrong side of the street for tho car coming down?" "My dear man, it would have beer breath thrown away," he replied. "That woman lives around hero and' has been riding on this line for five.' years. I've explained and explainedV and so has every other conductor, bnt' what good has it done? Not one woman, in 20 will ever get it through her heiyll that a car can't stop in tho center of ft crossing and block a street, and so wo must put up with her 'sass' and look for our relief beyond the stars." De troit Free Press. Oak Wood. The oak is a historic wood. As early as the eleventh century it bcuumo the favorite wood of civilized Europe, and specimens of carving and interior finish have come dowu to us from that early day, their pristine beauty enhanced by the subduing finger of time. The early colonists brought with them to tho shores of America their love for this wood, and here, too, the oak acquired historical interests. A Family Peculiarity. "Literature certninlv rnna in tha Greensmith family. Tho two daugh ters write poetry that nobody will print; the sons write plays that nobody will aci, ana ine motner writes novels that nobody will read. " "And what does the father writo?" "Oh. he writes chnrka that nnWIi will cash." Press and Printer. Waterproof Bricks. It is stated that onllnarv hrinla i.;t...i J wiiuii in tar for about 13 hours, or uutii they are saturated with it, are increased about 80 Dor cent in weicrhfe. ara mnih k.1.. It f -- UUIUD, than common onus and nmdw.,.i i . , MUMAAWbOtl lljf frosts and acids as well as perfectly! waterproof. They form an excellent flooring; for workshona particularly in chemical establishments. vmuagu jaeraiu.