Up VOLUME 2. ItKYXOLDSVILLK, I'ENN'A., WEDNESDAY JANUAHY 3,1891. . NUJIIJEI! :)3. -Bell's- REMARKABLE SPECIAL Men's and Boos' Glotliliio. Two Wonderful Special Offers any man to treat himself to a hint or Overcoat for a Christmas Gift. $IO.OO FOR CHOICE Men's fine double breast ed Cheviot and Cassimer Suits, solid colors and mixtures, reg ular price $12, now 10. Men's fine black Dress Suits in sack and cutaways, regular price $12, now $10. Men's strict ly all-wool Bus iness Suit, the latest pattern, now $10. BOYS' CLOTHING. Two surprising bargains which should induce every mother svf a Vkwr 4 mfllra o ltoa -Taw T TjT T 'L? $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 OFFERS that will make it easy for $10.00 KoK CHOICE Men's celebrat ed Cans trobe twilled Melton and Kersey Overcoats, reg ular price is $12.50, now $10.00. Men's all wool Ulsters in green, black, blue and steel colors, regular price $12, now $10. Men' real Shetland and Irish Freeze Storm Over coats, finest lin ings, regular price $15, now 10.00. $5.00 for Choice. 850 B.SeeligfeCo. celebrated novelty suits m 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! 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 I UBN I 0B 1 1 MRS. BENT'S TRAVEL8. r?ha Atfnmnmt II ar Hnn1and In flln Fx- plnratlons An Ahysslnlan Advantnre. The woman traveler is becoming ev ery yonr Ims of n novelty. Recently Mr. nnd Mrs. Theodora Bent, a pair of indefatigable English "gloho trotters," started for sonth Arabia to continue the explorations they have been mnking In various countries. They begnn their work in 1884 by digging along the shores of Greece. Tho next year they went through the 82 Cyclades isles and carried ft good many objects back to the British museum. During her first visit to Greece Mrs. Bent wan unac quainted with the language, and the people prononnced her nice, very nice, bnt ilnmb. Three years later she re- Visited thein, and, mnch to their sur prise, conversed flnently. In 1886 they visited Thnsoe, an Egyptian island, and the next year nailed along the coast of Lycia. In 1889, wishing to go still farther afield, they started f r Bahrein, on the Persian gulf, thence going across Persia and over the Caucasus, attended by o special escort from the shah. On nil these expeditions Mrs. Bent "ronghed it" like the rest. A tent was her only shelter, and she slept in a ham mock. Tho scarcity of water was the greatest privation, for in some places the snpply had to be so coiefally hns banded that baths were an Impossible luxury, and even tea whs sometimes impracticable. The most dangerous expedition made by Mr. and Mrs. Bent was to Mashona- land. They started in January, 1891, reached the ruins of Zimbabwe in June and retraced their steps through a path less country via Beira, reaching Eng land in January, 1803. They immedi ately returned to Abyssinia, where the natives became so fond of them that they wonld not allow them to leave, This was an uncomfortable sort of pop- nlarity, and after tho travelers hixl been twice defeated in attempts to get away the situation became decidedly nnplensant. Hearing that troops were pouring in and that there was a prospect of serl oub fighting, Mr. Bent said that they must make a strong effort to escape. Mrs. Bent is an ardent photographer and whs nt the time engaged in develop ing some negatives she had made of the Abyssinian women aronnd her. She finished her photographs first, and then, watching for a favoroble opportunity, tho little party mounted mules, and as sisted by an Italian officer and 400 sol diers who hod been sent to rescue them managed to cBeajie from their devoted Abyssinian friends. Mrs. Bent brought away the negatives Bho had persisted in finishing, and these snow the costume of an Abyssinian woman to consist of two garments a pair of trousers fitting tightly around the ankles, and a long, loose overdress lavishly worked round the neck and down the tapering sleeves, which are bo tiny at the ends that one can hardly imagine how a woman's hand could get throngh the cuffs. New York Bun. Achilles mnd tha Tortoise. There is one paradox which upon ita race appears to be very easy of solu tion, but which, after careful study. does not pan out eo well. The story was first told upon a gentleman named Achillea, who was rather prominent in early political times, and who had a reputation as an all round athletic. He could run, and run fast at that. One day ho started to catch a tortoiso, which was as slow in those days as he is today, Achilles was some distance behind the tortoise and set out to capture it Achil les went twice as fast as the slow old tortoise and gained constantly, but he never caught it. No matter what prog ress Achillea made, the tortoise wont ahead just half as far. By this time the -distance between tho two, had they lived to this day, would have been infinitesi mal, but yet if Achilles and the tortoise ran with the proper mathematical pre cision there would still be an interval between the twa. St. Louis Globe Democrat. Ton Mnltke rndleuunt Ton Mottke onoe went to Linddn, as be thought, incognito. Be ordered a room on the ground floor in the Bay erische Hof and went to bed early, but forgot to draw bis Hinds down. When be was just going to sleep, he beard mnsio drawing near. Ue had been reoqgnized, after all, and was going to be serenaded again. The difficulty was how to get dressed without being seen. He dared not strike a light. But pres ently the glare of torches lit up his room, and the curious crowd stood close to the windows, their noses pressed against the Danes. In suite of that ha tMt tli.f ha must rise, so be got up and dressed. But as be put on each piece of his ap parel the feat was greeted with lond and prolonged anDlause. San Franciwn Argonaut. Prlneess Marie of Greece. Princess Mario of OrencA la tha nrtn. cess whose name has been so frequently mentioned of late as a bride for the Russian cznrowitz. She is 16 years of age, uoiongs to the same religion as the czarowitz and iniiht mitlca him a good wife were it not for tlin fart that sho happens to be his first cousin, her father, King George, boing brother of the czarina. And Hi nrA la nnthlnrv wklnk the canons of tho (Jr.u.k hm...h strictly prohibit thau matrimonial nn ions between first cousins. The young DrinceSS is round fjmiul n'nlnmi,.,) figure, not particularly protty, but hav ing the vivacity and fresh coloring of early girlhood. Exchange. TUBERCULOSIS. Calculated to Cause One-scri-nth of the Total Unman Mortality. Dr. Anderson, tho medical officer of health of Dundee, delivered nn inter esting address recently, with a view of quickening public interest on tho im portant topic of tuberculosis. After re ferring to tho history of our knowledge of tho specific germ and of tho manner of its propagation, ho mentioned the fact that tnlierculosis had been calcu lated to cause one-seventh of the total mortality of the human race. It was remarkable that, notwithstanding this important fact, little practical interest had been taken in tho matter by the Jtatc, local authorities or Individuals. An assumed theory of its unavoidable nature seemed to lie at the root of this baneful fatalism. Dr. Anderson main tained that all tubercle bacilli were derived from predecessors of the some charaoter, and pointed out the facility with which this bacillus adhered to moist surfaces and propagated itself un der insanitary conditions such as pre vailed in the overcrowded houses of the poor. He also mentioned the opinion, held by bacteriologists, that the expired breath of thoso suffering from tho dis ease was comparatively innocuous, while their sputum swarmed 1th bncilli and on evaporation and desiccation was npt to become a fruitful source of infection. Hence tho paramount necessity for a systematic destruction of tho sputum, disinfection of apartments occupied by those Buffering from tuberculosis, and disinfection o." destruction of articles of clothing likely to retain tho germ. Referring to tho largo moitulity from tuberculosa disease, Dr. Anderson men tioned, as an instance of public apathy in t lio matter of its prevention, the fact that very few people applied for disin fection of material after death from this cause in comparison with the number of those who took micli precautions in the cuso of the various fevers. Passing to tho subject of the disease in cattle, he pointed out tho largo mortality among tlu-so animals from this cause, and also the relation of milk supply to iufant mortality from tuberculosis. Tho proportion of deaths from this cause in children under 5 years of age In Dundre was found to be 1 in 11. All tin so facts pointed to the ne cessity for the householder to safe guard his own interests. Dr. Anderson concluded his instructive address by mentioning in detail tho preventive and disinfectant measures necessary to se cure tho highest possible immunity from the scourge. Lancet. Mixing tlio Fees, An amusing incident has just come to light anent tho recent marriage of a prominent young railroad man to an up town bello. As is usual on such oc casions, the arrangements, including the financial end of the transaction in hearts, woro left to tho best man, him self a well known club man and a cricketer of local repnto. The story that is now going tho rounds, and which is creating considerable merriment, deals wholly with the part played by the Utter young man. By some nnao conntable contretemps the youth in question delivered to the organist the magnificent sum of (30, while theBhock beaded youngster who supplied the wind for the instrument was gladdened by the gift 0110. When itcanio to the clergyman, how ever, the lavish expenditure previously niado had so depleted the nuptial funds that on y $ 3 remained. With unblush ing effrontery and perfect sang froid tho best man tendored the two planks to the dominie, whose feelings can bet ter bo imagined than doscribod. Tho orgnnist says the wedding was tho most brilliant of the season, while the shock headed boy who supplied the wind characterizes it as "hot stuff." It would be interesting to know what the -clergyman who tied tho knot thinks bout it. Philadelphia Kccord. neernlng Pronunciation. An Englishman who has been visit ing in Chicago says it is very amusing to listen to the American ridicule of Englishmen for pronouncing Cholmon deloy "Chumley," Heaucharap" Beech am, " etc. In England, " he declares. "you will find, as a rule, that people pronounce .Massachusetts Ma-eatcn-asettes.' Absurd? Of courso it is, but bow are yon going to tell? The rule by .which it is pronounced 'Massachusetts' is purely arbitrary. The most curious of all your misprononnciations are per haps the adopted French names. How in tie name of the eternal fitness of things do yon get 'Boo Saint Mary' cut of Sault Ste. Mario? Terry Hut' for Torre Haute is just a little worse. It is unaccountable, too, how yon came to call Prairie da Chien 'Prairie doo Sheen. ' Of course you have a right to arrange your own pronounciution, bat give us the same liberty. We at least have tho excuse that our names are 10 or IS centuries old and have hud oppor tunity to grow naturally corrupted in the lapse of time." Chicago Standard. Two binds of Marital Cruelty. Mrs. Maria Cook Ehlurs has begun a nit for separation from John Ehlurs, a wealthy liquor dealer of 2U4 Flushing avenue, Brooklyn. The couple were married 16 months ago. Mr. Ehlers was a widower and twice as old as his bride. Mrs. Ehlers says that she was threatened with death. She says her husband forced her to visit the graves of bis first two wives, New York Press. THE HOLY OFFICE. Function of tha Congrrgntlnn of the In. qulsltlon In the Kternal city. There are two different tribunals at Rome to which is intrusted tho judg ment of books, pamphlets, articles and other writings referred to them as linblo to a chorge of endangering faith mid morals. One of these is tho congregation of the holy office or inquisition, and '.ic other is the congregation of the Index. The very name of the former of these will cause a thrill of horror In the minds of those whose knowledge of the inquisi tion is derived from the calumnies and exaggerations that have been heaped Upon it by its enemies. It is not my business to defend it in my present paper. I would only re mind the reader that it is most unfair to impute to the Roman inquisition tl.e cruelty and injustice of the SpjiiImIi tri bunal, against which the popes again tvi l again protested. The Spanish inq'ii i tion is now happily defunct, and the Roman congregation of tho inquisition alone survives. It is a permanent com mittee chosjn from the cardinalitii::i body and holds its meetings always within the precincts of the Holy City. It was instituted In the year 1.112 1 Panl III, by the constitution beginning with the words, "Licet ub inito," and had for its chief object to arrest the progress of the doctrine of Luther. The congregation of the holy office, t-r Inquisition, holds tho first pluco nmonj Roman congregations. Its members iir:. some dozen cardinals, moro or lees, sc lected by tho pope on account of their knowledge of theology and canon la vi and their skill aud energy in the trans action of ecclesiastical busiuess. It has jurisdiction over a field of greater im portance than any other tribunal what soever, for it has intrusted to it tho guardianship of the purity cf faith mil morals throughout the Christian world. Alone of all the Roman courts it baa for its official president the pope him self, although iu point of fact his muLi tudinons duties rarely permit of hi : presence at its meetings, and his pla-.-t- i ' taken by one of the cardinals chosen 1 him, who bus to report to tho holy f ther the samo evening all that tul:-. j place during its session. Besides the cardinal who acts as p:vi dent, there is a secretary, who is usuall; the senior cardinal preseut: a commi.-v sary, whose busiuess it is to decide wl:-;t questions shall bo referred to the consult ors for their opinion, and who is i 1 ways a Dominican! u promotor five...;, or public prosecutor, who conducts t. case, and an advocutus reoriini or ci . sel for tho defendant, who seeks to cm : : tho suspected writings of the charge i : false doctrine. Iu addition to tho cardinals who coi:. pose tho tribunal there is attached t.i it, as I have said, a number of cou sultors, and of these a certain tmm'..i . are selected, under the name of qim!i ficators, for what is the most dilhYvit and delicate part of tho work intrunti . to them. The consultors inclu'lo (In most celobrated of tho Roman tlii'o'i gians, secular and regular. Niueteentl. Century. Found Bar Duughtar In Tights. An indignant mother who saw her 18-year-old daughter clad in gorgeons tights practicing a somersault has noti fied the police of a peculiar state of things. 8he says not only her daughter but a number of other girls of that age have been engaged to form a theatrical combination. These damsels, it ap pears, meet for rehearsals in barns and are under the instruction of a couple of men. They intend to make a tour of the small towns of the state. All wear tights, it seems, and this one girl's mam ma wss shocked at her daughter's ap pearance. The police are looking for the men who are training the tender maidens to feel at home in the skinless costume. Reading (Pa.) Dispatch. And Maphlsto Smllad. Some years ago, when Irving was play ing "Faust" at the Lyceum, in the part of Mephistopheles, he descended through a trapdoor in a cloud of flame. While doing so the trap jammed for some rea son, and a voice from the "gods" im mediately called onti "Hurrah, boysl Hull's fulll There's no room for us!" Mephisto was forced to smile. Ban Francisco Argonaut. - Tha A than of tha South. And now comes the Memphis Com mercial proclaiming that Memphis it the "Athens of the south." It is a lit tle late in filing its claim, but we trust that it will be duly considered. There ,is not a city or town in the whole southern country, scarcely a village or haiulut, that can boast of a high school, an acadomy, a college or a university, a reading club or a literary society, that does not boast of being the "Athens of the south." Meanwhile Knoxville continues to be the "Athens of the south. "Knoxville Tribune. Failarowskl's Enduranca. M. Pudorowski, the night bofore a re cital iu London, practiced all night, or, at least, until 8:110 a. in. .Tho morn ing after tha rod tal.lio went to Chelten ham, where lie played tho samo after noon before a denncly packed' audience. Ho exhibited no futiguo. Now York Sun. A Tcgntnriniu "I thought VOll Worn a vnm.ti,!.... o.. still you are eating roast mutton I" "Yes, bnt I am only an indirect veg etarian that is in aav I nnl oa tv. . Tv mvmj , m J V M . MiV flesh of mob animals as live on vege- wuie aiei. neuejournal. BELIEVERS IN WITCHCRAFT. Realdonts of an Ohio Vlllaga Hold Mr. Culp Culpahla For Mysterious lulngs. The residents of Hurt's Corners, a (arming community 10 miles east of this city, are agog over the doiugs of a witch. Several du r.o s ycz.ig farm er mimed Howard Hughes dug u well upon a small hill, and when ho had got to what be believed to bo a sufficient depth, much to his surprise, no water appeared, fie cogitated upon tho mat ter, and being a firm believer iu witches and hobgoblins concluded that somo person hud cust a spell upon his land. Within the limits of this city lives a Dr. Hoff, an octogenarian, who deals iu herbs and claims supernatural powers. To this strange old man Hughes repair ed and hired him to go down to his place and locate the trouble. Hoff wont with him, and building a lire threw some of his powders into it, and while the fire burned consulted tha spirits through a powwow performance. Ha told Hughes that tha absence of water In his well was due to a neighbor aumed Culp, who was a wl-Jrd, with a poisonous breath aud an evil eye, aud that the well would remain dry until he (Culp) was dead. Since tho old witch doctor revealed this startling in formation the Hughes and u dozen other families who believe iu witchcraft fcvavo ceased nil Intercourse with Culp and avoid bim as they would tho evil one. The affair has caused such a stir that tho matter resolved Itm-lf into u special meeting held iu tho Methodist church of the village, to which all tlu au peoplo belong. The Rev. J. E. Hollister of this city, the pastor of tho church, pie sidud aud called upon Hughes aud bis iollowers to disavow witchcraft nnd treat Culp ns a brother or leave the church. This they refused to do. and a church trial will result. Last spring Miss Sadie Loop, n mem ber of the church, was expelled nt a church trial for asserting that Culp wns a wizutd, and it wua thought at thut time that the ridiculous superstition had been stumped out. Alliance (O.) Cor. Chicago Herald. Artist and Amataar. A critic, who was recently usked to define the line between artist and ama teur, stated that an amateur's sketches were labored und finished up to invito favorable criticism, while tho artist's sketches were broad und unfinished, suggesting much to himself only. Could not the dividing lino bo better defined? Tho amount of time spent on a sketch often depends upon opportu nity. When the time is not needed else where, one quito able to sketch in the boldest, most rapid style muy prefer to go ou and produce a picture, trusting to the inspiration of the present ruther than of the future, and to vision rather than memory. If something greater is to be subsequently developed from the work, it will be no less suggestive be cuuxo of its finished character. It may not be easy to define tho divid ing line between artist and amateurs, but it is easy to point out a well recog nized ono that is identical with it the ono that is drawn between poets and mero writers of verse. Art Amateur. ' The Right Kind. i Tho following story, told of the I a to Senator Stanford, is characteristic of the man. He was always a cheerful giver, but preferred paying for work to emp tying his purse. One day ho found a dilapidated cub on tho avenue, with a half clad mun upon the scat. "Why are you standing here in the cold?" "I B'pects it's 'cause I'ze got too shabby, sir," said the man. "Do you believe that horse could carry me to tho capi tol?" inquired Stanford. "Yes, sir." "Try it, then," was the response. And, . all that winter the man who owned tho finest horses in America jogged along behind the rusty steed. That there was . a chnngo in that ioor driver's fortunes by the spring everybody knew. Rum's' Horn. j Ills Religion. 1 John Field, the pianist, was an Irish-' man who studied with an Italian, Clemente, and lived in Russia. Ho loved cbampngne and washed his own clothes. When be was dying, somo ono sent for a priest, who went to his bed aidoand whispered, "Are yon a Catb olio or a Protestant?" - The dying man, revived sufficiently to sigh out: "Net-, ther. Iain a pianist," and immediate ly expired. Philadelphia Press. The most expensive royal regalias in the world are those of the mahurajuh of Baroda, India. First comes a gorgeous collur containing 000 diumonds, ar ranged in five rows, some as large as walnuts. Top and bottom rows of emeralds of equal size relievo the luster of the diamonds. ' ' Chief Otan, the orang-outang from, tho Javanese village in tho Midway, has arrived at tho Philadelphia zoo, Otan .is used to" first class Juva, cotleo. A cup presented bim from the eating station at Altoonu wus declined. Otan knows railroad coffee. Borax is au excellent wo-shing pow der. Tho women of Belgium and Holr luiul aro noted for their snowy linen. They attain this desired result by the nso of borax a huudful to 10 gulluus o wuter. i Tho roast beef of old England, It ap. pears from the report of a committee of the house of lords, is apt to be best when it is Anioricun raised.