mm VOLUME 2. I.KYN0LRSV1LLE, PENN'A., AVE I N KS I )A Y F E I H UA It Y II, 1U9I. NWIHEK li'X -Bell's- REMARKABLE SPECIAL OFFERS Men's and Boos' Glotlilnn. Two Wonderful Special Oiler that will make it eany for any man to treat liinwlf to a Suit or Overcoat. $IO.OO for CHOICE Men's fine double breast ed Cheviot and CaPHinier 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. $1,000 von CHOICE Men's celebrat ed Cans trobe twilled Melton at id Kersey Overcoats, reg ular price is 12. r0, 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 l.r, now 10.00. BOYS' CLOTHING. Twto surprising bargains which should induce every mother of a boy to make a bee line for HULL'S. $2.00 for Choice. Buy good quality double breasted suits in new, dark designs for 2. Boys' elegant and . fashionable f eeber suits with broad collar for 2. Long cut double breasted overcoats with deep cape for $2.50. $5.00 for Choice. 50 B.Seelig&Co. 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. CLOSED ! World's Fair Exhibition at Chicago. t OPEN ! Our Great Shirt Exhibi tion. One dollar each. No fare or hotel bills here, at BELL'S. HATS! If you liatn't any hat, and you hat to buy a hat, hatn't you better buy a hat from us, THE -ONLY - IIATTEIt. Bkll's. TIESI TIES! TIES! Tied or Untied, 50c. at THE LION PATH. t dnrr not honk lh f'tn1 In very dark The trr?' Mir unftly, nnl tlir Mink! The long irrnm rnili"snml t lit OiuknpmmuTM Porr llirrn brynnri There' oomelhliiu crept across the road Just mwl Ami you woiilil Imve tneffo? Oo there through that llveclarknoM hldeoiifl With fit Ir of cmtiehltitt forms tlmt watt to kill? Ah, lookl He there nnd tlu-ru and there attain Great yi-Hmv fflav ) Hoe In the Rrnttmll hook I Now Ihe elondn urn llifhli-r, I can we The long, hIow lnlilhic of the winewy lull And the net quiver nf -tt rntifr Jaw tlmt wait. f)o there? Not II Who darew to go who sees t?o perfectly the Hon In the path? Conies one who dure. Afraid at Aral, yet bound On such hhrh errand an no frar could at ay. Forth Koes lie, with the Hunt In hi path. And then Ho dared a death of annny Outnumltered buttle with the klrm of heaatai hone; tniKKle In the horror uf the nluht; Dainl and went forth to meet- O ye who fear! Finding an empty road and nothing there A wide, barn coin in on road, with homely field And fence and the dunty roadside treen Pome unit tin kittens nmyln In the urn op. Charlotte lYrkins Htetuon In IKmton Worn ns Journal. THE END OF RAMADAN GRAPHIC ACCOUNT OF THE CLOSE OF THE FORTY DAYS' FAST. A Gun IIokiiisiI Prom til. Citadel at the lleglnnlng and Kittling uf the lilt The Legend Upon Which the Vncomfortnhle Cu.tom 1. ltaaed. Wewt In tho tout's shadow, with our faces turned toward Cairo. There were three of ns, tho sheik of tho neighbor iti? village, Ahmed Biid 1. The clear ontllno of the Mokhnttan hills was hid den in the thick mint generated by the heat; the rity was n gray blur against the black Hided of the. uplands. Below us, nmid the sugar cane, the fulliihin worked with an affectation of energy. Bonietimes n voice came to us mellowed by distance; sometimes tho sail of a vessel glided phantom wiso over the bluo ribbon of water that twined along tho valley toward Alexandria and the delta. A month before 1 had seen tho mes sengers leave tho city and strike into tho desert. Twenty-four hours later, dusty and hot, they returned, bearing news. The new moon hail appeared, and tho fast was proclaimed. At mid night a gun boomed from the citadel, and suddenly (ho merry noises of the '.recti were stilled. Next day 1 wandered through tho ba zaars, but recived no invitation to drink coffee with my friends, Pipcsnud cigarettes wero not offered to me. A kind of half sleep had fallen on every body, and 1 hardly dared speak to any one. In tho intervals between their burciiuings tho merchants read tho Ko rimi'i grayed, counting their beads with nimble lingers, head bent downward. Tho burgnlningH, too, wero n poor shad ow of tlio exciting scenes I loved. The pu: chaser was always languid and the vendor inort, unintcreKtod. As tho afternoon woro on a look of fntiguo, often of real pain, gloomed on tho usually genial faces. It was hot, so hot. Tho dim beat furiously on tho vhito walls and roads; tho cruel Kom pion whirled tho dust through tho streets and dried tho bkin mid lis. But tho cry of tho water carrier was not raised; no ln)j3 ottered bunches of juicy fruit to tho sufferers. Kamaduti had come with all Its toirors, and for tho lovo of Ood and his apostle must they bo borno, if not cheerfully, nt any rate sternly and itianfnlly. One hour bohire sunsot lifo seemed to stir again in 'ho veins. Tho bakeries wctu crowded; tlio (ires blazed under tho ovens; n smell of cooking stole over tho city. Women squatted at intervals along Mm streets with cakes and fruit and bottles of water spread before tlieiu. Little groups gathered round them, im patient, expectant. Tbe smokers took out their pipes or cigarettes and stood waiting for the signal, mutch in hand. Suddenly tlio sun felt, and tho gun thundered from the citadol. The city awoke; tho population began to eat; the women were busy disposing of thoir goods. For 40 day these things wero, and now vu8 come the closing day of the fast, and 1 sat with my friends on tho sand, gazing toward tho citadel till the gun showed fire for the last tiine, AH tho afternoon envious glnncea bad been cast ut mo as I cheerfully dis obeyed the prophet's orders. Ahmed, 1 think, had tbe sheik not been with mo, would have nioked a cigarette, bnt at it was be lay beside me and sulked. The sheik was too old to behave thus, lie was quiot and spoko slowly, but he tried bravely to conceal all signs of dis comfort. Ahmed's annoyance may bo accounted for in this way. IIo declared to me that Mohammed fasted one day in tho month Katuadan, but on which day was uncertain, and therefore tho the ologiuus decreed a 40 days' fust that they might bo snre of fasting the same day as tho prophet. I do not think Ah mod believes this legend, though he vouches vehemently for its truth. To while away tho timo I asked the sheik to tell mo about tho visit of the czarowitz. But tlio long alatiuonce made hint miublo to talk at any length, and oven this his favorite story he told me briefly in a couple of bald aen touces, though ho responded gently: "I mot him as one prince meets another, tie told mo be owned many villagoa; that ha was sheik over half the world. It may be as they hove said." "And what did he soy to you?" I queried. "He greeted Inn courteously and took me by tbe hand. This ring that 1 wear Is his gift." As he spoko ho showed me, without brido, a sapphire of great sizo and beauty. Then bo relapsed Into silence, and 1 amused myself by picturing the event in my mind. 1 would that I had seen that meeting between tho heir of the holy Russian empire mid the simple Arab chief. Looking Into his grave gray eyes and at his tall, slight figure, the broad shoulders not yet bent, though the white beard he was stroking told of many years of life, and in spite of his tattered bine robe, 1 easily conceived how he had been treated courteously s became n prince. Before the setting sun touched the horizon a boy from the villago brought a large plate of food and a bottle of wa ter and set them before ns. "The sig nal." 1 cried as a white pnfl of smoke rolled nwayfroin thecitadal walls, and at tho snine instant the sun sank behind tho desert. The sheik seized the bottle of water and drank long and eagerly. When bis thirst was appeased, ho belched loudly and handed tho bottle to Ahmed, who drank eagerly, too, not omitting the curious after grace. Then they devoured the food vora ciously, the old man beckoning me to join. After we had eaten we sat and talked far into the night under the golden stars. The distant city gleamed fairylike with myriad lamps, and the murmur of its thousand voices came to ns tt rough the silent air. Kamadan was dead. The fast was over and the feast begun. Pall Mall Budget. Explaining- a Prevalent Belief. A superstition very prevalent among workingmen is the injiiiious effect sup posed to be exeicised by the sun's rays falling upon their tools. Tho best tools made for use In tropical countries are subjected to exactly the same amount of tempering ns those made for borne nse, although they aro to be used un der a greater heat. A heat greater than any which reaches this earth from the sun would be re quired to affect them. No metallic or other matter Is equal ly susceptible to beat as tho sand uf which tho soil of tho desert ot Heinde, in India, is composed. It has been found heated by tho sun to almost 300 degrees F. But to affect the temper of steel more than double this temperature is required. In tlio steel used for a lancet tho temperature of tlio metal must be brought to 480 degrees, In ru zorsand surgical instruments to 4 .10 do glees, in penknives to 470 degrees, in scissors ami chisels to 411(1 degrees, in axis, planes nnd pocketknives to ft 10 degrees, in table knives and large shears to 580 degrees, in swords and watch springs to 550 degrees, in lino saws anil augers to 5110 degrees and for band and pit saws to (IU0 degrees, or to three times the greatest beat of tlio sun felt on this earth. At 800 to U.'iO degrees soft steel and iron becomoinnch deteriorated in power to resist perenssivo action nnd strain, bnt their temperature can never bo raised to such n degreo ns this by tho hen t of the snu. Now York Herald. Ittmieaii and the Hog. Many eccentricities aro pardoned In musical geniuses, especially by those who do not suffer from them. I'll fortu nately tho object of n musician's wrath is qnito apt to be nnablo to appreciate why ho has offended. Ouo can fancy tho possessor of the nn trained voice who figures in tho fol lowing story thinking bard things of tho celebruted composer Knmcnu. Ouo day Kaiuean whilo calling on a lady fixed a stern glanco on a little dog who sat in her lap and was barking good naturedly. Suddenly Kameau seized the poor littlo fellow and threw him out ot the window. "What is the matter?" asked his hostess, much alarmed. "He barked false!" said Rameau in dignantly. Youth's Companion. An Oversight. "See here," said satan to bis friend Beelzebub, "we have overreached our selves. You insisted that we must put into the brain of mini to invent instru ments for liis destruction, and we have so done. Man has inado gatling guns, mitrailleuse, chain shot, giant powder, dynamite every day he effects some new combination which insures greater destructiveness." "Well, then," said Beolzobub, "all is well." "What n fool you are!" sneered sa tan, with asperity. "Don't you see that we have made war so costly that these manikins won't fight?" "Ah," said Beelzebub in despair, "why didn't I refloct that tbeso people are always calculating expenses." Kulo Fluid's Washington. littler and Father Byan. When General Butler was in com mand at Now Orleans during the rebel lion, he was informed that Father Ryan, priest and poet, had been expressing rebellious sentiments and had suid he would oven refuse to bold funeral serv ices for a deud Yankee General Butler lent for him in haste and began round ly scolding him for expressing such un-Christiuu uud rebellious sentiments. "General," the wily priest answered, "you have been misinformed. I would be pleased to conduct funeral servicea for ull the Yankee officers and men in New Orleans. "San Francisco Argonaut. THOMA9 GODBEPRAISED. A Man Who fleam That t'ernllnr Name Trlla Hnw It Originated. The register of the Girard House re cently recorded the arrival In the city of Thomas Godliepraised of Barrow-in-Furness, England. Being approncl.ed upon the subject of tlio oddity of his surname, Mr. GoillM'prnised said: "Yes, I suppose tho name does sound very odd to Americans, although snrh names are not altogether nmisnnl in England and especially in Lancashire, which was a stronghold of the Round heads or Puritans in Cromwell's timo. My home Is in Barrow-in-Furness, which Is in Lancashire. My ancestors prior to Cromwell's time were all royalists. The family name was Elliot. A younger son renounced the religions faith and politi cal opinions of his forefathers and lie came Puritan. As was usual in such cases he abjured his carnal name of Charles Elliot and took the inspired one of Ezekiel Godbepraised. "There is quite a romance connected with this ancestor of mine. He fell in love with the only daughter of a Colonel Fielding in the Cavaliers' army, and not being able to obtain her father's consent to their marriage Ezekiel abducted her and for two years kept her hidden in a dreary honse that stood near the littlo town of Formby, where a son was born. After a battle a little to the sonth of the River Mersey between the Cavaliers and Ronndhends her brothers discovered her and carried her off to old Fnrness abbey. In the hurry the child was left behind, but as a result of the mother's pleading one of the brothers returned to Formby to get it. "In the meantime Ezekiel had discov ered his loss and removed the child. Then the followed the brother back to Fnrness abbey, bnt arrived too late. The brother and sister had set sail from Bar row beach for tlio isle of Man. A storm came up, and Ezekiel arrived just in time to see the boat founder. He returned to hischild more bitter against the royalists than ever and brought the child np with the same sentiments. "At the close of the war Ezekiel adopt ed the trade of a weaver and settled in Barrow-in-Fnrncss. Thus tho name was perpetuated, the stern commands of the father forbidding tho son to throw off tho fanatical nickname when tlio heat of Pu ritanical zeal had given away." Phila delphia Times. The IilfTerent f.MmlntiH. Tho size of London is somewhat in definite, but. may bo said to cover about asquuro mile. The postal district covers an urea of 2."0 square miles. The polico district extends still farther, covering an urea of (W square miles. On the other band, tho parliamentary London is much narrower. It consists of It) bor oughs, of which tho city of London, al though the smallest having f0,iQ3 in habitants in lHSt is represented by four members on account of its commercial and financial importance, while each of the other nine, although larger, is repre sented ouly by two; Westminster, 418; Chelsea, 2."i8,011; Marylebone, 477, 655; Hackney, 803,427; Finsbury, 483, 810; Tower Hamlets, 8111,558; Lambeth, 879,113; Southwalk, 807,1185; Greenwich, 107,083. Put together, these 10 boroughs repre sent only a population of about 8,000,000, and the remainder of the inhabitants of the city lielong to nonmetropolitan elec toral districts. Generally, however, the sizo ot tho city is determined by the area tinder tbe operation of the metropolis local government act, which is also adopted by the registrar general of tho census. According to the definition, Lon don covers an area of 133 square miles, forming parts of tho counties of Middle sex, Hurrey and Kent. Baltimore Amer ican. Coatly Meal. The costliest meal ever served, as fur as history shows, wns a supper given by Aelin VeruH, one of the most lavish of the littter day Roman uristocrats. The supper was ouly intended for a dozen persons, yet its cost was 6,000 sestertia, which would amount to 48,000 in Eng lish money, or nearly a quarter of a mil lion dollars. The celebrated feast given by Vitel line a Roman emperor of those degen erate days, to his brother Lucius cost a fraction over $300,000. Luetonius says that this buuquet consisted of 3,000 dif ferent dishes of fish and 7.000 different fowls, besides other courses in propor tion. Vitellins, fortunately for the world, did not reign very long; other wise the game preserves of Libya, Spain and Britain would have been exhausted. It may not lie out of place to mention here that it is recorded as a curious point of history that a single dish on the table of the Emperor Huliogabulus was worth $300,000. St. Louis Globe-Democrat. The Llghta Went Out. Hid royal highness the Priuceof Wales was present at a noble lord's once to gether with all fashionable London, and after dinner the best musicians, both vocul uud instrumental, were prepuring to displuy their talent, when suddenly out went the light, and performers and audience were left in total darkness. As the light was electric and was supplied from a private engine which hnd chosen this inopportune moment to go com pletely wrong, there was nothing for tho giver of the feast to do but to collect ull the available bedroom candlesticks and empty bottles and stick caudles all over the place. The effect was most comical and seemed to cause amusement to every body but the host, San Francisco Argonaut. SHADES OF BLACK SKIN. A Jouriip From the Land of Palefaces and lliirk Agnln. A familiar human example will make this general mnddliiiess and uncertainty of nature realizable to every one. If we see a negro in the streets of London, we immediately recognize the broad differ ence that marks him off from tlio com mon mass of white men by whom he is surroundifi. But that of conrxeis only because w take an individual instance. We say quite dogmatically: "This man Is black, thick lipped, flat nosed. I call him a negro. These other men are white, thin lipped, sharp nosed. I call them Eu ropeans." yuite so. That is true relatively to the small area and restricted number of eases you have then and there examined. But now suppose yon go on to the Son dan and start from thence down tho Nile through Nubia to Alexandria. At first on your way yon would see few but thoroughly negroid faces black skins, thick lips, flat noses, etc., according to sample. As you moved northward into Egypt, however, yon would soon begin ' to find that, while the skin remained an black or nearly aa black as ever, the fea tures were tending slowly on the aver age to Eiiropeanize. Yet there would be nowhere a spot where you could say definitely, "Here I leave behind me the Nubian type and ar rive at the Egyptian." Never even could yon pick out three or four men quite cer tainly from a group on some riverside wharf overshadowed by donm palms nd say on the evidence of skin and fea tures alone, "These men are Soudanese, nd the remainder are Nubians." Then, if yon went on still through Si nai and Palestine the regular eastern tour you would find at each step the tints getting lighter and the faces mora Semitic. Passing, farther through Con stantinople, Athens, sonth Italy, yon wonld observe at each change a lighter complexion and more Enropean style, till at last, as you crossed Provence and approached central France, yon wonld arrive pretty well at the familiar Eng lish type of face and feature. Cornbill Magazine. "Curlnns Womiin." He was showing them the various pic tures hanging on the wall. They wero gems, for he really had excellent tasto in urt. They were choice bits of land scape, lovely ideals of humanity, studies of still life and hints from the impres sionist school. Tho ladies viewed each with admiration, bnt none with especial interest nntil they cauio to a hnge frame with its face turned toward tho wall. Immediately they wero nil interest. "What is that?" naked one of tho la dies. Tho yonr.g man assumed an nir of mystery and shook his head as though ho would like to tell, but could not. "Aren't you going to let us seo it?" said one in surprise. "I'm sorry, but yon can't," began be. "But, really, we'd liko moro to see that than any of tho others. Wouldn't we, girls?" The girls said they would. "Well," said the exhibitor, "if yon must see it, I suppose you must." The young ladies conjured up all kinds of beautiful visions as they looked with expectancy on the mysterious back of the frame. "It is called 'Curious Woman,"' said he. Of course that only increased tho zeal. Finally ho turned tho frame nnd disclosed a mirror. Woro tho young ladies disappointed? Philadelphia Pres Where Was O'i'lymiT A judge of the Massachusetts superior court has a habit of allowing his voice to drop so low that his words can with difficulty bo heard. Tho story is told that he was sentencing a prisoner at Lawrence cno time when a man in the courtroom shouted: "Speak louder, your honor! Speak up!" "Send that man out of the courtroom, Mr. Officer!" said tho judge. The order waa obeyed, and the pro ceedings went on. "Call the next case," said the judge when he had finished with the prisoner In whose case the interruption had oc curred. "Terence O'FlynnI" called the clerk, but Mr. O'Flynn did not rise. Tho crier called bim, but there was no answer, and tbe officers of the court began to look about. It was discovered that Prisoner O'Flynn had disappeared, and his absence could not be accounted for until some one said: "May it please the court, Terence O'Flynn waa the man you just sent ont for shouting to the judge to speak up." Youth'a Companion. He Had Ilia Beward. It was in a large department store that a gilded youth drifted up to the candy counter. "Do you know," he said to the pretty young woman in churge, "if I were the proprietor of this establishment I should dismiss you?" "Why?" she usked iiidignautly, "In order to give the candy u chance, " he answered. And she gave him 1 pounds of 75 cent sundy for 50 cents. Detroit Froe Proas, A combined photogruphio and visuut telescope has been finished and placed in position for Dr. Junseu at Meudon. The two lenses were made by the ilonry Bros, of tho Paris observatory, and the mounting by Guuthier of Paris. Tho men in thnPiiiniinv, Dui...n vHiavwewu B"Jll4I,UiQUla In South Africa outnumber the women' 07 m 10 i, ana spinsters are rare. j