M VOLUME 2. HEYN0LDSV1LLE, l'ENN'A., WEDNESDAY AUGUST 30, 1893. NUMBER 16. The Unparalleled SUCCESS! -Of our sales for Men's and Is due wholly to the fact that we give you one hundred cents' worth of val ue. Why does everyone nay that Bells are always do ing something ? Be cause we have the Goods and give you Good, New, Fresh Goods always. No old, second hand stuff on our counters We have a few more . MEN'S we are selling for the sum of $7, 7.50 and $8.50, actual values $10, $12, and $14, so if you care to secure one of these Gems and at the same time save $3 to $5 in cash you will have to come at once. SCHOOL $2. Reduced from $2.50 and $3.00. School will soon commence be in need of new clotheB. We Durable and Stylish Caesimere, sizes 4 to 14, in all different new styles (see above cut) at the unequalled low price of 1 BELL Giotuiers, - Tailors REYNOLDS -o Boy's Suits SUITS SUITS, again and many a boy wil will offer 1,000 Boys' Good Cheviot and Jersey Suits, wo Dollars. BROS , - and - flatters, VILLE, PA. Summer of- $2. THE LEGEND OF EVIL. Thin In tbs sorrowful storv Told when the twllluht full And the monkey wnlk together Holding i-aeli other's lulls: "Onr fnthcrs lived In tho forest! F00IM1 Mople were they. Th-)- went ilnwn to I lie cornlnnd To tench the farmers to plnr. "Our fnthrrs frisked In the millet. Our fathers skliMicd In the wheat, Our fathers hung In the branches, Onr fathers diuu-cd In the street. "Then eniiip the terrible fanners. Nothing of ilny they knew. Only they rauuht our fathers And set them to lnbor tool "Pet them to work In the cornlnnd. With plows and sickles and II si 1st Put them In nmdwalled prisons And cut olT their beautiful tnllsl "Now wocsn wateh our father, ftullen and towed and old, Btonplnu over the millet, Stirring the silly mold. "Driving n, foolish furrow, Mending a muddy yoke, Bleeping In mudwalled prisons, BtvepliiR their food In smoke. "We may not spesk to our fathers, For If the farmers knew They would conio up to the forest And set us to labor tool" This Is the horrible story Told as the twilight falls. As the monkeys walk together Holding each other's tails. Iludynrd Kipling. IT IS A USELESS GIFT. THE VERMIFORM APPENDIX CAUSES SERIOUS TROUBLE. Science Advances to the Ilescue and Khowa the Only Way to Safety A Possibility That the Coming- Man Will He Without That Dangerous Organ. Will the coming man have a vermi form appendix? Who has not heard of that troublesome little pouch in the ab dominal region which nerves no good purpose, but is responsible for thousands of deaths each year? Emmons Dlaine, Senator Hitgan and bnndreds of other persons of prominence had trouble with the vermiform appen dixand they died. Now science is asking in all serious ness whether the vermiform appendix shall be allowed to exist; whether it shall not be removed entirely before it has the opportunity to poison and destroy. Professor U. G. Wilder has said flatly that children should be relioved of the vermiform appendix, just as they are vaccinated. Hut other students in this new field are not yet ready to pronounce in favor of so radical a scheme. Physicians have known for centuries that the vermiform appendix existed, but it was not until 1888 not until five years Bgo that any one of the profession had the daring to make an incision into the abdominal cavity and remove this rank offender against the laws of health. The attack on the vermiform appendix is but five years old, but it is being pros ecuted with remarkable vigor in New York city, where it originated, and tho reason is not far to seek. It is simply be cause physicians find sure that they have evidence that appendicitis, as disease of the vermiform appendix is named, canses more deaths every year thaw consump tion, the long acknowledged chief among fatal diseases. The appendix verniiformis in normal condition is about the size of a load pen cil and about 0 inches long. It is very well shown in a specimen which was re moved at a clinical lecture at the Post graduate Medical school on Jan. 18. This appendix had ulcerated and in creased in size somewhat, but gave a very fair idea of the part. When perfectly normal, it so compares with an ordinary lead pencil that it is most frequently de scribed as like it. It is a pencil that writes only death warranto. Even today very few physicians out side of New York city have any accurate knowledge or appendicitis or would un dertake an operation for the removal of the appendix. So entirely is the discov ery of the disease and the iireper method of treating it an American development of knowledge and practice that among scientists of other countries today ap pendicitis la known as "the American disease." Since the recent discoveries removals of the cause of all the trouble have been very frequent. One general practitioner lias had 48 such cases within a year. Speaking in the light of recent re search, it seems safe to say that appen dicitis is far more prevalent than con sumption, and in just that proportion causes more deaths, the chief difference being that the cause or seat of appendici tis may be removed bodily with success in most cases, and success means restor ation to perfect health. The removal of the vermiform aiwen- dix fat the eurly stages of an attack of appendicitis is now held to be one of the safest of surgical operations, while such an operation, when the case has come to near its lost and fatal stage, is one of the most desperate. The sud case of Senator ' Hagan is one in point. Ee hod long de sired an operation, bnt it bad been de layed until too lute for an assured suc cess. And now, after all theso facts are re cited, recurs tho question of whether the coming man will have a vermiform ap pendix, it is not meant by this to in quire whether the coming man will have his appendix slain lest it slay him. A much wider question is indicated. The number of appendixes removed in this city since the discovery that such an op eration could be safely performed is very great, ail things considered, One gen eral practitioner, not a surgical special 1st, told the representative of The World that he had removed 100 appendixes In two years. Possibly 1,000 appendixes have lieen removed since the first opera tion of this sort in 1888, and most of theso in tho past threo years. W hat follows? If such a rate is to lie maintained, there will soon be a very large proportion of tho people of New York city who have eliminated their vermiform appendixes, and we are glad of it. Will the children of these people be likewise possessed of vermiform appen dixes? Undoubtedly. But should the eliminating process be continued for a few generations, how long would It be before this useless and dangerous, de generate and rudimentary portion of the body is permanently bred out of exist ence? New York World. Hypnotising Witnesses la Court. Dr. J. 8. Wintermute, complainant in 1 141,000 damage suit against James Stin- ion, a Chicago stockman, was accused in ihe United States court of hypnotizing a witness who waa on the stand. Winter mute is said to be able to mesmerize and hypnotize people. Stinson sent him a lot or blooded horses couple of years ago. They were placed 9n Wintermute's farm for breeding pur poses, and now Wintermute has sued Stinson for services and the use of his farm properties. This morning the court denied a motion for a nonsuit, and Btin son, who had engaged able counsel, be gan to introduce his evidence. One of his witnesses "could not re member." He halted and hesitated re peatedly, and finally Stinson told the court the witness was being hypnotized by the complainant, Wintermute. Judge Band ford did not seem to consider the objection seriously. The examination was ordered continued and the witness asked more questions, but he still seemed confused. Again Stinson arose and called the court's attention to the wit ness's mental condition and insisted that he was under a hypnotic spell. Winter mute was observed to be making curi ous passes with his hands in the direc tion of the witness. He was ordered to keep his hands down. Stinson says Wintermute hypnotized persons in his house at Chicago and is positive he had the witness under his influence. Tacoma Cor. Chicago Tribune. An International Episode, An international incident of an un usual and amusiug sort has given inter est to the news of the week from Can ada. Admiral Magnaghi arrived at Montreal with his ship Etna, and as he dropped anchor ho fired a number of guns prescribed by naval etiquette as salute to the flag of a friendly nation. But Montreal has a mayor who does not recognize the kingdom of Italy, and by his orders the salute was not returned. It is understood that he bases his refusal to recognizo King Humbert on the ground that Victor Emanuel wronged the head of the church or wlilcn lie is a faithful member, and that the king of Italy is, therefore, in some way a usurper. The mayor of Montreal is evidently a long way behind the times. But Ad miral Magnaghi is not, and he forthwith telegraphed the Ottawa government, de manding that the prescribed amount of powder be burned in honor of the Italian flag, and intimating that unless this were dono without further offensive de lay he should fuel compelled to resent the Indignity by sailing right away out of the St. Lawrence. Bo the premier at Ottawa ordered the mayor at Montreal to fire tho salute, the admiral is ap peased, and the international incident is closed. Boston Commonwealth. Tho White Cruiser Chicago at Dublin. The stars and stripes are as familiar to Irish eyes as the flag of green, but not often is the symbol of the United States of America seen on an American battle ship in Dublin bay. A warship is re garded as a part of tho territory of the state to which it belongs, and therefore the Chicago may bo looked upon as tho port of the great country in which so many of our people have found a home, and not a few of them have found fume and fortune. It was only natural, there fore, that her advent to our shores should have stirred Irish hearts, and that the flag flying above her should have conjured np visions of battle days when side by side with it was carried the flag of gieen. Ireland gave Barry to the American navy, and the blood of Old Ironsides coursed through the veins of Charles Stewart Pornell, and tho Irish nature would have ceased to be Irish if our warmest affections were not successfully appealed to by the sight of part of the armed force which the genius of Barry helped to create and of the flag under which the grandfather of the Irish leader served and fought. United Ireland. Gentlemen Who Aspire to lie Flunkeys. With the exception of Lord Corring ton (who did very well indeed) the offi cial actors in the ceremonial at the duke's wedding appeared to be very im perfect in their parts, and it is a wonder that no accident took place. It was odd Indeed to see a number of arlstocratio personages walking backward with the appearance of being saturated with tho most slavish servility, but even more grotesque and remarkable were the con stant and profound bowings and scrap ings of all the courtiers. Lord Palinorston once remarked to Lord Dulling, who repeated the saying to Charles Lever, "What a happy arrange ment it is that in an age when onr flun keys aspire to be gentlemen there are gentlemen who ask nothing better than to be flunkeys," and he never said a bet ter thins; T-London Truth, WHY BOOK9 ARE CHEAP. A Machine That Prints and Folds Three Thousand Erery llonr. There are various rumors nnd tales floating about town among those in the business concerning some wonderful ma chinery over on the west side of the city In a certain monstrous bookmaking es tablishment. The "novel machine" is a large web press similar to the kind newspapers are printed on, but arranged to take curved electrotypes of each page of a book in stead nf a single large metal cylinder casting. There are two cylinders, on each of which 144 pages may be screwed, and as the long strip of paper goes Kirough, first one side is printed and then the other, making it possible to print 288 pages at every revolution. The strip of paper, after being carried over rollers which dry the ink, Is cut, folded and brought together in the shape of a small volume, with the edges all trimmed. Ev ery time the great cylinder goes round a novel is printed, folded and trimmed, and 0,000 of these are turned out every hour, while, if it were necessary, 7,000 or 8,000 might be the quota. From the printing press these books are carried to a little machine that looks like a sewing machine, and two wire stitches are taken in the back of each. The stitched volumes are then carried to the covering machine, where they are put side to side in a long feeding trough. At the end of this is a little compartment large enough to take a book, carried on an endless chain running over wheels at each end. Indeed, there are series of little compartments on this chain, and as the chain moves along each one re ceives a book. As the book proceeds a wheel running in a gluepot presses against its back, smearing it with gluo. A little further along there is a pile of covers that comes np at just the right moment, lexving a cover sticking to the gluey back of the book. In this way SO books can be covered every minute. Two hundred and fifty thousand of these paper covered novels are thus turned out every two weeks, and extra editions of 60,000 or so are often worked In lwsides. New York Commer cial Advertiser. The Last English Babbit. The game of the world is decreasing, and as new lands are opened to civiliza tion so it will get less and less. In the struggle for existence, there will be no room for the sportsman. His require ments will grow more modest as time advances, bnt thoy will not be satisfied. The last British wolf was killed in Snth erlandshire about the year 1700 by a man named Poison. Who will be handed down to posterity as tho slayer of the last British rabbit? What a pn tho tie picture might he drawn of the last cock pheas ant! Perhaps some Macatilay of the far distant future may astonish his readers by his account of whut went on in the rural districts of Great Britain in the nineteenth century. He would relate how, owing to the scantiness of the population, men used to shoot partridges and pheasants by the thousand on ground then and for gener ations past the sites of immense towns; telling how the great garden of England, thon mapped out into small tenements, each laboriously and minutely culti vated, with no waste of wood or hedge row, used in those far away years to be furiously ridden over by hundreds of horsemen in pursuit of an animal long since extinct in the land and only known to the curious in old books of natural history. Macmillan's Magazine. ! French Servants and Wealthy Shopkeepers. I The one extravagance of dress of the l French servant irirl lies in havincr her best gown made by a dressmaker instead of making it herself. Hence her corsages always fit her well, and her plain stuff costume nas a degree or style ationc it which she is fully capable of appreciat ing. The ladies of the so called bour geois set the wives and daughters of rich shopkeepers and manufacturers very rarely Indulge in rich fashionable toilets. Mmo. Boucicaut, the foundress of the Bon Marche, was worth millions upon millions. Always arrayed in black silk or satin of excellent quality, but made in the plainest possible style, she looked to the last hour of her life just what she was the greatest and richest shopkeeper in Paris possibly, but still a shopkeeper, and one that never tried to look like anything different. When the daughter of one of these wealthy trades people marries, her trousseau is usually very superb, but the famous masters of the art of dress are seldom or never called upon to exert their inventive tal ents in hor behalf. Lucy Harper in Home Journal. Astouuuing Memories. Horace Vernet is the best example of visual memory, lie could paint a strik ing portrait of a man, life size, after hav ing once looked at his model, Mozart had a great musical memory. Having heard twice the "Miserere" in the Sis tine chapel, he wrote down the full score of it. There are soloists who during 24 hours can pluy the composition of other masters without ever skipping a note. tt. Binet In Kevue des Deux Mondes. Streets Versus Presidents. A little Buffalo miss, when asked by ner sciiooiteucner to name the presi dents of tho United States in order, be gan glibly," Washington, Jefferson, Mad ison, Monroe, Adams, Watson, Emslie" Here she was checked by the teacher, who remarked that she seemed more fa miliar with the streets of her native city than with the presidents of her country. New York Times. Kleetrle Freight Engines. The three electric locomotives being constructed by the General Electric company to haul cars through the Blt railroad tunnel are nearly complied. The machinery is about finished, and the generators are well under way. The locomotives will lie of 1,200 horsepower each and will consist of three separate trucks conded together to form one motor. The weight on drivers will be AX) tons, and the numlier of drivers to each locomotive will be 12. The maxi mum weight of freight trains to be hauled is placed at 1,200 tons, which can be carried at a speed of 15 miles an hour; maximum weight of passenger train, COO tons; speed, 80 miles an hour. Each axle of the locomotive has mount ed upon It a gearless motor flexibly con nected to the driving wheels, and means are provided for controlling tk-e motors and commutating them, so that high ef ficiency can be attained at nearly all rates of speed by running the otors either in series, multiple series or multiple, ac cording to the load to be hauled and speed desired. The current will be sup plied to the motors from the generators by the regular trolley wire, with ground return through the rails. Where switches and sidings occur special arrangements will be made to prevent the trolley by any chance from jumping the wire. Baltimore American. To lie Ttorled Allre. The mind reader, A, J. Seymour, is generally known in Illinois, and his pro posed attempt to be buried and remain In the ground while a crop of barley is grown on his grave creates interest throughout the state. Dr. E. C. Dunn of Rockford has been selected by Sey mour as manager. Dr. Dunn says: "There Is no question that this feat con be performed. I have seen it per formed successfully three times in India, at Allahabad, Delhi and Benares." For several days Seymour will be fed upon a diet of fat and heat producing food. He will then throw himself into a cataleptic state, the lungs will le filled with pure air to their fullest capacity and the tongue placed back and partially down the throat in such a manner as to completely close the aperture to the lungs. The nose, eyes and ears will be hermetically sealed with wax. After parafflne has been spread over the entire body to close the pores it will be ready for burial. The body will be put into an extra large casket. This will be placed inside another, Bud both will be perforated In order that if any poisonous gases exude from the body they mny make their escttpe and be ab sorbed by tho soil. The interment is to be made in a clay soil. An Old Carpet Worth 818,1100. The longer a carpet is used in tho coiners' department at the United States mint the more it is worth. Wear and tear do not diminish its value. Yester day a thick woolen carpet that has been on tho coiners' floor for seven years was taken up and carefully cremated. The precious ashes were scrupulously gath ered together, as if they were the relics of some departed saint, and by an elab orate refining process the government recovered 279 ounces of gold, worth over $.1,000. The metal had been deposited there by tho infinitesimal abrasions and disintegrations of the yellow metal while being converted from bullion into coin. Even the heavy gloves of the men who handle bullion are incinerated, and tho gold is brought back to Uncle Sam's cof fers. Even the smoke from the furnaces used for melting the metal la made to redeliver the treasure with which it is trying to escape, and from the soot in the chimney cunning little bars of the yellow stuff are secured. San Francisco Examiner. The Energetic Camera Fiend. For several days an enterprising pho- -tographor from Kansas has had a masked camera so arranged in a tent at the main crossing into the Cherokee Strip that he can take a negative of everybody pass ing without his knowledge. As the department holds that every person who now goes upon the strip is a "sooner" and loses his right to take land there, these negatives will become very valuable evi dence against those going in now to hunt out good claims, and the owner of them can command a good price from each subject to have his negative destroyed, or can sell the same to contestors or the government attorneys employed to hunt up evidence against perjurers. Guthrie Cor. Chicago Herald. A Clock That Registers the Tide. The chamber of commerce of Rouea has erected a clock tower which gives the time on three sides and the height of the tide on the fourth, namely, that front ing the harbor. The tide indicator con sists essentially of a float, which, by means of a cord and counter weight huag on a drum, actuates a series of shafts with bevel wheel gearing and moves a hand or pointer on a dial like that of a clock, marked with the necessary figures to show the level of the tide. The dials are of opal gloss and are illuminated at night. The clock has an apparatus for distributing the time to other clocks in Rouen and also for unifying the time after the method adopted in Pari. London Globe. A Siamese Statu of lluddha. The reclining statue of Buddha in the Temple of the Sleeping Idol at Bangkok is 160 feet long, made of brick and cov ered with gold. The soles of the foot are 18 feet long and are inlaid with mother of pearl in designs representing flowers and fruits. Philadelphia Press,