ffje VOLUME 2. REYXOLDSV1LLE, PEXN'A., WEDNESDAY OCTOItER 25, 1893. NUMBER 21. The Unparalleled SUCCESS! o Of our sales for s and Men' Is due w holly to the fact that we give yon one hundred cents' worth of val ue. Why does everyone say 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 r- k 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 again and many a boy will be in need of new clothes. We will offer 1,000 Boys' Good, Durable and Stylish Cassimere, Cheviot and Jersey Suits, sizes 4 to 14, in all different new styles (see above cut) at the unequalled low price of Two Dollars. BELL BROS., Clothiers. - Tailors - and - Hatters, REYNOLDSVILLE, PA. Summer of o Boy's Suits SUITS SUITS, BESIDE THE BAY OF MONTEREY. Beside the bay of Monterey, When morn Is on the mountain, What Joy to hear and know not fear, The cry of seaborn fountains! Across the hay of Monterey The ilea tog, thinly drilling. The land reveal or shore conceals. Soft scenes, like magto, shining. Beside the bay of Monterey How sweet to walk at even, When softened dyes from sunset skies Steal np the sapphire heavenl Along the reach of rocky beach Oh. Joy It Is to follow, Where blooms the sea anemone In every waveworn hollow. On Riant rock that fronts the shock The spray wet grasses glisten. Where lircnks the wave on clifT and cat The flowers bend and listen. t count the years by all my tears And all life's stormy weather, r Since bv the bay of Monterey We wandered, love, together. I walk along the changing shore. Oh, sad and strange It teems! And if yon hear the billows roar. You hear them but in dreams. For you have slept now many a day Upon the shore of Monterey. Sarah L. Stlllwell in Overland Monthly. THE SIAMESE HAREM. A COMPLETE CITY WHEREIN WOM AN'S REIGN 13 ABSOLUTE. Its Government, Amusement and Ilo manees The Elopement ofalteantlful Princess Leads to a Trial For Witchcraft. A Slave's Herole Devotion. Extremely interesting nre the stories of bare m life in Slam told by Mrs. A. H. Leonowens, an English woman who spent six years at the courts of the late king. She was employed as a governess for the king's children, 05 in number, the present king being one of her best pupils. Her description of the city of Nang Harm, or Veiled Women, is full of interest. The 11,000 inhabitants of this city, which is inclosed by the inner of two parallel wy Is around the royal palace, are all women and children. No man, save the king and the priests, dare ever enter its precincts. Here live the royal princesses, the wives, concubines and femalo relatives of the king, with their numerous slaves and attendants. Connecting the city with the two pal aces are covered entrances for the wom en. At the end of each of these passages is a bas-relief representing the head of a sphynx with a sword through his mouth and bearing this inscription, "Better that a sword be thrust through thy month than that thou utter a word against him who ruleth on high." Not far off are the barracks of the amazons, the women's hall of justice and the dungeons, where female justices daily administer justice to the inhabitants of this woman's city. There is also a temple, a gymnasium and a theater, where the great ladies as semble in the afternoon to gossip, play games or watch the dancing girls. In this city live also the mechanical slaves, who ply their trades for the benefit of their mistresses. It is, in fact, a city. It has its own laws, its judges, police, guards, prisons, executioners, markets, merchants, brokers, teachers and me chanics. Every function is exercised by women and by women only. The women of the harem amuse them selves in the early and late hours of the day by gathering flowers in the palace gardens, feeding the birds and gold fishes, twining garlands for the heads of the children, listening to reading by slaves and especially in bathing. When the heat is not oppressive, they plunge into the pretty, retired lakes, swimming and diving like flocks of brown water fowl. They play at chess, cards and dice, and some of them are decidedly skillful. Mrs. Leonowens describes a trial for witchcraft which occurred while she was at the palace. It seems that daring the king's absence a beautiful princess disappeared from the harem, and in her place remained only a deaf and dumb slave girl. The day of the trial three women, half stupefied by the foul air of the damp cell in which they had been imprisoned, were conducted to the great court hall of the temple, where the trial for witchcraft was to take place, A pro cession of astrologers, wizards and witches, who receive handsome salaries from the king, filed into the temple and took their places. Then came the chief judge of the su preme court and his secretary to report the trial to the king. The prisoners, when brought in, proved to be May Peah, who was the deaf and dumb changeling, and the two handmaidens of the princess. They were guarded by 60 amazons. The crowd, who looked upon May-Peah as a veritable witch, was breathless with expectation. Conch shells were now blown to summon the holy man of the woods, who soon ap peared on the opposite bank of the river, plunged into it and came and took his place beside the prisoners. This strange mortal, who lived the life of an orang on tang, bad a remarkably fine, sensitive face and was always called to aid the court in its spiritual examinations. At the command of the judge the two amazons who were on duty on the night of the abduction testified that a tail, dark figure, with a dagger in one band and a ponderous bunch of keys in the other, bad entered the ball They saw her go to the cell of the princess, open it with one of the mysterious keys and lead her forth. As they were paralyzed and unable to move from the spot, the strange figure reappeared, passed by them quickly into the cell and closed the door. To the questions of the wizards May-Peah returned no answer. At a signal an alarm gong was struck immediately behind her, and being tak en by surprise she turned to see whence the sound came. The wily judges then shouted, "It is plain that you can speak, for you are not deaf." She was forth with condemned to all the tortures of the rack. The holy man of the woods on bearing this uttered a wild cry of "Yah" (forbear) and declared that she was powerless to speak because under the in fluence of witchcraft. One of the wise women suggested that some magio water should be poured into her mouth. On opening it they fell back with horror and cried: "Brahmat Brahma! An evil fiend has torn out her tongue." Immediately the unhappy woman be camo the object of pity and even adora tion. The ceremony of exorcism was gone through, and she and her compan ions were fully acquitted of any com plicity with the devil, each receiving a sum of money and being set at liberty. May-Peah's friends afterward told Mrs. Leonowens that it was she who had terrified the amazons, released the princess and led her to a boat in which were the lover prince and two friends. As there was not room for all, May-Peah refused to leave the companions of her beloved mistress, and, full of terror lest by the dreadful torture which she knew awaited her she might be forced to be tray those who were dearer to her than ber own life, she with one stroke of her dagger deprived herself of the power of ever uttering an intelligible sound. Novel Stage Effects. Some new scientific stage effects vc; introduced into a recent performance i Wagner's "Die Walknre" at the Ur;itil Opera House, Paris. The scene where the sons of Wot an, mounted on steed and brandishing their lances, are seen in the clouds is described as very realis tic. The foreground is wild and rocky, and the clouds are seen to send ikyi ss the sky. This effect is produced by i o jecting the image of a cloudy sky by nil electric lantern on a curtain of trmi' lu cent blue cloth. The continuous movement of the clouds for half an hour is produced by painting them on the edge of the disk of glass 13 inches in diameter and rotating the edge past the lens of the lantern. Three lanterns are employed to blend the clouds. The wild cavalcade of Wo tan's heroes is produced by a line of mo chanical horses, full sized and carrying real performers. They are supported on a scaffold and drawn by means of a ca ble across the scene at a suitable eleva tion. The mounted men are strongly illuminated by the electrio light, and thus rendered visible through the trans lucent curtain representing the heavens. Tho scene terminates by a conflagra tion in which great flames run along the rocks, while thick fumes, reddened by Bengal fire, Bpread through tho atmos phere. The flames are due to fulminat ing cotton placed in advance on the rocks and lit by the machinists. Lyco podium powder is also blown through holes in the stago, Weird cloud effects are produced by steam. Exchange. A Sad Awakening. In one of Theodore Hook's stories the bridegroom, departing with bis bride for their honeymoon, is disturbed by a continual tapping on the floor of the post chaise. It begins to bother him ex ceedingly, "What the deuce is that noise?" at lost ho mutters. "It is noth ing, darling," answers the bride sweet ly. "It is only my wooden leg." Only that, and nothing more. She had got accustomed to it from long use, but the information put him out exceedingly and cansed a coolness which was perma nent. Argonaut. The Duchess of Cleveland. The aged Duchess of Cleveland, the mother of Lord Rosebery, who is one of the last, if not the last, of the surviving ladies who officiated as bridesmaids to the queen at her majesty's marriage over 68 years ago, is a lady of great activity of mind and body. She is just about to set out on a journey to South Africa. London Queen. The greatest naval review of modern times was by Queen Victoria in 1864, at the beginning of the Crimean war. The Beet extended in an unbroken line for five miles and comprised 800 men-of-war, with twice that number of store and supply ships. The fleet was manned by 40,000 seamen. It has been computed that in a single subio foot of the ether which fills all pace there are locked up 10,000 foot tons of energy which has hitherto es caped notice. To unlock this boundless Itore and subdue it to the service of man Is a task that awaits the electrician of the future. It is an old belief of native Hawaliuns that the spirits of their warrior chiefs Inhabit after death the bodies of their favorite horses. There is a fine white Italllon in Honolulu in which, it is pop ularly believed, lives the spirit of Boki, Who led a rebellion in Tahiti years ago. A vine at Hampton Court, which was planted in 1768, is believed to be the largest in the world. Its branohes ex tend over a space of 3,800 feet. It usu ally bears upward of 8,0db bunches of rapes annually. Tho stock of paid notes for five years in the Bank of England is about 77,745, 000 in number, and they fill 18,400 boxes, which, if placed tide by side, Would reach H miles. COULDN'T FOOL THE ROOSTER. fee Parmer Tried to Stop Ills Crowing, but It Didn't Work. When Charlie Trifles went out into the country for bin health, he put np at Farmer Ellery Cranberrymarsh's place. Fanner Ellery was something of a poul try fancior and had one of those big, melodious, gamy cockerels of Buff Co chin extraction, with a voice that was a cross between the blowing of a geyser and the sound of a three tined whistle on a boiler factory. About 8 o'clock every morning the rooster would arise on his perch, and standing on his tiptoes make all the hens sick by letting go his voice like the sound of many waters. It also broke up Charlie Trifles' slum bers, and he was unable to woo them back by cigarettes or philosophy. He made considerable complaint to Uncle Ellery, and the old gentleman hunted over his poultrybook and read as fol lows: "There is one simple device by which a rooster can be reduced to complete and acceptable silence. The bird can not crow unless ho is able to stand erect and raise his head to the fullest extent. Now if a plank, or even a lath, be placed above his perch so that he cannot gain an upright position, be cannot possibly lift up his voice." Here was the solution, and Uncle El lery arranged laths above all the perches. In the early dawn before milking time Uncle Ellery crept out to the hennery to see bow the device worked. The cock had just awakened and was trying to get np to turn his lungs loose in his UBual mat utinal vociferation, but he was unable to raise his bead, A hen opened one eye, and seeing his dilemma smiled and dropped off to sleep again. Uncle El lery chuckled. But the rooster was not to be foiled. Recognizing his dilemma, he dropped off the perch to the floor, got a good grip on an adjacent crack in the boards so as to take up the recoil of the crow, raised himself np on tiptoe and let out his lungs in a way that pulled Charlie Trifles out of bed and drove him to cigarettes. Then after a satisfied "cut, cut, cor-r-r-r-r," the rooster kicked a hen or two off the roost and dropped off into a con tented slumber. Minneapolis Journal, An Escape In the Sky. Once in awhile a meteor plunging in to the atmosphere of the earth is neither consumed by tho beat developed through friction nor precipitated upon the surface of the globe, but pursues its way out into open space again. Its brief career within human ken may be compared to that of a comet traveling in a parabolic orbit, which, as if yiolding to a headlong curiosity, almost plunges into the sun and then hastens away again, never to return. In July, 1803, one of these escaping meteors was seen in Austria and Italy, Careful computations based upon the observations which were mode in vari ous places have shown that it was visi ble along a track in the upper air about 680 miles in length. When at its nearest point to the earth, it was elevated 43 miles above the surface. From this point it receded from the earth, its elevation when last seen being no less than 88 miles. Although the resistance of the atmos phere was not sufficient to destroy the motion of this strange visitor, which con tented itself with so brief a glimpse of our globe, yet it carried the effects of that resistance out into space with it and can never shake them off. No matter what its previous course may have been, tho retardation that it suffered during its passago through the air sufficed to turn it into a different di rection and to send it along another path than that which it had been follow ing. Youth's Companion. InstantaueotM Photography. A recent improvement in photography enables the artist to overcome to a con siderable extent the difficulty of preserv ing the natural expression of the sitter during the necessary period of exposure. It seems that, notwithstanding this pe riod has been greatly shortened in vari ous ways, particularly by the adoption to such an extent of the magnesium light. with its unique advantages, nervousness is so prevalent among those who sit be fore the camera that the operator has still found the interval too prolonged for the perfect accomplishment of his work. Herr Haag of Stuttgart claims to meet and overcome the trouble in question by means of a change in the management of the magnesium light, making for this purpose what are called lightning car tridges, which cause a tremendous de velopment of luminosity and are set alight in ono-tonth of a second by means of electricity. The so called natural photographs taken by this process are said to preserve the mental expression and momentary play of the features with extraordinary clearness and exactitude, but the operation requires so much skill and practice that it is said to be carried on only by a single photographer in Ber lin. Berlin Letter. ' The Vaulty of Sparrows. A correspondent informs the London Spectator that his daughter writes to bun from Bangalore that she is "obliged to cover up her looking glass with a towel, for the sparrows come in, sit on the frame and tap at themsolves, making on both glass and dressing table a horrid mess. At first the towel kept thorn away, but they were always on the watch, and if any one threw back the towel they would be there in a minute. But now they hold back the towel with one claw, hold themselves on with the other and peck away at their images," Vegetation and Climate, The time was when Florida was an Im mense sand bar, stretchiug into the gulf of Mexico, and probably as barren ns can be conceived. But in the scniitropical climate under which it exists, in the course of ages the amis carried to its shore by the sen, and the winds, and the myriads of birds which find it a resting place have clothed it withluxurlaut veg etation, interspersed with tracts of ap parently barren sauds. Its main features illustrate the absurd ity of the common notion that tho land scapes of tropical and semitropical lati tudes are superior in luxuriance of vege table production to those of itw temper ate cones. The truth is that in tho hot regions it is only where there is constant moisture that there is a strong and rank growth of plants. Generajjy aridity prevails, the hillsides are Wrelt of vege tation, and an air of parched up uud suffering nature characterizes all that is seen. It is only when we come north that our landscapes glow with universal veg etable profusion; that the forests stand out in bold relief on the hillsides'; Unit the earth is carpeted with vernal green, and prodigality of vegetation reigns su preme. In tho tropical landscape the l - m n , ., ... auunuuiiue vi uowers, which bio Klip posed to be peculiar to warm climules, are exceptional phases. They exist, but it is in tho recesses of the swamp where the burning sun is checked in its offulgeucy. In theso re cesses, and favored by Brtoi;?8 of water, we have in Florida tho wildest t fiVets. Wo have flowers and vines nml dtriir.'.'o leafings and glantic trees as nowhere else to be seen; but they are always in bidden places. The open tropical land scape, we repeat, is arid and desolate. Picturesque America. Leopard Shooting. The first time that I saw a wild leopard in the junglo might havo been easily also the last timo for my seeing any wild leopards. I was creeping along under tho trees on the sloop of one of tho little hills at Chittagong, just inside tho tan gled fringe of briers and grasses tit tho edge of the covert. I was stalking, or rather sneaking, after one of those beau tiful pheasant which we used to call the mathoora (Euplocamus horafieldi) and listening for its footfall on tho dry leaves, for this pheasant rather disregards the precaution of moving Bilently, Suddenly there was a slight noiso of a broken twig on the projecting branch of a tree almost overhead, in front of mo. A glance showed to me a leopard stretch ed out nlong the branch and gazing ear nestly into tho bushes below it. Tho leopard was hunting tho mathoora after his fashion, hoping to pounce on it from the tree. Ho was so intent on his work that bo seemed not to huve board or studied or seen me. In a moment I raised my gun and fired a charge of No. 6 shot into his head just behind tho ear. The leopard foil dead almost at my feet, nearly all the shot having penetrated the brain. But if I had not been so lucky as to see the leopard and also to kill it, it might perhaps have jumped (lowu on me and broken my neck, or in its dying struggles it might have bitten and maul ed me. It was great luck forme, but bad luck for the leopard. It was a very handsome yonng beast, apparently full grown, though leopards vary so much in size and length that it is not easy to say when one of them has reached maturity. This adventure hap pened many years ago, I still have the animal's skin, but it looks rather dingy and dirty now. Longman's Magazine, The World's Parliaments. The British parliament compares fa vorably in size with those of other na tions. With 670 members in the bouse of commons and over 668 in the upper bouse, it is far and away the largest in the world, France comes nearest with 684 in the chamber of deputies and 800 in the senate. Spain comes next with 431 in congress and 861 in the cortes. then comes the Austrian reichsrath with 853 and 245 in the lower and upper houses respectively, followed by Ger many with 827 in its reichstag and 68 in its bundesrath. The United States has BSD representatives in congress and 88 euators. London Tit-Bits. Raphael. , Raphael experienced temptations to suicide. He himself says: "I tied the! fisherman's cords which I found in the boat eight times around her body and ; mine, tightly as in a winding sheet. I raised hor in my arms, which I had kept free in order to precipitate her with me ' Into the waves. At the mo ment I was to leap to be swallowed for- ever with her, I fult her pallid head turn upon my shoulder like a dead weight and the body sink down upon my knees." New York Times. The Truth Out. Clara Therel I knew it. He has pro posed this evening and she has accepted. . Dora They are acting like other peo ple. Merely polite, that's all. "That's only a blind. Look at her' yachting cap." "It's on hind side before," "Yes. A mancan't kiss a girl under one of those peaks," New York Weekly. 1 . . Women's Patents. Among the patents recently taken out ' by women are ones for a new foldlug' bath, folding dish nap and glass holders cor uso on smpDoaru, improvements in irtiflclul eyes, new method of sounding whistles and the like in combination with bellows, and a regulator for (low combustion fireplaces,